Tulsa World from Tulsa, Oklahoma (2024)

TULSA WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1992 SECTION A 19 TELLING BIRTHS Babies were born to the following parents, who live in Tulsa unless otherwise indicated: Hilicrest Medical Center Sondra and Bryan Henderson, boy. Melissa Sellers, girl, Sand Springs. Stacy and Adrian Berryhill, girl. Susie Stout and Luther Cauthon, boy, Delmy Melendez and Mario Davis, girl. Debra Lee and Bobby Shaw, boy, Mildred Taylor, Debra Schultz and Dallas Matzenbacker, boy.

Christie Cooper, girl. Michele Hankins, boy. St. Francis Hospital Paula and James Fritz, boy. Laurie and Mike Krimbill, boy.

Edina and Charles Lawson, boy, Claremore. Kim and Joe LeFlore, girl. Keri and Rob Stevens, girl. Elizabeth and Thomas Kennedy, girl, Muskogee. St.

John Medical Center Melissa and Todd Coleman, girl, Owasso. Julia and David Nierenberg, girt, Owasso. Lisa and Wayne James, girl. Barbara and Jeffrey Dickson, girl. Tulsa Regional Medical GayeLynn and Todd Price, girl, Porter.

Patricia and Larry Sappington, boy, Broken Arrow. Judith Gelvin, boy. Angela Jackson, boy, Sand Springs. Tammie and Phillip Welty, boy, Muskogee. TULSA DEATHS HURD, Jessie 71, bookkeeper, died Wednesday.

Services 1:30 p.m. Friday, Moore's Memory Chapel. KUCERA, Thomas James, 22, Midwest Irrigation, died Wednesday. Services pending. Floral Haven, Broken Arrow.

LINDENAU, Judy, 47, homemaker, died Thursday. Services 10 a.m. Saturday, Moore's Eastlawn Funeral Chapel. Edna 82, homemaker, died Wednesday. Services 10 a.m.

Saturday, Holy Family Cathedral. Graveside services 3 p.m. Saturday, Wynnewood Cemetery. Wynnewood Funeral Home. MORAN, LeRoy, 75, retired draftsman, died Thursday.

Services pending. Moore's. PEARSON, Mathie, 68, died Wednesday. Jack's. George 77, artist, died Wednesday.

Services 1 p.m. Friday, Moore's Rosewood Funeral Chapel. REYNOLDS, Ruth, 95, homemaker, died Thursday. Services pending. Moore's Eastlawn.

SHOOK, Gloria 68, homemaker, died Wednesday. Services 10 a.m. Saturday, Church of God of Prophecy. Moore's. SILKEY, Edna, 78, homemaker, died Thursday.

Services 2:30 p.m. Friday, Whisenhunt Funeral Chapel. STEVENSON, John Truman, 53, retired from died Wednesday. Services pending. Moore's Southlawn.

TROWE, Edna, 87, retired bookkeeper, died Tuesday. Services 10 a.m. Monday, College Hill Presbyterian Church. Whisenhunt. VERNON, Jerry Wayne, 47, painter, died Thursday.

Services 1 p.m. Monday, Heath Griffith Funeral Chapel. WEAVER, Joel, 40, car salesman, died Wednesday. Services pending. Moore's Southlawn.

State Turnpike Bond Refinancing Approved OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) The state Bond Oversight Commission voted unanimously Thursday to authorize the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority to refinance up to $650 million in turnpike bonds. But the commission placed several restrictions on the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority for the refinancing, including requiring that the authority transfer $17 million from its trust fund to the Department of Transportation. Sen. Stratton Taylor, D-Claremore, member of the commission, said the $17 million can be used by the DOT to reap federal dollars on a 4-1 match for state road projects. The commission also required that the OTA transfer $3 million it received in motor fuel taxes to the DOT.

Other requirements are that the refinancing net at least a 2 percent savings and cost no more than 1 percent of the value of the bonds. State House Restores Raise for Troopers OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) The House voted unanimously Thursday for a bill restoring to Highway Patrol troopers the state employee pay raise passed last year. House Bill 2205 also provides for a lump sum payment to troopers of any pay raise they did not receive in the fiscal year that began last July 1. A bill enacting the $420 yearly pay raise for state employees had included state troopers when it was passed last year. But the bill was caught up in a quarrel between the governor and Legislature and wound up in court, which voided the section with the trooper pay raise.

LOTTERIES The winning numbers in Missouri's SuperCash drawing Thursday night: 6-21-27-28-38 The winning numbers in Missouri's Super Cash drawing Thursday night: 6-21-27-28-38 The winning numbers in Thursday Kansas Lottery Daily Pick 3 game: 7-6-9 WORLD DEATH Sergio Mendez Arceo MEXICO CITY (AP) Sergio Mendez Arceo, the former archbishop of Cuernavaca whose leftist liberation theology teachings often put him at odds with the traditional Roman Catholic Church, died Thursday of a heart attack. He was 84. TULSA MARRIAGE LICENSES BURKS, Jackie vs. Beatrice. (All Tulsans unless otherwise Indicated) DAVIS, Tonya vs.

Lyndon. Inge Brouard, 63, of Katonah, N.Y; Donald DEGRAW, James vs. Patricia, Brown Jr. 64. HANKS, Georgia vs.

James. June Daly, 68; Eugene Bala, 73. JUNGHANS, Wayne vs. Edna. Laura Dobbs, 22, of Broken Arrow; Tracy Lit- KLAASSEN, M.

VS. E. He, 26, of Raleigh, N.C. MACINTOSH, Tina vs. Donald.

Doss, 37; Franklin Whitlock, 44, both of MOORE, Karen vs. Theodore I. Claremore. PAYNE, Alice vs. C.L.

Kimberly East, 20; Joaquin Yuman. 26. DIVORCES GRANTED Jerri Johnson, 31; Patrick Kurz, 22, both of BUSH, Larry Karen. Broken Arrow. FRANK, M.

from D. Kellie Johnston, 23; Johnathan Land, 23. KELLER, Mark from Jeanne. Kristy Jones, 19, of Owasso; David Deroin, 22, KIRBY, Brian from Christina. of Broken Arrow.

MILLS, Bonnie from Russell. Melinda Rowland, 29; James Smith, 34. ROBISON, Victoria from Michael, Dorothy Ullom, 65; Carl Manning, ROBLES, Lauri from Richard, Kimbrely Vickers, 34, of Sand Springs; William ROEPKA, William Jr. from Evelyn. Dunning, 34.

ROZENE, Marty from Jennifer. SCHMITT, Patricia from William. DIVORCES ASKED SHIELDS, Douglas from Karla. BOYDSTUN, Brenda vs. Jack.

SPARKS, Mollie from Fred. DEATHS Central Junior High School seventh graders the Oklahoma Area Vo-Tech School Public InSarah Neal, left, Phoebe Brown and Tabitha formation Council. play a career oriented game produced by World staff photo by Steve Crane Board Game Lets Seventh-Graders Play Around With Career Choices By Laureen Gibson Gilroy World Staff Writer SAND SPRINGS Seventhgraders in Central Junior High School are playing games with their education, but no one's complacareerQuest" is a $20 board game produced by the Oklahoma Area Vo-Tech School Public Information Council. It teaches students about vo-tech courses and helps them plan for careers: Tulsa County Area Vo-Tech bought 25 games to loan to middle schools and junior highs. Missouri bought 150 for its vo-tech system.

Each CareerQuest player chooses a marker symbolizing careers in business technology, maintenance repair and mechanics, service, health, science and technology, or construction trades. Some boys were dismayed because sports was not a choice, but the students who played the game Wednesday said it was fun. They also said it gave them a picture of the vo-tech programs and what students do in the classes. have "I a found lot of out cheeseburgers bitha Doss, who explored the health field. Players earn points by answering questions about state government on "choice" cards or by doing certain make-believe tasks outlined on the education and experience cards.

For example, in the service field, a player earns 20 points for volunteering with children at the YWCA while in the vo-tech child care program. In the construction area, a player earns 30 points for knowing California's time zone and placing a last-minute lumber order for the high school wood shop. "You're always something good to earn the points. It's very said Jeremy McKinney. "It's better than earning 30 points for bashing somebody's head off." "Or getting 50 points for vandalizing the school," said Peter White.

Educators interested in borrowing CareerQuest should contact Nancy Breckenridge at VoTech's Lemley campus. Review Board Will Investigate Escape at County Courthouse A jail official said Thursday that an investigation will be conducted ex-convict charged with a violent crime could become a jail trusty and escape. Billy Wayne Jackson, 30, of 4698 N. Boston Place, was reported missing about 4:30 p.m. Wednesday after someone saw an inmate running from the Tulsa County Courthouse.

Twelve deputies spent Thursday searching for Jackson and have uncovered some "possible" leads, said Tulsa County Undersheriff Bill Thompson. A five-member incident review board will investigate the escape, Thompson said. "We're going to go over this whole thing to see if there were problems in procedure," he said. Thompson attributed the escape to overcrowding and human error. When Jackson was booked into the jail in November, he was held on the eighth floor, which houses those charged with the most serious crimes, Thompson said.

"He wasn't getting along with the other prisoners. So, our only choice was to move him upstairs," he said. The move was made recently, he added. Thompson said the ninth floor is the second-most secure floor in the jail, and houses women, juveniles and trusties. No one charged with a violent crime or who has a bond amount more than $10,000 can be a trusty, Thompson said.

A jailer who asked for a volunteer to clean a holding cell on the third floor should have checked with the jail computer to see that Jackson was limited access to the ninth floor only, he said. "Obviously, this wasn't done in this case," Thompson said. As the jailer finished a telephone call, he noticed that an alarm was sounding in the stairwell of the third floor and that Jackson had fled from the cell, Thompson said. "We still don't know how he (Jackson) could have gotten through the two doors that were supposed to be locked at the time." Jackson was charged in the Nov. 18 holdup of the Pier 1 Imports, 5255 S.

Sheridan Road. After a chase, police cornered him on the roof of the Skinner Bros. Co. building at 1317 E. Fifth Place.

After officers fired shots at Jackson, they persuaded him to surrender. He was being held on charges of armed robbery after a former felony conviction, assault on a police officer and possession of a firearm after a former felony conviction. He was charged Thursday with escape from a county jail. Jackson was sentenced to 12 years in prison in 1982 after a robbery with a firearm conviction. A Department of Corrections official said he was released in 1987.

Post Office Robbery Suspects Ordered Held Without Bond Two men facing a federal charge in the armed robbery of the Talala Post Office have been ordered held without bond pending a Tuesday detention hearing. A search for a third suspect, Lester Roy Chase, 28, continues. Chase, James Allen Fanning, 30, and Danny Joe Duvall, 43, are charged ant U.S. District Court. Assistant U.S.

Attorney Allen Litchfield asked that Fanning be detained as a danger to the community and that Duvall be held without bond because he is a flight risk. Fanning and Duvall apparently have given statements to authorities. Fanning claims to have been the gunman, Chase his accomplice and Duvall the getaway driver, according to an affidavit Student Charged In Rape at School By Bill Swindell World Staff Writer By Julie DelCour And Linda Martin World Staff Writers A student has been charged in Tulsa District Court with the first-degree rape of another student Tuesday in the girl's gymnasium at East Central High School. Antonio Carl Kincade, 19, is being held in the Tulsa Jail in lieu of $10,000 bail, a jail official said. The 16-year-old girl reported the rape to school officials, who then notified authorities, police said.

Police said Kincade told him that the girl had consented to sex at school, 12150 E. 11th St. Kincade the alleged victim had ridden to school beside each other on a bus, police said. BARTLESVILLE Thomas Edward Bridges, 83, died Thursday. Graveside services 2 p.m.

Monday, White Rose Cemetery. Arnold Moore. Emma Louise Proctor, 80, homemaker, died Thursday. Services pending. Arnold Moore.

Lucille Jean (Johnson) Miller, 73, retired county employee, died Wednesday. Services 10 a.m. Saturday, Arnold Moore Funeral Chapel, Dewey. COFFEYVILLE, Kan. Ezra Floyd Murray, 90, retired chef, died Wednesday.

Graveside services 2 p.m. Friday, Fairview Cemetery. Ford-Wulf-Bruns. COLLINSVILLE Claudine B. Linville, 75, and Wayne A.

Linville, 77, farmer and retired school principal, died Tuesday. Services 11 a.m. Friday, Campbell-Kelley Funeral Chapel, Eureka, Kan. DEPEW Ruth Kessler, 67, employee of the Oklahoma Security Commission, died Wednesday. Services a.m.

Saturday, Methodist Church. Schumacher, Bristow. DRUMRIGHT Letha E. Morse, 84, retired cafeteria worker, died Thursday. Services pending.

Bailes-Michaels. GROVE Josephine Stratton, 84, homemaker, died Wednesday. Services 1 p.m. Saturday, Worley-Luginbuel Funeral Home. HASKELL Rosetta A.

Montgomery, 91, homemaker, died Tuesday. Services 11 a.m. Saturday, Wilson Chapel Baptist Church, Muskogee. Granger, Muskogee. HENRYETTA James Bushman, 78, died Wednesday.

Services pending. Shurden. Opal Evaughna Bussey, 75, beautician, died Wednesday. Services pending. Shurden.

Mary Kosir, 84, died Wednesday. Services pending. Shurden. Arvel Adair Vassaur, 75, retired foreman, died Tuesday. Services 2 p.m.

Friday, Church of Christ. Shurden. HOMINY Sylvia E. Koch, 92, died Tuesday. Services 2 p.m.

Friday, Powell Funeral Chapel. HULBERT Rev. Joseph Chuculate 71, died Wednesday. Services 11 a.m. Saturday, ReedCulver Funeral Chapel.

LOCUST GROVE William Smith, 84, retired laborer, died Thursday. Services 2 p.m. Saturday, Ballou Baptist Church. Wilson MIAMI Roy M. Yrick, 70, retired from gas service company, died Wednesday.

Services 10 a.m. Saturday, Paul Thomas Funeral Chapel. OKEMAH Rosella Shultz, 84, homemaker, died Thursday. Services pending. Parks Bros.

OKMULGEE Paul Thompson, 80, stone mason, died Tuesday. Services 2 p.m. Friday, McClendon Funeral Chapel. OWASSO Howard C. Allyn, 54, service station owner, died Thursday.

Graveside services 2 p.m. Friday, Fairview Cemetery. Mowery. PARK HILL Charlie Byers, 69, pipefitter, died Thursday. Services pending.

Reed -Culver Funeral Chapel. PICHER Velma M. Crockett, 69, homemaker, died Thursday. Services pending. Paul Thomas.

PONCA CITY Allene R. Long, 73, homemaker, died Thursday. Services 10 a.m. Saturday, St. Francis Catholic Church, Newkirk.

Trout. POTEAU Henretta Triplett Henderson, 80, died Tuesday. Services 1 p.m. Saturday, Mount Calvary Baptist Church. Evans Miller.

PRYOR Ervin H. Longerier, 84. retired carpenter, died Wednesday. Services 2 p.m. Friday, Church of Christ.

Jim Green. SALLISAW Junior Faye Bowles, 49, mechanic, died Thursday. Graveside services 2 p.m. Saturday, Round Mountain Cemetery. Wheeler.

SAPULPA Wathla J. Long, 81, retired painter, formerly of Sapulpa, died Thursday in Oklahoma City. Services 1 p.m. Monday, Glorietta Baptist Church, Oklahoma City. Capital Hill, Oklahoma City.

SILOAM SPRINGS, Ark. Clifford Silas "Pete" Jones, 90, farmer, died Wednesday. Services 2 p.m. Friday, Pyeatte Funeral Chapel. Katie Mae Kizer, 83, homemaker, died Wednesday.

Services 2 p.m, Saturday, Wasson Funeral Chapel. STILWELL James Thatch Roberts, 72, retired director of Roberts Funeral Home, formerly of Stilwell, died Thursday in Birmingham, Ala. Services pending. Roberts. WELEETKA Jessie Shatswell, 77, homemaker, died Thursday.

Graveside services 2 p.m. Friday, Wetumpka Cemetery. Williamson. Students to Compete In Scholastic Test Four teams of Tulsa area high school students are among 12 that will compete Saturday in a regional scholastic test at the University of Tulsa. The Eastern Oklahoma Regional TEAMS (Tests of Engineering Aptitude, Mathematics and Science) competition will include a two-hour test covering six subject areas math, biology, chemistry, physics, English and computer fundamentals.

The first-place team will advance to a national competition in April. Tulsa area high schools scheduled to compete are Hale, Washington, Memorial and Union. Other teams are from Claremore, Muskogee, Mannford, Ponca City, Sapulpa, Seminole, Stringtown and Weleetka. Testing is scheduled 10:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.

in Keplinger Hall, Fifth Street and Harvard Avenue. Awards will be presented at 1:15 p.m. The competition is sponsored by the Junior Engineering Technical Society in cooperation with several other organizations. The Oklahoma Engineering Foundation Inc. is helping TU host the event.

by U.S. Postal Inspector Robert W. Malaby. told Malaby that "Chase bound the postal employees' hands and taped their mouths and later bragged about the female postal employee's state of fright," the affidavit states. Fanning was paroled from prison in October after serving most of a 5-year prison sentence for possession of stolen money orders in St.

Joseph, Mo. Fanning was arrested Wednesday after trying to cash a $325 money order at Riverside Pawn Shop, 1918 W. 23rd St. Pawn shop owner Keith Ferguson called police when he noticed the numbers on the money order matched those that had been stolen, he said. Ferguson and shop manager Mark Gragg decided to arrest Fanning when it appeared he was going to leave before police arrived.

Ferguson got his revolver and told Fanning to lie on the floor while Gragg handcuffed him. The police arrived 10 minutes later, Ferguson said. After reading about last week's robbery of the Talala Post Office, Ferguson called postal authorities to get the numbers of the stolen money orders because a large percentage of his business is cashing money orders and checks, he said. U.S. Postal Inspector Scott Hunt and Litchfield said information developed through a task force of the Talala, Owasso, Oologah and Tulsa police departments, the Rogers County Sheriff's office and 14 postal inspectors led to the serving of search warrants Wednesday.

A gun was recovered from the Owasso home of George Shaw, who is related to Fanning, according to the affidavit. Fanning, Chase and Duvall apparently had been staying at Shaw's mother's Talala home while she and her son were out of town. Postal inspectors found the stolen money order machine and some of the 89 money orders at the Talala home. Quick thinking several Tulsa and Talala residents appear to have put investigators on the trail of the men. On Jan.

28, a Talala woman had noticed a gray truck, with an outof-county license tag, whose appeared to be "casing the town" to see where police officers were. A short time after the robbery, an Oologah man saw a silver truck speeding from the direction of the post office. The man later saw the truck and two men at an Oologah convenience mart and copied down the license number. The license tag was traced to Helen Shaw, a Talala resident and a Fanning relative. Fanning, Chase and Duvall were staying at her home, the affidavit stated.

On the evening of the robbery, a Tulsa woman saw a man climb into a van after running from the National Check Cashers store at 11th Street and Harvard Avenue. She copied down the license tag of van, which was traced to Shaw's son, George. The Shaws face no charges. The man who fled the store, after trying to cash a stolen postal money order, had left behind a picture identification card with the name Jason Firquain. The card later was shown to a St.

Joseph, detective, who identified Fanning as the man in the picture. The detective had investigated Fanning five years ago following the burglary of a post office there. One of the Talala postal employees picked Fanning's picture from a photo spread. Suspect in Body Parts Case Found Guilty in Murder By Barbara Hoberock World Staff Writer SPRINGFIELD, Mo. A Springfield woman suspected of killing her mother, whose body parts were found in Broken Arrow in 1989, was convicted Tuesday of murdering and dismembering another woman.

A 12-member jury imposed the death sentence. Shirley Jo Ann Phillips is in the Greene County Jail awaiting formal sentencing March 16. She was convicted of shooting and dismembering Wilma Plaster, of Hollister, Mo. Plaster's stead, torso and legs were found along a road in Willard Oct. 6, 1989, in southwestern Missouri, said Linda Casey, a victim witness advocate for the Greene County Prosecutor's Office in Springfield.

Phillips was arrested four days later. Plaster, 66, a minister's widow, had four children. Phillips is a suspect in the death of her mother, Lela Adale Kyle, 76. Some of Kyle's body parts were found May 14, Mother's Day, in a trash dump north of Broken Arrow in a wooded area near 61st Street and 161st East Avenue, said Al Cross, a technical investigator with the Broken Arrow Po- lice Department. A man rummaging through the dump site found what he thought was a human ear and nose.

He called police, who found 12 pounds of body parts wrapped in aluminum foil packages, including two ears, an eyeball, the lower portion of a nose and lip, the top portion of the nose, and a tongue. Police identified Kyle's body by matching the middle finger from the right hand to a print taken from a mixing bowl in her apartment. No charges have been filed in Tulsa against Phillips in connection with Kyle's death, said Tom Gillert, chief prosecutor for the Tulsa County district attorney. Oklahoma authorities have not been able to question Phillips in connection with Kyle's death, Barrett said in May. Police suspect money was a motive in Kyle's murder and Plaster's murder, Cross said.

Phillips was suspected of forging Plaster's name on a check for $4,050, Casey said. A jury was picked in Joplin, Jan. 27, Casey said. The trial was in Springfield. A jury found Phillips guilty after deliberating three hours.

Casey said Phillips showed no emotion Wednesday when the jury recommended the death penalty..

Tulsa World from Tulsa, Oklahoma (2024)
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