PROTECTING THE INNOCENT CHILD ABUSE PREVENTION HIT HARD BY BUDGET CUTS April 2018
BACK IN BUSINESS DEVELOPERS AND BUSINESS OWNERS REVITALIZE 11TH STREET
FOUNDATION FOR SUCCESS HABITAT FOR HUMANITY’S 30 YEARS IN TULSA Faces of 11th Street Business: Lisa Wakefield, LeAnn Conley and Jesse Boudiette
LEGENDS: PAT WOODRUM
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APRIL 2018 | VOLUME 32 ISSUE 6 FEATURED
Cameron Walker is the CEO of Tulsa Habitat for Humanity. The organization is celebrating 30 years in Tulsa and the dedication of its 400th home.
34 Legends: Pat Woodrum Native Kansan served Tulsa’s library system and botanic garden. BY GAIL BANZET-ELLIS
36 Home makers Tulsa Habitat for Humanity has built more than 400 homes with the help of volunteers. BY SARA PLUMMER
38 It takes practice Incorporating yoga into traditional addiction recovery has seen local success. BY KIM BROWN
40 Protecting the most innocent among us Child abuse and neglect seem to have spiked in Tulsa County, but funding limits the services that could aid prevention. BY MORGAN PHILLIPS
BY SCOTT WIGTON
4
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
Tips for gardening and water conservation. A trip to Tahlequah. New View Oklahoma assists those with low vision. Connie Cronley rhymes for National Poetry Month.
April 2018
SPECIAL SECTIONS 53 71
Best Lawyers® Specialty Clinics and Physicians
THE GREEN ISSUE
Developers are revitalizing a historic thoroughfare.
67 LIFESTYLE
More restaurants open at Jenks Riverwalk. The Tomato Man’s Daughter gives recommendations for spring. Where to eat on First Friday.
PROTECTING THE INNOCENT CHILD ABUSE PREVENTION HIT HARD BY BUDGET CUTS
APRIL 2018
11th Street: Back in business
Experience the Dust Bowl in virtual reality. Renovations are underway at the historic Church Studio. Three spots to practice mindfulness. Four recent nonprofit benefits.
97 TABLE TALK
TULSAPEOPLE
45
11 CITY DESK
BACK IN BUSINESS DEVELOPERS AND BUSINESS OWNERS REVITALIZE 11TH STREET
FOUNDATION FOR SUCCESS HABITAT FOR HUMANITY’S 30 YEARS IN TULSA Faces of 11th Street Business: Lisa Wakefield, LeAnn Conley and Jesse Boudiette
LEGENDS: PAT WOODRUM
YOGA FOR ADDICTION RECOVERY
BEST LAWYERS® 2018
ON THE COVER Lisa Wakefield, LeAnn Conley and Jesse Boudiette inside Timber and Beam.
Listening to you helps us see your whole picture. To get great care for your everyday life, you need more than an everyday doctor. AscensionÂŽ care teams at St. John Clinic take the time to listen so we can understand all aspects of you and your life.
And with convenient locations, online scheduling for urgent care and virtual visits, you can get the care you need, when and where you need it. Find a doctor who is right for you by calling 918-992-7106.
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The NEW 2018 Tulsa Guest Guide is now ONLINE! The Guest Guide is a GREAT resource for both Tulsans and visitors.
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TU LSA GUE ST GUI DE
THE ESSENTIAL 2018 VISITORS’ GUIDE TO SHOPPING, SIGHT SEEING, NIGHTLIFE AND MUCH MORE
From the publisher
of
Magazine and
HOTEL COPY Please leave this copy for future guests
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Just dance The Prancing Pearls of Excellence showcase their skills. TULSAPEOPLE.COM.
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“We were so impressed with our mortgage experience, we moved everything to TTCU.” – Matt N., TTCU member
After moving five times to five different cities, Matt came home to Tulsa – and TTCU. He said, “A mortgage is the largest purchase you’ll probably ever make. You need a friend, someone who watches out for your best interest. Choosing TTCU for our mortgage was the best decision ever.” To learn more about our 100% local mortgages and our 100% financing option, call, click or come by.
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FROM THE EDITOR
Volume XXXII, Number 6 ©2018. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written permission from the publisher. TulsaPeople Magazine is published monthly by
Don’t you love April?
1603 South Boulder Avenue Tulsa, Oklahoma 74119-4407 918-585-9924 918-585-9926 Fax
PUBLISHER Jim Langdon PRESIDENT Juley Roffers VP COMMUNITY RELATIONS Susie Miller
It’s my favorite month, when I am always ready to
I’ve always had a heart for Habitat for
shed my winter coat and long sleeves. I get excited
Humanity, and how its volunteers help Tulsans
and colorful flowers popping up all over town.
Tulsa Habitat’s Tuesday Morning Miracle Work-
seeing budding trees, that first tease of green grass It’s finally time to turn off the heater and raise the windows again, enjoy the warmer weather and longer days, and get outside.
TulsaPeople’s annual “Green Issue” celebrates
this time of year with stories on topics from gardening to local revitalization efforts.
Along with a close friend who lives in the Pearl
District, I am really pumped about the ongoing
finally have the home of their dreams. On p. 36, ers are celebrating 25 years and the organization’s 400th home dedication.
Child abuse: two words we hear often in the
news, sending chills and shudders through all of us. City Editor Morgan Phillips spoke with lo-
cal experts about this serious, heartbreaking issue. Read about that on p. 40.
Maybe you already practice mindfulness, but
changes on East 11th Street, from South Peo-
do you need a new place to do so? On p. 14,
Route 66 has seen too many empty or rundown
that teach meditation. Mindfulness and yoga prac-
ria to Harvard avenues. For years, that stretch of
buildings. Now every time I drive through the
area, something new seems to be going in. Scott
Wigton’s story on p. 45 shows us how 11th Street is once again where to “get your kicks.”
Abigail Singrey introduces us to three local spots
EDITOR CITY EDITOR DIGITAL EDITOR ARTS & BENEFITS EDITOR ONLINE CALENDAR EDITOR
Anne Brockman Morgan Phillips Anna Bennett Judy Langdon John Langdon
EDITORIAL CONSULTING Missy Kruse, The Write Company CREATIVE DIRECTOR ART DIRECTOR GRAPHIC DESIGNER MANAGING PHOTOGRAPHER CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER VIDEOGRAPHER
Madeline Crawford Georgia Brooks Morgan Welch Michelle Pollard Valerie Grant Greg Bollinger
ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES Andrea Canada Steve Hopkins Betsy Slagle CONTROLLER Mary McKisick SUBSCRIPTIONS Gloria Brooks DISTRIBUTION COORDINATOR Amanda Hall
MEMBER
tice have become pillars of recovery for one Tulsa nonprofit and its clients. Find out more on p. 38.
TulsaPeople’s distribution is audited annually by
Happy green reading and living! TP
Ever wondered what became of the late Leon
Russell’s iconic Church Studio on West Third Street? Tulsa businesswoman Teresa Knox re-
Langdon Publishing Company sets high standards to ensure forestry is practiced in an environmentally responsible, socially beneficial and economically viable manner. This issue of Tulsa People was printed on recycled fibers containing 20 percent post-consumer waste with inks containing a soy base blend. Our printer is a certified member of the Forestry Stewardship Council and the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, and additionally, meets or exceeds all federal Resource Conservation Recovery Act standards. When you are finished with this issue, please pass it on to a friend or recycle it. We can have a better world if we choose it together.
cently purchased the legendary recording haunt and has amazing things in store. See p. 18. And
Riverwalk in Jenks also is experiencing new life. Beginning on p. 98, Natalie Mikles takes us on a
tour of new locations for Burn Co., Bramble and
Disregard any TulsaPeople subscription solicitation that is not directly mailed from the Langdon Publishing office at 1603 S. Boulder Ave. Contact Langdon Publishing directly if you are interested in subscribing or renewing your TulsaPeople subscription.
Andolini’s Pizza.
Here’s something else I don’t want to miss: the
Woody Guthrie Center’s new virtual reality experience of the Dust Bowl by Tulsa’s own Steele-
house. It takes users back 83 years to April 14, 1935 — Black Sunday. Learn more on p. 24. 8
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
Judy Langdon ARTS AND BENEFITS EDITOR
Spend the summer at Holland Hall! With more than 150 one-week classes & camps designed for both fun & education, Holland Hall has tons of options for 3-year-olds to adults.
PROGRAMS INCLUDE: • academics • sports • music • games • ACT prep • philanthropy • cooking • driver’s ed • acting • science • arts & crafts • robotics • computers • much, much more!
8 One-Week Camp Sessions May 29 – July 27, 2018 9am – 12pm & 12:30 – 3:30pm Choose between morning or afternoon sessions ... or sign up for both & stay all day!
Register online & view camp schedules & descriptions at
hollandhall.org/summer.
(918) 481-1111 5666 East 81st Street Tulsa, Oklahoma 74137
C A L E N D A R + C A U S E S + C U LT U R E
STEPPING UP
“T
VIDEO
at TULSAPEOPLE.COM
The Prancing Pearls of Excellence showcase their skills.
VALERIE GRANT
his team has really changed me,” says Sydnee Dickson. “It has changed the way I am as a person and the way I dance. I never thought my endurance would be this great, or that I could dance this powerfully.” Dickson, a Booker T. Washington High School senior, has danced with Tulsa’s Prancing Pearls of Excellence, a community majorette dance team, for three years. She’s the team captain. When not in class, dance practice or competitions, Dickson studies cosmetology and works part time at Home Depot. She’ll attend Clark Atlanta University in the fall. “As team captain, you learn a lot about yourself,” she says. “You have to not only be a leader for other girls, you also learn to be a leader within yourself.” See p. 16 for more on the Prancing Pearls of Excellence. TP
TulsaPeople.com
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APRIL C OMPIL ED BY JUDY L A NGDON
3-8
6-7 Celebrity Attractions presents “The Sound of Music” at the
Tulsa PAC.
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9
Tulsa City-County Library presents the “21st Annual Yom HaShoah: An Interfaith Holocaust Commemoration” at TCC’s VanTrease PACE.
Popular 1980s rock group 38 Special appears at the Joint at Hard Rock Hotel and Casino.
Former “Tonight Show” host Jay Leno brings his humor to the Joint at Hard Rock Hotel and Casino.
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21-29
The BOK Center turns up the country volume with singer/songwriter Thomas Rhett.
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The ORU Mabee Center welcomes Christian artists MercyMe and Tenth Avenue North.
6-7
Crown Tulsa’s best singer at the “Tulsa Sings! 100 Years of Song” competition at the VanTrease Performing Arts Center for Education.
7
Chow down at the Kendall Whittier Food Truck Festival at East Admiral Boulevard and North Lewis Avenue. The 2018 Tulsa Farmers’ Market on Cherry Street begins its season at East 15th Street and South Peoria Avenue. Repeats April 14, 21 and 28.
Author and radio personality Garrison Keillor’s “Just Passing Through …” tour visits the Brady Theater. Tulsa Town Hall presents author Piper Kerman’s “The Real Story of ‘Orange is the New Black” at the Cascia Hall PAC.
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27, 29
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28
19 Resort.
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Guthrie Green hosts Earth Day entertainment, activities for families and kids, and educational booths.
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The Tulsa Roots Music Global Bash grooves at Guthrie Green in the Tulsa Arts District. Three Dog Night rocks Paradise Cove at the River Spirit Casino
ONEOK Field will be crimson and cream and orange and black for OU-OSU Bedlam Baseball.
Celebrate the Woody Guthrie Center’s Fifth Birthday in the Tulsa Arts District.
Play ball! It’s opening night for the Tulsa Drillers 2018 home season against the Frisco RoughRiders at ONEOK Field. Tulsa Ballet’s TB II: Emerging Choreographer’s Showcase features three world premieres at Studio K.
28-29
Legendary band Judas Priest lights up the BOK Center.
Tulsa Opera presents Giacomo Puccini’s “Turandot” at the Tulsa PAC. Disco balls and big hair: It’s the 16th annual ’80s PROM at Cain’s Ballroom.
28-29
LENO AND TULSA SINGS: COURTESY; BEDLAM: COURTESY TULSA DRILLERS
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CH A RITA BLE E V EN T S 3 Are You Smarter than a KIPPster? Benefits KIPP Tulsa College Preparatory. KIPPTULSA.ORG Women’s Leadership Summit Benefits Leadership Tulsa. LEADERSHIPTULSA.ORG 5 Dinner and Auction Benefits Metro Christian Academy. METROCA.COM Friendship Dinner and Awards Ceremony Benefits Raindrop Foundation Oklahoma. THEDIALOGINSTITUTE.ORG / TULSA Founders Dinner Benefits Iron Gate. IRONGATETULSA.ORG Knock Out Violence Benefits Domestic Violence Intervention Services. DVIS.ORG Oysters and Ale Benefits Hospice of Green Country. HOSPICEOFGREENCOUNTRY.ORG / OYSTERSANDALE
Tulsa Boys’ Home Women’s Association Spring Luncheon Benefits Tulsa Boys’ Home. TULSABOYSHOME.ORG / TULSABOYS / SPRING _ LUNCHEON.ASP Showcase Premiere Party Benefits Foundation for Tulsa Schools. FOUNDATIONFORTULSASCHOOLS.ORG 6 ARTSCAPE Benefits the Tristesse Grief Center. ARTSCAPETULSA.COM Babypalooza and Painted Pacifier Benefits Emergency Infant Services. EISTULSA.ORG / EVENTS Hall of Fame Awards Assembly, Dinner and Presentation Benefits Will Rogers High School Community Foundation. WILLROGERSFOUNDATION.NET
Mirror Mirror Gala Benefits Youth At Heart. YOUTHATHEART.ORG / EVENTS
Garden Party Benefits A New Leaf. ANEWLEAF.ORG
Promise Ball Benefits Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and Type 1 diabetes research. JDRF.ORG
Popping Bottles Benefits Emergency Infant Services. EISTULSA.ORG / EVENTS Project Cuffway Benefits National Pancreas Foundation. PROJECTCUFFWAY.COM
7-28 Bowl for Kids’ Sake Benefits Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Oklahoma. BFKSTULSA.ORG
Tulsa’s New Leaders Benefits Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. CFF.ORG / TULSA
7 Aquarium Run Benefits Oklahoma Aquarium. OKAQUARIUM.ORG
13 BOTANICAL! Dinner Benefits Tulsa Botanic Garden. TULSABOTANIC.ORG
Garden Party Benefits Little Light House. LITTLELIGHTHOUSE.ORG Pranks and Paws Benefits Tulsa Society of Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. TULSASPCA.ORG The Color Run Benefits River Parks Authority. THECOLORRUN.COM The Kelley Derby, Bishop Kelley’s Annual Auction Benefits Bishop Kelley High School. BISHOPKELLEY.ORG / AUCTION 8 Open Mosque Day Benefits Islamic Society of Tulsa. ISTULSA.ORG Superhero Challenge Benefits Child Abuse Network. FACEBOOK .COM /
13-14 SpringFest Benefits Tulsa Garden Center. TULSAGARDENCENTER.COM 14 The Symposium at BOTANICAL! Benefits Tulsa Botanic Garden. TULSABOTANIC.ORG Garden Fest Benefits A New Leaf. ANEWLEAF.ORG Herb Day in Brookside Benefits Brookside Business Association. BROOKSIDETHEPLACETOBE.COM ONE Awards Benefits Oklahoma Center for Nonprofits. OKLAHOMACENTERFORNONPROFITS.ORG / CONNECT / ONE-AWARDS
CANSUPERHEROCHALLENGE
10 Redbud Celebration Benefits OK2Grow. OK 2 GROW.ORG 13 Battle of the Bands Benefits Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma. OKFOODBANK.ORG / EVENTS / BATTLE-BANDS
Route 66 Gurney Tourney Benefits Hospitality House of Tulsa. HHTULSA.ORG Rock the House Benefits Tulsa Habitat for Humanity. ROCKTHEHOUSETULSA.ORG Spokeasy Benefits Tulsa Hub. TULSAHUB.ORG / SPOKEASY Tanzanite Nights Benefits MainSprings. TANZANITENIGHTS.COM
Tulsa Boys’ Home Junior Women’s Association Annual Derby Dash 5K Benefits Tulsa Boys’ Home. TULSABOYSHOME.ORG / TULSABOYS / DERBY_ DASH.ASP 19 Appetite for Construction Benefits Home Builders Association Charitable Foundation. TULSAHBACF.COM Embers Benefits Palmer Continuum of Care Inc. PALMER-TULSA.ORG Juliette Low Leadership Society Luncheon Benefits Girl Scouts of Eastern Oklahoma. GSEOK .ORG Step Up to the Plate, Fight ALS Benefits Muscular Dystrophy Association. MDAUSA.ORG 20 CANdlelight Ball Benefits Child Abuse Network. FACEBOOK .COM / CANDLELIGHTBALL 21 Celebrate Cascia Benefits Cascia Hall Preparatory School. CASCIAHALL.COM
24 Empty Bowls Benefits Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma. OKFOODBANK .ORG 26 Legacy Awards Dinner Benefits Greenwood Cultural Center. GREENWOODCULTURALCENTER.COM Spark 2018: Trivia Night Benefits Camp Fire Green Country. TULSACAMPFIRE.ORG / SPARK 2018 27 Conservation on Tap Benefits Tulsa Zoo. TULSAZOO.ORG Rhinestone Cowboy 2018 Benefits Volunteers of America Oklahoma. VOAOK .ORG / RHINESTONECOWBOY 27-28 Philbrook Wine Experience Benefits Philbrook Museum of Art. WINE.PHILBROOK .ORG 27-May 20 Designer Showcase Benefits Foundation for Tulsa Schools. FOUNDATIONFORTULSASCHOOLS.ORG
Heart Walk Benefits American Heart Association. TULSAHEARTWALK .ORG
28 Scholarship Banquet Benefits the Christian Ministers Alliance. THE REV. W.R. CASEY: 918-951-7407
Smoke and Guns V Benefits Oklahoma Firefighters Burn Camp and Oklahoma Special Olympics. OKFFBURNCAMP.ORG AND SOOK .ORG
Soiree en Blu! Spring Fling Benefits Owasso Community Resources. OWASSOHELPS.ORG
Where Hands and Feet Meet 5K Benefits TSHA. TSHA.CC 23 Annual Golf Classic Benefits Indian Nations Council, Boy Scouts of America. OKSCOUTS.ORG / SUPPORT-SCOUTING / GOLF-CLASSIC
30 Golf Tournament Benefits Arts Alliance Tulsa. ARTSTULSA.ORG Musical Mondays Concert Benefits LIFE Senior Services. LIFESENIORSERVICES.ORG
EDITOR’S NOTE: TULSAPEOPLE IS A SPONSOR OF THE HIGHLIGHTED EVENTS.
TulsaPeople.com
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WHERE TO … Group meditation in the chapel at the Osage Forest of Peace
Practice mindfulness When the hustle and bustle of modern life becomes stressful, Tulsans have lots of options to relax.
Osage Forest of Peace Whether meditating in the chapel, raking the traditional Zen garden or chanting in the Cave of the Mothers, guests can experience the beauty of nature at the Osage Forest of Peace, a 45-acre retreat center. From classes to community meditation and prayer to cabins for rent, there’s something for everyone. Visitors can do short sessions or longer retreats, depending on their needs. A labyrinth and woodland trails on the property also make for a peaceful walk. “I was amazed to learn how spending time in meditation each day reframed my outlook on the world and equipped me to handle stressful situations,” says Executive Director Rev. Don Chatfield.
Rates and class times vary. 141 Monastery Road, Sand Springs forestofpeace.org
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St. John’s Center for Spiritual Formation
Tulsa Yoga Meditation Center
For those looking to deepen their personal quiet time, St. John’s Center for Spiritual Formation offers interfaith meditation classes led by Executive Director Sister Ellie Finlay, a solitary nun within the Anglican tradition. The Foundations in Meditative Practice course teaches the basics, then participants can take ongoing classes. “The human mind works pretty much the same way regardless of belief system,” Finlay says. “Each person is able to use that understanding to deepen the spiritual practice he or she already has.”
“Yoga and meditation are two sides of the same coin,” says Victor Parachin, director of the Tulsa Yoga Meditation Center. “Yoga prepares the body to sit quietly; meditation increases awareness so that one is more mindful when doing yoga practice.” He teaches the traditional principles for meditation and yoga based on ancient Vedic and Buddhist texts. The Wednesday group meditation class at 7 p.m. is the perfect starting point, Parachin says. TP
$85 for a six-week course. Pre-registration required. Times vary. 5840 S. Memorial Drive, Suite 305 sjcenter.com
$15, drop-in rate. Class times vary. 5319 S. Sheridan Road tulsayogameditationcenter.com
OSAGE FOREST OF PEACE: VALERIE GRANT
BY ABIGAIL SINGREY
a physician-owned hospital
Sixteen years ago a group of quality-minded Tulsa physicians had the vision for a new hospital that would provide the exceptional care and personalized service that their patients deserved. We are pleased to announce that their efforts continue today as Oklahoma Surgical Hospital has received a five-star rating from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). CMS’ new Overall Hospital Quality Star Rating combines 64 quality measures into one consumer friendly rating that is available on their Hospital Compare website. Oklahoma Surgical Hospital is one of only 84 hospitals in the nation to receive this prestigious rating.
81st & Lewis | Cit yPlex Tower s | 918-477-5000 | oklahomasurgicalhospital.com
NOTEBOOK B Y MORGAN PHILLIP S A ND JULIE WENGER WATS ON
USA BMX SEEKS NEW RACERS
Dance team is Tulsan’s dream
The spring season of the BMX Racing League starts April 3, and USA BMX Chief Marketing Officer Rob Gardenhire says it’s a great opportunity to introduce the whole family to BMX. The five-week season is aimed at teaching beginning riders, including children, the basics of the sport. Gardenhire says interest in BMX has picked up nationally since its debut at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. At the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Americans Connor Field and Alise Post Willoughby won gold and silver medals, respectively. Many Tulsans are taking notice because of USA BMX’s plans to build an indoor Tulsa track and move its national headquarters and hall of fame here in late 2019. USA BMX hopes to capitalize on local interest through the racing league, which also will have a fall season, according to Gardenhire. “The goal is to get kids and their parents excited about BMX,” he says.
As a member of Jackson State University’s Prancing J-Settes, Dr. Shavonda LaKay Pannell learned firsthand the positive power of dance. “Jackson, Mississippi, had a lot of community dance teams,” says Pannell, a Tulsa native. “After I left Jackson, I really wanted to bring something like that back home for young ladies in the community. I knew I wanted to be able to give back to young ladies in a positive way, and I know dance helps build character and self-awareness.” With the debut of “Bring It!,” a popular dance reality TV series, Pannell saw her opportunity. The program showcases the community majorette dance teams in the South, specifically the Dancing Dolls of Jackson under the direction of Dianna Williams. “Once the show came out, and (Williams) exposed the world to the majorette dance style known as ‘bucking,’ I felt it was safe to introduce that style to Tulsa.” In 2015, the nonprofit Prancing Pearls of Excellence was born. Girls ages 12-18 go through a rigorous audition to make the team. As members, they’re expected to maintain their GPA, attend practice three days a week, display good social media etiquette and travel to competitions throughout the season. “The best part of my job is seeing their growth as dancers and as young ladies — seeing them become more confident and aware of who they are,” says Pannell, the team’s head coach. “I’m proud to be a mentor to them.” — JULIE WENGER WATSON
April 3-May 3 USABMX SPRING RACING LEAGUE For children ages 4-15 and parents age 25 and up. 6-7:30 p.m., Tuesdays and Thursdays. Sand Springs BMX, 2600 S. River City Park Road, Sand Springs. $130 per rider; loaner bikes and helmets available. Visit bmxracingleague.com or sandspringsbmx.com.
DOCU-SERIES ROADTRIPS THROUGH TULSA In January a Texas family set out on a yearlong, cross-country road trip to “serve as a catalyst for reconciliation and unity in America.” Their first stop? Tulsa. Erin and David Leaverton and their three children spent eight days meeting Tulsans and documenting their stories for their docu-series project “Undivided Nation.” Read about the family’s visit to Tulsa and follow their trip at undividednation.us. 16
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
Voices of Oklahoma “(Woody Guthrie) had a very tough life. And yet, out of all of it, he overcame sadness and tragedy with humor. Woody had a tremendous sense of humor, and that I appreciate. If we don’t have any humor, we don’t have anything left.” — The late Guy Logsdon, music historian, musician, and University of Tulsa librarian and professor. Logsdon died Feb. 5 at age 83. “Voices of Oklahoma” is an oral history project supported by the Oklahoma Center for the Humanities at the University of Tulsa. John Erling founded the project in 2009.
USABMX: MIKE CARRUTH/BMX NEWS; PRANCING PEARLS: VALERIE GRANT; VOICES: GUYLOGSDON.COM
Dr. Shavonda Pannell, left, is the founder and head coach of the Prancing Pearls of Excellence.
“one big party that helps fund world - class animal habitats” - Tulsa zoo
tulsa zoo
a waltz on the wild side production in association with major sponsors harold and edna white charitable foundation, john steele zink foundation, SUPPORTING SPONSORS helmerich & payne, inc., ONEOK, osage casino hotel, PRICE FAMILY PROPERTIES, HANNAH and JOE ROBSON, ANDREW and HOLLY RYAN, STAVA BUILDING CORP MUSICBY professor d FOODBY local favorite restaurants DANCINGBY you! SPECIAL THANKS to these zoo partners for building a better zoo through their continued support presents
THE H.A. AND MARY K. CHAPMAN CHARITABLE TRUST
NO ONE UNDER 21 ADMITTED WINE, BEER, AND SOME FESTIVE COCKTAILS
THE HELMERICH TRUST
COMING SOON 6.15.2018 waltzonthewildside.org
CHANGEMAKERS
A NEW TUNE
Teresa Knox is breathing new life into the Church Studio and East Third Street.
S
omething exciting is happening for the Tulsa music industry, and Teresa Knox is at the heart of it. In 2016, Knox purchased Leon Russell’s former recording studio, housed in a 1915 church at East Th ird Street and South Trenton Avenue. Now she is restoring the Church Studio to its former status as a working, world-class recording studio to open in early 2019. “Honestly, I’m obsessed with getting it perfect, where all stakeholders’ expectations are exceeded,” says Knox, referring to the music community, the neighborhood, and Russell’s family and friends. For the project, Knox — who is the founder of Community Care College, Clary Sage College and Oklahoma Technical College — enlisted the help of architect Chris Lilly and three consultants, Chad Hailey, Steven Durr and David Cherry, who are recording studio experts.
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TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
Along with renovations to the existing Church Studio, an addition will include a gallery, dressing rooms, restrooms, storage space and a service elevator. An outdoor courtyard/performance space also will be added. While the Church Studio has an historic musical past — Knox recently finalized its addition to the National Historic Register — developing its future is just as important to her. “I’ve met so many incredible people during this process,” she says. “I interviewed over 200 people as part of my research to get to the truth and capture it in a way that can be loved and shared for generations to come. “Honoring Leon’s legacy through restoring the Church Studio has been one of the greatest honors of my life,” Knox adds. “Th is not only pays tribute to Leon’s brilliance, but it also gives a new generation of musicians and fans an opportunity to be inspired.” TP
It isn’t just the Church Studio that Teresa Knox is re-imagining, but the entire area. Originally, Leon Russell owned 14 buildings surrounding the Church Studio that were used as office space and lodging for employees and musicians, Knox says. Similarly, she has purchased 11 of the surrounding lots or structures, including the former headquarters — and now satellite gallery — of Garden Deva Sculpture Co., with plans to create a vibrant district surrounding the Church Studio. Just down the street on Third is the recently opened Teegarden Studio, owned by David Teegarden Sr., former Grammy Award-winning drummer for Bob Seger. “Teresa is a real sparkplug on that Third Street corridor between Utica and Peoria Avenues,” Teegarden says. “We, Teresa and I, are referring to it as ‘Studio Row.’”
VALERIE GRANT
‘STUDIO ROW’ TAKES SHAPE
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ARTIST SPOTLIGHT Matt Phipps photographed Tulsa landmarks and Tulsan Nicci Atchley for the book.
From
‘SHOW THY SELF’ to ‘KNOW THY SELF’
NEW TRICKS Local woodturner uses art to support charity. BY JOSEPH PRICE
S
ome artists spend a lifetime perfecting their craft. Others start in their 60s. Local woodturner Ken Hager waited until retirement to pursue his lifelong dream. Hager had always been fascinated by the works of art that could come from a raw piece of wood. But leading a 43-year career in health care administration and raising a family left him little time for hobbies. After retiring as vice president of Saint Francis Hospital, Hager asked himself, “What do you want to do with the rest of your life?” Enrolling in a woodworking class at Tulsa Tech, Hager decided, “An old dog can learn new tricks.” Now with more than two decades of experience in his craft, Hager finds artistic satisfaction by discovering beauty in unexpected places. “I love going to the city dump to find a piece of wood that someone has discarded and turning it into a lovely piece of art that will last for decades,” Hager says. “Many times you don’t know what’s going to come from it. Sometimes you have
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to start turning and see what the wood will allow you to do.” Hager’s craft also has given him opportunities to support charitable causes. Ornate wooden bowls crafted by Hager and other members of the Northeastern Oklahoma Wood Turners Association will be available for purchase through the live and silent auctions at this month’s Empty Bowls Dinner. Proceeds will benefit the Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma. “Our woodturning club has donated pieces to the food bank for over 10 years,” he says. “It’s such a great organization that we are delighted to donate to.” TP April 24
EMPTY BOWLS HUNGER AWARENESS DINNER
5:15 p.m., doors open; 7 p.m., dinner. Cox Business Center, 100 Civic Center. $75, tickets; $1,000-$25,000, sponsorships. Benefits Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma. okfoodbank.org/events/emptybowls
ARTIST SPOTLIGHT: GREG BOLLINGER
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ictoria McArtor, co-founder of the MUSED organization, set out to explore her relationship with social media by writing 30 poems in 30 days. The project ultimately became the book “Reverse Selfie,” which published in January and features the photography of Matt Phipps. As a millennial, McArtor says she struggles with social media’s focus on self because it can breed narcissism. “Narcissists aren’t good for society,” she says. “How do you engage in social media responsibly without it becoming an unhealthy habit?” While the book was in progress, the philosophy behind its poems inspired a spin-off program called the Reverse Selfie Project for middle- and high-schoolers in Tulsa Public Schools. McArtor and other professionals lead a sixweek creative-and-critical-thinking workshop that helps students look beyond “surface level” and analyze their inner selves through poetry. At press time, the program had reached 100 students. The locally published “Reverse Selfie” book is available for $18 at retailers such as Dwelling Spaces, Decopolis and Magic City Books and at musedorganization.org. All proceeds support the Reverse Selfie Project in TPS. — MORGAN PHILLIPS
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CONVERSATIONS
FROM A CORNED BEEF CONCESSION TO STOCK MARKET SUCCESS Tulsan Sid Shupack has a lifelong love of finance and U.S. presidents. BY DOUG EATON
S
id Shupack is a self-admitted entrepreneur at heart, with a deep-seated fondness for finance and a penchant for making money. From starting a corned beef sandwich concession business in college to founding First State Investment Advisors Inc. to heading his investment management firm, he says his priority has always been customer service. Shupack earned his bachelor’s degree in business administration at the University of Oklahoma and studied postgraduate law at the University of Tulsa. He started his career at Walston, a brokerage firm, in 1959 and later worked at A.G. Edwards and Sons and Merrill Lynch before starting First State in 1971, where he currently serves as president and chairman. How did your college corned beef concession come about? Living in the fraternity house at OU, I thought of ways to make money. Of course, all the kids would get hungry at night. I asked our housemother if I could use the refrigerator. I would buy the corned beef and bread, then make the sandwiches, add a dill pickle and chips and charge them a buck. I made some good money. At First State you have developed an investment strategy called “The Gold Chip Standard.” How would you describe it? It’s our proprietary investment strategy where we target primarily high-quality, large-cap stocks that exhibit strong, long-term industry growth, led by outstanding management and with a dividend payout ratio of at least 20 percent. We have developed our own proprietary software to aid our research. What do you think accounted for the stock market’s remarkable rise in 2017? Coming into office, President (Donald) Trump promised to do the most important thing that would impact the stock market; that is, to lower taxes. Previously corporations paid a 35 percent tax rate. The laws changed it to 21 percent. That has a huge impact on earnings. Plus, the market likes fewer regulations. Cutting red tape is a big plus for businesses and thus a big plus for the market.
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Sid Shupack in his office at First State Investment Advisors
What’s your outlook for 2018? We experienced a 10 percent market correction in early February, which rallied to about a 5 percent correction. It’s a cautious time to invest. The public needs much more education on why they need to buy or not buy a particular stock or mutual fund and why a stock price goes up and down. People need to understand what they are paying for. You keep busy in various charitable organizations and pursuing several hobbies. I’ve always been involved some way with the Tulsa Area
United Way by being a member of the Alexis de Tocqueville Society. I served on the board with the Tulsa Zoo Friends for years. I was in Rotary Club of Tulsa for many years. I enjoy traveling with my wife, Susan, taking cruises. I am an avid reader. I enjoy reading history and anything about the presidents. I have over a thousand books at home, with over 300 on the presidents. I’m always reading something on economics and finance. I played tournament racquetball for 25 years. It kept me in shape. TP
SPONSORED EDITORIAL
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“Surprisingly Easy” Banking for the Next Generation of Business Owners
Tom Biolchini, Chairman
In 1982 Bob Biolchini was a founding member of Valley National Bank after a few key people had taken a chance on him, and he had the desire to pay it forward. He began with a vision of helping local entrepreneurs grow their businesses and an intentional philosophy of serving those who often didn’t meet the requirements of larger banks. Although Bob passed away this November, his family remains as committed as ever to continuing the work he started nearly four decades ago. Today, Valley National Bank is one of the few remaining family-owned, multigenerational financial institutions in northeast Oklahoma. Bob’s legacy of service continues to drive the VNB team through the leadership of his youngest son, Tom Biolchini. Recently elected chairman of the board, Tom is honored to lead the bank into its next chapter. “Our family is excited and proud to continue Dad’s legacy, and we intend to build on what he started. We are here to stay and look forward to taking care of our customers and friends for generations to come,” Tom said.
As many family-owned banks are being acquired up by larger institutions, Valley is stepping on the gas. Bank leadership has plans underway to ensure the best possible experiences for their customers. Chief Executive Officer Brad Scrivner believes Valley is well-positioned to serve the next generation of families and businesses. “Tom and I worked closely together over the last five years, and I’m confident that we will accomplish our vision of making banking surprisingly easy for our customers and communities over the coming generations. We are excited about Valley National Bank’s future, and customers can expect exciting news in the coming months that will enhance their experience and demonstrate our ongoing commitment to our communities,” Scrivner said. Valley National Bank is a family-owned, multigenerational financial institution based in northeast Oklahoma that takes pride in personalized customer service, flexibility, trust, and community involvement. VNB continues to build on a legacy of strength and integrity for
its customers by offering unique products, competitive rates, and quick, local decision-making that has helped it stand apart. Valley National Bank is committed to its neighbors, friends and local communities. VNB employees are active throughout Green Country and support many causes including the United Way, South Grand Lake Lions Club, Tulsa Day Center for the Homeless, Catholic Charities, Oklahoma Project Woman and the Salvation Army. And rumor has it, you may even see them sponsoring live music on the infamous Cry Baby Hill at Saint Francis Tulsa Tough.
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BIZ WHIZ
Michael Hughett and his collection of golf awards
Better
Deana McCloud of the Woody Guthrie Center and Mark Steele of Steelehouse stand on the center’s replica front porch, where visitors will be able to experience the Dust Bowl in virtual reality starting April 23. The experience is part of the Woody Guthrie Center’s fifth anniversary celebration. Visit woodyguthriecenter.org for a full schedule of activities and events.
IMMERSIVE HISTORY Firm’s VR work takes Woody Guthrie Center visitors back to Dust Bowl. BY TIM LANDES
T
his spring, visitors to the Woody Guthrie Center will have the opportunity to relive the day the Dust Bowl began in a virtual reality experience created by Tulsa based-company Steelehouse. Firm co-founder Mark Steele says users will sit on a replica front porch and wear a VR headset. “From that moment, you are sent back in time to Black Sunday: April 14, 1935,” he says. “From the perspective of that front porch, you experience the moment the dust storm overtakes the panhandle in visceral sensory detail, as if you are there.” The VR experience, which is part of the Woody Guthrie Center’s fifth anniversary celebration April 21-29, is narrated by Oklahoma icon Michael Wallis. It will fit in seamlessly with the permanent exhibit that shares information about
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the Dust Bowl and how it shaped Guthrie’s life. “The experience of seeing those storms and the impact on those who were displaced because of the devastation was the catalyst that made Woody a spokesperson for his people,” says Deana McCloud, executive director of the Woody Guthrie Center. Steelehouse’s creations are not limited to Tulsa. The 19-year-old company is currently in production for a “Transformers” multimedia installation that will launch in China later this year. The company also has launched multiple games and augmented reality experiences for mobile devices. “Our team is already blowing minds with the innovative VR/AR work it is creating for our clients, so we are poised to blow the doors off as the medium grows into a phenomenon,” Steele says. TP
For 50 years, Michael Hughett has played a lot of golf and won a lot of tournaments. His 2016 victory in the Oklahoma State Golf Association’s Senior Stroke Play Championship at Meadowbrook Country Club made it his 19th OSGA title, which is the most in association history. That championship came 30 years after his first win, an OSGA State Stroke Play Championship at Tulsa Country Club. Originally from Lincoln, Nebraska, Hughett started playing golf at age 9. Following high school, he played for Oral Roberts University for three years before transferring to Nebraska, where he redshirted one year before finishing his college career. For the past 20 years, Hughett has worked for NORDAM, where he serves as the chief financial officer. He rarely has time to play a round on a weekday, but he always finds time to hit the links on the weekend at Owasso Golf and Athletic Club, where he has been a member since 1999. Hughett has qualified for the U.S. Senior Championship five times, but has never been able to get past the third round. Just one more match, and he’d receive an automatic qualifier to the next one instead of earning it through competition. He typically plays in six to 10 tournaments a year, and his goal is to play at least 10 this year. “The competition keeps me motivated to always get better,” Hughett says. “I don’t let age get in the way of that.” — TIM LANDES
BIZ WHIZ: VALERIE GRANT; HUGHETT: GREG BOLLINGER
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PASSIONS
COUPLE’S VOLUNTEERISM CELEBRATED
Participants in the Youth At Heart tennis program
Community youth program builds values on the tennis court. BY JOSEPH PRICE
S
with our organizational philosophy that tennis ince 2005, Tulsa’s Youth At Heart oris a vehicle for supporting participants’ positive ganization has partnered with the U.S. character development,” Finley says. Tennis Association, using tennis to “Playing tennis taught me teach character lessons to stuhow to work hard to win,” says dents from socio-economically APRIL 6 — YAH participant Michael B. challenged neighborhoods. MIRROR MIRROR GALA The association funds train“I never thought that I would 6-9 p.m. DoubleTree by Hilton learn this much just from playing for YAH staff, ACEs (AdHotel Tulsa-Warren Place, ing tennis.” verse Childhood Experiences) 6110 S. Yale Ave. Dress is “Tennis helped me learn curriculum, tennis equipment sports-themed; wear a jersey good sportsmanship and good and marketing materials. from your favorite team. As a result, “The participants manners and working coopera$75, tickets; $500-$15,000, are able to learn the fundamentively with other teammates … I sponsorships. have learned to respect others,” tal skills of the lifelong sport Benefits Youth At Heart. adds Nate S., another YAH of tennis,” says Marquetta Visit youthatheart.org/gala. student. Finley, YAH director of develTh is month’s Mirror Mirror opment. “Positive values such as good sportsmanship, commitment and propGala is YAH’s annual fundraiser, which helps support its afterschool programs like tennis erly handling adversity are reinforced through and its summer enrichment programs. Finley each student’s involvement with the program.” says, “Our goal is to ensure we provide a place Nearly 100 YAH students participated in for students to go after school to engage in 2017, many of whom played multiple times per positive, constructive behavior and opportuniweek at LaFortune Park, Philcrest Hills, Lacy Park and elementary schools. ties that result in their academic achievement and success.” TP “The Tennis Association’s philosophy aligns
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For Tulsans David Hogan and June Patton, volunteering is simply a way of life. They have volunteered for CASA, Resonance Center for Women, Youth Services of Tulsa, the YWCA, Tulsa Ballet, Saint Simeon’s, Tulsa Girls’ Art School, Tulsa Women’s Connection and Clarehouse. This month, the couple will be honored as 2018 Premier Volunteers at Volunteers of America Oklahoma’s fundraiser, Rhinestone Cowboy. The event coincides with the 25th anniversary of Volunteers of America Oklahoma. “I have been volunteering most of my adult life, 50-plus years,” says Hogan, a founding partner of HoganTaylor. He says he “mainly volunteers with agencies that serve the disadvantaged.” He is in his second year tutoring a second-grader, also named David, through Reading Partners. Patton, account manager at L & M Furniture, says her mother instilled in her the importance of volunteering. Now, she says, “I volunteer for many reasons and feel all of the organizations that I have helped have impacted their clients beyond what I could have imagined. “My heart for Resonance has been touched the most by seeing how these women coming out of prison, with the help of Resonance, have turned their lives around,” Patton says. “It’s powerful.” — JUDY LANGDON
April 27 — Rhinestone Cowboy 6 p.m. Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N. Main St. Dinner, drinks, live auction, country music and dancing. $90-$1,000, tickets; sponsorships available. Benefits Volunteers of America Oklahoma. voaok.org
PASSIONS: VALERIE GRANT; PATTON AND HOGAN: JOHN BIVENS IMAGES
SERVING CHARACTER
June Patton and David Hogan
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Night of Dreams Night of Dreams, a Feb. 22 gala at the Oaks Country Club, raised financial support for the L.I.F.E. (Literacy Is For Everyone) program at the Tulsa Dream Center. L.I.F.E. is an afterschool and summer reading program for at-risk youth in north Tulsa. Gala patrons enjoyed a plated dinner, live music from “The Voice” alumnus and Tulsa native Brian Nhira, and a silent auction. 1. Back row, Tulsa Dream Center supporters Denise Geuder, Katy Schmelz, Carmen Cavanaugh and Lauren Beach; Sarah Ingle and Molly Ford of the Tulsa Dream Center; and supporters Jodi Conneely and Bethany White; front row, Tim Newton of the Tulsa Dream Center, Amber Johnson and Aaron Johnson of the Tulsa Dream Center 2. Brian Nhira and his band performed at the gala. 3. Patrons Byron and Jennifer Bighorse of Osage Casinos, a Night of Dreams sponsor, and Aaron Johnson of the Tulsa Dream Center
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Icons and Idols
1. Sheri Stinson, event chairwoman, and Betsy Hendershot, event co-chair 2. Patrons Bonnie Klein and Pat Gordon 3. Guest artists from the Tulsa Ballet’s production of “Strictly Gershwin” 4. Dancers from TB II performed portions of “Strictly Gershwin.” 5. A classic Rolls-Royce inside the Cox Business Center added to the evening’s vintage vibe.
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NIGHT OF DREAMS: CODY APPLEGATE; ICONS AND IDOLS: STEVEN MICHAEL HALL AND TOM GILBERT
Icons and Idols: The Golden Age of Gershwin took Tulsa Ballet supporters back to an era of Hollywood glamour Feb. 3 at the Cox Business Center. More than 500 patrons enjoyed big band music, stunning fashion and a special performance by Tulsa Ballet’s TBII, with choreography by Derek Deane. Music was provided by the Tulsa Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Gareth Valentine. Icons and Idols raised $1.34 million for the Tulsa Ballet.
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Puttin’ on the Dog The smooth sounds of local band Double Treble welcomed patrons to LIFE Senior Services’ annual Puttin’ on the Dog gala Feb. 22 at the Cox Business Center. Highlights of the evening included dinner by chef Devin Levine, live and silent auctions, a wine pull, and a video demonstrating LIFE’s impact on senior citizens in the community. KOTV reporter Amy Kauffman was the night’s emcee.
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JOHN BLEVINS IMAGES
1. Jessica Vagin, Tammy Brown and Jessica Bolen, who all work for POTD sponsor Montereau 2. Wilson Conde, Carmela Hill and Vashonda Sherra of Double Treble 3. Joe Mathis and Todd Wade of Rumbledrum planned the décor with flowers from Messages Floral. 4. Patrons bid on items in the silent auction. 5. Board member Scott Shepherd presented the scope of LIFE’s services in 2017.
Fiestivale
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1. The Fiestivale committee wore their “1920s best” to the speakeasythemed fundraiser. 2. Committee member Carla Munozcano hung the self-portraits of Eisenhower students at the Greenwood Cultural Center. 3. The event also featured music by Daniel Jordan, a photobooth, karaoke and dancing. 4. Erin Brown of EB2 Events and the Eisenhower PTA were responsible for the event decor.
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ERIN BROWN AND CHELSEA SCHUMANN
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Eisenhower International School celebrated its 20th annual Fiestivale fundraiser Feb. 24 at the Greenwood Cultural Center. Some 450 patrons celebrated the theme “A Night at the Speakeasy” with food, drinks and dancing. The school raised money for its classrooms by auctioning more than 60 gift baskets and a selection of travel and experience packages. Parents also were given the opportunity to purchase a self-portrait created by their child and bid on class projects.
april 13 & 14
The Symposium at Botanical! The Cuisine of France in History & The Tasting
Saturday, April 14, 2018, 9am-1:30pm visit www.botanicaltulsa.org to purchase tickets
The Bazaar at Botanical! stroll among eclectic vendors in a french-style street market
Saturday, April 14, 2018, 10am-5pm visit www.botanicaltulsa.org or call 918-289-0330 for more information and a full list of weekend events.
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LEGENDS
PAT WOODRUM Native Kansan championed Tulsa’s library system and botanic garden. BY GAIL BANZET-ELLIS
O
n the heels of graduate school at the age of 23, Pat Woodrum began her career at the Tulsa City-County Library. She spent the next 32 years working in nearly every area of the system and was executive director for two decades. But Woodrum, 76, is known for much more than her service as Tulsa’s lead librarian. She’s a master gardener, cook, wife, mother, friend and philanthropist. Woodrum was one of the founders of the Tulsa Botanic Garden and served as its executive director for seven years. A book lover and writer, the library brought her to Tulsa, but she stayed because of its people and a community she grew to love. WHERE DID YOU GO TO UNIVERSITY? WHY? I started at Parsons Junior College (Labette Community College) and went on to Pittsburg State Teachers College (Pittsburg State University). There was never any doubt, because of my parents, that I would go on and get a college degree. When I was 15, I started working in the Parsons Public Library, and it was then I decided I wanted to be a librarian. In order to be a librarian, I went to the University of Oklahoma for a master’s degree in library science. WHAT WAS ONE OF YOUR MOST DEFINING MOMENTS IN LIFE? When I married Clayton. I first met him when I was 14, and we were married when we were in college. It was a very good decision. We have many like interests, and our careers and community activities have complemented one another. We feel blessed because we have been married for 56 years and have one son, Clay, and two grandsons, Trey and Taylor.
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WHAT AGE DO YOU FEEL RIGHT NOW AND WHY? I feel mentally that I’m 40, and it’s because I’m still very much involved in the Tulsa City-County Library and the Tulsa Botanic Garden as well as a lot of other community activities — for instance, Iron Gate. I have several writing projects in process. I love to garden and cook, and I compiled a cookbook of recipes for family and friends. YOU STARTED WORKING IN THE PARSONS LIBRARY AT AGE 15. WHAT INTERESTED YOU ABOUT LIBRARIES AT A YOUNG AGE? I was 4 years old when my father first took me to a public library. He and my mother were great readers. We would go to a secondhand store, and our parents would let us pick out any used books that we wanted, and we read a lot in our home. HOW WOULD YOUR FRIENDS DESCRIBE YOU? That’s a hard question to answer. Several of my longtime friends say I’m loyal, caring, intelligent and giving. I’m a strong moral compass, organizer, planner and leader. WHAT WOULD PEOPLE BE SURPRISED TO KNOW ABOUT YOU? They’d be surprised to know that I almost always have some reading material or a book in my handbag. I just have to do something with my time. I experience a great sense of insecurity if I don’t have three or four new books at the house or with me when I’m traveling. WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE GENRE OR TYPE OF BOOK? It’s primarily fiction, all types. I like historical novels. I try to read anything with an interesting plot or an author that I like that’s on the New York Times bestseller list. I don’t often read brandnew authors until they’ve been out a while. Isabel Allende is one of many favorite authors. IS THERE A LIBRARY PROGRAM YOU’RE PARTICULARLY PROUD OF? When I was executive director of the library, Peggy Helmerich helped me develop an endowment. In return, I wanted to do something to thank her for it. We started the Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award that once a year brings in an outstanding author who has made a major contribution to literature. There’s a black-tie dinner on the main floor of the library followed with a public program the next morning. When we started it, we could offer a $5,000 honorarium, and the honorarium now is $40,000. The author would spend several days in Tulsa, so I got to spend that time with the author. That has been a real privilege to meet those people over the years. IF YOU COULD RELIVE A MEMORY FROM THE PAST, WHAT WOULD IT BE? We moved here in 1964 when the Central Library was under construction. I helped move into that building from the old Carnegie building, which was at Third and Cheyenne. The night of the opening for the public, the plaza area between the courthouse and the library was set up with chairs and the building was dark. Gov. Henry Bellmon was the speaker that night, and at the conclusion of his talk he got on the phone
“I was 4 years old when my father first took me to a public library. He and my mother were great readers. We would go to a secondhand store, and our parents would let us pick out any used books that we wanted, and we read a lot in our home.” and called the director of NASA in Washington, D.C. The director turned on the building lights via a signal transmitted from Washington to Tulsa by satellite. Nobody had ever seen anything like that before!
family traditions in that building. We’d always go there for brunch with our son after church, and the Helmerich Christmas party was always up there. Thinking about it brings back a lot of memories of people who are no longer with us.
WHAT WAS A “WORST TIME” AND HOW DID YOU PULL THROUGH IT? When our son was 18 months old, he contracted spinal meningitis and was in St. John’s in quarantine. He was in a coma, and doctors didn’t give us very much hope that he would ever pull through it. After about a week and a half, I just left the hospital and went home and sat by myself and prayed. I don’t know how many hours I prayed. The phone rang, and I was told to return to the hospital because he was coming out of the coma and I could hold him. It took a couple of months for him to fully recover, but he did. I believe in prayer, which has helped me in many difficult situations.
DESCRIBE A PERFECT WEEKEND IN TULSA OR ELSEWHERE. It’s a Sunday where we go to church and then to brunch, and if it’s a nice day we go out and spend time at the Botanic Garden. Then, almost every Sunday we have a family dinner at our house. Our son lives six blocks away. One grandson is just graduating from Baylor and is going to get a master’s at OU in library science. My youngest grandson is a freshman at TU.
WHAT KEEPS YOU AWAKE AT NIGHT? I very seldom have that problem. HOW DO YOU MEASURE SUCCESS? Anything that can help make life a little better for someone else or to make the world a better place — being able to do any of those things, that’s an achievement and success. WHAT IS A FAVORITE TULSA MEMORY? The Tulsa Club building at Third and Cincinnati has been empty for probably 20 years. In its heyday, it had a private club and was a place where a lot of the oilmen stayed when they were in town. There was a gentleman’s floor, which I helped break the “glass ceiling” in, and then other floors, but the top floor was open like a ballroom. We had a lot of wonderful
WHAT HAVE BEEN THE MOST SIGNIFICANT CHANGES YOU’VE EXPERIENCED IN TULSA? They’ve been due to advances in technology. I think it was probably in the mid-’80s when the first fax was sent from the Central Library to the OSU Library. A group of us stood around a new fax machine and watched as the send button was pushed. We believed we were seeing the cutting edge of technology, and we were at that time. Today’s newly renovated Central Library is unbelievable in so many ways, but primarily due to the advances in technology. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE THING ABOUT TULSA? The people, without a doubt. I’ve had an opportunity to work with many of the leaders and funders of Tulsa — people like the Zarrows and George Kaiser. I admire so many of them for what they have done for Tulsa and what they do for people. People are giving, and they care about the community and improving people’s lives. That’s the thing that I like most and enjoy being involved in. TP TulsaPeople.com
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Habitat for Humanity has been in Tulsa for 30 years. In December, the organization dedicated its 400th home. Volunteers and homeowners work together to build single-family homes.
HOME MAKERS TULSA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY HAS BUILT MORE THAN 400 HOMES WITH THE HELP OF VOLUNTEERS. BY SARA PLUMMER
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few dozen retired men sit or stand around sipping coffee and lightly ribbing each other about anything and everything. It’s a classic morning scenario seen in donut shops, diners and coffee shops across the country. This one just happens to take place in the living room and kitchen of a home under construction. And these are the Tuesday Morning Miracle Workers, a group of dedicated volunteers who spend two days a week donating their time at Tulsa Habitat for Humanity. Their coffee break over, the men ranging in age from mid-50s to early 90s get back to work installing a wood laminate floor throughout the house. Bill Yeagle, 84, is one of the founding members of the group. He and co-founder Bob Sanborn were looking for something to occupy their time while also serving the community, so they walked into Tulsa Habitat and offered to volunteer regularly on Tuesdays. In just a few months their two-man club grew to about a dozen. Now 25 years later, 35 to 40 retired men, and occasionally women, are a part of the Tuesday Morning Miracle Workers. “I never thought it would turn into what it has become,” Yeagle says. 36
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The Miracle Workers held a variety of day jobs before retiring, including as engineers, mechanics, lawyers, even a computer repair specialist and a former TV meteorologist. The group has been around almost as long as Tulsa Habitat, which is celebrating its 30th year in the community and dedicated its 400th home in December. Cameron Walker, CEO of Tulsa Habitat, says despite the organization’s longevity, it still encounters misconceptions. “We don’t give homes away,” he says. Those who qualify for the Habitat program are the working poor who can’t get financing for a home through the traditional route of a bank or mortgage company. “We stand in the gap between banks and low-income borrowers,” he says. “Our homeowners are all gainfully employed but technically living under the poverty line in Tulsa County.” Those who qualify go through a rigorous Homeowners College with courses on money management, basic home repair, and the mortgage and lending process.
Kent Powers and Bob Sanborn are members of the Tuesday Morning Miracle Workers.
In December, the Stanton family moved into Tulsa Habitat for Humanity’s 400th home.
F Sweat equity is another part of the homeowners’ responsibility. Homeowners must spend 200-250 hours working on the construction of their home or other Tulsa Habitat volunteer opportunities. Todd Klabenes, Tulsa Habitat’s chief operating officer, says volunteers like the Tuesday Morning Miracle Workers are one of the biggest reasons for the organization’s success. “We would look hugely different without volunteers,” he says. “If you could look up the definition of consistent, their picture would be right next to it.” Kent Powers started with the Miracle Workers six years ago. “You don’t have to be a skilled worker; we do on-the-job training,” he says. “It’s the idea of giving back to the community.” Yeagle volunteers at several organizations in addition to Habitat. “If someone isn’t volunteering, they are missing out,” he says. For him, the group has also become a support system. “When you retire, all your work buddies go away. You need to find a new social group. There are also those in the group like me who are widowers. I don’t like sitting in an empty house.” But when it comes down to it, it’s really about people becoming homeowners. “It’s so heartwarming, so rewarding to see a family who never thought they would own their own home,” Yeagle says. “If you come to a home dedication and see the faces of the people receiving the home — that’s the paycheck.” TP Tulsa Habitat for Humanity will host Rock the House 2018, the organization’s revamped annual fundraising gala, at 6 p.m., April 14, at the Cox Business Center, 100 Civic Center. It will include live music, dinner, cocktails and dancing. The event also will honor Heart of Habitat recipients Bo and Carrie Van Pelt and the Jimmie Swindler Spirit Award winner Dennis Lane, president of Thermal Windows. Tickets start at $150, with sponsorship opportunities between $2,000-$20,000. For more information, visit rockthehousetulsa.org.
A FAMILY HOME
or the Stanton family, 2016 was a year of big changes and big challenges. Johnthan and Johnisha Stanton were the parents of one daughter, with another on the way. Their small family nearly doubled when Johnthan’s sister died in a car crash and the Stantons took in her three children. “We were living in a two-bedroom condo. It was pretty packed,” Johnisha says, so the process began for the family of seven to find a larger home. “We tried different lending companies. We knew we needed more space, but financially we weren’t there,” she says. “We kind of needed a miracle.” A friend knew about Tulsa Habitat for Humanity and told her to apply. They were accepted this past summer to be the homeowners of the organization’s 400th home. Johnisha works in early childhood education at the Hutcherson YMCA, and Johnthan recently started his own alterations business, Johnny’s Sewing Co., so after their day jobs they worked on their new home as part of their required sweat equity hours. “You realize how much it takes to put up a house,” Johnthan says, but working on it made it more special when they got to move in right before Christmas. “This is our house. It’s built specifically for our family. It will be in our family for hopefully generations.” Larry Vitt, director of facilities and real estate, has worked at Tulsa Habitat for 18 years and has been present for 350 home dedications, including the Stantons’. “It was a special home in a lot of ways,” Vitt says. “The highlight of that dedication was the family that received that home. It was the perfect family for our 400th home.” Cameron Walker, Tulsa Habitat’s CEO, says that while he’s proud of the milestone, he wishes it had come sooner in the organization’s 30-year history. “We’re building about 20 homes a year, but we get that many applications a week,” Walker says. “The need for quality, low-income housing is big in Tulsa.” The Anne and Henry Zarrow Foundation recognized that need and gave Tulsa Habitat a $6.7 million grant to establish the Boomtown Development Co. “In the next five years, we’ll go from 20 homes in a year to 150 homes a year,” he says, through the continued construction of not only single-family homes, but also the addition of townhomes and multi-family rental units. “There are people who just aren’t ready for homeownership but still need a safe, well-maintained place to live while they reduce their debt and build up credit,” Walker says. Tulsa Habitat also is changing its financing model to better work with banks so financial institutions can offer the funding while Habitat staff still remain handson in servicing the lending, making the most of the well-established relationships between Habitat and its borrowers. Although changes are underway, the mission has stayed the same: to give a hand up, not a hand out. “They’re such an incredible organization to support you,” Johnisha says. “They do their part and they help you do your part. It’s not a handout. We have a second family now: our Habitat family.” TulsaPeople.com
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Nicole Peltier Hall is the owner of the Yoga Room, where she hosts Raven Yoga, a class designed to address the needs of people in recovery.
IT TAKES PRACTICE INCORPORATING YOGA INTO TRADITIONAL ADDICTION RECOVERY HAS SEEN LOCAL SUCCESS. BY KIM BROWN
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or those working to overcome addiction, yoga can be a refreshing and powerful way to reconnect and focus. Yoga for Recovery classes are available at some Tulsa-area nonprofits, a few treatment centers and even traditional yoga studios. Many treatment centers and social service providers have embraced this practice by including yoga and mindfulness classes alongside traditional substance abuse treatment programs. Specialized training for yoga instructors — which can range from $1,000 to $1,200 per session per instructor — is supported by local philanthropic agencies such as the Hardesty Family Foundation, which has grant-funded these programs for nearly three years. “I’ve been practicing yoga for 20 years, and there is empirical evidence that it lowers stress and anxiety, helps with depression and gives people an overall sense of well-being, which are major drivers when dealing with recovery, domestic abuse or post-traumatic stress disorder,” says Michelle Hardesty, executive director of the Hardesty Family Foundation. “What yoga teaches you is that when you’re on your mat, what happens and how you react is the same way you can approach situations when you’re off the mat. You can learn those behaviors and take them out into the real world.”
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One of the agencies the Hardesty Family Foundation funds is 12&12 Addiction Treatment and Recovery Center. Some 22 yoga instructors teach Yoga for Recovery classes to supplement patients’ aftercare, says Brad Collins, the center’s director of community relations, research and efficacy. Collins emphasizes that the center doesn’t advocate yoga as a substitute for other types of professional medical and counseling treatment for addiction, but he believes it can be a helpful tool that can aid a person in recovery. “It’s not this or that; it’s this and that,” he says. “The more types of resources someone has, the more opportunity they have for long-term, sustainable recovery.” Hardesty offers the analogy that recovery is like a piece of Swiss cheese. “If you layer your cheese, eventually all the holes get covered,” she explains. “One is your (addiction recovery) program, one is meditation, another is yoga. It is good to have many support systems in place when dealing with addiction so when one fails or is insufficient you have others as a backup.” Collins says his interest in Yoga for Recovery is personal; he has been in recovery from addiction for 21 years, and he says adding yoga “took my recovery to a new level.” “I became a fan personally, then did the research and the intentional work.” In 2015, 12&12 began offering yoga two to three times a week. Now it offers yoga classes every day and has added meditation classes and a mindfulness-based relapse prevention (MBRP) program. In partnership with the Hardesty Family Foundation, Collins says instructors from places such as Colorado, Washington and San Jose, California, were brought to Tulsa to train 12&12 instructors. “We see the evidence-based value in every single nuance in yoga-based recovery and MBRP we can get our hands on,” he says.
RECOVERY AND FREEDOM Nicole Peltier Hall, owner of the Yoga Room, says her yoga journey led her to Yoga for Recovery. “My story is so different. I started with yoga and then found myself in recovery,” says Peltier Hall, who identifies as a recovering alcoholic. “For me, I’ve been practicing yoga for 20 years, teaching movement for 18 years, and I’ve now been teaching recovery yoga for two. Usually it’s the other way around.” She created a class called Raven Yoga, which she offers for all levels each Sunday at 4:15 p.m. at the Yoga Room. The class focuses on addressing negative or unhealthy habit patterns, and language is geared more toward how participants are living outside of the yoga class. She says the goals at Raven Yoga — the physical expression of recovery — are different than those in a typical yoga class. Peltier Hall says she named the class for the raven — a symbol of freedom and flying. “When I see a bird flying, it represents the ultimate freedom,” she says. “Recovery is rediscovering and uncovering who you really are — as if
Raven Yoga focuses on simple movement and allows students to reflect and tune in to their bodies.
12&12 Addiction and Recovery Center offers daily yoga classes.
you were in a cage. It’s like being a butterfly under a blanket, and when in recovery, you feel finally uncovered.” The class isn’t the typical power yoga or hot yoga class that many people use for physical fitness. People don’t have to bend themselves into difficult poses to participate.“It’s very simple physical movement; we’re really kind,” Peltier Hall says. “People don’t want their butts kicked in recovery — they need it, but they’ll often reject it. So we need to take them where they are willing to go: gentle self-love and reflecting.” Peltier Hall quotes Yoga of 12 Step Recovery creator Nikki Myers: “The issues live in the tissues.” All students have to do is walk through the doors of the Yoga Room, which moved after 17 years to 4329 S. Peoria Ave., Suite 350. Because the students are in recovery, “We protect them in a way,” she says. “The words we use are different. I’m in recovery, so I know what they’re going through.” Hardesty says students of Yoga for Recovery
can use physical challenges they experience in the class to help with life situations. “If you’re holding a pose and it starts to get really uncomfortable, you can hear yourself start to say, ‘I am not good enough. Do I just quit?’” she says. “But you learn those techniques to react to negative stimuli. You start to say, ‘If I just breathe and relax, I know this is only temporary.’ Then you can cope with anything and take that into the real world.” Peltier Hall says Raven Yoga is a powerful tool to help recovering addicts pause, breathe and become tuned into their bodies and minds. It teaches the idea of the “sacred pause” to address cravings, using these moments as an opportunity to make a choice. “In general, people take yoga because they want to be fitter,” she says. “In recovery yoga, it’s reentering the body. When you’re addicted, you leave your body — you leave the building, we like to say. They come here and they don’t know how they feel because they’ve been vacant for so long. Yoga is coming home.” TP TulsaPeople.com
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PROTECTING T MOST INNOCE
Therapy dogs like Nala accompany child abuse victims to court appearances through the Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office Special Dog Unit. The program started in 2010, and prosecutors applaud its benefits to victims, who are more at ease with a canine companion.
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THE ENT AMONG US Child abuse and neglect seem to have spiked in Tulsa County, but funding limits the services that could aid prevention. STORIES BY MORGAN PHILLIPS
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n Tulsa County, substantiated cases of child abuse and neglect jumped 102 percent from 2012-16, according to data from the Oklahoma Department of Human Services. That’s nearly double the statewide increase experienced over the same period. Local child welfare experts, including OKDHS officials, say it’s difficult to know the specific reasons for this spike. Anna America, CEO of Child Abuse Network, says citizens, who are mandated by law to report suspected child abuse and neglect, might be doing so with more frequency. Ashleigh Kraft, clinical director for the Parent Child Center of Tulsa, suggests the rise could correspond to the 2012 implementation of OKDHS’ Pinnacle Plan, a five-year blueprint to improve Oklahoma’s child welfare services. One thing is certain: The professionals interviewed don’t expect to see the pattern quickly reverse. “When we look at the current challenges families face, we don’t see protective factors improving,” Ashleigh Kraft explains. All agree that when social services for adults, including services addressing mental health and substance abuse, are cut at the state level, children pay a price. OKDHS has been one of the agencies hardest hit by the state’s revenue shortfall in recent years. Since Fiscal Year 2015, its budget has been slashed by more than $100 million. As a result, foster care and adoptive reimbursement rates have been reduced, the agency has lost more than 1,200 employees — including child care licensing and mentoring staff — and education programs for child care workers have been cut. Sarah McAmis, assistant district attorney for Tulsa County, has prosecuted child abuse and neglect cases for 23 years. She says, “Every single time I hear about the state budget cuts to social service agencies, it absolutely horrifies me because these families are not going to get the assistance they need, and children will suffer as a result.”
NEGLECT VS. ABUSE
The majority of OKDHS cases, including those in Tulsa County, are related to child neglect. In the most severe neglect cases, a child might die or experience significant medical issues, according to Cpl. Mark Kraft, detective for the Tulsa Police Department’s Child Crisis Unit. In those cases, he says charges are filed and warrants issued for the child’s guardians. Sometimes a child is not in imminent danger, but there might be no food in the home or substandard living conditions. In these situations, charges might not be appropriate, so OKDHS works to connect the family with in-home services that might include education, therapy, public assistance programs or court-ordered addiction treatment. But child abuse is clearly a problem, and troubling patterns do emerge, say McAmis and Mark Kraft. Tulsans have heard this scenario on the evening news many times: A mother leaves her child with someone who is not equipped to be a caregiver, and the child is abused or even killed as a result. “I would venture to say that in physical abuse cases especially, 75 to 80 percent (of the time) the perpetrator is Mom’s boyfriend or a stepdad or a non-family member who’s not related or associated with the child,” Mark Kraft says. Often the perpetrator has a history of violence, sexual crimes or drug abuse, and many are under the influence at the time of abuse, Kraft says. Anna America points out that one of the greatest risk factors for becoming an abuser is having been abused as a child. The mothers in these situations might have been well-intentioned or desperate for child care, but they have not done their due diligence to ensure their children’s safety, Mark Kraft says. A mother can be charged if investigators feel most people under the same circumstances would have TulsaPeople.com
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BEST INVESTMENT
With many successes to date, the George Kaiser Family Foundation has long focused on improving early childhood education in Tulsa. More recently, that focus has recognized the critical importance of parents. The foundation’s latest initiative, the Birth through Eight Strategy for Tulsa (BEST), has this lofty goal: to help families break the intergenerational cycle of poverty in Tulsa by connecting them with programs, services and community agencies to build opportunity. Such dramatic change requires dramatic funding. Blue Meridian Partners is a philanthropic collaboration of individuals and institutions investing in social change on an unprecedented scale. This partnership of impact-driven philanthropists is seeking to change the odds for U.S. children and youth living in poverty, according to Sophia Pappas, BEST managing director at the GKFF. By investing $31 million over two years to help fund the first phase of BEST, Blue Meridian Partners will be able to learn what elements of the strategy work in concert with one another, Pappas says. Additionally, BEST will connect Tulsa families with programs and services that are evidence-based programs of other Blue Meridian Partners grantees. Pappas says approximately 40,000 children under age 9 are living in or near poverty in Tulsa County. Over the course of 10 years, BEST is projected to reach 80 percent of these children annually. BEST wants to move the dial forward in four areas in Tulsa with increasing the percentages of healthy births, children raised in safe and nurturing homes, children ready for kindergarten and children achieving success by third grade. It aims to do so by increasing access to quality programs and services from preconception through age 8; providing individualized, ongoing navigation support to help families connect with desired programs and services; and improving conditions for success with tools, partnerships and other supports. Pappas says decades of research on brain development as well as input from organizations providing health, education and social services in Tulsa and insights from focus groups with Tulsa families have all shaped BEST’s approach. “Essentially, what we have learned about how much of the brain develops in the early years has steered us and our partners toward an intensive focus on that period in a child’s life in order to ensure that all children have the opportunity to succeed,” she says. Although Tulsa already has many proven services targeting families who are socio-economically disadvantaged, Pappas says BEST came out of the need for a more integrated, coordinated approach that involves collaboration among organizations to review data, plan and support children and families for a full eight years. BEST partners include the Parent Child Center of Tulsa, the Tulsa Health Department, Community Action Project of Tulsa, Educare, Tulsa Public Schools and Reading Partners. “Only by working together can we solve the complex problem of intergenerational poverty,” Pappas says. “Program and service providers from across Tulsa, GKFF and other partners, families and the BEST team must collaborate to strengthen our community for our children.” She acknowledges that BEST — which launched in summer 2017 — is a complex initiative with many moving parts. However, if successful, it could change generations. Pappas says, “There is potential, through BEST, to impact not only children and families in Tulsa, but throughout the country.” 42
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Parent Child Center of Tulsa Clinical Director Ashleigh Kraft and Executive Director Regina Moon
In April, which is Child Abuse Awareness and Prevention Month, Tulsa’s Child Abuse Network will host two fundraisers to help serve approximately 2,400 children each year: APRIL 8 — FIFTH ANNUAL CAN SUPERHERO CHALLENGE A family-oriented event with two obstacle course runs; snacks and drinks; games for all ages; and booths from event sponsors and CAN’s partner agencies. Superhero costumes encouraged. 1-4 p.m. | POSTOAK Lodge and Retreat, 5323 W. 31st St. N. | $25, tickets; sponsorships start at $500. APRIL 20 — CANDLELIGHT BALL Cocktails, dinner and dancing. | 6 p.m. | The Mayo Hotel, 115 W. Fifth St. | Sponsorships begin at $1,000. Tulsa County Assistant District Attorney Sarah McAmis with court therapy dog Nala
understood they were not making a safe choice for their family, McAmis explains. Charges also can be filed against the mother when she does not report her child’s abuse right away. “A mother’s first and foremost responsibility is to her child, so when the mother does not seek medical attention for them because she is more concerned with protecting her boyfriend, she has to be held accountable,” McAmis says.
PREVENTION THROUGH EDUCATION
A key way to prevent abuse and neglect is by identifying at-risk families and educating them about healthy relationships and safe parenting choices, Ashleigh Kraft says. The PCCT attempts to do just that through Parents As Teachers, a home-visitation service targeting families who have risk factors for abuse and/or neglect. Factors can include living in poverty, growing up in an abusive or neglectful home, experiencing domestic violence, struggling with substance abuse and not completing high school.
Call 918-624-0217, email events@childabusenetwork.org or visit childabusenetwork.org for more details.
Through Parents As Teachers, PCCT parent educators visit families, who participate voluntarily, to provide in-home education to caregivers every other week. Referrals come from hospitals, obstetric and pediatric doctors, and other social service organizations, according to Ashleigh Kraft. Caregivers learn about home safety and how to manage the challenges of parenting in safe and nurturing ways, and how their baby should be developing. The visits also provide professionals an opportunity to screen children for developmental delays and make referrals for needed services. However, despite high demand and fairly constant wait lists for the Parents As Teachers program, in November the PCCT lost the $444,000 state contract to provide the program through the Tulsa Health Department — a casualty of cuts within the Oklahoma Department of Health. The program, which the PCCT continues to provide, reached 220 families during the 2017 calendar year and is on pace to surpass that this year if funding can be secured through other sources.
How is child abuse different from neglect?
Child Abuse Network CEO Anna America
ABUSE: Harm, threatened harm or failure to protect from harm or threatened harm, to the health, safety or welfare of a child by a person responsible for the child’s health, safety or welfare, including, but not limited to, nonaccidental physical or mental injury, sexual abuse or sexual exploitation. This can be any real or threatened physical, mental or emotional injury or damage to the body or mind that is not accidental, including, but not limited to, sexual abuse, sexual exploitation, neglect or dependency. NEGLECT: The failure or omission to provide any of the following: - Adequate nurturance and affection, food, clothing, shelter, sanitation, hygiene or appropriate education - Medical, dental or behavioral health care - Supervision or appropriate caregivers - Special care made necessary by the physical or mental condition of the child The failure or omission to protect a child from exposure to any of the following: - The use, possession, sale or manufacture of illegal drugs - Illegal activities - Sexual acts or materials that are not age-appropriate SOURCE: Oklahoma State Statute, current through February 2016
IF YOU SUSPECT A CHILD HAS BEEN OR IS BEING VICTIMIZED, CALL THE STATEWIDE CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT HOTLINE: 1-800-522-3511
“While we lost the funding from the Health Department, we are working very hard to raise enough money to keep this program going to the end of this year,” says Carrie Little, director of external relations for the PCCT. “Beyond this year, we will need to establish a relationship with a donor or donors willing to sustain the program over time.”
‘EVERYONE’S DOING TRIAGE’
As with most societal issues, preventing child abuse and neglect is less expensive than the alternative. “Statistics show, time and again, that prevention of child abuse and neglect is much less costly both in dollars and human suffering than treatment to address the impact on children and families after abuse has occurred,” Ashleigh Kraft says. America says many in the child welfare field agree Tulsa would benefit from a higher-level view of child abuse and neglect — a data-driven, collaborative effort to identify key markers that could be used to guide strategies and policies, potentially keeping more children from becoming victims. Right now, “Everyone’s doing triage, so the worst cases get higher priority,” America says, but she says that approach likely leaves many children vulnerable. “If you talk to everybody in this field, we know
that probably the biggest group of underserved kids right now (are in those families) where we have recognized as a community that there’s a problem, but it hasn’t escalated to the level where there are more intervention services available,” she says. At press time, the five detectives in TPD’s Child Crisis Unit were each carrying 80-90 cases. Mark Kraft says adding two more detectives would increase the unit’s capacity to investigate less severe cases of abuse and neglect more quickly. “When you have that many cases, especially with the types of cases we work, they’re often pretty involved, and you often have to triage the more serious cases,” he says. “And oftentimes some of those more minor cases keep getting pushed back, and it might take us more time to look into those.” Though more oversight and staffing might help the cause, both would require more funding — the perpetual source of frustration for those in the field. “Every time we try to have more oversight and the budget is slashed, we lose ground,” McAmis says.
TRUDGING ON
“How do you do it?” is possibly the most-asked question of child welfare professionals who can’t un-see or un-hear the trauma and tragedies they encounter on the job.
The secondary traumatic stress they can experience is sometimes referred to as “compassion fatigue,” according the National Child Traumatic Stress Network. It can be a cumulative response to the cases they’ve worked, or it can result because of a particular client’s traumatic experience. From a law enforcement perspective, Mark Kraft says it helps to focus on the outcome, instead of the incident. “There’s kind of some reward in that,” he says. “We put a lot of really bad people in prison for the rest of their lives. We kind of keep focused on those end goals of knowing that we made a child safer by taking them out of a situation (or) bringing justice to a child by putting away this monster who did these horrific things to them.” McAmis, who started her legal career prosecuting child abuse and neglect cases, continues more than two decades later. Ninety percent of the cases she prosecutes are child fatalities. Although she admits wanting to quit many times over the years, McAmis says it is her responsibility to the victims that keeps her coming to the Tulsa County Courthouse. “I keep doing it because unfortunately kids keep getting hurt and killed,” she says. “I want to be able to help as many kids as I can and get justice for them.” TP TulsaPeople.com
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Serious Child Custody and Divorce Cases 427 S. BOSTON AVE., SUITE 320 800-409-1915 ALLENGARRETT.COM
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TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
ALEXANDRA N. MASTERS
1 1 T H S T R E E T:
BACK IN BUSINESS Developers are revitalizing a historic thoroughfare. BY SCOTT WIGTON
F
or years, 11th Street, east of downtown, was synonymous with urban blight. The once venerable artery became a shadow of its colorful Route 66 glory days. A smattering of businesses — mostly appliance repair shops, garages and small auto dealerships — punctuated empty storefronts, degraded buildings and boarded-up windows along the street. Prostitution and drugs were commonplace. What a difference the past few years have made. As Tulsa’s push to reinvigorate downtown gathered steam and boosted property values and rental rates over the past 15 years, a handful of intrepid developers, entrepreneurs and Route 66 enthusiasts saw a golden opportunity just beneath the tarnished reputation of 11th Street. Today, a resurgence led by the private sector is well underway on 11th Street, primarily between South Peoria and Yale avenues. New businesses are popping up in renovated old buildings as organic growth, fueled by convenient location, affordability and Route 66 nostalgia, takes hold. It appears 11th Street is back in business.
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LIVING ON 11TH
IT’S PRETTY COOL As business development erupts up and down 11th Street, so do the housing options. Bordering neighborhoods such as Renaissance and Forest Orchard are seeing an influx of renovations and residents. Additionally, new living choices have popped up. Among them is the 11th Street Lofts at 11th and Xanthus Avenue. These upscale lofts owned by Aaron Meek are attracting young professionals and students who want to stay close to the urban core where they live and work. One of them is 11th Street Loft resident Josh Langston. He is working full time and studying part time at Tulsa Community College downtown with plans to attend the University of Tulsa Law School. “I love this area and what it’s becoming,” says the 28-year-old. “It’s so convenient to downtown, Cherry Street and Utica. New stuff is happening all the time.” A Tulsa native who previously lived in southeast Tulsa, Langston remembers a not-so-nice 11th Street just 15 years ago but is impressed with the increasing retail and restaurant options nearby. “One of the things I really like is the small businesses rather than the big corporations down here,” he says. “I see a reflection of where Tulsa is going and it’s something I’m proud of.” Old housing in the area is finding new life thanks to local landlords. In January, Kaleb Hinkel, 25, and Kiley Keel, 23, rented a 1,000-square-foot, renovated 1920s home near 11th and Peoria. The pair moved from Norman and were thrilled to find an affordable dwelling near downtown. “We did notice all the new shops along 11th and that it’s an up-and-coming area,” says Hinkel, who is an auditor for a company in downtown Tulsa. His fiancée Keel attends TCC’s Metro campus. “One of the key things we were looking for was the downtown lifestyle and being near 11th Street, it was affordable.” 46
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
EVOLUTIONARY REVIVAL
Business was always the business of 11th Street, especially during its Route 66 golden era. “The whole purpose of Route 66 was economic development,” says Ken Busby, former chairman of the Route 66 Commission and executive director of the Route 66 Alliance, which was established in 2010 to build awareness of the road in Tulsa and beyond. “It was about moving people, goods and services and generating wealth, and that was true of Route 66 here in Tulsa. It’s still about commerce and growth.” Back in the late 1920s, Tulsan Cyrus Avery, the father of the Mother Road, made sure 24 miles of the famous Chicago-to-Los Angeles blacktop passed through his hometown. Eleventh Street and Route 66 were one and the same for a magical era stretching from 1932 until Route 66 was decommissioned in 1985. Today, 11th Street remains part of Historic Route 66 and, as such, has become a small part of a 2,400-mile-long tourist destination for bucket-listers from around the world. For decades, up and down 11th Street, travelers and locals alike had many retail options. “In the early days, you had service stations, momand-pop stores and, not surprisingly, motels and diners,” Busby explains. “Cars would break down, and you had garages to fix them.” Gradually, Route 66 lost its luster, a consequence of the more direct Interstate system and more reliable vehicles, which allowed people to get to their destinations both faster and with fewer stops. This is when 11th Street really took it on the chops, economically speaking. “With less traffic going through here, a lot of businesses shut down and the street went into decline,” Busby says. “The stretch between 11th and Peoria and Lewis became a sort of Red Light District for Tulsa.” Those less-than-desirable conditions prevailed on 11st Street and in nearby neighborhoods. Tulsa Police Officer Gerard Stege has patrolled 11th Street for nearly 20 years and recalls the area when it was deeply troubled. “Basically, what you had was drive-up drugs and prostitution on 11th Street and surrounding areas,” he says. “There were lots of streetwalkers on the corners and other disturbances.” Slowly, clean-up efforts in the nearby Kendall Whittier neighborhood by the City of Tulsa, law enforcement crackdowns and the expansion of the University of Tulsa forced many of the bad elements back into the shadows. “It’s been an evolution,” Stege says. “I’ve seen it gradually change. They took out a lot of the crappy hotels and apartment complexes. When you get more legitimate businesses in there, it makes the illegitimate ones nervous.” He says the area today is much safer than it was just a decade ago. Busby is excited about the direction 11th Street is heading. “The best thing that’s happened is the repurposing of old buildings,” he says. “Developers are taking buildings that are historically
interesting and bringing new life to them. They’re doing what the road was originally intended to do, which is generate commerce.”
RISK PAYING OFF FOR DEVELOPERS
One of the busiest 11th Street developers is Aaron Meek. In a meeting at the Campbell Hotel at 11th and Columbia Avenue (a property he has redeveloped), he is joined by two other 11th Street area developers/landlords, Leanne Benton and Kimberly Norman. Combined, they own more than $15 million in commercial and residential properties along and adjacent to 11th Street. Meek also owns Meek’s Electrical Service, the trendy 11th Street Lofts and the new Pearl Shops. Meek, Benton and Norman all began buying property along 11th Street long before it was fashionable to do so. Benton, of Good Day Properties, and her husband began buying in the area 20 years ago, while Norman (owner of O’Fallon Properties) jumped in 13 years ago. Meek got in on the action in the late ’90s. “Back then, everyone thought we were crazy,” Benton says with a laugh. “Now they think we’re brilliant.” She and the others say they noticed, or at least hoped for, a trend that would lead to an 11th Street resurrection. “Our philosophy was to surround downtown,” Benton says. “We felt like people were going to come back to the urban areas, and we’d seen that trend on the coasts, though it hadn’t hit Tulsa yet. We felt this area was primed for that.” Gradually, they bought, held and remodeled. “It has been an evolution,” Norman says. “We continued to buy because we recognized what was here and because of Route 66 nostalgia.” Meek also says the steady revival is due to the affordability of 11th Street, at least for now. As downtown exploded and became pricier for developers, merchants and tenants, they began to look elsewhere. Eleventh Street fit the bill. “You look at some of the other places, 15th Street, Brookside, downtown — they priced themselves so high that the average small business can’t afford to be there anymore,” Meek says. “They needed a place to go that has energy and the desire to bring them in, and this is it. We need another retail shopping district, and I believe Tulsa can support it.” Developer Marvin Shirley and business partner David Sharp took an interest in 11th Street about six years ago. The two have been involved in downtown development, including the Tulsa Arts District, but the lure of economic opportunity along 11th could not be ignored. “We saw a lot of buildings on 11th that had potential,” Shirley says. “What 11th Street had was availability of old brick buildings that you could restore. My partner and I love doing that.” The pair have invested an estimated $3 million to $4 million into multiple 11th Street properties, including the building at 11th Street and Yale Av-
(Clockwise from top left) Timber and Beam’s showroom features design ideas starring reclaimed wood. • Ike’s Chili has been in Tulsa more than 100 years. • Timber and Beam’s LeAnn Conley, Propeller’s Jesse Boudiette and Jenkins and Co.’s Lisa Wakefield are just some in the private sector who have taken a chance on 11th Street. • The 11th Street Lofts are a housing option along historic Route 66. • Josey Records opened in 2017. • Kimberly Norman, Aaron Meek and Leanne Benton inside the Campbell Hotel, a 1927 National Register of Historic Places property owned by Meek. Originally the Casa Loma Hotel was part of the Spanish-Colonial designed Max Campbell building, one of Tulsa’s early urban shopping areas. Norman, Meek and Benton all own property along 11th Street and the surrounding area. They bought into the area in hopes for a renaissance, which is now underway along the historic thoroughare. TulsaPeople.com
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Home goods retailer Jenkins and Co. is one of several businesses along East 11th Street.
enue that houses Tally’s Restaurant, as well as the building at 11th and Quincy Avenue that contains Timber and Beam, SoBo Co., JLA Art and Design, and Joseph Gierek Fine Art. By and large, developers are keen to see 11th Street continue its current trajectory toward becoming an important homegrown retail strip for Tulsans and Route 66 travelers. “That’s really our whole aim and emphasis, to make it more retail versus an entertainment area,” Shirley says. As development gathers pace, another thing is changing, too. “The (property) prices have gone up dramatically in the last five years and they continue to climb,” Shirley adds.
BUSINESSES AND RETAILERS FIND AFFORDABLE HOMES
Business operators also are finding 11th Street to be an ideal spot to set up shop. Jesse Boudiette, president and founder of marketing and public relations firm Propeller, moved the business from its downtown location to 11th Street about two years ago. Propeller now occupies about 1,500 square feet in a renovated, former warehouse with 20-foot ceilings. “We kind of got in at the beginning, and the price was right,” Boudiette says with a smile. “It was a cool space on 11th in an area that has a funky feel to it. Plus, we love the Route 66 history. It’s only five minutes from downtown, and we don’t have to pay for parking, either.” Lisa Wakefield is a partner with her family that owns the 10,000-square-foot building at 1335 E. 11th St., where Propeller is one of several tenants. Lisa owns and operates Jenkins and Co. “We bought it in 2015,” she recalls of Propeller’s building. “It was boarded up, subdivided inside and full of auto parts. But we saw so much potential because of its location so close to downtown, Cherry Street and TU. And, it’s easy to get to.” The building now has five of its six spaces leased out. “Being on Route 66 is huge,” pointing out the high density of storefronts along the street that were ripe for development. Such is the allure of 11th, that Tulsa’s iconic Ike’s Chili, now over a century old, moved onto the strip in 2014 after being located on East Admiral Boulevard for 52 years. “We could see that 11th Street was rebounding big time and for us, moving was a matter of survival,” says part-owner Len Wade, pointing to a decline along Admiral. He purchased the red brick building at 1503 E. 11th St. that has housed various businesses over the years, including a flea market and hair salon. Constructed in the late 1920s, the building needed extensive remodeling, but today there is plenty of room for diners to get a classic bowl of Ike’s three-way chili at a barstool or table. Wade says his clientele includes locals and Route 66 enthusiasts from afar. “We had these German bikers show up on their Harleys on the way through,” he says. “Being close to downtown on historic Route 66 and with all the development, this street is becoming a bigger draw.” 48
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
INVESTORS FRUSTRATED BY SLOW CITY PACE
While not official yet, business owners and developers are making plans for a Meadow Gold District, which would encompass East 11th Street between Peoria and Utica avenues. Supporters say the district would encourage customers and visitors to the area.
Across the street from Ike’s is Timber and Beam, an outfit founded in 2007 that sells reclaimed wood from old structures. The 11th Street retail revival coincided perfectly with the company’s need for a showroom and retail front. “We fell in love with this area,” says LeAnn Conley, Timber and Beam’s general manager. “It has the history, and what’s happening here on 11th is totally in line with what we do, which is to revitalize materials.” They moved into the 2,000-square-foot space, remodeled and opened up the transom windows, letting in more light from the street front. Business on 11th Street has been good since the shop opened its doors this past August. “A ton of people drive by and turn around and come in to check us out,” Conley says. “This area is really on the upswing, and we feel really good about where it’s headed.” All of these buildings are a stone’s throw from the historic Meadow Gold sign, which sits on the corner of 11th and Quaker and is a landmark for Route 66 travelers. Developers are encouraging the establishment of a Meadow Gold District that would allow joint promotion of the area between Peoria and Utica avenues. Early last year, the Pearl Shops, owned by Meek, opened at 11th and Rockford Avenue, offering several retail options, among them, Josey Records, a throwback vinyl record store. “For our clientele, this is what a real record store is,” says co-manager Josh Norrid. The airy, 2,500-square-foot space with high ceilings features long bins filled with classic vinyl LPs. “Eleventh is a good spot for us,” Norrid says. “It’s Route 66, we’ve got parking and people coming literally from around the world who stop in.” TP
The massive Meadow Gold sign towers over East 11th Street just east of South Peoria Avenue. The 1930s era sign was rescued from destruction in 2009 and now stands as a testament to a public and private partnership that foreshadowed the renewal of 11th Street. Fifteen years ago, voters approved Vision 2025, which included millions of dollars dedicated to highlighting Route 66/11th Street. This included the sign, planters, some streetscaping and other visual elements. As welcome as these improvements were, local developers and business owners want further public investment. As the pace of private investment along 11th Street increases, developers and business owners are hoping the City of Tulsa jumps in with both feet to support it through infrastructure improvements. Several developers and business owners have expressed frustration that City Hall is dragging its feet when it comes to supporting the good things happening along 11th. “We’ve got to get the City more involved,” says Aaron Meek of Group M Investments, which owns millions of dollars in property along 11th. “Investors and developers have been way ahead of the City on this, and I think we’ve done our part in bringing back these old buildings. Now we need the City to step up and do its part.” Meek and others say the City has so far failed to fulfill its promises to make improvements such as adding a turn lane, bike lane, utilities and parking along 11th that would attract even more people. The money for such infrastructure (appropriated through the Vision 2025 package passed 15 years ago) has been ready, but little has happened. “We’ve seen plans and we’ve waited
for years and we’re still waiting,” says developer Leanne Benton. City Councilor Blake Ewing, who represents the area, agrees the City’s slow pace has been frustrating, and he believes 11th Street could likely be the “next cool spot” emerging in Tulsa. He cautions that the City is sometimes hamstrung when it comes to coordinating complex urban redevelopment projects with private interests, as well as juggling the many interdepartmental challenges. “Tulsa has a competency at repaving streets, but not really a competency at designing great public places,” he says. “City Hall is not equipped to do comprehensive urban development like we want on 11th Street.” That, he says, had led to a slowdown and caution. “One thing, I think, is that they don’t want to mess it up,” Ewing says. “If you look at other areas, like Cherry Street, and the problems it has encountered, they want to avoid those. They don’t want to mess it up. They want to do it right.” He points to a lack of parking and a history of tension between the commercial businesses and the historic neighborhood. Ewing says there is $500,000 in Improve Our Tulsa funding for revamping Tracy Park and its playground at 11th and Peoria and progress is being made to introduce a proposal to apply an overlay to Route 66 to allow for attention-grabbing signs. “This will allow for bigger signs, and that could really create an attraction and make 11th Street even more of a destination,” he says. For the time being, eager developers and businesses may have to cool their heels. “Unfortunately, sometimes the wheels of government turn very slowly,” Ewing says.
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BUSINESS NEWS FROM OUR ADVERTISERS
POLO GRILL EARNS AAA FOUR DIAMONDS
GROUNDBREAKING HELD FOR VISION TULSA PROJECT AT TCC In February, officials broke ground on the newest Vision Tulsa project — the Student Success and Career Center at the Tulsa Community College Southeast Campus, 10300 E. 81st St. The $5.3 million facility is part of Vision Tulsa, the $884 million sales tax renewal package approved by voters in 2016. “Tulsa’s future workforce starts by giving individuals the tools they need to graduate from college with a degree or certificate and to start a career,” says Mayor G.T. Bynum. “Through the strong support in our city for the Vision Tulsa program, the investment is being made and TCC will help shape Tulsa’s future workforce.” The Student Success and Career Center is designed with the student in mind by removing stumbling blocks such as long lines and providing personalized service to increase the student’s success. More than 90 percent of TCC graduates remain in the Tulsa area and invest their careers in Tulsa businesses, according to a 2017 study by TCC. This means more citizens completing post-secondary education and better prepared to enter the Tulsa area workforce. “This facility will have a direct impact on student success by creating an area where key support services are integrated and attention is individualized for each student,” says TCC President and CEO Leigh Goodson. “This will be a comprehensive one-stop location from the first time a student enters TCC until the time they graduate and enter the workforce.” TCC serves approximately 25,000 annually. The Southeast Campus, the largest of the four main campuses, routinely serves about half of those students. The new facility will expand key student services considered essential for graduation and job attainment by offering wrap-around services from college application to completion. Construction of the 48,250 square-foot facility is expected to take 12 months. For more information on TCC, visit tulsacc.edu. 50
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
Tulsa’s Polo Grill is the only restaurant in Oklahoma to attain the coveted AAA Four Diamond designation. It is one of only 665 restaurants in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and Caribbean to receive this prestigious designation, which it has earned for the 18th consecutive year. Restaurants earning this distinction offer a unique fine-dining experience and attentive service, according to AAA. Menu offerings are typically distinguished by highly creative chefs using top-quality ingredients and an upscale ambience. “This rating acknowledges the hard work and dedication of our staff,” says Robert Merrifield, proprietor and chef. “We are honored to be recognized as a AAA Four Diamond restaurant. At Polo Grill, we are committed to exceeding guest expectations and providing a premier dining experience.” Merrifield opened the Polo Grill in 1983. What began as a modest bar and single dining room has expanded to a main dining room and five private dining rooms/wine cellars, a granite-topped bar and booths in the lounge, a full-service catering operation and a wine selection with more than 1,100 labels and 22,000 bottles. The restaurant’s staff is known for its impeccable service. For more than 80 years, AAA’s professional inspectors have conducted anonymous, in-person property evaluations. AAA offers the only rating system using comprehensive, on-site professional hotel and restaurant evaluations guided by member priorities. AAA’s rating system covers the United States, Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean. Visit pologrill.com and aaa.com for more information.
CASCIA NAMES NEW HEADMASTER
Fr. Philip Cook
Cascia Hall Preparatory school has named Fr. Philip Cook, O.S.A., as its new headmaster effective July 1. “I believe that Father Philip’s education and experience have prepared him to take on this important role of service for the School and the Augustinian Order. This is a very exciting time for Cascia Hall,” says the Rev. Bernard C. Scianna, O.S.A., prior provincial of the Augustinians of Chicago, Canada and Chulucanas, Peru. Cook has served at Cascia off and on for the past 25 years. He currently teaches theology in the upper school. “I am looking forward to taking on the challenge of leadership at Cascia Hall,” he says. “Our students are some of brightest I have encountered, and they energize me to be an even better teacher and leader.” Cook will replace Roger Carter, who served eight years as the school’s first lay headmaster. Cook is a 1990 graduate of Villanova University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in classics. In 1997, he graduated from Catholic Theological Union with a master’s of divinity degree. He completed a second master’s degree in Latin and Greek in 2007 from Catholic University of America, and his Ph.D. in classics in 2016 from the University of Florida. Cascia Hall Preparatory School is a Catholic, Augustinian college preparatory school for students of all faiths in grades 6-12. For more information about Cascia Hall, visit casciahall.com.
CASCIA AND TCC: COURTESY
Phil Lakin Jr., Tulsa city councilor; Leigh Goodson, TCC president and CEO; Stacy Schusterman, Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation co-chair; and Ron Looney, TCC regent at the TCC Foundation VIP Design Reveal of the new Student Success and Career Center at the TCC Southeast Campus.
Robert Merrifield
QA &
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From Tulsa Professionals
BEAUTY & WEIGHT MANAGEMENT What’s the quickest way to get rid of my freckles and sun damage before summer? Years of sun damage can be difficult to reverse. Thankfully there are several great solutions, mostly in the form of a prescription-based skincare line, like Obagi. But if you want to see results in days rather than weeks, consider an IPL photofacial. This technique uses intense pulsed light to target dark spots — such as freckles, sunspots or veins — and remove them within 7-10 days. IPL also results in firmer, more youthful-looking skin. To schedule a complimentary consultation, call 918-872-9999.
GENERAL DENTISTRY Is Botox right for me? It all depends on your personal needs. Botox has long been used in skincare. Wrinkles and fine lines develop over the years even if you live a healthy and active life. Depending on your age, Botox works by either preventing or correcting wrinkles. Beyond outward appearance, Botox may be the answer to your migraines or bruxism. Whatever your need for Botox, a simple no-cost consultation can answer all your questions. Call us to discuss the best option for you.
Malissa Spacek and Dr. James Campbell
Priscila Jelsing, DDS
BA Med Spa & Weight Loss Center 500 S. Elm Place • Broken Arrow, OK 74012 918-872-9999 • www.baweightspa.com
Atlanta Place Dentistry 2106 S. Atlanta Pl. • Tulsa, OK 74114 918-743-7444 • www.PriscilaJelsingDDS.com
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
VETERINARIAN
Will my current Medicare card be replaced with a new card?
Should my dog take the same medicine I am?
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will begin mailing new Medicare cards in April 2018 to Medicare participants. The mailing will occur in waves based on geographic location. Oklahoma participants are estimated to receive new cards after June 2018. The project should be completed by April 2019. A new, unique Medicare number will replace the Social Security-based number currently used on Medicare cards. Upon receipt of your new Medicare card, destroy your old card and begin using the new card.
There are many similarities between humans and our pets. There are medicines that are used in both human and veterinary medicine. Thyroid supplements, anti-anxiety medications and seizure medications are just a few examples. Many of these medications are used at a much higher dose in dogs and cats. If you have questions about the dose or medication, always talk to your veterinarian so he/she can explain.
J. Harvie Roe, CFP, President
Dr. Mark Shackelford
AmeriTrust Investment Advisors, Inc. 4506 S. Harvard Ave. • Tulsa, OK 74135 918-610-8080 • hroe@amerad.com
15th Street Veterinary Group 6231 E. 15th St. • Tulsa, OK 74112 918-835-2336 • www.15thstreetvet.com TulsaPeople.com
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METHODOLOGY FOR BEST LAWYERS® This list is excerpted from the 2018 edition of The Best Lawyers in America©, the pre-eminent referral guide to the legal profession in the United States. Published since 1983, Best Lawyers lists attorneys in 145 specialties, representing all 50 states, who have been chosen through an exhaustive survey in which thousands of the nation’s top lawyers confidentially evaluate their professional peers. The 2018 edition of Best Lawyers is based on more than 7.3 million evaluations of lawyers by other lawyers. The method used to compile Best Lawyers remains unchanged since the first edition was compiled more than 30 years ago. Lawyers are chosen for inclusion based solely on the vote of their peers. Listings cannot be bought, and no purchase is required to be included. In this regard, Best Lawyers remains the gold standard of reliability and integrity in lawyer ratings. The nomination pool for the 2018 edition consisted of all lawyers whose names appeared in the previous edition of Best Lawyers, lawyers who were nominated since the previous survey, and new nominees solicited from listed attorneys. In general, lawyers were asked to vote only on nominees in their own specialty in their own jurisdiction. Lawyers in closely related specialties were asked to vote across specialties, as were lawyers in smaller jurisdictions. Where specialties are national or international in nature, lawyers were asked to vote nationally as well as locally. Voting lawyers were also given an opportunity to offer more detailed comments on nominees. Each year, half of the voting pool receives fax or email ballots; the other half is polled by phone. Voting lawyers were provided this general guideline for determining if a nominee should be listed among “the best”: “If you had a close friend or relative who needed a real estate lawyer (for example), and you could not handle the case yourself, to whom would you refer them?” All votes and comments were solicited with a guarantee of confidentiality — a critical factor in the viability and validity of Best Lawyers’ surveys. To ensure the rigor of the selection process, lawyers were urged to use only their highest standards when voting, and to evaluate each nominee based only on his or her individual merits. The additional comments were used to make more accurate comparisons between voting patterns and weight votes accordingly. Best Lawyers uses various methodological tools to identify and correct for anomalies in both the nomination and voting process. Ultimately, of course, a lawyer’s inclusion is based on the subjective judgments of his or her fellow attorneys. While it is true that the lists may at times disproportionately reward visibility or popularity, the breadth of the survey, the candor of the respondents, and the sophistication of the polling methodology largely correct for any biases. For all these reasons, Best Lawyers lists continue to represent the most reliable, accurate and useful guide to the best lawyers in the United States available anywhere.
Barrow & & Grimm Grimmisisproud proudtotoannounce announceitsitsseven lawyers recently selected for publication recently selected for publicationininthe the © America edition of of The TheBest BestLawyers Lawyersin in America 2018 edition ©
Counsel for the Business of Life
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Commited to Providing Quality Legal Services for Your Important Matters
Allen E. Barrow, Jr. William R. Grimm Corporate Law Commercial Trusts and Estates Litigation Corporate Law
William E. Farrior Litigation Controversy–Tax, Tax Law
Robert B. Sartin Commercial Litigation Healthcare Law
Wm. Brad Heckenkemper Commercial Litigation
Adam K. Marshall Thomas D. Closely Held Robertson Companies & Family Employment Law Businesses Law Management
Established in 1976, Barrow & Grimm, PC is a commercial practice law firm serving a wide variety of corporate, partnership, and individual clients. 110 W. 7th St., Ste. 900 | Tulsa, OK 74119 | 918.584.1600 | www.barrowgrimm.com TulsaPeople.com
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BEST LAWYERS
* DESIGNATES LAWYER OF THE YEAR
THE FOLLOWING FIRM NAMES WERE ABBREVIATED: Hall, Estill, Hardwick, Gable, Golden & Nelson –– Hall Estill, et al. Rhodes, Hieronymus, Jones, Tucker & Gable –– Rhodes Hieronymus, et al. Riggs, Abney, Neal, Turpen, Orbison & Lewis –– Riggs Abney, et al. Titus Hillis Reynolds Love Dickman & McCalmon –– Titus Hillis, et al. Norman Wohlgemuth Chandler Jeter Barnett & Ray –– Norman Wohlgemuth, et al. McDonald, McCann, Metcalf & Carwile –– McDonald McCann, et al. Newton, O’Connor, Turner & Ketchum –– Newton O’Connor, et al. Franden, Farris, Quillin, Goodnight + Roberts –– Franden Farris, et al. Atkinson, Haskins, Nellis, Brittingham, Gladd & Fiasco –– Atkinson Haskins, et al. Doerner, Saunders, Daniel & Anderson –– Doerner Saunders, et al.
Pamela H. Goldberg Hall Estill, et al. Charles Greenough McAfee & Taft Jeffrey D. Hassell GableGotwals John E. Howland Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold Gary M. McDonald McDonald McCann, et al. Patrick D. O’Connor Moyers Martin
ADMINISTRATIVE / REGULATORY LAW David E. Keglovits GableGotwals Curtis M. Long Conner & Winters Thomas P. Schroedter Hall Estill, et al.
BANKING AND FINANCE LAW John R. Barker GableGotwals
Steven W. Soulé Hall Estill, et al.
Gary L. Betow Conner & Winters
Sidney K. Swinson GableGotwals
Michael D. Cooke Hall Estill, et al. Frederic Dorwart Frederic Dorwart, Lawyers
Neal Tomlins Tomlins & Peters
Phillip J. Eller Eller & Detrich
Timothy T. Trump Conner & Winters
Terry D. Ragsdale GableGotwals
Jeffrey D. Hassell GableGotwals
Andrew R. Turner Conner & Winters
Joel L. Wohlgemuth Norman Wohlgemuth, et al.
Steven G. Heinen GableGotwals
APPELLATE PRACTICE Jon E. Brightmire Doerner Saunders, et al.
Jeffrey T. Hills Crowe & Dunlevy
ANTITRUST LAW Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
Amelia A. Fogleman GableGotwals Gerald L. Hilsher McAfee & Taft Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals J. Michael Medina Frederic Dorwart, Lawyers Leslie C. Weeks Rodolf & Todd Bradley W. Welsh GableGotwals ARBITRATION David L. Bryant GableGotwals Joseph W. Morris GableGotwals John D. Rothman Dispute Resolution Consultants Deborah C. Shallcross GableGotwals
Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals Betsy G. Jackson Hall Estill, et al. Gary R. McSpadden Crowe & Dunlevy Barry G. Reynolds Titus Hillis, et al. John Henry Rule GableGotwals Gentra Abbey Sorem Conner & Winters BANKRUPTCY AND CREDITOR DEBTOR RIGHTS / INSOLVENCY AND REORGANIZATION LAW Sam G. Bratton II Doerner Saunders, et al. Mark A. Craige Crowe & Dunlevy Thomas A. Creekmore III Hall Estill, et al. John D. Dale GableGotwals Robert S. Glass GableGotwals
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Terry M. Thomas Dispute Resolution Consultants
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
BET-THE-COMPANY LITIGATION William C. Anderson Doerner Saunders, et al. David L. Bryant GableGotwals Dennis C. Cameron GableGotwals Mary Quinn Cooper McAfee & Taft J. Patrick Cremin Hall Estill, et al. Michael J. Gibbens Crowe & Dunlevy James E. Green Jr. Conner & Winters J. Kevin Hayes Hall Estill, et al. Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals Richard B. Noulles GableGotwals Phil R. Richards Richards & Connor James M. Sturdivant GableGotwals Sidney K. Swinson GableGotwals Terry M. Thomas Dispute Resolution Consultants
John H. Tucker Rhodes Hieronymus, et al. BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS (INCLUDING LLCS AND PARTNERSHIPS) Allen E. Barrow, Jr. Barrow & Grimm Mark D. Berman Conner & Winters R. Jay Chandler Norman Wohlgemuth Chandler Jeter William L. Eagleton IV Pray Walker Sarah E. Hansel Hall Estill, et al. Stephen M. Hetrick McAfee & Taft CIVIL RIGHTS LAW Louis W. Bullock Bullock Bullock & Blakemore CLOSELY HELD COMPANIES AND FAMILY BUSINESSES LAW Allen E. Barrow, Jr. Barrow & Grimm Robert A. Curry Conner & Winters Adam K. Marshall Barrow & Grimm Randy R. Shorb Johnson & Jones
Jon E. Brightmire Doerner Saunders, et al. David L. Bryant GableGotwals John A. Burkhardt Jr. Schaffer Herring Dennis C. Cameron GableGotwals Lewis N. Carter Doerner Saunders, et al. John J. Carwile McDonald McCann, et al. Casey Cooper GableGotwals Mary Quinn Cooper McAfee & Taft David R. Cordell Conner & Winters Mark A. Craige Crowe & Dunlevy Gary C. Crapster Steidley & Neal Heather L. Cupp Hall Estill, et al. Samuel P. Daniel Jr. Doerner Saunders, et al. Renee DeMoss GableGotwals Mark E. Dreyer Conner & Winters
COLLABORATIVE LAW: FAMILY LAW Moura A. J. Robertson Moura A. J. Robertson Family Law
Tom Q. Ferguson Doerner Saunders, et al.
COMMERCIAL FINANCE LAW W. Deke Canada Hall Estill, et al., et al.
Amelia A. Fogleman GableGotwals
Frederic Dorwart Frederic Dorwart, Lawyers Gary R. McSpadden Crowe & Dunlevy COMMERCIAL LITIGATION Steven J. Adams GableGotwals
Craig A. Fitzgerald GableGotwals
Melodie Freeman-Burney Conner & Winters Michael J. Gibbens Crowe & Dunlevy James E. Green Jr. Conner & Winters William R. Grimm Barrow & Grimm
Elliot P. Anderson Crowe & Dunlevy
James C. T. Hardwick Hall Estill, et al.
William C. Anderson Doerner Saunders, et al.
J. Kevin Hayes Hall Estill, et al.
Mark Banner Hall Estill, et al.
Tony W. Haynie Conner & Winters
Mark K. Blongewicz Hall Estill, et al.
Brad Heckenkemper Barrow & Grimm
WE WORK AROUND THE COUNTRY.
WE OFFICE DOWN THE STREET. We are proud of our 59 attorneys recognized as Best Lawyers in America®. Mark D. Berman Gary L. Betow Debbie L. Blackwell Paul E. Braden Elise Dunitz Brennan Teresa Meinders Burkett David R. Cordell Jason B. Coutant Katherine G. Coyle Brad K. Cunningham Robert A. Curry Mark E. Dreyer John R. Elrod Robin F. Fields Melodie Freeman-Burney
John W. Funk Jared D. Giddens Kevin H. Good James E. Green, Jr. Bradley A. Grundy P. Scott Hathaway Tony W. Haynie David H. Herrold John W. Ingraham Robert L. Jones III Kerri E. Kobbeman Todd P. Lewis Larry B. Lipe Curtis M. Long R. Richard Love III
Steven W. McGrath Robert J. Melgaard G. Daniel Miller Lynnwood R. Moore, Jr. C. Raymond Patton, Jr. Kiran A. Phansalkar Douglas M. Rather R. Kevin Redwine John R. Reeves J. Ryan Sacra Greg S. Scharlau John M. Scott Douglas M. Selwyn Beverly K. Smith Eric S. Smith
Terral J. Smith Gentra Abbey Sorem Irwin H. Steinhorn Anne B. Sublett Amanda M. Swain Jason S. Taylor Jeanette C. Timmons Timothy T. Trump Andrew R. Turner Nancy E. Vaughn Stephen R. Ward Henry G. Will Martin R. Wing G. Alan Wooten
CWLAW.COM
BEST LAWYERS David H. Herrold Conner & Winters
William W. O’Connor Hall Estill, et al.
Gerald L. Hilsher McAfee & Taft
Terry D. Ragsdale GableGotwals
Richard P. Hix Doerner Saunders, et al.
James M. Reed Hall Estill, et al.
Craig W. Hoster Crowe & Dunlevy
COMMUNICATIONS LAW Michael D. Cooke Hall Estill, et al.
Stephen W. Ray Hall Estill, et al.
James J. Proszek Hall Estill, et al.
CORPORATE LAW John R. Barker GableGotwals
Phil R. Richards Richards & Connor
CONSTRUCTION LAW P. Scott Hathaway Conner & Winters
Allen E. Barrow, Jr. Barrow & Grimm
Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
Andrew L. Richardson McAfee & Taft
Steven K. Metcalf McDonald McCann, et al.
Brian T. Inbody McNamara, Inbody & Parrish
Tracy W. Robinett Robinett, Swartz & Aycock
Tracy W. Robinett Robinett, Swartz & Aycock
Gerald L. Jackson Crowe & Dunlevy
Scott R. Rowland GableGotwals
Malcolm E. Rosser IV Crowe & Dunlevy
Robert J. Joyce McAfee & Taft
John Henry Rule GableGotwals
William H. Spitler McDonald McCann, et al.
Michael T. Keester Hall Estill, et al.
James W. Rusher Albright, Rusher & Hardcastle
David E. Keglovits GableGotwals
John D. Russell GableGotwals
COPYRIGHT LAW Rachel Blue McAfee & Taft
Patrick H. Kernan Newton O’Connor, et al.
Robert B. Sartin Barrow & Grimm
Thomas M. Ladner Ladner & Eldredge
Michael F. Smith McAfee & Taft
Bobby L. Latham Jr. Latham Wagner Steele Lehman
James M. Sturdivant GableGotwals
William S. Leach McAfee & Taft
Jason S. Taylor Conner & Winters
Michael S. Linscott Doerner Saunders, et al.
Terry M. Thomas Dispute Resolution Consultants
Larry B. Lipe Conner & Winters
John H. Tucker Rhodes Hieronymus, et al.
R. Richard Love III Conner & Winters
Mark D. Berman Conner & Winters W. Deke Canada Hall Estill, et al. Lawrence T. Chambers Jr. Doerner Saunders, et al. Michael D. Cooke Hall Estill, et al. H. Wayne Cooper Doerner Saunders, et al. Jason B. Coutant Conner & Winters
Dennis D. Brown Brown Patent Law
C. Bretton Crane Pray Walker
Frank J. Catalano GableGotwals
Robert A. Curry Conner & Winters
Shawn M. Dellegar Crowe & Dunlevy
Frederic Dorwart Frederic Dorwart, Lawyers
Todd A. Nelson GableGotwals
Robert F. Dougherty Hall Estill, et al.
Robert E. Spoo McAfee & Taft
Terry R. Doverspike Pray Walker
Terry L. Watt Crowe & Dunlevy
Pamela H. Goldberg Hall Estill, et al.
Mia Vahlberg GableGotwals
CORPORATE COMPLIANCE LAW Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
William R. Grimm Barrow & Grimm
Graydon Dean Luthey Jr. GableGotwals
Randall G. Vaughan Pray Walker
Graydon Dean Luthey Jr. GableGotwals
James P. McCann McDonald McCann, et al.
James E. Weger Jones, Gotcher & Bogan
Bruce A. McKenna McKenna & Prescott
Bradley W. Welsh GableGotwals
Stephen W. Ray Hall Estill, et al.
James C. Milton Hall Estill, et al.
Robert J. Winter Pray Walker
R. Kevin Redwine Conner & Winters
Victor E. Morgan Crowe & Dunlevy
Joel L. Wohlgemuth Norman Wohlgemuth Chandler Jeter
Kathy R. Neal McAfee & Taft
Harold C. Zuckerman McAfee & Taft
Charles D. Neal Jr. Steidley & Neal
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* DESIGNATES LAWYER OF THE YEAR
Richard B. Noulles GableGotwals
COMMERCIAL TRANSACTIONS / UCC LAW Gary R. McSpadden Crowe & Dunlevy
John M. O’Connor Newton O’Connor, et al.
Timothy T. Trump Conner & Winters
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
Robert J. Melgaard Conner & Winters
Del L. Gustafson Hall Estill, et al. Jeffrey D. Hassell GableGotwals Steven G. Heinen GableGotwals Jeffrey T. Hills Crowe & Dunlevy Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE LAW Pamela H. Goldberg Hall Estill, et al.
Betsy G. Jackson Hall Estill, et al.
Betsy G. Jackson Hall Estill, et al.
David A. Johnson Boesche McDermott
Graydon Dean Luthey Jr. GableGotwals
Graydon Dean Luthey Jr. GableGotwals
C. Raymond Patton Jr. Conner & Winters
Robert J. Melgaard Conner & Winters
Lynnwood R. Moore Jr. Conner & Winters P. David Newsome Jr. Hall Estill, et al. John M. O’Connor Newton O’Connor, et al. C. Raymond Patton Jr. Conner & Winters Stephen W. Ray Hall Estill, et al. R. Kevin Redwine Conner & Winters William F. Riggs Doerner Saunders, et al. J. Ryan Sacra Conner & Winters CRIMINAL DEFENSE: GENERAL PRACTICE Clark O. Brewster Brewster & De Angelis Paul D. Brunton Paul Brunton Law Office Jack E. Gordon Jr. Gordon & Gordon P. Warren Gotcher Gotcher & Beaver Allen M. Smallwood Allen Smallwood CRIMINAL DEFENSE: WHITE-COLLAR Clark O. Brewster Brewster & De Angelis Paul D. Brunton Paul Brunton Law Office Jack E. Gordon Jr. Gordon & Gordon P. Warren Gotcher Gotcher & Beaver Allen M. Smallwood Allen Smallwood DUI / DWI DEFENSE Bruce Edge Edge Law Firm EDUCATION LAW Karen L. Long Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold J. Douglas Mann Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold John G. Moyer Jr. Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold Eric P. Nelson Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold
McDonald, McCann, Metcalf & Carwile, LLP
Shane henry
proudly recognizes the Firm’s five lawyers included in the 2018 Edition of The Best Lawyers in America©
TRIAL LAWYER • 2017 & 2018 Best Lawyers ® listed for Family Law and Family Law Mediation • 2017 Earl Sneed Award Recipient for outstanding continuing legal education contributions
James P. McCann
Tulsa “Lawyer of the Year” Mediation
• 2016 Oklahoma Family Law Attorney of the Year by the Oklahoma Bar Association Family Law Section • Super Lawyers Rising Stars 2015, 2016 and 2017 • AV Preeminent Rated Trial Lawyer by Martindale Hubbell
Steven K. Metcalf
Tulsa “Lawyer of the Year” Litigation - Construction
Contact Shane at 918-585-1107 shane@fryelder.com John J. Carwile | Gary M. McDonald | William H. Spitler
www.DivorceTulsa.com
Tamera Childers is an AV-rated lawyer by Martindale-Hubbell Bar Register of Preeminent Women Lawyers, exclusively for women attorneys who have received the highest possible rating in both legal ability and ethical standards from their peers. Less than 5% of women lawyers have been recognized with an AV Preeminent Rating. Tamera Childers is recognized as one of the Top 10 Family Law Attorneys in Oklahoma by the National Academy of Family Law Attorneys.
Call Tamera Childers at 918.574.8990 and see why she is Tulsa’s premier family law attorney.
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BEST LAWYERS
* DESIGNATES LAWYER OF THE YEAR
EMINENT DOMAIN AND CONDEMNATION LAW Malcolm E. Rosser IV Crowe & Dunlevy
Larry D. Henry Rhodes Hieronymus, et al.
Thomas M. Ladner Ladner & Eldredge
Robert G. Fry Jr. Fry & Elder
R. Tom Hillis Titus Hillis, et al.
Curtis M. Long Conner & Winters
P. Warren Gotcher Gotcher & Beaver
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS (ERISA) LAW Debbie L. Blackwell Conner & Winters
Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
Tracy A. Poole McAfee & Taft
James R. Gotwals James R. Gotwals & Associates
Michael J. Lissau Hall Estill, et al.
Terry D. Ragsdale GableGotwals
Bradley A. Grundy Conner & Winters
Mary L. Lohrke Titus Hillis, et al.
James D. Satrom Hall Estill, et al.
M. Shane Henry Fry & Elder
Karen L. Long Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold
Thomas P. Schroedter Hall Estill, et al.
N. Scott Johnson N. Scott Johnson & Associates
Stephen A. Schuller GableGotwals
Ronald W. Little Doerner Saunders, et al.
Lisa T. Silvestri GableGotwals
Moura A. J. Robertson Moura A. J. Robertson Family Law
Paul E. Braden Conner & Winters Kristen L. Brightmire Doerner Saunders, et al. Bill G. Freudenrich McAfee & Taft Karen L. Long Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold Steven W. McGrath Conner & Winters David B. McKinney GableGotwals Sheppard F. Miers Jr. GableGotwals Clive A. Seymour Hall Estill, et al. Eric S. Smith Conner & Winters Anne B. Sublett Conner & Winters Martin R. Wing Conner & Winters
Kimberly Lambert Love Titus Hillis, et al. Kathy R. Neal McAfee & Taft Michael R. Pacewicz Crowe & Dunlevy Charles S. Plumb McAfee & Taft Thomas D. Robertson Barrow & Grimm Randall J. Snapp Crowe & Dunlevy David E. Strecker Strecker & Associates W. Kirk Turner Newton O’Connor, et al. Nancy E. Vaughn Conner & Winters
Donald S. Smith Pray Walker James M. Sturdivant GableGotwals ENVIRONMENTAL LAW Richard M. Carson GableGotwals
Robert J. Joyce McAfee & Taft
Bradley A. Grundy Conner & Winters
Linda Crook Martin Doerner Saunders, et al.
M. Shane Henry Fry & Elder
Ronald N. Ricketts GableGotwals
Moura A. J. Robertson Moura A. J. Robertson Family Law FINANCIAL SERVICES REGULATION LAW Gary L. Betow Conner & Winters
Louis W. Bullock Bullock Bullock & Blakemore
Madalene A. B. Witterholt Crowe & Dunlevy
EQUIPMENT FINANCE LAW Gary L. Betow Conner & Winters
ENERGY LAW Mark Banner Hall Estill, et al.
Gary R. McSpadden Crowe & Dunlevy
Tammy D. Barrett GableGotwals
FAMILY LAW Paul E. Blevins Blevins Law Office
Steven A. Broussard Hall Estill, et al. Courtney Bru McAfee & Taft N. Lance Bryan Doerner Saunders, et al. David R. Cordell Conner & Winters J. Patrick Cremin Hall Estill, et al. Kevin P. Doyle Pray Walker
Shelton L. Benedict Shelton L. Benedict Law Office Dennis C. Cameron GableGotwals Richard M. Carson GableGotwals David R. Cordell Conner & Winters John A. Gaberino Jr. GableGotwals J. Kevin Hayes Hall Estill, et al. Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
58
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
Richard A. Wagner II Hall Estill, et al.
Michael D. Graves Hall Estill, et al.
Keith A. Wilkes Newton O’Connor, et al.
EMPLOYMENT LAW — MANAGEMENT Kristen L. Brightmire Doerner Saunders, et al.
David Tracy Tulsa Family Law Center
FAMILY LAW MEDIATION James R. Gotwals James R. Gotwals & Associates
EMPLOYMENT LAW — INDIVIDUALS Donald M. Bingham Riggs Abney, et al.
Larry D. Henry Rhodes Hieronymus, et al.
Deborah C. Shallcross GableGotwals
Tamera Childers Tamera A. Childers Brad K. Cunningham Conner & Winters Samuel P. Daniel Jr. Doerner Saunders, et al. Richard J. Eagleton Eagleton, Eagleton & Harrison Heather Flynn Earnhart Hall Estill, et al. Joseph R. Farris Franden Farris, et al.
Gary R. McSpadden Crowe & Dunlevy
HEALTH CARE LAW Gary L. Betow Conner & Winters Elise Dunitz Brennan Conner & Winters Teresa Meinders Burkett Conner & Winters Robert S. Glass GableGotwals David J. Hyman Doerner Saunders, et al. David B. McKinney GableGotwals A. F. Ringold Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold Robert B. Sartin Barrow & Grimm Barry L. Smith McAfee & Taft INSURANCE LAW Mark K. Blongewicz Hall Estill, et al. Galen L. Brittingham Atkinson Haskins, et al. Renee DeMoss GableGotwals Craig A. Fitzgerald GableGotwals James E. Green Jr. Conner & Winters David E. Keglovits GableGotwals William S. Leach McAfee & Taft Kerry R. Lewis Rhodes Hieronymus, et al. John M. O’Connor Newton O’Connor, et al.
FIRST AMENDMENT LAW Louis W. Bullock Bullock Bullock & Blakemore
Phil R. Richards Richards & Connor
S. Douglas Dodd Doerner Saunders, et al.
Lisa T. Silvestri GableGotwals
FRANCHISE LAW Michael J. Gibbens Crowe & Dunlevy GAMING LAW Graydon Dean Luthey Jr. GableGotwals D. Michael McBride III Crowe & Dunlevy Geoffrey M. Standing Bear Geoffrey M. Standing Bear
A. Mark Smiling Smiling, Smiling & Burgess John H. Tucker Rhodes Hieronymus, et al. LABOR LAW — MANAGEMENT Steven A. Broussard Hall Estill, et al. David R. Cordell Conner & Winters J. Patrick Cremin Hall Estill, et al.
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inclusion in the selected 2017 edition its lawyers for of Congratulates Congratulates The Best in Lawyers inedition America inclusion the 2017 of Congratulates its its eight lawyers selected lawyers selected forfor Congratulates The Best Lawyers in America its for inclusion in 2018 of inclusion in the the selected 2018 Edition edition its lawyers lawyers selected for of inclusion in the edition of inclusion in the 2017 2017 edition of© The BestLawyers Lawyers inAmerica America The Best in
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BEST LAWYERS Kevin P. Doyle Pray Walker
Victor E. Morgan Crowe & Dunlevy
Michael D. Graves Hall Estill, et al.
Kimberly Lambert Love Titus Hillis, et al.
John Henry Rule GableGotwals
Gerald L. Hilsher McAfee & Taft
Kathy R. Neal McAfee & Taft
James W. Rusher Albright, Rusher & Hardcastle
Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
LITIGATION — LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT Jon E. Brightmire Doerner Saunders, et al.
Charles S. Plumb McAfee & Taft
Terry M. Thomas Dispute Resolution Consultants
Robert J. Joyce McAfee & Taft
Kristen L. Brightmire Doerner Saunders, et al.
LITIGATION — PATENT Dennis D. Brown Brown Patent Law
Randall J. Snapp Crowe & Dunlevy
Christopher B. Woods Crowe & Dunlevy
Lloyd W. Landreth GableGotwals
Steven A. Broussard Hall Estill, et al.
Margaret Millikin Millikin Intellectual Property Law
Linda Crook Martin Doerner Saunders, et al.
Courtney Bru McAfee & Taft
Todd A. Nelson GableGotwals
David E. Strecker Strecker & Associates W. Kirk Turner Newton O’Connor, et al. Frank B. Wolfe III Hall Estill, et al. LAND USE AND ZONING LAW Kevin C. Coutant Doerner Saunders, et al.
LITIGATION — BANKRUPTCY Sam G. Bratton II Doerner Saunders, et al. Mark A. Craige Crowe & Dunlevy Thomas A. Creekmore III Hall Estill, et al. John D. Dale GableGotwals
Ronald N. Ricketts GableGotwals Scott R. Rowland GableGotwals D. Kenyon Williams Jr. Hall Estill, et al.
Malcolm E. Rosser IV Crowe & Dunlevy
Charles Greenough McAfee & Taft
LITIGATION — ERISA Jon E. Brightmire Doerner Saunders, et al.
Stephen A. Schuller GableGotwals
Jeffrey D. Hassell GableGotwals
Renee DeMoss GableGotwals
LEGAL MALPRACTICE LAW — DEFENDANTS Joseph R. Farris Franden Farris, et al.
Kayci B. Hughes Crowe & Dunlevy
Tony W. Haynie Conner & Winters
Gary M. McDonald McDonald McCann, et al.
Karen L. Long Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold
W. G. Steidley Jr. Steidley & Neal
Michael R. Pacewicz Crowe & Dunlevy
David B. McKinney GableGotwals
LITIGATION — ANTITRUST Craig A. Fitzgerald GableGotwals
James M. Reed Hall Estill, et al.
Amelia A. Fogleman GableGotwals James M. Sturdivant GableGotwals LITIGATION — BANKING AND FINANCE Mark A. Craige Crowe & Dunlevy Charles Greenough McAfee & Taft Jeffrey D. Hassell GableGotwals Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals Gary M. McDonald McDonald McCann, et al. Gary R. McSpadden Crowe & Dunlevy
60
* DESIGNATES LAWYER OF THE YEAR
TulsaPeople APRIL 2018
Steven W. Soulé Hall Estill, et al. Sidney K. Swinson GableGotwals Terry M. Thomas Dispute Resolution Consultants Andrew R. Turner Conner & Winters LITIGATION — CONSTRUCTION N. Lance Bryan Doerner Saunders, et al. Michael T. Keester Hall Estill, et al. David E. Keglovits GableGotwals Steven K. Metcalf McDonald McCann, et al. LITIGATION — ENVIRONMENTAL Dennis C. Cameron GableGotwals
LITIGATION — FIRST AMENDMENT S. Douglas Dodd Doerner Saunders, et al. John Henry Rule GableGotwals J. Schaad Titus Titus Hillis, et al. LITIGATION — INSURANCE Terry M. Thomas Dispute Resolution Consultants LITIGATION — INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Rachel Blue McAfee & Taft
Terry L. Watt Crowe & Dunlevy
J. Patrick Cremin Hall Estill, et al. Kevin P. Doyle Pray Walker Larry D. Henry Rhodes Hieronymus, et al. Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals Mary L. Lohrke Titus Hillis, et al. Karen L. Long Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold Kathy R. Neal McAfee & Taft Charles S. Plumb McAfee & Taft Randall J. Snapp Crowe & Dunlevy W. Kirk Turner Newton O’Connor, et al. Madalene A. B. Witterholt Crowe & Dunlevy LITIGATION — LAND USE AND ZONING Malcolm E. Rosser IV Crowe & Dunlevy LITIGATION — MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS John R. Barker GableGotwals Michael J. Gibbens Crowe & Dunlevy
Dennis D. Brown Brown Patent Law
Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
Shawn M. Dellegar Crowe & Dunlevy
Terry M. Thomas Dispute Resolution Consultants
Craig A. Fitzgerald GableGotwals Robert E. Spoo McAfee & Taft
Bradley W. Welsh GableGotwals
LITIGATION — MUNICIPAL Michael T. Keester Hall Estill, et al. James C. Milton Hall Estill, et al.
LITIGATION — REAL ESTATE Robert J. Getchell GableGotwals Heath E. Hardcastle Albright, Rusher & Hardcastle Jeffrey D. Hassell GableGotwals Gerald L. Hilsher McAfee & Taft Victor E. Morgan Crowe & Dunlevy Stephen A. Schuller GableGotwals Steven A. Stecher Moyers Martin Thomas L. Vogt Jones, Gotcher & Bogan Robert J. Winter Pray Walker Christopher B. Woods Crowe & Dunlevy LITIGATION — REGULATORY ENFORCEMENT (SEC, TELECOM, ENERGY) Curtis M. Long Conner & Winters LITIGATION — SECURITIES Michael J. Gibbens Crowe & Dunlevy Richard P. Hix Doerner Saunders, et al. Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals P. David Newsome Jr. Hall Estill, et al. C. Raymond Patton Jr. Conner & Winters James M. Reed Hall Estill, et al.
SPONSORED EDITORIAL
2018 LAWYER OF THE YEAR Award Recipients
JON E. BRIGHTMIRE Doerner, Saunders, Daniel & Anderson Litigation - ERISA
JAMES W. CONNOR JR. Richards and Connor Medical Malpractice Defense
ROBERT JOYCE McAfee & Taft Environmental Law
KIMBERLY LAMBERT LOVE Titus Hillis Reynolds Love, P.C. Employment Law - Management
STEVEN K METCALF McDonald, McCann, Metcalf & Carwile, LLP Litigation - Construction
JAMES M. REED Hall Estill Litigation - Securities
TRACY ROBINETT Robinett, Swartz & Aycock Construction Law
THOMAS L. VOGT Jones Gotcher Litigation - Real Estate
ADDITIONAL AWARD RECIPIENTS: A. F. Ringold, Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold; A. Mark Smiling, Smiling, Smiling & Burgess; Allen E. Barrow, Jr., Barrow & Grimm; Andrew R. Turner, Conner & Winters; C. Raymond Patton, Jr., Conner & Winters; Charles D. Neal, Jr., Steidley & Neal; Charles Greenough, McAfee & Taft; Clark O. Brewster, Brewster & De Angelis; Craig A. Fitzgerald, GableGotwals; Curtis M. Long, Conner & Winters; David B. McKinney, GableGotwals; David R. Cordell, Conner & Winters; Del L. Gustafson, Hall, Estill, Hardwick, Gable, Golden & Nelson; Dennis D. Brown, Brown Patent Law; Donald S. Smith, Pray Walker; Eric P. Nelson, Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold; Geoffrey M. Standing Bear, Geoffrey M. Standing Bear; Jack E. Gordon, Jr., Gordon & Gordon; James P. McCann, McDonald, McCann, Metcalf & Carwile; Jeffrey D. Hassell, GableGotwals; John R. Barker, GableGotwals; Joseph R. Farris, Franden, Farris, Quillin, Goodnight + Roberts; Karen L. Long, Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold; Kevin P. Doyle, Pray Walker; Leslie C. Weeks, Rodolf & Todd; Mary Quinn Cooper, McAfee & Taft; Michael D. Cooke, Hall, Estill, Hardwick, Gable, Golden & Nelson; R. Kevin Redwine, Conner & Winters; Rita J. Gassaway, Gassaway Law Firm; Robert E. Spoo, McAfee & Taft; Robert J. Melgaard, Conner & Winters; Robert J. Winter, Pray Walker; Ronald N. Ricketts, GableGotwals; Sidney K. Swinson, GableGotwals; Stephen R. Ward, Conner & Winters; Stephen W. Ray, Hall, Estill, Hardwick, Gable, Golden & Nelson; Terry L. Watt, Crowe & Dunlevy; Thomas A. Creekmore III, Hall, Estill, Hardwick, Gable, Golden & Nelson; Thomas P. Schroedter, Hall, Estill, Hardwick, Gable, Golden & Nelson; Timothy G. Best, Best & Sharp; William E. Farrior, Barrow & Grimm; William L. Eagleton IV, Pray Walker
BEST LAWYERS James M. Sturdivant GableGotwals Terry M. Thomas Dispute Resolution Consultants LITIGATION — TRUSTS AND ESTATES Mark W. Curnutte Logan & Lowry LeAnn Drummond Ellis GableGotwals Jeffrey D. Hassell GableGotwals James C. Milton Hall Estill, et al. Robert J. Winter Pray Walker LITIGATION AND CONTROVERSY — TAX William E. Farrior Barrow & Grimm Kenneth L. Hunt Hall Estill, et al. Sheppard F. Miers Jr. GableGotwals MASS TORT LITIGATION / CLASS ACTIONS — DEFENDANTS William S. Leach McAfee & Taft Charles D. Neal Jr. Steidley & Neal Vani Singhal McAfee & Taft MASS TORT LITIGATION / CLASS ACTIONS — PLAINTIFFS Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals M. David Riggs Riggs Abney, et al. MEDIATION David L. Bryant GableGotwals John A. Gladd Sr. Dispute Resolution Consultants James P. McCann McDonald McCann, et al.
MEDICAL MALPRACTICE LAW — DEFENDANTS Michael P. Atkinson Atkinson Haskins, et al. Timothy G. Best Best & Sharp Clark O. Brewster Brewster & De Angelis Karen L. Callahan Rodolf & Todd James W. Connor, Jr. Richards & Connor
Stacy A. Schauvliege Crowe & Dunlevy
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MEDICAL MALPRACTICE LAW — PLAINTIFFS John F. McCormick Jr. Sherwood, McCormick & Robert MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS LAW Mark D. Berman Conner & Winters Gary L. Betow Conner & Winters Michael D. Cooke Hall Estill, et al. Terry R. Doverspike Pray Walker Stephen W. Ray Hall Estill, et al. R. Kevin Redwine Conner & Winters Randy R. Shorb Johnson & Jones MINING LAW Robert J. Joyce McAfee & Taft MORTGAGE BANKING FORECLOSURE LAW Mark A. Craige Crowe & Dunlevy
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Donald S. Smith Pray Walker
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Timothy S. Posey Hall Estill, et al.
Joseph W. Morris GableGotwals Richard B. Noulles GableGotwals
PATENT LAW Dennis D. Brown Brown Patent Law Alicia J. Edwards GableGotwals Margaret Millikin Millikin Intellectual Property Law Paul E. Rossler GableGotwals Terry L. Watt Crowe & Dunlevy PERSONAL INJURY LITIGATION — DEFENDANTS Michael P. Atkinson Atkinson Haskins, et al. Timothy G. Best Best & Sharp
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Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals
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Eugene Robinson The Robinson Law Firm
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PERSONAL INJURY LITIGATION — PLAINTIFFS E. Terrill Corley E. Terrill Corley and Associates Guy A. Fortney Brewster & De Angelis James E. Frasier Frasier, Frasier & Hickman John A. Gladd Sr. Dispute Resolution Consultants Walter D. Haskins Atkinson Haskins, et al. John F. McCormick Jr. Sherwood, McCormick & Robert Charles D. Neal Jr. Steidley & Neal Gary L. Richardson Richardson Richardson Boudreaux M. David Riggs Riggs Abney, et al. Ted C. Sherwood Sherwood, McCormick & Robert PRODUCT LIABILITY LITIGATION — DEFENDANTS Dennis C. Cameron GableGotwals James W. Connor, Jr. Richards & Connor Mary Quinn Cooper McAfee & Taft Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals William S. Leach McAfee & Taft Robert J. Winter Pray Walker John R. Woodard III Coffey, Senger, McDaniel PRODUCT LIABILITY LITIGATION — PLAINTIFFS Oliver S. Howard GableGotwals PROFESSIONAL MALPRACTICE LAW — DEFENDANTS Mary Quinn Cooper McAfee & Taft PUBLIC FINANCE LAW Randy R. Shorb Johnson & Jones REAL ESTATE LAW Gregory W. Alberty Hall Estill, et al.
* DESIGNATES LAWYER OF THE YEAR Vaden Bales Hall Estill, et al.
J. Ryan Sacra Conner & Winters
Shawn M. Dellegar Crowe & Dunlevy
Sara Barry GableGotwals
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Margaret Millikin Millikin Intellectual Property Law
Gary L. Betow Conner & Winters Kevin C. Coutant Doerner Saunders, et al. Robert F. Dougherty Hall Estill, et al. William L. Eagleton IV Pray Walker Thomas J. Hutchison GableGotwals Gary R. McSpadden Crowe & Dunlevy Eric P. Nelson Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold
SECURITIES REGULATION Robert A. Curry Conner & Winters Del L. Gustafson Hall Estill, et al. Robert J. Melgaard Conner & Winters P. David Newsome Jr. Hall Estill, et al. C. Raymond Patton Jr. Conner & Winters Stephen W. Ray Hall Estill, et al.
Coleman L. Robison Rosenstein, Fist & Ringold
TAX LAW Kenneth F. Albright Albright, Rusher & Hardcastle
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Gentra Abbey Sorem Conner & Winters
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SECURITIES / CAPITAL MARKETS LAW John R. Barker GableGotwals
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Varley H. Taylor Jr. Doerner Saunders, et al. Henry G. Will Conner & Winters Andrew M. Wolov Hall Estill, et al. TECHNOLOGY LAW Sarah E. Hansel Hall Estill, et al. Paul E. Rossler GableGotwals TRADEMARK LAW Rachel Blue McAfee & Taft Dennis D. Brown Brown Patent Law Frank J. Catalano GableGotwals
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MURRAY E. ABOWITZ Legal Malpractice Law – Defendants, Personal Injury Law – Defendants
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Daniel R. Ketchum II Newton O’Connor, et al.
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David B. McKinney GableGotwals Michael L. Nemec Hall Estill, et al. Curtis J. Shacklett Barber & Bartz
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D. BENHAM KIRK Bankruptcy and Creditor Debtor Rights Insolvency and Reorganization Law MICHAEL S. LINSCOTT Commercial Litigation Law LINDA CROOK MARTIN Environmental Law, Litigation - Environmental DAVID MCCULLOUGH First Amendment Law, Gaming Law, Native American Law
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WORKERS’ COMPENSATION LAW — EMPLOYERS Madalene A. B. Witterholt Crowe & Dunlevy
LINDA G. SCOGGINS Commercial Litigation, Health Care Law
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WE WANTED
A PLAN FOR THEIR FUTURE.
The Knapp family heard about Legacy Tulsa through a Legacy Partner organization that helps serve their son, Luke, who has muscular dystrophy. They attended a parent meeting that shared the importance of putting together a will and estate plan. “We learned it’s crucial to have this paperwork in order and worded in a specific way in case you pass away so your child can continue to receive state benefits without having to use inheritance money first,” said Laura Knapp.
We can’t express how special it was to give to the organization who has impacted our family. Knowing that we can use our resources to someday benefit kids like our son Luke is an honor. The Knapp family now has peace knowing that they have everything in place so that Luke and their daughter Olivia will be provided for no matter what the future may hold!
LEARN MORE ABOUT LEGACY GIVING AT
LEGACYTULSA.ORG Legacy Tulsa is designed to inspire people like you to make a charitable gift that helps care for you, your family and the organizations you passionately support.
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HEALTH
Lauren Branch is the president and CEO of New View Oklahoma, which has offices in Tulsa and Oklahoma City.
Future in focus NEW VIEW OKLAHOMA PROVIDES SPECIALIZED VISION SERVICES. BY ANNA HOLTON-DEAN
F
rances McFarland remembers the ice storm of 2007 like it was yesterday, but not for the reasons one might think. She was watching a University of Oklahoma football game when the TV appeared to lose color. She soon realized it wasn’t the TV that malfunctioned, but her eyesight — and so began her life with low vision and macular degeneration. Her husband, Glyn, also was diagnosed with macular degeneration several years later. At 85 and 91 years old, the simplest of tasks had become real challenges for the couple until their retina specialist, Dr. Ray M. Balyeat, referred them to New View Oklahoma for assistance this past November. New View Oklahoma is a nonprofit that provides specialized vision rehabilitation services to individuals with significant vision loss. It also is the largest employer for blind and vision-impaired Oklahomans, supplying nearly 150 jobs through in-house manufacturing and service contracts with local businesses and organizations. With the unemployment rate of visually impaired and blind individuals at over 70 percent, New View’s services are critical to the visually impaired community. In Oklahoma, over half a million people are identified with conditions that will lead to significant vision loss, says New View President and CEO Lauren Branch. In the Tulsa-metro area alone, over 20,000 people are considered legally blind, which is why Branch is currently working to expand employment opportunities in Tulsa. This past October, the Tulsa World call center hired three visually impaired employees and plans to add more in the near future. New View Oklahoma has been around since 1949, but its Tulsa clinic and retail store have only served the Tulsa area for three and a half years. However, New View is already changing lives. “We do diagnostics; we don’t cure anything,” Branch says. “We worry about their functional vision. We need to understand what’s going on in their environment. We do safety assessments,
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lighting assessments, mobility assessments and help them safely move in their community.” Also, optometrists specializing in low vision provide functional low-vision assessments and recommendations for optical devices. In keeping with its mission to empower individuals who are blind and vision-impaired to achieve their maximum level of independence, New View has revolutionized daily life for the McFarlands. After an initial visit to the Tulsa clinic to assess their needs, their assigned therapist, Terry Rairdon, visited their home multiple times to help address their difficulties with reading, technology, kitchen tasks and contrast deficits. With each visit, he focused on a different area of need. Rairdon found optimum lighting wattage and introduced them to everyday gadgets that are affordable and readily available on Amazon.com to make their lives easier. “We didn’t know what to expect when the doctor referred us, but now I just can’t sing their praises enough,” Frances says of New View. “I thought to myself, I know what this is going to be; they are trying to sell us something. We were almost negative about it, but they weren’t selling anything. Now I feel so lucky to have these services.” With technology assistance, the pair can watch church worship services on their iPad,
bank online, use their phones as magnifiers to read menus and instructions and have emails and texts read aloud to them from their devices. A simple yellow fit-over for their glasses has helped increase color contrast, which opened up a world of color and clarity the two had been lacking for years now. “I’m astounded at the difference the yellow sunglasses make. Everything is so much clearer,” Frances says. Frances even credits New View with keeping the couple independent in their home. “I know we will be able to stay in our home longer because of the ways they’ve helped us to be able to cook and do everything in our house,” Frances says. “I just feel so lucky.” New View assists individuals of any age, from infants to the elderly, but patients must be referred by their doctor. Currently, over 500 doctors in Oklahoma refer patients to the nonprofit. With an active client list of almost 5,000, New View receives 80 to 100 referrals per month. Branch says the best thing people can do to assist those with low vision is to help them understand that resources such as New View are available. “I think more than anything people want to be independent and not dependent,” Branch says. “Instead of viewing it as, ‘There’s nothing we can do,’ we can help them reach out and get assistance to provide hope and independence.” TP
How to save up to 70 percent heating and cooling your home each year… Geothermal heating and cooling systems tap into the free and renewable energy stored in the earth. By simply moving heat energy to or from the home and earth through a ground loop system, a geothermal heat pump unit achieves efficiency levels that ordinary gas furnace or air conditioners are unable to reach. As energy costs rise, homeowners and business owners are looking for more energy efficiency solutions that are eco-friendly. GeoExcel geothermal systems can reduce annual costs for heating, cooling and hot water by as much as 70% per year. At K&M Shillingford, we are proud to be a pioneer and national industry leader in the design, installation and service of innovative geothermal heating and cooling systems. Since 1979, we have built hundreds of commercial state-of-the-art systems and thousands of residential systems, virtually all in the Tulsa area. Our Tulsa company, one of the oldest geothermal contracting companies in the country, was named the 2012 “Contractor of the Year” by the Air Conditioning Contractors of America (ACCA), the nation’s largest association of environmental systems professionals.
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Dr. Vic Trammell, Dr. Greg Segraves, Dr. Larry Lander, Dr. Todd Johnson, Dr. Heath Evans
Eastern Oklahoma Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons Northeastern Oklahoma’s largest and most established oral surgery group Eastern Oklahoma Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons (EOOMS) is committed to providing comprehensive oral surgery care. They practice the full scope of oral and maxillofacial surgery. Common procedures include wisdom teeth and dental extractions with intravenous anesthesia for patient comfort. They specialize in all aspects of dental implant surgery, bone grafting and jaw reconstruction. As a group they offer 24-hour practice coverage and take trauma calls for local hospitals. EOOMS is comprised of five experienced oral surgeons: Larry Lander, D.D.S. MS.; Vic Trammell, D.M.D.; Todd Johnson, D.D.S.; Gregory Segraves, D.D.S.; M.S. Heath Evans, D.D.S. All EOOMS surgeons hold memberships in numerous dental societies including the Tulsa County Dental Society, Oklahoma Dental Association, American Dental Association, Southwest Society of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons and American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. For patients’ convenience, most of the group’s services are provided in the EOOMS offices. The offices are board certified for office IV anesthesia
to ensure patient comfort. Quality of care and patient safety are always the group’s primary concern. The EOOMS staff is a committed group of employees who strives to achieve the highest standard of care. Their surgical team has specialized training in oral surgery and anesthesia assisting, which provides for a more comfortable and safe oral surgery experience. EOOMS is located in the 91st and Highway 169 area at 4716 W. Urbana St. and at our NEW location in Owasso just off of Highway 169 and 96th Street North at 12802 E. 101st Place N. in the Medical Park Plaza. Eastern Oklahoma Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Broken Arrow Owasso 4716 W. Urbana St. 12802 E. 101st Pl. N. 918-449-5800 918-274-0944 www.eooms.com
SPECIAL TREATMENT Treating older patients can present challenges for doctors. BY KRISTI EATON
L
oosely defined as those over age 65, geriatric patients can face a host of ailments, but specialists offer support to those patients and their families. Dr. John Carment, a member of the geriatrics department at OU Physicians, says geriatricians treat all common diseases affecting older adults, but the focus tends to be on non-drug treatment whenever possible. Unlike younger patients, he says geriatric patients might have competing and concurrent medical problems. “A chronic condition, like diabetes mellitus, can be treated according to standard professional guidelines (in a young, healthy person),” Carment says. “The same treatment may not be feasible — and could be potentially harmful — when applied to a frail 88-year-old with eight active medical problems.” Carment says geriatric patients tend to have complex needs, such as cognitive impairment, declining function or multiple conditions, which makes it difficult for them to live independently and care for themselves. A geriatrician is trained to identify so-called “geriatric syndromes,” which include frailty, recurrent falls, dizziness, unintentional weight loss, sensory impairment, cognitive impairment and urinary incontinence, among other issues. “Knowledge of medications, drug-to-drug interactions and side effects that limit use of many medicines in older persons are also areas of expertise,” Carment adds.
OU Physicians neurologist Dr. Syed Hussain treats patients suffering from Parkinson’s disease, tremors and other neurodegenerative disorders. He says there are some challenges with treating older patients, and it is most successful through a multidisciplinary approach with the help of a caregiver as well as family support, nurses, a therapist, social worker and the neurologist. Both doctors tend to work more with the families and caregivers of older patients compared to those of younger patients. Caregivers provide invaluable support to the patient, Carment says. “This may be as simple as providing transportation to the grocery store or as involved as managing daily medications and assisting with self-care like bathing and dressing,” he says. “Caregivers are often the best advocate for older vulnerable adults and often serve as their ‘navigator’ through the complicated health care system.” Caregivers also provide crucial emotional support for older adults, he says. “Most caregivers are friends or family to the patient and are not compensated for the time committed to caregiving,” he adds. Hussain says caregivers play a critical role in the treatment of any geriatric patient — whether it is giving medications at the right time or identifying problems that might require medical attention. Problems emptying the bladder or urinary or fecal incontinence are other issues facing older patients. Such issues are known as pelvic floor disorders, says Dr. Jameca Price, a physician in
the obstetrics and gynecology department of OU Physicians. For people who are nervous about having a conversation about pelvic floor disorders, which can affect men and women, Price offers some tips. She says starting a conversation in which the person noticing the change mentions the frequency of bathroom visits is an option. Opening a conversation around activity level and whether or not there has been leaking is another way to broach the subject, she says Finally, asking whether there is leakage when laughing, coughing or lifting heavy objects is another way to go about the topic. “If your loved one thinks she may have a (pelvic floor disorder), offer to schedule an appointment for her with a primary care doctor, gynecologist or a urogynecologist for an evaluation,” Price adds. Price says she provides a variety of treatment options for patients depending the severity of the condition, their general health and their wishes. “Often I recommend a combination of therapies,” she adds. It can be difficult to talk about such problems, even to health care providers, Price notes. “However, providers — and especially urogynecologists — are used to talking about these problems. And, to get proper treatment for pelvic floor disorders, you need to talk about them,” she says. TP CONTINUED ON P. 72 TulsaPeople.com
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O K L A H O M A S TAT E U N I V E R S I T Y
Dedicated to providing exceptional, personalized cardiology care for our patients.
Cardiovascular Medicine Physician’s Office Building 802 S. Jackson Ave., Suite 225 Tulsa, OK 74127 918-582-7711
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OKLAHOMA IN NEED OF PRIMARY AND SPECIALTY CARE PHYSICIANS Oklahoma, along with other states, is facing a doctor shortage, according to Dr. James Herman, dean at the OU-TU School of Community Medicine. The shortage is seen particularly in areas of primary care, but also in areas of specialties, including general surgery, psychiatry and obstetrics/gynecology. “The shortages in primary care mean that many people cannot find access to general care and preventative services,” Herman says. “A robust system of primary care is known to improve almost all health care indices, and the lack of such a system in the United States is a major cause for concern. These shortages are even more of an issue in many rural areas.” A 2016 report from the United Health Foundation found that Oklahoma’s shortage is one of the worst in the nation. The state has 85 physicians for every 100,000 people, ranking the state 48 out of 50. Herman says the School of Community Medicine is taking the issue seriously. “We call ourselves a School of Community Medicine because we believe that supplementing the usual medical school curriculum with activities that improve understanding of the social determinants of health is fundamental to producing the types of physicians that our state most needs,” he says. One example is the Bedlam Clinic, a student-run medical practice that sees the most underserved members of the community. The school attracts students from Oklahoma and nearby states, Herman says. “They are idealistic yet hard working, serious yet interested in their patients as human beings, and interested in being curers of disease and healers of individuals and families,” he says of OU-TU medical students. “They put in long hours studying as medical students, and even longer hours as residents training in a specialty area after graduating.”
COURTESY OU-TU SCHOOL OF COMMUNITY MEDICINE
CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE CLINIC
12 & 12, Inc. An evidence-based approach to addiction recovery
Samuel Martin, M.D., Medical Director | Brad Collins, MHR, LADC-S, Director – Private Pay 12 & 12, Inc. offers life-saving recovery tools to adults suffering Treatment Program | Brandie Herren, RN, Director of Nursing | Bryan Day, CEO from the brain disease of addiction — or co-existing mental health and substance use disorders — to support their ability to achieve individualized recoveries. The clinic’s complete continuum of care ing, motivation and commitment necessary for building long-term recovery,” provides multiple levels of treatment — including detoxification, intensive says CEO Bryan Day. “That’s why we customize treatment planning to meet residential treatment, outpatient and intensive outpatient treatment, counseleach client’s needs. Simultaneously treating co-existing mental health and ing, transitional living and sober living. substance use disorders dramatically increases our clients’ likelihood of 12 & 12’s multi-disciplinary approach integrates medical oversight, recovery.” psychiatry, nursing, counseling and case management. It operates a unit that A Tulsa Area United Way partner agency 12 & 12, Inc. allows commercial insurance clients to receive all their services — bedrooms, since 1989, 12 & 12 is the only accredited 6333 E. Skelly Drive recreation, dining, laundry and group and individual counseling — within the Comprehensive Community Addiction Recovery 918-664-4224 self-contained unit. Center (CCARC) in the state that provides a full 12and12.org “We recognize that clients come to us with varying degrees of understandcontinuum of services, onsite.
Midtown Wellness Institute
Precision Lifestyle Medicine An innovative wellness clinic recently opened in midtown Tulsa, conveniently located at East 17th Street and South Peoria Avenue. Midtown Wellness Institute serves patients interested in improving their quality and enjoyment of life. Dr. Blaine Price “We focus on improving your health rather than just treating illness,” says Dr. Blaine Price, a board-certified family practice physician and founder of the clinic. Wellness services offered at the cutting-edge practice include IV therapy, precision lifestyle medicine, concierge level programs, medical aesthetics, hormone therapy, sound-wave therapy treatment for erectile dysfunction, plateletrich plasma (PRP) treatment for hair loss, extracorporeal pulse activation therapy (EPAT) for orthopedic injuries and genetic health assessments. Dr. Price’s genomic tests use the esteemed Apeiron Center for Human Potential algorithm, the most advanced in the field. Current assessment categories include sleep, detoxification, nutrition, supplementation, weight loss and athletic performance.
The practice also has an aesthetic nurse and aesthetician on-staff to administer Botox, fillers, facials and more. “The focus of the practice is taking your health to the next level to increase the quality of your life,” says Dr. Price. Midtown Wellness Institute 1713 S. Peoria Ave., Suite A 918-895-6272 midtownwellnessinstitute.com
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Tulsa Fertility Center
Reproductive endocrinologists provide infertility treatments Dr. Stanley Prough and Dr. Shauna McKinney provide patients hope for their parenting dreams. As the area’s only two fellowship trained physicians in reproductive endocrinology, Prough and McKinney treat those having difficulty getting pregnant or with recurrent miscarriages. “We also help preserve a patient’s fertility due to her upcoming cancer treatment or due to maternal age,” says Prough. “Those who desire not to have children right now also can have their fertility preserved through our care,” adds McKinney. Tulsa Fertility Center positions itself at the forefront of fertility treatment in the Tulsa area, attracting patients from across northeastern Oklahoma, Arkansas and Missouri. “We are the only full service in vitro fertilization clinic and laboratory in northeastern Oklahoma,” says J. Kevin Thibodeaux, Ph. D., laboratory director.
This allows the physicians to treat all fertility issues here at the office. “We can effectively remove barriers to getting pregnant — male infertility, maternal age, blocked tubes or recurrent miscarriage, for example.” Besides IVF, Tulsa Fertility Center offers intrauterine insemination and surgeries to correct underlying infertility issues. The vast majority of patients in the Tulsa area have insurance coverage for their initial visit and pre-testing, however only half of those patients will have insurance coverage for fertility treatment. Some fertility treatment can be expensive and Tulsa Fertility Center can suggest an outside Tulsa Fertility Center financing company. 115 E. 15th St. 918-359-2229 www.tulsafertilitycenter.com
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www.tulsaimplantdentist.com Visit TulsaPeople.com to register for our SPRING BEAUTY PACKAGE: Get pampered at Ihloff Salon and Day Spa with a $200 gift card! Register by April 30.
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POSITIVE CHANGES!
Neurofeedback Brain Fitness Center
“RENU Your Brain,
RENU
Your Life.” There are many reasons why RenuYou Neurofeedback Brain Fitness Center is considered one of the top clinics in the world for neurofeedback (NFB). For the past decade, they have been the pioneer front runners of neurofeedback in Oklahoma and are passionate about research and development. They are the only board-certified neurofeedback NFB clinic in Oklahoma that has licensed professional therapists and counselors, NFB mental health practitioners as well as on staff physicians, including one of the only triple certified psychiatrists in the state who is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and specializes in child/adolescent and addiction psychiatry. We were desperate when we came to RenuYou. Our son was a victim of bullying and was dealing with tremendous anxiety, after being locked in a locker at school. After treatment, our son has come back to us! He is calm, relaxed, and is earning good grades in school again. We thank God that we did our research and found RenuYou. Our son’s turnaround was miraculous!
RenuYou Neurofeedback begins with a qEEG that measures the electrical activity of the brain. Why? Because everything on our brains is electric…every thought you think and every emotion or sensation you feel is due to the electrical firing of neurons. “We measure that activity to see where a person is producing too much, as in the case of anxiety; where they’re not producing enough, as in ADHD, or where the roads just don’t seem to be connected,” says clinical director, Marie McCabe, LMFT, BCN. “We then develop a treatment protocol, based off that analysis and address it for change with neurofeedback.”
I am a 26 year old and suffered with depression and anxiety my whole life. I didn’t know what life was like without taking a pharmaceutical. When I found RenuYou, I was skeptical. Train my brain to come out of this vicious cycle of depression and anxiety? After treatment, I am now drug free and earned my nursing degree. RenuYou helped me be who God intended me to be.
ANNOUNCING DR. ANTON SURJA! Dr. Anton A Surja, MD, is one of only a handful of TRIPLE BOARD CERTIFIED Psychiatrists in the entire state of Oklahoma! His certifications are in 1. General psychiatry, 2. Child and adolescent psychiatry and in 3. Addiction/substance abuse psychiatry. He completed his residency at the University of Louisville, Louisville, KY. Dr. Anton has over 18 years of diverse experience and has a heart for children as well as adults in helping patients achieve peak performance. He also specializes in medication management and is not your typical psychiatrist. While recognizing the need for medications, he would like to help patients reduce or better manage their medication when possible and believes neurofeedback is the perfect adjunct for doing so. Dr. Surja says, “I am honored to be working with the dedicated staff at RenuYou Neurofeedback Brain Fitness Center and am looking forward to helping our patients be the best that they can be!”
Are you struggling? WITH ADHD, ADDICTIONS, AUTISM, ANXIETY, CHRONIC FATIGUE, DEPRESSION, INSOMNIA, PTSD, MIGRAINES, OCD OR SLEEP DISORDERS?
RENUYOU NEUROFEEDBACK CAN HELP! Safe and non-invasie, brain wave biofeedback is considered to be one of the most advanced, drugfree therapies of this technological generation and performs what most of us are conditioned to think of as miraculous. CONTACT US TODAY!
RENUYOU NEUROFEEDBACK BRAIN FITNESS CENTER 7424 S YALE AVE • 918-747-7400 • RENUYOUTULSA.COM BCIA Certified • Physician Staffed • Licensed Professional Therapists
“The New Bohemians: Cool and Collected Homes” by Justina Blakeney. $24.99.
Baskets, perfect for storage or plant display. $79.99.
Assorted pansies, grown by Southwood. $19.99, per flat.
STOREFRONT
Paul James
GARDENER GETAWAY
100 percent pure, raw honey, produced by bees at Southwood’s 80-acre farm, located in Jenks. $12.99 for 24-ounce jar.
SOUTHWOOD HAS BEEN MAKING OTHERS GREEN WITH ENVY FOR THREE DECADES.
Snake plants are among the easiest houseplants to grow. $4.99-$29.99.
BY ANNE BROCKMAN
I
n its 36 years, Southwood Landscape and Garden Center has evolved from a local nursery to a gardening, lifestyle, learning and design mega center. Come spring, the 5-acre facility becomes a destination, as Tulsans flock to Southwood for their seasonal planting needs. “We grow so much of what we sell, and we’re so proud of that,” says Marketing Manager Paul James. Southwood’s greenhouses, which are less than 2 miles from the garden center, allow for products that are acclimated to Tulsa’s climate. Although Tulsans can find tried-and-true varieties at Southwood, the company also introduces 20 percent new cultivars each year, whether that’s in color, size or spread. Spring is one of the busiest times at the garden center, so expect to find lots of shoppers, as well as live music every Sunday during the season. And, don’t leave the kids at home; Southwood’s tricycles provide plenty of entertainment for the younger crowd.
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Along with plants, Southwood has grown its inventory to include household and seasonal decor, as well as outdoor living necessities. “We’ve evolved to accommodate a wide array of customers,” James says. Onsite classes are held throughout the year, led primarily by James and other expert staff. Workshop themes range from pruning to container gardening to edible herbs to lawn care. Classes often fill up fast, so James recommends registering online. Throughout the year, Southwood also hosts annual events, like the Quilt and Fiber Arts Show each January and Plant a Row for the Hungry in March, where within a six-hour window, Southwood gives away 15,000 tomato plants in exchange for non-perishable food items it then donates to the Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma. James says Southwood and its owners — Joe, Ginny and Margaret Schulte and Brenda Schulte Baird — believe in giving back to the community that has sustained their secondgeneration local business. TP
Southwood potting soil, an exacting formula developed by Oklahoma State University and only slightly tweaked over the years. $6.99-$9.99.
Southwood Garden Center 9025 S. LEWIS AVE. | 918-299-9409 SOUTHWOODGARDENCENTER.COM 9 a.m.-7 p.m., Monday-Saturday; 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday
Peepers Readers and Chala Handbags fit your style needs.
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BEYOND CITY LIMITS
The Cherokee Capitol Building
T
SPRING SOJOURN Tahlequah’s sites and its annual Red Fern Festival STORY AND PHOTO BY RHYS MARTIN
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he name “Tahlequah” means different things depending on whom you ask. Linguists trace it back to the Cherokee word for a red grain. Others interpret it as “plains.” Locals say it means “two is enough;” as the legend goes, tribal elders planned to meet to determine the location of the Cherokee Nation capital. Though three elders planned to attend, only two arrived, and decided “two is enough.” Regardless of definition, the Cherokee capital of today is a town of great diversity. Some people bypass Tahlequah on their way to the Illinois River, but there’s a lot to see. Muskogee Avenue is the main street, with its repurposed and restored buildings, retains its historic feel. A few old service stations have been converted into modern shops, and some of the traffic signs are printed in both English and Cherokee. The Cherokee Capitol Building was built in the mid-1800s and currently houses the Cherokee Nation’s judicial branch. As the oldest government structure in the state, the Cherokee National Supreme Court building was built in 1844, holding court sessions and the printing press for the Cherokee Advocate, Oklahoma’s first newspaper and the official publi-
cation of the nation. Also, check out the Cherokee National Prison Museum. The sandstone penitentiary was the only one in Indian Territory from 1875 until the turn of the 20th century. The town also is the setting for the 1961 children’s book “Where the Red Fern Grows.” On the last weekend of April, downtown Tahlequah holds the Red Fern Festival in honor of the popular coming-of-age story. There’s live music, a car show, an antique tractor show, tons of vendors, children’s activities and a fly-in at the Tahlequah Airport. For non-festival visits, check out Sam and Ella’s Chicken Palace on the north end of Muskogee Avenue. Don’t let the name fool you; chickens are only part of the decor. It’s a pizza place, and theirs is excellent. The crust is thick, twisty and flavorful. Should home cooking be more your style, Jincy’s Kitchen can’t be beat. It’s not in Tahlequah, but south of Highway 62 in Qualls. Jincy’s is in an old general store that was used as a set in the film version of “Where the Red Fern Grows.” The shelves are still stocked with antiques and other memorabilia. The comfort food menu, including pan-fried chicken, is varied, as are the hours. Check in advance so that you don’t drive out there just to be disappointed. Cash and check only. TP
Starting APRIL 7 th
EVERY SATURDAY • 8-11:30 AM
Fresh local produce, eggs, honey, salsa, soap, jelly, flowers, non-GMO beef, pork and chicken!
51st and Sheridan
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GARDENING
Tips and tricks for water conservation in your landscape BY ALLEN ROBINSON
O
ur cold winter is fading and spring is sprouting. For many of us, that means it’s time to start thinking about landscaping
projects. A well-designed landscape not only adds beauty to your home, it also can help reduce your water use, improve your home’s comfort and lower your energy bills all year long. Explore xeriscape design and you’ll discover that this type of garden is environmentally friendly and attractive. Many homeowners confuse xeriscape with zero-scape, thinking that choosing a xeriscaped yard means accenting mostly hardscape with a few plants. That’s not the case at all. Yards that embrace xeriscape ideas actually feature all manner of plants and garden styles, even cottage gardens. The term simply refers to a landscape that minimizes water use. Here are 10 relatively easy tips to help conserve water in your landscape:
1.
Select plants appropriately. Seek out Oklahoma Proven plants for the best success in our regional climate. Visit oklahomaproven.org for plant profiles.
2. 3.
Always group together plants that have similar water needs.
Choose vining vegetable crops like cucumbers, assorted melons, and summer and winter squash. They require less water than
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many other vegetables, and watering is only critical during their flowering and fruiting stages. The same goes for eggplant, peppers and tomatoes.
rates are low. Avoid watering in the late evening as wet leaves at nighttime invite disease.
4.
9.
5.
10.
A lawn is easily No. 1 in water consumption in the average landscape. Consider limiting turf areas and replant with grasses that survive solely on rainfall and/or use turf grass, which requires minimal water. Contact the Tulsa County OSU Extension Office for proper turf selections for our area.
Aerate your soil, as it improves water flow to plants’ roots and enables soil to better absorb water and nutrients. This encourages deeper roots.
6.
Use drip irrigation. These systems deliver water directly to the root zone and nowhere else. They can be readily found both in stores and online, and are quite easy to install. Watering the root system versus the foliage has many advantages, including both efficient water usage and minimization of foliage mold and other diseases.
7.
Collect rainwater from roofs via guttering into rain barrels or similar apparatus. Reuse any old water that is not high in sodium and salts.
8.
Water only in the early mornings, when it is cooler and less windy and evaporation
Raise your lawnmower cutting height as it gets warmer. Longer grass blades help shade each other and retain more water. Generally speaking, root depth is proportional to grass blade height. That is, the higher the blade height, the deeper the roots, which will survive drought conditions much better.
Use mulch to keep plant roots cool, minimize evaporation, prevent soil from crusting and reduce weed growth. On average, a well-designed landscape saves enough water and energy to pay for itself in less than eight years. It’s never too late to make your landscape beautiful and efficient. TP Thank you to Tulsa County Master Gardeners for their expertise in this subject matter. Allen Robinson has been a Master Gardener since 2010.
PLANT SALE
The annual Tulsa Master Gardeners Plant Sale continues online through April 4, with the public sale 9 a.m.-7 p.m., April 19, at the Expo Square Exchange Center, 4145 E. 21st St. The sale offers a variety of plants for containers, flower beds and vegetable gardens. Admission is free. Plant prices vary. Proceeds benefit Tulsa Master Gardeners’ educational and volunteer programs. Visit tulsamastergardeners.org.
T H E T I TA N O F T H E I N DU S T RY Our knowledgeable and experienced staff is poised to help you with any need or answer any question. We’ve proudly built our team upon these pillars: Integrity, Experience, Employees, Focus and Service. •
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As a full-service escrow company in Oklahoma, we merge experience, a dedicated team, and innovative technology solutions to offer you peace of mind. You can rest assured your escrow transaction will be completed fast and accurately whether in a Residential Closing, a Commercial Closing, a Refinance, or 1031 Exchange. We are committed to offering our clients the most comprehensive suite of services available.
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HOME
WE
HOPS
CHINCHILLAS HOP WHEN THEY ARE HAPPY.
100% of proceeds from Conservation On Tap goes to Save the Wild Chinchillas, Inc. 21+ event.
APRIL 27 TULSA ZOO TULSAZOO.ORG/TAP
LANYARD SPONSOR: RANCH ACRES WINE & SPIRITS Special thanks to these zoo partners for building
The Helmerich Trust
a better zoo through their continued support.
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The H.A. and Mary K. Chapman Charitable Trust
Natalie Mallory operates Full Sun Composting, a local composting service that generates compost for home use. “Most things you plant in full sun,” Mallory says, “so plant in Full Sun Compost.”
TRASH TO TREASURE Local business turns food waste into compost. BY ANNE BROCKMAN
W
hen Natalie and Don Mallory moved from Colorado to the former oil boomtown of Tulsa, they decided to make their own black gold: compost. The idea to start a compost business began in early 2016, when they attended a 40-hour training by the U.S. Composting Council in Raleigh, North Carolina. The couple launched Full Sun Composting in October 2016 in their own backyard, and this month are settling in to their new commercial space at Hemphill Create, a manufacturing incubator near East Pine Street and North Harvard Avenue. “There’s something great about turning what someone considers trash into a valuable medium,” Natalie Mallory says. Compost is considered by some to be black gold: rich organic matter that enriches soil, retains moisture, reduces the need for chemical fertilizers, encourages the production of beneficial bacteria and reduces methane emissions from landfills, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. In 2014, 38 million pounds of food waste were discarded. Twenty percent of what Americans discard is food waste. Full Sun collects food waste and coffee grounds from sites across the city, including the Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma, Roppongi, The Vault, 36 Degrees North, Kitchen 66, Crushed Red and Blue Moon Cafe, and mixes those ingredients with wood chips and other organic materials to create a compost perfect for local gardens and lawns. Natalie, who grew up on a dairy farm and works as a nutritionist for the Tulsa Health Department, says she always wanted to be a good steward of the earth. Similar compost services exist across the country, but Full Sun is working with the Department of Environmental Quality to be the first permitted in the state. Until then, the Mallorys will continue to divert Tulsa food waste. In 2017, Full Sun collected 34,256 pounds, with plans to double that this year, thanks to new partners and the company’s new location. Full Sun Compost is sold at Grogg’s Green Barn, 10105 E. 61st St., in 1-cubic-foot bags. Visit fullsuncomposting.com for more information. TP
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ROOF VENTILATION DAYLIGHTING SYSTEMS Ask us about the 30% tax credit.
By Perk, Inc.
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3632 S. Peoria • 918-392-0992 www.brooksidecleaners.com
GET SOME GREEN THIS SPRING! TULSA'S BEST SELECTION OF STATUARY POTTERY
NANYEHI the story of nancy ward
MAY 4 & 5 • 7:30 PM
TICKETS: 918.384.ROCK © 2018 Cherokee Nation Entertainment. All Rights Reserved.
THE PLANT PLACE Call Today for Your Free Designer Consultation: 918.582.5572 Or Visit Us at Our Show Room at 1502 S Cincinnati Pl | www.cohlmia.com VISIT US AT OUR OKLAHOMA CITY LOCATION
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MUSINGS
M
y favorite teacher at Coffeyville Community College was J. Henry Hedley. In a literature class he asked us, in the Socratic method, “What’s the difference between poetry and verse?” We looked at him with blank faces. We were too cool to frown in ignorance. “Anyone can write verse,” he explained. “Only a poet can write poetry.” We nodded knowingly. At that age and in that time we were very wise and oh-so-cultured. We were especially fond of the poet Rod McKuen. A boyfriend gave me a book of poetry by Carl Sandburg, “Honey and Salt.” We gave one another poetry books back then. It was a long time ago. Now, I read my horoscope more fervently than I read poetry. In honor of National Poetry Month I am revisiting my love of poetry. I’ll pull out copies of Billy Collins books with poems such as “Another Reason Why I Don’t Keep a Gun in the House.” I’ll reread the Mary Oliver poem “Wild Geese” that reminds us, “You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves.” I’ll read haiku and Emily Dickinson. Because they’re short and suitable for my 8-second attention span, similar to that of a goldfish. My favorite book of poetry these days is the funny children’s book “I’m Just No Good at Rhyming.” I thought about dabbling with the didactic
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POETRY AND TEACHERS BY CONNIE CRONLEY
cinquain form of poetry, five lines playfully using adjectives, gerunds and nouns: “Snow Silent, white Dancing, falling, drifting, Covering everything it touches Blanket.” But I got distracted and remembered the funny free verse of e.e. cummings: “The snow doesn’t give a soft white damn whom it touches.” Wasn’t it Robert Frost who said writing free verse is like playing tennis with the net down? That reminded me of the fierce free verse of Sherman Alexie, especially in his new memoir about his mother’s death in “You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me,” and I wandered off to look for that book in my library.
There I found Dorothy Parker’s sharp-as-ablade doggerel, “Higgledy Piggledy, my white hen She lays eggs for gentle men You cannot persuade her with gun and lariat She will not come across for the proletariat.” Stuck in one of the books as a bookmark was a thank-you note I got from Lily, the 16-year-old who lives across the street. She thanked me for a Christmas gift, but more importantly, she wrote this: “Also, thank you for encouraging me to finish ‘Jane Eyre.’ I ended up loving the book! The ending was wonderful! Probably my favorite school book I’ve read.” What a triumph! (Lily encourages me to use exclamation marks.) Does this elevate me to the status of teacher? Oh, wait. I remember when I taught journalism writing at the University of Tulsa and went to class one day to find this note on my podium: “Dear Ms. Cronley. The reason I didn’t come to class today was because I’m depressed already.” I’ll look forward to the first full week of May, which is Teacher Appreciation Week, but for now I’ll celebrate National Poetry Month in honor of Mr. Hedley with this composition of my own. It’s a verse, not a poem. “I loved you for what you were. Or what I thought you were. Or what you thought you were. Boy, were we wrong. “Now when I dream of you I know it’s a sign That I’m coming down with something — A virus or a migraine.” TP
Oklahoma’s Statewide Open Mosque Day Sunday, April 8, 2018
How do you describe a commercial cleaning company that has been in business for 32 years in 1 word?
Blessed. Here’s to the next 32 years!
We invite you to join us from 1 to 4 p.m. to learn about our Culture and Religion! Come for a meet and greet, tours, snacks, activities for kids (calligraphy of their names, face painting), a presentation (theology, charity, lifestyle, myths and stereotypes), and to observe a prayer.
Islamic Society of Tulsa • 4630 S. Irvington Avenue /ISTOutreach • 918-960-2990
918.663.1919 final touch cleaning.com Sc h o o l s • Me di c a l F a c i l i t i e s • I n d ust r i al & Offi ce
S PO N S O R ED BY TH E IS L AM IC C O U N C I L O F O KL AH O MA
FOUNDED FOUNDED BY BY
PRESENTED PRESENTED BY BY
MAY 1-6, 2018 For Tickets, Event Schedule and more, visit bentonvillefilmfestival.com
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58th Annual Opera Ball 2018 Debutantes
Gabrielle Elise Armstrong
Allison Paige Bovasso
Littrell Kate Connor
Olivia Grace Cooper
Katherine Anne Darden
Isabella Katrine DesBarres
Sommer Ellen DeSelms
Darcey Monae Drullinger
Macey Renae Drullinger
Catherine Grace Easterling
Emily Claire Elmburg
Megan Hoffman Fitz-Patrick
Madison Theresa Anne Galbraith
Nadia Michelle Geer
Aliye Christine Hargett
Katherine Elise Horne
Emily Lauren McDonie
Erin Nicole Milsten
Sydney Alexandra Murrah
Asha Sharma Richardson
Maris Kathryn Susman
Sydney Elizabeth Thorpe
Heidi Nicole Young
2018 Squires
Colin Samuel Broermann
Johnathan Forrest Cowen
George Nolley Enterline
Edward Reed Herndon
Harrison Randall McCormick
Samuel James Reed
William Meyer Siegfried
Chase Garrett Taylor
Nathan Kent Washecheck
Shelly Drullinger
Melissa Easterling
Amy Herndon
Event Chair
Debutante Chair
Squire Chair
PROPERTY GROUP
918-231-5637 thayes@mcgrawok.com
McGraw Realtors
LUXURY
TIM HAYES
SHERRI SANDERS 918-724-5008
ssanders@mcgrawok.com
AT MCGRAW REALTORS
Call any of the Luxury Property Group Realtors about one of these homes, or any property that you have an interest in. We will provide you with superior personal service with the highest integrity.
GORDON SHELTON
DIANA PATTERSON
918-697-2742
918-629-3717
gshelton@mcgrawok.com
dpatterson@mcgrawok.com
THE ESTATES OF HAMPTON HILLS
13127 S Yorktown Avenue, Bixby. Fabulous Custom on approximately 5 acres with 2 stocked ponds, salt water pool with hot tub. Outdoor kitchen with fireplace. Elevator. Safe room. Shop with quarters and additonal 4 car garage. $2,199,900
THE VISTA GRAND Located along the beautiful bluffs in the Coves on Bird Island ! This custom & completely furnished lake home offers 4 beds, 4.5 baths, formal living & dining, great room open to kitchen, master suite with huge master bath & office/could be bedroom on the main level, floor to ceiling windows all along the lakeside. $1,590,000
BIXBY 6845 E 181st Street S - Newer gated estate with exquisite details thru-out. Located on 5 acres with outdoor living. Fireplace, pool, spa, waterfall, sport court, pond & shop. Chef’s Kitchen, fab master, study, mud room, Safe room, 1st floor Theater. 2 bed down/3 up with gameroom & study niche. $1,300,000 AVALON PLACE 3020 S. Trenton Ave. - One owner custom built smart house. Architect Rachel Zebrowski calls it “Desert Mediterranean”. Large Master suite downstairs and guest apartment with living area and kitchenette. Pool overlooks greenbelt & Crow Creek. $899,000
MIDTOWN 4604 S Evanston Ave - Midtown total remodel on .57 acre! Contemporary finishes & superior craftsmanship. 2 Masters on 1st floor. Kitchen with island & upscale appliances. Formal Dining. Luxurious master with tub, shower & closet connects to laundry. Study. Game Room & 2 beds up. $725,000
GRAND LAKE South Grand Lake Spacious Mediterranean waterfront completely remodeled! New roof, new paint inside and out, new tile and carpet, beautifully decorated with unforgettable views of Grand Lake! Four-slip refloated dock, 30x50 shop with half bath & office, 197’ of waterfront and great outdoor living space. $1,100,000
THE OLYMPIA TOWNHOMES 611 W 15th Street - A 3,931 sq ft (M/L) townehome overlooking the Arkansas River. Situated on top of the complex with two floors, a private elevator, and an inside staircase from street level. 3 beds, 4 baths, 4 living areas & patios. The custom designed home is now vacant and ready for your decorating ideas! $500,000
E NJOY T H E LUXU R Y L IFESTY L E YOU DESIRE TulsaPeople.com
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McGraw Realtors
PRIVATE GATED ESTATE ON 26 ACRES F A R M S BrookWood Farms III features 1.0 - 1.5 acre premium home sites located in Wagoner County, just southeast of Tulsa and Broken Arrow. This small, privatized, upscale neighborhood consists of 27 home sites. It is situated among mature trees, open spaces and nature. Purchasers are welcome to choose their own builder. 14142 S. 246th E. Ave. Lot prices start at $80,000.
5412 E PRINCETON STREET, BROKEN ARROW Impeccably maintained private gated Estate on 26+ acres. Breathtaking golf course-like grounds with manicured gardens. Grand curved staircase, palatial rooms with soaring ceilings. 2 master suites on 1st floor & 2 beds up. Kitchen opens to great room & over looks infinity pool & spa. 4 car garage is heat & cooled. Sprawling pond with water feature. 9 bay outbuilding has heat/air, 5 stalls, wash bay & office. Additional outbuilding & greenhouse. 4 Paddocks. Fully fenced with 2 gated entrances. Truly a one of a kind property with access to major highways. $4,995,000.
918.724.5008
Ssanders@mcgrawok.com SherriSanders.net
A Retreat From the Ordinary Visit our website at www.BrookWoodFarms-Land.com or call/text Brian at 918-231-7519 or Sherri Sanders www.brookwoodfarms-land.com McGraw Realtors 918-724-5008.
Brian@BrookWoodFarms-Land.com
S
918.406.8286
918-231-7519
Hsanders@mcgrawok.com SherriSanders.net
Scott Coffman 918-640-1073 - scoffman@mcgrawok.com CT
A TR
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UN
3 5 4 2 E 66 T H S T R E E T
$294,000 - 4 BED - 2 FULL, 1 HALF BATH New listing in Jenks Schools (the brand new Jenks elementary), corner lot, 3 bedrooms plus game room or 4 bedroom. Very spacious master with spa like master bath, wonderful vaulted living with fireplace, hardwoods, formals, enormous yard with sport court, 3 car garage.
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CO
2404 E 27 T H P L A C E
$795,000 - 5 BED - 4 FULL, 2 HALF BATH Stunning fully remodeled Midtown Estate Home with top-of-the-line touches and amenities throughout. Enormous kitchen opens to casual living and breakfast nook. Original moldings and trim. Charming study, multiple living rooms, two indoor fireplaces, wine/cigar room, and basement with granite counters, 3 car garage, beautiful yard and landscaping.
McGraw Realtors TulsaPeople.com
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McGraw Realtors
1554 S Yorktown Place
Enjoy the character and charm found in this historically significant, 1930 Gillette District home! Stunning details and numerous original features. Impeccable condition! Library, formals, gameroom, exercise room with sauna, two laundry areas and rentable garage apartment. Remodeled kitchen with subzero fridge. Expansive bedrooms. Gorgeous landscaping with backyard large enough for pool. Travel the tree-lined boulevard on your way to Cherry Street! $647,000
232 Hazel Boulevard
Amazing contemporary with warm touches throughout. Double wall of windows in the great room open to two different private patio areas. Maple cabinetry in the kitchen and Ceaserstone counters. Master suite on first floor with large walk-in closet. Upstairs features a spacious game room, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths plus a library. $899,000
Gated Guierwoods
Guierwoods offers so many different options for residents to enjoy an easy lifestyle. 7 2 0 4 S G ARY AVE | $410,000 One-story unit with 3,176 sq. ft. of living space has lots of updates. Master with his and her baths. Generac-whole home generator, and safe room. Newer roof and driveway. Beautiful covered patio. 7 2 42 S G ARY AVE | $ 49 9,0 0 0 Need something a little bigger? 3,402 sq. ft. of beautiful living space. Completely redone by the current owners with custom kitchen and baths. Master suite on first floor. 2 bedrooms up each have private baths. Spacious laundry. Several outdoor living areas. 7 2 03 S G ARY AVE | $ 41 5,0 0 0 Not ready to give up your “Big� pieces yet try this 3,996 sq. ft. Spacious formals. Large eat-in kitchen opens to patio. Master suite with updated bath. A second bedroom is down with a private bath. 2 additional bedrooms are on the 2nd floor. 92
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918.625.6260
Debra Adamek 918.695.4945
Debbie.Adamek@gmail.com DebAdamek.com
Crown Jewel Collection
nkavanaugh@gmail.com
McGraw Realtors
Nancy Kavanaugh-Gotcher
CE
W
NE
9547 S. College Court - College Parke II Great floor plan with 3 bedrooms & 2.5 Baths. Hardwood floors newly refinished with new carpet in master bedroom. Large closets in all bedrooms and hallways. Large Formal Living/Dining with wall of bookcases. $265,000
Mobile:
Allison jacobs
8711 S. College Place - Cedarcrest II Stunning Remodel with 5 Bedrooms & 3.5 Baths. New kitchen with granite countertops. New paint, carpet, hardwoods, master bath. Huge basement with theater room, workout and bedroom. Must see! Large backyard with plans for the pool. $389,900
I PR
5720 E. 118th Street - Shadow Wood Superbly appointed English mansion on private gated cul-de-sac. Design built by Mike Dankbar, featured in John Brooks Walton’s “Tomorrow’s Historic Tulsa Homes”. Fabulous grounds has pool, paths, veranda & sun deck. Backs to reserve w/pond & valley views. $869,500
918.850.2207
ajacobs@mcgrawok.com 4105 S. Rockford ave. tulsa, ok 74105
mcgrawrealtors.com
56826 S 560 Road, Rose
4407 S. Gary Ave.
Almost 80 acres available with an incredible ranch + home, barn, shop, NEW pool. Pipe fence + automatic gate and barbed wire surround the property. Livestock pens, automatic waterer and horse pens. Close to HW 412. Gorgeous property! $699,000
Top-of-the-line home located in the heart of Midtown! Granite kitchen w/ breakfast area. Large master suite down w/ private bath and walkin closet. Downstairs office, living room w/ fireplace, formal dining room & exercise room. 3 beds up all w/ private ensuite baths & HUGE closets. Theater room + Gameroom! Outdoor living. $979,000
1411 S. St. Louis Ave.
9829 S. Jamestown Ave.
Walk to Cherry Street. Open Living to kitchen & dining. Beautiful hardwoods, granite & stainless Steel appliances. Downtown views. Huge closets, highest quality finishes. Each bedroom has private bath! Low maintenance & stucco exterior. Must see! $340,000
Extraordinary home tucked into the trees of Silver Chase. Beautifully updated kitchen & master bathroom w/ heated floors! 2 living areas, perfect hardwoods, large & cozy screened in porch with hot tub. Dreamy storybook curb appeal! Jenks schools. $459,000
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The Rotary Club of Tulsa congratulates these public servants for outstanding acts of character,
commitment and compassion to both their profession and our community.
2018 Firefighter of the Year
2018 Police Officer of the Year
Firefighter/Paramedic Deerinwater has served the Tulsa Fire Department for more than 18 years. On his own time, he donates his graphic design skills to the TFD, helps children who are regulars around the station and follows up with patients he treats. In his name, $2,500 was donated to Hydrants of Hope. This award was presented in honor of late Tulsa Fire Chief E. Stanley Hawkins.
Officer Comfort has served the Tulsa Police Department for 32 years and currently works at the Riverside Station. He served in the Army with tours of duty in Desert Storm, Desert Shield, in Central America and Europe. On his own time, he puts on safety programs for children in Tulsa Public Schools. In his name $2,500 was donated to the Akdar Shrine.
Craig Deerinwater
Greg Comfort
George B. Hamilton Special Award This special award was presented to 911 Dispatchers, Ginger Ward and Amanda Dunn, recognizing the important role 911 dispatchers play in emergency situations for fellow citizens and first responders. We salute these unsung heroes.
For more information, visit tulsarotary.com.
Presenting Sponsors
Donated Ad in April Issue of Tulsa People
CHARITABLE EVENTS SUPPORTED BY
C E L E B R AT I N G EXCELLENCE IN OKLAHOMA WOMEN
Newsmakers 2018
TULSA
Join us in celebrating four extraordinary women! Wednesday, May 2, 2018 Southern Hill Country Club | 11:30 A.M. - 1:00 P.M. $55 AWC Members | $65 Guest
Visit awctulsa.org for tickets to this event. Carole Lambert
Cindy Hulsey
Dr. Kayse Shrum
Councilor America
A TASTE OF TULSA
PRESENTS
Thursday, June 14, 2018 | 6:30 PM Cox Business Center Ballroom | Tulsa, Oklahoma Join Big Brothers Big Sisters of Oklahoma as we come together to celebrate our Little’s, the NEXT BIG THING in Tulsa! Enjoy tastes from Tulsa’s top chefs, a luxury live auction and dancing.
of Oklahoma For more information, visit www.tulsamastergardeners.org or call 918-746-3701
Purchase tickets at
www.atasteoftulsa.org TulsaPeople.com
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2018 Event Chairs Whitney & Daniel Eslicker with 2018 Patron Chairs Lane & Chris Hartshorn
Pictured Left to Right: Anna America, Chris Hartshorn, Lane Hartshorn, Adrienne Barnett, Billie Barnett, Daniel Eslicker. Not Pictured: Whitney Eslicker.
Please Join Us ABOUT
the
Friday, April 20, 2018
EVENT
The Mayo Hotel 115 West 5th street Tulsa, Oklahoma
CANdlelight Ball is the primary fundraiser for the Child Abuse Network. It is a time for the greater Tulsa community to come together in support of CAN’s mission to provide collaborative intervention services to child abuse victims, so that they are encouraged to embrace a future driven by hope. Your support of this event helps to positively impact the lives of area children
champagne & cocktail reception six o’clock in the evening dinner, dancing & dessert to follow
who need our love, light and encouragement for a better life. Through your generosity, we’re changing the lives of children for generations to come.
Learn more at CandlelightBallTulsa.org
Complimentary Valet Parking Black Tie Attire
DINING + FOOD + DRINKS
11TH STREET WONDER A
t Jane’s Delicatessen, the traditional BLT is dialed up with the addition of schnitzel. We opted for the chicken, but diners also have a breaded pork or eggplant option. That is paired with thick-cut bacon, lettuce, pickled green tomatoes, red onion and mustard aioli, all served on a made-in-house bun ($10). Jane’s Delicatessen opened in March at the Campbell Hotel in a space formerly known as Maxxwell’s. The restaurant’s interior is enlivened with unique art and a nod to classic delicatessens. TP 2626 E. 11TH ST. | 918-872-0501 | JANESDELICATESSEN.COM
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DINING OUT
Bramble Breakfast and Bar’s Monte Carlo Benedict
SHORE THING
THREE TULSA MAINSTAYS ADD LOCATIONS AT RIVERWALK. BY NATALIE MIKLES
R
iverwalk is back, as evidenced by the opening of three favorite Tulsa restaurants. When Andolini’s opened a location at Jenks’ Riverwalk last year, it was the sign of things to come. Soon thereafter, Maryn’s Taphouse and Raw Bar also opened there. When word got out that Burn Co. was coming on board, people took notice. With its legendary long lines of fans who wait through their lunch hours for barbecue, Burn Co. could have gone anywhere. But it chose Riverwalk. Most recently to open at the development is Bramble, a cozy farm-to-table breakfast and lunch spot that has proven its success in the Blue Dome District downtown.
Bramble Breakfast and Bar
More than a year ago, Johnna Hayes of Bramble Breakfast and Bar talked to a friend involved with Riverwalk. The friend told her, “Trust me. You’ve got to look at this spot.” The next day she learned that Andolini’s and Burn Co. were headed there. “We decided if Burn Co. is going for it, we’re going for it,” Hayes says. Hayes owns Bramble as part of the Three Sirens Restaurant Group with Sara Day and Debbie Zinke. They have plans for a third Bramble location in Broken Arrow. Bramble is unique in both food and atmosphere for Riverwalk. The restaurant is fresh and lively with nearly everything made in-house. Bacon is hand-cut and brined, hams are smoked 24 hours and breads are baked from scratch. Hayes says the most talked about menu item is the Monte Carlo Benedict. The dish starts with brioche spread with a seasonal jam, and is then filled with smoked cheddar, house-cured ham, two sunny-side up eggs and an orange-zest hollandaise. The brioche is deep fried to give it that crisp Monte Carlo style. 98
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Last year, Andolini’s opened its Jenks location at Riverwalk, and since then several other popular Tulsa dining spots have opened additional locations there, too, including Burn Co.
Bramble’s menu has brunch favorites like buttermilk pancakes and ham and cheese quiche, but also fun takes on classics. So instead of a traditional breakfast hash, Bramble offers a jerk-spiced hash with sweet potatoes and pork belly. In addition to breakfast and brunch, Bramble at the Riverwalk is open until 9 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Customers can’t seem to get enough of its boozy milkshakes.
Andolini’s
Andolini’s has been on the Tulsa restaurant scene long enough that it feels like it has always been here. Pizza lovers know they can find an Andolini’s in Owasso, in Broken Arrow and on Cherry Street. Plus, there’s Andolini’s Sliced in the Blue Dome District and the brand’s STG Gelateria in Broken Arrow’s Rose District. The latest addition is Andolini’s in Jenks at Riverwalk. Owner Mike Bausch says he has been able to attract many new customers through the Jenks location, the largest Andolini’s space yet. And the location, with its walkability and family-friendly ambiance, has been popular with longtime Andolini’s fans. The original appeal of Riverwalk, with its proximity to the water and the ability for people to stroll and shop, eat and play, is still what makes it
interesting. Since the Creek Nation purchased the property in 2012, the number of new tenants has steadily increased. “We saw all the efforts from the Creek Nation and Onefire (a subsidiary of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation) to revitalize the area, and once we met with them, we knew they were the real deal,” Bausch says. “Since acquiring Riverwalk, they have aggressively sought to maximize the great qualities of the location and fix the issues that were problematic in the past.” Bausch recognizes that his move spurred other restaurants to do the same. “We put the word out about how easy it was to work with Riverwalk, and I think that helped, but the property managers and everyone involved are owed the credit for acquiring great local brands to heighten the awareness of the location,” he says. Andolini’s at Riverwalk has all the pizzas of the other locations, including customer favorites like the Marzano Pesto with pistachio pesto, mozzarella and San Marzano tomatoes and the Clemenza with meatballs, Genoa salami and house-made Italian sausage. Pizza aficionados really love Andolini’s purple label luxury pizzas, which carry the tagline, “No substitutions, no halfs, no compromises.” On this menu you’ll find interesting combinations, like the Upper East Side with garlic-infused olive oil, brie,
toasted walnuts, honey glaze and Granny Smith apples. Or, in recognition of some of Tulsa’s favorite barbecue, the Burn Co. Pulled Pork with more than a pound of pulled pork plus mozzarella and red onions.
Burn Co.
Some Burn Co. regulars were worried their favorite barbecue wouldn’t be the same at a new location. But you won’t hear any complaints from those hovered over plates of pulled pork, burnt ends and grilled potato salad at Burn Co. at Riverwalk. The lunch and dinner menus here are the same as the Boston location, with occasional specials and surprises that keep regulars on their toes. The ribs are the most sought after, and if you’ve ever tasted them, you understand why. Along with ribs, there are barbecue chicken drumsticks, bratwurst and brisket and an Oklahoma original: smoked bologna. Just like the location on Boston, Burn Co. in Jenks has a meat market where customers can pick up hand-cut rib-eyes, house-made sausage, thick pork chops and whatever else is in store. Maybe the only thing better than eating Burn Co. barbecue is eating it outside in the sunshine while listening to music coming from the Riverwalk stage. It seems there will be a lot of that happening this spring. TP TulsaPeople.com
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CHEERS!
A LA CARTE
First Friday in the Tulsa Arts District is a can’t-miss event year-round. But it really gets going at the first sign of spring. Here are some of our favorite spots to grab dinner or a drink during the First Friday Art Crawl. — NATALIE MIKLES (PRICES: $: LESS THAN $10 $$: $10-$15 $$$: $16-$25 $$$$: OVER $25)
Mr. Nice Guys
Elgin Park
Located at Guthrie Green, Mr. Nice Guys is the place to be on First Friday. Service is fast, so you can order tacos from the window and then find a seat on the green. The jerk chicken taco is at the top of the menu for a reason. Try it in a corn tortilla with black beans, cilantro and roasted corn. If you have picky kids in tow, Mr. Nice Guys gets you. Order the kiddos the baked mac and cheese, but save a bite or two for yourself.
As baseball season gets swinging, Elgin Park is where art crawlers converge for a dose of sportiness. Elgin Park’s outdoor patio provides a front-row seat for people-watching. Do so with a cold beer brewed on-site and a slice of New Haven-style pie. The popular White Potato pizza provides savory satisfaction, and meat lovers rejoice over the Meatzza, featuring pepperoni, two kinds of sausage, Canadian bacon and bacon.
111 E. M.B. BRADY ST. | 918-991-2357 $
325 E. M.B. BRADY ST. | 918-986-9910 $$$
A SOFTER SIP
T
Laffa
If you’d rather walk and talk than sit down to eat, stop at Laffa’s walk-up falafel window. Falafel dipping sauces come in three flavors: mint labneh, lemony-avocado and mango chili. Laffa has great small plates and full entrees, but the shareable snacks put most “bar food” to shame. We love the feta fries: sweet potato fries with a spicy sauce, tzatziki, feta and parsley. Or, try the maghreb nachos with chermoula salsa, feta sauce, pine nuts, red onion, cilantro, feta and tomatoes.
Amelia’s
Wood-fired cooking is at the heart of Amelia’s. Whether it’s campfire-inspired rainbow trout, wood-grilled beef tenderloin or a simple pizza, the food has an elevated earthy flavor from the Argentinian-style wood grill. House-made pastas and breads are excellent. Or, if you’re stopping by late after the art crawl, have drinks and a plate of warm cookies at the bar. 122 N. BOSTON AVE. | 918-728-2435 $$$
111 N. MAIN ST. | 918-728-3147 $$
Celebrity Restaurant 3109 S. Yale Ave. | 918-743-1800 | celebritytulsa.com
Mahogany Prime Steakhouse 6823 S. Yale Ave. | 918-494-4043 mahoganyprimesteakhouse.com/locations/mahogany-tulsa
The Lounge 11 E. M.B. Brady St. | 918-949-9803 | bullinthealley.com
Polo Grill 2038 Utica Square | 918-744-4280 | pologrill.com
Charleston’s 6839 S. Yale Ave., 918-495-3511 | 3726 S. Peoria Ave., 918-749-3287 | charlestons.com
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Celebration Restaurant Whether it’s a holiday, birthday or just a reason to make merry, these five spots are tops in Tulsa, according to TulsaPeople’s annual A-List Readers’ Choice Awards
CELEBRITY RESTAURANT, MR. NICE GUYS: GREG BOLLINGER
he rise of craft cocktails has unwittingly elevated a new, less boozy craze: soft cocktails, sometimes sneeringly referred to as “mocktails.” A new temperance movement is gaining momentum, and whether people are abstaining because of a diet or as a lifestyle, soft cocktails are appearing on menus more often. T. Read Richards, bar manager for Oren Restaurant on Brookside, keeps a rotation of soft cocktails on the menu, featuring ingredients like grapefruit, cardamom, cinchona bark or tarragon. “The craft food scene has become ubiquitous, and guests want only the best ingredients. That goes for non-drinkers, too,” Richards says. The sophisticated sober crowd wants to sip something more complex than a Shirley Temple or soda and lime. Richards mixes up only the finest herbs and syrups, and even employs special non-alcoholic spirits for added oomph. “It’s a good option for someone who has had enough, but wants to stay in the game,” Richards says. And, of course, adding a shot of the real stuff is always an option. — ANGELA EVANS
“Our Chamber is probably the best chamber of commerce in the United States for starting a business.” Jennifer Jezek President, York Electronic Systems MEMBER SINCE 1984
YOUR PARTNER IN PROSPERITY tulsachamber.com/partnersinprosperity
TRC_PartnersInProsperityAd_TP_QTRPage_0218.indd 2
3/9/18 8:57 AM
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W H AT’S COOK ING? The buzz on Tulsa’s tastiest products, restaurants and events BY NATALIE MIKLES
Black cherry tomato
HOME GROWN
CHEROKEE PURPLE: This might be the most popular heirloom variety in the country. And, Merrell’s particular variety is grown from seeds using plants grown in Oklahoma for more than 20 years, making it acclimated to Oklahoma’s growing conditions. DELICIOUS: This one is considered a great slicer. It’s just right for topping burgers or BLTs. PINK BERKELEY TIE-DYE: The rosy color of the Berkeley has a surprise inside — a swirl of green, red and yellow. BLACK CHERRY: This is the cherry tomato Merrell plants in her own garden every season. The plants are loaded with round cherry tomatoes with a complex, sweet flavor. BREAK O’ DAY: Expect a lot of production with this plant. The 4- to 6-ounce tomatoes are juicy and tangy. This heirloom was introduced in 1931 and is considered a workhorse for its dependability. The skin has a pretty sparkle in the sunlight. 102
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reen drinks and smoothies are just what you need when your energy is running low or when you need a jumpstart for better eating. We love the green drinks from Ediblend and Pure. But if you want to try making them at home, go for it. One thing to remember: If you’re making a pure juice with whole fruit and vegetables, you’ll need a juicer. For smoothies, made with fruits, vegetables and either water or yogurt, a blender will be just fine. Smoothies aren’t necessarily less healthy than pure juices. You can pack a big nutritional punch with a green smoothie filled with spinach or kale, plus celery or sweet and tangy kiwi.
MARGARITA-STYLE GREEN SMOOTHIE Makes 2 large smoothies 2 cups baby spinach 1 orange, peeled and sectioned 1 cup unsweetened coconut water 2 cups frozen mango chunks 1 cup frozen pineapple chunks Juice of 1 lime, plus lime slices for garnish Kosher salt
In a blender, blend spinach, orange and coconut water until smooth. Add mango, pineapple and lime juice. Blend until smooth. Rub slice of lime around margarita glasses. Dip rims into kosher salt. Garnish with lime.
KIWI AND STRAWBERRY SMOOTHIE Makes 2 smoothies 2 cups kale 2 cups fresh squeezed orange juice 2 cups frozen chopped strawberries 2 kiwi, peeled and sliced 1 banana, peeled 1 tablespoon honey (optional)
Blend greens and orange juice until smooth. Add strawberries, kiwi, banana and honey until smooth.
If you have a juicer, here’s a simple green juice that can be easily adapted. If you want it less sweet, swap less apple for more celery. The lemon juice adds a nice freshness.
SIMPLE GREEN JUICE Makes 2 servings 5 stalks celery 1 cucumber 2 oranges, peeled 1 apple, peeled 4 cups spinach 1 lemon, peeled
Throw everything in the juicer, and blend until smooth.
TOMATO: COURTESY LISA MERRELL
If you’ve bought Lisa Merrell’s tomato plants, you’re likely a fan. Merrell’s business, the Tomato Man’s Daughter, sells heirloom tomato and pepper plants through her farm, 2515 W. 91st St., and at herb festivals in the spring. This year, Merrell’s plants also will be available at Grogg’s Green Barn, 10105 E. 61st St. You can find 23 varieties of tomatoes; 20 varieties of hot, sweet and bell peppers; and a handful of her companion plants there through the end of April. Favorite plants from The Tomato Man’s Daughter:
Q& A
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FREE
John Gibbens and Shawn Zenthoefer
T
he Goods Bodega has been a bright spot for those who live and work downtown. We caught up with owner Shawn Zenthoefer. She runs the bodega with her general manager and BFF John Gibbens. Shawn gives us the goods on the Goods Bodega.
BEEN MAKING THE DRIVE SPECIFICALLY FOR YOUR GRILLED CHEESE SANDWICHES. WHAT MAKES THEM SO GREAT? We use local Farrell Bread and quality cheeses. Plus, we make fun dipping sauces in house so you can give your sandwich a different twist each time.
TELL US ABOUT THE GOODS. The Goods Bodega opened last September. We are a small urban market offering grocery and pantry staples and prepared food meal solutions for downtown residents. We also make grilled cheese sandwiches for lunch Monday through Saturday.
WHAT’S THE STRANGEST OR MOST UNIQUE THING YOU SELL? Cheesy Cups. It’s a blend of four different cheesebased chip products in one cup.
DID YOU MODEL IT AFTER A FAVORITE BODEGA IN ANOTHER CITY? There are so many we love! Jimmy’s Food Store in Dallas, Lolita’s in Boulder, and all the nameless bodegas and markets found all over larger cities. We did visit Royal Blue in Austin several times. They have a very successful model. PEOPLE WHO LIVE AND WORK DOWNTOWN WERE STARVED FOR A BODEGA LIKE YOURS. DO YOU HAVE A LOT OF REGULARS? About 80 percent of our customers are regulars. It’s been great getting to know everyone in the neighborhood! EVEN THOSE WHO AREN’T IN WALKING DISTANCE HAVE
Tuesday e-newsletter featuring spotlighted articles from the magazine, exclusive content, blogs, quizzes, guides and more!
WHERE DO YOU LIKE TO EAT IN TULSA WHEN YOU’RE NOT AT THE GOODS? We eat tacos. A lot. The truck behind Fair Fellow has become a favorite. We’re also regulars at La Flama on 11th Street. HOW LONG HAVE YOU LIVED IN TULSA, AND WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE CHANGES TO DOWNTOWN IN THE LAST DECADE? I have lived and worked in downtown for the last 12 years. Being part of the downtown culture and witnessing the growth has been amazing. WHAT WOULD MAKE DOWNTOWN TULSA EVEN BETTER? As a mom, I would have to say better education. As a bodega owner, I would have to say more downtown residents. As a hip downtowner, I would say more downtown retail and entertainment besides just food and drinking.
GIROUARD VINES WINE RECEIVES GOLD AND SILVER AWARDS
Oklahoma’s Girouard Vines Winery recently announced that two of its new wines — Southern Cross and Valjohn — were awarded Gold and Silver medals in the 2018 San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition, the largest competition of American wines in the world. Both are among the first wines produced from new wine-grape varietals from the family-owned winery, and are available at local liquor stores. “These wines are a product of a Girouard family project that began 50 years ago when our founder and my father-in-law George Girouard began growing grapes in his Oklahoma City backyard with the dream of cross-pollinating traditional European grapes with wild Native American grapes to breed a new, hardy, great-tasting wine-grape,” says President and COO Jan Girouard. “After testing thousands and thousands of seedlings, George eventually selected four of the hybrids (now named Southern Cross, Valjohn, By George and Plymouth) for commercial testing, and those are the four varieties from which these newly released wines are produced,” she says. TP
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TAKE ME BACK
WATER WAY BY JUDY LANGDON
D
uring Tulsa’s early years, getting clean water to the city’s expanding population was a major challenge. Finally, ground was broken on Spavinaw Dam on Oct. 19, 1922. Completed in 1924, the damming of Spavinaw Creek in northeastern Oklahoma — which created Lake Spavinaw — brought water from 400 square miles of Ozark Mountain foothills and a tributary of the Grand River, solving the city’s water problem. Crews laid a pipeline to bring this water to Lake Yahola in Tulsa’s Mohawk Park. The project, at a cost of $7.5 million, was funded through a bond issue. When it became operational in 1924, the Spavinaw-to-Tulsa water line, at 50-60 miles long, was the longest of its kind in the U.S. Spavinaw is still Tulsa’s main water supply, though a second dam at Lake Eucha was finished in 1954. The Mohawk Water Treatment Plant can treat 100 million gallons of water per day. TP
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COURTESY BERYL FORD COLLECTION/ROTARY CLUB OF TULSA, TULSA CITY-COUNTY LIBRARY AND TULSA HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Concrete pipe was used to connect Tulsa to the Spavinaw water supply in May 1923.
Bassett Home Furnishings – Tulsa Spring Home Sale • April 12-29th
WINNER!
10137 East 71st Street • 918.254.6618 bassettfurniture.com • bassettwindowdesigns.com