As of Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024
Cities without a state are in Missouri
Nov. 18, 1964 – Dec. 14, 2024
Tammy Jeanne Clark, 60, of Joplin, passed away at 9:14 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 14, 2024. at University of Kansas Health System in Kansas City, Kan., after a brief illness.
Tammy was born Nov. 18, 1964, at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. She lived in the Joplin area the past 40+ years. She worked most recently for the Jasper County Circuit Clerks’ Office in Carthage and Joplin. Previously, she worked more than 35 years for St. John’s/Mercy. She graduated from Draughn’s Business School.
Tammy enjoyed four wheeling in Colorado on trails. She also loved camping. Loved her grandkids, and was a friend to many. She was a member of Central United Methodist Church.
She married Kenny Clark on Aug. 10, 1984, in Sarcoxie, and he survives. Other survivors include two daughters, Megan (Blake) Heisten, Carthage, and Rachel Clark, Joplin; her parents, Tom and Sandra (Farrell) Shouse, Webb City; two brothers; Paul (Carla) Shouse, Cabo, Mexico, and Scott Shouse, San Francisco, Calif.; and six grandchildren, Jakayla Sherrick, Katelynn Heisten, Aiden Heisten, Ava Clark, Drayton Clark and Brayden Clark.
She was preceded in death by grandparents A.L. (Shorty) and Mary Shouse, and Chet and Shirley Farrell.
The memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 28, 2024, at Mason-Woodard Mortuary, with visitation to follow.
March 19, 1931 – Dec. 21, 2024
June Marion Schipper, 93, a Dothan, Ala., native, and longtime Crookston, Minn., resident, passed away at Spring River Christian Village in Joplin on Saturday, Dec. 21, 2024.
June was born in Dothan on March 19,1931, and was the daughter of Jack and Eula (Seaborn) Segler. She graduated from Dothan High School in 1949 and went on to receive a bachelor’s degree in education from Alabama’s University of Montevallo in 1953. She returned to her hometown after graduation and taught at Dothan High School during the 1953-54 school term.
On June 12,1954, June was united in marriage to Vance Duane Schipper in Dothan. Ready for whatever in life awaited her, she came with Vance to his hometown of Crookston, Minn., settling on a farm Vance had purchased in Parnell Township. The next several years would see their family grow with the addition of four little ones: Ila, Quinn, Vana, and Leah. Even with the demands of her roles as wife and mom, June found time to teach for a term in 1957-58 at the Fisher (Minn.) High School, and later work as a copywriter for KROX Radio in Crookston from 1966 until 1977. For a period of time during the late 1970’s she served as an assistant teacher for Crookston’s Head Start program. June’s lifelong love of literature naturally brought her to employment with the Crookston Public Library, part of the Lake Agassiz Regional Library system, where she worked from 1979 until retirement. Later on, she became an RSVP volunteer there. In 2008, June was named Volunteer of the Year by the Friends of the Library. She dedicated many years of her life to the Crookston Community Theater, serving on the board, doing grant writing, acting, and working with the stage crew. In February of 1999 she and Vance were honored by the City of Crookston as Experienced Americans. She and Vance moved from their farmstead to a new home just outside Crookston in 2005. In 2020, June moved to Webb City to be nearer to her children.
June was a devoted member of the Church of Christ in Crookston. For many years she served as a Sunday School and vacation Bible school teacher, and church organist. She was also very active for years in the Christian Women’s Fellowship and Mission Study. In Missouri, June attended Connect Christian Church of Carl Junction, where she was active in Sunday School and a ladies’ home Bible study.
June liked the challenge of doing crossword puzzles and playing Scrabble. It came as no surprise that she was an avid reader; but it was rather amusing to note that she also enjoyed the newspaper comic strips, which she called the “funny papers.” June and Vance enjoyed traveling, and very special to them were trips made to New Zealand and Hawaii. She had a quick wit and wonderful sense of humor and always saw the good in people. June found great joy in her family and taught them about love, faith, commitment, honesty, humor, and compassion.
Left to mourn June’s passing are her four children: Ila (Luis) Martinez, of Wylie, Texas, Quinn (Becky) Schipper, of Bartlesville, Okla., Vana (Peter) Buckland, of Webb City, and Leah (Steve) Hanson, of Chetopa, Kan.; five grandchildren, Casey Pahlen, Madison Schipper, Audrey Buckland, Austin Buckland, and Alex (Sierra) Buckland; eight great-grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren. She is also survived by her brother, Sidney B. Segler; one sister-in-law, Audrey Schipper Murphy; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. June was preceded in death by her loving husband of 62 years, Vance; her parents, Jack and Eula Segler; Vance’s parents, Ed and Sylvia Schipper; two brothers-in-law, Dale Schipper and Burl Schipper; three sisters-in-law, Jean Segler, LaVada Schipper Hanson, and Walda Schipper; and one granddaughter, Brenna Kelley.
June’s and Vance’s cremains will be inurned together at Oakdale Cemetery in Crookston, Minn. A celebration of June’s life will be held at a future time. Memorials may be given in June’s memory to a charity of your choice. Local arrangements are under the direction of Mason-Woodard Mortuary.
Nov. 19, 1943 – Dec. 20, 2024
Longtime biology professor and conservationist Jim Triplett, 81, of Pittsburg, died on Dec. 20, 2024, at Via Christi Village after a battle with cancer.
He was born on Nov. 19, 1943, in Webb City, to Robert Triplett and Mary Lou Triplett (ne Shaner).
Triplett dedicated a lifetime to every natural resource and conservation-related activity he could find. His connection to Pittsburg State began as a student in 1962 and continued for decades as a professor, chair of the Biology Department, and most recently a special assistant to the president.
He earned a bachelor’s degree from what was then Kansas State College of Pittsburg in 1966, followed by a master’s degree in 1968. He served in the Navy during the Vietnam War, then earned his PhD at the University of Kansas in 1976.
He was hired as an assistant professor at Pittsburg State in 1981 and was appointed biology chair in 1985, serving 23 years in that role until stepping down in 2008 to focus solely on teaching and conservation projects.
In 1998, he married Shirley Drew, a professor of communication at Pittsburg State. She survives, of the home.
In 2014, he retired from teaching but didn’t stop serving, moving into an emeritus office in Hartman Hall where he could curate the PSU Museum of Ichthyology and Herpetology, and spearhead initiatives related to sustainability.
Triplett helped to launch the university’s new Students for Sustainability organization and create the state’s first Bachelor of Integrated Studies in Sustainability, Society, and Resource Management.
He lobbied hard for the new degree, advocating that it would put graduates in a position to help solve some of the nation’s most difficult and important problems.
Triplett served on the Governor’s Solid Waste Advisory Committee for many years, was chair of the Neosho Basin Advisory Committee from 1985 to 2015, and was chair of the Crawford County Solid Waste Planning Commission.
He was a leader in the Grand Lake Watershed Alliance Foundation and a member of the Spring River Watershed Restoration and Protection Leadership Team.
He was instrumental in forming the Southeast Kansas Recycling Center in Pittsburg and served as its president for many years. In November, the organization dedicated its primary building in his name.
Triplett wrote numerous articles and gave many presentations about natural resources, aquatic life, conservation, and sustainability for regional, state, and national audiences.
In 2017, he was honored as the Kansas Conservation Champion by the Kansas Natural Resources Council.
In addition to his wife Shirley, he is survived by a son, Nathaniel Triplett (Stephanie); a daughter, Kellie Triplett (Julie Brozovich); and three grandchildren, Ashely Conley (Ryan), Josh Triplett (Lisa), all of Colorado Springs, Colo., and Bryon Triplett, of Pittsburg.
Preceding him in death were his father, Dr. Robert Triplett; his mother, Mary Lou Moffett and her husband, Owen Moffett; and his sister, Jonne Moffett Draper.
Arrangements are under the direction of Bath-Naylor Funeral Home in Pittsburg. Memorials may be made to SEK Recycling and the Pittsburg State University Biology Department.
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