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Kathy Taylor (born 1955), Mayor of Tulsa (2006–2009) John Volz (1935–2011), attorney for the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, died in Tulsa in 2011; R. James Woolsey Jr. (born 1941), former director, Central Intelligence Agency; Terry Young (born 1948), former mayor of the City of Tulsa
Jerry Johnston (born 1959), Southern Baptist clergyman and university administrator, born in Oklahoma City; Charles William Kerr (1875–1951), first permanent Protestant minister in Tulsa, Oklahoma; Robert McGill Loughridge (1809–1900), Presbyterian missionary; Quanah Parker (Comanche, 1852–1911), Native American Church leader and advocate
Hughes accepted a football scholarship from the University of Oklahoma. He was a safety and wore jersey #19. He was a safety and wore jersey #19. As a junior in 1973 , he earned the starting strong safety position for the University of Oklahoma , leading the team in interceptions (5) and being named All-Big Eight .
James M. Hewgley, Jr., 94, American politician, Mayor of Tulsa, Oklahoma (1966–1970). [214] Harmon Killebrew, 74, American Hall of Fame baseball player (Minnesota Twins, Kansas City Royals), esophageal cancer. [215] Tómas Mac Anna, 84, Irish director and actor. [216] Frank Upton, 76, English footballer (Derby County, Chelsea), after short ...
The Tulsa Tribune was an afternoon daily newspaper published in Tulsa, Oklahoma from 1919 to 1992. Owned and run by three generations of the Jones family, the Tribune closed in 1992 after the termination of its joint operating agreement with the morning Tulsa World .
Cain Hope Felder Eric Pleskow Diahann Carroll Rip Taylor Francis S. Currey Robert Forster Harold Bloom John Tate Elijah Cummings Bill Macy Thomas D'Alesandro III Willie Brown Don Valentine Robert Evans John Conyers Kay Hagan John Witherspoon Ron Fairly. October 1 Cain Hope Felder, Methodist minister and biblical scholar (b. 1943) [405]
Tulsa World at the Oklahoma Historical Society Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (retrieved April 14, 2009). Tulsa Daily World hosted by the Gateway to Oklahoma History . "Voices of Oklahoma interview with Ken Neal" —First person interview conducted on February 26, 2009 with Ken Neal, former editor of the Tulsa World
The largest home game attendance for Tulsa occurred on April 26, 1980, when 30,822 fans watched the Roughnecks' 2–1 victory over the New York Cosmos at Skelly Stadium. The highest attendance for any Roughneck game occurred on August 26, 1979, when Tulsa met the Cosmos in New York for a NASL playoff game before a crowd of 76,031.