OUR LIVES
Transcription
OUR LIVES
A 10 n n Monday, February 24, 2014 OUR LIVES LET US HELP YOU Sign the guest book attached to each obituary, watch online memorials created by family members and search the obituary archive. www.tulsaworld.com/ourlives >>> PLEASE SEE THE TULSA WORLD CLASSIFIEDS SECTION FOR ADVERTISEMENTS ABOUT BURIAL PLOTS AND CREMATION LOTS. How can I submit an obituary for publication? Circle of Life 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. 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. How can I submit a death notice for publication? Honor your veteran with a symbol of their military service, the American lag. Hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Closed Sunday. OBITUARIES 9430113 0224 Millikan0224.jpg Freeman Harris 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. Gary Davis Millikan | Gary Davis Millikan, 79, of Tulsa, passed away Saturday, February 22, 2014. Born September 6, 1934 in Beaver County, OK, son of the late John Edward Robert and Marjorie Loraine (Davis) Millikan. A 1954 graduate of Will Rogers High School and a US Navy Veteran. Gary retired from Wm. H. Rorer/Rhone-Poulenc Pharmaceutical Co. where he earned several awards and was selected to hold oices in the Tulsa Medical Service Assn. His parents and brother, James Brooks Millikan predeceased him. Gary is survived by his wife of 58 years, Barbara Inbody; daughter and DEATH NOTICES TULSA Allison, Blanche F., 42, homemaker, died Friday. No local services planned. KennedyMidtown. Berry, Owassa Nadine “Wassy,” 87, Hillcrest business ofice collections worker, died Saturday. Visitation 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, Moore’s Eastlawn Funeral Home, and service 2 p.m. Wednesday, Good Shepherd Lutheran Church. Brody, Marla Sue, 68, All Saints Home Medical operation manager, died Friday. Memorial service 11 a.m. Wednesday, Congregation B’Nai Emunah. Fitzgerald Ivy. Burgess, Richard P., 51, retired, died Sunday. Services pending. Kennedy-Midtown. Clark, Elmer, L., 94, former Parrish & Clark Dodge owner, died Sunday. Services pending. Moore’s Southlawn. Cooper, Carl Lee Sr., 74, retired Southern Hills Country Club maitre d’, died Sunday. Services pending. Moore’s Eastlawn. Darby, Jack Roy, 85, retired truck driver, died Sunday. Services pending. Moore’s Southlawn. Elbon, Jane A,. 61, Coldwell Banker Realtor, died Thursday. Service 11 a.m. Friday, Trinity Episcopal Church. Ninde Brookside. Goodchild, Marguerite L., 89, homemaker, died Friday. Services pending. Moore’s Eastlawn. Harper, Dale D., age unavailable, died Sunday. Services pending. Crown Hill. Harrod, Bill Franklin, 84, tubular products manager, died Friday. Visitation 6-8 p.m. Wednesday and memorial service 1 p.m. Saturday, both at Moore’s Southlawn Funeral Home. Lamb, Wanda E., 83, dental receptionist, died Friday. Visitation 6-8 p.m. Monday, Moore’s Rosewood Funeral Home, and service 1 p.m. Tuesday, 10th and Rockford Church of Christ. Ramirez, Samuel Sr., 63, died Saturday. Services pending. Mark Griith-Westwood. Shepherd, Joel Dan, 71, Integrated Utility Products president and owner, died Sunday. Services pending. Moore’s Southlawn. Tate, Ruthe Anita, 74, retired registered nurse, died Sunday. Services pending. Mark Griith-Westwood. son-in-law, Renae and Rob Cass; granddaughter, Courtney and grandson, Connor Cass; brothers, Arlen Millikan, Jack Millikan and sister-in-law, Karen; step-brothers and their wives, Wayne and Rosie Williams, Don and Yvonne Williams, Bill and Mary Williams; sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Jo Ann and Rudy Smith; as well as many cousins, nieces, nephews and a host of friends. A Memorial Service will be held, 2PM, Tuesday, February 25, 2014, in the chapel of Freeman Harris Funeral Home. Condolences may be left on-line. Freeman Harris Funeral Home, (918) 749-3333. www.freemanharris.com BIRTHS Thomas, Donald, 85, retired Blue Cross Blue Shield accountant, died Saturday. Service 10 a.m. Tuesday, Jenks United Methodist Church, Jenks. Mark GriithWestwood. Vogel, Jefrey “Jef,” 59, investor, died Sunday. Service 3 p.m. Tuesday, St. John’s Episcopal Church. Ninde Brookside. Welch, Kate, 94, waitress, died Saturday. Services pending. Floral Haven, Broken Arrow. Whisenhunt, Charles “Chuck,” 67, retired OCV Control Valves vice president of sales, died Saturday. Service 11 a.m. Wednesday, Christ United Methodist Church. Stanleys. STATE/AREA Funeral home, church and cemetery locations are in the city under which the death notice is listed unless otherwise noted. Bartlesville — Edward Sang Um, 83, welder, died Saturday. Services pending. Stumpf. Bixby — Norma E. Talley, 94, homemaker, died Sunday. Services pending. Bixby Funeral Service. Broken Arrow — Elaine R. Davis, 83, University of Wyoming administrative assistant, died Saturday. Private family services. Floral Haven. — Everett R. Dunlap, 80, physician, died Sunday. Services pending. Hayhurst. — David Pierce, 62, professional musician, died Friday. Visitation 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, Hayhurst Funeral Home, and service 11 a.m. Wednesday, First Baptist Church. Catoosa — Anita Hudgins, 49, homemaker, died Sunday in Tulsa. Services pending. Kennedy-Kennard. Claremore — Howard R. Thompson, 88, retired gardener, died Sunday. Service 10 a.m. Tuesday, Church of God Seventh Day. Rice. Dewar — Gary Lane, 60, died Sunday. Services pending. Integrity, Henryetta. Henryetta — Susan J. Dombek, 68, died Sunday in Midwest City. Services pending. Integrity. Hominy — Howard Eugene Kennedy, 82, retired oil-ield pumper, died Friday in Barnsdall. Visitation 2-8 p.m. Monday, Powell Funeral Home, and graveside service 2 p.m. Tuesday, A.J. Powell Cemetery. Schaudt’s, Glenpool. Peggy V. Helmerich Women’s Health Center Erika Romero and Joaquin Molina, twin boys. Courtney and Chris Sutherland, Skiatook, boy. Christian Driver and Dewon Pruitt, boy. Amber Hart and Craig Cousins, Okmulgee, girl. Kimberly and Mark Johnson, Broken Arrow, girl. Kimberly Patterson, girl. Shawntae Price, boy. OSU Medical Center Saint Francis Hospital (Tulsans unless indicated) St. John Medical Center Monique Dabney, boy. Tifaney Phelps, girl. Melissa and Kevin Barnett, girl. Jessica and Shane Eden, boy. Brittany Hoke and Colin Mayner, boy. Langley — Glen DeWayne Chism, 73, retired Cinch employee, died Saturday. Service 10 a.m. Thursday, First Free Will Baptist Church, Vinita. Luginbuel South Grand Lake. Lawton — Robert D. Green, 34, counselor, died Feb. 12. Memorial service 2 p.m. Wednesday, Paradise Valley Baptist Church. Hunn Black & Merritt, Eufaula. Locust Grove — Ronney Gene Hubbard, 39, concrete inisher, died Thursday. Visitation 6-8 p.m. Monday, Locust Grove Funeral Home, and graveside service 10 a.m. Tuesday, Hogan Cemetery. Muskogee — Raymond T. “Mac” McLaughlin, 69, retired from the Navy, died Thursday. Service 1 p.m. Friday, Cornerstone Funeral Home Chapel. Oglesby — Bob Jess Taylor, 81, retired from the city of Bartlesville, died Friday. Service 11 a.m. Tuesday, Oglesby Christian Center. Stumpf, Bartlesville. Perry — Henry Voise Jr., 90, farmer, died Sunday. Service 2 p.m. Wednesday, Zion Lutheran Church. Brown-Dugger. Sand Springs — Beaulah M. Shavney, 91, died Saturday in Oklahoma City. Services pending. Mobley-Dodson. — Lillian M. Swinson, 89, retired from Tulsa World Advertising Department, died Saturday. Services pending. Moore’s Southlawn, Tulsa. — Linnie Lucille Walters, 92, homemaker, died Saturday in Tulsa. Services pending. Mobley-Dodson. Sapulpa — Shirley Jean Haynes, 80, barber, died Saturday. Services pending. Floral Haven, Broken Arrow. Stillwater — Mack McCoy, 65, retired, died Sunday. Services pending. Kennedy-Midtown, Tulsa. Vinita — Wayne Henry Waggoner, 59, chiropractor, died Saturday. Services pending. Luginbuel. Wagoner — J.B. “Red” Ogden, 77, retired B&R Auto owner, died Saturday. Service 2 p.m. Wednesday, Cornerstone Funeral Home Chapel, Muskogee. Whiteield — Billy Junior Crowder, 87, welder, died Saturday in Stigler. Services pending. King & Shearwood, Stigler. Amanda and Ben Hurley, Jenks, girl. Tiona Hurley and Skymond Thomas, Glenpool, girl. Jenny and Clay Mindemann, Salina, boy. Helen and Matthew Moore, Owasso, girl. Ashley Shipley and John Farmer, Cleveland, Okla., boy. Laura and Brian Stuemky, boy. Chazney Wilson and David Carroll, Okmulgee, girl. Jasmine Woodfork and Antonio Wilson, Broken Arrow, girl. Series of small earthquakes continues in Oklahoma LANGSTON — The U.S. Geological Survey has recorded several more small earthquakes in Oklahoma. Authorities say no injuries or damage are reported from quakes ranging from magnitude 2.2 to 3.5 that were recorded in Logan, Payne and Grant counties, although police in Stillwater say several residents called to report feeling the temblors. The USGS reports a magnitude 3.5 quake was recorded at 3:15 a.m. Sunday about 7 miles northwest of Langston and a 3.1 magnitude quake occurred at 9:11 p.m. Saturday about 3 miles southwest of Stillwater. Separate 3.0 magnitude quakes were recorded at 1:23 a.m. Sunday near Langston and at 10:44 p.m. Saturday near Stillwater. Two 2.5 magnitude quakes were recorded Sunday near Medford and Langston and quakes of magnitude 2.2 and 2.7 were also recorded in the Stillwater area. — ASSOCIATED PRESS Alice Herz-Sommer, believed to be the oldest-known survivor of the Holocaust, is seen in her London home in 2010. Herz-Sommer, whose devotion to the piano and to her son sustained her through two years in a Nazi prison camp, died Sunday morning at the age of 110. THE LADY IN NUMBER 6/Bunbury Films/Associated Press Oldest-known survivor of Holocaust dies at 110 BY SYLVIA HUI AND ROBERT BARR U.S.-WORLD DEATHS Associated Press LONDON — Alice HerzSommer, believed to be the oldest Holocaust survivor, died at age 110 on Sunday, a family member said. The accomplished pianist’s death came just a week before her extraordinary story of surviving two years in a Nazi prison camp through devotion to music and to her son is up for an Oscar. Herz-Sommer died in a hospital after being admitted Friday with health problems, daughter-in-law Genevieve Sommer said. “We all came to believe that she would just never die,” said Frederic Bohbot, a producer of the documentary “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life.” “There was no question in my mind, ‘would she ever see the Oscars.’ ” The ilm, directed by Oscar-winning ilmmaker Malcolm Clarke, has been nominated for best short documentary at the Academy Awards next Sunday. Another producer on the ilm, Nick Reed, said telling her story was a “life-changing experience.” “Even as her energy slowly diminished, her bright spirit never faltered,” she said. “Her life force was so strong we could never imagine her not being around.” Herz-Sommer, her husband and her son were sent from Prague in 1943 to a concentration camp in the Czech city of Terezin — Theresienstadt in German — where inmates were allowed to stage concerts in which she frequently starred. An estimated 140,000 Jews were sent to Terezin and 33,430 died there. About 88,000 were moved on to Auschwitz and other death camps, where most of them were killed. Herz-Sommer and her son, Stephan, were among fewer than 20,000 who were freed when the notorious camp was liberated by the Soviet army in May 1945. Yet she remembered herself as “always laughing” during her time in Terezin, where the joy of making music kept them going. “These concerts, the people are sitting there, old people, desolated and ill, and they came to the concerts and this music was for them our food. Music was our food. Through making music we were kept alive,” she once recalled. “When we can play it cannot be so terrible.” Though she never learned where her mother died after being rounded up, and her husband died of typhus at Dachau, in her old age she expressed little bitterness. “We are all the same,” she said. “Good and bad.” Caroline Stoessinger, a New York concert pianist who wrote a book about Herz-Sommer, said she interviewed numerous people who were at the concerts who said “for that hour they were transported back to their homes and they could have hope.” “Many people espouse certain credos, but they don’t live them. She did,” said Stoessinger, author of “A Century of Wisdom: Lessons from the Life of Alice HerzSommer, the World’s Oldest Living Holocaust Survivor.” “She understood truly that music is a language and she understood how to communicate through this language of music.” ‘Nobody can help you’ Frederic Chopin, a dauntingly diicult monument of the repertoire. She labored at them for up to eight hours a day. She recalled an awkward conversation on the night before her departure to the concentration camp with a Nazi who lived upstairs and called to say that he would miss her playing. She remembered him saying: “I hope you will come back. What I want to tell you is that I admire you, your playing, hours and hours, the patience and the beauty of the music.” Other neighbors, she said, stopped by only to take whatever the family wasn’t able to bring to the camp. “So the Nazi was a human, the only human. The Nazi, he thanked me,” she said. The camp’s artistic side was a blessing; young Stephan, then 6, was recruited to play a sparrow in an opera. “My boy was full of enthusiasm,” she recalled. “I was so happy because I knew my little boy was happy there.” The opera was “Brundibar,” a 40-minute piece for children composed by Hans Krasa, a Czech who was also imprisoned in the camp. It was irst performed in Prague but got only one other performance before he was interned. The opera was featured in a 1944 propaganda ilm which shows more than 40 young performers illing the small stage during the inale. In 1949, she left Czechoslovakia to join her twin sister, Mizzi, in Jerusalem. She taught at the Jerusalem Conservatory until 1986, when she moved to London. Her son, who changed his irst name to Raphael after the war, made a career as a concert cellist. He died in 2001. Anita Lasker-Wallish, a friend and fellow concentration camp survivor, said Herz-Sommer was still lively during a visit last week. “She was a real optimist,” she said, adding that the pair used to play Scrabble together frequently until Herz-Sommer’s eyes failed her. “She was feeling very unwell and she went to the hospital last Friday. I think she had enough.” She added that Herz-Sommer lived a modest life and would probably balk at the media attention directed at her death. “She didn’t think of herself as anybody very special,” she said. “She would hate any fuss to be made.” Herz-Sommer was born on Nov. 26, 1903, in Prague, and started learning the piano from her sister at age 5. Alice married Leopold Sommer in 1931. Their son was born in 1937, two years before the Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia. “This was especially for Jews a very, very hard time. I didn’t mind because I enjoyed to be a mother and I was full of enthusiasm about being a mother, so I didn’t mind so much,” she said. Jews were allowed to shop for only half an hour in the afternoon, by which time the shops were empty. Most Jewish families were forced to leave their family apartments and were crammed into one apartment with other families, but her family was allowed to keep its home. “We were poor, and we knew that they will send us away, and we knew already in this time that it was our end,” she said. In 1942, her 73-year-old mother was transported to Terezin, then a few months later to Treblinka, an extermination camp. “And I went with her of course till the last moment. This was the lowest point in my life. She was sent away. Till now I don’t know where she was, till now I don’t know when she died, nothing. “When I went home from bringing her to this place I remember I had to stop in the middle of the street and I listened to a voice, an inner voice: ‘Now, nobody can help you, not your husband, not your little child, not the AP writers Lawrence Neumeister in doctor.’ ” New York and Jessica Herndon in From then on, she took refuge in the 24 Etudes of Los Angeles contributed to this story.