
24 minute read
See OPENING NIGHT
by okcfriday
Inside Send us your Christmas photos Shop today: and letters to Santa! the Look Sue Ann Arnall responds to an OKC FRIDAY Most Powerful Women’s edition article. Page 3 It would not be an OKC FRIDAY Christmas issue without Santa letters and kids in Christmas costumes or all dressed up. Elementary school children can write letters to Santa Clause and email them to rose@okcfriday.com. We also want holiday pictures. Whether your little ones are in Christmas pajamas or dressed in their holiday finery, we want to see all of their smiling faces. Again, email to rose@okcfriday.com. The deadline is Dec. 16. Baby, it’s going to get cold outside. Fashion Editor Jennifer Clark helps you Shop the Look — and stay warm. Page 11
OKC FRIDAY



Vol. 54 No. 31 • Two Sections • 16 pages December 11, 2020

www.okcfriday.com facebook.com/okcfriday OKC’s only locally-owned legal newspaper with all local news Serving Oklahoma City, Nichols Hills, The Village, Quail Creek, The Greens and Gaillardia for 46 years

20,000 may be evicted in Oklahoma County
By Vicki Clark Gourley
Publisher
A grandmother is caring for her grandchildren, ages 6, 7, and 8. She has a job and is making ends meet. Then the pandemic strikes. The schools close. She has to cut back her hours to take care of the children.
She gets a little behind on her bills. Her debts grow larger with each month. Now she and the children are facing eviction in January.
The Homeless Alliance estimates 20,000 households are at imminent risk of being evicted in Oklahoma County the first of the year. Several local agencies are working to keep people from becoming homeless.
Dan Strong, executive director of the alliance, told OKC FRIDAY that beds in homeless shelters have shrunk from 900 to 600 due to COVID social distancing rules. But even 900 would not be nearly enough.
The Homeless Alliance facilitates collaboration between Neighborhood Services Organization, Upward Transitions, Catholic Charities, the Oklahoma Community Foundation, Community Action, Community Cares Partnership, and several other organizations. These help people pay rent and utilities and stop homelessness.
$500 to $2,000 can save a family
The total financial cost is enormous, but agencies can negotiate with landlords not to evict a family, sometimes for as little as
Off to the championship!
Irish to face Carl Albert for 5A title
The Bishop McGuinness football team faces Carl Albert this Saturday for the Class 5A state championship. Kickoff is at 7 p.m. at Wantland Stadium in Edmond. The Irish pulled off a comefrom-behind 28-21 win over McAlester last Friday in the semifinals. • • • At right, McGuinness quarterback Luke Tarman accounted for all four Irish touchdowns against McAlester.
- Photo by Richard Clifton, rtcdigitalimages.zenfolio.com
See story in Sports, Page 4
Opening Night goes virtual, too
into a virtual livestream event for
See EVICTIONS, Page 10

The Village resident doesn’t get his goat
By Rose Lane
Editor
Following a lengthy discussion with two residents, The Village City Council has made no changes to its ordinance governing prohibited animals.
Resident Thomas Stanley asked the council to consider allowing certain animals — particularly miniature goats — to be kept as emotional support animals. He owns two Nigerian Dwarf goats, which are about 24-inches tall, and received a ticket for disturbing the peace because of them.
He said the goats are therapeutic for his mother as she needs physical therapy. Stanley said these animals help her get moving and go outside to care for them.
It is against code to keep goats within the city limits.
Opening Night, OKC’s New Year’s Eve celebration produced by Arts Council Oklahoma City, is not a ticketed event this year. Instead, the event is a free, virtual livestream experience for the entire community.
After several internal discussions with Opening Night volunteer Co-Chairmen Colby Wedel and Mark McBride and Board President Kati Christ, the decision was made to turn Opening Night
See GOATS, Page 8
the health and safety of the community.
“Sadly, with ever increasing cases of COVID-19 in our city and state we had to rethink how to produce Opening Night this year,” said Executive Director Peter Dolese. “Since the pandemic began, we’ve had great success virtually livestreaming several of our other programs such as Art Moves and Sunday Twilight Concert Series. Those experiences will help us create a fantastic
See OPENING NIGHT, Page 2
FRIDAY’s Dog of the Week
This is Layla Tarango. She is a 2-year-old Great Pyrenees mix. She loves bones, new toys and sometimes digging. She’s a very good girl.
Isabel Tarango is her human. Layla was adopted from OK Humane.
Send Dog, Baby and Cat of the Week nominations to rose@okcfriday.com.

Sponsored by Paulette and Leo Kingston of WePayFast.com



From Page 1
livestream Opening Night.
Opening Night was originally scheduled to be an outdoor event at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark with extensive safety protocols in place for guests to roam the park and enjoy interactions with artists and musical acts. However, with the ongoing increase of COVID19 cases, the community’s health and safety became the most important concern.
“We have been working closely with the OKC County Health Department to look at various scenarios for Opening Night and together we have come to the conclusion, it should not be a ticketed event,” Dolese said. “In-person gatherings in the magnitude created by events like Opening Night are not safely part of our current reality.”
The livestream experience for Opening Night was always going to be a key factor for this year’s event, Project Director Seth Lewis. said.
McBride said this was a decision made from an abundance of caution and desire to protect the community of OKC.
“But getting to enjoy local music, fireworks, and other holiday magic while safely in our pajamas feels like an especially fitting end to 2020,” he said.
Wedel said it is going to be “an extraordinary party to say goodbye to 2020 and ring in the new year.”
“We look forward to welcoming a new year full of hope as we slowly bring our world back to normal,” he said.
Additional information and updates about the Opening Night livestream program are to be available soon at the Art Council’s website.
Furthermore, Opening Night’s kickoff event, the Finale 5K run is also virtual this year. Registration is now available at artscouncilokc.com.


Sue Ann Arnall responds to Most Powerful Women article



In the FRIDAY issue its merits. Since that campaign regarding the Most Powerful lasted over a year, I don’t think Women, the paragraph about my posting on social media me was incorrect. during the last month qualifies
I did not fund ANY of the me as the major spokesperson effort to push State Question or advocate for SQ 805. 805.In 2019, I did donate I was extremely sad that it $100,000 to OCJR, one of the didn’t pass. I had thought it organizations supporting it, was going to sail through and but they do a lot more than so had not gotten involved push legislation. until literally the last minute.
I did not contribute any- I know that it makes good thing to the organization that copy to write that the No. 1 gathered signatures or adver- and No. 2 women were foes, tisement on SQ 805. and yes, we were, because we
My understanding from were on different sides of an the news is that several mil- issue. That would have been lion were spent proposing SQ more accurate to write. 805. If any of my $100,000 in SUE ANN ARNALL I seem to get credit for being 2019 went towards that, I still the major funder on a number don’t think that qualifies me as a major, or the of issues, and sometimes I am, and sometimes I’m major (as was written) contributor to SQ 805. not. This time I wasn’t.
I also was not involved in the campaign until the last month when I began to post articles on Sincerely, social media and also did a TV interview regarding Sue Ann Arnall





Oklahoma City FRIDAY, Friday, December 11, 2020, Page 4 OKC FRIDAY Sports Weekly
FOOTBALL | 5A CHAMPIONSHIP: IRISH VS. TITANS • SATURDAY 7 P.M. • WANTLAND STADIUM FOR ALL THE MARBLES Irish get rematch against Carl Albert for 5A title
By Jason Jewell
Sports Editor
As district opponents which meet every season, the McGuinness and Carl Albert football teams have also become fixtures in the Class 5A state championship game.
The Irish and Titans face off this Saturday for the fourth time in the last five years to claim the gold ball. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m. at Wantland Stadium in Edmond.
“They are the defending state champs,” McGuinness coach Bryan Pierce said of Carl Albert. “They’re going to play the way they play until someone knocks them off the top and takes (a state title) from them.”
In their district meeting in Week 6, the Irish built a 3touchdown lead in the first half, only to see the Titans storm back with 42 unanswered points in a 56-35 road loss.
McGuinness also came out on the short end of a 3015 setback to Carl Albert in the 2019 state final.
For the Irish to gain the upper hand in Saturday’s championship game, they need to be sound on both sides of the ball, Pierce said.
“We’re going to have play sound football and tackle well,” the coach told FRIDAY. “We need to stay the course and not give up the big play. On offense, we need to execute the plays and put our playmakers in the best position for big plays.”
Irish quarterback Luke Tarman serves as the “cornerstone” of the McGuinness offense. The senior, in his third year as starting quarterback, accounted for all four touchdowns in a comefrom-behind semifinal win over McAlester last Friday.
“He is a true leader,” Pierce said. “His confidence and comfort level in the offense are extremely high. He seems to keep getting better every week.”
Tarman’s primary receiving targets in the last half of the season include Cole Limber and his brother Paul Tarman. He threw two touchdowns to Limber and one to Paul Tarman against the Buffaloes in the semifinals.
Tailback Michael Taffe also gets hard yards and can make big plays in space,” Pierce said.
Linebacker Chris Clark leads the way on defense for the Irish.
“He is our field general,” the coach said. “He does a good job getting everyone lined up.”
McGuinness has also gotten good play from Andrew Chambers from his defensive end spot along with defensive back Adam Wheeler.

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FOOTBALL | PLAYOFF ROUNDUP: 3A, 5A SEMIFINALS McGuinness rallies past McAlester
Trailing by seven at halftime, the McGuinness football team scored twice in the second half to pull away for a 28-21 win over McAlester last Friday night in the Class 5A semifinals at Pribil Stadium.
Quarterback Paul Tarman connected with Cole Limber on a 25yard touchdown pass with 19 seconds left in regulation for the goahead score. Tarman also hit his brother Paul Tarman on the 2-point conversion attempt to put the Irish (10-2) up a touchdown.
The senior signalcaller threw a 5-yard pass to Limber to open the game and ran for a 1-yard TD in the third quarter.
The Irish’s win advances them to the - Photo by Richard Clifton, rtcdigitalimages.zenfolio.comstate championship game this Saturday McGuinness’ Paul Tarman hauls in a 31-yard pass against Carl Albert. The from his brother Luke Tarman against McAlester. Titans held off a late Collinsville rally for a Heritage Hall ran ending loss last Friday 45-28 victory in their out to a 2-touchdown night in the Class 3A semifinal game. lead in the first half, semifinals. but saw host Lincoln Quarterback Will LINCOLN CHR. Christian erupt for 21 Pague threw a pair of TOPS CHARGERS unanswered points to touchdowns to Davis suffer a 35-27 season- Duncan for 33 yards and Orie Walker for 25 yards to lead the Chargers (10-2). K.J. Evans ran for a 13-yard TD and Gavin Freeman finished the night with a 68-yard punt return for a touchdown, as Heritage Hall saw its season end in the semifinals for a second straight year Photo by Dewayne Jones, dewayne-jones.smugmug.com against the Bulldogs. Holland Hall defeatCaptains Andrew Chambers (44), Luke Tarman (7), John ed Stigler in the other Lopez (62) and Adam Wheeler (8) go out for the coin toss. 3A semifinal on Friday.



BOYS BASKETBALL ROUNDUP Knights top 3A poll in Week 2
As the 2020-21 basketball season enters its second week, Crossings Christian ascended to the top spot in the most recent Class 3A poll, released at ossaarankings.com.
The Knights (2-0) earned 16 first-place votes for the No. 1 spot, just 10 points ahead of Millwood which garnered 12 first-place votes.
Heritage Hall sits at No. 2 in the 4A poll, after two big wins to open the year. The Chargers got three firstplace votes and are ranked behind No. 1 Kingfisher with 48 firstplace votes.
PC North is the only other Fridayland team in the top 5. The Panthers (1-0) came in at No. 5 in the 6A poll.
McGuinness made the top 10 in the 5A poll at No. 9, while John Marshall was ranked No. 10 and Mount St. Mary was No. 11 in 4A.
Irish hold off Cyclones
Keyed by three players in double figures, the McGuinness girls basketball team held off Fridayland rival Casady for a 63-53 road victory last Thursday in the opening weekend of the 2020-21 season.
Raegan Crisp and Victory Ososanya netted 15 points each to lead the Irish (2-0), ranked No. 11 in Class 4A, and Alyssa Rooks chipped in 12 points.
McGuinness tipped
After splitting its opening two games of the season, the Casady boys basketball team got back on track with a 92-85 win over the OKC Knights last Monday night.
Three players scored in double figures, led by P.J. Mitchell-Johnson with 33 points. Jackson Kennedy netted 23 points, while D.J. Freeman finished with 11 points and 11 rebounds.
Earlier in the week, the Cyclones (2-1) suffered a 77-74 overtime loss against Fridayland rival McGuinness. Mitchell-Johnson collected a team-best 26 points, with Freeman adding 20 points and 15 rebounds and Kennedy notching 14 points.
Casady opened the season with another slim 55-54 win against Bethany. Mitchell-Johnson again paced the Cyclones with 22 points, while Freeman had 16 and Kennedy netted 11 points.
Casady is set to compete at the Edmond Open this weekend and host Destiny Christian off the season with a dominating 57-31 win over Santa Fe South. Ososanya collected a team-best 10 points, while Crisp and Tameka Talley had eight points each.
The Irish are scheduled to compete at the Harrah Panther Classic this weekend.
CARL ALBERT TOPS CHARGERS
Heritage Hall endured a couple tough losses to ranked teams last weekend at the season-opening Carl Albert Festival.
CHARGERS DOWN CARL ALBERT
Heritage Hall opened the 2020-21 season with a pair of big wins at the Carl Albert Festival last weekend.
The Chargers, ranked No. 2 in Class 4A, cruised to a 72-61 win over 5A No. 2 Carl Albert on Friday.
Trey Alexander netted a team-best 26 points to lead a trio in double figures. Kyle McLaughlin scored 17 points and Ethan Franks chipped in 11 points.
Heritage Hall also jumped out a big lead and rolled to an 84-47 victory against Ardmore last Thursday in the festival opener, behind 27 points from Alexander. Sebastian Perry finished with 15 points and McLaughlin added 14 points.
This weekend, the Chargers (2-0) compete at the Joe Lawson Tournament in Norman.
IRISH CLIP CYCLONES IN OT
Keyed by three play-
GIRLS BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
ers in double figures,
Host Carl Albert proved to be too much for the Chargers (0-2) in a 56-29 loss. Lainey Portman netted a teamhigh 13 points, with Lainey Gray adding seven and Macy Moore getting six points.
Moore led the way with 16 points in a 4438 loss to 5A No. 4 Ardmore in the opener. Annie Walker scored eight points and Portman added seven in the setback.
The Chargers next play Dec. 28-30 at the Duncan Holiday Classic.
Story continued at OKCFRIDAY.com. McGuinness escaped with a 77-74 overtime win at Fridayland rival Casady last Thursday.
Graham Tawwater scored 25 points and grabbed 14 rebounds to lead the 5A No. 9 Irish (2-0). Andrew Smith was just behind with 22 points and Prince Bradley chipped in 15.
McGuinness opened the season with an easy 69-39 triumph against Santa Fe South. Smith notched a team-high 23 points, while Tawwater netted 12 points and Matthew Williams had 10 points.
The Irish compete at a tournament in Duncan this weekend.
Crossings Christian dominated a pair of ranked opponents with wins over 2A No. 14 Oklahoma Christian Academy and 3A No. 2 Millwood.
Story continued at OKCFRIDAY.com.


NEWS OKC ZOO NEW HOURS • As of Dec. 1, the Zoo is closed to the public on Tuesdays and Wednesdays OKCPHIL until Spring. The Zoo will continue to be open to the public Thursdays through Mondays from 9 am Dec. 625 • ‘A Classic Christmas’ The OKCPHIL’s ‘A Classic Christmas’ will be virtual. The single tickto 5 pm daily. The decision to close two days a week is a first in the OKC Zoo’s history which prides itself on connecting guests with wildlife every day of the year except Thanksgiving and Christmas. However, the emergence of COVID19, which forced the Zoo to close in March for 51 days, has ets for the Digital Con had a significant financial impact on the organizacert Stream are now tion’s operational budget. By closing the Zoo’s available for purchase guest facing operations on Tues. and Wed., the for $20 at okcphil.org least attended days during the winter season, the or okcciviccenter.com Zoo is able to reduce expenses while still providing and the performance will be available on demand for viewing and reviewing during an extended timeframe of Dec. 6 – 25. ample opportunities for families to visit. The Zoo will continue to engage fans with multiple photos and videos posted daily on social media platforms, including TikTok. Advance tickets are required for all guests and ZOOfriends members and can be purchased at okczoo.org/tickets. For updates on this and other OKCPHIL version is a great as they perform selecperformances go to opportunity to intro tions from the show. www.okcphil.org or duce little ones or any They'll be streaming call (405) 8425387. ballet newcomers to straight into your livlive performance. For ing room, so buckle in HOLIDAY more information, for a night of searing including perform performances and an Dec. 1220 • ance schedules, visit electrifying dose of The Nutcracker OKCBallet.com. collective joy. In the Oklahoma City Ballet’s spirit of the vital The Nutcracker: Short THIS WEEKEND #SaveOurStages & Sweet presented by movement that has Devon Energy returns Dec. 13 – 15 • risen during the panto the Civic Center Jagged Live In NYC demic, OKC Broadway Music Hall Dec. 12 OKC Broadway is is able to keep a porDec. 20. Artistic Direc proud to share Jagged tion of proceeds from tor Robert Mills’ Live In NYC: A Broad‐ ticket sales so that beautiful staging of way Reunion Concert. your money still supTchaikovsky’s The Nut‐ For the first time in ports the performing cracker will warm nearly 10 months, the arts right here in Oklahearts and fill them Broadway cast of the homa City. Livewith the spirit of the 15time Tony Award® stream packages $33holidays. This year’s nominated Jagged Lit‐ $225 at production is short tle Pill is reuniting for stellartickets.com. All ened to one act but a live concert in New tickets include access will still include all the York City. Join Kathryn, to the livestream prefavorite characters Celia, Derek, Season, miere on Sunday, Dec. from the dancing Lauren, Elizabeth, 13 at 7:00 pm and snowflakes to the Antonio and others, OnDemand access Kingdom of Sweets. along with the Jagged through Tuesday, Dec. This Short & Sweet Little Broadway Band, 15. NEW DATES/CANCELATIONS Chesapeake Events/Shows: Brightmusic concert Virtual Michael Buble 02/17/2021 OKC Ballet Ball Firebird 02/12/2021 Jeff Dunham – 04/09/2021 Memorial Marathon 04/25/2021 Elton John – 01/30/2021 Rodeo Hall of Fame 11/12/2021 Maroon 5 – 08/14/2021 OKC Town Hall 01/21/2021 Backstreet Boys – 09/12/2021 Beaux Arts Ball 11/27/2021 MercyMe – 03/12/2021 Bachelors Club Ball Cancelled Other Events/Shows/Awards: City Rescue Mission donate boxes Chuck Wagon Festival – 05/29/2021 Wes Welker Golf Tourney 06/21/2021 Western Heritage Awards – 04/10/2021 UCO WinterGlow Cancelled Sunbeam Shine a Light – 05/13/2021 Opening Night 12/31 LIVESTREAM • LifeShare WinterFest & Snow Tubing at Bricktown Ballpark CANCELLED • OKCPHIL Beethoven, Ragtime & Bach Concerto Postponed • Scissortail Park’s ‘Tis the Season Market 12/5 & 12/6 Streaming services took over the world this year, providing entertainment directly to our homes as live events and movie theaters came to a screeching halt. Amazon, HBO, Hulu, ESPN, Disney, and Apple all released great shows to wide acclaim. But, once again, Netflix stayed in the lead, releasing great original programming and providing acclaimed network shows a wider audience.
The Last Dance –Director Jason Hehir’s ten-part series about Michael Jordan and his final season with the Chicago Bulls was my favorite television show of 2020. Starting with college and moving through his storied career, the ESPN series explored the fierce determination required to become the greatest basketball player of all time and the impact that drive had on his teammates, competitors, and the growth of the NBA. Dominating discussions from its April release on ESPN to its summer release on Netflix, The Last Dance took home the Outstanding Documentary Series at the 2020 Emmy Awards.
Schitt’s Creek – This hilarious family comedy wrapped its sixth and final season by sweeping the Emmys, taking home nine awards, including Best Comedy Series and all four comedy acting prizes for Eugene Levy, Catherine O’Hara, Dan Levy, and Annie Murphy. The show about a formerly wealthy family who loses it all aired on CBS, but became a pop culture phenomenon when Netflix started re-airing the series in Season 3.
The Queens Gambit –Netflix’s dramatic series about an orphaned chess prodigy battling addiction while working to become the world’s greatest chess player was a massive success, becoming Netflix’s most watched series of all time. Set in the 1950’s and 60’s, the fascinating series is beautifully designed, well written, and perfectly performed by a great cast, led by magnetic star Anya Taylor-Joy as the chess prodigy.
Tiger King – This docuseries about Oklahoma native Joe Exotic and his tiger zoo was released in March on Netflix and quickly became the most talked about show in America. The shocking tale of an Oklahoma zoo keeper and former gubernatorial candidate proved hypnotic across the country. More than 34 million people watched the series in the first 10 days. Many Oklahomans bristled at the image of Joe and his rag tag group of misfits. But, for a nation recently stuck at home during a pandemic, Tiger King proved to be the perfect distraction.
The Crown – This awesome Netflix series about Queen Elizabeth and the sorted history of the British monarchy returned for another glorious season, focusing on Princess Diana and her tumultuous relationship with Prince Charles. The depiction of their relationship caused such a stir, Prince Charles was forced to shut down all social media for his charities because they were being attacked by hackers. The Royal family has asked Netflix to add a disclaimer that the show is fiction. But, the fact remains, this award-winning series has made the Royal family more popular than ever.

Send your calendar events to jennifer@okcfriday.com
Cleats for Kids impacts 100,000 Oklahoma kids with sports equipment
Oklahoma Cleats for Kids (C4K) is proud to announce that they have officially equipped 100,000 Oklahoma kids with sports shoes and equipment since their founding in 2011.
C4K has experienced exponential growth since its start. Even with the advent of COVID-19, kids don’t stop playing and neither does C4K. In fact, C4K is on target to equip 30,000 kids this year alone and help them unlock the transformational power of sports.
How was a small organization able to help so many kids in just under 10 years? “Partnerships with schools, organizations and businesses are the key to our success,” C4K Executive Director Stacy McDaniel explained. “By connecting with these important people in our community we are able to, in turn, impact more kids.”
One such relationship is with Oklahoma City Public Schools, C4K’s largest district partnership. “Each day OKCPS strives to ignite passion and instill pride in our student-athletes, believing that when they find a team, they find the classroom; and when they commit to the classroom, they put themselves on a better path to graduation and life beyond high school,” OKCPS Athletic Director Todd Dilbeck said. “But we can’t do it alone. OKCPS is also blessed with a strong network of support from our community, including amazing partners like Cleats for Kids who invest in our student-athletes by providing them with the gear they need to play the sports they love. Although these partners do not suit up and sit on the bench beside our students, rest assured that they are part of #TeamOKCPS.“
“Sports are so important to kids’ development,” Millwood Athletic Director Shannon Hayes echoed. C4K has partnered with Millwood Public Schools many times over the last ten years to help their student athletes find the gear they need. “Giving our students an outlet to learn more about themselves and what they are capable of guides the work we do, and we couldn’t reach as many kids without C4K’s help.”
C4K plans to continue celebrating this milestone as well as their 10-year anniversary throughout 2021. For more information about C4K’s mission and how they empower kids to live healthier lifestyles and learn life lessons through sports contact Taylor Self at taylor@cleatsforkids.org or our website okc.cleatsforkids.org.


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