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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 19, 2017
CORRECTION: In the item about Charles N. Moore Sr., the Roxy Theater is owned by the city of Muskogee.
Governor Mary Fallin Makes Appointments to Oklahoma Arts Council
OKLAHOMA CITY – Governor Mary Fallin today announced she has made
six appointments to the Oklahoma Arts Council.
William E. Beckman Jr., Judy J. Hatfield, Charles N. Moore Sr., Becky
J. Frank and Roshan Pujari all have been confirmed by the state Senate. Fred
Hall will serve on the 15-member council, pending Senate confirmation.
Created by the Oklahoma Legislature in 1965 to encourage and
stimulate all forms of artistic endeavors, the Oklahoma Arts Council receives
appropriations from the Legislature and from the National Endowment for the Arts to
provide matching grants to Oklahoma non-profit arts organizations. Terms are
for three years.
Fred
Hall, of Oklahoma City, will serve a term ending July 1, 2020. He
succeeds Susan Coles, who resigned. Hall is chairman and chief executive
officer of Hall Capital, a family-owned private investment company. He is an
art collector and a founding family of the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. He is a member and past
chairman of Allied Arts, the Greater Oklahoma City Chamber, the Fred Jones Jr.
Museum of Art, the Oklahoma City Public Schools Foundation, the Oklahoma City
Industrial and Cultural Facilities Trust, and Ballet Oklahoma. He earned a bachelor’s
degree from Vanderbilt University and a master’s degree from the University of
Southern California. Hall and his wife, Karen, have three grown children: Maguire
Hall Thomas and husband Tyler Thomas; Jones Hall and wife Justine; and Allison
Hall.
William
E. Beckman Jr., of Edmond, will serve an unexpired term ending in 2019. He
succeeds Cassandra Gaines, who died late last year. He is one of the principal
owners
of the Beckman Company, one of the largest family-owned insurance agencies in
the state of Oklahoma. He is a member of the Oklahoma City Rotary Club No. 29
and served as a past president. He was one of 525 Rotary International district
governors elected to serve worldwide. He also is a past board member of the Air
Space Museum, the Five Tribes Museum, the Salvation Army and several other
organizations. He is a patron of the Metropolitan Museum of New York City, and
has visited multiple museums and art exhibits around the world, including The
Louvre in Paris and The Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. He earned a
bachelor’s degree from Oklahoma State University and a master’s degree from
Southern Methodist University.
Judy J. Hatfield, of Oklahoma
City, succeeds Nancy Leonard and will serve a three-year term ending July 1,
2020. She is a founding principal of Equity Commercial Realty, and is a
commercial real estate broker and developer. She serves on the boards of the
National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum and the Oklahoma City Museum of
Art, and is a former board member of Allied Arts. She earned a bachelor’s
degree from the University of Oklahoma.
Charles N. Moore
Sr.,
of Muskogee, succeeds Joseph (J.P.) Richards, and will serve a three-year term
ending July 1, 2020. He is senior pastor of First Baptist Church in Summit. He
also heads the church’s outreach ministry, the SEED (Summit Economic and
Educational Development) Center. He has championed the arts through Roxy
Theater, which was purchased by the Muskogee Little Theatre to use for plays,
concerts and other events. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Bacone College.
Becky J. Frank, of Tulsa,
succeeds Hannah D. Robson and will serve a three-year term ending July 1, 2020.
She is chairman, chief executive officer and managing partner of Schnake,
Turnbo, Frank, a public relations and management consulting firm. She
previously served as board chair of Tulsa Regional Chamber, Leadership
Oklahoma, Tulsa Area United Way, the Salvation Army, the Summit Club, Tulsa
Press Club, Tulsa Advertising Federation, and Tulsa River Parks Authority. She
chaired the United Way’s 2013 campaign and Mental Health Association Oklahoma’s
2016 capital campaign. She currently serves on the Tulsa Regional Chamber Board
and as a member of the Philbrook Board of Trustees. She attended John Brown
University.
Roshan Pujari, of Nichols
Hills, succeeds Ann Hargis and will serve a three-year term ending July 1,
2020. He is the chief executive officer and founder of VIKASA Capital, an
emerging market investment advisory firm. Pujari returned to his native state
to work in the community where he grew up. He serves on the boards of Allied
Arts, Heritage Hall School and the Integris James L. Hall Jr. Center for Mind,
Body and Spirit. Pujari also works with numerous other organizations, including
the Integris Jim Thorpe Rehab Hospital and the Oklahoma City Museum of Art, and
enjoys building reading rooms with the Why Not Foundation.
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 Fred Hall
 William E. Beckman Jr..
 Judy J. Hatfield
 Charles N. Moore Sr.
 Becky J. Frank
 Roshan Pujari
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