Dec 1, 2021
MARANANEWS The Voice of Marana since 2007
Volume 28 • Number 48
Santa on Stage
Oct. 7, 2020
Gaslight Theatre debuts holiday show based on movie Elf | Page 16
INSIDE
DESERT DEFENSE
Our Town
A new art book details the history and conservation efforts of the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, illustrated by local scratchboard artist Priscilla Baldwin. Read more on page 13.
How to help this season | Page 4
Holiday festivals bringing holly, jolly fun Staff Report Tucson Local Media
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ightly temperatures are dipping into the 40s and Christmas lights are adorning the hillsides. Aside from ‘Hamilton’ finally these being a reminder that you really have to get started on that holihits Tucson day shopping, it also means holiday festivals and events will be filling | Page 18 the calendars! This weekend will see the Oro Valthird of the state’s pandemic in October was the most in the Ulysse Bexn ley Festival of the Arts & Holiday Tree high, according to the latest Bu- state since 1976, the first year Cronkite News Lighting. The event, sponsored by the for which BLS numbers are reau of Labor Statistics data. Town of Oro Valley and the Southern It was the fourth straight available. rizona’s unemployment Arizona Arts & Cultural Alliance, is a Job gains were spread across month of a falling jobless rate PCC soccer rate continued its steady two-day holiday festival that will allow forofthe state, even as the over- almost all categories, with the USE 11/24 BB EXP Change theme to Christmas in background a santa hat onfallLisa instead the pilgrim hat. Send declineandinplaceOctober, 2) 1054 E Royal Oak Road, Oro Valley, AZ 85755 ($560,000) 3BD/3BA/Den achieving goals people of (2,665 all ages,sq cultures ft) and backcontinued biggest increase in the leisure ingmetoProof. 5.2%, down a full all workforce has Carrington MLS #22121107 grounds to celebrate the arts. plan in Sun City O.V. | Page 20 percentage point from just two growing. The 3.65 million peo- and hospitality industry that ple in the Arizona workforce earlier and almost one- (2,575 See HOLIDAY FESTIVALS, P6 ) 4BD/3BA 1) 1277 W Varese Way, Oro Valley, AZ 85755months ($430,000 +Loft sq ft) See UNEMPLOYMENT, P5 Photo courtesy Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum & Priscilla Baldwin
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Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
Hot Picks BrewLights 2021. The Reid Park Zoo is hosting the hoppiest event of the holiday season. The zoo is teaming up with local craft breweries so you can enjoy the flavors of Tucson while taking in holiday lights and faux-snow. Participating breweries include Barrio Brewing, Catalina Brewing, BlackRock Brewers, Copper Mine Brewing and more. The evening will also feature musical entertainment from the After 7 Band. There will also be carousel rides, hot chocolate (with or without holiday spirits), and more than one million twinkling lights and lighted animals displays. Friday, Dec. 3. 3400 Zoo Court. $35 for adult tickets with beer tastings. $11 for adults without beer tastings. $7 for children. reidparkzoo.org/event/ brewlights-2021
Dec. 4 at the AVA Amphitheater at Casino del Sol. 5655 W. Valencia Road. Free and open to the public.
Tamal Festival. Casino del Sol is hosting the 16th annual Tucson Tamal & Heritage Festival, which celebrates “the rich tastes, smells and variation of tamales from the Southwest and Mexico.” In addition to a tamale contest, there will also be artisan vendors and live music. Contest categories are for traditional red tamales, green corn tamales, gourmet tamales, and sweet tamales. Contestants will compete for a $750 prize for all around best tamale, as well as multiple smaller prizes. 10 a.m. Saturday,
WEDNESDAY
Mercado Holiday Bazaar. The MSA Annex is hosting their annual holiday market, where more than 50 local artists and artisans are selling their goods in the open air. This is a great way to get a lot of holiday shopping done while also supporting local creators. And because it takes place at the MSA Annex, you can also enjoy food and drinks as you stroll through the stalls. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Friday, Dec. 17 through 19. 100 S Avenida del Convento.
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Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
Our Town: Ways to Help this Holiday Season Alexandra Pere Tucson Local Media
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hile many of us are focused on celebrating the holidays, it’s a time when others are struggling to make ends meet. According to Feeding America, more than 60 million people went to food banks and community programs to keep their bellies full in 2020. The pandemic has exacerbated hardships for many, but if you are one of the lucky few who can share your gratitude for surviving another year, consider donating to these local food
and gift drives this holiday N. First Ave. (Through season to make the holiday Dec. 13) KVOA Studios, 209 bright for a stranger. W. Elm St. (Through Dec. 20) Season 4 Hope Food Drive Youth Education Supporters Holiday News 4 Tucson has Drive partnered up with local sponsors to donate toys, Youth Education Supfood, and diapers to the Community Food Bank porters (aka YES) is a of Southern Arizona, group that supports famToys for Tots, and the ilies in the Marana UniDiaper Bank of Southern fied School District. The Arizona. Drop off toys, group, which supplied food, and diaper dona- more than 1,200 kids in tions from 4 p.m. to 6:30 the district with backp.m. at: packs earlier this year, CDTFD Station #181, is now raising funds for 99 E. Tallahassee Drive. holiday meals and gifts (Through Dec. 6) for Marana students. TFD Station #20, 4798 Contact Pat Johnson at
bayesnana@gmail.com Toy Drive” poster. for details on how you can help. Tucson Toys for Tots GAP Ministries Santa’s Helper Donate new, unwrapped toys and stocking stuffers to GAP ministries, 2861 N Flowing Wells Road, by Dec. 10. GAP Ministries is open from 9 am to 5 pm. Dollar Tree Operation Homefront Toy Drive
Donate toys to locations all over Tucson by visiting the Tucson Toys for Tots website at https:// tinyurl.com/3e89mp9k. Search by zip code to find the closest donation site. Hours, days, and addresses are available on their website. In 2020, Tucson Toys for Tots supported 38,998 children and 40,513 toys were distributed.
Purchase a toy and doSalvation Army nate it to the Dollar Tree’s Christmas Angel Tree donation boxes until Dec. Donate in-person or 2. Donation boxes can be identified with a “Holiday online to the Salvation Ar-
my’s Christmas Angel Tree toy drive through Dec. 24. Don’t want to leave the house? No problem! Visit their wish list website to donate from your laptop. In-person locations include: Foothills Mall (7401 N La Cholla Blvd.), La Encantada Mall (2905 E Skyline Drive), Park Place Mall (5870 E Broadway Blvd.) and Tucson Mall (4500 N Oracle Road). The Salvation Army Hospitality House, 1002 N. Main Avenue, is open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Unemployment Continued from P1
was battered last year by pandemic shutdowns and travel bans. Jobs in that sector grew 17.6% from a year earlier, according to the BLS. “It represents how much the economy has started to rebound from the pandemic lows,” said Andrew Sugrue, the assistant director of policy and advocacy at the Arizona Center for Economic Progress. “And it represents that people are ready to be rehired and ready to be employed in the aftermath of the pandemic.” The preliminary October jobless rate was still higher than the state’s pre-pandemic unemployment levels, which ranged from a low of 4.7% in December 2019 to 5% in March 2020, when COVID-19 first hit. And it was higher than the national rate of 4.6% for the month, a rate touted Wednesday by President Joe Biden as more evidence of “historic progress” on the economy under his watch. “Unemploy ment is down to 4.6%, two years faster than everyone expected,” Biden said. “When we started at this job, it was over 14%. “Last year, there were 21 million unemployment insurance claims before the Thanksgiv-
ing holiday. Today, there were 2.4 million,” he said. “This is a historic jobs recovery: 5.6 million jobs created since I took office.” The drop in unemployment claims was mirrored in Arizona, where the Department of Economic Security said there were 19,067 total jobless claims last week, compared to 404,748 in the week before Thanksgiving last year. Improvements in the job market have helped drive increases in wages and disposable income, according to the White House. But those gains have been tempered by a surge in inflation. BLS said the consumer price index rose 6.2% between October 2020 and 2021. The rate in the Phoenix metro region was 7.1%, driven by higher food prices and a staggering 23.3% rise in energy costs, including a 46.8% rise in the price of gasoline. Biden conceded this week that inflation is driving price increases that “hurt American pocketbooks and undermine gains in wages and disposable income.” On Tuesday, he announced a plan to release 50 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, in conjunction with similar moves by other countries, in an effort to drive down spi-
Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
raling energy costs. And while there have been employment gains in most industries, the increases have not come across the board. In addition to the return of leisure and hospitality jobs, professional and business service jobs in Arizona grew by 6.4% and the trade, transportation and utilities sector rose 5.5%, according to BLS data. But the data also showed that construction jobs grew a scant 1.3% while the number of government jobs was unchanged and the number of information jobs actually declined by 0.9%. The increases in hospitality industry jobs can be explained at least in part by the availability of COVID-19 vaccines, which have led to relaxation of business and travel restrictions. Sugrue said he thinks one reason people are returning to work has to do with their “comfort with being able to return to the workforce and the wide availability of the vaccines.” “As long as the virus continues to be controlled, and case numbers continue to fall, I think you’ll see better employment numbers,” he said. For more stories from Cronkite News, visit cronkitenews.azpbs.org.
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Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
Holiday festivals: OV and Marana
Courtesy Photo
Continued from P1
The festival includes a variety of arts, live performances and a tree lighting celebration. Starting on Saturday, Dec. 4, the festival will have food trucks, photos with Santa and the Golder Ranch Fire Truck, caroling, and local artists selling their crafts. Performers on the main stage at the Oro Valley Marketplace include Oro Valley Team Dance, the Ironwood Ridge High School Jazz Band, the Wilson Elementary Choir, Saguaro Stompers Clog Dance Company, DJs playing holiday favorites, Cross Middle School Jazz Combo and more. The mission of the Festival of the Arts is to “connect art and the community by presenting an annual arts festival and by promoting the arts in the Southern Arizona community,” according to Oro Valley officials. The festival runs from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday Dec. 4, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 5, at 12155 N. Oracle Road. Admission is free. Marana is once again
celebrating the most wonderful time of the year with a Holiday Festival and Christmas Tree Lighting on Saturday, Dec. 4. And unlike 2020’s drive-thru event, this year’s festival includes a variety vendors and food trucks. The free annual event will include appearances by Santa and Mrs. Claus along with live music, snacks and drinks, games and the lighting of a 25-foot-tall Christmas tree just after sunset. Santa and Mrs. Claus will arrive at 3 p.m. accompanied by the Marana High marching band and Marana cheerleaders. Dozens of vendors will also be on hand for a holiday artisan marketplace, making it an ideal opportunity to support local artists while whittling away at your gift-buying list. The performance schedule includes the Marana Children’s Choir, Desert Dance Collective, Kevin Pakulis, Marana High School Chamber Orchestra, Mountain View High School Dance and more. That way, there’s music and entertainment for every taste.
There will also be plenty for kids to do, besides presenting their wish list to Santa. Lucky Cat Social Art will help kids create ornaments for the Christmas tree. Those 10 and under can hit a bounce zone, while those 10 and over can have fun at an inflatable zone. In addition, there will games, a holiday kiddie train and a foam snow dance party (which will leave the kids wet, so bring a change of clothes). How lucky are we in Southern Arizona, that winter snow is a treat, not a hassle. Family Joint Pizzeria, Jake’s Donuts, Tucson Kona Ice, Meatball Madness, Smokin’ Monster and dozens of other food trucks will be on hand. The festival kicks off at 3 p.m. in downtown Marana at 11555 W. Civic Center Drive. The tree will light up at 6 p.m. Parking is in all the surrounding lots (MMC and MHC Healthcare), including marked dirt lots. The tree show plays every night, Dec 5-31, on the hour every hour from 5 to 8 p.m.
Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
Talonya Adams verdict looms over Hobbs, governor’s race Jeremy Duda Arizona Mirror
J
ust a few weeks ago, things were coming together for Katie Hobbs in a way that few Democratic gubernatorial candidates in Arizona could ever say. Buoyed by the socalled “audit” of the 2020 election in Maricopa County, a widely mocked affair conducted by conspiracy theorists who reached a series of dubious conclusions after months of work, Hobbs, who as secretary of state serves as Arizona’s top elections official, was secure in her status as the Democratic frontrunner. Her frequent appearances on national cable television programs boosted her fundraising and name recognition to the point that most observers had simply penciled her in for the general election, despite having two opponents in the Democratic primary. The dynamics of the Hobbs campaign and the governor’s race changed dramatically this month when a federal jury found in favor of Talonya Adams, who was fired from her job as a policy advisor for the Senate Democrats in 2015, when Hobbs was the chamber’s minority leader. In 2019, a jury in federal court agreed with Adams, a Black woman who argued that she was underpaid in the Senate
as a result of racial and gender discrimination. And a jury sided with Adams again earlier this month when it found that she was fired for complaining about that discriminatory pay. Now, many Democrats worry about what the verdicts mean for the gubernatorial race. Hobbs “is treating this issue with the utmost seriousness and takes responsibility for her role, and is continuing to learn how to be a better ally. The verdict remains the same as in 2019, which shows the facts haven’t changed—in fact, these systemic inequities still exist in the state legislature. Katie will continue to do what is necessary to address these systemic issues,” her campaign said in a statement to the Arizona Mirror. In a recent interview with the Mirror, Hobbs noted that the firing was nearly seven years ago and the first trial was two years ago. It’s “not a new issue,” she said. However, many political observers expect the jury decision for Adams, and the underlying issues behind it, to be a problem for her in both the primary and general elections. Equitable pay across racial and gender lines is a core issue for the Democratic base. The finding that Hobbs acted in a discriminatory manner has led to an outpouring of criticism. A group of African-American lead-
ers penned a letter urging people of color to “reconsider” their support for her. Adams has said Hobbs is “unfit” to serve as governor. Hobbs’ response to the verdict has fanned the flames. She defended Adams’ firing as not discriminatory and not a result of her race or gender, saying there were problems with her performance, including some that she alleges weren’t disclosed during the four-year federal court battle. “I don’t think Democrats can afford to have any candidate who is under a cloud to start off,” said Ann Wallack, a former chairwoman of the Maricopa County Democratic Party. Wallack said she’s been supporting Hobbs, and wants to continue doing so. But she also wants to be responsive to the feelings of the African-American community and other minority groups. If they think Hobbs is untenable as a candidate, Wallack said that’s of great concern to her. Roy Herrera, a prominent Democratic campaign attorney, said Hobbs’ explanation for the firing doesn’t square with what the jury found. And her claim that there were other, undisclosed issues that led to Adams’ firing is problematic as well, he said. The issue won’t go away, he said, unless she’s able to more satisfactorily answer
some of these questions. A little contrition for her role in the firing, an acknowledgement of Adams’ pain and suffering, could have gone a long way, Herrera said. “I didn’t read anything in that response or explanation … that let us know how she would address this problem going forward. What is her plan for ensuring that this kind of thing wouldn’t happen again or wouldn’t happen to anyone else ever again?” he said. Aaron Lieberman, a recently resigned state legislator who is challenging Hobbs in the Democratic primary, said
the issues surrounding the verdicts in the Adams case simply aren’t going to go away. Republicans are already looking at the verdict as something they can use in the general election to suppress Black voter turnout and use against Hobbs, if she’s the Democratic nominee, he said. “I think the biggest concern is that Republicans will drive a truck through this in the general election. That’s just the reality of the situation,” Lieberman said. There’s no doubt that Republicans have keyed in on the issue. Daniel Scarpinato, a
7
GOP political operative and former chief of staff to Gov. Doug Ducey, said he’ll be shocked if the Adams verdict doesn’t become a focal point of the Republicans’ campaign against Hobbs next fall. Between the Republican nominee and the outside groups that run ads to support them, a lot of money goes into gubernatorial races, Scarpinato said. And that money will be used to hammer Hobbs with the discrimination verdict, including Adams’ searing indictment of Hobbs. See Governor’s Race, P12
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Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Fibromyalgia remains a mysterious illness, but research continues
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October 2021
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‘Peace, Love and Pasta’
Education is Key Traveling safer and smarter during the pandemic
Chef Scott Conant revisits family meals in book
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Treating the Whole Person A Touch of Class
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Informed of the Night Big in Japan Women’s Resiliency has been the voice of, and for, the After-50 market in Tucson for more than 40 years. It is one of the most respected and largest publications reaching the senior audience in the nation. The Tucson edition represents The Getting Out Switching anofunparalleled way to reach seniors at their homes, Right Touch the and where they spend their time. If your or Scottsdale’scompany Hope Clinic Concerts, performances return Peter Madrid says going from goes international to fill fall schedule newspapers to PR was seamless organization needs to reach the senior community, there is no better way to do it than to advertise in Lovin’ Life After 50 and on our website, LovinLife.com. An Ageless Attitude Since 1979 - Tucson Edition
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exertion, weather changes, hormonal fluctuations, allergies, and a lack of sleep. We do not know its cause but have seen that in some people, the symptoms started after a flu-like illness or physical or emotional trauma. Lyme disease as a trigger has been studied, as has sleep apnea (heavy snoring, and a lack of enough oxygen during sleep).
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Under the criteria es- otherwise explain the pain. no diagnostic tests such as tablished by the American Fifteen years ago, this phe- computerized tomography Special to Tucson Local Media College of Rheumatology, nomenon was just being (CT) scans, magnetic resa patient can be diagnosed noted and there was little onance imaging (MRI) or hile much is still for fibromyalgia if s/he has insight or research into blood work to pinpoint ficauses, treatment op- bro. The symptoms define pain Ageless Attitude Sinceover 1979 sev- Tucsonits Edition unknown about Anwidespread tions, and prognosis. To- the illness. These include en of 19 areas of the body fibromyalgia, reday more people are being diffuse soft tissue pain and and also has symptoms search over the diagnosed based primarily severe tenderness when at of fatigue, poor sleep and past 10 years has shown least 11 of 18 specific tenon patient history. cognitive changes. Th ese that this is a real illness, The Getting Out der points on the body are ‘Live Life Fibromyalgia is pain in Touch symptoms must have been of not just a manifestation Right the House Until You Die’ A Touch of Class of depression as many in ongoing for three or more soft fibrous tissues of the palpated. An Ageless Attitude Since 1979 - Tucson Edition Very commonly, pathe medical field had pro- months and the patient has body, muscles, tendons no other illness that would and ligaments. There are tients also have a constelposed. Mia Smitt
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Giving Tree Dispensary makes shopping easy
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Ms. Senior Arizona gears up to crown 2022 queen
‘Steel Magnolias’ comes to Phoenix Theatre Company
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December 2020
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officials warn it is too early to let guard down
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mask mandates, while events of going vaccination efforts—as more than 50 people would no of Monday, March 29, at least 2 longer require permission from million Arizonans had been givlocal governments. en COVID-19 vaccines and 1.2 ov. Doug Ducey lifted all Ducey also said requirements million were fully vaccinated. In coronavirus restrictions for businesses to limit occupancy addition, hospitalizations had last week regarding local and take other steps to reduce the decreased considerably since the ordinances, businesses and spread of COVID would shift to January peak during the winter events. recommendations and bars could wave. Ducey said he would block now operate at full capacity. See COVID, P10 local jurisdictions from enacting Ducey noted the state’s on-
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aking charge of a police department with more than 100 officers is no easy feat even during a good year. But Oro Valley Police Chief Kara Riley’s first year on the job included a pandemic, nationwide protests, natural disasters and shifting regulations. In the law enforcement profession for nearly 30 years, Riley says 2020 turned out to be the most rewarding of her profession. “We were really put to task and had some difficult, difficult times,” Riley said. “These challenges were things that haven’t been experienced in the law enforcement profession in many years, and the pandemic was just one of them.”
The Voice of Marana since 2007
Volume 28 • Number 33
Home Sweet Home
What to keep in mind when choosing solar and contractors | Special Section HEALTH & MEDICINE
INSIDE
County supervisors shoot down school mask mandate
Hot Picks
Events around town | Page 3
Christina Duran Tucson Local Media
Health & Wellness
(Left to right) Andy Cathey, Donny Cathey and Carly Timpf.
Photo by Gavin Dunham/HSSA
Cathey’s Sewing Drive Supports Humane Society
Valley fever dangers | Page 6
Jeff Gardner Tucson Local Media
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ore than a hundred shelter animals awaiting adoption are now a little more comfortable — and stylish — thanks to a donation from Cathey’s Sewing & Vacuum to the Humane Society of Southern Arizona. The donations are part of Cathey’s annual Christmas-In-July sewing event, where customers and staff create specialized items
for local nonprofits. In addition, Cathey’s also raises funds for the selected nonprofit from raffles and events. This year, the Humane Society of Southern Arizona received 165 pet bandanas, 85 cat beds and $3,250. “Every year we try to choose a different nonprofit, as locally oriented as possible, with a sewing challenge we can connect them to,” said owner Donny Cathey. “Often it’s not too difficult to come up with
Jigsaw Health supports healthy pickleball play
Patricia Person crowned 2022 Ms. Senior Arizona
East Valley Edition
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See our
13763 N Placita Meseta De Oro, Oro Valley, AZ 85755
something for a charity… Animals touch everyone’s lives, so to support a charity that helps house and support animals is always worthwhile.” The sewing takes place during Cathey’s Saturday classes, and culminates in awards given to the volunteers who are most artistic and go above-and-beyond. During the finale, attendees vote on their favorites and the best use of embroidery to decide the winners. See SEWING, P8
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or more than nine weeks Arizona has seen an exponential increase in COVID-19 cases and public health experts predict the surge would likely exceed cases and hospitalizations seen last summer 2020. In his latest COVID-19 forecast updated Aug. 14, Dr. Joe Gerald, an epidemiologist with the UA Zuckerman School of Public Health, reported Arizona has a rate of transmission of 255 cases per 100,000 individuals per week as of Aug. 8 and would likely soon exceed the rates seen during the summer of 2020, of 409 cases per 100,000 residents. “While I am hopeful we will not reach the levels seen in the winter of 2021, the experience of other states (e.g., Louisiana) combined with inaction of our local and state officials suggests this may be wishful thinking,” said Gerald. “Another wave of cases and hospitalizations caused by the Delta variant is now certain; the only question remaining is just how big.” See COVID, P4
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for her CBD and THC business section inside! JUST A Quilting Festival offers one-stop shop for crafters Page 18 CLICK AWAYJUST A
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A new startup business out of the University of Arizona is getting to the science behind bad dog breath, and how to cure it with specialized bacteria. Pictured are co-founders Eric Lyons and Scott Zentack. Read more on page 6.
Experts say vaccinated people can resume most activities | Page 4
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New golf tourney | Page 15
Lawsuit: Fertility doctor fathered his patients’ children | Page 4 • UA assistant professor’s book becoming a movie | Page 9
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to Help locations, including grocery stores, pharmacies, The latest news and top local stories! www.LovinLife.com www.LovinLife.com Walgreens, community centers, gyms, senior living facilities and many other establishments, when it comes to reaching this market, we mean business.
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tate Rep. Mark Finchem sent a “cease and desist” order to the group petitioning for his recall, threatening to sue the group for defamation. The Republican, who represents District 11, faces a recall by Rural Arizonans for Accountability, a group of his district’s constituents, for spreading voter fraud conspiracy theories and his ties to the “Stop the Steal” rioters at the Jan. 6 Insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. Natali Fierros, co-executive
March 2021
Director of Rural Arizona Action, said they were approached by Finchem’s constituents to help organize the recall. “We exist to empower people, regular folks who are involved in the democratic system and really recalling an elected official is a power reserved for the people of Arizona by our state’s constitution,” said Fierros. “If enough registered voters sign that petition and they agree that Finchem does lack integrity, that he is dangerous and an ineffective legislator, then it goes to the voters in that district to get a chance to vote on whether or not they
should fire him.” On May 5, the group received a letter from Finchem’s lawyers, which according to the Recall Finchem website, “demands Rural Arizonans for Accountability destroy all campaign materials Finchem incorrectly deems ‘defamatory’ and publish retractions in local newspapers. If not, Finchem’s lawyers promise to sue.” Rural Arizonans’ lawyers rejected Finchem’s demand and stated they would seek sanctions against him should he sue. See FINCHEM, P10
Right Touch
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has been the voice of, and for, the After-50 market in ‘Can Do’your is Advertise with us, and put advertising investment ‘Must Do’ June 2021 for more than 40 years. It is one of the most A Sensory Valley communities directly in the hands of the afflTucson uent reader who is Experience amenities first Medical respected and largest publications put reaching the senior Marijuana or loving life after 50! in the nation. The Tucson edition represents Recreational? audience Switching Treating the an unparalleled way to reach seniors at their homes, Putting the ‘Can Do’ is Whole Person and where they spend their time. If your Focused company or Staying Pieces Together ‘Must Do’ Community boasts technological advances
Mesa exhibitions take Wellness Issue new views on religion Theater company strikes gold with cabaret revues
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than ever The latest news and top local stories!
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Arizona Restaurant Week returns with takeout, Festive specialty At KNIX, Jim West in-person options holiday drinks watched it make Scottsdale Edition ‘Steel Magnolias’ comes to broadcast history Phoenix Theatre Company
A Touch of Class
Chef Scott Conant revisits family meals in book
Doctor weighs in on Proposition 207
Mary Vraa wants clients to feel free when downsizing
Marvina Thomas looks to the gods for her CBD and THC business
WWII veteran and COVID survivor Col. Richard Bushong recently celebrated his 98th birthday at the Pima Air and Space Museum, where he has volunteered for 29 years. A veteran of both WWII and the Vietnam War, Bushong is seen here sitting beneath the B-17 bomber he flew multiple missions in. Read more on page 12.
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an unparalleled way to reach seniors at their homes, Home-delivered to several great After-50 active The Art of Artist Meet andEducation where they spend their time. If your company orfor the Home Genealogy and Greet Peter Madrid says going Looking from Ahead available at many commercial Culinary Diversity Keeping Residentscommunities and is Key Huladays Bucking Trends Toy Story newspapers to PR was seamless Informed A Sensory Resiliency Cluttered House, organization needs to‘Peace, reach the senior community, Women’sDon’t Want Experience locations, including grocery stores, pharmacies, Love of Cluttered Mind to Cook? Medical and Pasta’ Education is Key Marijuana or thereRecreational? is no better way to do it than to advertise in the Walgreens, community centers, gyms, senior living facilities and performances many other establishments, when it Lovin’ Life After 50 and on our website, LovinLife.com. Concerts, return Patricia Person crowned The Langham Huntington Putting the to fall reaching this market, we mean business. to fill schedule The comes Getting Out 2022 Ms. Senior Arizona In ‘Excess’ is Pasadena’s ‘jewel’ Inner Rock Star Staying Focused Pieces Living LikeKIT a Home-delivered After-50 active ‘Live Life Together to several great of MEDIA Right Touch the House Advertise with us, and put Quilting yourFestival advertising JB Smoove welcomes Sportsbook Arizona offers one-stopinvestment shop for crafters UntilCaesars You Die’toand The Monkees celebrate their success on farewell tour Touch Class Queen communities availableAat manyofcommercial Tulsa professor shows sides of Bob Dylan in new book Page 14
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The Voice of Marana, Oro Valley and Northwest Tucson
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O. After , weeks of stalling, Gov. Ducey agrees to allow Pima County to
Jan. 6, 2021 • Volume 11 • Number 1 • www.TucsonLocalMedia.com
Jigsaw Health supports healthy pickleball play
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Community boasts technological advances
JB Smoove welcomes Caesars Sportsbook to Arizona Page 17
Right Touch
Ofrenda is ‘a place to taste and remember’
Giving Tree Dispensary makes shopping easy The Retreat at Alameda
East Valley Edition
Ms. Senior Arizona gears up to crown 2022 queen
Scottsdale’s Hope Clinic Concerts, performances return G HEALTH & BEAUTY goes international to fill fall schedule communities and at many commercial Spiritualavailable Art RETIREMENT LIVING Always There The Arttoof Help ‘A Great Artist Meet locations, including grocery stores, pharmacies, Home for the Genealogy Little Oasis’ SPORTS and Greet & RECREATION July 2021 October 2021 August 2021 September 2021 Huladays The Music www.LovinLife.com The Retreat www.LovinLife.com A Sensory FOOD & DRINK Walgreens, community centers, gyms,www.LovinLife.com senior living Don’t Wanthas been the voice of, and for, the After-50 market in of the Night at Alameda Big in Japan Experience ‘Can Do’ toisCook? Medical ‘Must Do’ Marijuana or facilities and many other establishments, when it DESERT TIMES Tucson for more than 40 years. It is one of the most Recreational? Looking Ahead Keeping Residents FOOTHILLS NEWS Culinary Diversity Toy Story comes to reaching this market, we mean business. Arizona Restaurant Week Ms. Seniorthe Arizona gears up respected and largest publications reaching senior Informed Summer Survival 2021 returns with takeout, to crown 2022 queen The Great Arizona Innovative Women’s Resiliency The community bonds in-person options the Puppet Theater brings audience in the nation. The Tucson edition represents Advertise with us, and putPutting your advertising investment Inner Rock Star over Vi newsletters Marana’s Class In ‘Excess’ ‘Peace, Love ‘Steel Magnolias’ comes to magic to the stage Staying Focused Switching The Music Pieces Together Treating the of 2021 took on an unparalleled way to reach seniors at their homes, is Keyreader Phoenix Theatre Company Valley communities of the Night Big in Japan has been the voice of, hands andEducation for, theaffl After-50 market big challenges directly the of the uent who isin andinPasta’ put amenities first Traveling safer and smarter Whole Person Chef Scott Conant revisits and where they spend their time. If your company or during the after pandemic BUSINESS Glencroft erases stigma loving life BUSINESS Peter Madrid says going from family meals in book40 Tucson for more than years. It is 50! one of the most M SHOWCASE of modern living centers SHOWCASE newspapers to PR was seamless organization needs to reach the senior community, Lawmaker threatens to sue recall proponents respected and largest publications the senior An Ageless Attitude Sincereaching 1979 - Tucson Edition there is no better way to do it than to advertise in S audience in the nation. The Tucson edition represents Lovin’ Life After 50 and on our website, LovinLife.com. Switching April 2021
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of the
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Giving Tree Dispensary makes shopping easy
July 2021
August 2021
September 2021
Bill Kelleher retires from military Beard Papa’s cream puffscommittee bring lines to the Quarter
Theater company strikes gold with cabaret revues
Mary Vraa wants clients to feel free when downsizing
Trattoria D’Amico continues its legacy
Phoenix Edition
March 2021
May 2021
At KNIX, Jim West watched it make broadcast history
Community boasts technological advances
Ahwatukee man traces family histories
Home for the Huladays
has been the voice of, and for, the After-50 market in Gears Inner Rock Star Doctor weighs in on Proposition 207
Peter Madrid says going from
November 2020
December 2020
The Art of Genealogy
Ofrenda is ‘a place to taste and remember’
Mediterra Bakehouse shares its Irish soda bread recipe Page 18
Glencroft erases stigma
Big in Japan
Beard Papa’s cream puffs bring lines to the Quarter
Festive specialty holiday drinks
Artist Meet and Greet Hidden in the Hill returns with new guidelines
Don’t Want to Cook?
May 2021
Here are some Thanksgiving options
The Music of the Night
In ‘Excess’ MEDIA
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Theater company strikes gold with cabaret revues
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arana High School Salutatorian Diya Patel didn’t sugarcoat the challenges of the last year in her graduation speech last month. “I think most people would agree with me when I say that this has been a dreadful year,” Patel said. “Graduation speeches in the past have included stories of proms, formals and football games. However, this year we had to adjust to a brand new way of life full of Zoom calls, masks and COVID tests, which consisted of massive Q-tips being shoved up our noses. Instead of reminiscing on a joyful high school experience, we are all sitting here today, collectively taking a deep breath and just being grateful that we’re finally here.” Patel, like so many other students, longed for a year of normalcy, but instead lived through a pandemic. Patel and fellow Marana Unified School District graduates expressed the woes of trying to graduate while juggling a series of changes beyond their control caused by the COVID-19 outbreak. “This past year, the Class of 2021 proved that we were some of the most adaptable See MARANA, P8
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Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
Some studies point to possible (not proven) systemic bacterial, viral or even fungal infections and some health care providers use medications to combat infection in their treatment of fibromyalgia. Research continues to find causes, connections, and treatments. Women with fibromyalgia far outnumber men with the illness. The ratios are estimated between 9:1 and 20:1 (women to men) and this disease is seen primarily between the ages of 20 and 50. For many years, women were told to “relax” or that it was “all in their heads” when standard diagnostic tests were inconclusive. This is now recognized as a real phenomenon even though we are still grappling with effective treatment options.
The primary problem is that fibro patients have a heightened sensitivity to pain stimuli and develop a lowered pain threshold. The pain becomes more intense and lasts longer. Recent research has found that some people with fibromyalgia also have PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder), often stemming from abuse issues in childhood or adolescence. A number of women have suffered through domestic violence. Is fibromyalgia a manifestation of undertreated depression or other psychiatric condition? While questions and research continue, it is important to realize that this syndrome is NOT “all in your head” as some physicians in the past have asserted. Researchers and fibro
patients themselves are finding ways to deal with this illness. The primary treatment goals are to reduce pain, enhance quality of life, and improve sleep. Non-pharmacological treatments such as yoga, daily walking, and low intensity/low impact exercise may relieve some of the pain and the fatigue associated with the disorder. People who exercise three to five times a week report a 25% reduction in most fibro symptoms and require less prescription medication. Unfortunately, some patients with fibro have increased pain with exercise. An altered exercise regimen such as tai chi and water aerobics, deep breathing and improved posture can reduce exercise discomfort. Acupres-
sure, massage therapy, relaxation techniques, biofeedback and chiropractic care have also shown to be helpful, as has cognitive behavioral therapy. Many people benefit from medications that boost serotonin and norepinephrine. These are neurotransmitters that help to regulate sleep, the immune system and pain, and are effective in reducing some symptoms of depression. There are three FDA-approved medications currently available to treat fibromyalgia: Pregabalin (Lyrica), Duloxetine (Cymbalta) and Milnacipran (Savella). Many other drugs are used “off label” to treat fibro symptoms, including amitriptyline, trazodone and some SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) like
fluoxetine, sertraline and escitaprolam. Antianxiety medications such as clonazepam and diazepam also may aid sleep but are highly addictive so must be used with caution. Muscle relaxers may be helpful, as are anti-inflammatory medications (over the counter ibuprofen and naproxen) but some patients may need strong opioid pain medications to treat severe pain. All of these medications can have serious adverse effects so it is very important to consult with your health care provider before starting any drug regimen and at regular intervals during treatment. (If your health care provider will not discuss fibromyalgia or dismisses the symptoms, find another one!) Mineral and vitamin
supplements such as magnesium, zinc, malic acid, folic acid, creatine, vitamin C, vitamin B complex, vitamin E, calcium, melatonin (for sleep) and acidophilus have been examined for effectiveness, but there is little conclusive evidence for their efficacy. Fibromyalgia Awareness Day is observed on May 12. It was started in Tucson by a support group organized in 1992. Support groups are invaluable in that they offer a place for fibro sufferers to receive and give emotional support by others who experience this disease. Support groups tend to be very energizing in the exchange of information and lifestyle advice. Mia Smitt is a nurse practitioner with a specialty in family practice.
10
Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
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eeling pressured by all your holiday todos? Good news— you can reduce your stress (and maybe your todo list) by doing something nice for someone! Love Conquers Stress Multiple studies have shown that good deeds and altruistic emotions result in feeling a “helper’s high”—positive emotions that not only feel good, they actually overpower stress. There are some small studies that link these feelings of love and empathy with a stronger immune system.
Pumpkin Ginger Cupcakes Makes 24 cupcakes.
2¼ cups all-purpose flour 3-oz. box of instant dry vanilla pudding mix 2 tsp. baking soda ½ tsp. salt 1 tbsp. cinnamon 1 ½ tsp. pumpkin pie spice ½ cup finely diced crystalized ginger 1 cup butter 2 cups light brown sugar 4 eggs By doing someone a favor, 1 tbsp. vanilla giving a thoughtful gift, or Residents at Splendido enjoy an ever-changing selection of desserts from pastry 15-oz. can pumpkin puree squeezing in a little volun- chef Mary Teresi-White. Here she shares recipes for two that make excellent gifts. teer work this season, you Preheat oven to 350 degrees. can lower your stress level— With an electric mixer, as well as ease the physical (You can enjoy a different of desserts she creates for cream butter, sugar, and vachanges that stress brings set of positive emotions by Splendido residents, Mary nilla to light and fluffy. Add (think high blood pressure). sampling them yourself.) has shared the two recipes eggs one at a time, mixing on this page so that you after each addition. Add Give a Sweet Gift Mary Teresi-White is the can wow your family and pumpkin puree and mix One way you can enjoy pastry chef at Splendido, friends—and feel that bene- well. In a separate bowl, these “generous” health ben- a Life Plan Community ficial helper’s high while you combine , flour, pudding mix, soda, salt, and spices. efits is by making a delicious in Oro Valley for those 55 do so. Add to egg/pumpkin mixtreat you can give as a gift or and better. Known for the ture and mix well. Fold in serve to friends and family. seemingly endless variety Happy Holidays!
blend out
ginger. Line 24 muffin tins with cupcake papers. Fill each with a 2 oz. scoop of batter. Bake approximately 22-30 minutes, until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool completely before icing top with cream cheese icing. Cream Cheese Icing for Cupcakes (optional) 2 lbs. powdered confectioner’s sugar 1 lb. of cream cheese (room temperature) 12 tbsp. soft butter 3 tbsp. vanilla 2 tsp. lemon juice (optional) In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter with the cream cheese and vanilla. Add the powdered sugar little by little, mixing after each addition. Mix completely and continue mixing until light and fluffy, scraping the bowl numerous times. Do not overmix or frosting will become too runny. Frost cupcakes with a spatula or put frosting in a piping bag and make a swirl on top of each cupcake.
3 lbs. pecan halves or any desired nut 3 lbs. light brown sugar 1 cup egg whites 2 tsp cinnamon •In a large bowl, put brown sugar, cinnamon, and egg white and mix. It will resemble wet sand. Add the nuts and toss to completely cover. •Pour onto three sheet pans and place in a 225-degree oven. •Bake 15 minutes, then take out and toss….do this every 15 minutes for 1 to 1.5 hours until the nuts are “dry.” •When cool, you can store in a metal tin or bag for individual gifts. They last for months!
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Governor’s race Continued from P7
“These are races that a lot of money gets put into, and we can all picture that in the Phoenix media market with a thousand points a week behind it,” Scarpinato said. “If I’m her campaign, I would just assume that this is going to have a lot of weight and a lot of money and a lot of energy behind it.” The Black leaders who signed the letter warning against support for Hobbs weren’t swayed by her explanation. One, former lawmaker Art Hamilton, has since endorsed Marco Lopez, one of her opponents in the Democratic primary. Others have yet to
Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
announce support for any candidate. But whatever happens, it’s clear that their support won’t go to Hobbs. Cloves Campbell, a former legislator, said he wanted to hear an admission of wrongdoing from Hobbs, and wanted her to say what she’ll do to fix those problems. If she’s not going to do that, he said, Black leaders and voters can support someone else. “A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n communities are tired of hearing people say things about us and do things against us and then expect us to turn the other cheek,” Campbell said. “We’ve run out of cheeks and we’re not going to put up with it anymore.” Another African-American leader who signed the
letter, Warren Stewart Sr., a pastor who has been on the front lines of Arizona’s civil rights battles since the 1980s, said Hobbs’ response to the verdict was too little, too late. Asked if he wants to hear an apology from her, Stewart told the Mirror, “I don’t want to hear anything from Katie Hobbs.” Hobbs needs to reach out to the African-American community and offer a heartfelt apology, said Mario Diaz, a lobbyist and longtime Democratic operative. “The courts have spoken and she needs to apologize to community leaders,” Diaz said. “Whether she did anything, quote, wrong or not, the perception and the legal judgment was that there was bias towards a person of color. And the buck stops
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or not really depends on … whether she’s able to answer these questions in a satisfactory way.” Exactly what effect the Adams verdict will have on Hobbs in the general election, if she makes it there, remains to be seen. Though Republicans are sure to make a major issue of it, Diaz said attacks from the GOP will ring hollow on matters of race relations. If Hobbs makes it out of the primary, that likely means she still has a significant amount of support, Campbell said, though that doesn’t diminish what happened with Adams. Whether Hobbs can get support from Black voters in the general election will depend on what she does moving forward. Campbell said she’ll have to be sure to include African Ameri-
cans in her campaign if she gets that far. Campbell didn’t doubt that Republicans will use the Adams situation against Hobbs and that’ll make it harder for her to win. “That’s what the Republicans do,” he said. “At the same time, what are the Republicans doing to garner the African-American vote? It works on both sides of the fence. Just because we’re upset with her doesn’t mean we’re going to automatically give our votes to them.” This article originally ran in the Arizona Mirror, a nonprofit online news agency.
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at the leadership position.” Still, most observers expect Hobbs to win the Democratic nomination, at least against the current field. That could change if another major candidate joins the race. Herrera said someone who can raise money and has significant support within the party would have a shot at wresting the nomination from her. But for now, Hobbs, though weakened, maintains her role as the frontrunner in the Democratic primary. “My guess is that she still wins the primary, that despite this she still is the nominee. And then she goes into the general election with this as a liability,” Herrera said. “I don’t think it’s over. I don’t think she’s sunk necessarily at this point. But whether she is
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Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum combines art, conservation in new book Jeff Gardner Tucson Local Media
P
art museum, part zoo, part art studio, the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum has brought Tucson residents closer to desert wildlife for more than 60 years. Beyond an appreciation for the beauty of our surrounding landscape, the Desert Museum aims to help visitors understand and connect with nature through live animal demonstrations, classes and community events. “Treasured Legacies,” a new book from the Desert Museum, traces Tucson conservation efforts within a crossroads of art and education. The book features large, vibrant scratchboard illustrations from local artist Priscilla Baldwin, as well as archival photographs, interviews with local biologists, and a history of the museum. All of the illustrated animals in the book are native to the Sonoran Desert and are either currently or formerly housed at the Desert Museum. Many of the animals were previously featured in “Desert Ark,” an outreach program started in the 1950s where Desert Museum member Hal Gras brought animals into
schools and clubs to give residents in-person education about desert animals. “Many adults today will tell the tale of Hal coming to their classroom and as they were leaving the exhibition, all the students would reach out and touch the animals he brought, like a snake. And for some of them, that was the first time they touched a snake,” said Anne Warner, who co-authored the book and is a longtime supporter of the Desert Museum. The book also highlights the Desert Museum’s ongoing “Raptor Free Flight” program, where birds like falcons, ravens and owls fly over visitors. However, the book is based around Baldwin’s scratchboard art: a unique form of “subtractive art” where bits of colored clay are sliced off to reveal different colors beneath. Baldwin’s incredibly detailed art is almost photorealistic, such as depicting the individual hairs of a sleeping mountain lion on the book’s cover. “Priscilla Baldwin was the muse behind the book,” Warner said. “She’s a very talented scratchboard artist, and she became a co-founder of the Art Institute at the Desert Museum. Priscilla, in her work, became fascinated with the conservation
work of Hal Gras and the Desert Ark from way back at the beginning of the museum. She really wanted to capture the conservation message it epitomized.” So the story goes, Baldwin’s friends wanted to see a collection of her work. The idea gradually grew, and soon the Desert Museum staff decided to put together a book that captured several elements of the museum, such as historic conservation, art, and modern conservation efforts. “We realized we didn’t just want to look at the history of the museum and conservation at the museum, but we wanted to look at what the museum and other museums might face as challenges in the future,” Warner said, who worked on the book for roughly two years. “The museum does have a loyal following, and we want to foster that support for the museum and conservation efforts. But having said that, we also hope new readers and visitors will be drawn into the amazingly graphic art of Priscilla, and also the conservation efforts.” Other conservation efforts from the Desert Museum include a captive breeding program for the Mexican wolf to reintroduce
Courtesy Photo
them to their natural habitats, the Save Our Saguaros campaign to fight invasive grasses in the Sonoran Desert, and a program to support migratory pollinators. “We want to give people a feel for what conservation can look like. And that’s one of the things the Art Institute does so well,” Warner said. “Because you can take a class at the Art Institute and watch a live animal interact with its keeper. Once you begin to look at the way nature expresses itself, you have the opportunity to be drawn in more and more.”
Warner says Baldwin serves as the ultimate example of this transformation. In the book, Baldwin explains how she came to a realization while doing a botanical illustration—a realization that would eventually lead her to co-found the Desert Museum’s Art Institute with her husband in 1998. “She was always interested in conservation, but it was more in the back of her mind,” Warner said. “But then she began to take art classes and watched a wasp interact with a flower, and she told me a lightbulb went
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off. She said, ‘This is the gift of life that I want to convey.’” Other contributors for “Treasured Legacies” are Desert Museum librarian and archivist Peggy Larson, executive director Craig Ivanyi, and former executive director Bob Edison. “Treasured Legacies: Conservation, Art, Education, and the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum” is currently available at Des er tMu s eumAr ts.com/ treasured-legacies-book
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Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
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LIVEN UP
Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
Gaslight Theatre serves up holiday magic with ‘Elf’d’ Emily Dieckman
Special to Tucson Local Media
W
earing a Santa Claus outfit and a smile so big and sincere that we could see it through her mask, our waitress at the Gaslight Theatre asked us if we were celebrating anything special this evening. “Just Christmas!” I exclaimed, probably obnoxiously but definitely in the
spirit of the Gaslight Theatre, where Christmas is in full swing. And thank goodness. I think we could use as much holiday cheer as we can get, this year. Dudley the Elf, the protagonist of The Gaslight Theatre’s current show, “Elf ’d,” would almost certainly agree with me. No one, we are reminded throughout the show, has as much Christmas spirit as Dudley. This parody is based
on the beloved Christmas movie “Elf,” which tells the story of a human raised by elves who must learn to navigate the mean streets and brightly lit shopping malls of New York City. With a new plot and its own special Gaslight Theatre twist, this show—written by Peter Van Slyke and directed by Katherine Byrnes— brings the characters and the spirit of the original film to life. As Dudley, actor Jake
Chapman brings all the naïve enthusiasm we know and love from the movie, and ALMOST brings back some of its most memorable phrases. When he’s frustrated with himself, he calls himself a “fluffer nutter noodle noggin.” When he’s trying to save Christmas, he reminds himself of one of elfhood’s most important rules: “If you want to spread Yuletide spirit, say ‘Merry Christmas!’ for all (L to R) David Orley, Todd Thompson and Jake Chapman to hear it.”
Courtesy Photo
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Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
As the show begins, Santa explains he is concerned about being able to fly his sleigh this year, because it’s powered by Christmas spirit—a commodity in increasingly short supply. Dudley has gathered up all his favorite things about Christmas, all those that bring him the most holiday cheer, and put them into a bottle which Santa can use as fuel. But when Wally the greedy elf (Jacob Brown) gets ahold of it and flees to New York, there’s trouble: Wally wants to work with a giant, money-hungry toy manufacturer to get Santa’s workshop shut down and replaced with a corporate toy factory. It wouldn’t be a classic Christmas tale without the forces of capitalism lurking, would it? Wally wears a pointy green elf hat, which, in order to blend in in NYC, he later replaces with a fedora and a green blazer. His color scheme, combined with his obsession with a secret formula in a little bottle and general shrillness, make his character
Elf’d Musical presented by Presented by Gaslight Theatre 7010 E. Broadway Blvd. Monday through Sunday through Jan. 2. $27 adults, $25 for students/seniors/ military, $15 for kids 2 to 12.
reminiscent of Plankton, owner of the Chum Bucket in Spongebob Squarepants. His “grumpy wumpy grouchy pants” vibe makes a great counter to Dudley’s never-wavering, Spongebob-like cheer. Armed with the knowledge that he’s not the elf he thought he was, but still dressed in full elf garb, Dudley follows Wally to New York via beluga whale, where he attempts to get back his magic Christmas potion
Courtesy Photo
(L to R) Todd Thompson, Heather Stricker, Mike Yarema, Jake Chapman and Jacob Brown are a jolly cast of characters in Gaslight’s Elf’d (except for one Scrooge). and to eat pieces of candy he finds on the sidewalk. On his journey, he encounters wacky characters that range from a Salvation Army Santa Claus to a woman also dressed as an elf to a cleaning lady with a big secret. Heather Stricker and Erin Thomp-
son were both particularly funny in their roles as two women trying their best to keep all of this chaos organized. As usual, the musical numbers throughout the show don’t disappoint, surely thanks to musical direction by Linda Acker-
man and choreography by Katherine Byrnes. I had to laugh when they did their own version of “Christmas Is All Around,” the song Bill Nighy’s rockstar character sings in the film “Love, Actually.” And when they did a version of “YMCA” called “SAN-
TA,” even the teenage boy at the table next to us was laughing and clapping along. Do you know how hard it is to get a teenage boy to exhibit enthusiasm? Leave it to the Gaslight to make true holiday magic happen.
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Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
A marvelous ‘Hamilton’ finally takes the stage in Tucson
Margaret Regan
Special to Tucson Local Media
I
n the opening scene of Hamilton, the characters who will become America’s founding fathers crowd the stage. There’s a Jefferson here and a Madison there and a Washington over yonder. But there’s a newbie too, and the suspicious Aaron Burr demands to know who the fellow is. “What’s your name, man?” he sings in a hip-hop cadence. The stranger stands in the center of the stage, in the spotlight, looks proudly around and boldly sings out: “Alexander Hamilton!” Last Thursday night, the huge audience in Centennial Hall roared when they heard his name. Julius Thomas III, the dashing actor playing Hamilton, smiled at the crowd, and chuckled lightly at their fervor. He waited until the fans’ cheers went down a notch. Then, going back into character, as a supremely self-confident young man, he roared right back: “My name is Alexander Hamilton.” You couldn’t blame the enthusiastic patrons in the seats, some 2,500 strong.
They had waited two long pandemic years to see the smash musical about an unlikely immigrant who shoots to power in the early years of the Republic. In 2019, Broadway in Tucson announced a performance of Hamilton in 2020. It was cancelled by COVID, and finally staged now, in late 2021. The ground-breaking musical, winner of 11 Tony Awards in 2015 and a Pulitzer Prize in 2016, turns what could be a dusty old story of government and politics into a rollicking spectacle. Almost every line in the show is sung in bouncy hip-hop and rap, performed sometimes solo and often by the whole cast, 14 actors and 11 ensemble players at once. This contemporary music transforms the work from the late 18th century to the present. As the talented Lin-Manuel Miranda—creator of the Hamilton book, music and lyrics—has said, the show is “America then, as told by America now.” That America is full of ambitious, conniving, smart and lively young men, all of them arguing over what the new nation they have created should be. You will detect no sign of the stolid founding fathers that we are used
Hamilton Musical presented by Broadway in Tucson Through Dec. 5, various times At Centennial Hall, 1020 E. University Bld., at UA Tickets from $59 to $299 at Ticketmaster.com
Courtesy Photo
to seeing hanging in dull portraits. Instead, you’ll find cast, young, multi-colored with the main characters portrayed by Black actors: George Washington (Darnell Abraham), Thomas Jefferson (Paris Nix) and the rivals Aaron Burr (Donald Webber, Jr.) and Hamilton himself. From the beginning there is no secret how the story ends. Even high school students still know (I think?) that Burr killed Hamilton in a duel. And in the first scene, Burr admits, “I’m the damn fool that shot him.” The story line is really about what made Hamilton click. Burr puzzles over Ham-
ilton’s surprising success in life. George Washington relied on Hamilton as an aide-de-camp in the Revolutionary War and later, as president, named him the first Treasury Secretary of the United States. Hamilton’s efforts with the nation’s money still influence the government. “How does a bastard, orphan, son of a whore,” an immigrant from the Caribbean. “grow up to be a hero and a scholar?” Burr asks. The energetic Hamilton occasionally reveals the answer. “I am not throwing away my shot,” he likes to say as a young man. “I’m young, scrappy and hungry.” He’s brilliant and hard-working,
but he’s not without fault. Miranda made an effort to bring women into a tale that is mostly male. The Schuyler Sisters song introduces the woman Hamilton was to marry, Eliza Schuyler (Victoria Ann Scovens), and her sister Angelica (Marja Harmon), an intellectual woman whom, in Miranda’s telling, had feelings for Hamilton, her brother-in-law. But Eliza emerges as a strong woman, and Scovens delivers one of the most powerful scenes in the show. This is a good time to say how gorgeous all the players’ voices are. In particular, Scovens is a beautiful singer and Brandon Louis Armstrong, who plays James
Theatre goers must show card certifying they have been fully vaccinated, or provide proof of a negative COVID test within the last 72 hours of showtime.
Madison, has a voice that’s positively operatic. Armstrong is also a great comic on stage, and so is Nick Negron. Negron, playing the petulant King George of England, delivers hilarious solos every time the fledgling Republic goes amiss. Finally, the dancing is superb. Choreographed by Andy Blankenbuehler, the movements are in are in almost every scene, with the dancers shape-shifting around the actors, shimming like snakes, subtly slipping into a soldier’s sheath. The dances amplify the actors, the singers and the set and nearly everything in this marvelous show.
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EN INGS HAPP EN Visit www.tucsonlocalmedia.com/livenup/calendar to submit your free calendar listing. For event advertising, contact us (520) 797-4384 or tlmsales@tucsonlocalmedia.com
THEATER WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY AND SUNDAY, NOV. 26DEC. 24
Symphony Orchestra in a classical ballet translated to 1880’s Tucson. Details: 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday; Tucson Music Hall, 260 S. Church Ave.; $28-$38; ticketmaster.com.
direction of Michael Lich. Details: 7:30 p.m.; Pima Community College Center for the Arts, 2202 W. Anklam Road; $6; 206-6986.
MUSIC
• Don’t miss the Reveille Men’s Chorus holiday show A Very Merry, Mary! Details: 7:30 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday; Leo Rich Theater, 260 S. Church Ave.; $25, youth free; reveillemenschorus.org.
• Bring the kids and grandma to the Jingle Bell Rockin’Revue with all your favorite holiday hits guaranteed to put you in the Christmas spirit. Details: 6 p.m. Wednesday-Friday, 2 or 3 p.m. se- THURSDAY TO SATURDAY, lect Sundays; Gaslight Music Hall, 13005 DEC. 24 N. Oracle Road; $27, $15 children; 529- • Listen to Live Music Concerts presented by the Southern Arizona Arts and Cul1000 or gaslightmusichall.com. tural Alliance featuring jazz on Thursday, rock on Friday and Saturday. Details: 5-7 FRIDAY TO SUNDAY, DEC. p.m. Thursday, 6-8 p.m. Friday-Saturday; 319 Westward Look Wyndham Grand Resort • Enjoy a performance of the and Spa, Lookout Tucson Bar & Grill; 245 classic-style White Christmas The E. Ina Road; $10; 602-349-3137. Musical. Details: 7 p.m. Friday, 2 and 7 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday; Arts FRIDAY, DEC. 3 Express Theatre, Park Place Mall, 5870 • Get your groove at the Dance to E. Broadway Blvd., Suite 214; $40; the Music Dance Party with Little arts-express.org. House of Funk Band. Details: 7 p.m.; SATURDAY TO SUNDAY, DEC. Gaslight Music Hall, 13005 N. Oracle Road; $20; 529-1000 or gaslightmu45 sichall.com. • Put the entire family in the holiday spirit at Elf Elegies: Essential Workers of • Take a walk down memory lane with Tony-nominated Broadway star the North Pole written and performed and Platinum-selling singer/songby Pima Community College students. Details: 1 p.m. Saturday, 5 p.m. Sunday; writer in Ann Hampton Callaway Pima Community College Center for the Sings the 70’s with special guest Liz Callaway. Details: 7:30 p.m.; Fox Arts, 2202 W. Anklam Road; donations Theatre, 17 W. Congress St.; $35appreciated; 206-6986. • Bring the entire family to A Southwest $53; foxtucson.com. • Listen to the PCC Guitar EnsemNutcracker presented by the Tucson ble performing a classical and Regional Ballet featuring the Tucson contemporary repertoire under the
FRIDAY TO SUNDAY, DEC. 35
SATURDAY, DEC. 4
• Recall the magic and experience the acoustic music and harmonies of a folk trio that changed the world at MacDougal Street West, A Peter Paul and Mary Christmas Experience. Details: 2 and 6 p.m.; Gaslight Music Hall, 13005 N. Oracle Road; $27; 529-1000 or gaslightmusichall.com. • Enjoy a holiday tribute to Luciano Pavarotti, Andrea Bocelli and Enrico Caruso at the 3 International Tenors’ Christmas Concert. Details: 4 and 7:30 p.m.; DesertView Performing Arts Center, 39900 S. Clubhouse Drive; $30; 825-2818. • Enjoy the songs and stories of award-winning artists Shawn Colvin, Marc Cohn, Sara Watkins: Together In Concert. Details: 7:30 p.m.; Fox Theatre, 17 W. Congress St.; $49-$110; foxtucson.com. • Listen to the PCC Orchestra performing
a classical and contemporary repertoire under the direction of Anne Grimes. Details: 7:30 p.m.; Pima Community College Center for the Arts, 2202 W. Anklam Road; 206-6986.
SUNDAY, DEC. 5
• Listen to the Oracle Piano Quartet presented by the Oracle Piano Society. Details: 3 p.m.; Oracle Center for the Arts, 700 E. Kingston St., Oracle; $30; oraclepianosociety.org. • Listen to one of the most inventive and electrifying musicians of his generation Lindsey Buckingham whose direction made Fleetwood Mac a beloved rock group now performing as a solo artist. Details: 7 p.m.; Fox Theatre, 17 W. Congress St.; $43-$100; foxtucson.com. • Listen to the PCC Chorale & College Singers performing selections for a mixed voice choir and a cappella choir under the direction of Jonathan Ng. Details: 7:30 p.m.; Pima Community College Center for the Arts, 2202 W. Anklam Road; 206-6986.
TUESDAY AND THURSDAY, DEC. 7 AND 9
• Enjoy a Musical Theatre Workshop with selections from various musicals and operas under the direction of Darryl King. Details: 3:45 p.m.; Pima Community College Center for the Arts, 2202 W. Anklam Road; 206-6986.
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 8
• Come enjoy the sights and sounds of Christmas in Mexico with mariachi music and dance at Mariachi Extravaganza Feliz Navidad. Details: 6 p.m.; Gaslight Music Hall, 13005
N. Oracle Road; $27; 529-1000 or gaslightmusichall.com. • Ring Those Chords! with the SaddleBrooke Barbershop Chorus featuring the award-winning A Cappella Syndicate with a mix of holiday, traditional and contemporary songs and a bit of comedy. Details: 7:30 p.m.; DesertView Performing Arts Center, 39900 S. Clubhouse Drive; $25; 825-2818. • Listen to the Los Angeles Piano Trio featuring pianist Fabio Bidini, violinist Margaret Batjer and cellist Andrew Shulman presented by the Arizona Friends of Chamber Music. Details: 7:30 p.m.; Leo Rich Theater, 260 S. Church Ave.; $32, $10 students; arizonachambermusic.org.
SPECIAL EVENTS SATURDAY, DEC. 4
• Celebrate the rich tastes and variations of tamales from the Southwest and Mexico at the 16th Tucson Tamal & Heritage Festival featuring a tamale contest, entertainment, food vendors and more. Details: 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Casino del Sol AVA Amphitheater, 5655 W. Valencia Road; free admission; 800-344-9435 or casinodelsol.com. • Kick-off the holiday season at the Marana Holiday Festival & Christmas Tree Lighting with live performances, a visit from Santa, activities for kids, holiday artisan market, food vendors and a show-stopping light show. Details: 3-8 p.m. (light show at 6 p.m.); 11555 W. Civic Center Drive; free admission; maranaaz.gov.
SATURDAY TO SUNDAY, DEC. 45
• There’s something for everyone at the Oro Valley Festival of the Arts & Holiday Tree Lighting Celebration featuring art, live music, interactive creative experiences, food and more including TUBACHRISTMAS (2 p.m. Dec. 4) and photos with Santa. Details: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday; tree lighting festivities begin at 3 p.m. Dec. 4 with tree lighting at 6 p.m.; Oro Valley MarketPlace, 12155 N. Oracle Road; free admission; 520-797-3959 or saaca.org.
DAILY DEC. 323 AND 2630
• Stroll through the twinkling lights and enjoy family fun at ZooLights: Holiday Magic. Details: 6-8 p.m.; Reid Park Zoo, 3400 E. Zoo Ct.; $11; 520-791-3204 or reidparkzoo.
CLASSES AND PROGRAMS SATURDAY, DEC. 4
• Learn about Japanese traditions and rituals involved in the preparation and presentation of green tea at the Yume Gardens Tea Ceremony Demonstration. Details 1 and 2 p.m.; 2130 N. Alvernon Way; $20 (includes gardens admission, advance reservation required); 520-3033945 or yumegardens.org.
SUNDAY, DEC. 5
• Help raise funds for Ballet Tucson at the 20th annual Sugar Plum Tea with a performance, holiday boutique, silent auction and confections of every kind. Details: 1 p.m.; DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Tucson, 445 S. Alvernon Way; $75; ballettucson.org.
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Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
SPORTS EXTRA POINT WITH TOM DANEHY &RECREATION Pima College’s soccer team is winning national championships Tom Danehy
Special to Tucson Local Media
B
ack in the late 1990s, I was coaching girls’ basketball at Amphi High. We were in the midst of a championship season (as it turns out, the only one in that particular sport in the school’s history), and I was feeling pretty good about things. I happened
to mention to the athletic director that perhaps girls’ basketball, after many— MANY—down years, was poised to join the legendary Vern Friedli’s football and Corey Morishita’s girls’ volleyball as an elite program on campus. The AD, John Ryan, asked, “Have you seen the boys’ soccer team?” I hadn’t, so that night, after basketball practice was over, I went out to the
football field. I remember it being really cold, although that probably meant that it was in the mid-40s. Some hardy folks (mostly parents) were huddled in the stands, trying to keep warm with kerosene-powered portable heaters. The kids from Amphi on the field that night didn’t need any help keeping warm. They were running circles around their
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opponents, scoring almost at will. After the game, I went up and introduced myself to the coach, Dave Cosgrove. He was all-in on soccer, coaching the Pima College team during the fall and Amphi in the winter. He would later start the Tucson Soccer Academy. I congratulated him on how well-coached his team was. He was very gracious and then he asked me if I was a soccer fan. I said no, because…you know, I’m an American. He laughed and then I asked him about the only soccer game I had ever seen. In the 1974 World Cup championship game, Germany faced off against upstart The Netherlands. The Dutch were led by the legendary Johan Cruyff and they played Totaalvoetbal (total soccer), where everybody went on offense and everybody got back on defense. It was like a full-court press and fast-break in basketball and it was fun to watch. Using that unorthodox system, the Dutch went from near-total obscurity to within one game of being World Cup champions. They got to the knockout round in the ’74 World Cup, where they pounded Argentina, 4-0, then beat East Germany and Brazil
by identical scores of 2-0. The Dutch scored an early goal against Germany, but the Germans, led by Franz Beckenbauer, came back for a 2-1 win. I watched the game via closed-circuit TV at the Fabulous Forum, the then-home of the Los Angeles Lakers. (I went with a friend whose parents had been born in The Netherlands.) The place was sold out and they had heavy security separating the German fans from the Dutch. It was crazy. What turned me off was that, after the game, all of the soccer knoweverythings in the world, chimed in with, “See, I told you that Total Soccer wouldn’t work.” It was so lame. Using a revolutionary system had allowed the equivalent of the old Tucson Toros to meet the New York Yankees for the World Series title. But because they lost the final game, the system was abandoned and almost nobody has used it since. Coach Cosgrove was really cool to me that night and I became a fan of his team. I followed him until he left Amphi in 2002 and I continue to root for his Pima College teams to this day. What he has done at
Pima is absolutely phenomenal. For as far back as anyone can remember, Yavapai College in Prescott had dominated junior-college soccer in Arizona. Year in and year out, the Yavapai roster consisted of foreign athletes, many of them seasoned athletes in their 20s. Cosgrove would have to counter with 18- and 19-yearolds, almost all of them from Tucson. Each year, the Arizona Community College Athletic Conference was allowed to send only one team to the national tournament and that one team was almost always Yavapai. Cosgrove’s program caught up with Yavapai and then moved past it, bringing a national championship to Pima College in 2018. Then, a couple weeks ago, they won another one. Adding to the sweetness of the victory was the fact that rooting them on in that final game were the women from Pima College, who had also reached the national championship game. Pima’s women lost a heartbreaker in a shootout. It was the first time in NJCAA history that the men’s team and the women’s team from the same school had both reached
Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021
the national championship game. And judging by the level of excellence achieved by Cosgrove and his counterpart on the women’s program, Kendra Veliz, it might not be the last time. A cynic once said that soccer is the next big thing in America…and it always will be. And while it will probably never rise to prominence in the United States, at Pima College it’s not the next big thing. It’s the Big Thing. EXTRA POINTS: The high-school football season came to an end for northwest teams when Canyon Del Oro fell to Glendale in the Class 4A quarterfinals on Friday night… The Dorados, who started the regular season with three straight losses before rebounding to win six of their final seven regular-season games, hung close for much of the game before falling, 38-27… Local prep teams are making the transition to winter sports, with competition getting underway in girls and boys basketball, girls and boys soccer, and girls and boys wrestling… Mountain View, Flowing Wells, Canyon Del Oro, and Marana will all be fielding girls’ wrestling teams this season… The Flowing Wells girls’ basketball team reached the Class 5A State championship game last year and is looking to make a deep run in the playoffs again this year… The Cabs were the only northwest team to advance to the state playoffs last year…
Athlete of the Week: CDO football’s Kayden Luke Tom Danehy
Special to Tucson Local Media
L
ooking back, it was a season nobody really expected. The Canyon Del Oro football team was supposed to be pretty good, certainly good enough to make a run at a berth in the Class 4A State playoffs. But then, quite unexpectedly, they started off the season with three straight losses. They righted the ship with a couple one-score wins against Catalina Foothills and rival Ironwood Ridge. Then they started blowing teams out, winning games by the scores of 47-0 and 4919. The winning moved them into the Top 16 in the AIA’s Power Point rankings and earned them a spot in the State Tournament, although they would have to go to Lake Havasu City. The trip to Lake Havasu was an adventure in itself. The school couldn’t find a charter bus to transport the team across the state. They finally located one—as the story goes, it was the last one available in the entire state—and got to Lake Havasu in time to check into the hotel the night before the game. The trip didn’t bother the Dorados too much as they came away with a relatively easy 35-21 road victory. The Dorados were able to control the pace of that
game with their running attack, and that attack was led by sophomore Kayden Luke. Canyon Del Oro Coach Dusty Peace was effusive in his praise for Luke, who rushed for 193 yards on 26 carries. Luke, who tallied a significant part of his yardage after the initial contact, also scored two touchdowns and a two-point conversion. The unlikely win in Lake Havasu City allowed the Dorados to advance to the quarterfinals, where they met fifth-ranked Glendale. CDO started off strong, scoring 14 quick points in the first quarter, but the host team tied the game by halftime and then pulled away in the second half for a 3827 win. If anything, Luke was even more spectacular in the quarterfinal game than he had been in Lake Havasu. He carried the ball 20 times for 183 yards (an average of more than nine yards per carry) and scored three touchdowns. After starting out 0-3, Canyon Del Oro went 7-2 the rest of the way. The past was briefly bleak, but the present is bright, and the future for Kayden Luke is almost blinding. He has a long way to go to challenge the school records set by former Dorado and University of Arizona star Ka’Deem Carey. (As a junior, Carey rushed for 2,738 yards on 224 carries—a stunning
12.2 yards per carry for the season—and scored 45 touchdowns.) At 5’11” and 200 pounds, Luke is probably built more like the linebacker he plays on defense than a running back, but he excels at both. (He made First Team All-Conference as a running back.) Now that his football season is over, he will get into wrestling, followed by baseball in the spring. Then he’ll be back running the ball down opponents’ throats next fall. And the fall after that…
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Classic opening line from an NBC sketch show 42 King or queen topper 43 Baby ___ (“The Mandalorian” nickname) 44 Looks all over (for) 45 Reply to “Gracias” 48 “___ Duke” (1976 Stevie Wonder hit) 49 Classic line from the Wayne’s World sketch on “S.N.L.” 55 Doughnut go-with on an orchard tour 56 Indian honorifics 57 Little dog’s bark 59 “I’ll take that as ___” 60 Classic line from the Blue Öyster Cult sketch on “S.N.L.” 64 Pot-au-___ (French stew) 65 How some will solve this crossword 66 Start of a playground selection process 67 Humorous suffix with “most” and “best” 38
“The Fox and the Grapes,” e.g. 6 What often follows “Did you hear …?” 11 ___ Jima 14 Yet to be rented 15 Unsuk Chin’s “Alice in Wonderland,” for one 16 Hosp. scan 17 Classic line from the Superfans sketch on “S.N.L.” 19 Buddy 20 Cacophony 21 William who lent his name to a state 22 Masterful moves 24 Classic line from the Delicious Dish sketch on “S.N.L.” 28 Apple platform 29 Baked ___ 31 Belief system 34 Womb mate 37 Sue Grafton’s “___ for Innocent” 1
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TAURUS (April 20-May 20). When you build fun into your day, it’s better for everyone. It puts you in the mood to be your best self with people and contributes to your effectiveness with the serious work of the day. This week, fun will take planning, though. Put it in the schedule first and everything else will fit around it. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). It’s said you should dress for the job you want, not the job you have. In these times, when so many jobs can be done in bedroom slippers, the adage applies more to lifestyle than career. You’ll be defining yourself with style choices, at least on the surface, but it somehow changes how you feel and what you do. CANCER (June 22-July 22). There is much evidence to support a certain theory. It will be hard to reach any other conclusion than the obvious one, yet there is more that is true. Continue the questioning and try to keep an open mind. You’ll save yourself from later trouble by getting a fuller understanding of this week’s problems and mysteries. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Memories will weigh heavily on your future action. You’ll busy yourself with doing what you can to create positive experiences that reinforce the person you want to be. You’ll set your environment and schedule up for success, and you’ll surround yourself with people who make it easier for you to do the right thing. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll be hiring or choosing someone for a role. Base your choice on merit. You need someone with a very specific expertise, and swagger cannot stand in for skill. Give someone who is underconfident a chance. The others may have overlooked this person, but you are more attentive and observant.
Crossword Puzzle Answers
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“Wabbit” pursuer Elmer 2 Diarist Nin 3 Mel who voiced 1-Down 4 Grassy field 5 Greek “H” 6 Dressed like a Supreme Court justice 7 Overturn 8 Ogreish sort 9 Hockey great Bobby 10 Scamp 11 Strong urge 12 Sarong, for one 13 Some fine art 18 Imitates 23 Humorous suffix with “crap” and “schnozz” 25 Prep for a surprise party, in a way 26 Big dog’s bark 27 Nemesis 30 Doesn’t just assume, say 31 Attired 32 Mirin and sake 33 Made level 34 Also 35 Subj. of arms talks 36 ___ funk 39 Hanks’s “Sleepless in Seattle” co-star 40 Sound from a fan 41 Portable structure that’s pitched 46 Exist 47 Skin layer 48 Uninspiring 50 Overseer of Hamlet’s duel with Laertes 51 Council site of 1545 52 Absorbs, as body moisture 53 “Laughing” scavenger 54 New Haven Ivy Leaguer 55 ___ au lait 58 Begged 61 What the tangent of 45° is equal to 62 Something that’s catchy? 63 Actress Arthur 1
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ARIES (March 21-April 19). Everyone wants something. You’ll apply social skills and intuition to figure out how people can help one another. You may not be able to solve your own problem, but you’ll solve someone else’s, and the karma will come full circle in a most delightful way, and when you need it most.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You will work on a particular matter, turning it every which way to understand it from every angle. You’ll examine it from inside, outside, sideways, backward, historically, genetically and geographically. In the end, this diligence will serve you well, though you may not find a place for the information for some time. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You’re being marketed to constantly by those who would like you to choose their product. The science employed works; why not use it to market to yourself? Surround yourself with symbols and messages about the wise, smart and lucrative behaviors you would like to choose as the best version of yourself. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Success is a shapeshifter. It will come in an unexpected form. So, this week, don’t bother trying to define the win. There are creative forces at work weaving an intricate plan that will not adhere to your expectation. Defeat can give you power. Victory can deplete you. With an open mind, feel your way through. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’ll censor your words and cater your actions to fit the sensibility of others. In some cases, it’s just good manners, but you shouldn’t have to conform around everyone all the time. Consider your needs for self-expression and how they may be served better. You’ll get focused and attract new opportunities. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). The word “question” starts with a quest, and so will this week. The epic ask of your heart will send you gathering what you need from hospitable people in fruitful places. You’ll make progress on your own, though more when you enroll friends. Yours is an interesting challenge that will bring out the best in all. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Preparation has served you well in the past, but it’s not always possible or practical to ready yourself for every situation. This week brings instances in which a move must be made. Boldness will be rewarded over preparation. Take the lead. Go on, raise your hand... even if you have nothing to say.
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HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis
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Worship Guide 520.797.4384 BAPTIST
METHODIST
RESURRECTION LUTHERAN CHURCH AND CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTER
Classifieds@TucsonLocalmedia.com LUTHERAN
Changing the world through Christ, by caring for all people
LUTHERAN
Worship with us! SUNDAY
8:30 & 10 a.m. in person 10 a.m. online umcstmarks.org/live-worship 1431 W. Magee Rd. (520-297-2062) www.umcstmarks.org Methodist
VISTA DE LA MONTAÑA UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Please joinWorship us for for In-Person Vista Sunday at 10Church amand Please join us LIVE! Online service Children’s Sunday School Live Streamed Worship Service Sunday @ 10am @ 10:00am at 10:15 am after the children’s www.vistaumc.org www.vistaumc.org time in the church service or watch anytime using the the previor watch anytime using ous broadcast previous broadcast Adult Sunday Schoolbutton! –button! 11:15 am Please visit our website and/ 3001 E. Miravista Catalina or VistaUMC onLane, Facebook for Facebookfor viewing and daily updates updates on our our viewing on Locatedand on daily Oracle Rd. between Sunday services. services. Sunday
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Wilds Rd. & Golder Ranch Rd.
(520) 825-1985 www.vistaumc.org
CATHOLIC ST. MARK THE EVANGELIST CATHOLIC CHURCH
Reconciliation: T-F at 7:30 am, Sat at 3:15 pm and by appointment.
2727 W. TANGERINE ROAD ORO VALLEY, AZ 85742 520.469.7835 WWW.STMARKOV.COM SATURDAY: 4:00 PM Vigil Mass SUNDAY: 7:00 AM 8:30 AM Masks required 10:00 AM 11:30 AM
All Things Advent
11575 N. 1st Ave. Oro Valley, AZ 85737 (520) 575-9901
Welcome to Resurrection Lutheran! Come join us every Saturday evening or on Sunday for worship!
Oro Valley Location
5:00 pm Saturday evening Worship 7:45 am and 9:15 am Traditional Worship 10:45 am Contemporary Worship Friday, December 24 3:00pm Family Candlelight Service 5:00pm Contemporary Candlelight Service 7:00 and 9:00pm Traditional Candlelight services
NO services Christmas Day. Sunday, December 26 - 1 service only 9:15 am Lessons and Carols Wednesday Advent Services December 1, 8,15 and 22 at 12 noon
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SaddleBrooke 9:00 am Worship HOA1 Clubhouse Vermilion Room. SaddleBrooke Christmas Eve Service at 1:00 pm HOA1 Vermilion Room Online worship available anytime to fit your schedule. Check our website for more information
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Reserve Ad space in your local Worship Directory Call 520-797-4384 UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST Casas Adobes Congregational Church An Open and Affirming Congregation of the UCC
Visit our webpage to find resources to help you remain focused on the true meaning of Advent stmarkov.com/advent
For more inforamtion about these activities, please call the Parish Office.
LUTHERAN
as ChodrCisotllm ectio Fo
n
No matter who you are or where you are on life’s journey, you are welcome here!
Join Us for In-Person and Online Worship Services www.caucc.org/welcome/worship 520.297.1181 | info@caucc.org | 6801 N. Oracle Road
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Tucson Local Media
ith a major research university right in our backyard, a strong military presence and innovative companies throughout the metro region, there’s often a plethora of interesting science, medical and technology news to be found in Southern Arizona. Here’s a breakdown of the most interesting recent developments. Calcified Computers. A new type of computer developed by researchers at the University of Arizona can monitor bone health while remaining attached to the body, beneath the skin, over long periods of time. The so-called “osseosurface electronics” are ultra-thin devices that are wireless and do not require batteries. The devices use a calcium adhesive with an atomic structure similar to bone cells to stay attached. Otherwise, the bones may shed the device as they normally do with old tissue and cells, similar to skin flaking. “The bone basically thinks the device is part of it, and grows to the sensor itself,” said Philipp Gutruf, an assistant professor of biomedical engineering at UA. “This allows it to form a permanent bond to the bone and take measurements over long periods of time.” Although not yet approved for human use, researchers hope the devices can eventually be used to monitor health and healing associated with bone fractures and breaks. This may
be of particular importance Classifieds@tucsonlocalmedia.com to individuals with diseases like osteoporosis; rather than tracking bone health via trips to the hospital, the small devices could continually provide information to the user and doctor wherever they are. The devices have so far been used on lab rats, and collected information including temperature and bone strain during exercise. munities, with the money The devices can even deliv- paid on a reimbursement er optical stimulation to the basis for costs incurred by bone and surrounding tis- the applicants. sues, to potentially induce “In today’s digitally conbone regeneration. nected world, ensuring ac“As a surgeon, I am most cess to high-speed internet is excited about using meas- key to growing opportunity,” urements collected with Ducey said in a news release. osseosurface electronics to “Today’s historic investment someday provide my pa- will build on the progress tients with individualized of recent years to get even orthopedic care – with the more schools, businessgoal of accelerating reha- es, tribal communities and bilitation and maximizing homes connected, opening function after traumatic in- up more opportunities for juries,” said Dr. David Mar- services like telemedicine golis, an assistant professor and digital learning.” of orthopedic surgery at the Individual rural funding UA College of Medicine. can reach as high as $10 milThis research is discussed lion and individual urban in the paper “Osseosurface funding can reach as high as electronics,” published in $5 million, making this one the science journal Nature of the single largest broadCommunications. band investments in state history. Internet Investment. “We have prioritized On Monday, Nov. 15, Gov. a true need for Arizona – Doug Ducey announced a broadband,” said State Rep. $100 million commitment Joanne Osborne. “Teleto expand high-speed inter- health, education and econet to “unserved or under- nomic development all deserved areas of the state.” pend on a strong broadband These funds come from the connection. Investments American Rescue Plan Act, in broadband lead to safer and will be known as the highways, connected comArizona Broadband Devel- munities and healthier Ariopment Grant Program. The zonans.” program will make funds eligible to local governments, Native Center for DisNative American tribes, abilities. The University of schools, libraries and more. Arizona’s Sonoran Center The funds are available to for Excellence in Disabilities both rural and urban com- has been awarded $1.3 mil-
Photo courtesy of Gutruf Lab / UA
lion by the Arizona Developmental Disabilities Planning Council to establish a new center aimed at improving disability services for tribal communities. According to UA, the new Native Center for Disabilities will provide on-site and virtual training, continuing education, workshops, community events and other disability and culturally related services. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the disability community makes up about 27% of Arizona’s nearly 272,000 Native American population. About 12% of Native Americans in the state have a disability that requires the use of a wheelchair, cane or crutches. “Far too often the needs of our people with disabilities go unrecognized and opportunities become less and less as they age, leaving them and their families feeling hopeless,” said Mildred Manuel, deputy director of the Pascua Yaqui Tribe Education Division and member of the Sonoran Center’s Community Advisory Council. “We are pleased to see the work being done by the University of Arizona Sonoran Center and look forward to being part of this new opportunity for our Native American communities and our people with unique needs.”
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Explorer and Marana News, Dec 1, 2021