A Chicago college is offering a class on the Occupy movement.
A runaway elk can't go home to Pennsylvania, even if it wanted to.
An Ohio woman called the wrong number when she was experiencing a medical attack but still found help a couple of time zones away.
A 250-pound man with a history of jumping on the backs of student athletes in the Pacific Northwest has pleaded guilty to assault.
A 55-year-old Montana man who says he "always wanted" to be part of a police chase can check that off his bucket list.
A Vermont prison inmate who makes stationery and license plates has gotten the best of the state police by adding the image of a pig to the state decal on their cruisers.
With 120 lions, tigers and other big cats on the grounds, the owner of a Colorado refuge didn't think he needed a security system.
A woman's speeding got her a warning from an Ohio state trooper but wasn't enough to keep her grandchild from being born in her car.
Police say a woman who appeared to not have any teeth in surveillance photos from a bank robbery last month has confessed, apologized and said she planned the heist because she needed the money for dentures.
Around Tulsa
Tuesday night, Broken Arrow residents were calling for resignations at the city council meeting.
Celebrity Headlines
Madonna's not finished with stadiums. Her world tour will start May 29 in Tel Aviv, Israel. It will include performances in Istanbul, Brussels, Helsinki and Zurich.
Chris Brown will perform at this year's Grammy Awards, the event where his career almost ended three yea rs ago.
Movies
Potential Oscar winners will now be a click away from winning a trophy.
Problem Solvers
The IRS provides help figuring how to pay-back the credit.
Segment 2
Nine months, 14 schools and thousands of students later, Project Schoolhouse has been implemented within the Tulsa school district. But with any big change, comes big adjustment.
Uncovering government waste. A 2NEWS investigation found the state spending your tax dollars on things it may already have. In fact, some lawmakers say the system for tracking the state's inventory is so flawed, it lends itself to corruption.