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There When You Need Them

As a teenager, Cliff Eppler did not know what he wanted to do with his life. And he certainly didn’t expect to find the answer in a smoldering pasture near Sallisaw, Okla.

Eppler was driving his pickup truck down a country road when he spotted a local forest ranger battling a grassfire in a nearby field. The teenager pulled over to the side of the road and helped the man stamp out the blaze. Shortly after the fire came to a rest, he had his answer.

“I was just 16 years old, but I knew right then that I wanted to become a ranger,” Eppler says. “I enjoyed helping him put out that fire then and I still enjoy doing it.”

Today, Eppler is one of the Oklahoma Forestry Service’s nearly 80 rangers dedicated to prevention and suppression of wildfires in the eastern portion of the state. And that task wasn’t an easy one this past summer as scorching heat and drought like conditions turned much of the state’s forests into kindling.

“This has been a challenging year because we have had very dry fuel and extremely hot weather,” says Mark Goeller, Oklahoma Forestry Service assistant director for wildland fire and eastern operations.

“And if someone outside of the area needs assistance and we have the personnel available, we’ll send it. We’ll go anywhere.”

The Oklahoma Forestry Service staffs 42 units across the eastern portion of the state. Each unit consists of a ranger and crew chief, which operate a dozer and brush bumper. The crews are on call 24 hours a day providing fire protection and prevention in their assigned district.

Don Cook, a forest ranger crew chief in Broken Bow, says he never dreamed of a career in the forest service, but was attracted to the challenges and variety of the job.

“To do this job you have to enjoy fighting fires and be pretty flexible,” the 19-year veteran says. “There’s a lot of variety, you never know where or what you’re going to be doing each day. I could be in Eagletown or Poteau or Woodward or who knows where. And there are also days when it’s 110 degrees outside and I’m walking behind a dozer with a drip torch, wondering if I’ve lost my mind.”

“There are days when it’s 110 degrees and I’m walking behind a dozer with a drip torch, wondering if I’ve lost my mind.”

Those calls requesting assistance are not limited to the 18-county region. This year, crews have been dispatched across the state and have helped with large wildfires near the Arbuckle Mountains and spent nearly a week battling a blaze in Medicine Park in late June.

“We’ve gone all the way from Broken Bow and Jay all the way to Erick and up to the panhandle,” Goeller says.

Through an agreement with the federal government, the Oklahoma Forestry Service also makes its wildland fire division available to other states. Eppler has helped on a number of those fires, including the massive wildfire that scorched nearly 800,000 acres of Yellowstone National Park in 1988. As part of a crew of 20 Oklahoma fire personnel, Eppler spent nearly two weeks helping combat the historic fire.

“That was a really memorable and unique experience,” says Eppler. “When we got there, we had to hike 10 miles to get to the spike camp. And I remember every morning a wildlife official would ride horseback out of camp to check for grizzly bears. They’d go out before crews and look for grizzly bears. And every tent would have bear spray, so that was pretty different.”

Wildland firefighters have been protecting the state’s forests since the Oklahoma Forestry Service was founded in 1925. Before that time, excessive timber harvesting without forest regeneration and uncontrolled wildfires discouraged any interest in making investments or improvements in much of the southeastern portion of the state.

During the early days of the department, rangers relied on a number of fire lookout towers to monitor the heavily wooded part of the state. At one time, there were 23 state fire towers within the protection area. A few of those fire towers are still in use today, but the department now relies on flyovers.

“We would have people climb those towers to check for smoke and sometimes they would stay up there all day, depending on the fire danger,” Goeller says. “As we’ve moved on through history we now have a three pronged attack with our employees patrolling their districts, public calling in and surveillance with our aircraft and fire towers.”

The equipment on the ground has also come a long way during the past few decades.

“In 1982 we got our first dozer for the Sallisaw district,” he said. “Before that we had to put out the fires with a leaf blower and a rake. We later got a better dozer with a climate controlled cabin, so the equipment has really been upgraded since I’ve been here.”

Along with the task of fire protection, the Oklahoma Forestry Service works with private landowners, municipalities, civic organizations and school groups to promote fire prevention. They assist with the development of Community Wildfire Protection Plans and Firewise Plans, while also conducting fire prevention activities including displays at public events, school programs and Smokey Bear visits.

Fashion Week Diary

Oklahoma Magazine’s delegation got a peek at the 2012 spring collections from the biggest names in fashion at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in New York City. Our ever-fashionable reporter gives us some of the highlights:
 

If you believe Heidi Klum, über model and star of the Lifetime reality series Project Runway, "One day you are in, and the next day you are out."

It's true; we saw some new fresh faces showing their collections at the Spring 2012 New York Fashion Week runway shows. Chris Benz, famous for the ever-changing color of his hair (currently hot pink), showed us avant-garde looks that are more downtown than uptown, dripping with Asian attitude. (Is he the new Marc Jacobs, we wonder?) We are going to keep our eye on Anndra Neen, who presented a bold collection full of inspired accessories. BUT, we really fell head over heels, crazy in love with some of our timeless favorites.

Zang Toi, all elegance and refinement, gave us a powerful collection with a North African influence. These are STATEMENT pieces. Stephen Baldwin, of the famous Baldwin brothers clan, sat across from us with a very young, very pretty brunette. Closing the Toi show was Kirstie Ally, exploding onto the catwalk in a royal blue, jeweled gown and full-length coat, sporting a very sexy new figure, compliments of her recent stint on Dancing With The Stars. We had just bumped into Kirstie in the Mercedes-Benz Star Lounge relaxing before the show. Kirstie, girlfriend, you go, girl!

Showing to a packed, standing-room-only crowd, Hervé Léger creator, of the iconic bandage dress, had a seductive collection designed by French couturier Max Azria, who also designs BCBG. His signature is a sculpting silhouette that wraps the most famous female bodies in Hollywood. This season, the look was monochromatic, except for the few pieces that used Ikat dyeing techniques. I am not quite sure how they translated, but his fans adore him, just the same. Country crooner Lee Ann Rimes was on the front row looking scarily slim.

The eccentric Betsey Johnson has been IN since she first launched in 1978 and continues to show a funky, frilly, flirty and oh-so-sexy collections, which had pink and black lingerie playing peek-a-boo. Her daughter LuLu strutted the catwalk in a form-fitting champagne maxi dress à la Jessica Rabbit. All of the models were curved in just the right places, unlike the typical 16-year-old, starved, under-developed waifs that look as though they had their last meal some eight weeks ago. The coup de grace was when the 69-year-old quirky designer, with her platinum locks, ended the show by flying down the stage and landing a perfect cartwheel to thundering cheers and applause.

If I could walk away with only one piece, it would be from Carlos Miele, whose flagship store is in the Meatpacking District. This gorgeous Brazilian knows how to make a woman look beautiful. These are sultry clothes that blast of luxury and sensuality, especially the sheer silk kaftans infused with colors of the swirling sun and sea. Whether you are on the red carpet, at a gala or the very chic mother of the bride, his alluring gowns make your body look and feel flawless.

What is Pink Tartan? A smart, sophisticated line designed by Kimberly Newpot-Mimran

I loved these ‘60s inspired Brigitte Bardot meets Holly Golightly styles.

How does one achieve lady-like and prim and at the same time sexy? Sometimes it is what you DON'T see that rules the imagination. I loved these ‘60s inspired Brigitte Bardot meets Holly Golightly styles. A red satin cigarette pant and fitted shirt with a pencil thin orange belt simultaneously screamed siren and coquette. I want every piece in this collection, including the Tom Ford Nikita, cat-eye sunglasses the models were sporting. If you don't yet own a pair, get them. They sizzle!

On a side note, Vivienne Tam proved that you cannot always mix prints. The show, however, was redeemed by the fact that we chatted up the tall, handsome Matt Nordgren, star of Bravo's latest reality show, Most Eligible Dallas. "I love Oklahoma!” Matt said. Thanks Matt, we love Dallas…AND Bravo!

Dallas native Lela Rose is one of many designers who is down streaming a designer collection for the masses. Seated on the front row were her beautiful husband, children and dog looking like they jumped off the pages of Town & Country. She designs a shoe collection for Payless that has the look of couture with an affordable price tag. The collaboration between designers and mass retail began with Karl Lagerfeld's collection for the Swedish retailer H&M in 2002. This season, Missoni is designing for Target, proving the point that you don't have to be rich to be fashionable. The response to Missoni for Target was such a grand slam that Target's website crashed 30 minutes into the release of the collection, leaving shoppers enraged. Note to Target execs: Try this again with Gucci or Ferragamo, but be prepared for the onslaught of shoppers who will do just about anything for a designer label.

Derek Lam delivered a "California Dreamin’" montage of mustard yellows, gold and aqua that made one want to rip out the Net Jet card and fly away to Palm Springs for the weekend.

On a break between shows, we cruised the shops on Madison Avenue to catch our breath and do a little window-shopping. We popped into Chanel and snagged the last bottle of the white-hot nail color of the season: Chanel's limited edition "Les Jeans" is a muted steel blue called Blue Boy. As fashion is known to make a girl a little thirsty, we meandered into the posh Surrey Hotel for an afternoon libation in Bar Plieades. Resident bartender Mary McGuigan whipped up cappuccinos and frothy little cocktails. The rooftop bar is perhaps one of the best views in Upper Manhattan.

A girl cannot live on fashion alone. We needed some gastronomic sustenance along the way, and we found it. Lavo (39 East 58th), owned by the restaurant group who gave us Tao, is a loud, jam-packed scene with a mix of youngish Manhattanites, Europeans and tall, blonde, aggressive Russian girls looking for the buyer of their next handbag. The Kobe beef spaghetti and meatballs…SO worth the indulgence.

Sometimes you love a place, sometimes, not so much. We opted to head across town to The West Village eatery The Lion by chef John DeLucie, formerly of Waverly Inn fame. Sad to say, it failed to dazzle. After 15 minutes, a rude hostess and less-than-acceptable table on a balcony the size of a matchbook, we walked out and popped down 9th to the Hotel Griffou, another trendy spot that was a bordello at the turn of the century. As serendipity would have it, we were met at the door by one of the four owners, who showed us to a sexy little booth and proceeded to deliver a beautifully executed dinner. We noshed on a juicy halibut, chicken under brick (the latest way to prepare a bird) and sweet sausage rigatoni with broccoli rabe. The chocolate soufflé ended in a four-way, spoon-to-spoon war game! Lesson learned: Sometimes the grass IS greener on the other side of 9th Avenue. (21 West 9th).

Saturday night après dinner in Jean-Georges at The Mark Hotel (Madison Ave at 77th) – I ordered a watermelon and goat cheese salad with cracked pepper and olive oil which I can't stop thinking about – we quite literally bumped into Daphne Guinness. Daphne who? Daphne of the Irish Guinness family, heiress, fashion icon and oft called "the most fashionable woman in the world" Daphne, that's who! She swept into the hotel bar (best place on upper East Side for cocktails) like a cyclone in Brian Atwood suede wedges and an alligator Hermès Birken bag that probably cost more than a semester at Duke. A retrospective of her famous haute couture clothing collection recently opened at The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology. I totally have a girl crush on her…. AND her handbag. In the words of Rachel Zoe, I could just die!

Every once in a blue moon you are able to get a dinner reservation in the hottest spot in town. Score one for the concierge at the Peninsula, who booked us into Marea (240 Central Park South), Chef Michael White's Cucina del Mare. Donnie Deutch was at the next table high-fiving a group of men that had obviously just closed a major business deal. This is a power broker restaurant. Order the branzino, which is a striped sea bass served with roasted eggplant and apricot mostarda, or the seppia, a Mediterranean cuttlefish.

Philippe (33 East 60th) by Philippe Chow (not to be confused with Mr. Chow) was voted Best in Chinese in 2010 Zagat. We opted for the tasting menu, which included chicken satay in cream sauce, squab lettuce wraps, pork dumplings, a divine crispy Peking duck, green prawns and Chilean sea bass. We hosted a couple of students from Parsons School of Design who are from Tulsa families.

Don't you just love fall Sundays in New York? The place you want to be seen in your sweater and leggings is at Isabella's on 77th and Columbus. The lines are long, but while waiting to dine on the farmers’ market egg white omelette or Isabella's huevos rancheros, you can stroll the farmers’ market in the surrounding Upper West Side neighborhood. We saw vendors with giant bouquets of fresh lavender and artists showing interesting jewelry designs.

Our first and our last stop to New York is always Botega del Vino for breakfast and lunch. A cappuccino or glass of pinot grigio and a Veronese mortadello panini split two ways is just enough when you need a small bite. It is located across from the Plaza Hotel at 59th and Fifth. This area was a checkpoint to get into midtown Manhattan due to the 10th anniversary of 9/11. New York's finest were on full alert due to a high threat level and were randomly searching cars, taxis and trucks. It was a somber day, to be sure. We will never forget how this sad historic day changed our lives forever.

All good things must come to a close.  It was another glorious fashion week overflowing with talent and celebrity and dining and shopping.

Coco Chanel once said,  "Fashion is not something that exists in dresses only. Fashion is in the sky, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening."

Oh, dearest Coco, my thoughts, exactly!

What is Your Body Telling You?

We have scheduled maintenance for our cars, and the handy monitoring systems let us know when they need to be serviced. Unfortunately for humans, our bodies don’t come conveniently equipped with a dashboard to light up when something may be amiss. Dry skin, waist size, creaky joints and even dry eyes can all be signs of underlying health issues. While most of the time these symptoms should not be cause for alarm, you should always be alert to what your body is trying to tell you.

As new studies are published and picked up by the media, it seems that anything and everything can be a sign that some health disaster is looming in your future. From having a longer ring finger than the forefinger being an indication that you have a higher probability of developing osteoporosis, to the shape of your body and sense of smell, it seems that new information about health issue probabilities is released daily.

“The pendulum changes so often,” says Dr. Jenny Le, a family medicine specialist with OU Physicians in Edmond.

“It used to be pear-shaped bodies were healthier than apple shape bodies, but a recent study has refuted that, saying basically that large amounts of fat anywhere aren’t good.”

Le says she tends to take the latest and greatest medical finds published in supermarket health magazines with a grain of salt, preferring to stand by the studies that have years of research behind them.

“There are certain truths to old wives’ tales – there is something in chicken soup that makes you feel better and aloe vera is good for burns. But, I don’t buy into most of it.”

While it’s not likely that your doctor is going to be examining the lengths of your fingers to develop a case history, your body does communicate with you in numerous ways. We’ve asked doctors about some common complaints and what they could mean.

Symptom: Cold Hands

According to Le, having cold hands doesn’t necessarily mean anything. However, consistently cold hands could indicate poor circulation.

“Definitely go see a doctor if having cold hands is outside your normal or if you have a tingling sensation. It could be nerve damage-related.” 

Treatment:

First thing’s first: If you have cold hands, bundle up. If the coldness persists or becomes tingly, your doctor will work with you to establish a medical history and devise a course of action. Sometimes, something as simple as watching your salt intake can help.

Symptom: Irritability When Hungry

Do you notice that you get increasingly cranky or you’re not as focused as it gets further and further away from the last time you ate? You could be expressing the indicators for hypoglycemia. Other symptoms can include heart palpitations, tremors, anxiety and sweating.

Treatment:

For most, simply eating curbs the irritability, while your doctor can confirm if what you’re experiencing is hypoglycemia. According to the Mayo Clinic, if you have diabetes and early signs of hypoglycemia don’t improve with eating or taking glucose tablets, seek immediate help.

Symptom: Leg Cramps

“Leg or muscle cramps can be tricky,” says Le. “If you’re experiencing muscle cramps after a bout of physical activity, that’s par for the course. You also may have a low potassium level or restless leg if there’s no rhyme or reason to the cramps.”

Treatment:

“We’ll likely draw a blood level to see what’s going on with your potassium. That’s the biggie – deficient potassium can lead to heart problems. But most patients that I see have increased their activity level in some way,” says Le.

Symptom: Energy Slumps

Feeling down and not so peppy? Experiencing prolonged energy slumps can be the signs of an underlying thyroid issue.

“When a patient comes in and complains of decreased energy, it could be thyroid-related or an imbalance of iron levels in their blood,” says Le. “Patients may can also be depressed. It’s really important to look at the big picture to determine potential causes for these symptoms.”

Treatment:

According to Le, a blood panel will likely be taken to determine if the thyroid is functioning properly or if the blood is low in iron. Additional treatment options can be as simple as a vitamin B-12 shot or amending your diet and adding exercise.

“Sometimes the solution for loss of energy is as easy as starting an exercise routine. When you get exercising, you’re using your own endorphins. Also, eating a lot of junk food can make you feel sluggish. If that’s the case, you really need to examine what kinds of foods you’re consuming.”

If your funk is more likely due to depression, your doctor may prescribe anti-depressants or other forms of medication to get you feeling back to normal.

Symptom: Creaky Joints

If there is pain, swelling, redness or warmth at the joint, it could be gout or rheumatoid arthritis. Hopkins says that typically normal osteoporosis does not present with fever. Which type of creaky joint you have will dictate the course of treatment.

Treatment:

If there is pain, swelling, redness or warmth at the joint, it could be gout or rheumatoid arthritis. Hopkins says that typically normal osteoporosis does not present with fever. Which type of creaky joint you have will dictate the course of treatment.

Symptom: Dry Skin

“Medical providers view the skin as a barrier,” says Dr. Stephen Hopkins of Mercy Clinic Northwest Expressway.

“A lot of this stuff is what we’re doing to ourselves – soap, body wash and such. Dry skin can be benign or something more serious, such as psoriasis.”

According to Hopkins, dry skin coupled with constipation or other symptoms can also be a signal of a thyroid issue.

Treatment:

Solutions can be as simple as switching soap and daily moisturizing. Psoriasis is treatable through creams and medication.

“Dry skin could just be a sign that you’re getting older – your skin loses its ability to hold moisture,” says Le. “I love putting Vaseline on damp skin to trap in the moisture. It’s cheap and it works.”

If you’re experiencing dry skin coupled with other symptoms, it’s important to tell your doctor, as it may be related to an underlying issue.

Symptom: Snoring

“Typically, if someone comes into my office and says their spouse is complaining about their snoring, we’ll go over a history to determine if a sleep study is warranted,” says Hopkins. “It can be that the snoring is caused by allergies, or could it be from sleep apnea.”

Treatment:

If you’re one of the many who keep their spouse awake at night due to snoring from allergies or inflamed nasal passages, nasal strips might help. If it is sleep apnea, which is the halting or stopping of breathing during sleep, and goes untreated, it can lead to much bigger issues such as heart disease.

Symptom: Chronic Coughing

According to both Le and Hopkins, the reasons for experiencing chronic coughing can be as varied as the designs of a kaleidoscope.
 
“If there is something that needs to be sought for medical evaluation, it would be chronic coughing,” says Hopkins. “It can be asthma, it could be cancer, tuberculosis –  even some medications can cause chronic coughing.”

“It could be a byproduct of acid reflux or if you’re a smoker it can be even worse,” adds Le.

Treatment:
Both doctors say that assessing a patient’s medical history is important to finding the root cause of the coughing to provide the appropriate course of treatment.

Symptom: Changes In Your Nails

“Changes in the fingernails and toenails may be suggestive of underlying systemic disease,” says Hopkins. “Spoon-shaped nails may indicate underlying iron disorder or anemia, a club shaped deformity of the nail might indicate underlying lung or bowel disease, and small nail hemorrhages might suggest heart disease especially in the conjunction with a heart murmur. Pitting of the nail may reflect psoriasis, and yellow, discolored nails may indicate fungal infection and sometimes something more serious: problems with the lymph system, kidneys or other systemic diseases.”

Treatment:

Depending on what you’re experiencing, your treatment can be varied. If the changes in your nails are fungal related, they most likely can be easily treated through medication.
The biggest thing, both Le and Hopkins caution, is that it is important to be aware of any changes in your body.

“If you have something ongoing for more than a few weeks, go get it checked out,” Le says. “I’m never upset about a patient coming in to see me about any concerns they might have. You are the person who knows what’s going on with your body better than I do so don’t underestimate what you know. Just have your concerns addressed by someone in the medical profession.”

“Pain is an important indicator,” adds Hopkins. “Anytime there’s pain it’s your body’s indicator that something is going on.” 

Additional symptoms that you might want to have checked out by a health provider include new moles, yellowing of the skin, dramatic changes in weight and rashes on the face. Increased thirst and urination can be early warning signs of diabetes. Both Hopkins and Le say that any and all chest pain should be taken seriously and any lump or mass should be looked at immediately.

“Early detection can save your life,” adds Hopkins. “Some signs are more subtle and some are more obvious. Like a car’s check engine light, people should get their questions answered.”

More About Thyroid Disorders

It is estimated that approximately 20 million Americans suffer from some form of thyroid disorder, and that at least half of those cases are undiagnosed. Symptoms such as fatigue, weight gain and foggy thinking are often attributed to factors such as stress, unhealthy diet or other illnesses when a faulty thyroid gland may be to blame.   

The thyroid gland is a small endocrine gland situated in the front of the neck that is responsible for maintaining proper metabolism – the rate at which the body uses energy. While somewhat inconsequential in size, it is surprisingly powerful. When the thyroid gland doesn’t function properly, the body is deprived of essential hormones needed to regulate things such as body weight, heart rate, body temperature and brain function.

Due to the thyroid gland’s all-encompassing effects on the body, symptoms of thyroid disorders are often far-reaching and difficult to pinpoint.

“Thyroid disorders may be difficult to diagnose based on symptoms alone because many of these symptoms are nonspecific and may be associated with a multitude of other disease processes,” says Dr. Erin Kratz of OSU Medical Center.

Common Disorders

The most common disorder of the thyroid gland is called hypothyroidism, or under-active thyroid. Symptoms typically include fatigue, dry skin, hair loss, constipation, cold intolerance and weight gain. Cognitive difficulties are also sometimes associated with a sluggish thyroid, as well as a diminished sense of smell, taste or hearing.

Hypothyroidism is most often caused by an autoimmune disorder called Hashimoto’s Thyroiditus, which causes the body’s immune system to attack the thyroid gland and inhibit thyroid hormone production. In some cases, hypothyroidism may also be caused by the pituitary gland failing to produce enough TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone), which essentially tells the thyroid what to do and when to do it. 

Hyperthyroidism, or overactive thyroid, is less common than hypothyroidism, but can be equally debilitating. Symptoms commonly include increased heart rate even when resting, heat intolerance, weight loss, tremors and more frequent bowel movements. While basic blood tests may be used to diagnose hyperthyroidism, an iodine uptake and scan may be needed to identify the specific cause. The most common cause of hyperthyroidism is Grave’s Disease, which is an autoimmune disorder similar to Hashimoto’s that causes the immune system to attack the thyroid gland and trigger an increase in the amount of thyroid hormones released. The most prominent symptom of Grave’s Disease is known as exophthalmos, or a swelling of the eyes that causes a visible protrusion of the eyeballs themselves. 

Treatments

Hypothyroidism is traditionally treated with a daily oral hormone replacement, such as Levothyroxine, Synthroid, Levothroid or Levoxyl. Once medication has been prescribed, thyroid levels are then monitored every few weeks, and medication dosage may be adjusted in order to determine the adequate amount needed for healthy thyroid function in each individual patient.

Hyperthyroidism is commonly treated with oral medication or radioactive iodine, which helps inhibit thyroid hormone production. For more severe cases, or for those with thyroid nodules or thyroid cancer, the thyroid may be partly or completely removed surgically.
After thyroid disorders are treated, TSH levels typically return to normal, but some symptoms may take a bit longer to fade.

“Symptoms such as hair loss may take a longer time to resolve, even after laboratory tests return to normal,” says Kratz. “It may take a while to ascertain the right dosage of medication, as each individual will respond differently to treatment.”

Since treatment may not provide immediate and/or significant relief from symptoms, patients may sometimes assume it is not working, and request a higher dosage of medication or feel the need to increase their dosage themselves. However, too much thyroid medication can be dangerous.
“Too often, thyroid hormone levels are manipulated with medications based on symptoms without regard to the thyroid hormone levels,” says Dr. Peter J. Tebben of Mercy Health Center.

Symptoms should be evaluated carefully in order to ensure that thyroid hormone levels are really causing the problem before increasing dosage. “Taking too much thyroid hormone can cause serious health problems,” Tebben says.

Risk Factors

While anyone can develop a thyroid disorder, young and middle-aged women are most susceptible to thyroid problems, and it is often hereditary. The NWHIC (National Women’s Health Information Center) estimates that one in eight women suffer from a thyroid disorder.
Pregnant women are particularly prone to thyroid disorders, so it is important to monitor thyroid health both during and after pregnancy.

“Abnormal thyroid hormone levels during pregnancy may increase the rate of miscarriage and affect the neurological development of the child,” says Tebben. “Thyroid hormone doses may need to be increased by as much as 25 to 50 percent during the early phase of pregnancy and then be reduced again after delivery.”

Infants are sometimes born with hypothyroidism, but current newborn screening programs test for thyroid problems. Other high-risk factors include a family history of thyroid disease, postpartum women, those with pre-existing autoimmune diseases and/or those who have undergone radiation treatments.

While most North Americans typically consume enough iodine, a continued emphasis on low-salt diets and an increase in consumption of iodine-deficient processed foods may have put some at risk for iodine deficiency. The Institute of Medicine Food and Nutrition Board (IOM) recommends a dose of 90 milligrams per day for children, 150 milligrams per for adults and 220 milligrams per day for pregnant women. Good sources of iodine include iodized table salt, seafood, milk, yogurt and strawberries. There are also many vitamin supplements available that contain the recommended daily dose of iodine.

Regular checkups are recommended, since untreated hypothyroidism can lead to serious health problems including diabetes, heart disease, seizures and, in rare cases, even coma. 
Hyperthyroidism that goes untreated can lead to problems such as cardiac arrhythmia, osteoporosis and toxicity to the liver, or thyroid storms.

The Thyroid Foundation of America recommends that women should have their thyroid hormone levels checked starting at age 50, and men should begin regular monitoring at age 60. Those over age 35 should have their thyroid checked every five years.

 – Tricia Tate
 

Cold Case Oklahoma

After dark on the snowy evening of Feb. 5, 1975, Geraldine Martin, 28, left art class at Tulsa Junior College to walk to her Volkswagen parked nearby. Nineteen days later, construction workers renovating the abandoned Osage Hills Apartments north of downtown found her nude body stuffed into a built-in cupboard. She had been strangled with a ligature, her body mutilated.

The case remained unsolved for nearly three decades.

More than 6,000 killers get away with murder every year in the United States. One third of all homicides go unsolved. Clearance rates for murder and manslaughter have dropped from nearly 90 percent in the 1960s to less than 65 percent. While FBI statistics show Oklahoma’s murder clearance at above 80 percent, that still means two of every 10 killers in the state avoid apprehension.

“A case may go cold, but it is never closed,” points out retired Tulsa Homicide Detective Sergeant Mike Huff. “There is no statute of limitations on murder.”

Huff and a string of Tulsa detectives before him kept the Martin case active for 27 years. In 2002, FBI agents arrested long-haul truck driver Clyde Carl Wilkerson in Little Rock, Ark., on California fugitive warrants. DNA technology unavailable in the 1960s and ‘70s linked him to the 1965 sex-slaying of Cheryl Burnett in El Cajon, Calif., and to the murder of Louis Mercer and brutal rape of Mercer’s wife two weeks earlier in the same city. DNA also pinned Wilkerson to the 1975 Tulsa case.

Wilkerson pled guilty in 2004 to snatching Martin off the TJC campus and dumping her body in the Osage Hills Apartments. Now an old man in a wheelchair, he is expected to die in prison. Police continue to investigate unsolved murders he may have committed while criss-crossing America in his 18-wheeler.

Most Famous Unsolved Murder

E.C. Mullendore

A forest of trees has been sacrificed to newsprint in speculation of who killed 32-year-old millionaire rancher E.C. Mullendore III. Estranged from his wife pending divorce, the rancher was on his sprawling 40,000-acre Cross Bell Ranch in Osage County with ranch hand Damon “Chub” Anderson the night of Sept. 26, 1970, when he was beaten and shot to death. Summoned by Anderson, deputies found Mullendore dead in a pool of blood in the basement and Anderson shot once in the back of his arm. There was evidence of a savage struggle.

According to Anderson’s statement, he was upstairs getting ready to take a bath when two intruders broke into the house and attacked Mullendore, beating him before shooting him between the eyes. Hearing the gunshot, Anderson rushed downstairs and exchanged fire with the assailants.

Investigators learned the rancher was deeply in debt and had reportedly obtained loans from underworld crime figures, leading to rampant rumors that his slaying was a mob hit. Anderson was widely regarded as a prime suspect, possibly having cooperated with the mob.

Tulsa private investigator Gary Glanz, a former Tulsa Police detective, arrived at the murder scene within hours, having been contacted to provide security for the dead man’s wife. News outlets such as the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times have referred to Glanz as a “super sleuth.”

“This was never about a contract hit,” he states flatly. “The case should have been solved within the first 72 hours.”

Anderson died in Kansas in 2010 at 70-years-old after a medical release from prison on other convictions. Glanz, who had maintained contact with the case, arrived at his deathbed in time to tape a stunning statement.

“We have got the answer,” Glanz reveals. “There was another man with Chub the night of the murder, who helped cover it up. I’m working with the DA in Osage County to resolve it.”

An indictment may be pending.

Terror on Cache Road

The Lawton Serial Killer

Crimes of passion and run-of-the-mill “Saturday night” shootings, stabbings and bludgeoning tend to sort themselves out quite readily. “Whodunit” homicides associated with crimes like robbery, rape and drug activity are more likely to go cold. Serial killers are especially difficult to track down. The longer a case drags on, the less likely it will be resolved. A handful of unsolved crimes in Oklahoma have particularly captured the attention of the public and law enforcement.

“We never stop looking,” says Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation Agent Robert Williams, case agent for a series of murders that occurred in the Lawton area from 1999 to 2003.

The reign of terror began mid-summer of 1999 when a passerby spotted a nude corpse bobbing in shallow Sandy Bear Creek six miles northeast of Velma in rural Stephens County. Forensics identified the body as that of Jane Marie Chafton, 28, from Lawton. She was last seen on Aug. 9.

Cassandra Lee Ramsey, 25, was next, disappearing on Oct. 10, 1999. Her naked body turned up five months later beneath a bridge along a rural road in Jefferson County.

Mandy Raite, 25, vanished from Lawton on June 15, 2000. She reappeared two days later, nude, dead and dropped in a streambed in Comanche County.
 

There are more than 50 children still listed as missing in Oklahoma, some from as far back as 1985.

Janice Buono, 29, went missing for nearly two months before her body was recovered in Comanche County on Feb. 23, 2002. Her remains were likewise stripped and dropped into a streambed.

Pam Woodring, 34, was the most recent victim in succession, her naked body recovered in Kiowa County on June 5, 2003.

The modus operandi of the murders coupled with the history of the victims indicate a Jack the Ripper-type suspect. According to Richard Goss, OSBI agent-in-charge of the investigation, all five young women were known prostitutes and drug abusers who haunted the sleazy, low-rent motels and underground world of drugs and prostitution along Cache Road in Lawton. One by one they were seized and left naked, and presumably raped, in streambeds. Medical examiners discovered cocaine residue in each of the five bodies.

Decomposition made causes of death difficult to determine. However, detectives emphasize that the women did not die of natural causes.

“The Lawton murders seem to have stopped with Woodring,” says Goss. “But whoever did it will not quit. He’s moved elsewhere, is in prison for other crimes, or something else has happened. Someone out there knows something or has suspicions. We hope they come forward. Lifestyle aside, these women were human and did not deserve this.”

They Went for a Walk

 Skyla Whitaker and Taylor Paschal-Placker

The genesis of the OSBI dates back to the 1920s when gangs of outlaws roamed Oklahoma, requiring a statewide response from law enforcement. The Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation reduced the number of bank robberies in the state by 75 percent after Gov. Martin E. Trapp created it in 1925. In 1939, the agency became known as State Crime Bureau, evolving into the OSBI in 1957. It assists rural and small town law enforcement in investigating major crimes for which locals do not possess adequate manpower and resources. With only about 80 agents to cover the entire state, investigators find themselves swamped, each of them working as many as 17 or 18 cases at a time.

“We do not have enough personnel to work any single case full time,” explains OSBI spokeswoman Jessica Brown.

Nonetheless, Agent Kurt Titsworth spends at least three-quarters of his duty time sorting out clues and hunting suspects in the baffling murders of 11-year-old Skyla Whitaker and 13-year-old Taylor Paschal-Placker. An investigator for the Okfuskee County District Attorney when the homicides occurred, he later went to work for the OSBI in order to pursue the investigation. It is one of the most intensive probes in the history of the OSBI.

On June 8, 2008, at about 5 p.m., the two children left the rural Placker residence on County Line Road near Weleetka to stroll to Bad Creek Bridge, less than a half-mile away. Shortly thereafter, Okfuskee County Sheriff Jack Choate’s office received a frantic 911 call.

“Somebody killed two little girls! My baby, my grandbaby and her friend… They went out for a walk and now they’re dead…Oh, my God, help me, please…”

The little girls’ lifeless bodies lay sprawled in a shallow roadside ditch near the bridge, Skyla shot eight times in the head and torso, Taylor five times. Two separate weapons were involved. The crime was so horrendous, so apparently random, that detectives have yet to establish a motive for it.

The sole “person of interest” to date is described as an American Indian male in his mid-30s, six feet tall, slender, with a ponytail dangling down his back. He was seen driving a white Ford or Chevrolet pickup in the vicinity minutes before the girls were gunned down.

“We are constantly working new leads,” Brown stresses.

Pick a Motive

Lauria Bible and Ashley Freeman

Identifying motive in a crime can often – but not always – lead to a solution.

“We think we know the motive,” says Brown, referring to Lauria Jaylene Bible and Ashley Freeman, who disappeared on a winter’s night in 1999. “But we’re not willing to share it yet.”

At 6 a.m. on Dec. 31, 1999, a passing motorist reported a fire at a mobile home in a remote, wooded area near Welch in Craig County. Authorities subsequently recovered from the trailer the charred remains of Danny Freeman and his wife Kathy, each of whom died from a shotgun blast at point-blank range. The evening before, Kathy Freeman took her daughter Ashley and Ashley’s friend Lauria Bible, 16, to a Pizza Hut in Vinita to celebrate Ashley’s 16th birthday. The three returned to the Freeman home afterwards. By dawn, the trailer house was smoldering down to its wheels, the parents were dead and the two 16-year-old girls were gone. They have not been seen again in nearly 12 years.

Authorities have considered several motives for the crime – revenge, drugs, a feud, jealousy. They are not willing to divulge the one they have settled on as most probable. A bizarre phenomenon of high-profile homicides is the number of people who, for notoriety or other perverse reasons, will confess, even though they didn’t do it. At least four people claimed to have killed Geraldine Martin. Withholding key facts about a crime from the public allows detectives to sort out deceivers from actual perpetrators.

“There are no indications that Lauria and Ashley are alive,” Brown concludes. “They’ve literally vanished. But we can always hope.”

There are more than 50 children still listed as missing in Oklahoma, some from as far back as 1985.

Lack of Evidence

Jack and Eaine Denney

Hope is what keeps Cherokee County Undersheriff Jason Chennault going in his investigation of the bloody Denney double homicide. On Christmas afternoon 2007, Chennault and his deputies responded to a call for help on Iron Post Road near Locust Grove in northeast Oklahoma’s Green Country. Jack Denney, 65, and his wife Elaine, 66, were shot to death on the floor of their home. There were no signs of forced entry, nothing appeared stolen from the residence. The Denneys had no known enemies. They were, in fact, the beloved “unofficial grandparents” of the community, always willing to lend a helping hand to neighbors, friends, family, even strangers.

Chennault’s dilemma, he says, is not lack of motive or suspects. It’s lack of evidence.

“We have some good suspects that we’re looking at,” he explains. “One was recently released from state prison after conviction on an unrelated charge following the murders. We don’t have enough to charge him with homicide – yet.”

“They were inseparable,” Chris Denney says of his parents. “They were always together, they’ve always been together, and now they’ll always be together.”

“We Never Give Up”

Oklahoma averages more than 200 homicides each year statewide; about 40 of them go unsolved. To a detective, victims are more than statistics. An investigator comes to know as much about them as anyone who knew the person alive. He talks with the deceased’s friends and relatives; he reads diaries and letters; views home videos; talks to neighbors and employees. In the process, he shares and understands the victim’s innermost thoughts, feelings and aspirations. The dead were once people; they deserve justice.

“We never give up – no matter how long it takes,” affirms OSBI Agent Robert Williams.

Law enforcement officials urge anyone with information about any of these homicides, or any other unsolved murder, to contact the nearest police, OSBI or sheriff’s station. 

Making Art History

The University of Oklahoma’s Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art has long been home to well-regarded art collections that would do any museum proud. Now, after several years of construction, the museum’s new Stuart Wing will finally afford the opportunity to display some of the world’s premier objects of art to the public – and put the Fred Jones Museum on the map of the art world.

Designed by renowned architect Rand Elliott, the Stuart Wing expands the original 1971 building to encompass some 40,000 total square feet of exhibit space. The new addition will showcase one of the latest gems in the museum’s possession: the famed Eugene B. Adkins Collection. Jointly stewarded by the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art and Tulsa’s Philbrook Museum of Art, the $50 million collection gathers more than 3,300 objects of Native American art, including pottery, jewelry, silverwork and more. The Adkins Gallery alone encompasses some 7,800 square feet of the wing, which also will include a grand staircase leading up to a mezzanine level housing a 4,300-square-foot photography gallery and rotating exhibits.

The wing is named for OU Board of Regents member Jon Stuart and his wife, Dee Dee, longtime benefactors of the university and museum who contributed the lead gift to raise funds for the addition through the Stuart Family Foundation.

“The Stuart Wing is very important for the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art and the University of Oklahoma because it provides the space that is necessary to display the many collections the university has acquired over the past 15 years,” says Ghislain d’Humières, the Wylodean and Bill Saxon Director of the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art.

“The Stuart Wing also gives the university the capacity to welcome traveling exhibitions on a state-of-the-art and professional level that puts it in an international class for upcoming collaborations with museums from around the world.”

The Stuart Wing will open to the public with free admission on Saturday, Oct. 22. A grand opening celebration, which also is free and open to the public, will kick off from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23. For more information, visit www.ou.edu/fjjma.

Twisted Theatre

On the third weekend of every month, Tulsa’s New Age Renegade bar becomes a theater where patrons delight in the classics – cult classics with a little twist. Only after every eyelash has been brushed with a respectable coat of mascara, after every strand of hair is smoothed, after every button and belt has been impeccably fashioned does the curtain rise. Much like the performers who play the parts, these plays are wonderfully over-the-top. Twisted Theatre and its coordinator and director Tabitha Taylor have staged everything from The Golden Girls and Mama’s Family to Reefer Madness and Hairspray. The troupe’s annual Halloween send up of The Exorcist has become legendary. They may not be exactly as you remember them, but therein lies Twisted’s bawdy charm. Let’s hope for an encore of Merry Christmas, Mommy Dearest for the holidays. New Age Renegade is located at 17th and Main streets near downtown Tulsa. For more, call 918.585.3405.

Wine Notes

Call it a renaissance; call it a come-uppance. Just don’t call it low-class.

The boxed wine market has grown recently, with brands offering wines that taste much better – and carry much less stigma – than in years past. Gone are the days of upturned noses and snide remarks in regards to boxed wine.

“I don’t know if it’s because the economy isn’t in perfect condition or if it’s just more convenient,” says Ranch Acres Wine & Spirits owner Mary Stewart of the increased interest and purchase of boxed wine.

“They’re putting much nicer wine into the boxes.”

The Recommendation: Stewart says that the line of Bota Box wines is a great, mid-priced selection, with several whites and reds in the $18-$19 range.

If you like this, try: Black Box wines also come in several varietals, including Shiraz, Chardonnay and Reisling. You can pick up most Black Box wines for $20 or so. Pinot Evil produces two wines, a Pinot Noir and Pinot Grigio, for around $18. Big House offers great a great table red and white wines in boxes for around $18, as well.

Fresh Music – Sept., 2011

Lady Antebellum, Own The NightThis country music trio came roaring onto the scene just four years ago with the debut single, “Love Don’t Live Here.” Four No. 1 singles and two multi-platinum albums later, one of country’s biggest acts with broad crossover appeal is set to reveal their much anticipated third studio album.

Neon Indian, Era ExtrañaThe Alan Palomo fronted electronic outfit from Denton, Tex., released their debut, Psychic Chasms, in late 2009, earning a wave of critical acclaim from indie music media, Spin and Rolling Stone. Hot on the heels of a limited release vinyl EP with The Flaming Lips, the band is set to unveil their sophomore album, recorded in Helsinki, in early 2010.

Tori Amos, Night of HuntersTori Amos is one of those rare artists to achieve critical and commercial success without taking the conventional approach. Amos continues her tradition of albums based on a musical and ideological theme with her 12th studio release. This effort brings her back to a piano-driven, acoustic style similar to that which launched her career, and she envisions the work as 21st century song cycle inspired by classical music.

Wilco, The Whole Love Like Tori Amos, this Chicago-based group has achieved success and gained an enormous and enormously dedicated fanbase without caving to music industry norms – they were famously dismissed from Reprise after refusing to alter Yankee Foxtrot Hotel, which would go on to become their most commercially successful album. Their eighth studio album will be released on their own dBpm label. BTW, Wilco loves to play Cain’s Ballroom in Tulsa. Let’s hope this album brings them back soon.

Draft Day

The fall of 1996 was a good time for me. I was in shape, beginning my first year of college and had a full head of thick, dark-brown hair. That was also the year I joined my very first fantasy football league.

Fast forward 15 years and I’m no longer skinny, college is a distant memory and “full head of thick dark-brown hair” applies to me as much as “a courteous, thoughtful and kind individual.” I’ve also transformed from a fantasy football rookie to a grizzled veteran.

In all honesty, it’s embarrassing how much of my life I’ve devoted to scrolling though free agent pools, cursing Tom Brady and rooting for a team to lose one yard so my kicker can attempt a 40-yard (as opposed to 39-yard) field goal. In fact, if some scientist put a pie chart together that measures the stuff I think about in a full year, fantasy football would rank somewhere between Kristen Chenoweth singing in a pink bikini and Travis Meyer’s mustache.

Because I’m a self-described fantasy football expert, I decided to list a few fantasy football draft pointers. If you’re new to fantasy football, take these to the bank. If you’ve played fantasy football for years and think I’m nuts, well, I hope your first-round pick breaks a leg.

Never draft a wide receiver in the first round. Let’s compare fantasy football to the stock market. Running backs are the blue chips and the anchor of your portfolio. Quarterbacks are the mid-sized growth stock – a little more risk but more growth potential for your team. Wide receivers are the penny stocks of fantasy football. There are tons of them out there and it’s hard to determine which one will make or break you.

Since that’s the case, stay conservative in the early rounds of your draft and stock your team with running backs and a good quarterback. In the later rounds, take some flyers on high-risk, high-reward wide receivers. If it you get the right one, you may be on the fast track to your league championship.

Draft with your mind, not with your heart. Sam Bradford is your favorite player, so you decide to draft him. That’s not necessarily a bad decision, but it is if you draft him way too early. For example, one year I was in a league where a guy selected the Seattle Seahawks defense in the third round because they were his favorite team. Safe to say, none of us were surprised when we learned three years later that the dude was a cross-dresser.

Only draft one kicker, and do it in the final round. In fantasy football, kickers are like a pawn. They are abundant and all look the same. Sure, every now and then one may turn into a pivotal piece, but that’s out of your control.

It’s better to draft a good player on a good team than a great player on bad team. Unless that player is Adrian Peterson.

Don’t get drunk during your draft. I may have made this mistake once or twice. Trust me, it doesn’t end well.

To see Patrick get medieval on fantasy football, visit www.thelostogle.com.

Pigging Out

Lawton farmer Damon Doyle’s first experience with feral hogs was 750 pounds of barely stoppable pig. Two arrows and a couple of shells later, Doyle’s nephew was bringing home the bacon. But that hog was a loner. The following year brought more than just one, and Doyle got a chance to see the havoc that feral hogs wreak.

“The hogs went in and turned every wind row over and just made a rut down through the hayfield,” he says. “They didn’t ruin that alfalfa. They just made these ruts through it, which makes it really hard to farm. It’s different for the boys that raise corn. The hogs just get into that and go down the rows cleaning up the seeds that they’ve planted and they don’t get a crop.”

Russell Stevens, a wildlife and fisheries consultant at the Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, likens the devastation to a bomb-pocked World War II battlefield.

The hogs Doyle describes are descendants of garden-variety pigs. Raising pigs free-range was an ordinary farming practice in the past. Pigs wandered into the wild, made themselves at home, bred and eventually became a nuisance. The hogs reproduce quickly. The sheer number of feral hogs has graduated them from nuisance to threat over the past few years. Nobody knows how many are running around Oklahoma, but experts agree that there are a lot. They’ve popped up in every county in the state. They eat most anything but thrive on farmers’ crops.

“I’ve known of people that have completely given up growing corn because of the problems that feral hogs cause,” says Stevens.

Feral hogs don’t just threaten crops. As feral hogs spread, Oklahoma pig farmers are taking costly steps to make sure the hogs don’t come into contact with healthy pigs. Feral hogs are known to carry several diseases that, if found in the state’s domesticated pig population, could hammer the swine industry. They reproduce so quickly that if 80 percent of them were eliminated today, it would take only a few years before they returned to their present day numbers.

Experts are undecided on how to adequately address the threat.