A 10 n n Monday, December 30, 2013 OUR LIVES LET US HELP YOU >>> PLEASE SEE THE TULSA WORLD CLASSIFIEDS SECTION FOR ADVERTISEMENTS ABOUT BURIAL PLOTS AND CREMATION LOTS. How can I submit an obituary for publication? Obituaries include a story about the deceased and a photo. They are available to funeral homes and the public for a charge. To submit a paid obituary, ill out our online form. If you have any questions about paid obituaries with online guest books, please call the Tulsa World Obituary Desk at 918-581-8503. Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Closed Sunday. Bandeleer, Betty, 96, died Sunday. Services pending. Kennedy-Midtown. Colpitt, Charles H. “Chuck” Jr., 57, C.H. Colpitt Drilling Co. owner, died Saturday. Memorial service 11 a.m. Tuesday, St. John’s Episcopal Church. Ninde Brookside. Finley, Verna L., 62, home day-care provider, died Saturday. Services pending. Add’Vantage. Gibbens, Tommy J., 85, printer, died Friday. Service 10 a.m. Tuesday, Moore’s Southlawn Funeral Home Chapel. Hazley, Velda Gayle, 78, seamstress, died Thursday. Visitation noon-7 p.m. Friday, Keith D. Biglow Funeral Home, and service 11 a.m. Saturday, First Baptist Church North Tulsa. Hodge, Ronald, 56, died Sunday. Services pending. Keith D. Biglow. Ramkaran, Damian Mark, 28, Oklahoma State University medical student, died Friday. Visitation 5-7 p.m. Monday, Bixby Funeral Service, Bixby, and service 10 a.m. Thursday, RiverCrest Chapel, Bixby. Standridge, G.W., 90, died Saturday. Graveside service 11 a.m. Tuesday, Memory Gardens Memorial Park Cemetery Pavilion, McAlester. Bishop, McAlester. Zaller, Andrew B., 69, retired Booker T. Washington art teacher, died Sunday. Services pending. Add’Vantage. STATE/AREA Funeral home, church and cemetery locations are in the city under which the death notice is listed unless otherwise noted. Bartlesville — Billy Sells, 63, died Sunday. Services pending. Powell, Hominy. Beggs — Gregory A. Wynkoop, 56, died Saturday in Tulsa. Services pending. Integrity, Henryetta. Bixby — Johnnie J. Harvey, 73, retired from Fabricut Inc., died Saturday. Services pending. Add’Vantage, Tulsa. — Johanna V. Simpson, 83, retired Spartan School of Aeronautics secretary, died Saturday. Visitation 4-7 p.m. Monday, Bixby Funeral Service, and service 2 p.m. Tuesday, First Baptist Church. Bristow — Judy Ann Towler, 61, homemaker, died Sunday. Visitation noon-5 p.m. Monday, Hutchins-Maples Funeral Home. No services planned. Catoosa — Michael Morgan Sr., 41, retired, died Friday in Tulsa. Service 1 p.m. Thursday, First Baptist Church of Rolling Hills, Tulsa. KennedyKennard. BIRTHS (Tulsans unless indicated) Saint Francis Hospital Emily and Larry Atkerson Jr., Collinsville, boy. Brittany Church and Josh Metcalf, boy. Kelli and Chris Laughlin, Henryetta, boy. In an efort to honor those who have donated either organs, eyes or tissue, the Tulsa World is participating in the “Circle of Life” campaign sponsored by the Global Organization for Organ Donation (GOOD). If your loved one was a donor, please inform the funeral director if you would like to have the “Circle of Life” logo placed in his or her listing. Death notices are free and include basic information about the deceased: the person’s name, age, occupation, place of death and service information. They are available only to funeral homes. Funeral homes can submit death notices by e-mail to [email protected], by fax at 918-581-8353 until 8 p.m. daily or by phone at 918-581-8347 from 4 to 8 p.m. Cleveland — Todd Hester, 51, Southwest Energy employee, died Saturday. Services pending. Chapman-Black. — Louise Owens, 86, homemaker, died Sunday. Services pending. Chapman-Black. Colcord — Clara L. Hughes, 77, homemaker, died Sunday. Services pending. Grand Lake, Jay. Henryetta — Dennis LaMonte Coates, 56, retired heavyequipment operator, died Friday in Cleveland, Okla. Services pending. ChristianGavlik, Broken Arrow. Hitchita — Daniel M. Russell, 61, died Sunday in Henryetta. Services pending. Integrity, Henryetta. Kansas — Ada V. Versteep, 81, homemaker, died Friday. No services planned. Reed-Culver, Tahlequah. Mannford — Linda Lee Patrick Mills, 66, licensed practical nurse, died Friday in Tulsa. Service 2 p.m. Tuesday, First Baptist Church, Drumright. Don Smith, Drumright. Muskogee — Virginia Black, 78, homemaker, died Sunday. Services pending. Cornerstone. Owasso — Patrick Miles Scholl, 44, retail sales representative, died Friday. Visitation 4-8 p.m. Monday, Mowery Funeral Home, and service 2 p.m. Tuesday, Freedom Church. Park Hill — Lewis “Pa” Justus, 91, Tahlequah Lumber Co. sales representative, died Thursday in Tulsa. Memorial graveside service 2 p.m. Tuesday, Tahlequah City Cemetery, Tahlequah. Reed-Culver, Tahlequah. Pryor — Anna Colclazier, 82, homemaker, died Sunday. Services pending. Shipman’s. — John A. O’Bar, 69, Hamil Trucking worker, died Saturday. Visitation 7-9 p.m. Monday, Shipman’s Funeral Home, and graveside service 3 p.m. Tuesday, Old Adair Cemetery, Adair. Sand Springs — Joseph Fanning, 59, died Sunday. Services pending. Dillon & Smith. — Arvoicsal Richard Tig “Art” Phelan, 77, retired A&J Service and Appliance Sales owner, died Saturday in Tulsa. Services pending. Mobley-Dodson. Skiatook — Calton L. Chapman Jr., 40, Oklahoma Natural Gas foreman, died Saturday. Service 10 a.m. Thursday, South Mission Free Holiness Church, Broken Arrow. Peters-Stumpf. Vinita — Questa Eunice Alred, 96, retired from Eastern State Hospital, died Saturday. Services pending. Luginbuel. Wagoner — Renee A. Lewis, 80, retail sales worker, died Sunday. Services pending. Add’Vantage, Tulsa. — Richard Masters, 87, retired from Postal Service, died Saturday. Graveside service 11 a.m. Tuesday, New Hope Cemetery, Hulbert. Shipman. Polish pianist, composer Wojciech Kilar dies at 81 Wojciech Kilar, a Polish pianist and composer of classical music and scores for many films, including Roman PoU.S.-WORLD l a n s k i ’ s Oscar-winDEATHS ning “The Pianist” and Francis Ford Coppola’s “Bram Stoker’s Dracula,” died Sunday in Katowice, southern Poland. He was 81. “The power and the message of his music, as well as the noble character of Wojciech Kilar as a person, will stay in my memory forever,” said Jerzy Kornowicz, head of the Association of Polish Composers. Polish film director Kazimierz Kutz said working with Kilar “was pure pleasure. He would come, see my movie and a month later he would bring extremely good Circle of Life How can I submit a death notice for publication? DEATH NOTICES TULSA Sign the guest book attached to each obituary, watch online memorials created by family members and search the obituary archive. www.tulsaworld.com/ourlives music that was always beyond my expectations.” Polish conductor Antoni Wit praised Kilar’s generosity, saying he “liked to share whatever he had with others.” Kilar’s main love was composing symphonies and concertos, and he always put that above movies, even though he wrote the scores of dozens of films. He drew inspiration from Polish folk music and religious prayers and hymns, which he had learned in Latin as an altar boy. But it was film music, especially for Coppola’s 1992 erotic horror movie, that brought this prolific vanguard composer to the world’s attention and commissions from other celebrity directors, including Jane Campion and her “Portrait of a Lady.” — FROM WIRE REPORTS Melissa and Brandon McBride, Bristow, girl. Katy and Luke Phillips, Jenks, boy. Leah and Lyndon Spears, Morris, girl. Melissa and Chad Weber, girl. Peggy V. Helmerich Women’s Health Center Sarah and Andrew Justice, twins, girl and boy. Saying goodbye to those who died in 2013 This is the second and final installment in a roundup of notable people who died in 2013. The first installment appeared in Saturday’s newspaper. BY BERNARD MCGHEE Associated Press Boggs A host of celebrities, politicians and other notable personalities died in 2013, including a man whose invention you may hold as you read this. Doug Engelbart, who died in July, invented the computer mouse. Here is a roll call of some of Gandolfini the people who LOOKING died in 2013. 20 13 BACK Brothers Clancy Cooper Farina Frost Heaney Jones Mandela Manzarek Monteith MAY Chris Kelly, 34. Half of the 1990s kid rap duo Kris Kross who made one of the decade’s most memorable songs with “Jump.” May 1. Drug overdose. Jef Hanneman, 49. Founding member of the pioneering metal band Slayer whose career was irrevocably changed after a spider bite. May 2. Liver failure. Otis R. Bowen, 95. Small-town doctor who overhauled Indiana’s tax system as governor before helping promote safe sex practices in the early years of AIDS as the top health oicial under President Ronald Reagan. May 4. Giulio Andreotti, 94. Seventime premier and a symbol of postwar Italy. May 6. Jeanne Cooper, 84. Soap opera star who played grande dame Katherine Chancellor for nearly four decades on “The Young and the Restless.” May 8. Malcolm Shabazz, 28. Grandson of Malcolm X who at age 12, set a ire that killed the political activist’s widow. May 9. Injuries from being beaten. Boruch Spiegel, 93. One of the last survivors of the 1943 Warsaw ghetto uprising by poorly armed Jewish insurgents against the powerful Nazi German force that occupied Poland. May 9. Joyce Brothers, 85. Pop psychologist who pioneered the television advice show in the 1950s and enjoyed a long career as a syndicated columnist, author, and TV personality. May 13. Billie Sol Estes, 88. Flamboyant Texas huckster who became notorious in 1962 when accused of looting a federal crop subsidy program. May 14. Valtr Komarek, 82. Left-wing Czech politician who helped overthrow the country’s communist regime and was one of the most visible faces of the so-called “Velvet Revolution.” May 16. Jorge Rafael Videla, 87. Former Argentine dictator who took power in a 1976 coup and led a military junta that killed thousands in a dirty war to eliminate so-called “subversives,” May 17. Ken Venturi, 82. Golf star who overcame dehydration to win the 1964 U.S. Open and spent 35 years in the booth for CBS Sports. May 17. Ray Manzarek, 74. Founding member of the 1960s rock group The Doors whose versatile and often haunting keyboards complemented Jim Morrison’s gloomy baritone. May 20. Cancer. Jack Vance, 96. Awardwinning mystery, fantasy and science iction author who wrote more than 60 books. May 26. Jean Stapleton, 90. Stagetrained character actress who played Archie Bunker’s far better half, the sweetly naive Edith, in TV’s groundbreaking 1970s comedy “All in the Family.” May 31. JUNE Chen Xitong, 82. As Beijing’s mayor, he backed the military crackdown on the Tiananmen Square democratic movement but later expressed regret for the loss of life. June 2. Frank Lautenberg, 89. Multimillionaire New Jersey businessman and the last World War II veteran remaining in the U.S. Senate. June 3. David “Deacon” Jones, 74. Hall of Fame defensive end O’Toole Price Reed Siebert Stapleton Thomas Walker Whitman E. Williams L. Young credited with coining the word sack for how he knocked down quarterbacks. June 3. Rev. Will Campbell, 88. White minister who drew acclaim for his involvement in the civil rights movement. June 3. Esther Williams, 91. Swimming champion-turned-actress who starred in glittering, aquatic Technicolor musicals of the 1940s and 1950s. June 6. Pierre Mauroy, 84. As France’s prime minister in the early 1980s, he implemented radical social reforms that made life easier for French workers. June 7. Richard Ramirez, 53. Serial killer known as the Night Stalker who left satanic signs at murder scenes during a reign of terror in the 1980s. June 7. Liver failure. Iain Banks, 59. Scottish writer who alternately wowed and disturbed readers with his dark jokes and narrative tricks. June 9. Michael Hastings, 33. Awardwinning journalist and war correspondent whose unlinching reporting ended the career of a top American army general. June 18. Car accident. James Gandolini, 51. Actor whose portrayal of a brutal but emotionally delicate crime boss in HBO’s “The Sopranos” turned the mobster stereotype on its head. June 19. Heart attack. Slim Whitman, 90. Country singer who sold millions of records through TV ads in the 1980s and 1990s and whose song saved the world in the ilm comedy “Mars Attacks!” June 19. Vince Flynn, 47. Best-selling author who wrote the Mitch Rapp counterterrorism thriller series. June 19. Cancer. Bobby “Blue” Bland, 83. Singer who blended Southern blues and soul in songs such as “Turn on Your Love Light” and “Further On Up the Road.” June 23. Richard Matheson, 87. Proliic sci-i and fantasy writer whose “I Am Legend” and “The Shrinking Man” were transformed into ilms. June 23. Marc Rich, 78. Trader known as the “King of Commodities” whose 2001 pardon by President Bill Clinton just hours before he left oice prompted ierce criticism. June 26. Jim Kelly, 67. Actor who played a glib American martial artist in “Enter the Dragon” with Bruce Lee. June 29. Cancer. JULY William H. Gray III, 71. He rose to inluential positions in Congress and was the irst black majority whip. July 1. Charles “Chuck” Foley, 82. His Twister game launched decades of awkward social interactions at parties. July 1. Princess Fawzia, 92. Member of Egypt’s last royal family and the irst wife of Iran’s laterdeposed monarch. July 2. Doug Engelbart, 88. Visionary who invented the computer mouse and developed other technology that has transformed the way people work, play and communicate. July 2. Amar Bose, 83. Acoustic pioneer and founder and chairman of an audio technology company known for the rich sound of its tabletop radios and its noisecanceling headphones. July 12. Cory Monteith, 31. Actor on the television show “Glee” who had struggled for years with substance abuse. July 13. Overdose of heroin and alcohol. Willie Louis, 76. Witness who went into hiding after testifying at the Emmett Till trial about hearing the lynching victim’s screams. July 18. Helen Thomas, 92. Irrepressible White House correspondent who used her seat in the front row of history to grill nine presidents. July 20. Dennis Farina, 69. Onetime Chicago cop who as a popular character actor played a TV cop on “Law & Order” during his wide-ranging career. July 22. Emile Griith, 75. Elegant world boxing champion whose career was overshadowed by the fatal beating he gave Bennie Paret in a 1962 title bout that darkened all of boxing. July 23. Virginia Johnson, 88. Half of the husband-wife research team that transformed the study of sex in the 1960s and wrote two best-selling books on sexuality. July 24. George P. Mitchell, 94. Billionaire Texas oilman, developer and philanthropist who was considered the father of fracking. July 26. Lindy Boggs, 97. Former congresswoman and plantationborn Louisianan who fought for civil rights during nearly 18 years in Congress after succeeding her late husband in the House. July 27. George “Bud” Day, 88. Medal of Honor recipient who spent 5½ years as a POW in Vietnam and was Arizona Sen. John McCain’s cellmate. July 27. David “Kidd” Kraddick, 53. High-octane radio and TV host of the “Kidd Kraddick in the Morning” show. July 27. William Warren Scranton, 96. Former Pennsylvania governor, presidential candidate and ambassador to the United Nations. July 28. Harry F. Byrd, 98. Champion of racial segregation and iscal restraint who followed his father into the U.S. Senate. July 30. AUGUST George Duke, 67. Grammywinning keyboardist and producer whose sound infused acoustic jazz, electronic jazz, funk, R&B and soul in a 40-yearplus career. Aug. 5. Stan Lynde, 81. Western cartoonist and author who created the nationally syndicated “Rick O’Shay” comic strip. Aug. 6. Jack W. Germond, 85. Portly, cantankerous columnist and pundit who covered 10 presidential elections and sparred with colleagues on TV’s “The McLaughlin Group.” Aug. 14. Bert Lance, 82. Georgia banker who was President Jimmy Carter’s irst budget director before departing amid an investigation of his banking activities. Aug. 15. Jacques Verges, 88. Flamboyant lawyer nicknamed the “Devil’s advocate” for his defense of former Nazis, terrorist bombers and notorious dictators. Aug. 15. Albert Murray, 97. Inluential novelist and critic who celebrated black culture, scorned separatism and was once praised by Duke Ellington as the “unsquarest man I know.” Aug. 18. Lee Thompson Young, 29. Actor who as a teenager starred in “The Famous Jett Jackson” and was featured in the ilm “Friday Night Lights” and the TV series “Rizzoli & Isles.” Aug. 19. Apparent suicide. Elmore Leonard, 87. Crime novelist whose best-sellers and the movies made from them chronicled the violent deaths of many a thug. Aug. 20. Complications from a stroke. C. Gordon Fullerton, 76. Former astronaut who lew on two space shuttle missions and had an extensive career as a research and test pilot for NASA and the Air Force. Aug. 21. Julie Harris, 87. Muchhonored Broadway performer whose roles ranged from the lamboyant Sally Bowles in “I Am a Camera” to the reclusive Emily Dickinson in “The Belle of Amherst.” Aug. 24. Muriel “Mickie” Siebert, 84. She started as a Wall Street trainee and became the irst woman to own a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. Aug. 24. Robert R. Taylor, 77. He put soap in pump bottles and forever changed the way people wash up. Aug. 29. Cancer. Seamus Heaney, 74. Ireland’s foremost poet who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1995. Aug. 30. David Frost, 74. Veteran broadcaster who won fame around the world for his interview with former President Richard Nixon. Aug. 31. SEPTEMBER Judith Glassman Daniels, 74. She blazed a trail for women in the publishing world and became the irst woman to serve as top editor of Life magazine. Sept. 1. Stomach cancer. SEE 2013 A12
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