22 TPS Scholars due honor at banquet

Twenty-two 2007 graduating high school seniors will be honored as Tulsa Public Schools
Scholars at a banquet Friday, April 20th.  Three seniors from Hale will be among those honored and presented with scholarships -
William Duncan, Ashley Marengo and Ryan Yeager,

 

By DAVID R. MILLION World Staff Writer  4/25/2007
 

A Hale High School graduate could become the Food Network's next Emeril or perhaps the chef of a fine-dining restaurant in France.

Principal Chris Johnson said plans are in the works to create a restaurant, lodging and health management magnet program to begin in the 2007-08 school year at Hale, 6960 E. 21st St.  The program will include three areas:  food preparation and presentation; lodging and restaurant management; and health and human performance.


Ninth-grade counselor Brenda Summers, who will oversee the culinary aspect, said all ninth-graders will spend one semester in a class that explores different careers and a second semester looking at opportunities of the magnet program.  Hale students may take any of the program's classes, but only those accepted into the four-year program will work toward a certificate they receive along with their diploma at graduation.

"Once students graduate from Hale, they'll be ready either to enter the workforce or obtain further training," Johnson said.   Funding comes from a $12 million U.S. Department of Education grant that is also funding new magnet programs at Central, Webster and Edison Preparatory high schools.

Johnson predicts the Hale program will be successful.  "We're already getting requests from students to transfer to Hale. The hotel and lodging industry is one of the fastest growing.  There's a tremendous opportunity for students to move into this industry and have successful careers.  We want to give our students a head start."

Summers also foresees success.  "It looks like we'll have good support from area restaurants, and a couple of chefs have contacted us with interest in being part of our program," she said.  Guest chefs will supplement full-time teachers, Summers said.

Industry associations will provide curriculum for food preparation and presentation and lodging and restaurant management.  Curriculum for health and human performance is being written by Hale's faculty and will focus on nutrition, personal training, athletic training and dietetics, Johnson said.

Johnson said the magnet program will create changes in staff and facilities.  "We'll convert our 3,000-plus-square-foot fitness center into classrooms and a kitchen, and we'll hire additional teachers," he said. "We'll have an advisory board to help us decide the direction we want the program to go and monitor it.

"During their senior year, students will intern to obtain knowledge and experience, not only from the classroom and kitchen to be built at Hale, but learn in real settings."

To establish those internships, school officials are seeking restaurant and hotel partners, he said. "We're looking for upscale restaurants, not fast-food restaurants," he said.

Johnson's past work experience will be used to help establish the program.  "I worked in restaurants all four years I attended Oklahoma State University, two years at Mexico Joe's and at a variety of others two more years," he said. "It's given me a little bit of insight into the workings of a commercial kitchen. I have a good understanding of what we need to build a professional-grade kitchen."   He and others involved in the program have visited other training sites, both at the high school and college levels.
 

 

Image

Coaching son faces coaching dad:
Student vs. teacher
by ERIC BAILEY Tulsa World Sports Writer  4/20/2007

Soccer is a part of life for the Gray family. Brett Gray (left) played for his father, Clancy Gray, at East Central High School.  But Friday night, they will be on opposite sidelines. Brett coaches at Hale High School and his team plays East Central, which is coached by his father.

Hale soccer coach Brett Gray learned everything about his favorite sport from his father.

On Friday night, his squad will face East Central, which is coached by his dad, Clancy Gray.  "It's going to be funny," Brett Gray said. "I'm not used to this side of things. I'm used to having him as a coach."

For two hours, the father-son relationship will be pushed aside for rivalry reasons. But even during the boys soccer match, Clancy Gray will be a proud father. "This will be a real opportunity to see what he's done with his kids," East Central coach Clancy Gray said.

Hale will face an uphill battle against the Cardinals. The Rangers have just one victory this season, while East Central is in a race for a district championship.

Brett Gray graduated from East Central in 1999. His coach was Clancy Gray, who treated his son like any other player.  On Friday, Brett Gray will treat his father like he's just another coach. But chances are that fans at the East Side Stadium will see a mirror image of Clancy Gray on the Hale sidelines.

"My foundation of coaching has come from him," said 25-year-old Brett Gray, in his first season at Hale. "I couldn't have had a better coach growing up.  "I hope to give my kids just a taste of what he has given me."

Brett Gray was a standout on East Central's 1999 team, a squad that Clancy Gray labeled the best team in his 11-year coaching career.

Clancy Gray also secretly had a favorite player, although he didn't know whether Brett would play soccer.  "He was pretty athletic when he was little," Clancy Gray said. "I always thought baseball was his calling, but he was talented in both sports."

After college, Brett Gray accepted the rebuilding project at Hale. He only had 14 players come out for soccer this season, compared to a roster of 43 at East Central.   Still, he wouldn't change this experience for anything.  "It's been fun, thrilling, exciting . . ." Brett Gray said. "You go through all the emotions during the coaching experience."

Chances are the Hale-East Central match won't draw the biggest crowd in town on Friday. But there will be three proud fans in the stands.  Included with Brett Gray's brother, Dax, and sister, Mendi, will be his mother, Sherry.

And who will his mom be cheering for on Friday night?  "She's rooting for me," Brett Gray said with a sly smile, before adding, "No, she's going to be neutral. All of (the immediate family) will be."
 

 

ATTENTION RANGERS

Ben Schmenk, the new band director at Hale, is searching for a part time marching drum instructor.   Hale will pay some one to come in a few times a week.  It's possible that the instruction could start this semester.

If you can help our band program with this, or know someone that can, please contact Mr. Schmenk at SchmeBe@tulsaschools.org or contact him at Hale during school hours - 925-1200.

 

Tulsa World 3/21/07 Robertson honored: Hale high school [2003] graduate Jena Robertson, who pitches for University of Rochester was chosen as pitcher of the week in the Liberty League.

Tulsa World 3/25/07 Hale grad honored: University of Rochester senior Jena Robertson, a 2003 graduate of Hale High School, was named to the first team in the University Athletic Association. This is her fourth consecutive All-UAA selection.

 


According to the March, 2007 issue of High School Sports magazine,
two of Hale's top senior athletes have signed with colleges.

CONGRATULATIONS TO:

Danny Knighten - NEO
Kendall McKellum - Northern Iowa
 

 

Hale Rangerette Pom Squad participated with several other area high schools in the "Dance for a Cure" Benefit last January.  Their performances, which drew 1,000 spectators, raised $9,000 in 3 hours for the American Cancer Society.

 

Nathan Hale High School Honors Pile Up

They're in the Gutter - Nathan Hale students participated in the February 22nd OSU Engineering Challenge. The challenge was to build a boat that would race down a 10-foot rain gutter with the fastest time. The four teams from Hale placed first, fifth, sixth and seventh. The Rangers were also awarded the Best Overall School Time.

Rangers take Stock - The Hale Ranger Profiteers won another first place in the February 20th Junior Achievement Stock Market Challenge - against industry participants at the DoubleTree at Warren Place. The students won with the highest net worth of over $265,000,000. The winning team includes Niayla Magee, Moritze Stadler, Courtnie Arnold and David Biswas. Other students participating included Billy Duncan, Robert Drake, Ryan Yeager, Manuel Stork, Lyndsey Smith, Khristan Roberts and Michael Cardenas.

 

TPS Hosts Teaching & Technology Fair

Tulsa Convention Center, 100 Civic Center
Contact: Yamilette Williams, 746-6702

Tulsa Public Schools will host a Technology Fair on March 15, 12 -7 pm, at the Tulsa Convention Center, 100 Civic Center. See the latest in teaching and technology available to classrooms, schools, districts and the public! Several hundred vendors will be on hand to conduct live demonstrations of the latest in educational technology products; and a myriad of door prizes will be given away throughout the day. The public is invited to this event at no charge.

 

TPS Holds Magnet School Fair

Woodland Hills Mall, Lower Level near Sears
Contact: Paula Wood
746-6304

Get a glimpse of the new Tulsa Public Schools magnet school programs; and see the tremendous opportunity of existing magnet programs and Schools of Choice at the TPS Magnet School Fair, Saturday, February 24, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., at Woodland Hills Mall. The displays and presentations will be located on the lower floor by Sears.

Unveiling demonstrations of their new curricula will be Nathan Hale High School, with its Restaurant & Lodging, Health and Dietetics magnet program; and Daniel Webster High School, with its Broadcasting & Digital Media magnet program. Visitors may watch a professional chef in action and watch the drama of television production unfold.
 

 

National American Red Cross Month Kicks Off at Nathan Hale

The American Red Cross of Tulsa will kick off National American Red Cross Month at Nathan Hale High School on March 2, 1 p.m.

Tulsa Mayor Kathy Taylor will be on hand with a proclamation for the event.

 

Nathan Hale "Stocks" Up

Playing the stock market at Nathan Hale High School has recently paid big dividends for students! The Hale students took FIRST in the Junior Achievement Stock Market Challenge on February 16, and then beat a team of adult investors on February 20.

This is the first time in the history of the event that a high school team has beaten the adult competitors!

 


Aisha Spanyard (left), Courtnie Arnold and Jennifer Dye, members of Hale's High School Heroes, stack blankets the group collected for the Share the Warmth project.
High School Heroes conducts service projects and mentors to elementary students.
Photo by
SARA PLUMMER / Tulsa World

 

HALE HIGH SCHOOL HEROES

Mission: Service oriented organization that informs elementary school students about the dangers of tobacco and also mentors and tutors elementary students.

Members: Approximately 16

Meetings: Usually weekly

Upcoming events: Reading to area elementary students on March 2, Read Across America Day.

Sponsor: Vivian Bishop

Officers: Aisha Colbert, president; Courtnie Arnold, vice president; Jenifer Cortez, secretary; Maya Dandridge, treasurer; Randi Dye, historian; Bill Duncan, chaplain; Aisha Spanyard, parliamentarian; Niaya Magee, activity chairwoman.

Personal Quotes: "It's a good way to help younger kids in school," said Courtnie Arnold, vice president. "It gives them a role model to look up to."

Tulsa World 2/21/07

 

William Z. Duncan is one of the few surviving
Merrill’s Marauders of World War II fame.

Like many World War II veterans, William Z. Duncan is often reluctant to talk about his experiences during the war. But Duncan is a living connection to a part of American history that many people don't know exists -- he is one of only 200 men to return alive from a mission considered so dangerous that "the U.S. crossed us off," he said.

Duncan and some 3,000 others were part of Merrill's Marauders, a Ranger-type unit that went into Japanese-occupied Burma to fight the Japanese, destroy their supply lines, and open roads into China, according to the U.S. Army Ranger Association Web site, http://www.ranger.org.

Led by Brig. Gen. Frank Merrill, the men -- who had no tanks or heavy artillery to support them -- hiked more than 1,000 miles across the Himalayan Mountains and into the jungles of Burma, an Asian country between India and China, the Ranger site states.

On one of his marches, Duncan was shot and wounded by a Japanese sniper. The bullet penetrated Duncan's chest, went around his rib cage and exited through his back. Duncan spotted his assailant and killed him. "I was only afraid one time -- when they shot at me -- and I stayed afraid until I went home," Duncan said.

Enemy fire was not the only danger. The campaign took the men into remote areas filled with Bengal tigers, monkeys, large snakes and piranhas, Duncan said. With no roads in the area, the men carried supplies on horses, mules, and an elephant, if one was captured. Food and supplies were dropped into Burma from airplanes. Food was scarce, and the men had to improvise as a matter of survival. The soldiers solved their hunger problem by throwing explosives into a river to kill fish, Duncan said.

Merrill's Marauders was a product of the Quebec Conference of August 1943, when allied leaders devised a plan for an American ground unit to lead and work with the Chinese army in a long-range mission behind enemy lines, according to the Ranger Association Web site.  "We had to stop them there (in Burma), because the Japanese would have taken India," Duncan said.

Duncan was wounded several times. He was awarded two Purple Hearts, the Silver Star, and the Bronze Star. He said tropical illnesses were the most dangerous enemy.  "There were a lot of casualties, but there were many more to disease and sickness than bullets," he said.  "I was darn glad to leave it. Typhus is the one that about killed me."

Duncan said he and the other soldiers had no idea what they were getting into when they volunteered for the mission. "They posted a letter on the board asking for volunteers for a dangerous mission. Everyone figured it was one mission and it would be over," Duncan said.

The unit headed out by ship, but the soldiers did not know where they were going or how long they would be gone. "There were too many ships being sunk (by the Japanese). When we got there, we couldn't write home and tell them where we were," Duncan said.

The mission was considered so dangerous that "the U.S. crossed us off," he said. "We were being sacrificed as the only infantry in the China Burma India Theater."

After the campaign, Duncan returned to the United States, where he spent several months in the hospital, recovering from malaria, dysentery, typhoid fever, and other tropical fevers.

In 1944, Merrill's Marauders were awarded the Distinguished Unit Citation. In 1966, the honor was re-designated as the Presidential Unit Citation.

Duncan and his wife raised four sons, and he spent 44 years as an educator. He retired in 1986 as principal at Tulsa Public Schools' McKinley Elementary School.

The actions of the Marauders have been immortalized in movies and history books.

Duncan's oldest son, Bill, an assistant principal at Hale High School, saw his dad's picture in a Compton's Encyclopedia. He was thumbing through the book, reading about World War II, when he saw a familiar photograph of his father and several other soldiers standing by a dead Japanese soldier.

Bill Duncan is proud of his father's accomplishments during the war. "He was always my hero," he said. "(My students) called him Burma Bill -- but never to where he could hear it."

Tulsa World 2/21/07

 


Important Announcements About
2007 Nathan Hale Patriot Yearbook

Business advertising space is available.  Prices range from $25 - $120

Individual Student Recognition ads are priced from $25 - $105

2007 Yearbook Prices:

Order Now - $35
Order in November - $40
Order in December or January - $45

2005-2006 Yearbooks are on sale for $15 (while limited quantities last)

For More Information, contact
Mrs. Jenna Hillman

925-1200
 

 


Teen board members make all the difference
Tulsa World Satellite          Friday, November 10, 2006         by KELSY MIRANDO

"You make the time for the things that are important to you," said community leader Hannibal Johnson.  Simple enough. But what qualifies as important to the typical teenager?

Today, more and more young adults are breaking away from the stereotypical "it's all about me" mantra. In fact, many Tulsa teens are making service and philanthropy a high priority.

"My motivation was to set a good example for my brother and sister," said 18-year-old Hale senior, Kimi Dempsey.

After moving to Tulsa in 2004, Dempsey attended a Youth Listening Conference, an annual event featuring teenagers giving 15 to 20 presentations to a panel of community leaders. The goal is to alert these leaders to the concerns and issues facing this community's adolescents.

Dempsey saw immediate results and changes being made in response to the students' concerns.  One presentation addressed the poor condition of public school restrooms and "within two weeks, Nathan Hale had all-new bathroom stalls," said Dempsey.

Impressed by the conference's impact on the community, Dempsey went straight to the brains behind the operation: Productive Youth Rendering Safety, or PYRS (pronounced peers).  PYRS is the youth advisory board for Tulsa's Mental Health Association, and Dempsey soon became its ringleader.   PYRS gives the Mental Health Association a first hand teenage perspective for decision and policy making.

"A nonprofit's youth board definitely makes a difference," said Dempsey, "because we are the future.  It's not a matter of if you're a teen, an adult or a middle school student.  Everyone has an opinion that deserves to be heard."   And Tulsa is beginning to take steps to see that happens.
 

 


Congratulations
to the Lady Rangers softball team !

Lacy Lawmaster
All Green Country Conference
Player of the Year

Kelsey Landrum, Kayla Landrum
Elizabeth Miska
and Tia Lewis
were named to the All Conference team

Wendy Flowers, Heather Moss and Jordan Evans
made the Honorable Mention List

Lacy Lawmaster was one of only two TPS students
that made the Honorable Mention list for the All State team

 

 

Rogers, Hale are surprises
By Barry Lewis  Tulsa World, 10/8/06

THROUGH six weeks of the football season, Hale and Rogers have combined for a 9-3 record.  That’s especially impressive considering their mark over the previous four years was 5-75. Hale and Rogers hadn’t combined for nine wins in a season since 1979.  They are two of this year’s biggest surprises, but not the only ones. Here is a look at some of the area’s most dramatic turnarounds:

Hale (5A, 5-1): Second-year coach Kevin Busch’s Rangers have built on the offensive foundation they began during the second half of 2005.  Danny Knighten is the most exciting quarterback in the area and leads an offense that averages 40 points per game. With his strong arm and elusiveness, it’s a thrill ride for defenses every time he drops back to pass. But the Rangers’ jump from 1-9 to a top-five team would not have occurred without incredible defensive improvement directed by first year coordinator Wylan Terrell.

 


Hale’s Kenny King tries to shove away Edison defenders during Thursday’s game.
Photo by Mike Simon, Tulsa World

Rangers explode past Edison
HALE 50, EDISON 20
BY DUANE DAPRON
TULSA WORLD, 10/6/06

Kevin Busch thinks his Class 5A No. 5 Hale football team has a tendency for being slow starters. But thus far this season the Rangers have shown that they know how to finish games. After rolling up 44 points in a 25-point win at No. 10 McAlester a week ago, Hale exploded for 36 second-half points in a 50-20 win over Edison Thursday night at the East Tulsa Sports Complex. 

Quarterback Danny Knighten rushed for 120 yards and two touchdowns while passing for 202 yards and two TDs via the air to lead the Rangers (5-1, 2-1). Running back Kenny King added 110 yards and a pair of touchdowns on the ground as Hale rushed for 246 yards. 

Hale led 14-13 at the half, managing just 27 rushing yards on nine carries. But Busch challenged his team at halftime and the Rangers responded.  “I told our players to look at each other and ask how badly they wanted to win this game. I told them they had a chance to prove to others that they can be a good football team.  Frankly, they surprised me. We have been a team of slow starters.”Nursing its one-point halftime lead,

Hale took the second half kickoff and promptly marched 64 yards in just six plays. King finished the drive with a six-yard burst off the right side. Following Knighten’s two-point conversion run, Hale led 22-13.  The Rangers would score on all five second-half possessions while outscoring Edison (2-4, 0-3) 36-7. 

Knighten had 115 yards rushing in the second half while King registered 98 yards on the ground after halftime.  The Eagles, who played without standout tailback Shaun Baker- Hughes, aided Hale’s cause by turning the ball over four times n the second half.

 

Special ceremony: Before Edison’s 7:30 p.m. game against Hale on Thursday at the East Tulsa Sports Complex, there is scheduled to be a ceremony honoring Marine Sgt. James “J” Graham III, who was killed in Iraq in Aug. 2005. Graham is a former Hale player. His coach at Hale is current Edison coach Steve Neal.  Nine years ago this week, Graham rushed for two TDs in a win over Noble.

By Barry Lewis, Tulsa World, 10/5/06

 

NEWS, NOTES & QUOTES
By Barry Lewis and John D. Ferguson
Tulsa World, 10/1/06

Rangers regain focus: Hale, ranked No. 5 in 5A, bounced back from its first loss of the season with a 44-19 win at 10th-ranked McAlester.  “I looked at all my kids after the Ada game and I saw what I hadn’t seen before — they were mad,”  Hale coach Kevin Busch said. “I told them to take this anger and release it in practice and against McAlester.  “The week of the Ada game our concentration level was bad and we had players being late. This past week, our concentration level was unbelievable. Everyone was on time.  It was a wonderful week.” The Rangers, led by quarterback Danny Knighten, had their best offensive game of the season. Knighten passed for 241 yards and rushed for 137. “I told Danny to have fun and start enjoying the game,” Busch said. “I told him I was tired of seeing him run all the time. He asked me if I was teasing him or pulling his chain. But I told him that I wanted him to be more relaxed and patient and throw more, instead of just taking off and running.  “We finally opened up things up and saw the real deal our offense can be.”

 

TULSA WORLD PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Danny Knighten - Hale QB
Tulsa World 10/1/06

Six-foot-3 senior produced 378 total yards and three TDs to lead the 5A No. 5 Rangers to a 44-19 win at 10th-ranked McAlester. He completed 10-of-19 passes for 241 yards with two TDs and had 13 carries for 137 yards. Coach Kevin Busch on Knighten: “This is his first year playing quarterback and he’s learning how to take control of the offense.”

 


Larry Cornelius

Question and Answer
Tulsa World 9/15/2006
Grade: Senior
Ht: 5-10; Wt: 180
Positions: WR-DB
Birthday: 7/28/89
Favorite TV show: "The Wayans Brothers"
Favorite movie: "Friday Night Lights"
Favorite music artist: Pharrell
Favorite athlete: Santana Moss
Most embarrassing sports moment:
Getting beat 84-6 (Hale's loss to East Central in the 2004 opener)
Favorite meal: Hamburgers
Favorite Web site:
Myspace.com
Most prized possession:
1991 Notre Dame football team autographed football

 

September 8, 2006     Week 2     Hale 2-0

HALE RANGERS 20     Edmond Deer Creek 14

Highlight: At the East Tulsa Sports Complex, Hale senior running back Lloyd Younger scored on a 93-yard kickoff return for a touchdown.

Keys: Senior receiver Larry Cornelius caught eight balls for 153 yards and two touchdowns for the Rangers. Senior quarterback Danny Knighten was 13-for-21 passing for 199 yards and of 21 (1 interception) with 199 yards, two TDs and one interception.

 

Knighten, King Lead Hale To Victory
September 2, 2006  by Kevin King

The Hale Rangers racked up nearly four hundred yards rushing Friday night, including 100-plus yards each from quarterback Danny Knighten and Kenny King in a 42-12 season-opening win over Rogers.
King gave the Rangers (1-0) a 7-0 lead early in the first on a 33-yard scoring run. Knighten later scored from a yard away and added a two-point conversion run to make it 14-0.

King added a 16-yard touchdown run and Knighten tossed a 22-yard touchdown pass to Larry Cornelius in the third quarter as Hale pushed the lead to 35-6.

Hale had 396 yards rushing --139 from Knighten and 115 from King. Rogers' scoring came on a pair of touchdown tosses from Kyle Johnson to Jarvis Mayberry.

Hale will play at home next week against Edmond-Deer Creek. Rogers will play against Webster.  
- KTUL

 

All-City Preview: Hale's royalty begins with QB Knighten
By BARRY LEWIS Tulsa World Sports Writer 8/25/2006

Senior produces 167 yards in Rangers' 20-7 win over Edison.

Hale senior Danny Knighten is being recruited by many major colleges and the attention he is receiving from them should increase with performances this season similar to his effort on Thursday night in the 64th annual All-City Preview.

Knighten, who can play several positions, produced 167 yards as a quarterback to help lead the Rangers past Edison 20-7 in a first-round game at Webster's Milton Stadium.  "Danny can do a lot of different things," Hale coach Kevin Busch said. "And I am impressed about how much he sacrifices for the team."

Hale advances to play defending champion Booker T. Washington in the semifinals at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at East Tulsa Sports Complex, with the winner to play in the title game that will immediately follow.

Michael Harris rushed for 108 yards and three TDs to lead BTW past Webster 31-0.

Success in the All-City, which consists of games with 12-minute halves, is important for the Rangers, who went 1-9 last year though they snapped a 29-game losing streak. "We wanted to come out here and show people that we are improved over last year," Knighten said.

In the first half, Knighten connected on a 37-yard pass to Larry Cornelius, who made a leaping catch at the Edison 21. After two penalties, Kenny King broke free on the next play for a 31-yard TD run that opened the scoring. "That was a great run," Busch said. "By next season, Kenny King will be one of the showcase backs in the state."

Early in the second half, Kendall McKellum took a short screen from Knighten, broke several tackles and scored on a 53-yard play as he zigzagged through the Edison defense, from the left sideline to the right and back to the left.  "That was a crazy play," said Knighten, who gained 57 yards on seven carries and was 3-of-6 passing for 110 yards.

McKellum kicked the extra point for a 14-0 lead.   "Kendall told me before the game tonight that he wanted to play every play and he did," Busch said.

Hale, which only won once during a five-game stretch last year when it averaged 30 points per game, shut down the Eagles offense, except for Austin Miller's 58-yard TD run with 7:17 left.

 

Nathan Hale Participates in NEIGHBOR-FEST

Click Here for photos

 

ARCHIVED SCHOOL NEWS

HOME

Class of 2008        Class of 2009        Class of 2010        Class of 2011

Administration    Alumni    Athletics     Attendance     Daily Schedule    Faculty    Library

Student Fundraisers    Hale Rangers     Links    Magnet Program    Organizations

Partners in Education    Principal's Page    PTSA    Rangers in the News    Ranger Wear    School Profile

School Activities Calendar

Nathan Hale High School
6960 East 21st St     Tulsa, OK 74129

Main Office:  918-925-1200
Fax: 918-925-1262

For Student's Absence, contact:
Sharon Hendricks - 925-1204
or  B. J. Spry - 925-1220

Site Updated:  5/06/08

This site is best viewed with Microsoft Internet Explorer
Site problems?  Contact the webmaster

Copyright 2007     www.TulsaHale.org     All rights reserved

Site design by Karen Moon, Hale Class of '74