Grayhawk
DC Ranch
Scottsdale
March 2014
Haley & Spencer of 76th Street Grayhawk :: DC Ranch :: Scottsdale
Mar ch 2014
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Shelly Spence :: owner/publisher shelly@imagesaz.com :: 623-341-8221
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:: :: :: :: ::
Table of Contents 08
Meet the McCune Family
12
Community
writer writer writer writer writer writer writer writer
22
Playing in the Big (Ivy) League
26
Hospitality Employee of the Year
30
Notre Dame Prep goes to Washington DC
34
Explore Prague
38
76th Street :: Haley and Spencer
44
Phoenix Chamber Music Society
photographer photographer photographer photographer photographer
48
Fighting for Life
52
Tour d’Artistes
60
Marketplace
62
Local Index
66
Recipe
Amanda Christmann Larson :: editor/contributing Stephanie Maher Palenque :: contributing Donna Kublin :: contributing Tom Scanlon :: contributing Lynsi Freitag :: contributing Jenn Korducki Krenn :: contributing Jim McAllister :: contributing Barb Evans :: contributing Bryan Black of Blackswan Photographers Loralei Photography Karen Sophia Photography Jamie Pogue Photography Jerri Parness Photography
jenn
shelly@imagesaz.com
jerri
stephanie
jim
barb 623-341-8221
donna
meaghan
paula
karen Shelly Spence
tom
amanda
lynsi
Contributors
Advertising
bryan
jamie
loralei
contents
Take a peek...
Meaghan’s Dream :: graphic artist
March 21, 22 & 23, 2014 Friday–Sunday 10:00am–5:00pm Come and enjoy 3 days of art, food & music! Free Admission! The annual Sonoran Arts Festival returns to downtown Carefree, and the streets surrounding the majestic Carefree Desert Gardens. Hosted by the prestigious Sonoran Arts league, this popular outdoor festival celebrates its 13th year featuring more than 100 accomplished and emerging artists from across the country. The Sonoran Arts League is one of the oldest and largest art organizations in the Southwest, drawing friends and followers from throughout the US and Canada. Enjoy three fun-filled days of live musical performances, unique local flavors and interactive art experiences that encourage visitors to “be a part of the arts”!
P. NEIMI
S.STENTO
C.HEEDE
H.BRIN
M. GREENFIELD
Y. LUBBERS
For information call Vermillion Promotions at 623–734–6526 or visit SonoranArtsLeague.org
Downtown Carefree 100 Easy Street Carefree, AZ 85377 Mar ch 2014
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welcome
Publisher’s Message
It’s been six months since we first met, and I’d like to take a moment to thank each one of you who has so graciously welcomed ImagesAZ into your lives. From the inspirational members of the community who have shared your stories with our readers to the business owners who have trusted us to reach your customers, I am thankful. For 14 years, we have been in the North Valley as a positive presence, shining a spotlight on the people and organizations who are making a difference. We want to make people proud of this place we all call home, and we aim to enhance the sense of community that we all come here to these desert mountains to enjoy. Most of all, we work hard to maintain the integrity our friends and neighbors know us by. We hold ourselves to high standards, and I am always proud of the level of excellence our entire ImagesAZ staff strives to achieve. We hope you continue to enjoy each month’s edition as much as we enjoy bringing it to you. Here’s to many more years of community! Cheers! Shelly Spence Publisher, ImagesAZ Magazine shelly@imagesaz.com 623-341-8221
Haley & Spencer of 76th Street Writer Tom Scanlon Photography by Jerri Parness P. 38
ImagesAZ magazine is proud to be a member of:
Local First A R I Z O NA 6
Submission of news for Community News section should be in to shelly@imagesaz.com by the 10th of the month prior to publication. ImagesAZ is published by ImagesAZ Inc. Copyright © 2014 by ImagesAZ, Inc. All rights reserved. Ima g e s A Z . c oReproduction, m M a rchin2whole 0 1 4 or part, without permission is prohibited. The publisher is not responsible for the return of unsolicited material.
Join us for the Brown Jordan Spring Sales Event. Save an ADDITIONAL 10% OFF all collections. MArCh 1ST ThrOUGh MAY 12Th. 36889 N. Tom Darlington Rd. Suite C-5 • Carefree, AZ
480.575.3091
carefreeoutdoor.com
Mar ch 2014
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family
Meet the McCune Family Writer Lynsi Freitag Photographer Loralei Photography
If you know a family you would like to nominate, please email shelly@imagesaz.com.
“We love
C
hris and Holly McCune’s home is in a quiet part of Scottsdale where the landscaping has matured, making the grass seem a little greener and healthier.
Scottsdale, there
The streets have a friendly feeling and neighbors wave to passing drivers. It’s no
is so much to do
surprise that two Midwesterners chose the picturesque, tranquil and warm area of
here. We like the
Scottsdale Ranch to call home.
outdoors and love
Chris and Holly met in high school, but they will quickly tell you that they weren’t
going to Bartlett
high school sweethearts. Instead their families were friends, creating a foundation of
Lake, hiking the
friendship that continues to resonate today.
desert, just all of
“We are very grounded people,” says Holly. “I think having that core foundation, shared
the diversity.”
values and a love for our families is what really has kept us focused on what’s important.” After high school, Holly studied Spanish and elementary education at the Augsburg College while also balancing being an NFL cheerleader for the Minnesota Vikings. Holly’s
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smile broadens when she talks about both cheering and studying education, such diverse passions yet both so evident. While Holly stayed in Minnesota, Chris headed to the University of Montana where he studied business. After college, he worked in golf maintenance as a superintendent. Though he loved the work, he didn’t love the lull in work six months a year when the golf courses were covered with snow. He headed to Scottsdale where the sun shines bright and golf courses abound. As fate would have it, Holly’s sister had also moved to Arizona. Given that their families were friends, Chris and Holly would hang out on occasion when she was visiting her sister in Arizona. A long-distance relationship turned more serious and the couple was married in March 2004 at the Orange Tree Golf Resort. Holly was teaching third grade at Tesseract Elementary School at the time, and the school choir sang at their wedding. “It was really beautiful,” says Holly. “I can’t believe we’re coming up on our 10th anniversary,” adds Chris. The memories hit them both. They smile in unison.
Twice the Pink,Double the Fun About eight months after their wedding, Chris and Holly received the surprise – and blessing – of their lives. Newly pregnant and having just shared the news with family friends a few days earlier, Chris and Holly went into an ultrasound appointment where the technician told them they were expecting identical twin girls. “I always joked that I wanted twins: a boy and a girl and done,” laughs Chris. “But when they said we were having twins, I was just shocked.” They went to lunch afterwards where they sat in silence staring at the ultrasound photos. The shock quickly turned to excitement as they prepared for twice the pink and double the fun. The girls were born six weeks early at Scottsdale Shea Hospital and were in the NICU for 12 days. Malayna was five pounds and Sierra was four pounds. “We are so proud of our girls,” says Holly. “They are strong, sweet and compassionate children, who care for others and always see the good in life.”
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The girls sit side-by-side, listening patiently and sharing glances with one another. When asked where they attend school, they say in unison, “Shepherd of the Desert.” They are in second grade, play soccer, and take horseback riding and piano lessons. They talk about being teachers or scientists. They are smart, driven, and darling … times two. They are also jokesters. Malayna and Sierra keep their teachers, friends and parents on their toes every April 1 when they pretend to be each other – or not – only they know.
Loving Life in Scottsdale While Chris works as a superintendent at a golf course in Chandler, Holly spends her weeks with the girls. She works at Shepherd of the Desert as a Spanish teacher and resource teacher. As a family, they enjoy traveling around the country and serving locally. The girls have been to 15 states and love seeing the princesses at Disneyland most of all. Locally, they volunteer throughout the year at many organizations and put together meal packs for Feed My Starving Children. “It is a wonderful time to spend together as a family and give back to the community,” says Holly. Just for fun, the girls in the house model from time-to-time. Holly, Malayna and Sierra modeled for Leslie’s pool stores on pool floats and water toy packages and boxes. The girls still have fun going into the stores and finding their pictures. The family is taking it easy in 2014 after a busy year of traveling and appearances as Holly was Mrs. Arizona International 2013. This year, they are taking the time to enjoy each other and the place they call home. “We love Scottsdale, there is so much to do here,” says Chris. “We like the outdoors and love going to Bartlett Lake, hiking the desert, just all of the diversity.” “I like where we live because it’s still really green and we have the man-made lake,” adds Holly. “It just reminds me of home.” Mar ch 2014
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community
If you are interested in submitting community events, please email to shelly@imagesaz.com by the 10th of the month prior to publication.
Xavier Students Receive Art Honors The National Art Honor Society recently published the work of several of Xavier College Preparatory’s talented art students in its winter magazine. A bird mural, created by 13 of Xavier’s National Art Honor Society members last spring for the “Phoenix Renews” project, and a portrait of Sister Mary Kenneth Keller, created by McCaslin Polich, then a Xavier senior, now a freshman at Northern Arizona University, were featured in the publication. ImagesAZ extends congratulations to the students and educators who are making visual and creative arts a priority in education.
SCA Fourth Grader earns Perfect Score in National Competition Fourth grader Nathan Yee, representing Scottsdale Christian Academy, recently received a perfect score in the first of three meets for this year’s WordMasters Challenge, a national vocabulary competition involving nearly 150,000 students annually. Competing in the difficult blue division of the challenge, Yee earned a perfect score of 20 in the recent meet. Nationally, only 29 fifth graders achieved a perfect score. Another student at Scottsdale Christian Academy who achieved outstanding results in the first meet is Elyse LaVallee, who scored 19. The students were coached in preparation for the WordMasters Challenge by SCA honors teacher Shirley Cox. Congratulations to these talented students and kudos to the parents and educators who are helping them achieve great heights!
Xavier Prep Athletes Sign Letters of Intent Xavier College Preparatory is pleased to announce five student athletes have signed collegiate letters of intent. Shelby Brown has committed to University of Mississippi in cross country / track; Lauren Pipitone will attend Creighton University in soccer; Audrey O’Sullivan will attend Rockhurst University in soccer; Carlie Wagner will attend Fordham University in soccer; and Kellie Peay has signed with Santa Clara University’s soccer program. “Xavier is incredibly proud of all of these exceptional young women,” said Sister Lynn Winsor, BVM, vice principal for activities and athletic director at Xavier College Preparatory. “We are thrilled to see their years of academic and athletic dedication recognized by these colleges.”
New Song Center for Grieving Children Serves ScottsdaleArea Families New Song Center serves families in the Scottsdale area with grief support groups that meet at Episcopal Parish of Saint Barnabas on the Desert, 6716 N. Mockingbird Ln. in Scottsdale. Groups meet every other week in the evening. Children, teens and young adults learn to cope with their grief and loss by sharing stories and experiences, as well as through art, music and recreation. At New Song Center, which is part of services offered by Hospice of the Valley, families find the support they need in a “safe” place to share feelings of loss. Children and adults find support through difficult emotional times. New Song Center also serves families at locations in Phoenix, Gilbert and Avondale. 480-951-8985
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info@thenewsongcenter.org, www.hov.org
February 28–March 2 Carefree Fine Art & Wine Festival Husband and wife team Joan Michlin and Skip Ennis will be featured artists at the 19th Annual Carefree Fine Art & Wine Festival the weekend of February 28 and March 1 and 2 in downtown Carefree. The talented duo is the first jewelers ever to be featured at a Thunderbird Artists event. In addition to their stunning jewelry, the festival features
more
than
165
juried,
world-class
artists
displaying over 5,000 original pieces of artwork in a variety of mediums. Award-winning composer Darren Skanson, one of the most requested classical guitarists on Beethoven Radio, will perform, and wine tasting is also offered, with a vast array of wines to sample from around the world. Delicious food and delectable chocolates supply the final touches to the unparalleled ambience this festival holds. The event will take place in the heart of downtown Carefree. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. Admission is $3. Carefree residents receive complimentary admission. Parking is free all weekend.
March 1 50s Dance Party All the high voltage hits like “That’ll Be the Day,” “Peggy Sue,” “La Bamba” and “Chantilly Lace” will get you up on the dance floor in this Tribute to Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper! It’s a rock ‘n’ rollin’ good time starring John Mueller as Buddy Holly, Jay P. Richardson, Jr. as The Big Bopper, Las Vegas Legends headliner Ray Anthony as Ritchie Valens, Grammy winner Mike Acosta on saxophone, and a first-rate band. Celebrate this festival finale of Arizona Musicfest 2014. The event will be held at Highlands Church, 9050 E. Pinnacle Peak Rd. in Scottsdale. Tickets are available online, or call for information. 480-840-0457 www.azmusicfest.org
March 7–9 Tour d’Artistes 2014 Enjoy an “artful” weekend in scenic Fountain Hills, March 7, 8, and 9 at Tour d’Artistes 2014, a self-guided tour of working studios and local galleries where you can interact with the artists as they explain their processes and what inspires them to create art. Funds raised go to create art scholarships, Boys and Girls Club and for free art programs for abused children. Passport tickets, which include the map/ ticket and reception, cost $20 per person and are available for sale from galleries on the tour, from members of the FH Art League and on their website. Tickets are also available at the March 6 reception from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Fountain Hills Artists’ Gallery, 16858 Avenue of the Fountains, Suite #103. 480-836-9919 www.fountainhillsartleague.com
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community
If you are interested in submitting community events, please email to shelly@imagesaz.com by the 10th of the month prior to publication.
March 14–16 Fountain Hills Fine Art & Wine Affaire The quaint little town of Fountain Hills will be the venue for the last Thunderbird Artists festival of the year, the Fountain Hills Fine Art & Wine Affaire March 14 – 16. This exciting festival will take place at the home of one of the world’s tallest fountains, during the spectacular St. Patrick’s Day celebration when the fountain water will be dyed emerald green March 16. The festival will take place on Avenue of the Fountains, between La Montana and Saguaro Blvd. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. Admission is $3, and residents of Fountain Hills receive complimentary admission. Parking is free all weekend. www.thunderbirdartists.com
March 20 Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center at Taliesin West Join David Shifrin, Tara Helen O’Connor and other Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center artists for an evening of flute, clarinet and strings in the music pavilion at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin West March 20.
The performance will include works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,
Heitor Villa-Lobos, Sebastian Currier and Joan Tower. Prior to the performance, share hors d’oeuvres and wine with the artists in the Sculpture Garden. The sunset reception begins at 6 p.m. Tickets are $70 inclusive of the reception. The Taliesin West concert is one of six performances in the Phoenix Chamber Music Society’s 2014 Winter Festival. The festival opens March 15. Tickets to all events are available online. 602-252-0095 www.phoenixchambermusicsociety.org
March 22 Free Skin Care, Health & Fitness Evaluations and Pain Relief Demos Bodywork for Life and Fusion Skin Care are hosting an open house in their new north Scottsdale location in The Peaks Corporate Park at 7629 E. Pinnacle Peak Rd., Suite 118 in Scottsdale March 22, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Reservations are recommended. The experienced Bodywork for Life staff will be offering complimentary
Bodywork for Life 14
Integrated therapies for healthy living Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
Massage • Microcurrent • Pilates • Egoscue
postural analysis, strength and fitness assessments, and demonstrations of unique pain relief methods.
Fusion Skin Care will also be available. Esthetician Paula Ridley will be giving demonstrations of her unique ultrasonic facials, as seen on “The Doctors,” and talking about her specialty line of natural skin care products. Learn how these treatments and products can effectively treat dry skin, hyper-pigmentation, acne and rosacea. We will be offering demonstrations of frequency-specific microcurrent, equipment-based Pilates and movement therapy, and Egoscue therapeutic exercises created by famed author of “Pain Free,” Pete Egoscue. 480-595-0246 www.bodyworkforlife.com
March 23 Arizona Musicfest’s “A Touch of Class” Musicale What could signal spring more than a beautiful string ensemble, the Tetra Quartet, performing an intimate concert on the tiered garden patio of a charming home at The Boulders! The Arizona Musicfest “A Touch of Class” Musicale March 23 from 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. recreates a full traditional high tea in the garden. Delicious scones with all the scrumptious accompaniments, tea sandwiches of delightful varieties, and a full dessert selection catered by Carefree’s English Rose Tea Room are all part of the musical event. Feel free to wear your favorite garden party hat, or for the gentlemen, a straw boater or cap could be a festive accoutrement! (White gloves not required.) Limited seating provides the ultimate musical and dining experience, so reserve early so you won’t be left out. Tickets are $80 per person. Hosts and co-hosts have generously covered all Musicale-related expenses, allowing the ticket price to fully support Arizona Musicfest’s annual festival, youth education and Young Musicians programs. 480-488-0806 www.azmusicfest.org
March 29 MIM Curator’s Choice Lecture: Ritual Musical Instruments Join Manuel Jordán, chief curator and director of collections at the Musical Instrument Museum (MIM), for this short, informal lecture as he highlights the use of a variety of musical instruments in the context of divination and healing among Central African peoples. The lecture will take place March 29 from 1 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the MIM, 4725 E. Mayo Blvd. in Phoenix. It is free with museum admission. Jordán will present specific cases to illustrate how music and musical instruments become strategic devices in the process of redressing illness and misfortune. Among different Central African groups, divination is viewed as a process through which individuals with extraordinary knowledge attempt to find solutions to the problems of others. Learn how a diviner and/or healer aims to create order out of disorder and, through the use of divination and musical instruments, has the ability to identify an agent of misfortune and recommend actions toward resolution of afflictions. 480-478-8690 www.mim.org
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community
If you are interested in submitting community events, please email to shelly@imagesaz.com by
March 30 Scottsdale North Rotary Hosts Wine Tasting for FAR The Scottsdale North Rotary Club is sponsoring a wine tasting
the 10th of the month
fundraiser for the Foothills Animal Rescue (FAR) March 30 from 3 p.m.
prior to publication.
to 5 p.m., at Vino 100 in Tuscany Village Center, 30835 N. Cave Creek Rd. in Phoenix. Enjoy wine, appetizers, and music by the popular group The New Deal while raising funds for FAR, a cage-free, 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that saves lives through rescue, care and adoption of homeless cats and dogs. Tickets are $20 per person, $35 per couple and can be purchased in advance or at the door. Checks should be made payable to Foothills Animal Rescue. 480-595-0697 www.rotaryscottsdalenorth.org jmcmanus@mndomain.com
April 7 Arizona MusicFest Scholarship Application Deadline Arizona Musicfest has announced the Arizona Musicfest scholarship application period is January 27 through April 7. The Arizona Musicfest Scholarship Decision Committee seeks applications from deserving, highly qualified Arizona high school seniors who will graduate during spring or summer 2014 and enroll in a college-level music performance program prior to December 31, 2014. In addition to the student’s performance abilities, also taken into account will be high school academic record, personal enthusiasm, and third-party recommendations. The scholarship award will be $2,500, paid directly by Arizona Musicfest to the recipient’s school. The winning applicant will also be considered for additional awards for the remaining three years of college. Applications can be downloaded online. The application deadline is midnight April 7. The winner will be announced May 1. www.azmusicfest.org
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$ in Millions
ReAl eSTATe MARkeT TRenDS in 85255 AnD 85262 fROM JAnUARY 2013 TO JAnUARY 2014
400 375 350 325 300 275 250 225 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 25 0
New Listings
Active Listings
Sold Listings
Months Inventory
January 2014
403
1,116
82
13.61
December 2013
145
1,031
111
9.29
November 2013
235
1,014
121
8.38
October 2013
310
926
113
8.19
September 2013
238
821
123
6.67
August 2013
190
759
137
5.54
July 2013
178
752
160
4.70
June 2013
190
827
162
5.10
May 2013
240
915
215
4.26
April 2013
260
955
188
5.08
March 2013
272
978
182
5.37
February 2013
246
952
130
7.32
January 2013
302
886
114
7.77
Mkt 20.89%
List $
Mkt 8.91%
Mkt 8.52%
Mkt 6.88%
Mkt 6.36%
Russ Lyon RE/MAX Fine Homesmart Realty Sotheby’s Properties Executives
MLS: ARMLS Date: 02/01/2013 - 01/31/2014
Type: Broker
Realty One Group
Status: Sold
Price: All
Mkt 5.48%
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Mkt 4.56%
DMB Realty
Construction Type: All
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Mkt 3.18%
Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage
Prudential Arizona Properties
Bedrooms: All
Sell $
Mkt 2.31%
West USA Realty
Bathrooms: All
Property Types: Residential: (Single Family-Detached, Patio Home, Townhouse, Twin/Semi-Detached, Manufactured/Mobile Housing, Modular/Manufactured, Loft, Other) Zip Codes: 85255
With Jean Ransdell, Tom Scappaticci and Russ Lyon Sotheby’s International Realty comes the most prestigious and powerful brands in Scottsdale Real Estate! The world reaches our market and our market reaches the world via this unmatched combination of leaders.
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Realtor®, ABR, e-PRO, Relocation Specialist, 2013-2014 Pinnacle Peak RMS Tour Director
Trust Jean Ransdell and Tom Scappaticci for Results! They are the Team You Will Proudly Use and Refer! Mar ch 2014 Im age s A Z.c om
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RIDING HIGH
ASAA Horse Show TO Benefit CAMP SOARING EAGLE
Writer Barb Evans
Every child deserves a chance to laugh, play and just be a kid. For some, that means forgetting they are sick, even if it is just for a moment. The American Saddlebred Association of Arizona (ASAA) is helping those children have their moment by hosting the 43rd Annual Carousel Charity Horse Show at West World of Scottsdale March 13 through March 16. This year, the largest multi-breed horse show in the Southwest will donate a portion of their proceeds to Camp Soaring Eagle, a Sedona non-profit organization that provides year-round medically supervised camping programs for children who suffer from such chronic or life-threatening illnesses as diabetes, hemophilia or cancer. The multi-day event features various breeds of horses shown by riders of all ages who are competing to be the best in their class. Attendees can try their hand at judging a class in
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the jackpot judging contest Saturday evening, or cheer on the academy riders and participants of the Equestrian Special Olympic classes Sunday afternoon. The county fair-like atmosphere will also include a variety of family-friendly activities, silent auctions, raffle tables, and numerous vendors. “An event such as the 43rd Annual Carousel Charity Horse Show means so much to our campers because it shows the kids that their illness does not have to prevent them from experiencing new and exciting things,� said Paula Bommarito, executive director of development for Camp Soaring Eagle. At the camps, children ages seven to 15 years old enjoy such fun activities as horseback riding, fishing, crafts, archery and boating. For a moment, they and their families can take a break from the grinding schedule of tests, treatments and hospital stays and discover the wonderful healing power of laughter and play. The camp is free of charge to participants and their families, and is funded through charitable donations and events like the Carousel Charity Horse Show. Camp Soaring Eagle campers will be in attendance at the show as event volunteers, sharing their stories about how the camp has improved their lives. The event will be held at West World of Scottsdale, 16601 N. Pima Road in Scottsdale from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 13 through March 16. Admission is free, and the event is open to the public. www.campsoaringeagle.org www.carouselcharityhorseshow.com
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OK, I’ll admit it, I’m addicted to the Tucson Festival of Books, the intellectual stimulation of panel discussions, the exhilaration of literary “rock stars” being applauded by enthusiastic fans, and the sheer enjoyment of being with people having fun. On my calendar a year in advance, I was happy to sing Auld Lang Syne, signaling only 74 days left to get my fix, another delectable feast for my mind and spirit. This passion started in 2009 with the inaugural festival.
My
college-aged
niece
from
New
Hampshire, an avid reader, spent spring break with us. Casting about looking for something of interest for us to do, I discovered it. I have been hooked ever since. We went to the special Friday night festivities which included dining with a published author. She was thrilled. We ended up staying through Sunday, attending workshops, listening to best-selling authors, checking out activities at the pavilions, and listening to musical groups while we sampled local cuisine. We both had an amazing time and after that, mid-March became sacred. I’ve just checked the updated list of presenting authors and I’m psyched. Mega-best-selling writer
Scott
“Identical”),
Turow Pulitzer
(his
newest
Prize-winning
book
is
author
Richard Russo (“Elsewhere”), mystery master Craig Johnson (whose work spawned TV’s “Longmire” series), and former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor (“Out of Order”)
A Feast of Literary Talent
Tucson Festival of Books March 15 and 16
will be there, just to name a few. In total, there will be 450 authors, illustrators, science experts and entertainers on hand. Packed with romance, mystery, fantasy, truelife stories, and lots of activities, the festival is suitable for all ages. With special author
Writer Donna Kublin
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Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
events for every genre, themed panel discussions
place winners will be part of a panel discussion. In
and
by
addition to cash prizes, winners receive scholarships
noted cookbook authors, and child-focused activities,
to the two-day masters’ workshop, which will follow
there is something for everyone. In addition to
the festival. First place winners in the 2014 writing
author events, kids of all ages can enjoy hands-
competition are: Luke Tennis, Baltimore, Maryland
on literacy activities, live performances, and the
(fiction), Michelle Chikaonda, Philadephia, Pennsylvania
kid-focused Science City. The event will host more
(non-fiction) and Emelia Reuterfors, Tucson, (poetry).
than 250 exhibitors, including those representing
The complete list of winners can be found on the
small publishing houses, book-related products and
website.
workshops,
live
cooking
demonstrations
services, booksellers and educational programs. A variety of food by local restaurants will be available The festival’s Science City will offer highly engaging,
in the food court, ranging from BBQ to Mexican,
visual
demonstrations,
organic to traditional sandwiches and snow cones to
including Chemistry of Combustion show; Adventures
kettle corn. This year’s event is expected to match
with Things that Bite, Hiss, Sting and Crawl; Arizona
or exceed last year’s 120,000 attendance. Each year
Sonora
with
the festival grows, but this well-organized event on
rattlesnakes, hawks, ringtail cats and Gila monsters;
UA’s campus, ably assisted by 1,500 volunteers, has
52 nature activities for city kids; and presentations
always run very smoothly.
science
Desert
presentations
Museum
live
and
animal
show
from children’s science authors. The 2014 edition will be held Saturday and Sunday, Presenting authors, hand-picked by the festival’s
March 15 and 16, from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on
author committee and subcommittees, will appear
the campus of the University of Arizona. Entrance
in the workshops, panel discussions, demonstrations
and parking is free. In its sixth year, the festival is
and solo presentations that make up the official
proud of being the fourth largest event of its kind
events of the Festival. The committee ensures that
– challenging long-standing book festivals in mega-
an outstanding and diverse mix of local, regional
markets Miami, Washington D.C. and Los Angeles.
and internationally best-selling authors will be able to discuss topics of interest in more than a dozen
For the second year in a row I am going with my
genres of literature, with educators, storytellers and
friend, a published author, who I have to admit I
illustrators adding their expertise to a number of
enticed into going last year only to find her quickly
sessions. Presentations are followed by book signings
marking her calendar for the next. I am not at all
at nearby locations and there are also book signing
guilty about it. In my book, healthy addictions are
events at exhibitor booths throughout the weekend.
just fine, and the Tucson Festival of Books is a
There are author pavilions for those who are not
great one to have. Appetite strong, mouth watering
presenting authors, and new for 2014, there is a
already, I can’t wait to sink my teeth and brain into
Mexican authors’ pavilion presented by University of
this delectable literary feast.
Arizona’s Confluencenter for Creative Inquiry. www.tucsonfestivalofbooks.org Winners of the festival’s Second Annual Literary Awards writing competition were announced and first
Mar ch 2014
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Playing in the Big (Ivy) League Writer Tom Scanlon
Most would agree that being invited to play football for a major college is quite an achievement, showing that a high school athlete has reached the ultimate level. Not to slight the hard-studying crowd, being invited to learn at an Ivy League school also is a rare accomplishment. But to combine the two? Well, those hulked-out footballers surely can’t be smart enough to go to places like Harvard University, right? Such are the stereotypes Billy Nichols faces on a regular basis. Standing 6 feet 5 inches off the ground, and sinking into it at 282 pounds, he certainly has the look of a college football player; no need to convince anyone there. But when people ask him where he’s going to college, and he answers – that’s where the fun begins. “Some people I needed to convince I was going to Harvard,” he said with a light chuckle. “Some people make me show them my ID. It’s so rare to meet someone going to Harvard.” Not to mention someone who looks like he could bench press a smart car! For the record, a smart car weighs about 1,800 pounds; Nichols can only bench press 360.
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Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
After spending four years shoving smaller players around on the Pinnacle High football field, the beastly Nichols turned down the likes of Utah University and other big football schools to enroll at Harvard. After his first semester at the school in Cambridge, Mass., Nichols returned home to north Scottsdale for winter break, hitting the weights, soaking up some of that glorious Arizona sun (Boston weather: brutally cold) and telling his high school friends what the Ivy League life is like. “I tell them it’s pretty challenging,” said Nichols, over coffee on a Saturday afternoon. “But school wasn’t as tough as I thought it would be. We’re given the resources to succeed, teachers and tutors, and students help each other out. “On the football end, it was a lot more work than high school. It’s like a full-time job. Lifting in the morning, then school throughout day, then you come back and watch film from the past day’s practice. You go out to practice, then there’s usually more film – you watch the team you’re playing that week. Then you go back to your room and go to sleep.” How does he have energy to study, on days like those? “You just kind of have to push through it. As long as you don’t take a nap,” Nichols said with a smile, “it’s O.K.” He said he got by on five or six hours sleep a night during football season, and plans to sleep more, now that football is done for the year. “One of the things that’s great about Harvard is that there are no kids that put partying first. Everyone realizes you have to put academics first, which makes it easy on time management – school, football, eat, sleep.” In his first semester, Nichols had a 3.0 gradepoint average in class (“I think I can improve”), and learned quite a bit about football. “My technique is what changed. And just being aggressive, that’s another thing I worked on. Pass blocking and run blocking.” His
parents,
Nick
and
Cathy,
visited
for
parents’ Mar ch 2014
Im age s A Z.c om
23
weekend and attended the Dartmouth game. “They got to see other guys play and me stand on sidelines,” Nichols said with a sardonic smile. He did play briefly in three games, logging about seven minutes total in games against San Diego, Brown and Cornell. He’ll long remember his first time on the college field: “I was a little nervous. It felt just like high school, until you actually had to hit the other guy and you realized he was a full grown man.” Did it hurt? “A little,” he answered, with a deep chuckle. “You grow used to it after you get hit every single play, which linemen do.” His goal for next season is to crack the starting lineup, which won’t be easy as Harvard has two sophomores starting at his position, offensive tackle. If he can make it as a starter, he may even get a shot to play pro football. Quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick and three other Harvard grads played in the NFL last season. “Over the next four years I’m going to work as hard as I can in the classroom and on field, and see what opportunities I have,” Nichols said. “If that’s the NFL, great.” If not, he expects to put his economics courses to work. While he was a captain of the Pinnacle High football team and named to the all-state team, his time here in Scottsdale was hardly defined by football. Nichols played on the club hockey team, was a class senator, member of several academic clubs and earned A’s in nearly every class he took here. “I was always really competitive in the class room, trying to beat out my best friends. We usually tied with straight A’s.” Curiously, though he was always the biggest kid in
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Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
the class (“I was looking back at a kindergarten picture, and I was a head above everyone else”), his first love was hockey. “Then my junior year when I played (football), I started getting interest from colleges. That’s when I realized I could take it to next level.” After his junior year, he attended a Harvard football camp. “That’s when they offered me a spot on the team,” Nichols recalled. “My dad jumped out of his seat. I’m the first person in my immediate family to go to college.” And not just any college – the school! Asked what his toughest assignment was in his first Harvard semester, Nichols pondered, then answered. “Nothing is really easy when it comes to schoolwork at Harvard, but for a project in my economic-based statistics class I had to estimate housing prices drawn from different variables for 100 houses. To do this, I was given data concerning about 800 other houses which included prices. I had to create a model by deciding which variables were important in estimating the price, and which were not. I also had to create dummy variables (more specific variables based on other broader variables)
in
order
to
obtain
more
accurate
estimations. It was nothing too bad since I was able to ask my teaching fellow for guidance a few times. Plus it was almost kind of fun.” If he finds economic variables fun, he is clearly in the right place at Harvard University. Nichols’ advice to those who enjoy books as well as sports and who want to follow in his footsteps from north Scottsdale to the Ivy League: “I would say to work hard in the classroom as well as on the athletic field. And remember to put school first, because we are student athletes.”
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Hospitality
Employee of the Year Olivia Writer Tom Scanlon Photographer Jamie Pogue
Fierro
Just about everyone is nice to friends, family, co-workers and others he or she knows. Strangers? That’s a different story. Some people want to be nice to people they don’t know, but are too shy; others are too wrapped up in their own lives to think of people they don’t know; some actually think kindness is a sign of weakness.
26
Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
For those folks, working in the hospitality industry
“This was gut-wrenching. There is no pain like the
probably isn’t the best idea. Oh, they might be able
loss of a child, and then to compound it with Fenn’s
to fake it for a while, though the false smiles and
confusion was agonizing,” the Mullins’ later wrote in
forcing “have a nice day” would wear them down.
a letter of appreciation to the Four Seasons. “As
They probably wouldn’t be able to work in hospitality
parents, our first priority was to help our little one
for a year, let alone win an award.
find his smile and sweet laugh again.
No, they would be no threat to take the title from
“It was a warm, sunny afternoon the day we arrived
Olivia Fierro, a 25-year-old Anthem resident with a
and we decided to take Fenn to the pool. The
non-stop smile and rare spirit. Last year, she was
walk over from our room was something we had
named Outstanding Lodging Employee of the Year by
never experienced with our usually happy boy. There
the American Hotel & Lodging Association.
were tantrums and tears and more heart-wrenching questions. It felt like one of the longest walks we had
Fierro, known to most as “Liv,” is a front desk supervisor
ever taken. We finally made it over to the pool, and
being groomed as a manager at Four Seasons Resort
that’s where it all began.
Scottsdale at Troon North. According to Troon, “She has received countless guest experience accolades
“We found a few chaise lounges by the pool, soon to
and is regularly recognized by her colleagues for
find out the pretty girl with the beautiful smile would
outstanding service to the guests and team.”
be our ever-loving Liv!”
Liv Fierro shares her secret: Being nice to complete
The Mullins’ said Liv was kind and attentive on that
strangers is easy, for her. That’s just the way she is.
first day, though she had no idea what they had been
“I genuinely care about every single person I meet,”
through. At the end of the day, the father and mother
said this passionate young woman, who found her
shared with Liv what had happened to Lile.
niche after college. Raised in East Hampton, a resort town on New York’s Long Island, she came west to
“The next morning we went to the patio restaurant
study business and communications at Arizona State
by the pool for breakfast,” the Mullins’ later wrote,
University. After graduating, she couldn’t decide what
“and there was Liv with a basket full of toys for Fenn
to do next, and at her mother’s urging decided to
– rubber snakes, Matchbox cars, Nerf balls and all
try the hospitality industry.
the things little boys love. The smile on Fenn’s face would have lit up the world. Over the course of our
In February 2011, she was hired by Four Seasons as
stay, which we extended from a three- to an eight-
a pool server, which is what she was doing when she
night stay, we would see Liv at the pool daily. With
met the Mullins’. They are a Colorado family of three
this, we slowly started to see the light come back
who were trying to emerge from the loss of seven-
into Fenn’s eyes and hear a laugh from deep down
year-old son Lile, who died in a hiking accident. The
within him. Our encounter with Liv has been a life-
parents took Lile’s three-year-old brother Fenn on a
changing experience that our family will be forever
vacation to Scottsdale, hoping to distract him while
grateful and thankful for.
they pulled themselves together. But the strategy didn’t seem to be working, early on the trip. “Where’s
“We will always describe her as the girl who brought
Lile?” Fenn kept asking.
our little boy’s smile back.”
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The Four Seasons attached the letter in nominating Fierro, who at first was shocked to find out she won a state competition, and said she had no idea she would win the national award. Then again, receiving nation-wide recognition paled for her, compared to the actual experience of meeting and befriending the Mullins family and the appreciation they passed back to her. “That letter and that family means more to me than anything else on this planet,” said Fierro, who later accepted an invitation to visit the Mullins family in Colorado. “They changed my life just as much as I changed theirs.” As such, she dedicates the award to Lile and Fenn Mullins. Tall and statuesque, with a tan complexion and long, dark-blonde hair, Liv Fierro is now training newer Four Seasons employees to provide the kind of customer service she expects. “It’s all about the little things,” she says with the kind of passion that you won’t find in a corporate manual or how-to PowerPoint. “I want my front desk agents to succeed and do well. I want them to do little things like, when a guest checks in, ask, ‘Why are you here? Are you celebrating?’” If it turns out to be a birthday or anniversary, after the guests leave the front desk area, Fierro will turn to her staff and suggest they do a little something special. That can mean having a box of truffles delivered to the room, or bottle of champagne – or simply a nice note, saying “Thanks for picking us to help you celebrate.” The daughter of a gregarious pizzeria owner, Liv Fierro is naturally polite and respectful, perhaps a throwback amongst a generation who are glued to their phones, seemingly oblivious of the outside world, and little social customs that seem to be fast-fading. “Whether it’s at work or on the street, when someone’s right behind me or over there by the plant,” she points to an area about 15 yards away, “I wait and hold the door for them. People are shocked. I feel like so much has been lost in translation. Even with the harder guests to deal with, I just say to myself, ‘They must be dealing with something I can’t understand.’” And if a guest has a complaint, large or small, this lady from Long Island takes it as a personal mission: “For me, I actually enjoy the challenging guests. There’s nothing better to me than turning their
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Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
day around. If they’re upset about a room location or whatever it may be, I love to give them options and completely turn them around. And I definitely don’t stop until I know someone’s happy. A lot of times I’ll put it in back in their hands, ‘What is going to make you the happiest you can be?’” She says the Four Seasons backs
up
this
philosophy.
“They
really give you every opportunity to go that extra step and make sure that the guest is happy.” Though Fierro’s parents spend a great deal of time in Anthem, most of her big, Italian-American family is back east. Her close workplace helps with that. “It’s like family here. It’s a really, really wonderful place to work.” And she has been folded into another family, becoming an honorary
member
of
the
Mullins
family, and Fenn’s big sister – the Liv who taught him how to live, again. She will always be known around this resort as “the girl who won that big award,” but deflects it. “When (coworkers) say ‘You won that award!’ I say, ‘No, we won that award.’” It has certainly been a career-booster, and likely will continue to be, as she plans to stay in the hospitality field, wherever it takes her. Yet she hopes “Employee
of
the
Year”
doesn’t
define her. “I don’t want to be judged by that award. I just want to be judged by being a good person.”
Mar ch 2014
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Notre Dame Prep Goes to D.C.
Writer Tom Scanlon
It has been said that there are two things you don’t want
The Close Up Foundation program allows students to
to watch being made: sausage and laws. Yet a group of
see their government in action. Though the Scottsdale
Notre Dame Prep students were happy to spend a week
students were able to see famous monuments, memorials
getting a behind-the-scenes look at the grind of our federal
and institutions, this is far more than a sightseeing tour,
government.
as the students also were able to sit in on meetings with congressional delegations. Seminar panels included
30
Social studies teacher Rob Gwynn led a group of NDP
lobbyists, journalists and members of the military and, at
students to Washington, D.C.; they landed on January 19,
“hot topics� events, liberal and conservative guest speakers
and attended a debate that evening.
squared off, with students moderating the debates.
Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
Gwynn, who has been at Notre Dame Prep since it opened a dozen years ago, has led trips to D.C. for the past seven years. “I take seniors on the trip during the third week of January every year to experience Washington, D.C. in a way they have not had access to before,” he said. “We go to D.C. to become immersed into how our government works and functions. The students actively participate in daily workshops and debates that not only teach them about how government works, but also help them to develop their own political identity which they can carry with them as they enter into the voting world. In the seven years I’ve been going with students, I have yet to have a student who isn’t positively impacted by the experience they’ve had on our trip.” Twenty-five Notre Dame Prep seniors made the trip to the epicenter of American politics: Taylor Ashton, Haley Bacon, Erin Bradford, Meg Cahill, Kyle Conway, Emily Discerni, Katherine DiVall, Sarah Eversman, Aleksei Gendron, Kristin Green, Noelle Haro, Mickey Horn, Emile Kassir, John Lauro, Mary Lauro, Bridget Maguire, Maya Mangels, Gabriella Martinez,
Caitlin
Railson,
Alexandra
Schuler,
Madeline Sobek, Madeline Stearns, Emily Thomas, McKayla Tully and Grant Zaro. Their teacher said it was great preparation for life beyond high school. “Aside from working with the government, the students are also interacting with high school students from around the country during their week in the nation’s capital,” Gwynn noted. “This may be the most valuable experience of all as it teaches our college-bound kids about the diversity they will find outside of our little corner of the world, and prepares them for interacting with all sorts of students from all over the country when they head off to college in the fall.” Mar ch 2014
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You might say that the Rotary Club is somewhat discriminatory – you can’t join if you have more than two legs. Even so, there will be tails wagging joyfully this month, as a local Rotary chapter is gearing up to help out some needy four-leggers. The local story begins when Dena Oppenheim lived in Iowa, where she was a member of the Rotary Club of Fairfield, although she spent her winters here in the sunshine. Out of curiosity, she started popping in on meetings of the Scottsdale Rotary Club. Once she and her husband moved here permanently, she decided to help launch the Rotary Club of Scottsdale North. “We received our charter from Rotary International in September 2009,” she notes. She and her co-founders had some slightly different ideas than the usual: “Ours was, at the time, a fairly new concept for Rotary Club in that we meet in the evenings and have no weekly speaker. We also try to do everything at our meetings and not by committee. Our whole club acts more as a traditional club’s board and committees. “Our meetings are fun and quite lively. One visitor called it ‘efficient
A Different Kind of Rotary Writer Tom Scanlon
chaos.’ At the end of the meetings, we have a long list of plans for the future and a sense of accomplishment for all we have done.” And this group of men and women are quite busy with community building. Some recent and ongoing projects: - The Interact Club at Pinnacle High School. The local chapter sends several students to the Rotary Youth Leadership Awards. - Providing dictionaries to local third graders. - A sale of “gently-used” items to benefit Foothills Animal Rescue. - “Adopt-a-Road” clean-ups. - Cleaning and planting along the side of the Pinnacle Peak Trail. - Fundraisers for the Foothills Food Bank. - Supplies for local schools. - Donation of money and goods to the TRRFCC horsemanship program for youth. - Nooks donated to local schoolchildren. Every spring, the North Scottsdale Rotary Club targets a local community group and sponsors a fundraiser. This year, the funds will go to Foothills Animal Rescue, a no-cage shelter for homeless cats and dogs at 23030 N. Pima Road in Scottsdale.
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Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
“Pets and Wine – two of our favorite things” is this year’s fundraising theme. And so it is that Sunday, March 30, Vino 100 in the Tuscany Village Center, 30835 N. Cave Creek Road will be the setting for a wine tasting to benefit these homeless animals. Tickets are $20 per person or $35 per couple. Admission includes four wine tastings, appetizers and music by the New Deal. How else does money get raised? “We raise funds by collecting ‘Happy/Sad Bucks’ at every meeting,” said Oppenheim. “This is not unique to our club, but we have a different twist:
we all share and we all give something.
This has helped to bond our group because each week we hear from each member what they are happy and/or sad for/about that past week. This sharing has proved to be a tremendous boost to our club’s friendly and caring feeling.” The North Scottsdale Rotarians have dinner meetings every Wednesday at 5:45 p.m. at Hacienda Mexican Grill, 32527 N. Scottsdale Road. “We welcome visitors and new members and do not use the traditional category system for admitting new members,” said Oppenheim, the group’s secretary. The North Scottsdale chapter has attracted the likes of Cherry Baumbusch, a part-timer from the Washington, D.C. area. “I am actually a member of the Rotary Club of McLean (recent past president), am a past member of the Rotary Club of Dubai (UAE). I have visited Rotary Clubs around the world in my seven years as a Rotarian. I am a new winter resident of Scottsdale, have visited for years, and the Scottsdale North Rotary Club has always welcomed me as one of their own, along with their other ‘snowbirds,’ as they call us.” Cherry likes what she sees about this club: “I would say from my experience with many Rotary Clubs, this one is unique in its meeting format, which is casual and very much run like an open forum for member participation and comment. This brings a feeling of unity and commitment among members.” www.rotarynorthscottsdale.org // www.foothillsanimal.org 480-595-0697 // jmcmanus@mndomain.com
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Explore Prague Writer Margie BouttĂŠ
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Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
At least once a year, I try to take a
Vuitton and Versace, Prague has
most amazing panoramic views of the
trip abroad. I think of every trip as a
gleefully joined the consumer culture.
city, including spectacular views of the
voyage of discovery. On this particular
Millions of tourists visit every year to
square, Prague Castle, the Charles
trip to the Czech Republic, Prague,
admire its architecture, absorb the
Bridge and hundreds of narrow streets
the 1,100+ year old Golden City of
culture and to drink the incredible
and alleys. It pays to head up there as
100 Spires did not disappoint. Easily
beer. Czechs take immense pride
soon as you arrive, and you will not
up there with the best in Europe, the
in their city and their buildings,
regret a climb to the top.
stunning architecture, riverside locale
preserving centuries-old facades and
and romantic ambiance make Prague
employing city workers to carefully
One of the jewels in Prague’s crown
a world-class stunner.
pry cigarette butts out of the millions
is its Astronomical Clock, the third
of crevices in cobbled streets.
oldest in the world and the only one
Prague is a fairy tale city with its
still functioning. This is a special
beautiful castles perched on hilltops,
The main sightseeing areas of Prague
clock with unique mechanisms. Its
intricately
old
are separated by the Vltava River.
main dial still shows the local time
bridges, museums, quaint cobbled
The city of Prague encompasses the
and a wheel with zodiac signs, which
streets, walled courtyards, numerous
grouping of four towns: Mala Strana
turns inside the display to reveal
gardens and lots more. It is a mix of
(The Little Town) located under the
the position of the stars. The outer
buildings in gothic, baroque and art
castle; Stare Mesto (The Old Town) with
ring of the clock, marked with Arabic
nouveau styles of architecture, and
its famous Old Town Square; Josefov
numerals, calculates the time from
the Vltava River passing through the
(The Jewish Town) with its interesting
the precise moment of sunset. If you
city completes the mise en scène.
synagogues and old cemetery; and
come at the right time, you can see
Nové Mesto (The New Town) with its
the hourly display of the 12 apostles
Founded in the 800s, Prague’s status
fantastic art nouveau buildings and
taking turns peeking out from the
as an influential European city has
the great Wenceslas Square.
two small doors above the clock.
carved
cathedrals,
weathered many masters, as the seat
At the same time, creepy skeletons
of the Holy Roman Empire, capital
The
historical
symbolizing death, vanity, greed, and
of Bohemia, player in the Protestant
center is Old Town Square. Beautifully
the Ottoman invader placed around
Reformation and the Thirty Years’ War,
restored, it is a good place to start a
the clock move along the sound of
and a key city for the Hapsburg rulers
Prague visit. This square is a beautiful
bells. Crowds amass at the top of
and their Austro-Hungarian Empire.
mix of historic sites, churches, cafes,
every hour to watch this ritual, but I
After World War I, Prague became the
restaurants and shops, and it’s also
have to admit, the spectacle itself is
capital of Czechoslovakia. During World
the place frequented most by tourists.
rather anticlimactic. The real wonder
War II, Hitler intended for Prague to
Within the square are the beautiful
is that this clock built in 1410 is still
be the arts and culture capital of Nazi
gothic spires of Týn Church, the
ticking away the time.
Europe, and thus it was kept intact. In
baroque
1993, when Czechoslovakia split into
the famous Astronomical Clock. The
Charles Bridge is on the top of every
two countries, Prague became the
center of the square has the statue of
Prague visitor’s must-see list. The
capital city of the new Czech Republic.
reformer Jan Hus Memorial. Alongside
scenic and legendary 15th century
the Astronomical Clock, Old Town
stone gothic bridge is popular with
Prague has levied history to become
Hall Tower built in 1338 is one of
Czech artists, musicians and souvenir
a booming tourist destination. From
the most striking buildings in Prague,
vendors whose stands line both sides
glass shops, garnet shops, Louis
where atop you will find some of the
of the bridge. During the day you
heart
St.
of
Prague’s
Nicholas
Church
and
Mar ch 2014
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35
can climb towers on both sides of the bridge for outstanding views. I especially recommend the one on the Old Town side for wonderful views of the bridge and Old Town spires. Sunset affords a breathtaking view of the fully lit Prague Castle against the evening sky. Records indicate that Prague Castle is the largest ancient castle area in the world and home to Kings of Bohemia, Holy Roman Emperors and the offices of the Czech Presidents. This complex has more than 18 buildings, including palaces, churches, halls and towers, and eight large gardens, so be prepared to see a lot and do some walking. The presidential offices are housed inside the castle. One of the most interesting streets in Prague is Golden Lane within Prague Castle grounds. Originally built for palace guards, the tiny houses along Golden Lane were eventually taken over by goldsmiths, giving the street its name. Today these houses have been converted to shops that sell trinkets, books and souvenirs for the thousands of tourists who pass every day. A day excursion to Terezin Memorial complex, about an hour outside of Prague, is a must. This fortress served as a prison almost from the very beginning and became notorious as a Gestapo prison, Jewish ghetto and concentration camp during World War II. In the years 1941-1945, TerezĂn became the largest concentration camp in Czechoslovakia. Over 140,000 Jewish men, women and children were brought here from around the country, as well as from Germany, Austria, Holland, Denmark, Slovakia and Hungary. The majority of those who survived the forced labor, malnutrition and terrible living conditions were later transported to the extermination camps further east. TerezĂn was turned into a memorial in 1947.
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Ima g e s A Z . c o m M a rch 2 0 1 4
There is a lot to see in the Czech Republic besides Prague, and I highly recommend a week if possible to explore charming towns full of historical treasures, castles, peaceful mountains, forests, lakes, villages, people and traditions. The Czech Republic is a great country for hiking, biking, touring, climbing towers, even tasting local wines. Among the most visited places outside of Prague is the beautiful Ceský Krumlov, located in Southern Bohemia, and Moravia, a region of beautiful sweeping hills dissected by waterways, located in the southeast corner of the country. These can be visited as day trips from Prague. Southern Bohemia, with its historic towns and man-made lakes, is one of Czech Republic’s
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Mar ch 2014
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76th Street Writer Tom Scanlon Photographer Jerri Parness
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“Most Likely to be Best Friends Forever.” We are deep in the heart of a quiet Scottsdale suburb, not far from Grayhawk Park. On a Tuesday evening, the rest of the neighborhood is quiet – almost creepily so, and you wonder if you’re about to hear a scary-movie soundtrack. The homes look similar, but as you get closer to one of them, the one with a giant cactus and iron cowboy sculpture out front, you start to hear it, the sound of something brewing, not scary-movie but scary-good. Inside, Haley Gold and Spencer Bryant are up to something, as usual. These Pinnacle High seniors have changed, in more ways than can be described by “senioritis.” No, it’s not that. Last year, they both played on the school’s undefeated, state champion lacrosse team; this year, they decided not to play. They spend their days in school, dreaming of this … something. They cut back on spending time with other friends. They dyed their hair black. Just what is going on here? A gang? A cult? Black magic? Witchcraft? Well, yes and no. Since launching the musical duo Haley & Spencer, now known as 76th Street, these two have been bewitching audiences with their mystical melodies and heavenly harmonies. “It’s magic,” one observer insists. Though each is having a very hard time focusing on schoolwork, their parents are otherwise unworried. Indeed, you won’t find many parents who are less worried about their attractive, 17-yearold daughters. “It keeps them off the streets,” Debra Gold, Haley’s mother, said with a laugh. Haley and Spencer spend practically every free moment they have here in the Gold’s high-ceilinged living room, singing and singing as the hours fly by. The last things Debra and husband Jason often hear before they slip off to sleep are the angelic sounds of the girls harmonizing. “We love it, it’s so wonderful,” Debra said. Spencer Bryant’s parents, Jaina and Brian Thompson, agree with that assessment, and so do audiences around Phoenix. The two have played a number of shows in the half-year they have since they launched a rock-solid collaboration, but they are slowly winning new fans with their confident, artistic performances. First known as Haley & Spencer, now going by 76th Street, they have played big, seemingly-intimidating outdoor stages at San Tan Village and Desert Ridge, as well as the smaller confines of Cave Creek’s charming Songbird’s Nest. Jennifer Kelber, the singer-songwriter who owns Songbird’s Nest, plans to have the duo back at her place this month. “I adore them,” Kelber says of Haley and Spencer; Kelber has known Spencer since she was 14 years old. “I’m beyond thrilled that these two best friends are collaborating. Mar ch 2014
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“When they perform, it’s magic, and they’re such good friends, which makes it more awesome.” The two have been close friends since fifth grade, and soon found they had a common love of music. “I came over here one day,” Spencer said, looking at Haley with a twinkle in her eye. “And you were always singing, all around the house. I said, ‘I like singing, too!’” Haley laughs. “We loved all those terrible songs!” Seven years ago, the 10-year-olds were big on all the pop radio hits. While they encouraged each other to sing, each of them performed solo or in other bands for years. “Now that I think of it, that was so boring,” Haley said. And, as usual, Spencer instantly agreed. “I’d be at my house playing guitar alone in my room, and she’d be here playing piano.” Spencer is almost shocked by a realization: “I don’t know how we were friends for so long and didn’t sing together!” The light switch flipped on when they would do shows together, each singing individually, then singing together for a few songs. “When we did songs together, we were getting amazing responses,” Haley said. So, the summer before their senior year, the two 17-year-olds (both have April birthdays) decided to form a band. And, instantly, a bond. Without hesitation, they locked in on the project. “It’s a lot of commitment, a lot of practicing,” Haley said. “We played lacrosse the last three years, but we made a commitment to our music.” Once they made their joint decision
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to quit lacrosse, they knew they had made the right choice. They felt they needed to practice together “every single chance we have a free moment.” Their first show was at the Arizona State Fair November 2, 2013. Since then, they have had at least one show per month, sometimes more. Haley is a fine piano and keyboard player, and Spencer has a nice guitar style. But what makes them so fascinating is the way their voices fit together, sinking and soaring like birds naturally following each other. As Kelber notes, “They feed off each other, they even finish each other’s thoughts. They come together beautifully.” The staples of the 76th Street shows remain cover songs, albeit creative versions of other people’s hits. Even if you grit your teeth at Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean,” you might be thrilled by the Haley & Spencer version, which is at once sultry and vulnerable – haunting, rather than poppy. And they like to put a spin on country hits, like an up-tempo version of Darius Rucker’s “Wagon Wheel.” Now, they are really getting creative, writing their own songs. The first original they have recorded is “Too Weird,” pumped up by a Billy Joel piano beat, but again with a fascinating twist. It’s something of an anti-love song, with the sneaky, devastating hook:
You see the moon I see it smiling at me I can’t reach the stars While you’re down on one knee Don’t cradle my face Don’t tell me I’m pretty ‘cause I’m too weird for you Mar ch 2014
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The song pretty much sums up the philosophy of this duo. As Spencer starts it, “When I used to write songs, it was all about boys and breaking up.” “None of our songs are about that,” Haley finishes. So what is their theme? “Most of our songs are about independence,” Haley says. “A different outlook on things,” Spencer says, harmonizing. Though they have been together officially for less than a year, this duo recently changed its name from Haley & Spencer to 76th Street. “We thought we should have a more permanent name, with the symbolism being that it is the road between our two neighborhoods that brought us together.” Whatever they call themselves, the community around the budding Lennon-and-McCartney of Pinnacle High expects these two to be a musical pair for a long, long time. This probably won’t surprise you: Their high school class recently voted Haley and Spencer “Most Likely to be Best Friends Forever.” Now we’re left to wonder: What will the future be like, for these musical BFF’s? Jennifer Kelber suggests what many are thinking: “I hope they go far.” www.haleyandspencer.com www.76thstreet.net
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Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center at
Taliesin West Phoenix Chamber Winter Festival 2014
Writer Donna Kublin Photography by Andrew Pielage, Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
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There is nothing commonplace about the Phoenix Chamber Winter Festival concert at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin West March 20; the setting, the musicians and the music are all extraordinary. “You know you are about to experience something special when you drive up to Taliesin West and begin to see the architectural masterpiece gracefully set into the desert landscape,” said David Shifrin, artistic director of festival. “This historic landmark created by a 20th century genius is the venue for our world class musicians to perform the world premiere of another 20th century genius.” David Shifrin, Tara Helen O’Connor and other Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center (CMS) artists will present an evening of flute, clarinet and strings in the Music Pavilion at Taliesin West March 20. The performance will include works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Sebastian Currier and Joan Tower. “The ink is barely dry on the page of the Currier piece,” said Shifrin. “We are thrilled to be able to bring this world premiere to our Taliesin West concert, the centerpiece of our winter festival”. Prior to the performance, hors d’oeuvres and wine with the artists will be served at a sunset reception in the sculpture garden. Performers include: David Shifrin, clarinet; Arnaud Sussmann, violin; Tara Helen O’Connor, flute; Yura Lee, viola; Mihai Marica, cello; and Ani Kavafian, violin. Tickets are $70 inclusive of the reception and are limited to 140 guests. The concert is one of six performances in the Phoenix Chamber Music Society’s 2014 Winter Festival which runs March 15 to March 21. Under the direction of Shifrin for the past five years, the festival is exceptional for its musical talent, diverse programming, and venues. “Nowhere else can you see all this in one week: 20 world-class musicians performing different pieces in six venues, ranging from private homes to Tempe Center for the Arts, to the Binns Wildflower Pavilion at the Desert Botanical Garden, all showing how adaptable chamber music is,” said Shifrin, whose goal it is for people to give up everything they are doing that week to attend. Shifrin has an extraordinary resume which includes performing with major orchestras, chamber ensembles as well as being artistic director in several settings, including CMS from 1992 to 2004 and Chamber Music Northwest in Portland, Oregon since 1981. He joined the faculty at the Yale School of Music in 1987 and was appointed artistic director of the Chamber Music Society of Yale and Yale’s annual concert series at Carnegie Hall in September 2008. He has also served on the faculties of major universities. Mar ch 2014
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Composer Sebastian Currier, whose world premiere will be performed at the Taliesin West concert, is the 2007 recipient of the prestigious Grawemeyer Award. Heralded as “music with a distinctive voice” by the New York Times and as “lyrical, colorful, firmly rooted in tradition, but absolutely new” by the Washington Post, his music has been performed at major venues world-wide by acclaimed artists and orchestras. His music has been enthusiastically embraced by violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter, for whom he wrote “Aftersong,” which she performed extensively in the US and Europe. His violin concerto, “Time Machines,” dedicated to Ms. Mutter, was premiered by the New York Philharmonic in June 2011, and called “rapturously beautiful” by the New York Times. His chamber music was presented by the Berlin Philharmonic in 2007 and 2008, including three world premieres. “Currier’s piece using the same combination of instruments as Mozart’s flute quartet is remarkable,” said Shifrin, “as is the fact that the creator of the Music Pavilion, Frank Lloyd Wright, had a musical background and often compared his architecture to the structure of music and the shapes and materials of instruments.” Frank Lloyd Wright grew up with music. His father William C. Wright was a composer, pianist, and organist, and Frank himself played the viola as a teenager. He believed that music is enriching and essential to life and his apprentices were encouraged to pursue music for not only enjoyment, but to help them with design work as well. Music has always been a large part of Taliesin West’s activities. The Music Pavilion, built in 1956, was primarily intended for dance performances since Wright’s daughter danced and choreographed, and his wife, a musician, composed the music for the performances as well as for chamber concerts. Since then, there has been a rich history of resident artists and other professional musical performances over the years. Effi Casey, Taliesin music director, is pleased to be having CMS artists there for the second year. “At this point in the development of the foundation it is important that a wider audience has the opportunity to experience Taliesin West as a cultural place in which the exchange of ideas, music and dance are celebrated,” said Casey. “This concert, especially, will be one not to miss.” The festival’s opener is March 15 at Camelback Bible Church and includes Mozart Piano Quartet and Dvorak Piano Quintet. Piano is also featured March 17 at the American Lutheran Church of Sun City. March 18, the Desert Botanical Garden hosts Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons.”
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The festival concludes March 21 with Stravinsky’s rarely-performed “L’histoire du soldat” (“The Soldier’s Tale”) at Tempe Center for the Arts, one of two pieces involving the spoken word that will be performed that evening. “A portion of Stravinsky’s piece, titled ‘Couplets du diable’ (‘The Devil’s Song’), is what I consider to be the earliest rap music written,” said Shifrin. There is also a Meet the Artists event the evening before at the AZ Opera Center with David Shifrin and Ani Kavafian along with their graduate students from Yale who are performing at the Tempe Center. They will be giving a concert plus chatting about themselves. The audience will have an opportunity to ask them questions. The festival musicians are all exceptional, having won
international
competitions
and
awards,
and
having played as soloists with major orchestras around the world, in addition to playing with chamber music ensembles. Some of the artists include: world renowned flutist Tara Helen O’Connor, a charismatic performer sought after for her unusual artistic depth, brilliant technique, and colorful tone in music of every era; violinist/violist Yura Lee, the winner of the only first prize awarded across the four categories in the 2013 ARD Music Competition in Munich, Germany; Ani Kavafian, a classical violinist and full professor at the Yale School of Music; cellist Mihai Marica, who won the first prize in the 2005 Irving M. Klein International String Competition; violinist Arnaud Sussmann, a multifaceted and compelling artist who has performed as soloist throughout the United States, Central America, Europe, and Asia; and one of the great viola players in the world, Nokuthula Ngwenyama. Full concert schedule as well as tickets may be purchased at the website or by calling the Phoenix Chamber Music Society. www.phoenixchambermusicsociety.org, 602-252-0095
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Jeff Luttrell was only five years old when he became a superhero. Like all his favorite Marvel comic book heroes, he wasn’t trying to be different, but a twist of fate and a villain called “cancer” revealed his hidden strengths. For two decades, he’s continued to battle his nemesis, and he’s stayed strong, relying on his physical fortitude when he could, and his mental strength when he could not. Like all superheroes, Jeff can really never rest. At 25 years old, he’s in his seventh bout with cancer right now, a fight he’s determined to win. And with a league of fellow superheroes in the Children’s Cancer Network fighting behind him with all they’ve got, he’s got a great chance at winning yet another battle for his life. It was Jeff’s second day of kindergarten when he faced his first skirmish with the disease. His mom Patti took him to the doctor for a series of illnesses that didn’t seem to be getting better. Tests revealed Jeff had leukemia. The initial blow was a clear strike to Patti and her husband Steve, even before Jeff began a difficult sequence of treatments that left him weak, but appeared to work. With each victory the family celebrated, cancer came back with a sucker punch. By the time
Fighting for Life
Writer Amanda Christmann Larson
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he was in fifth grade, Jeff was in his fifth bout with cancer, and a bone marrow transplant was the only weapon left in his arsenal. The Make A Wish foundation entered the picture and helped Jeff create his dream: his own action figure called Razor, which still shows up on shelves at stores and Comic Con today. It was during that difficult time while he was lying in a Tucson hospital bed that his family began to realize their own power. In the room next door, another little girl lost her cancer battle. Her family had traveled to be near her in
her last moments, but the financial
that we wanted to talk directly to
strain of having a sick child had
the families, the nurses, the doctors
left them unable to pay for gas
and the social workers to find out
to get home. Jeff’s sister Jenny
what people needed.”
overheard their need and came to her parents with a plea. “We have
And so Children’s Cancer Network
to find a way to help,” she said.
began.
“We have to do something.” The first need they identified was And that’s what they did.
for gas and food cards. Like the Luttrells, families of children with
On that fateful night, the Luttrells
childhood
and other families pitched in to
countless hours on the road and in
help
the
cancers
often
spend
grieving
family
return
hotel rooms obtaining treatment and
their
mission
didn’t
visiting doctors. The financial burden
end there. Jenny had an idea
put on working parents, or on single
to hold a fashion show to start
parents, can be tremendous.
home,
but
a fund for families enduring the financial
strains
that
childhood
“When a child is diagnosed with
inevitably
puts
on
even
cancer, the first thing parents think
the healthiest of bank accounts.
is, ‘Is my child going to live?’”
That first year, they raised $7,000
explains Steve. “When they get to
and donated it to the Pediatric
the stage when they realize that
Bone
Funds
most kids do have a fairly decent
at Phoenix Children’s Hospital and
chance at survival, the next thing
University Medical Center.
they think is, ‘How am I going to
cancer
Marrow
Emergency
pay for this? Do I have to quit Every two hours, three U.S. children
my job? How do I get my child
are diagnosed with cancer. The
to treatment? Will this be covered
Luttrells wanted to be more than a
by my health insurance?’ There are
statistic. For perhaps the first time
so many questions that go through
since cancer stole the beautiful,
parents’ minds.”
unremarkable
routine
from
their
lives, the Luttrells discovered there
Today, over a decade later, the
was
Children’s Cancer Network commits
something
they
could
do
proactively to fight back.
$35,000 each year to gas and food cards for families in need. Most
“It was a good feeling to give back
recently, the non-profit foundation
and help other families,” says Patti.
has also begun to distribute bus and
“We were able to contribute to the
hospital cafeteria passes through
emergency funds, but the one thing
hospital social workers as well.
we wanted to do differently was Mar ch 2014
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The next step for the Luttrells and Children’s Cancer Network was to implement a special program for families of children with cancer during the holidays. At a time when few families are able to focus on anything beyond survival, the smiles and tears of joy when families receive holiday gifts are emotional for everyone involved. The holiday program expanded to include back-to-school supplies for survivors and siblings. Then, when Patti and Steve learned that many area children with cancer do not have beds of their own, they added them to the list of needs they wanted to fill. Scholarships, too, became part of the opportunities Children’s Cancer Network began to provide, and some of the 76 scholarship recipients have used their honed strength to go on to make a difference in the lives of others who are walking all-too-familiar paths. The Luttrells soon realized there was a wide gap in services that provided for the emotional needs of survivors, parents and siblings. Cancer tears at every bond in the family, and no one understands that like other survivors. Children’s Cancer Network began implementing “It’s All About You” programs for every member of the family to provide targeted yet uplifting sessions for every member of the family. Self-care, which is often forgotten about during cancer crises, is the focus of each one of these body, mind, and spirit-lifting sessions. Today’s Adopt-A-Family, scholarship, and It’s All About You programs through Children’s Cancer Network address a multitude of financial and social needs for families who, more than any other time, need the warmth and caring of people who care and understand. Their new center in Chandler offers a bright, safe space where, for a few hours at a time, life happens outside of cancer. They allow families to focus on healing, and rebuild a “new normal” full of hope. Children’s Cancer Network has also dedicated funding to Phoenix Children’s Hospital’s Molecular Medicine at the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), where cutting-edge cures for childhood diseases are being developed.
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Pictured from left to right: Jenny, Patti Steve and Jeff Luttrell
The Luttrells have learned a few things, too. They’ve learned that their love for each other is more enduring than any disease, and they’ve learned that life is not for worrying about the future. Life, they say, is about being fearless, and they have learned they are strong. As for Jeff, he is still spreading hope, too. He’s a graphic design student, and although he’s recently endured more painful treatments, he is as courageous as ever. He has fought cancer seven times and won. “The one thing you’ve got to remember is to never give up,” he says, in true superhero fashion. “Keep on fighting and just keep going. Just know that things are going to be tough, but there are times it’s going to be a nice life, too.” The Grand Canyon University Run to Fight Children’s Cancer will take place March 8 at Grand Canyon University, 3300 W. Camelback Rd. in Phoenix. The event includes a 10K run, a 5K run/walk, and a survivor’s walk. There’s something for everyone in the family, from arts and crafts, music, jumping castles and more. Registration and packet pick-up information can be found online. Also, this year’s “Inspirations” Annual Fashion Show and Luncheon will be held March 15 from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Arizona Biltmore Resort and Spa, 2400 E. Missouri Ave. in Phoenix. Young survivors and their siblings take the spotlight in a fun and positive way at this signature event, and all funds go to Children’s Cancer Network programs. Information on registration, table sponsorships, model sponsorships and more can be found online. 602-717-9139 www.runtofightcancer.com www.childrenscancernetwork.org
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Tour
d’Artistes
Enjoy an artist reception and visit artist studios in Fountain Hills during the third annual Tour d’Artistes March 7, 8, and 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. This unique weekend event offers a chance to meet and view artwork of over 80 local artists and interact with them as they work,
Writer Donna Kublin
gaining insight into their processes and what inspires them to create. There will also be artists’ demonstrations, snacks and music at some venues and art work will be available for purchase, including paintings, sculptures, jewelry, fiber and gourds. Kicking off the tour is an artist reception March 6 at Fountain Hills Artists Gallery. Sponsored by the Fountain Hills Art League, the self-guided tour of working studios and local galleries is available to those who purchase a Tour Passport Ticket, good for three days. A portion of the ticket price helps fund a scholarship for Fountain Hills art students, art programs at the Fountain Hills Boys and Girls Club, and Free Arts for Abused Children of Arizona. Passport tickets, which include the map/ticket and reception, cost $20 per person.
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Tickets can be purchased from art league members or at Gridley’s of Fountain Hills or Fountain Hills Artists Gallery, the location of the reception March 6, from 5 to 7 p.m. The reception is open to all artists participating in the tour as well as ticket holders. Tickets can be purchased at the reception. Tour visitors whose passport has a stamp from all venues on the tour will be entered into a drawing to win one of four original artworks donated by artists. Stamped passports are turned in at the last venue visited. Well-known metal artist and owner of Kenworthy Custom Metal, Don Kenworthy and his wife Andrea are co-chairs for Tour d’Artistes this year. “The tour was started by Michelle Williams three years ago to raise money and to showcase Fountain Hills as a viable art community giving people a unique opportunity to visit artists at their studios and interact with them,” said Don. “Attendance was great last year on both days of the tour, so we added a third day this year.” More artists and studios are participating than in the past, with 80 artists and 16 venues. Four are art galleries and 12 are private studios being showcased. “Our hopes for this year’s tour is to introduce as many people as we can to all the wonderful artists in Fountain Hills, to raise more money to support and promote the arts in our community, and to help keep art alive in our charities,” said Don, who adds, “Each year we give scholarships to Fountain Hills High School seniors wishing to advance their studies in art.” Don Kenworthy is well-known in the area. Beginning his artistic career in Seattle, Washington 20 years ago, Don has been creating metal art and custom metal work for the residences around Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Cave Creek and Fountain Hills since 2001. The Town of Fountain Hills recently purchased his sculpture called “Big Blue” and placed it in Fountain Hills’ world famous fountain.
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Don explained the background of “Big Blue”: “I started this piece back in 2009 as a commission piece for a client of mine. It was supposed to be an abstract representation of the great blue heron. As I researched more about blue herons I decided it needed to be more realistic in form to represent the majestic bird. This change led to increased costs and my client did not want to raise his budget for the project. I returned his deposit, packed up the half completed piece, placing it in the corner of my studio until the beginning of 2013 when, with no other projects going, I decided to finish it. As it was getting close to completion, my wife and I went for a walk around Fountain Lake, saw a blue heron sitting on the island and talked about how cool it would be to have the piece there. A few days later we were at the Fountain Hills Artists Gallery showing some pictures of him to a fellow artist, who suggested I present the piece to the town’s public art committee. I sent pictures to Sandi Thompson, public art chair, and the rest is history.” Don became interested in metal work as artistic expression when he was working for a small metal fabrication company in Seattle. He worked there for four years and then started his own business in 1994, doing custom metal work for high-end homes around Lake Washington and the greater Seattle area. He explained what helped him start to see himself as a professional artist and not just a welder/ fabricator. “When the designers and architects started calling me to help them with the designs for the metal work on their projects, I felt I had earned my place as an artist.” A real turning point came after one of the
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first jobs he did, a 7,000-squarefoot, three-story home on the waterfront of Mercer Island, where he fabricated and installed the 30-foot-tall structural steel frame for the home. He later returned to design the ornamental railings and metalwork for the finishing touches on the home. “When we finished, the house looked great and
the
developer/contractor
used a picture of the entry rails in their advertising,” said Don. Don’s work, ranging in subject matter and scale, can be seen at Emerson Gallery and at his studio, Kenworthy Custom Metal, both on the tour, and, of course, “Big Blue” at Fountain Lake. Tour
d’Artistes
provides
an
intimate view of local artists at work, an opportunity to see and purchase a variety of artwork, while at the same time supporting the
advancement
expression
in
of
artistic
young
people
through local charities. Tickets for the event can be purchased at Gridley’s of Fountain Hills, 16830 E. Avenue of the Fountains; at Fountain Hills Artists Gallery, 16858 E. Avenue of the Fountains, #103; from Fountain Hills Art League members, or through the arts league website. www.fountainhillsartleague.com www.donkenworthy.com 480-234-1584 Mar ch 2014
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Windsor
Square Writer Paula Theotocatos
In this age of peas-in-a-pod sameness of suburban development, it is a delight to stroll through historic neighborhoods of unique homes that give us a rare glimpse into the past. Phoenix has several residential areas dating back to the early 20th century that have been restored with love, cash and hard work. Stellar among these is Windsor Square, which was recently recognized by CNNMoney magazine as one of the “Best Big City Neighborhoods to Live In.” Phoenix magazine featured Windsor Square as one of the city’s “Hot Neighborhoods” because of its tree-shaded homes
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on winding streets, excellent schools and its access to light rail and nearby restaurants. Back in 1929 when the Windsor Square project was first announced, developers promised it would “stand out as one of the very finest home communities in the entire Southwest.” Bordered by Central Avenue and Seventh Street and Pasadena Avenue and Oregon Avenue, builders boasted of features like curbs, sidewalks, ornamental lights and landscaping in the 260-home now-historic district. Phoenix’s population was about 70,000 back then, and its trolley line ended at Thomas Street. On Sunday, March 30, you will have a chance to walk through Windsor Square on a self-guided walking tour that features 12 historic homes, beautiful gardens and a beer garden. Based at Central Avenue and Camelback Road, the event will also feature live music, fine arts and crafts from street vendors and delicious food from central Phoenix’s famous food trucks. Presented by the Windsor Square Neighborhood Association, the self-guided walking tour and festivities, which run from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., will give you an extraordinary look at the distinctive architectural styles. You might even pick up a decorating idea or two. Historic Home Tour committee chair and Windsor Square resident Jeffrey Long notes: “The residents of Windsor Square take great pride in their neighborhood, and every other year we open our doors to share the rich history of our north central Phoenix neighborhood with the public. This year’s will be one of our best tours yet with a wide variety of homes, a beer garden and a fantastic choice of street vendors featuring everything from food trucks to unique gifts and crafts to home improvement services.” Tickets will be available for purchase online in advance of the tour, as well as the day of the tour at Orange and 2nd Street, which is located one block east of Central Avenue and just north of Camelback Road. Free parking will be available and there will be a discount of $1 for attendees who show light rail tickets for the day. The cost is $15 for adults; children 12 and under are admitted free. 602-619-4444 www.windsorsquarephoenix.org
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who rock Writer Tom Scanlon
The genre-bending Women Who Rock features outfits, hand-written lyrics, guitars and other artifacts from dozens of powerful female vocalists, covering a period from the early days of the blues to current pop. Perched like a security guard outside the exhibit is an ordinary-looking piano … not so ordinary, as exhibit notes explain this was Lady Gaga’s childhood piano. “She wrote her first song when she was five years old. Joan Jett rocks, and so does Mavis Staples. Pat Benatar is a rocker and so is Aretha Franklin. Madonna rocks, as did Ma Rainey, long before her. As the Musical Instrument Museum’s Women Who Rock exhibit shows, you don’t have to be a rocker to rock. This dynamic and thought-provoking exhibit will be on display through April 20. While the exhibit itself has plenty of recorded music, a Mavis Staples concert here March 12, and several other live performances, including Nicole Atkins March 8, and Storm Large April 17. In addition to a vibrant solo career, Mavis Staples sang with her father and siblings as the Staple Singers, the brilliant R&B/gospel crossover act that had a string of 1970s hits, including “Let’s Do It Again” and “I’ll Take You There,” a song that truly delivers on its promise. With a voice that seems like it just left church and is on the way to a blues bar, Mavis Staples is a perfect example of a non-rocker who just flat out rocks.
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It was called ‘Dollar Bills’ and was inspired by Pink Floyd’s ‘Money.’” Fitting, as Lady G would later make a lotta dollar bills, with her tours grossing an estimated half-billion dollars. The exhibit also features the “meat dress” Lady Gaga wore to the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards, the sexy bustier Madonna wore on her controversial Blonde Ambition Tour in 1990 and a diamante dress from Tina Turner’s Wildest Dreams Tour (1996). Over on the right wall are the Bob Mackie-designed dress Cher wore in her Half Breed era (1973), the skintight two-piece Britney Spears wore in 2000, and sexy Sheila E and Janet Jackson outfits. The emphasis is on fashion, yet this is hardly all glam and sizzle. To stimulate wide-ranging thought, there is a 1923 record from the powerful, influential Ma Rainey, as well as a somewhat jolting 1920s poster advertising “the world’s largest colored show.” Trailblazing women of color are prevalent in Women Who Rock, which features blues great Bessie Smith,
a poster for Billie Holiday’s just-out-
Museum in Cleveland. Here at the
of-jail 1948 concert at Carnegie Hall
MIM, more than 10,000 have visited
(ticket range, $1.20-3.60), Ruth Brown
the exhibit.
dresses from 1949 and 1988 and a copy of Mahalia Jackson’s “The
“The
World’s Greatest Gospel Singer” 1954
contributions women have made, not
record.
only to rock and roll per se, but more
exhibition
honors
the
broadly to popular music – primarily On the flip side, there is also plenty
American, yes – and to changes in
of pop, with Spears, Cyndi Lauper,
society from the late 1920s through
Christina Aguilera and a few other hit
the present day,” Strawn said. “Blues,
makers.
gospel, jazz, country music, rockabilly, Motown, soul, folk, disco, R&B, punk,
And if you’re looking for the women
new wave, hip hop, and pop all are
who really rocked, as in fire up the
represented as influences, extensions
electric guitars and jam, the exhibit
and contemporaries of rock music.”
flicks a metaphorical lighter to Kim Deal (set list from a 1986 Pixies concert),
As clothing is such a big part of the
Joan Jett (hand-written “Cherry Bomb”
exhibit in a museum that celebrates
lyrics from her Runaways days), Heart
musical instruments, Strawn explained,
(Nancy and Ann Wilson dresses, and
“Many of the artists represented in
Ann’s guitar), Pat Benatar and Chrissie
the exhibition have used clothing as
Hynde.
key elements of their performance aesthetics,
The
exhibit’s
public
leather
statements. In this way, the outfits
jacket and left-hooked by a Patti
have been part of the bigger picture
Smith mid-1970s outfit, faded baseball
of music making, as have musical
jacket, racing T-shirt and battered,
instruments and other relevant tools.”
Hynde’s
glam
their
images, and to make sociopolitical
by
on
shape
is
counter-jabbed
accent
to
duct-taped army boots. Strawn’s favorite piece in the exhibit That rocks!
is,
indeed,
an
article
of
clothing.
“Billie Holiday was one of our nation’s Cullen Strawn, the curator of the north
greatest talents, and possessions of
Scottsdale exhibit, holds a Bachelor
hers are rare. The fox fur stole in the
of Music in Performance degree from
exhibition is a symbol of her success
the University of North Carolina at
despite the otherwise dark and difficult
Greensboro. He noted the Women
realities of her life.”
Who Rock exhibit was developed in 2011 by Meredith Rutledge-Borger at
www.mim.org
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Mar ch 2014
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marketplace
Wild Holly Gallery Art for Your Body - Wild Holly Gallery Introduces its Wearable Art Collection Wild Holly Gallery in Carefree is proud to announce the opening of its Wearable Art Collection. The Wearable Art Collection features eclectic art from 92 different artists. The collection, which owner Holly Bergman calls ‘art for your body,’ includes the work of 25 new artists who utilize a variety of materials to create clothing, leather goods, jewelry, handbags, shawls, hats and just about anything else. For example, you may find an Art Norby sculpture with a Tess McGuire hand-felted hat perched on its head. The gallery is proud to announce the addition of Teri Jo Summer’s one-of-a-kind creations to the wearable art department. Teri Jo Summer has worked as an accessories and clothing designer for nearly 30 years. Her collections have been well received in fine stores and galleries throughout the United States, Canada, Australia, Japan and Europe. Her body of work ranging from belts to bags to specialty clothing continues to evolve. As an animal lover, Teri is donating a portion of all her sales at the Wild Holly Gallery to Ms. Bergman’s second love, Foothills Animal Rescue in Scottsdale. The gallery even shows handmade alpaca dog coats! 480-595-8757 22 Easy St., Carefree www.wildhollygallery.com
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480.596.9222
www.summit-arizona.com 7202 E. Carefree Dr. • Bldg 3, Suite 1 • Carefree, AZ 85377
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Wild HollyGallery.com
Mar ch 2014
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local index
ImagesAZ Magazine 623-341-8221 www.imagesaz.com For Advertising Information Shelly Spence :: 623-341-8221 shelly@imagesaz.com
Absentee Homeowner Services Desert Lifestyle Management 480-907-4662 www.desertlifestylemgt.com Plan B Home Services 602-540-7900 www.planbhomeservices.com AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING Priceless Plumbing Heating & Air 480-595-5330 www.pricelessplumbing.com Proskill Services 623-551-7473 www.proskillservices.com
Cave Creek Museum 480-488-2764
Bridal and Formal Wear The Quintessential Bride and Formal Wear 18291 N. Pima Rd. A125 480-419-7755 www.qbrideandformals.com
Desert Foothills Community Association 480-488-4043
Buy and Sell Gold American Federal 480-553-5282 www.americanfederal.com
Art Gallery Wild Holly Gallery 480-595-8757 22 Easy Street Carefree, AZ www.wildhollygallery.com
College Paradise Valley Community College 602-493-2600 my.maricopa.edu
Artificial plants, flowers and succulent Arizona Silk Flower 480-991-0285 23425 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ste A-107
COMMUNITY ASSISTANCE Animal Control 602-506-7387
Automotive Sales AZ Used Care Factory 602-359-2539 www.azusedcarfactory.com Luxury Motorsports 855-497-3675 www.luxuryms.com Sanderson Lincoln 602-375-7500 www.sandersonlincoln.com Beauty Studio C Salon 480-664-0602 www.studiocsalonsaz.com Skin Care Merle Norman Cosmetics 480-948-1659 7001 N. Scottsdale Rd., B-125 Bike SHop Flat Tire Bike Shop 6149 E. Cave Creek Road 480-488-5261 www.flattirebikes.com
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Boutique Stefan Mann 3455 N. Scottsdale Road, Suite G10 480-488-3371 www.stefanmann.com
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Desert Awareness Committee 480-488-1090
Desert Foothills Community Education 480-575-2440 Desert Foothills Land Trust 480-488-6131 Desert Foothills Theater 480-488-1981 Foothills Community Foundation 480-488-1090 McDowell Sonoran Conservancy 480-998-7971 www.mcdowellsonoran.org
Community Loan Closet 480-488-8400
Newcomers Club of Scottsdale 480-990-1976 www.newcomersclubofscottsdale.com
Foothills Animal Rescue 480-488-9890
Rotary Club 480-585-9157
Foothills Caring Corps 480-488-1105
Sonoran Arts League 480-575-6624
Foothills Food Bank 480-488-1145
Soroptimist International 480-522-6692
Foothills Caring Corps 480-488-1105
YMCA 480-596-9622
Salvation Army 480-488-3590 St. Vincent de Paul Society 602-254-3338 COMMUNITY organizations American Legion Post No. 34 & Auxiliary 480-488-2669 Arizona Archaeological Society 480-595-9255 Arizona Musicfest 480-488-0806
Financial Planning Investments Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Pope Scanlon Team Glee Pope - 480-502-6072 Owen Scanlon - 480-922-7909 Summit Wealth Management 7202 E. Carefree Drive, Building 3, Suite 1 480-596-9222 www.summit-arizona.com Flooring Carefree Floors 480-515-9999 www.carefreefloors.com
For Advertising Information Shelly Spence :: 623-341-8221 shelly@imagesaz.com
Government/business Motor Vehicle Department 602-255-0072 Social Security 800-772-1213 Voter Registration 602-506-1511 Handyman Desert Foothills Handyman Service 602-540-9794 www.1handyman4you.com Hauling/Rubbish Removal Rubbish Works Local Junk Removal & Recycling 480-545-1220 Ext. 711 800-501-9324 www.rubbishworks.com/phoenix Health care Cierra Medical Walk-In Care 480-575-0131 Desert Foothills Medical Center 480-488-9220
House Cleaning The Maids Scottsdale 602-923-4000 www.themaidsscottsdale.com
PEst control Paradise Pest Control 602-677-9780 www.paradisepest.com
Insurance Allstate Insurance Frank M. Schubert 480-515-6259
PET Supplies Pinnacle Horse & Pet 480-575-1242 6015 E. Cave Creek Road www.pinnaclehorseandpet.com
State Farm Kyle Vanlandingham 480-515-4400 Landscape Design and Maintenance A Couple of Green Thumbs 6061 E. Cave Creek Road 480-488-2155 www.acoupleofgreenthumbs.com Azul-Verde Design Group, Inc. 480-595-0611 www.azulverde.com Library Appaloosa Library 480-312-7323
Mayo Clinic 480-515-6296
Desert Broom Library 602-262-4636
Mayo Hospital 480-585-6296
Desert Foothills Library 480-488-2286
Paradise Valley Hospital 602-923-5000 Scottsdale Healthcare 480-324-7000 7400 E. Thompson Peak Pkwy. 480-323-3000 90th St. & Shea Blvd. Home COntractor & Design New Legacy Building & Design 480-363-6713 www.newlagacybuilding.com Home Services Desert Lifestyle Management 480-907-4662 www.desertlifestylemgt.com Plan B Home Services 602-540-7900 www.planbhomeservices.com
Photography Karen Sophia Photography 480-543-7526 www.karensophiaphotography.com Loralei Photography 602-795-0555 www.loraleiphotography.com Plumbing Priceless Plumbing Heating & Air 480-595-5330 www.pricelessplumbing.com Proskill Services 623-551-7473 www.proskillservices.com Podiatry Westland Family Foot and Ankle Specialist 480-361-2500 www.westlandffas.com
Outdoor Furniture Carefree Outdoor Living 480-575-3091 www.carefreeoutdoor.com
Pool Design/construction Azul-Verde Design Group, Inc. 480-595-0611 www.azulverde.com
Outdoor Lighting Let There be Light, LLC 480-575-3204 www.lettherebelightllc.com
Post office Scottsdale Post Office 7339 E. Williams Dr. 480-513-2935
Parks Cave Creek Regional Park 623-465-0431
Real Estate Jean Ransdell Russ Lyon Sotheby’s 480-294-3257 www.arizonaluxuryrealty.com
Gateway Desert Awareness 480-488-1400 Spur Cross Ranch 480-488-6601 Cave Creek Ranger 480-595-3300
local index
ImagesAZ Magazine 623-341-8221 www.imagesaz.com
Tom Scappaticci Russ Lyon Sotheby’s 602-430-4081 www.arizonaluxuryrealty.com
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local index
ImagesAZ Magazine 623-341-8221 www.imagesaz.com For Advertising Information Shelly Spence :: 623-341-8221 shelly@imagesaz.com
Restaurant English Rose Tea Room 480-488-4812 201 Easy St. Carefree, AZ www.carefreetea.com Retirement Community The Heritage at Carefree 480-488-1622 www.heritagecarefree.com SCHOOL Annunciation Catholic School 480-361-8234 Bella Vista Private School 480-575-6001 Black Mountain Elementary School 480-575-2100
The Scottsdale School 480-451-9442 www.thescottsdaleschool.com
Horseshoe Trails Elementary School 480-272-8500
Ventana Academic School 480-488-9362
Little Sunshine’s Playhouse and Preschool 480-585-7000 www.littlesunshine.com Lone Mountain Elementary School 480-437-3000 McDowell Mtn Ranch KinderCare 480-538-0411 www.kindercare.com
Career Success School 480-575-0075
Notre Dame Preparatory 480-634-8200 www.notredamepreparatory.org
Copper Ridge School 480-484-1400
Our Lady of Joy Preschool 480-595-6409
Community Education Preschool 480-575-2072
Paradise Valley Community College at Black Mountain 602-493-2600
Desert Foothills Lutheran Preschool 480-585-8007
Pinnacle High School 602-449-4000
Desert Canyon Middle School 480-484-4600
Pinnacle Peak Elementary School 480-538-7120 www.pvschools.net
Desert Sun Academy 480-575-2900 Desert Willow Elementary School 480-575-2800 DO Re Mi School of the Arts 480-451-8233 El Dorado Private School 480-502-6878 www.eldoradops.com Foothills Academy 480-488-5583 Goddard School 480-437-1000
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Grayhawk Elementary School 602-449-6600 www.pvschools.net
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Pope John XXIII Catholic School Community 480-905-0939 www.popejohnxxiii.org Quality Interactive Montessori School 480-575-5269 www.qimontessori.com Scottsdale Christian Academy 602-992-5100 www.scarizona.org Scottsdale Preparatory Academy 480-776-1970 www.scottsdaleprep.org Sonoran Trails Middle School Main Line 480-272-8600 Attendance: 480-272-8604
Sheriff Sheriff’s Posse 602-876-1895 Shopping Cave Creek Candle & Gifts 6245 E. Cave Creek Road 480-488-7799 www.cavecreekcandles.com Finders Creekers 602-739-3494 6554 E. Cave Creek Road Las Tiendas 6140 E. Cave Creek Rd. www.lastiendascavecreek.com Stefan Mann 3455 N. Scottsdale Road, Suite G10 480-488-3371 www.stefanmann.com Technology Support Tech 4 Life 748 Easy Street #5 480-553-9171 www.techfourlife.com Tire Repair C&R Tire 623-551-6255 www.candrtire.com Vacation Rental Homes Kobey’s Cozy Desert Oasis 602-359-2539 www.kobeyscozydesertoasis.com Water Softener & Filtration Priceless Plumbing Heating & Air 480-595-5330 www.pricelessplumbing.com Proskill Services 623-551-7473 www.proskillservices.com
For Advertising Information Shelly Spence :: 623-341-8221 shelly@imagesaz.com
window treatments Carefree Coverings 602-617-2920 34522 N. Scottsdale Rd. Suite 100B Worship Black Mountain Baptist Church 480-488-1975 www.bmbcaz.com Black Mountain United Church of Christ 480-575-1801 www.bmucc.com
Desert Foothills Lutheran Church 480-585-8007 www.dflc.org
North Scottsdale Christian 480-367-8182 www.northscottsdalechristian.com
Desert Hills Presbyterian Church 480-488-3384 www.deserthills.org
North Ridge Community Church 480-515-4673 www.northridge.org
Desert Mission United Methodist Church 480-595-1814 www.desertmissionumc.org
North Valley Church of Christ 480-473-7611 www.nvcoc.net
Desert Valley Baptist Church 623-465-9461
Canyon Church of Christ 623-889-3388 www.canyonchurch.org
Episcopal Church-The Nativity 480-307-9216 www.nativityscottsdale.org
Carefree Highway Community Church 480-488-5565 www.carefreechurch.us
First Baptist Church of Cave Creek 480-488-2958
Cave Creek Adventist Fellowship 602-663-1268 www.cavecreekchurch.com
First Church of Christ Scientist 480-488-2665 www.csarizona.com
Christ Anglican Episcopal Church 480-488-0525 www.christchurchaz.org
Good Shepherd of the Hills Episcopal Church 480-488-3283 www.goodshepherdaz.org
Christ the Lord Lutheran 480-488-2081 www.ctlcarefree.org
Highlands Church 480-348-9191 www.highlandschurch.org
Church of Jesus Christ of LDS 480-488-3035 www.lds.org
Light of the Desert Lutheran Church 480-563-5500 www.lightofthedesert.org
Congregation Or Chadash 480-342-8858 www.congregationorchadash.org Coolwater Christian Church 480-585-5554 www.coolwaterchurch.org Covenant Community Church 480-419-0844 www.covcom.us Crossroads Christian Fellowship Church 623-465-9461
Living Water Lutheran Church 480-473-8400 www.lwlcaz.org Lone Mountain Fellowship Church 480-818-5653 www.lonemountainfellowship.org Mountain Valley Church 602-531-5432 www.mountainvalleychurch.com New Covenant Lutheran Church 480-860-0169 www.newcovenantaz.org
local index
ImagesAZ Magazine 623-341-8221 www.imagesaz.com
Our Lady of Joy Catholic Church 480-488-2229 www.oloj.org Pinnacle Presbyterian Church 480-585-9448 www.pinnaclepres.org Redeemer Lutheran Church 480-585-7002 redeemer.vze.com Sanctuary Church 480-656-0081 www.sanctuaryforscottsdale.com Son Rise Community Church 480-502-2834 www.sonrisescottsdale.org Spirit in the Desert Retreat Center 480-488-5218 www.spiritinthedesert.org St. Bernard of Clairvaux Catholic Church 480-661-9843 www.stbernardscottsdale.org St. Gabriel the Archangel Catholic Church 480-595-0883 www.stgacc.org St. Patrick’s Catholic Community Church 480-998-3843 www.stpatrickscottsdale.org Via de Cristo United Methodist Fellowship 480-515-4490 www.viadecristo.com
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recipe
Irish Soda Bread
Writer Jenn Korducki Krenn // Recipe courtesy of Ina Garten
With St. Patrick’s Day around the corner, embrace the luck of the Irish and give friends and family a taste of this zesty soda bread. A staple at mealtime on the Emerald Isle, this crumbly, currantstudded loaf will conjure images of rolling green hills and cozy bed and breakfasts. Traditional Irish soda bread was made cheaply with flour, baking soda, soured milk and salt. Before baking, a cross was cut on top that was often said to ward off the devil and protect the household. Beyond the spiritual significance, however, is a practical explanation: slicing the dough helps the bread stretch and expand as it rises. It is best enjoyed freshly baked and warm.
Ingredients: 4 cups all-purpose flour, plus extra for currants
Directions: Preheat oven to 375°F. Line a sheet pan with parchment paper.
4 tablespoons sugar 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt 4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) cold unsalted butter, cut
Combine flour, sugar, baking soda and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Add butter and mix on low speed until butter is mixed into flour.
into 1/2-inch cubes 1 3/4 cups cold buttermilk, shaken
With a fork, lightly beat buttermilk, egg and orange zest together
1 extra-large egg, lightly beaten
in a measuring cup. With the mixer on low speed, slowly add the
1 teaspoon grated orange zest 1 cup dried currants
buttermilk mixture to the flour mixture. Combine currants with 1 tablespoon of flour and mix into dough. It will be very wet. Dump the dough onto a well-floured board and knead it a few times into a round loaf. Place the loaf on the prepared sheet pan and lightly cut an X into the top of the bread with a serrated knife. Bake for 45 to 55 minutes, or until a cake tester comes out clean. When you tap the loaf, it will have a hollow sound. Cool on a baking rack. Serve warm or at room temperature.
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When experience count s
The Agents You Use & Refer
A well-earned North Valley reputation for strong work ethic and valuable networking connections makes Jean Ransdell and Tom Scappaticci the smart choice for your next purchase or sale. The Extra Mile In today’s market, nothing less gets the job done. Whether buying or selling, an experienced real estate agent who is quick to see solutions and not shy about testing limits to pursue your best interests is what you need and what you get with Jean and Tom. Winning Negotiation Style Well-seasoned in the art of negotiation, Jean and Tom are a valuable asset with the diplomacy of an ambassador and the perseverance of a bulldog.
Tom Scappaticci
Jean Ransdell
602.430.4081
480.294.3257
tom@tomscappaticci.com Realtor®, Associate Broker
jean@jransdell.com Realtor®, ABR, e-PRO, Relocation Specialist, 2013-2014 Pinnacle Peak RMS Tour Director
You want them on your team, and it doesn’t take long to see why! Up-to-Date Laws, finance strategy, tools and resources, market trends and so much more change almost daily in Arizona real estate. Jean and Tom stay on top of current industry information and education and hold numerous certifications such as Associate Broker License, ABR and ePro Certification. Luxury Homes & Lots With 50+ years of combined experience in AZ luxury real estate and hundreds of transactions under their belts, you benefit from this powerhouse team’s in-depth experience in luxury home and luxury lot sales. Land and lots are, especially, a unique sale or buy with very different considerations to be mastered. Tom prides himself in being that expert. Check out www.ArizonaLuxuryRealty.com
Power of t he Brand
5320 SF, 6 BR, 5.5 BA, Offered at $1,095,000
With Jean and Tom comes the most prestigious brand in Arizona luxury real estate – Russ Lyon Sotheby’s International Realty. The world reaches Arizona and Arizona reaches the world via this unmatched combination of leaders in the local and international markets.
7428 SF, 5BR, 7 BA, Offered at $2,950,000
Trust Jean Ransdell and Tom Scappaticci for Results! They are the Team You Will Proudly Use and Refer! 68
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