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This is repeater station Kilo. OK, well that's some history on Cherokee Nation there. And it has a really good, I mean, if you know the history of Oklahoma, at one point, we were going to be, there was going to be the state of Sequoia, which was half of Oklahoma, where all the five big civilized tribes are. And when it became a state, they were going to make it the state of Sequoia, you know, Northeast Oklahoma, that area there. And then Congress never did ratify it or whatever. So when Oklahoma became a state, the Constitution that we had, they used that for the Constitution of the state of Oklahoma. They just changed the words. It was a copy and paste, a job. We created that Constitution for the state of Oklahoma. But anyhow, that's some history, Mike. And there's a lot more history here. I think the first telephone conversation was in downtown Tahlequah to Oklahoma, or no, to Muskogee. It was the first actual telephone from one place to another. So that's some of the history of my area there, Mike. We've got a lot of lakes. Randall Lake of the Cherokee is huge. I don't even know how many hundreds of miles of shoreline. Close to me here in Tahlequah, there's a lot of lakes, like Tim Killer is our big lake. And we've got the Illinois River. We've got the Arkansas River. It's just a water playground here in Northeast Oklahoma. Rolling Hills, the start of the Ozarks. If you go west of Tulsa, it's more of the flats of prairie. But on the start of the Ozarks, we've got trees, forest, rolling hills, lakes, rivers, and all that kind of stuff. OK, I'm talking enough. Let me throw it back over to Mike, N5 J-O-J.

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