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One last post

Pastor Eddie Gallegos prays with a member of the congregation at his church in south Oklahoma City. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

When he was 13, a friend put a tattoo of a spider web on Eddie Gallegos’s left hand. Back then, he was a member of Gran Barrio Central (GBC), and went by the name ‘Spider.’ Today, Pastor Eddie has a small, but devoted congregation in a borrowed sanctuary in south Oklahoma City. Eddie, who leads emotional, song-filled services, delivers his sermons in Spanish and English as paces at the front of the church. He’s the son of a preacher, a husband and a father who says that he accepted God’s plan for his life while sitting in prison.

Pastor Eddie Gallegos at his church in south Oklahoma City. Gallegos is a former member of the GBC and the son of a preacher. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

Pastor Eddie Gallegos delivers an emotional sermon at La Roca Community Church at his church in south Oklahoma City. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

These are a few of my favorite pictures of Pastor Eddie and his church. I was slow to get these pictures into Merlin, which I regret, but I wanted to publish them before I leave The Oklahoman. After six years of taking pictures, making slideshows and videos and writing for Alternate Crop, I’m leaving the newspaper after today. I’ll continue to work in multimedia, just in a different place.

In six years I’ve put a modest 10,657 pictures into merlin. I’ve written about a few of my favorites before. So, I’ll sign off of Alternate Crop by reminding both of you that you can click on any image featured on this blog to see a larger view. You can always see photo galleries by clicking here or you can watch some of the slideshows by clicking here.

-John Clanton


Bill Bratwurst and images from Halloweens past

Racks of Halloween masks await local goblins who will spend Halloween dressed as witches, devils or clowns. Photographed Oct. 12, 1973. Archive Photo by Bob Albright

File cabinets on the 11th floor are full of faded and torn folders and decades worth of alphabetized images from staff photographers at The Oklahoman and The Oklahoma City Times. I looked through the images filed under ‘Halloween’ and pulled a few of my favorites.

The cutlines on the Halloween images are printed as they ran in the newspaper, or how it was written on the back of the print.

You can see more images from current staff photographers at The Oklahoman by clicking here.

Billy Kort cavorts as Billy Bratwurst at the Halloween Masquerade Ball. Photographed on Oct. 30, 1979. Archive Photo by Todd James

The skeleton is out of the closet and ready for a bone-chilling Halloween night at this haunted house southwest of Edmond. Little ghosts and goblins are expected to be out in force Monday evening, the time Mayor A.C. Caplinger has designated as official trick or treat night for Edmond youngsters. Someone hung this skinny fellow in the window of this abandoned house to tickle the funny bones of passing motorists. Photographed on Oct. 26, 1977. Archive photo by an unknown photographer.

Dean Johnson prepares for Halloween with a new "Great Goblin" face, with the assistance of Claudia Ostrom. The elaborate mask, one of several that will dot the streets Saturday night, is found at Hazel's Costumes, 1515 N. Portland. Photographed on Oct. 22, 1982. Archive Photo by Renee Lynn

"Pufnstuff" (Mrs. R.J. Riley) welcomes all youngsters to their Haunted House. She holds cowboy Steve Reimer, 6, by the hand. Waiting to enter are Amy Lockard, 9, and Mrs. Harry L. Deupree Jr. who, as one of the guides, is dressed in a pumpkin costume. Photographed on Oct. 25, 1970. Archive photo by unknown photographer.

Halloween, Oct. 26, 1967. Archive Photo by Austin Traverse

Monster Rally presented a frightful sight Wednesday, as students of Harmony Elementary School, 1537 NE 24, donned costumes for their annual all-school Halloween festival on the school grounds. Spacemen and robots joined traditional monsters, ghosts and witches for the fun. No horrible spells were cast, but the young goblins tossed coins into a witch's steaming cauldron for the Red Cross. Photographed on Oct. 27, 1965. Archive photo by Bob Albright

-John Clanton


Rain-soaked football

Ron Millican stands under an umbrella near the door of the maintenance barn at C.B. Speegle Stadium in Oklahoma City before the high school football game between Del City and U.S. Grant on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

Here are a couple of pictures from Thursday night’s rain-soaked football games. In addition to high school football,  the Bronchos from the University of Central Oklahoma played Black Hills State at UCO in Edmond.
You can see more pictures from Thursday night’s game by clicking here.

UCO's Terrance Davis (1) is tackled by Black Hills' Joey Brown during the college game between the University of Central Oklahoma and Black Hills State at Wantland Stadium in Edmond, Okla., Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011. Photo by Sarah Phipps, The Oklahoman

-John Clanton

 


A statue for Austin Haley

Renee Haley hugs a life-sized statue of her deceased son, Austin Haley, as she holds her 6-month-old daughter, Mikayla Haley, after the statue was unveiled at the Haley family's home in Noble, Okla., Monday, Oct. 24, 2011. At left is Jack Haley, Renee Haley's husband and father of Austin Haley, Mikayla Haley and the couple's two other children. Photo by Nate Billings, The Oklahoman

Five-year-old Austin Haley was killed by a Noble police officer’s stray bullet in August of 2007.  A statue created by a local artist was unveiled at the Haley family’s home in Noble on what would have been Austin’s tenth birthday, Oct. 24, 2011. Nate Billings photographed the ceremony and made a touching picture of the statue and Austin’s mother.

You can read the most recent story about Austin and watch a video about the statue by clicking here.

Also, if you haven’t lately, take a look at our photo gallery page, including the galleries from OU’s loss to Texas Tech and OSU’s win over Missouri in Columbia.

-John Clanton


A defense-free basketball exhibition

J.D. Sims (center) of Lawton, Gaylan Towle (right), of Edmond, and other fans watch Kevin Durant walk onto the court during the US Fleet Tracking Basketball Invitational at the Cox Convention Center in Oklahoma City Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

Kevin Durant, a few of his Thunder teammates and other locked-out NBA players, put on an exhibition game at the Cox Convention Center in Oklahoma City on Sunday night. Here are a few of the pictures from the game that ended with Kevin Durant and the White Team ahead of Carmelo Anthony and the Blue team by a score of 176-171.

You can see more pictures from the game or read stories by Darnell Mayberry and John Rohde.

Russell Westbrook slams the ball during the US Fleet Tracking Basketball Invitational at the Cox Convention Center in Oklahoma City Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

Michael Beasley (right) puts up a shot in front of Kevin Durant during the US Fleet Tracking Basketball Invitational at the Cox Convention Center in Oklahoma City Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011. The White Team defeated the Blue Team 176-171. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

-John Clanton


One last mission

Clarence "Bud" Stark, of Norman, wipes tears from his face as he walks away from the Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington, Va., on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. Stark, a Marine during WWII, was on Iwo Jima when the flag was raised. Stark and other veterans from WWII visited memorials in Washington D.C. and Virginia during an Oklahoma Honor Flight on Wednesday. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

When we were kids, my brother and I looked forward to hearing war stories. They didn’t happen all that often, but when my grandfather would tell us something that happened in the South Pacific or my father would tell us a story about Vietnam, we both listened carefully. Most of the stories we heard weren’t really war-related. By that I mean that nobody talked about people killed or battles won and lost. My grandfather, Fred Cox, who operated cranes for most of his life, was a Sea Bee in the Navy. He told us about poker games on long nights at sea, or the time he got stranded for a few days on an island in the South Pacific. There were stories about friends he met, equipment he operated and he’d tell us the names of islands where he’d help build a base or a runway. Mostly, they were interesting stories that just happened to take place during a war.
One of the greatest stories we grew up hearing about, of course, is how Fred Cox married his war-time pen pal, Dorothy Curtis. They were married for 59 years, until she died in 2005.

Fred Cox looks around in the National WWII Memorial during an Honor Flight in Washington D.C. on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

My grandfather is one of the younger veterans of WWII. At 17, he got his father to sign a consent form, drove to California and joined the Navy in 1943. Last week, I joined him on an Honor flight that he’d been looking forward to since his daughter signed him up for it last year.

The Honor Flight staff called the trip ‘One last mission.’ Even though my grandfather and the other veterans on the Honor flight returned from their service more than 65 years ago, I looked at this trip as one last war story that we can share.

Seen from a tour bus window, Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington Virginia, was one of the sites during a tour of some of the memorials in the Washington D.C. area on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. Veterans from Oklahoma visited the National WWII Memorial and other memorials during an Oklahoma Honor Flight to Virginia and Washington D.C. on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

I was assigned to be a Guardian on the trip, which meant I was responsible for helping out my grandfather and a man named Charles Austin, an Army veteran who lives in Norman. I knew just a few minutes into the required Guardian Training class, that I was going to be busy helping the veterans get around during the hectic travel schedule.

As a photographer, I adjusted my approach to the Honor Flight as an assignment. I didn’t want special access that members of the media are sometimes granted. I didn’t take much equipment either, just two cameras, a 35mm lens and a 50 mm lens. I rode the bus with the veterans and walked through the memorials with them. It rained in Washington D.C. on Wednesday, so much of the trip was what they called a ‘windshield tour.’ I concentrated on photographing the experience of being there. I would occasionally seek out pictures, but for the most part I was getting pictures while I pushed a wheelchair through the memorials, or while I was standing in the back of a crowd. I took pictures of Arlington National Cemetery and the Baltimore Ground Crew through the window of the bus, just like the veterans saw it.

Tourists watch a guard on duty at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. Veterans from Oklahoma visited the National WWII Memorial during an Oklahoma Honor Flight to Virginia and Washington D.C. on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

A WWII veteran from Oklahoma poses for a photograph under the Oklahoma column at the memorial in Washington D.C. on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. Veterans from Oklahoma visited the National WWII Memorial during an Oklahoma Honor Flight to Virginia and Washington D.C. on Wednesday. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

Veteran James Criger, of Grove, Okla., pushes a wheelchair past Adam Milligan, a current member of the Air Force from Broken Arrow Oklahoma in the terminal at Baltimore Washington International Airport in Baltimore, Maryland on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. Criger was on his way home from an Honor Flight visit to the WWII Memorial and other monuments in Washington, Milligan boarded a plane to go overseas. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

After a long day looking at war memorials in Washington D.C. and Virginia, one of the most poignant moments happened at the Baltimore Washington International Airport as we waited to board our flight back to Oklahoma City. WWII Veterans from Oklahoma walked through the terminal and gathered around gate 6. On the way, they passed a group of active duty members of the Air Force who were headed overseas.

Staff Writers at The Oklahoman worked with me from Oklahoma City and Washington D.C. to write stories about this Honor Flight. You can read Bryan Painter’s story about Vernon Keepers by clicking here or read Chris Casteel’s story by clicking here. I put together a slideshow featuring more images from the trip, you can see the slideshow by clicking here.

-John Clanton

 


‘The Helmet’ and more football pictures

Kingfisher students and a customized golf cart called "The Helmet," lead the high school football team onto the field before the YellowJackets play Bethany during their high school football game in Kingfisher, Oklahoma on Friday, Oct. 14, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

The Helmet has been a tradition at Kingfisher High School football games since it was built in 1995. Steve Sanders and a group of his friends and Kingfisher residents built the customized golf cart out of a defective liquid fertilizer tank they bought from a manufacturer in Louisiana. Equipped with horns and flashing lights, The Helmet leads the high school football team onto the field and circles the endzone after each touchdown.

You can see more images from tonight’s high school football games by clicking here.

-John Clanton


Cleaning up

A resident of Slapout, Oklahoma poses outside his home in the Oklahoma panhandle in August, 2007. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

I cleaned out my desk and 5 small lockers that I’ve used for storage over the last 6 years. It’s about time. I found printed assignment requests with names scrawled on them dating back to February of 2006, which is just four months after I started here. Those lockers held a random assortment of junk including $1.09 in loose change, a piece of a mini blind from the first house I bought in Oklahoma City and an old delayed baggage claim form.

Cleaning up a six-year stack of assignments, newspaper clippings and equipment brought back some memories too. It was fun to think about the pictures behind some of those assignments. For example, I found a couple of rolls of film that I used in my Holga camera and a picture that I shouldn’t have passed on four years ago (above). I took the Holga on a road trip to the panhandle with former staff writer Ron Jackson back in 2007. He wrote a story about the Northwest Passage, which runs from Oklahoma City to Boise City, Oklahoma.

To see more recent pictures from The Oklahoman’s photo staff, click here.

-John Clanton


Weekend festivals and a regatta

Chalk artist Bobby Marsee creates a work of art, as Rose State College hosts a cultural fair as part of the 23rd annual Global Oklahoma festival at the Rose State College campus in Midwest City, OK, Saturday, Oct. 1, 2011. By Paul Hellstern, The Oklahoman

In addition to the OU game against Ball State, photographers at The Oklahoman also staffed the Head of the Oklahoma Regatta, the 23rd annual Global Oklahoma Festival, a Czech Festival in Yukon, and the Homecoming festivities at the University of Central Oklahoma.

You can see all our photo galleries by clicking here.

Oliver Salowna, of the Dallas Rowing Club, shows off his "live to row, row to live," tattoo during the 2011 Head of the Oklahoma Regatta at the Oklahoma River in Oklahoma City on Sunday, October 2, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

A rower carries his boat toward the Devon Boathouse after the 2011 Head of the Oklahoma Regatta at the Oklahoma River in Oklahoma City on Sunday, October 2, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

-John Clanton


A few good pictures

Secretary of Military and Veterans Affairs, Gen. (Ret) Rita Aragon stands on a chair and applauds while a song is played during a "Salute the Troops" event at First Southern Baptist Church in Del City on Monday, September 26, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

Staff photographers at The Oklahoman are getting ready to start another weekend of photographing high school and college football. Before that, though, here are a couple of pictures from the last few weeks that I think deserve another look. You can see all of our photo galleries by clicking here.

The sun sets behind Bethany High School freshman David Noriega as he plays with the high school band before Bethany and Washington played their high school football game in Bethany, Okla., on Friday, September 16, 2011. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

Freshman Angela Vargas gets a hug from student Kasra Kaidan (left) and Challenge Day staff member Romeo Marquez after Angela spoke to students during Challenge Day at Putnam City High School in Oklahoma City on Wednesday, September 21, 2011. Challenge Day is a group building exercise to end bullying and other discipline issues. Photo by John Clanton, The Oklahoman

-John Clanton