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Herald

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NEWS AT WWW.SVHERALD.COM

Local ceremony salutes WWII vets Event next Sunday remembers those who served in uniform and on the homefront BY BILL HESS bill.hess@svherald.com

SIERRA VISTA — The United States is fast approaching the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II. America’s entry into World War II officially began on Dec. 7, 1941, with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and other military installations in Hawaii early one Sunday morning. One of the deaths during the attack was Bisbee resident Seaman 1st Class James Murphy, one of seven Arizonans who died while serving on the battleship USS Arizona. Although the U.S. was already providing war support war primarily to England by escorting merchant ships through the Atlantic, the official war status of America becoming involved in World War II was the Japanese attack. The following day, on Dec. 8, 1941 the U.S. formally declared war on both Germany and Japan. And the end of the war, another Bisbee resident, Seaman 1st Class Nick Pavlovich, now 94, retransmitted the Japanese surren-

der ceremony from the USS Missouri to the United States from a naval radio station on Guam. That is a short synopsis of the war which saw more than 12.5 million American men and women don uni for ms of the Army — which then included the Air Force — Marines, Navy and Coast Guard, as well as an unknown number of those who served with the Merchant Marine. At 10:30 a.m. next Sunday, Aug. 16, one of the public Global Spirit of ‘45, commemorations will be held at the Southern Arizona Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery in Sierra Vista. Joe Larson, the cemetery administrator, said all federal and state-operated veterans’ cemeteries have been asked to participate in the event, which will begin in the Philippines at the American Battle Monuments Commission cemetery, and culminate at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Hawaii. The local ceremony, which will

FROM BEGINNING ... The U.S. entered the war after the Dec. 7, 1941 sinking of the USS Arizona.

See CEREMONY, Page A9

IN UNIFORM (Exclusive of the Merchant Marine) KILLED WOUNDED

407,316

671,846

WORLD WAR II KILLED/ WOUNDED

Those serving in uniform included 12,209,238 men and 358,000 women by 1945. The largest minority group were blacks with more than 900,000 in uniform. In 1939 the Army, Navy and Marines had a total of 334,473 in uniform. Figures for the Coast Guard were not tracked until 1942. Of those who served during the war, nearly 39 percent of the men were volunteers and all the women were in that category. Slightly more than 61 percent were drafted.

Army and Air Force 318,274 565,861 Navy 62,614 37,778 Marines 24,511 68,207 Coast Guard 1,917 Unknown

... TO END The Japanese delegation arrives on the USS Missouri to sign the surrender Sept. 2, 1945

Merchant Marine

11,324

of which 4,780 were missing, presumed dead

Blending art and history BY AMANDA HETRO amanda.hetro@bisbeereview.net

MARK.LEVYSVHERALD.COM

Bisbee artist Benjamin Dale works on his latest project Friday at Grassy Park. Dale is crafting a portico which will be bringing a small piece of the Bisbee Mining and Historical Museum outside. Dale refers to the diminutive edifice as the Park Archway Project.

This paper is published for valued subscriber Barbara Hill of Bisbee and the rest of Cochise County.

If you have visited Old Bisbee over the last few weeks and driven or walked by the Bisbee Mining and Historical Museum, you will have noticed an artist working on a large structure made of metal over the sidewalk. The museum, with the approval of the city council and the parks and recreation committee, asked local artist Ben Dale to design and construct a double arch over the sidewalk intersection in Grassy Park. “The design was his own and its architectural take, done in metal, on the built landscape of the park, is magnificent,” said museum director Carrie Gustavson. The revitalization of

See ART, Page A11

INDEX

SUN & CLOUDS High: 85 Low: 64

CALENDAR OPINION MOVIE LISTINGS OBITUARIES

A2 A4 A5 A6

SPORTS NEIGHBORS CROSSWORD IDIOTS&FRIENDS CLASSIFIED

MARK.LEVYSVHERALD.COM

Erika Heredia samples some wine with friends while attending the annual Hops and Vines Bad Decisions Campout in Sonoita Saturday.

Campout evolves into music fest BY LIZ MANRING liz.manring@svherald.com

SONOITA — More than a thousand people from across and beyond the state converged on Arizona Hops and Vines this weekend for the fourth annual Bad Decisions Campout, informally dubbed Southern

B1 C1 C4 C2 D1

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COMMUNITY

HERALD/REVIEW

Website launches at midnight BY ERIC PETERMANN eric.peterman@svherald.com

After almost a decade the Sierra Vista Herald/Bisbee Daily Review will be launching a new website that will go live at midnight Monday. The familiar svherald.com address will now feature a completely new look, responsive design and a comprehensive archive. Because of the responsive design, the webpage will adjust according to the size of the screen where the site is being displayed. Smartphone u ser s wi l l se e t he s a me i n for m at ion , r e or g a n i z e d t o f it the smaller screen, compared to tablet or full-sized computer monitors. Com menti ng a l so returns to the Herald/Review website. For the past several months, the feature has been turned off due to technical problems. Visitors to the site who want to leave a comment will find that opportunity at the bottom of each article. A new calendar is a l s o a n i mp or t a nt

part of the improved website. The directory of events offers users an opportunity to post their own calendar items and provides a fast and convenient way to find out what’s g oi n g o n i n yo u r community. Best of all, the website will have completely free access at its launch. Users will be asked to log-in, and will be able to see the complete version of articles, photos and other information. After the free tryout period, from Aug. 10 to Aug. 31, subscribers to the print edition of the Herald/Review will continue to have full access to the site. Vi sitors who wa nt complete access will pay a monthly fee. The modern, clean design of the website features full display photography, and lots of related content for each article. Special areas on the site are set up to tell users wh at ’s “ t r end i n g ,� show of f photo galleries and see who is commenting. T he “C om mu n it y St rong ! � website promises to be engaging while it serves to inform readers.

BIRTHS IMOGEN GENEVA ROSE COLVIN Imogen Geneva Rose Colvin was born on June 22, 2015, to Geneva and Brad Colvin of Sierra Vista, Ariz. Imogen was 21 inches tall and weighed in at 8lbs 6oz. Imogen’s maternal grandparents are Carolyn Noggle and Danny Noggle of Sierra Vista, Ariz. Her paternal grandparents are Jack Colvin and Lizbeth Dugan of Sierra Vista AZ and Trena Colvin who passed in 2003. Imogen also has a proud sibling Brad Colvin, Jr.

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

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2

Getting ready to Sizzle

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The 26th annual Sizzle will be held Sept. 19 starting at 5:30 p.m. at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Sierra Vista. Tickets are on sale from 9 a.m. to noon at Preference Properties, 705 E. Willcox, every Saturday in August and September leading up to the Sept. 19 event. The event raises money for Just Kids, Inc. The goal of this non-profit organization is to enhance the lives of needy children in the greater Sierra Vista area. This “ladies night out� supports Stocking Stuffers, Gifts from the Heart and other community programs. Sizzle will be held at the Knights of Columbus Hall, 156 NW Kayetan Drive in Sierra Vista. Tickets are $70 and credit cards are accepted. For ticket information call Candie at (520) 559-0637. Friday, the first tickets were distributed to select sponsors.

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PHOTOS PROVIDED

Dee Foster, representing the San Pedro Kiwanis Club, presented tickets to (photo one) Kirby Chapman (left) and Jack Blair (right) of Sulphur Springs Valley Electric Cooperative; (photo two) Jeannie McKinney of Cherry Creek Radio; (photo three) Eileen Coulston of Laser Cosmetics Services; and (photo four) Francis Wick, publisher of The Sierra Vista Herald/Bisbee Daily Review.

AROUND YOUR TOWN August 9 The Sierra Vista Environmental Operations Park (EOP), also known as the wastewater treatment plant, is open for bird walks each Sunday morning. The walks take about 2 hours and are led by docents from Southeastern Arizona Bird Observatory (SABO), Huachuca Audubon Society (HAS), and the Friends of the San Pedro River (FSPR). The walks begin Sundays at 7 a.m. and depart from the viewing platform inside the EOP. The entrance is located on Highway 90 between mileage markers 324 and 325 on the north side of the highway. All tours are FREE, although donations are accepted. Dress appropriately for the weather, bring drinking water, wear trail shoes, a hat, and use sun protection.

WELCOME

For more information call (520) 459-2555 or visit www. sanpedroriver.org Hands-on Hydrology of the Huachuca Mountains: Judy Phillips, environmental educator. What is an aquifer? How does groundwater recharge? These and other questions will be explained and answered in a family friendly series of activities Sunday, Aug. 9, at 1:30 p.m. Directions to the Carr House: From Sierra Vista travel south on Highway 92 to Carr Canyon Road (at the Mesquite Tree Restaurant), turn right (west). Drive about 2.1 miles up Carr Canyon Road. Carr House is on the left after a large concrete dip in the road. Please visit our website at www. huachucamountains.org. The next meeting of the Southeast Arizona Ostomy Support Group is Sunday, Aug. 9, at 2 p.m., in the Wellness Depot at the Mall at Sierra Vista. Karen Singer of Karen’s Acupuncture will be explaining the general use, procedure and effect of acupuncture. High Desert Writers will be meeting in a new location, The Sierra Vista Fire Station at 675 Giulio Cesare, beginning Sunday, Aug. 9. Meetings take place on the second Sunday of each month from 2 to 4 p.m. Writers should bring seven copies of their work for critique. For more information, contact Leslie Clark at (520) 266-0002 or Cappy Hanson at (520) 6422101.

Kit Shan Lee Pediatrician Sierra Vista Medical Group welcomes Dr. Kit Shan Lee to our medical staff.

August 10 “Cuba: The People, The Culture, The Cars� with Becky Orozco, Monday, Aug. 10 at 5:30 p.m. at the Copper Queen Library. In June 2015, Becky Orozco, Bisbee resident and history instructor at Cochise College, joined a people-to-people exchange of fellow educators to Cuba. As the group traversed the island nation, change was

Subway Gallery planning “critterâ€? exhibit ‘Dogs and Other Critters’ will scamper, hop, flutter, swim, walk and slither into Subway Gallery, 30 Main Street for the annual Tribute to our Animal Friends Show, on exhibit through the month of August. Works in all media representing every phyla of the animal kingdom will be on display, with a special emphasis on dogs. Even a plant or two might sneak in ‌ Prepare to go barking mad! in the air. Join Becky as she talks about her journey, the people she met and the cool cars she saw along the way. The Copper Queen Library is located at 6 Main Street, Bisbee. For more information call (520) 432-4232. The Sierra Vista Table Tennis Club will be playing recreational singles and doubles at J&R’s Table Tennis Facility, 7433 Brumby Ln., Sierra Vista, on Monday, Aug. 10, from 6 to 8 p.m. Newcomers welcome; no charge to first-timers. Paddles and balls furnished. Under 18 must be accompanied by an adult. August 11 The Huachuca Area Republican Women’s Club invites you to hear our own Arizona State Senator Gail Griffin speak at their luncheon on Tuesday, Aug. 11 at Pueblo del Sol Country Club. Senator Griffin will give us an update of the happenings in our State Senate last year as well as some expectation of what we might look for in the future. Registration and social time will start at 10:30 a.m. followed by lunch and the program. A fun Presidential straw poll will be conducted so you can vote for your candidate of choice. Cost for lunch is $16.00 with a reservation; please call Nancy at (520) 366-0012 no later than August 9. Walk-ins are welcome, and will be charged $17 without a reservation at the door. Guests as well as

prospective members and visitors are always welcome to attend. The Cochise County Youth Orchestra is now welcoming violin, viola, cello and string bass players to join in the fun next semester, which starts on Tuesday, Aug. 11 and runs through Dec. 2, 2015. Elementary through high school age youth are welcome. Beginning, intermediate, and advanced classes are offered. Rehearsals are held on Tuesdays after school at Cochise College, 901 N. Colombo, Room 705, in Sierra Vista. Beginning classes meet at 3:30 p.m.; intermediate and advanced orchestra meet at 4:30 p.m. For more information and schedule, call (520) 678-4823 or visit www.ccyo.info. Mask Making Workshop at Central School Project, Bisbee. Two sessions Tuesday, Aug. 11 and Wednesday, Aug 12 from 4 to 7 p.m. both days. The first evening, making your plaster mask, will take less than an hour’s time. Still we offer you a three hour window to come at your convenience. Wednesday evening your mask will be dry and you will want to take your time embellishing it, so plan to stay for the full three hours if possible. This workshop is best shared with a partner. Cost is $15 solo/$25 with a partner or child. Central School Project is located at 43 Howell Ave., Bisbee. For more information call (520) 432-4866.

Storm prompts emergency alert on cellphones BY ERIC PETERMANN eric.peterman@svherald.com

For more information please call 520-263-3500.

XNLV224762

Medical Office Building 2, 5750 E. Highway 90, Suite 375 !! "# ( "% ! $ !

Heavy rain washed parts of Sierra Vista on Saturday afternoon and the Palominas Fire Department was called out after an apparent lightning strike may have sparked a minor fire, after storm clouds move d t h r ou g h t he area. We at her Under g rou nd, a n on li ne source that was the first Internet weather service, reported rainfall totals ranging from just under 2 inches on the city’s north and west sides, compared to 1.5 inches elsewhere in Sierra Vista. Rainfall totals were not available from the National We at her S er vic e or the Sierra Vista Fire Department Saturday evening.

Just after 7 p.m., everyone owning a cellp h o n e r e c eiv e d a n emergency alert issued by the National Weather Service that warned of flash flooding in the area. The toned warning was activated by the agency and dispatched th rough a l l cellphone networks. Sheriff’s spokeswoman Carol Capas said f looding was reported in areas of the city, on Fourth Street, Sulgar Subdivision and other neighborhoods. “There were a couple of places that required 4 -wheel drive to get through,� Capas said. “But there were also great rainbows.� Lightning from the storm may have caused a fire in the Palominas area. The local department was initially dispatched for what was

thought to be a fire resulting from a lightning strike in the community, but the call was cancelled before firefighters arrived. In another incident on Saturday, the Sheri f f ’s Depar tment re ported a 37-year-old Elfrida woman was airlifted to a Tucson hospital after being bitten by a rattlesnake at around 11 a.m. Elfrida Fire Department medics checked t he fem a le a nd r e quested a helicopter to respond for possible t ra nspor t. No ot her information was available on the incident at press time. On Friday, Cochise County employees reported locating a baby rattlesnake near the Board of Supervisors offices, off Melody Lane in Bisbee.


LOCAL/REGION

HERALD/REVIEW

Free museum admission for Bisbee residents BY AMANDA HETRO amanda.hetro@bisbeereview.net

BISBEE — Following a longstanding tradition of more than 20 years, the Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum has designated the month of August, 2015, to invite Bisbee residents to visit for free. The museum also invites residents of Cochise County to visit on a two-admissions-for-one basis; for example, two adult admissions for the price of only one. T he museu m’s mission is both to preserve, but even more importantly, to interpret our shared history, and we do just that. This August we are again offering several new exhibits: a small exhibit done by the kids of the Learning Experiential Activities Program (LEAP) summer “museum camp� and paintings by our kids and families who participated in “Paint Your

Town� kick-off session in our newly revitalized Grassy Park under the direction of Bisbee artist Gretchen Baer. LEAP’s “museum camp� was a ton of fun as the kids learned what museum do and how they do it. Our research into our museum collections revealed a wonderfully fun collection of kazoo instruments made from kitchen implements such as graters, muffin tins, tin cans, egg beaters, and tin cans. With this as our base, we formed the LEAP museum, collected kitchen artifacts, and created the “Cusical Cookers� exhibit of whimsical kazoo instruments, Did you know that by 1994, the Original American Kazoo Company in New York was producing 1.5 million kazoos each year? You can also visit the Museum’s exhibit, Digging In: Bisbee’s Mineral Heritage, beautifully designed and executed by

the Office of Exhibits Central staff of the Smithsonian Institution. This exhibit received the Governor’s Award for Arizona Preservation from the Arizona Office of Tourism and the Award of Merit for Leadership in History from the American Association of State and Local History. If you haven’t seen Digging In, now is your chance. August also offers Bisbee residents the chance to visit the Museum Store, complete with new merchandise and a wonderful selection of books. Simply flash your driver’s license showing your residency and come see the changes and experience the fun of learning at the Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum! Located in the heart of Bisbee’s Historic District, #5 Copper Queen Plaza, the Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum is open daily, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

2015

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

A3

Sierra Vista Chamber of Commerce

HOME &

BUSINESS

EXPO

Saturday, September 12, 2015 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. The Mall at Sierra Vista

FREE ADMISSION! The Chamber’s Home & Business Expo is the largest trade show in Cochise County! Booths include table, skirted tablecloth, and 2 chairs. Y t Y Wi-Fi & electricity is available upon request.

IVANISKO WORKED LIKE A HIGHLY-SKILLED AND TALENTED SURGEON.

LIMIT 2 BOOTH SPACES PER BUSINESS.

REGISTER BY

Friday, August 28, 4 p.m. JOIN THESE BUSINESSES: t "MMTUBUF *OTVSBODF $PNQBOZ

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t $PDIJTF $PXCPZ 1PFUSZ BOE .VTJD (BUIFSJOH t (SBTTIPQQFS -BOETDBQJOH BOE .BJOUFOBODF --$

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t .S 'JY *U --$

t 7BMPS )PTQJDF$BSF 1BMMJBUJWF$BSF

t /PWB )PNF -PBOT t 0OF )PVS "JS $POEJUJPOJOH )FBUJOH 4JFSSB 7JTUB

t *U 8PSLT (MPCBM -JOETFZ %F8PMGF t (VJME .PSUHBHF

Booth space is available to Chamber members only.

Contact The Sierra Vista Chamber 520-458-6940 Exhibitor and Vendor Applications

PROVIDED

Richard Ivanisko, of Southwest Gas, maneuvers a backhoe to remove tree stumps near the Thrift Store in Sierra Vista. The work was donated to the non-profit thrift store by Southwest Gas.

AVAILABLE ONLINE AT SIERRAVISTACHAMBER.ORG

Great communities foster paying it forward The St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store on Myer Drive in Sierra Vista sells donated items to raise funds, which ultimately go back into the community as aid to those in need. Recent ly t he T h ri f t Store ne e de d help r emov i n g bi g stumps along the side the building and they turned to the community for help. They contacted Julie Phipps, the district Manager for South-

west Gas and explained the problem. Southwest Gas graciously offered to help. Wade Greenough, construction supervisor, contacted the St. Vincent store the next day and arranged for the stump removal. A week later, on Wednesday afternoon, Richard Ivanisko arrived and quickly removed the stumps as Southwest Gas’ cha ritable gi f t back to ou r community. Ivanisko worked like a highlyskilled and talented surgeon.

He made that machine do magic and in three hours, he had the stumps out, the ground leveled and all of the trash hauled away. This wonderful act of kindness ensures the bushes will not grow back to provide food and shelter for termites. The St. Vincent de Paul Conference has expressed its appreciation to Southwest Gas for its generous donation of time and talent supporting the thrift store, which is a non-profit organization.

THIS YEAR’S MAJOR SPONSORS: XNLV224608

Submitted by Steve Conroy

PAYMENT DUE UPON REGISTRATION.

Leaving a legacy

Busy intersection to get new traffic light cycle BY JUDY HECTOR Marketing and Public Affairs Division, City of Sierra Vista

SIERRA VISTA — Vehicles turning into Lowes or Wal-Mart from Martin Luther King Parkway will see a new traffic light cycle starting Tuesday, Aug. 11, giving drivers a left turn green arrow before drivers heading straight get the green light. Called a protected/permissive left turn, the green arrow will start the cycle while other drivers stop. After a few seconds, the green

arrow will turn yellow, then solid green indicating that drivers wishing to make a left turn should yield to oncoming traffic. While the old cycle does include a protected left turn, it is last in the cycle and drivers turning left are occasionally stuck in the intersection when cross traffic gets the green light, causing traffic snarls, fenderbenders and outright crashes. “This intersection has a history of accidents caused when drivers are turning left into

either Lowes or the Wal-Mart shopping area,� says City Engineer Sharon Flissar. “Changing the light cycle to provide a protected left turn first will clear the left turn bays and help keep drivers safe.� This change comes right on the heels of the first day of classes for Sierra Vista students. Remember to watch for kids crossing streets and walking along the roadways, and drop your speed to 15 miles per hour in school zones.

Cat found alive aboard sunken boat has new home

BRANDON MESSICK/TODAY’S NEWSHERALD VIA AP

Bonnie Butterworth, left, pets Lucky the cat, who is being held by Western Arizona Humane Society employee Samantha Dahl in Lake Havasu City, on Aug. 4. Lucky was found wet and scared aboard a sunken boat in Lake Havasu last month but was adopted by Butterworth this week.

LAKE HAVASU CITY (AP) — A cat that was found wet and scared aboard a sunken boat in Lake Havasu now has a home on dry land. The Today’s News-Herald reports that “Lucky,� a brown and black American shorthair breed, has been adopted. Bonnie Butterworth, who works for the Lake Havasu Convention and Visitors Bureau, is also an avid cat rescuer. Butterworth had been talking with staff at the Western Arizona Humane Society for several days and officially signed adoption papers earlier this week. Lucky was found July 25 when divers pulled the boat she was on from the water. Divers estimate the feline was in the water for at least an hour.

Members of the National Alliance on Mental Illness for Southeast Arizona board and guests faced the camera Thursday following a presentation by Tracie Lane, standing. Lane, who is regional director of the Arizona Community Foundation of Cochise, discussed “Leaving a Legacy and Supporting Your Favorite Charity.� From front to back are NAMI SEAZ board members Gwen Calhoun and Dwight Lind, volunteer Lori Schectman and advisory council member Alesia Ash. Lane said a beginning amount of $25,000 is needed for a nonprofit organization, like NAMI SEAZ, to launch an endowment fund. Once established, the endowment fund can provide an annual source of funding that a nonprofit organization can count on to sustain its operation and assure its viability. The NAMI SEAZ mission is “bringing hope, support and encouragement to individuals and families impacted by mental illness, and raising mental health awareness in our communities.�


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SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

GOVERNMENT CONTACT GOV. DOUG DUCEY • MAIL: 1700 W. Washington, Phoenix AZ85007 • TELEPHONE: (602) 542-4331 • EMAIL: http://www.governor.state.az.us/contact.htm (click on e-mail link on the Web site)

OUR VIEW

Federal agencies expanding their reach

Opinion

Opinion Editor: Eric Petermann, 515-4610, eric.petermann@svherald.com

A

lthough relieved that the new clean air regulations put forth by the federal Environmental Protection Agency aren’t as stringent as first proposed, the impact of what is being adopted will still have a significant economic impact on Southeast Arizona. And so will other new regulations being put forth by federal agencies. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife has proposed designation of new territory — including most of Cochise County — as a protected habitat for the Mexican Grey Wolf. Despite the fact that the only prey available in this region for the wolf are ranchers’ cattle, federal officials have ignored input from local governments and avoided public hearings in affected communities to mandate the change. Similar changes are coming for regulations that govern water. The EPA announced an expansion of the Clean Water Rule, which redefines rivers, streams, ponds and wetlands. The impact of the change would put the federal agency in the middle of regulating irrigation ditches and “nonnavigable” waters, like many of the dry-bed rivers and streams in this area. In all three cases, the expansion of federal authority proposed by these agencies will almost certainly require a larger bureaucracy to enforce — meaning taxpayers will have more of the federal government to pay for. More disturbing is that these regulations are dictated, not legislated. Our elected lawmakers can only react to what the EPA and USFW have proposed, without contributing to formulating the regulations and standards that are being established. This process violates the principle of representative government, vesting the decisionmaking process in federal agencies that have an incentive to expand their authority, budget and sheer size. It’s a process that needs to change.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR • Letters of general interest should be limited to no more than 400 words. • Letters must include address and telephone numbers for verification. • To write us, send your letters to: Letter to the Editor, Sierra Vista Herald, 102 Fab Ave., Sierra Vista AZ 85635. Letters can be e-mailed to eric.peterman@svherald. com .

W

Will Joe Biden run?

ill Joe Biden run for president? An answer to that question should come by fall, and meanwhile, Team Biden will be weighing the arguments for and against another campaign. Here’s what their pro-con list might look like, starting with the positives: • The dream never dies. While Biden never came close in his first two runs for the presidency, his drive has apparently not dulled with age. Remember the adage of the late congressman Mo Udall: “Presidential ambition is a disease which can only be cured by embalming fluid.” Biden has occupied a White House office for close to seven years. He’s inhaled the incense of ultimate power. And he must look at the commotion caused by Sen. Bernie Sanders’ upstart effort and say, “Really? Bernie Sanders? Why not me?” • The satellite circle. The candidate is not the only one with persistent presidential ambitions. Friends and family, staffers and supporters — they all have a stake in his success. Biden’s son Beau reportedly urged his father to run again when he was dying from cancer in May. After Beau’s death, some of the condolence calls the vice president received reinforced that plea. Those cheerleaders could provide an initial campaign network to get him started. • Hillary Clinton’s weaknesses. These conversations would not be happening if Clinton’s campaign had gotten off to a better start. But her vulnerabilities as a candidate are clearly visible. That’s why 17 Republicans are running: They think she’s beatable. And some Democrats are worried they’re right. In recent polls, her unfavorable rating has jumped to an average of 48 percent, with only 43 percent

viewing her positively. A CNN survey shows only 47 percent believing she “cares about people like you,” an enduring OMMENTARY and critical problem. STEVE & COKIE ROBERTS Clinton’s camp understands the importance of this question, which is why her first TV ads focus on her mother, Dorothy Rodham, who struggled to build a life after leaving home as a teenager. As Clinton adviser Jennifer Palmieri told the Washington Post, the ads are aimed at convincing voters that Dorothy’s daughter “understands what your life is like, that she understands your problems.” • Biden’s strengths. He’s a genuinely nice man. He’s more authentic and believable than Clinton, with a better chance of conveying the message that he “understands your problems.” And he’s a Catholic from Pennsylvania, with deep appeal to working-class voters in key Rust Belt states. (And in Florida, where he’s long been popular with Jewish voters.) There are plenty of negatives, too: • Age. Biden would be 74 on Inauguration Day, more than four years older than Ronald Reagan, the oldest president. The average age for our first 44 presidents was not quite 55. Two leading Republican candidates, senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, are younger than Beau Biden was when he died. • History. It’s very difficult for a sitting vice president to win on his own. Just ask Al Gore. All administrations pick up scars, and voters yearn for a

change. Before George Bush “41” succeeded Reagan in 1988, the last incumbent veep to accomplish the feat was Martin Van Buren in 1836. • Timing. Clinton is far ahead when it comes to raising money and building an organization. Even some longtime Bidenites have signed on with her. Obama adviser David Axelrod told NBC that Team Biden must face “a real big reality check here” when it comes to mounting a serious challenge. “I know what it takes put a presidential campaign together and it is late in the game,” he said. • Rationale. What is Biden’s reason for running, beyond personal ambition? He and Clinton belong to the same generation. They served in the same administration. They espouse the same pragmatically progressive views. They both boast vast foreign policy experience. They even trace their roots to the same Pennsylvania town (Scranton). So why Joe? • Risk. There’s one characteristic they don’t share: gender. And Biden risks being blamed for blocking the first female president. Sure, a stiff primary challenge can toughen and sharpen a candidate for the general election. It can also drain time and resources away from the eventual nominee and provide her opponents with plenty of ammunition. And if he fails, does Biden want to be remembered as a three-time loser? If Biden and his advisers are honest with themselves, they will conclude that the arguments against running far outweigh the positives. But emotions always play a big role in these decisions, and he could still decide to defy reason and roll the dice one last time.

supported assistance and that can not continue. One candidate did mention that working people unfairly support those who pay no taxes. The biggest disappointment was the emphasis on religion and government taking away individual choices in life that are strictly personal such as what we do with our bodies and the right to die. Only one candidate said that government does not have the right to interfere in your personal life choices. It again revealed how politics has become saturated with social and religious doctrine (which should not be in political discussion) at the expense of our country’s economic and military survival. In my opinion, creeping social media cancer and the urge to tell others how to live their lives reveals that our priorities are upside down. Those who are constantly on their electronic equipment or telling us how to live instead of learning more about personal survival, initiative and the increasing growth and domination of government, are

dooming our next generation. Dave Cartun Bisbee

the Madman Theory to Robert Halderman: “I call it the Madman Theory, Bob. I want the North Vietnamese to believe I’ve reached the point where I might do anything to stop the war. We’ll just slip the word to them that, ‘for God’s sake, you know Nixon is obsessed about communism. We can’t restrain him when he’s angry — and he has his hand on the nuclear button’, and Ho Chi Minh himself will be in Paris in two days begging for peace.” There was a flaw in Nixon’s thinking … Ho Chi Minh had stepped down in 1965 and had died a month before he put his plan in operation. He shouldn’t be blamed for his lack of intelligence since he was getting it from the CIA. To get back to Mr. Nugent’s point that we could have won the Vietnam War, there was only one point when North Vietnam was vulnerable. That was shortly after the Tet Offensive when the North had pretty much shot their bolt. However, again we were relying on the CIA for our intelligence.

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STEVE AND COKIE ROBERTS, can be contacted by email at stevecokie@gmail.com.

OUR READERS’ VIEWS Saturated with doctrine

To the Editor: Thursday night’s Republican debate showed many strengths, ignored important future considerations, and revealed how “social and personal” choices plus religion are dominating political conversation. Several candidates did say that that they support a “fair and equal tax” requiring that every person pays the same percent of their income. Two candidates suggested that a federal tax on consumption is much fairer and simpler than our current income tax. One candidate said that war is about killing people and strongly objected to heavy, politically correct, bleeding heart control over war. There was no mention of the possible need to reinstitute the draft or any candidate asking if Americans will be willing to demand that all able persons must do either military or public service. No candidate directly said that over 50 percent of Americans are receiving some type of taxpayer

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” — The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Winning the war

To the Editor: I saw a statement in Aug. 6 paper that I must correct. Jack Nugent stated, “We had that war (Vietnam) won just like in Iraq and Afghanistan.” What would Mr. Nugent have done differently to win the Vietnam War? We dropped three and a half times the number of bombs that were dropped in World War II. We even got confused as to where we should drop those bombs, so we bombed Laos and Cambodia. We used Operation Phoenix to neutralize (a much nicer word than kill) 41,000 Vietnamese. This operation got far more efficient when William Colby took over and determined that we should execute 50 percent of those tortured, instead of the 33 percent killed before he took the reigns. A good boss should set quotas for his employees. In 1969 Richard Nixon proposed

Publisher Emeritus: Robert J. Wick Publisher Emeritus: Walter M. Wick Publisher: Francis Wick SIERRA VISTA

Assistant General Manager: Patricia Wick Editor: Eric Petermann Advertising Director: Becky Bjork Send letters to the editor by mail to 102 Fab Ave., Sierra Vista AZ 85635, or by e-mail to svhnews@svherald.com.

See LETTERS, Page A5

Business Manager: Joan Hancock Circulation Manager: Jeremy Feldman

B I S B E E D A I LY


OPINION/FEATURE

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

HERALD/REVIEW

A5

Choose your words carefully

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with our co-workers, ierra Vista Unified students, parents and School District community. welcomed nearly We live in challenging 6,000 students to a new times, and our children school year on Aug. 3. have the unfortunate, The preceding weeks frequent opportunity were filled with SVUSD to see and hear employees preparing discouraging, negative, eight schools and hurtful behavior and dozens of buses for CHIEVING words in the world. their arrival. So much Pop culture makes put XCELLENCE to be accomplished downs and derogatory — cleaning, waxing, OGETHER language appear to painting, tuning, be the norm. Their repairing, tiling, KRISS HAGERL minds are like sponges, mowing and moving soaking up both the in the creation of safe, good and the bad they see and supportive environments for learning and working together. hear. I have challenged all SVUSD The summer found staff members to take care many SVUSD teachers and in their choice of words in professional staff members order to build up relationships attending college courses, with students as well as their professional conferences and co-workers, parents and workshops and spending community partners. Our countless hours preparing schools need to be places of engaging lessons for the encouragement, with positive upcoming year. They do this messages, and helpful behavior. for our children, in most cases Dave Weber, author of “Sticks at their own expense and and Stones Exposed, The Power without compensation. These of our Words,” has shared his professionals are called to give insights about the destructive their best so that our children power of words with thousands can have the best possible of teachers and professionals opportunities for success. across the country. During the District’s July You remember the saying, 31 Opening Ceremonies, I “Sticks and Stones may break had the privilege of sharing my bones, but words will the expectations found in the never hurt me,”? All of us District Strategic Plan that have experienced the painful support the achievement of mistruth of that statement. our mission of achieving high Dave paid an online visit to levels of learning for all of our SVUSD during our opening students. This plan centers on five strategic priorities: student ceremonies, reminding us to use words to praise and achievement, safe, nurturing support. “Words can crush learning environments, fiscal and kill the spirit of a child, a health, quality personnel and marriage, a team or family.” customer service. Achieving There are 6,000 amazing excellence in any and all of SVUSD pre-K through 12th these five areas requires grade children and youth teamwork. We must be who are watching the adults intentional in building healthy in their lives and their collaborative relationships

For the week ending Aug. 7

Y Y

Planned Parenthood: Senators failed, 53-46, to reach 60 votes for advancing a bill (S 1881) to end federal funding of Planned Parenthood, a nonprofit that provides health care, including abortion and other reproductive services, at 700 clinics in the U.S. A yes vote supported the funding cutoff.

KEY VOTES AHEAD

A E T

©2015 Thomas Voting Reports www.voterama.info

The House and Senate are in recess until Sept. 8. They face a Sept. 17 deadline for voting on whether to disapprove of the nuclear deal with Iran, and a Sept. 30 deadline for completing work on fiscal 2016 appropriations bills or, failing that, passing a stopgap budget to keep the government fully in operation.

A new hospital equals new services

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psychiatric ur new service is hospital has staffed by a been opened psychiatrist a little over three and a months and its psychiatric staff has been nurse busy establishing practitioner, hospital services and Psychiatric that will benefit the residents of OMMENTARY Telemedicine is also available Cochise County. patients. When we were LANNY A. KOPE, forThe goal of seeking a major EDD the psychiatric system with service is to whom to affiliate, return the patient to our hope was that the community as a additional services productive member and physicians would of society; the length be available so our of stay varies, but the residents didn’t have average stay is six days. to travel to Tucson for PTSD treatment their health care. The basic concept was is also a component of the behavioral ...”shop local.” health services and Under the leadership complements what is of CEO Dean French, available at the fort or MD, several services through the VA. have begun to Legislation has emerge at Canyon been introduced in Vista Medical Center the U.S. House of (CVMC). Representatives which One of these has would amend the been the designation of Veteran’s Choice Act to CVMC by the Arizona include access to nonDepartment of Health Department of Veterans Services as a Level III Affairs mental health Trauma Center. This services. The bill’s makes CVMC the only title is Veterans’ hospital in Cochise Mental Health Care County to reach that Access Act (H.R. 1604). level and one of five The bill would allow in the state to do so. veterans to access Benson, Bisbee, and mental health services Willcox are designated at non-VA facilities as Level IV. regardless of whether One feature of the the veteran has emergency service attempted to schedule designation is CVMC’s an appointment at Cardiac Receiving Center. This is an active a VA facility or the location of the veteran’s cardiac catheterization residence. laboratory with 24 Passage of this hour, seven-days-ameasure would week service. It has certainly help our two cardiac teams and permits the performing veterans who now have to go to Tucson. of life saving cardiac Another new service cath services. Cardiac is wound treatment in cath is basically a hyperbaric chamber. inserting a catheter in This service enables one of the large blood patients who have vessels leading to the wounds that will not heart to see where heal an opportunity the blockage is. If a to be treated in what blockage is found, then appears to be a long a stent is inserted to plastic tube. The open the blockage. patient who is in the A hospital without single chamber under a cardiac cath lab high atmospheric is restricted to pressure is placed on performing what’s 100 percent oxygen, known as thrombolytic which in essence is therapy which is the the healing agent. The use of drugs to dissolve hyperbaric chamber is the clot causing the a technique developed problem. years ago and often is The first 30 minutes used for divers who in a heart attack are ascend too rapidly critical which is why and contracted what helicopters are used to is called the “bends,” transport heart attack an accumulation of patients. nitrogen gas bubbles in Now that Douglas their system. is without a hospital, These new services helicopter transport to are just the beginning CVMC becomes quite of our health care significant. The first enhancement because responder in Douglas can activate the cardiac of the construction of a new hospital in which procedure at CVMC many individuals had when leaving Douglas, a hand. We should be and by the time the proud of this facility helicopter arrives — about a 10 minute flight and pleased that trips to Tucson are on the way — the cardiac team to being diminished. can be ready to render We can now begin to lifesaving treatment. shop local! Another very important and muchLanny A. Kope, EdD has needed service been a hospital trustee available at CVMC for over thirty years, is behavioral health. serving on urban and Until now, someone rural hospital boards. seeking behavioral He is the immediate past health services had to Board Chair of Sierra Vista go to Tucson. With the Regional Health Center advent of this program, and has had a national Tucson travel is no responsibility as Chair longer necessary. The of the American Hospital entire fourth floor of Association’s Committee CVMC is dedicated to on Governance. Dr. Kope psychiatric services is also a University of and has 15 psychiatric Phoenix faculty member in beds and four geriatric Health Care. psychiatric beds. The

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community. They are learning from what they see and hear. In my visits to our campuses this week, I found smiling adults and students working together, students holding doors for teachers and their peers, adults and students helping new students find their way to new classrooms, and teachers and parents getting to know each other so that they can work together to help students. Bus drivers greeted children with a smile and wished them a good day and students wished them the same. I saw committed adults striving to build and sustain a safe, nurturing environment for learning, working and living. As members of the greater SVUSD community, I challenge each of you to positively influence a child, a co-worker, a customer, a patient, a neighbor through encouraging words and thoughtful conversations. The strongest muscle in the body is the tongue; it weighs so little and yet so few can hold it! We need to show our young people the power of possibilities when we are civil in our debate. We can continue to build a community culture of kindness and cooperation through our actions at sporting events, in grocery stores, in our Internet postings, and schools. Thank you for supporting the children, teachers and support staff of your community’s outstanding schools. We look forward to working with you in our journey of achieving excellence together. KRISS HAGERL is the Superintendent of the Sierra Vista Unified School District. She can be reached at Kriss. Hagerl@svps.k12.az.us.

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STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON [R] Thursday, AUGUST 13, 8:00 p.m.

Sunday, 8/09

MINIONS MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: [PG] DIGITAL ROGUE NATION 11:30 2:15 4:35 [PG-13] DIGITAL 1:00 4:00 6:00 FANTASTIC 7:20 9:00 FOUR [PG] DIGITAL VACATION 11:40 12:05 2:10 [R] DIGITAL 2:55 4:40 5:45 12:15 2:45 5:15 7:10 8:35 7:45 COMING TO AMERICA [R] DIGITAL 2:00p.m.

THE GIFT [R] DIGITAL 11:50 2:30 5:10 7:50

ANT-MAN [PG13] DIGITAL 11:05 1:50 4:45 7:35

PIXELS [PG13] DIGITAL 11:00 1:40 4:20 7:00

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SOUTHPAW TRAINWRECK [R] DIGITAL [R] DIGITAL 12:55 4:05 7:15 6:55p.m.

COMING SOON: STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY, 8/9- 8/12

PG13 RICKI & THE FLASH 1:00 • 4:00 • 7:00 SHAUN THE SHEEP MOVIE PG 12:45 • 3:45 • 6:45 DISNEY’S INSIDE OUT - LAST WEEK! PG 12:45 JURASSIC WORLD - LAST WEEK! PG13 3:45 • 6:45

THURSDAY, 8/13

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It’s not too late for homeowners in crisis

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homeowners returned omeowners who for further assistance are behind in because their financial their mortgage circumstances had due to circumstances not improved after beyond their control, or receiving their first even due to poor money mortgage modification, management, can still ROWING but instead had gotten receive counseling on worse. what programs are RIZONA SEAGO works available to them for SOUTHEAST ARIZONA directly with lenders possible assistance to to attempt to reach a avoid foreclosure. Even GOVERNMENT sustainable outcome homeowners who have ORGANIZATION for the homeowner. received a previous SEAGO also works modification of their within the framework of mortgage may be eligible for Arizona Department of additional assistance when Housing’s Save Our Home experiencing a secondary AZ program. By using our hardship. counseling services, you are not The SEAGO Housing alone in the process – we are Department recently completed a second mortgage modification with you step by step. Is it an easy process? Unfortunately, for a homeowner who came it’s not. But as long as a to us for assistance two years homeowner can provide the after receiving their first documentation necessary modification, and is currently to properly document their counseling several other hardship, it is possible to homeowners who previously receive a modification. received a modification. These

Although a sustainable outcome may not include keeping your home, homeowners who fail to seek counseling may never find out if they were eligible for a first or second mortgage modification that might have enabled them to stay in their home. If you are more than three months behind on your mortgage, remember time is of the essence. It can take several months to work through the process of determining if you qualify for a mortgage modification, so don’t wait until you get a Notice of Trustee Sale before calling. If you are behind on your mortgage, remember the number one rule of thumb: Contact a housing counselor sooner rather than later! For more information on the programs offered by the SEAGO Housing Department, contact Julie at (520) 432-5301, Extension 203, or jpacker@ seago.org.

LETTERS:

which we face. Is this what we want to leave our grandchildren? A planet with no water, no food, cities under water? There is time, please vote for the planet not the corporations and do what in your heart of hearts you know is right. Sybil Erden Pomerene

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FROM PAGE A4

Vietnam was an example of fighting a war to prop up a corrupt dictatorship. When I think of it I think of George Nicholas Fanis, Jr. I was in basic training with him at Fort Knox. He now rests in Greenwood Cemetery in

Rockford, Illinois. Rest in peace George. Jim Handy Sierra Vista

Vote for the planet

To the Editor: Please do all you can to help avoid the catastrophic planetary climate crisis


A6

WEATHER/OBITUARY

HERALD/REVIEW

WEATHER 5-DAY FORECAST FOR SIERRA VISTA TODAY

TONIGHT

MONDAY

Partly sunny

Partly cloudy

Times of clouds and sun

High 85° RealFeel: 96°

Low 64° RealFeel: 65°

88° 65° RealFeel: 98°/65°

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

A t-storm in spots in the afternoon

Mostly sunny, a t-storm in spots

Mostly sunny

91°

66°

92°

RealFeel: 96°/63°

68°

93°

RealFeel: 95°/66°

66°

RealFeel: 98°/64°

The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature® is an exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine intensity, cloudiness, precipitation, pressure, and elevation on the human body. Shown are the highest and lowest values for each day.

REGIONAL WEATHER Snowflake 82/58

Prescott 85/62 Wickenburg 100/76

St. Johns 82/60 Show Low 76/56

Payson 87/61 Phoenix 107/86

Globe 94/73

Benjamin K. Weber

Ronald Mark Kuhn

March 4, 1971 – July 30, 2015

April 16, 1940 – August 5, 2015

Benjamin K. Weber, age 44, died on July 30, 2015. He passed away peacefully on a park bench near a church in Tucson, Ariz. Ben resided in Boulder, Tucson and Sierra Vista and was dearly loved by his mother, Martha Nordin (Ted) of Sierra Vista and his father, Gene Weber (Pam) of Boulder, Colo. He is also survived by his brothers, Gene Weber (Kim); Jimmy McDonald and Todd McDonald. Ben was known for his sense of humor, his thoughtfulness and generosity. He had only friends and his only enemy was alcohol. Ben received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Arizona and his master’s degree in Social Work from ASU. His education could not heal his disease. He will be missed by everyone whose path he crossed. Memorial services will be held at 11 a.m., Thursday Aug. 13, 2015, at Hatfield Funeral Home. Bob Culp will officiate. Arrangements are by Hatfield Funeral Home with online condolences at hatfieldfh.com.

Wendy Marie Furmanek

Reserve 85/55

February 15, 1965 – July 8, 2015 Coolidge 103/80 Gila Bend 107/84

Ajo 103/79

Safford 96/72

Casa Grande 103/80 Tucson 97/76 Sells 98/75

Willcox 90/66

Lordsburg 92/69 Tombstone 88/66

Benson 92/68

Green Valley 95/74 Nogales 90/66

Silver City 87/65

Bisbee Sierra Vista 85/64 85/64 Douglas Cananea 89/67 85/61

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

UV INDEX TODAY

ALMANAC

Sierra Vista through 6 p.m. yesterday. (Readings from Sierra Vista Fire Dept.)

Precipitation (in inches) 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. Rainfall past seven days 24-hour rainfall last year Total rainfall year to date Total rainfall last year to date Normal rainfall year to date Diff. from normal y-t-d Diff. from normal last y-t-d

0.11” 0.11” Trace 8.48” 5.92” 7.74” +0.74” -1.82”

Temperature: High Low

85° 64°

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

8am 10am Noon 2pm 4pm The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme

SUN AND MOON Sunrise today Sunset tonight New

First

Full

Last

Aug 14

Aug 22

Aug 29

Sep 5

ARIZONA CITIES

Today Mon. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

City

Casa Grande 103 80 s 104 80 pc Flagstaff 76 50 pc 78 52 pc Globe 94 73 s 96 72 pc Grand Canyon 78 49 pc 80 51 pc Green Valley 95 74 pc 96 74 c Holbrook 88 61 pc 89 63 t Kingman 96 69 s 97 69 s L. Havasu City 107 83 s 108 82 s Mesa 104 81 s 104 82 pc Nogales 90 66 s 90 67 c

5:42 a.m. 7:11 p.m.

City

Today Mon. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

Phoenix 107 86 pc 106 Prescott 85 62 pc 88 Safford 96 72 t 98 Sedona 89 68 pc 90 Show Low 76 56 pc 77 Superior 96 69 s 97 Tombstone 88 66 pc 90 Tucson 97 76 pc 98 Window Rock 80 54 t 81 Yuma 107 81 s 107

86 63 74 70 58 69 65 77 55 80

pc pc t pc t pc t pc t pc

U.S. / MEXICO WEATHER TODAY

Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice

Cold Warm Stationary

Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.

NATIONAL CITIES City

Today Mon. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

Albuquerque 89 Anchorage 66 Atlanta 94 Atlantic City 82 Austin 100 Baltimore 85 Billings 82 Bismarck 75 Boston 74 Charleston, SC 89 Charleston, WV 88 Charlotte, NC 90 Cheyenne 83 Chicago 80 Cincinnati 86 Cleveland 83 Dallas 104 Dayton 83 Denver 88 Des Moines 83 Detroit 83 El Paso 97 Helena 86 Honolulu 89 Houston 101 Indianapolis 82 Jacksonville 91 Kansas City 90

66 57 75 65 70 69 56 52 60 72 70 71 51 69 68 65 80 69 56 70 67 73 54 77 77 70 72 71

c 89 65 t r 66 50 r s 94 75 t s 81 69 pc s 101 71 s s 83 69 t t 90 59 s s 85 54 s pc 75 63 pc t 87 74 t pc 83 70 t s 88 73 t pc 78 55 pc t 82 64 t pc 84 67 t c 81 65 t s 105 82 s t 82 66 t pc 83 60 t t 83 64 t c 83 65 t pc 98 74 pc s 90 57 t pc 89 77 pc s 103 78 s t 84 66 t t 91 72 t pc 86 66 pc

City

Las Vegas 101 Little Rock 101 Los Angeles 79 Miami 92 Milwaukee 79 Minneapolis 84 Nashville 94 New Orleans 98 New York City 85 Oklahoma City 100 Omaha 85 Orlando 92 Philadelphia 86 Pittsburgh 84 Portland, ME 73 Portland, OR 84 Reno 89 Sacramento 93 St. Louis 93 Salt Lake City 86 San Antonio 100 San Diego 75 San Francisco 74 San Juan, PR 90 Santa Fe 87 Seattle 81 Tampa 89 Washington, DC 87

WORLD CITIES City Acapulco Athens Baghdad Beijing Berlin Cairo Dhahran Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Kabul Kuwait City London Madrid

Today Mon. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

90 90 114 93 83 101 113 93 89 90 91 118 77 94

79 76 87 71 61 80 90 81 76 68 58 94 60 66

t s s pc pc s s pc s s s s pc s

90 91 112 93 89 100 114 90 88 87 91 119 74 95

78 75 86 70 69 80 88 82 75 67 59 92 57 70

t s s t pc s s t pc s s s sh s

Today Mon. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 77 79 62 77 66 67 74 80 69 73 70 74 70 68 56 62 60 62 76 64 76 66 61 78 59 60 76 75

s 103 78 s s 102 78 s pc 79 61 pc t 90 77 t t 80 64 t t 80 62 s s 92 73 t pc 97 80 s s 82 71 pc s 96 73 pc c 81 62 pc t 91 74 t s 84 72 t pc 81 68 t pc 74 57 pc c 87 63 c s 88 58 s s 87 61 s t 89 72 t s 92 68 s s 101 77 s pc 76 65 pc pc 73 63 pc pc 90 78 pc t 84 58 t c 87 62 c t 88 76 t s 86 75 pc

City

Today Mon. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

Mexico City Moscow Nassau New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Sydney Taipei Tokyo Toronto Vancouver

77 87 90 91 74 80 89 87 87 64 92 89 78 72

54 61 77 81 57 67 70 74 80 48 79 79 59 58

t s pc t sh s s t t pc c pc s s

78 85 91 92 79 81 86 89 88 69 92 88 80 76

51 60 78 82 61 66 67 73 79 48 78 79 63 59

t pc s t pc s t pc r s t c t sh

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

Wendy Marie Furmanek departed this life on July 8, 2015. She was born Feb. 15, 1965, in West Covina, Calif. The daughter of Terrance Lee and Tanya Marie (Stephens) Machleit, she married Jeffrey Earl Furmanek on Oct. 14, 1989, in Irvine, Calif. Wendy owned her own business and was a devoted mother. She loved animals and was a lifelong equestrienne. In recent years, she enjoyed training and showing her beloved dogs to several titles in AKC agility events. Wendy also loved gourmet foods, both cooking and eating. She is survived by her husband and their son, Jason Lee Furmanek and his wife, Hayden. The family would like to thank the staff at Banner/ UMC Medical Center and Casa de le Luz Hospice for their kind and compassionate care. A celebration of her life will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 15, 2015, at the Life in Christ Church (2300 Las Brisas Way, Sierra Vista, AZ 85635). In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Casa de la Luz Hospice, 7740 N. Oracle Road, Tucson, AZ 85704. To express online condolences, please visit www.jensensmortuary.com.

Ronald Mark Kuhn, 75 of Sierra Vista, Ariz., entered into rest on Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2015. Graveside services will be held at the indoor chapel at the Southern Arizona Veterans Memorial Cemetery with Military Honors on Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2015, at 2 p.m. Ronald was born on April 16, 1940, in Newark, N.J. to Clifford and Betsy Kuhn. He attended and graduated from Midwestern University in Wichita Falls, Texas, with his bachelor’s degree and was a member of Phi Sigma Kappa Fraternity. Later he graduated from the Florida Institute of Technology achieving his Master of Science Degree. On Sept. 16, he married his beautiful wife, Bobbe, in Battle Creek, Mich. The couple were married for 26 loving years. Ronald served his country in the Army and retired with the rank of Colonel with the Quartermaster Corp. Ronald received numerous awards during his 30-year long and distinguished career. Some of those awards include the Legion of Merit, Bronze Star, Defense Meritorious Service, Joint Service Commendation and the Purple Heart. Ronald loved spending time with his family most of all. When he was not with them he was out on the golf course. He was a fantastic golfer and enjoyed being out on the grass with his golfing buddies. He is survived by his bride, Bobbe as well as his daughters, Ellen and Esther; his two stepdaughters, Renaye and Nicole; his younger brother, Richard; four adorable granddaughters and two handsome grandsons. He will be missed, but his memories will never fade from the hearts and minds of those who loved him dearly. The family request that anyone wishing to make a donation in his honor do so to any of the many wonderful Veteran support organizations. Online condolences for the family may be left at www.hatfieldfh.com.

NOTICE A celebration of Life Memorial Service for H.W.(Bill) Garwood will be held Saturday, Aug. 15, 2015, at 2 p.m. at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 2750 E. Cardinal Drive, Sierra Vista, Ariz. In lieu of flowers, a memorial has been established in Bill’s name at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church. An online guest book for Bill may be signed at osheimschmidt.com. Bill was buried at Black Hills National Cemetery, Sturgis S.D. with full military honors.

Edward Borders March 20, 1927 – July 26, 2015 Edward Borders, 88, of Sierra Vista, Ariz., passed away July 26, 2015, surrounded by family members. He was born in Ivesdale, Ill., March 20, 1927, and attended Decatur High School, where he graduated in 1945. Afterward, he served in the U.S. Army, 82nd Field Artillery Battalion, during World War II, and following his military service, he earned a bachelor of science degree in chemistry at Millikin University in Decatur, Ill. During his career, he worked for numerous companies including Gulf General Atomics, in San Diego, Calif., and Hanford Nuclear Production complex, in Richland, Wash. When he retired in 1993, Ed and his wife Jean moved to Sierra Vista, Ariz. Throughout his life, Ed loved raising dogs and often had two or three. He was an avid golfer, hunter, fisherman and gardening enthusiast. Ed and Jean were happily married for 42 years. He was a beloved husband, father, and grandfather, whom his family will greatly miss. He was a member of the Sierra Evangelical Lutheran Church of Sierra Vista, Ariz. Ed was preceded in death by his wife Jean, and his daughter Marsha. Survivors include his four children, Steve and his wife Donna of California, Jeff and his wife Wendy of Missouri, Ginny Archambault and her husband Jon of New Mexico, David and his wife Susan of California; two stepchildren, Kathy Pease and her husband Fred of Arizona, and Mike Mullvain of California; and six grandchildren, Ben, Sarah, Jessica, Carrie, Elizabeth and Suzi. Memorial services will be held on Aug. 21, 2015, at the Sierra Evangelical Lutheran Church at 10 a.m., followed by a brief committal ceremony at the Southern Arizona Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery in Sierra Vista at 3 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family asks instead that memorial donations in memory of Ed be made to the Alzheimer’s Association, Desert Southwest Chapter.

ON THIS DATE Today is Sunday, Aug. 9. On this date in 1860, Sylvester Mowry became the owner of the Patagonia Mine for which he paid $22,500. On this date in 1909, a party of six men with Dean Byron Cummings, archaeologist from the University of Arizona, became the first white men to see the Betatakin Ruins. On this date in 1913, 25 citizens of Douglas were sworn in as special officers and armed for the purpose of patrolling the city at night to stop crime. ASSOCIATED PRESS

In this June 25, 1946 file photo, Louise Suggs of Lithia Springs, Ga., drives from the 10th during the second day of the Women’s Western Open Golf Tournament at Des Moines, Iowa. AP PHOTO

Louise Suggs, LPGA founder and Hall of Famer, dies

Louise Suggs, a n L P G A fou n d e r and among the best women to ever play with 61 wins and 11 majors, died Friday. She was 91. T he L PGA Tou r said she died in a hospice in Sarasota, Florida, of natural causes. Suggs was perhaps the most inf luential player in LPGA history. Along with being one of the 13 founders in 1950, she served as LPGA president three ti mes a nd wa s i nducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame and the LPGA Teach and Professional Hall of Fame. “I feel like the LPGA

lost a parent,” Commissioner Mike Whan s a id. “ But I’m extremely confident that her vision, her competitiveness, and most importantly her spirit, will be with this organization forever.” T he L PGA Tou r rookie of t he yea r award is named after Suggs. She won every season of her professional career and was the first player to capture the career Grand Sl a m at t he 19 57 LPGA Championship. She finished her career with $190,251 in earnings. A steady presence at L P GA’s bi g g e s t events, her support of women’s golf never wavered and Suggs never lost her sharp tongue.

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Sierra Vista Advertising/Editorial . . . . . . . . (520) 458-9440 Sierra Vista Circulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (520) 458-9440 Bisbee Advertising /Circulation . . . . . . . . . . (520)432-2231 (USPC 496-020 and UPSC 0569--40) Published daily, including holidays 102 Fab Avenue, Sierra Vista AZ 85635. Editorial, Advertising, Business and Circulation offices: 102 Fab Avenue, Sierra Vista AZ 85635 12 Main Street, Bisbee AZ 85603 Periodicals postage paid at Sierra Vista AZ 85635 Postmaster: Send address changes to Sierra Vista Herald, 102 Fab Avenue, Sierra Vista AZ 85635 If you missed your paper, call: (520) 458-9440 in Sierra Vista or (520) 432-2231 in Bisbee

Entire contents copyrighted August 9, 2015, by Sierra Vista Herald, Inc. No materials in this issue may be reproduced in any manner without expressed written permission of the publishers. Sierra Vista Herald, Vol. 60, No. 306; Bisbee Daily Review, Vol. 117, No. 114.


STATE

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

State seeks reporting on fetal tissue sales Abortion clinics face new rules tracking final disposition, compensation BY HOWIE FISCHER Capitol Media Services

PHOEN I X — State Health Director Cara Christ is pushing ahead with new rules on the sale of fetal tissue even though nothing in state law actually prohibits it. In an interview with Capitol Media Services, Christ said a review of state statutes she performed on orders from Gov. Doug Ducey fou nd t hat sel li ng fetal tissue for profit is a crime only under federal law. The only state law on the subject makes it illegal to use a human fetus or any parts following an abortion for any medical experimentation or investigation. Christ said though, she intends to force abortion clinics to file reports detailing not only the final disposition of any fetal tissue but any compensation received. That could include anything from si mply c over i n g it s

costs for transporting it to actually making a profit. “We did n’t have a way at the department of getting that information and to know if it was going on,” she said. Christ said the new emergency rule, which she hopes to have enacted within weeks, w i l l p r ov i d e t h o s e answers. But even i f some one repor ts ma ki ng a profit, that’s not a violation of state law. Christ said bringing state criminal charges likely would require a change in state statutes to criminalize such activity, something only the Legislature can do. In ordering the review last month, Ducey said he was disturbed by undercover videos released by an antiabortion group Progress which pu r p or t to show officials from Planned Parenthood discussing the sale of tissue. “ T he foot age re leased by The Center

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for Medical Progress regarding the alleged sale and tra f ficking of abor ted feta l tissue and body parts by Planned Parenthood is horrifying and has no place in a civilized society,” Ducey said in a prepa red st atement. He directed Christ to perform “a thorough review of the law and immediately promulgate emergency rules desig ned to prohibit the illegal sale of any tissue from an unborn child.” None of those videos involved Arizona. National of ficials of Planned Parenthood charge the videos were heavily edited and misleading, saying the discussions involved covering legitimate costs. And Bryan Howard, president of Planned Parenthood Arizona, said clinics here do not make any fetal tissue available for any purposes. “It’s not because we don’t support it,” he said of legitimate medical research. “It’s just never been on our radar,” Howard continued. He said the organization instead focuses on its key mission of providing direct care rather than having to worry about setting up procedures for tissue donation. Howard said, though, he cannot say whether

Planned Parenthood will oppose or challenge the new rules, not out of concern that it would change his organization’s practices but that it could result in new reporting burdens. The Department of Health Services did not immediately provide a copy of the proposal that Christ and her agency have already sent to the Attorney General’s Office. But Ch r i st s a id t he i nformation she wants, including how much compensation was received, will simply be added to the reports that abortion clinics already have to file on e ach pr e g n a nc y terminated. T hat question of “c omp en s at ion ,” t hou g h , c ou ld le a d to an investigation if any abortion provider puts in a number, any number. Christ said she wants a monet a r y f i g u r e, even if it is only for costs clinics were reimbursed. She said if the numbers appear out of line, her agency would consult with the Attorney General’s Office to determine whether further inquiry was necessary. That, however, goes to the question of what the state can do, given the lack of a statutory ban on selling tissue, other than forward the

HERALD/REVIEW

WE DIDN’T HAVE A WAY AT THE DEPARTMENT OF GETTING THAT INFORMATION AND TO KNOW IF IT WAS GOING ON. — STATE HEALTH DIRECTOR CARA CHRIST information to federal prosecutors. Christ said state law requires abortion clinics to be licensed. More to the point, Christ said that law requires clinics to comply with all laws and rules — including the new ones she is proposi ng — under penalty of potentially being shut down. But since those rules also would not ban the sale of fetal tissue, the only way for a clinic to break them is if it refuses to provide the information. What Christ is preparing are emergency rules which do not require public hearings or input. She noted, though, they are effective for only 180 days and can be renewed only once. At that point, Christ said, she likely will need the Legislature to step in and specifically authorize action by her agency. The agency’s efforts come as abortion foes are using the videos in a bid to convince members of Congress to “defund” Planned Parenthood, a move that could affect the organization

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AT A GLANCE Arizona wildfire prompts evacuations near state line

PHOENIX (AP) — Officials say a wildfire burning in northern Arizona near the California border has prompted the evacuations of about 150 houses. The Mohave County Sheriff’s Office says the fire near Bullhead City had burned almost three square miles by Saturday afternoon. Trudy Thompson Rice, a spokeswoman for the American Red Cross’ Grand Canyon Chapter, said the homes evacuated were in the town of Topock. BLM spokeswoman Dolores Garcia says the federal Bureau of Land Management has been using aircraft to combat the fire. Garcia tells The Arizona Republic that she began receiving calls about the fire just after 3 p.m. But she says the exact time that the fire started is unclear.

Man rescued after getting stranded in his chimney

Capt. Ardell Deliz says people who are locked out of their homes should either call a locksmith or break a window to gain entry.

Begaye signs into law bill to tax alcohol at tribe’s casinos WINDOW ROCK (AP) — Navajo Nation President Russell Begaye has signed into law a proposal to tax alcoholic beverages sold in the tribe’s casinos. The 3.25 percent tax is expected to raise $73,000 a year. The revenue would go into a fund administered by the tribe’s Division of Public Safety to combat drunken driving on the reservation. Tribal officials say the tax is directed on retailers and distributors, but consumers are responsible for paying it. People legally can buy alcohol and drink it only in tribal casinos and at a tribal marina at Lake Powell in Page. The measure was previously approved by lawmakers for the Navajo Nation.

Three-car crash kills 4-year-old on highway PHOENIX (AP) — The Arizona Republic reports that a threecar collision Friday night on Loop 101 in north Phoenix left a 4-year-old child dead and sent two others to the hospital, according to the Arizona Department of Public Safety. DPS spokesman Tim Case says the crash shut down two westbound lanes and the freeway off-ramp at Cave Creek Road just after 8 p.m. Case says the child was killed after the vehicle was rear-ended, sending it into the rear end of a third car.

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PHOENIX (AP) — Firefighters rescued a Phoenix man who got stranded in his chimney for almost two hours Saturday after he locked himself out of his house and tried to find another way in. The man lowered himself into the chimney but discovered that the flue blocked him from descending further. Bystanders who heard the man’s cries for help had alerted authorities that he was in need of help. The 34-year-old man was rescued by attaching a rope around his waist that fire crews used to pull him back up through the chimney. He suffered minor scrapes, but wasn’t brought to a hospital.

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here despite the fact it does not make fetal ti ssue avai l able for research. Three years ago Arizona law makers ap proved a measure to deny any state dollars to a ny orga ni zation that also provides abortion services. Rep. Justin Olson, R-Mesa, who sponsored the legislation, said any money the government gives Planned Parenthood to pay for other expenses frees up other dollars for abortions. But that legislation was blocked by a feder a l app e a l s c ou r t . The judges noted that the state provided the family planning funds t h r ou g h it s Me d ic aid program and that agency’s rules allow patients to get care from any qualified provider. If Congress changes t he law, t hat li kely would undermine the Medic aid r u les on which courts voided the Arizona law. Howard said that would affect about 9,000 Medic a id r e cipi e nt s i n Arizona who now get family planning services through Planned Parenthood.


STATE/REGION

HERALD/REVIEW

Conservationists win ruling in wildlife killing suit RENO, Nev. (AP) — A U.S. appeals court has breathed new life into a conservation group’s legal battle in Nevada aimed at shutting down a Depression-era government program that spends more than $100 million a year to subsidize the killing of predators that threaten livestock. T h e 9 t h C i r c u it Court of Appeals panel recently overturned a 2013 ruling by a federal judge in Reno who threw out most of the lawsuit filed by the Colorado -based WildEarth Guardians. The lawsuit claims the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services is acting illegally because it relies on scientific and environmental data that is decades old. They want the program suspended until the underlying data is more current. Judge Miranda Du had concluded t he harm cited by the conservationists would not be alleviated by halting the operations in Nevada because the state has said it would carry out the killings of coyotes, mountain lions, ravens and other predators itself. But the three-judge panel in San Francisco said in the new opinion that Du’s conclusion was “speculative at best” and ordered her to reconsider the case. “Any independent predator damage mana gement ac t ivit ie s by Nevada are hypothetical rather than actual,” Circuit Judge Michelle T. Friedland wrote Aug. 3. The Wildlife Servic-

es program has given money to Nevada and other states across the West for more than 80 years. B e t h a ny C o t t o n , wildlife director for Wi ld E a r t h Gu a r d ians, said it’s a critical ruling. “For decades, Wildlife Services has operated in the shadows as though it were above the law,” Cotton said. Du has not yet set a briefing schedule for the case to continue in Reno. USDA officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Officials for the Nevada Farm Bureau Federation and Nevada Cattlemen’s Association said they were disappointed and disagreed with the circuit court ruling. The “predator control program not only benefits the livestock industry, but it benefits wildlife sustainability as well,” said Ron Torell of Elko, president of the cattlemen’s group. He said sage grouse specifically benefit from reductions in the population of coyotes, which sometimes feed on the birds, and ravens, which sometimes eat their eggs. The conservationists said the program that spent $127 million to exterminate more than 5 million animals in 2010 should be suspended nationally until USDA updates its scientific analysis that’s based largely on an environmental impact statement conducted in 1994.

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

Immigrant in sanctuary reaches one-year mark TUCSON (AP) — Rosa Robles Loreto cou ld leave the small, Tucson church where she has spent the past year. But there is no guarantee she won’t be sent back to Mexico, her native country. That’s enough to convince her to stay put, seeing her family only when they visit the church and missing her sons’ baseball games and first day at school. She isn’t alone. Two other immigrants living in the U.S. illegally remain in churches to avoid deportation, all women who are afraid of going to their home country for different reasons. They are like many immigrants left behind by lack of immigration reform. Robles Loreto’s case is unique in that her entire family is living in the U.S. illegally. In other cases, her attorney says, the government has granted leniency to i mmig rants whose children are U.S. citizens as part of President Barack Obama’s policy to try to keep families together. Robles Loreto says she is not leaving Southside Presbyterian Church until she has certainty that she will not be deported. Her case began five years ago when she was pulled over for a traffic infraction and turned over to immigration authorities. She began living at the church on Aug. 7, 2014. There is no rule under federal law that prohibits agents from arr esti n g i m mi g ra nt s in church, but it’s a practice the government generally avoids. Her husband and sons don’t face deportation because they have not been arrested or officially turned over to authorities. I m m i g r at ion s a nd

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In this July 30 photo, Rosa Robles Loreto sits in her small room at Southside Presbyterian Church in Tucson, where she has taken sanctuary from deportation. Customs Enforcement has said Robles Loreto is not a priority for deportation anymore, but attorney Margo Cowan says she still runs the risk of arrest. “U.S. I m mig ration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) continues to exercise prosecutorial discretion in the matter of Ms. Robles Loreto’s immigration case by not taking action to enforce her removal order,” spokeswoman Yasmeen Pitts O’Keefe said in a written statement. Robles L oreto, 4 2 , has two sons who have grown up in the U.S. but were born in Mexico. She says she was living in Arizona when pregnant with both but didn’t want to break any laws or rely on government assistance by giving birth to them here, so she returned home to have them in Mexico. If she’d had the boys here, her immigration case might be different. The boys are 9 and 12 years old. They play little league baseball and visit their mother on weekends and dur-

ing breaks from school, when the family of four sleeps on an air mattress and twin bunks in a small room at the church. W hen she’s a lone, Robles Loreto wakes up early, eats breakfast and cleans the church. She cooks dinner for her family, which her husband picks up after work. In the evening, she often participates in group prayers and reads or watches TV before going to bed. Robles Loreto, who worked cleaning house before she moved i nto t he church, says the days go by fast and her many visitors help her from feeling lonely. But she feels moments of despair, especially when she misses family events. “It’s like I lost a year,” she said. Southside Presbyterian has been offering sa nct ua r y to i m migrants since the 1980s, when a wave of Central Americans f led civil wars there. “I hope to see a day soon, when Rosa can leave this church and know that she will see

Wastewater from Colorado mine reaches New Mexico FARMINGTON, N.M. (AP) — The Environmental Protection Agency says wastewater continues to drain from an abandoned mine in southwestern Colorado at a rate of about 550 gallons per minute. Federal officials said Saturday that the rate was down from about 740 gallons per minute on Friday. About 1 million gallons of wastewater from Colorado’s Gold King Mine began spilling into the Animas River on Wednesday when an EPAsupervised cleanup crew acciden-

tally breached a debris dam that had formed inside the mine. The plume has reached the northern New Mexico cities of Aztec and Farmington. Experts are still analyzing the environmental and health impacts of t he rele a se, which c ont ai n s heavy metals including lead and arsenic. Officials responding to the spill say they have finished building two containment ponds to treat the yellow sludge.

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Aug. 12 hearing set in Willcox stabbing

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her children grow to adulthood in their home in Tucson,” The Rev. Alison Harrington said. Cowan said she will keep persuadi ng officials to grant Robles Loreto a stay of deportation or close her immigration case administratively. She hopes that an expansion of a program for children who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children will move forward so that Robles Loreto’s sons can enroll, which would make a stronger case for their mother. That program is known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, but an expansion of it that lowered the eligibility age has been put on hold by a federal judge. For now, Robles Loreto has wide community support. Nearly 10,000 signs in support of her case are posted around Tucson on lawns and in front of businesses. Over a dozen elected officials, including U.S. Rep. Raul Grijalva and Tucson Mayor Jonathan Rothschild, both Democrats, have written to the government to express support.

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An Aug. 12 preliminary hearing date has been set for a Wi l lcox man i n connection wit h a recent stabbing. Thirtyt wo -ye a rold Jose Rodrigo Robledo-SilRobledova was arSilva rested July 18 on charges of aggravated assault, possession of a narcotic drug, introduction of contraband into a correctional facility, assault, and disorderly conduct, said Interim Willcox

Police Chief Jose Rios. Robledo - Si lva is b ei n g held w it hout bond, as he was a lready on parole for an immigration violation, a c c o r d i n g t o c ou r t documents. T he st abbi n g o c curred at about 4 :40 a.m. on Saturday, July 18, at a motel in the 300 block of North Haskell Avenue, during a verbal altercation which later turned physical, Rios said. A 19 -ye a r- old H i s panic male was stabbed with a knife in the middle of his back to the left of his spine, resulting in a laceration about a hal f an inch long, he said.

Wit nesses identif i e d R o b l e d o - S i lv a , who wa s lo c at e d on the premises by Sg t. Dale Had field, he said. Meanwhile, the victim was transported to Northern Cochise Community Hospital with non-life threatening injuries. Roble do - Si lva wa s booked into Cochise County Jail in Willcox. While in the booking a r e a , Roble do - Si lva discarded a small plastic baggie containing what appeared to be cocaine, Rios said. I n i n it i a l app e a r ance was held July 18 in Justice of the Peace Court No. 4.


LOCAL/REGION

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

HERALD/REVIEW

Monday deadline for briefs in Tribute case PHOENIX — Monday is a deadline for the U.S. Department of the Interior and the Bureau of Land Management to file procedural briefs in a state appeals court case related to water permitting for the proposed Tribute development in Sierra Vista. Pueblo Del Sol Water Company currently pumps about 1,600 acre-feet of water per year, and would need to pump 4,870 acrefeet per year to supply enough water for Tribute, according to a brief filed by attorneys from Earthjustice and the Arizona Center for Law in the Public Interest. The brief is on file at the clerk of the Arizona Court of Appeals Division 1. In June 2014, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Crane McClennen struck down a writ of “adequate water supply� for the Tribute plan that was issued in April 2013 by the Arizona Department of Water Resources. The Superior Court held that ADWR erred in its conclusion that PDS Water Co. had an adequate and legally available water supply for Castle and Cooke’s 7,000-unit Tribute residential, office, and commercial master-planned development project, that is proposed east of Highway 92 on Sierra Vista’s south side. The ADWR and Castle and Cooke’s PDS Water Co. have appealed the reversal of the designation. The DOI and BLM case against ADWR and PDS Water Co. was originally brought by, and still includes as plaintiffs, the director of the Center for Biological Diversity who is represented by a legal team from Earthjustice, and the president of the Huachuca Audubon Society who is represented by the Arizona Center for Law in the Public Interest. The Arizona Center for Law in the Public Interest became involved with the case during the judicial review phase at the Superior Court, after the previous attorney for the case at the administrative level, Arizona State University Environmental Law Professor Joe Feller, was killed in an auto-pedestrian crash in April 2013 while he was jogging at Baseline Road in Tempe.

Legal Availability

Arizona law says that when ADWR receives an application for an adequate water supply designation, the agency must determine whether the proposed water supply will be physically, legally, and continuously available for at least 100 years. In evaluating PDS Water Co.’s application, the agency admittedly did not consider what effect the federal water rights held by the BLM in the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area would have on the legal availability of the proposed water supply.

THE 69-PAGE DOCUMENT DESCRIBES ADWR’S DECISION TO GRANT PDS WATER CO. A DESIGNATION OF ADEQUATE WATER SUPPLY AS AN “ABUSE OF DISCRETION.� Objections to the PDS Water Co. application and the ADWR decision argue that BLM would have the right to restrict the pumping for Tribute, because federal law protects federal surface water rights from the adverse effects of groundwater pumping, therefore, the water is legally unavailable. At this point, all objections from the BLM, the DOI, the Center for Biological Diversity, and the Huachuca Audubon Society have been combined into one effort, and a joint answering brief was filed in the Court of Appeals on June 25. The 69 -page document describes ADWR’s decision to grant PDS Water Co. a designation of adequate water supply as an “abuse of discretion.�

Legalistic History

On March 12, 2013, Administrative Law Judge Thomas Shedden, of the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings, affirmed ADWR’s decision that PDS Water Co.’s proposed increase in groundwater pumping to 4,870 acre-feet per year to accommodate the Tribute project was legally available for the next 100 years. This is the administrative decision which was reviewed and ultimately reversed by Judge McClennan. Reasons cited by Judge Shedden for his decision were 1) PDS Water Co. was a private water company holding a “certificate of convenience and necessity� which it was granted in 1972 by the Arizona Corporation Commission; 2) the ADWR was correct in its assumption that it lacked authority to consider whether the proposed diversion of water would affect the flow of the San Pedro River; and 3) the ADWR was correct in its determination that it lacked authority to consider whether the proposed diversion of water conf licted with Federal Reserved Water Rights. In 1988, the Federal Reserved Water Rights were implemented in the area when the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area was established by the 100th U.S. Congress through the Arizona-Idaho Conservation Act. In 1989, the United States on behalf of the BLM filed a claim with the Gila River General Stream Adjudication, which is a state water rights case docket that has been active in Maricopa County Superior Court for nearly 40 years. The litigation began in 1978 when ASARCO Inc. filed a petition with the state land department for the adjudication of the San Pedro River Watershed

including Aravaipa Creek in Graham County. In 2009, the Gila River Adjudication protocol ruled that the United States holds an expressly reserved water right for the purposes of the SPRNCA reservation, which comprises 56,000 acres of BLM-managed federal lands in the San Pedro River area. In 2010, the Gila River Adjudication ruled that a “certified water right� issued in 1992 by the ADWR to the BLM was a “perfected vested appropriative property right of the United States.� The certified water right had been granted in response to a 1985 application which was filed with the ADWR on the Gila River Adjudication docket by the Huachuca Audubon Society, Chiricahua Sierra Club, and the Defenders of Wildlife, to appropriate instream flows in certain areas of the San Pedro River. In 1986, that instream flow application was assigned to BLM and DOI. On May 15, 2013, leaders from the Center for Biological Diversity and the Huachuca Audubon Society filed complaints for judicial review of Shedden’s ruling. In reversing the Administrative Law Judge’s order, McLennen wrote that ADWR was required to consider both existing and potential legal claims that already exist, and to determine whether the amount of water requested by PDS Water Co. will have an effect on those claims. PDS Water Co. has argued that if water had to be trucked in at high cost to the Tribute neighborhood, because the water table failed or access was restricted by any superseding rights, that the Arizona Corporation Commission would be expected to step in to mitigate utility prices for Tribute occupants because PDW Water Co. is a state regulated industry. On July 23, a local intergovernmental planning group called the Sierra Vista Municipal Planning Organization, voted not to accept current recommendations for extending Buffalo Soldier Trail to Moson Road through an area of private open space and other undeveloped public land, because the proposal relied upon eminent domain policy. The city of Sierra Vista’s urban-rural interface on its east side is where the Tribute plan and the bypass extension are proposed. East of Moson county road begins the SPRNCA. The BST extension plan was criticized as being ecologically unsound, for example, because the requisite U.S. National Environmental Policy Act protocol was not incorporated into the engineering study.

Monsoon delivers another power punch BENSON — Mother Nature delivered anot her p ower -p acke d monsoon punch last week resu lting in a swift water rescue of a woman and her dog on July 29 in which t he fema le requi red treatment for severe hypothermia. Cochise County Sheriff’s Office spokeswoma n Ca rol Capas saud the 62 -year- old motorist was headed nor t hbou nd on Cascabel Road when she at t e mp t e d t o c r o s s t he f lo o de d “ T er a n Wash� at mile marker 20 shortly after 3 p.m. on July 29. However, due to about a threefoot drop in the wash, the woman’s mid-sized Toyota pickup truck was swept away some 200 yards. The truck ended up resting on its side, trapping the woman and her dog inside the vehicle until Benson-based CCSO deputies, the agency’s S e a r ch a nd Re s c ue Team, Cascabel Volunteer Fire Dept. and area residents, entered the water to free the woman and her pet to safety. In light of what alr e a dy h a s b e e n a n eventful season with

one casualty, authorities urge the public to exercise caution, particularly in the later a f t er no on a nd eve nings when the majority of the monsoon rain storms surge in intensity. One man has died as a result of Benson area stor m activity. A lvaro Montoya, 32, was struck and killed by lig ht ni ng i n t he early-morning hours of June 30. His burned body was discovered later that afternoon in the vicinity of El Paso Lane near North Ocotillo Road. T he f irst monsoon activity of the season in Benson on June 25 blew off a patio roof, upr o ot e d t r e e s a nd blew a trampoline from one house and onto the roof of another while creating minor havoc throughout other parts of the city “People need to not cross any flooded roadways at all,� Benson Fire Chief Keith Spang le r h a s r eit e r at e d many times a l ready t his season. He has said his depar tment t y pi c a l l y r e s p o n d s to one or two calls a year in regard to motorists attempting to drive through washes. Benson Fire was not one of the responding

The 62-year-old motorist and her dog required rescue July 29 on Cascabel Road north of Benson. CCSO PHOTO

agencies in this latest incident. “The Cochise Count y S her i f f ’s S e a r ch and Rescue warns untrained persons to not attempt these type of rescues. “We know it is hard to wait, but it your life worth it? Remember, turn around, don’t drown, and please stay safe out there,� is the message on CCSO’s social media page.

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THE ARSENAL President Franklin Roosevelt called the United States “the arsenal of freedom.� Here’s why: AIR During World War II, the United States built:

99,000 fighter aircraft 97,000 bombers 23,900 transports 57,000 training planes LAND

102,410 tanks As well as more than 2 million trucks, jeeps and other vehicles. SEA From the shipyards came: 124 aircraft carriers — at the beginning of the war America had less than a half dozen carriers 8 battleships 48 cruisers 349 destroyers 245 submarines Also built were nearly 3,000 Liberty ships, mostly using a prefabricated process. One ship was launched in four and a half days, from when the keel was laid.

CEREMONY: Set for Aug. 16 FROM PAGE A1 last about an hour, will include a number of World War II veterans in attendance, Larson said. A 36-foot long scale model of the USS Arizona is planned to be at the ceremony and to remember the era of the war, a 48-star American f lag — at the time of the war neit her A laska nor Hawaii were states, although both territories were scenes of battles during the conflict — will be f lown from the cemetery’s main flagpole. Larson said. “ We w i l l b e hon ori ng t he g reat he r o e s o f World Wa r II. It was the time of the Greatest Generation and that means those who wore the uniforms as well as A meric a ns on t he home front who supported the war effort, building ships, planes and other war materia ls and who g rew food to feed the military in a time when we Americans saw rationing food for ourselves,� he said. Larson said during the war “almost every A meric a n was i nvolved in the nation’s defense and it was a time for the Rosie the Riveters who worked in war industries. Almost every American was involved in the war effort.� From an historical perspective the copper mines in Bisbee were a main provider of copper, a critical war material, which led the Navy to commission the building of a frigate, named the USS Bisbee, which saw service in the Pacific where it was manned by a C o a s t G u a r d crew. The ship’s crew included a well known entertainer of the time as its executive officer, Buddy Ebsen.

THE CEREMONY The Aug. 16 ceremony at the Southern Arizona Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery, located off of Buffalo Soldier Trail, will begin at 10:30 a.m. The hour-long event will include: • Posting of the colors by the Fort Huachuca Color Guard. • Playing of the National Anthem by the 62nd Army band from the post. • Invocation. • Proclamations by the Sierra Vista Mayor and one from the Arizona governor. • Remarks by the commanding general of the fort. • 21-rifle salute and playing of “Tapsâ€?. • Benediction. • Retiring of the colors. After the event World War II veterans and other guests will be provided a lunch at VFW Post 9972 in Sierra Vista and 1940s music will be provided by the local Desert Swing Band.

Larson said of the more than 5,100 veterans and their spouses in the cemetery, to include cremains, 1,213 of them are World War II veterans. He hopes many area residents will come to the special ceremony, which will include the 62nd Army Band and honor guard from Fort Huachuca and will include a speech by the new intelligence center and fort commander, Maj. G en. Scot t Berrier. T he for t wa s t he training ground for two black divisions, the 92nd and 93rd, one which fought in Italy and the other in the Pacific theater . Larson said he hopes a rea residents wi l l come to the Aug. 16 event “and take time to thank the World War II veterans who attend.�

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BAD DECISIONS:

IF YOU GO Arizona Hops and Vines Grape Mash Sept. 12 3450 Highway 82 Sonoita, Arizona 85637 (888) 569-1642 azhopsandvines.com

FROM PAGE A1 and campers filled the land adjacent to one of Sonoita’s most popular vineyards. “ T h i s i s t he f i r st year we’ve run it as a music festival, and I think it’s going in that direction,” said Shannon Zou zou las, who co-owns the vineyard with her sister, Megan Hal ler. “My friend’s husband was one of the founders of one of California’s music festivals — I won’t name names — and it started like this: bring in small and college bands, those band get big, and they keep coming back. This is the growing year.” Zouzoulas has been keeping track of ticket sales for the past few weeks and the last time she looked, billing addresses included those across t he c ou nt r y, from as far as Washington, Virginia and Florida. “So ma ny customers h ave b e en here from the beginning,” she said. “This year, no one knew we were having all these bands until we really started advertising last week. People called me and were like ‘we’re coming from this state ! ’ They’re usually military, so it’s become a tradition for them to fly back in to see all their friends.” Chase Hunt, 26, was one of a group of friends from Phoenix who made the trek to Arizona’s wine country to experience Bad Decisions for the first time. He said they were excited to escape the monotony of the Valley’s bar scene and figure out how to set up a tent for the very first time. “We’re here to support local wineries and businesses,” he said. “We had a friend who came last year, and we heard this was the event to at-

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

tend. I’d never heard of Arizona wine country, but the weather is amazing, this is a blast and you get to watch the meteor shower. In a tent.” A $25 ticket to Saturday’s event provided a souvenir glass and 10 tasting tickets. A $60 ticket was for “the whole shebang”: souvenir glass, 10 tasting tickets and a spot in the campsite. Additionally, a number of vendors set up across the venue, including booths with ceviche, hot dogs, cigars, pizza, lotion, a boutique, kettle corn and barbecue. The sober shack had snow cones, bottled water and cotton candy, and Mama’s Hawaiian BBQ offered a bacon buffet from 1 to 3 p.m. with bacon-wrapped shrimp, pineapple, cupcakes, jalapeño poppers and lettuce wraps. Of course, there was also booze: six of Arizona Hops and Vines’ wines, six beers on tap f rom Temp e’s Fou r Peaks Brewing Company, and a margarita tent. “ T hi s i s t he f i rst year we’ve heard about it, and it seemed like a nice place to visit, drink and not worry about driving home,” said Lis Chatham, who camped along with her sister, Debra Chatham, both from Sierra Vista. “We’re enjoying the music, some culture, some socialization outside of Sierra Vista, but not so far away. I appreciate that. … They have great wine here, and I hope more people support these kinds of activities so these places stay in business.” S a t u r d ay ’s mu s i c

PHOTOS BY MARK.LEVYSVHERALD.COM

Sierra Vista area resident Lis Chatham enjoys her time during Saturday’s Bad Decisions Campout at the Arizona Hops and Vines vineyards in Sonoita.

scene supported bands of all genres, mostly from the Tucson area. Wild Bill and the Chaos of Sierra Vista kicked off the music on the patio stage, nearest to the vineyard’s tasting room. The band’s three core members — Curtis Ritchie on drums, Jason Lane on bass and William Wallace on guitar and vocals — have been per forming together for the last two years, and they added vocalist Mandie Tetreault about eight months ago. They perform together about

once a month, typically in Bisbee venues. “I camped out here last year and had a lot of fun,” said Lane, the band’s manager. “When the opportunity came up for me to book this about a month ago, I knew there would be a lot of people here. It’s local and it brings people to do stuff together. One newspaper dubbed this a mini-Coachella, and that’s cool because everything in Arizona happens in Phoenix, but south of Tucson, everything is beautiful.”

On behalf of the Real Wishes Foundation I would like to thank all those who contributed to the overwhelming success of our 4th Annual Dancing Like the Stars “Evening For Wishes” Fundraiser.

All the monies we raised will be used to help fulfill much needed wishes in our Community This Funraiser would not have been possible without the generosity of the following sponsors.

Sponsors: $1000 Fox Trot Sponsors

$1,500 Mirror Ball Sponsors

Long Realty Cares Foundation ERA Four Feathers Realty

Sierra Vista band Wild Bill and the Chaos entertain the large crowd at the Hops and Vines vineyard in Sonoita. The bandmates are, from left, William Wallace, Curtis Ritchie, Mandie Tetreault and Jason Lane.

Tucsonans Marissa Selby and Michael Dyckman spend some quality time together as they participate in this weekends Bad Decisions event in Sonoita. The band performed a diverse set list, including covers of Sublime, Rush, John Mayer, Michael Jackson, the Proclaimers and more. “We have an improv i s at ion a l , k i nd o f from-the-ground-up approach,” Lane said. “We cover all the bases, but for a lot of music, we take a tune and experiment with it and make it our own. We do also have a short album of original stuff.” Just outside the Bad Decisions venue, the Hops and Vines Buffalo Club’s three tents were filled with beer fanatics all afternoon. The club has existed for the last three years and welcomes home brewers to meet, discuss and share their homebrewed beer. Members meet every first Sunday of the month at Arizona Hops and Vines, a central location for brewers who come from Tucson, Sierra Vista, Bisbee, a nd ot her loc ations in Southern Arizona. On Saturday, brewers shared their beer with Bad Decisions attendees

who paid a $10 membership fee. “I love making beer. The creation, the process. It’s cooking,” said Bill Tucker, the club’s president and certified beer judge. “I brew 100 gallons a year, 20 different recipes. I was a doctor for 40 years, now I’m a beer maker.” Much of the proceeds from Bad Decisions goes toward the Arizona Rangers volunteer law enforcement group, and the rest will buy grapes for Arizona Hops and Vine’s fall harvest. Zouzoulas said she never expected the event to grow this big when it started four years ago. “My sister is the wine maker, and I handle events,” she said. “I just thought, ‘Let’s do what we want to do and go in that direction,’ and it’s taken off. We don’t even have to advertise anymore. It’s a blast.” A ri zona Hops a nd Vines’ next big event is a g rape mash on Sept. 12. Visit azhopsandvines.com for more information.

$500 Salsa Sponsors

Southwest Gas | Nancy Dwiggins, Realtor Pioneer Title Agency | Guild Mortgage Sunstreet Mortgage, LLC Sulphur Springs Valley Electric Coop

Ace Hardware Applebees

I would also like to thank those who donated items, services or time to help with the event: Aaron Honda Air Evac Services/PHI Air Medical Alpha Graphics Applebees Bea Jay Creations Bill Rodriguez Bob and Nancy Fusco Bowie Clemons Bradley Montoya Broadway In Tucson Cherry Creek Radio Cheryl “Rusty Smith” Cheryl Nickels Cindy Beeman Cindy Elbert Insurance Services, Inc. City Creek Furniture City of Sierra Vista Colleen Concannon Cynthia Giesecke Daynes Eye Care Derrick Coates Dillards EF Edwards Financial Mortgage Services Elizabeth Lambert Finatics of Dance First West Properties Fry Fire Chief Bill Miller

Guild Mortgage Hummingbird Stitchers Quilt Guild Jeff Davenport Joe and Phyllis Stroud Joseph Lettig Kathryn Honda Kriste Johnson Les Orchekowsky Lindsey Arnold Luke Aldrich Michelle Goodman Mike Zuspan Mountain View Air Conditioning and Heating Mr. Fix It Nancy Dwiggins Nancy Rea Nikolle Lettig Nova Home Loans Outside Inn Parawdise DJ Pat Faccio PDS Country Club Pizzeria Mimosa Real Estate Press Ryan Johnson Safeway

Shannon Bradley Shawnee Wright Sheriff Mark Dannels Sierra Vista Chamber of Commerce Sierra Vista Herald Sierra Vista Mobile Home Village Sierra Vista Subway Sierra Vista Woman’s Club Soraya Doser Southern Arizona Media Production Stacey Newman Studio C Photography Sunstreet Mortgage, LLC Terri Murrietta Texas Roadhouse Tim Gregory T.K. McCutcheon Tucson Speedway Tumbleweed Auction University Marriott Vanessa Montoya Wilko Wine and Eatery

And finally, a heartfelt thank you to Debby Coste, Marty Garcia, Phyllis Stroud, Cheryl Trujillo, Soraya Doser, Marisa Pigozzo, Bruce McKellar, Kathy Crawford, Crystal Madden, Wade Temple and Linda Broughton, who comprised the most efficient and hardworking committee I am proud to have been a part of. To anyone I inadvertently omitted, I am sorry and “Thank You”!

-Patti Miller, President, Real Wishes Foundation XNLV224554

Wild Bill and the Chaos lead guitarist William Wallace jams during a solo as the band performs during Saturday’s Bad Decisions event in Sonoita.


LOCAL

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

HERALD/REVIEW

A11

ART: Arch designed to blend into the surrounding environment FROM PAGE A1 Grassy Park to enhance it to its 1930s charm, has been a joint effort. Beginning last summer, the museum forged partnerships with the City of Bisbee, Freeport McMoRan Copper Queen Branch, the Freeport Foundation and members of the community. A $ 50,0 0 0 donation was made by Sloane and Danielle Bouchever toward the Grassy Park Public Art Initiative which blends art and history together. “Bisbee is well-known for its history; but imagination and creativity also have a long history in Bisbee and we wanted to showcase this blending in the park,” Gustavson said.

Artist, sculptor and selfproclaimed crafter Ben Dale has drawn countless gawkers, spectators and souls, some seeking unlimited conversation, and he was only too happy to oblige. “It’s been like performance art,” he said. While the community has enjoyed Ben’s positive energy and kind presence, the thoughtful deliberation on a piece like this took him three months and was different from other pieces he has worked on before. “The arch has geometric precision and was much harder than I thought it would be,” he said. “You think it looks simple, but it has 12 components that have to be precise.”

His idea is to almost make it disappear and blend into the environment. To make it appear harmonious and one with the Museum and the link between the present and the past. It will also have built-in glass cabinets for the Museum to display educational pieces and a ubiquitous Bisbee symbol on top. “There will be a finial Copper Queen that will be lifted up, like on a cloud, motioning towards the Pit,” smiled Ben as he explained the final piece. While there will be no ceremony or official fanfare upon completion of Ben’s project, his humble attitude is refreshing. W h e n d e s c r ibi n g why

he got involved with the Grassy Park Public Art Initiative, which included his love of the Museum and the beautiful park with public art, he added, “The entire community, from the richest to the homeless can take part in it.”

Local power official: EPA’s new standards will raise rates BY DANA COLE dana.cole@svherald.co

C O C H I SE C OU N T Y — When the Obama administration announced new U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations under the Clean Power Plan last week, the final rule raised concerns about impacts the plan could have on consumers in Arizona’s rural areas. According to a statement from Arizona’s G&T Cooperatives (AzGT), “Almost a half million rural electric cooperative member-consumers in Arizona, California and New Mexico will be affected” by the EPA’s final rule. The impacts could include everything from rate hikes to issues of reliability, the statement added. Under the Clean Power Plan, states are required to curb carbon emissions from coal-fired power plants, establishing first-ever national standards to limit carbon pollution. The final plan sets “flexible and achievable standards to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 32 percent from 2005 levels by 2030.” Apache Generating Station, a coal-fired power plant located in Cochise, east of Benson falls under the new mandate.

The final rule relaxes both the interim and final carbon emissions goals proposed in the EPA’s initial plan while allowing an additional two years for utilities to move toward compliance of that goal. The current format differs substantially from the agency’s initial draft, submitted in June 2014. In his announcement on Aug. 3, Obama said each state has an opportunity to put together its own plan for reducing carbon emissions, given every state has its own energy mix. Some generate more power from renewables, some from natural gas, some from nuclear and some from coal, the President said. “This plan reflects the fact that not everybody is starting in the same place,” Obama said. “So we’re giving states the time and the flexibility they need to cut pollution in a way that works for them.” AzGT Chief Executive Officer Patrick Ledger says the revised goals show the EPA listened to the assertions of electric utilities, arguing the EPA’s initial goals were not achievable. “We have already made substantial investments in reducing emissions and will be investing more than $32 million to meet the EPA’s re-

gional haze requirements by converting one of our two coal units to natural gas,” said Ledger, who added the natural gas conversion demonstrates the utility’s commitment to reducing reliance on coal generation. Arizona’s electric utilities have been unanimous in saying the EPA’s initial goals could not be met, Ledger noted. Under the revised plan, carbon pollution from power plants will be 32 percent lower than it was a decade ago, Obama said in his address. It’s a reduction equivalent to taking 166 million cars off the road, he noted. The EPA’s decision to extend the interim goal compliance timeline from 2020 to 2022 not only provides utilities with more time to achieve compliance, but also gives the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) more flexibility in how it implements reductions in the interim period before 2030. The rule also establishes requirements the ADEQ must meet as it works on the State Implementation Plan for emissions compliance. While the extended compliance goals are good news for Apache Generating Station and other utilities, Led-

ger says a detailed analysis of the new plan and its complicated verification provisions is being conducted. He cautioned the plan presents challenges, some of which include: • Higher rates for consumers as the emissions requirements are met and more costly renewable energy resources are brought on-line; • Lack of good regulatory fit with the multi-layer cooperative model; • Concerns about electric reliability; • The possibility of AzGT seeking bankruptcy protection from $ 255 million in stranded debt, reflecting debt still owed on Apache Generating Station and other facilities. Ledger thanked members of Arizona’s Congressional delegation, state legislators, member-consumers, employees, community leaders and others for the emails and phone calls backing AzGT’s alternative plan. “We are humbled and heartened by the tens of thousands of people who are supporting us,” he said. Ledger says that AzGT and other cooperatives will be meeting with local officials, key stakeholders, lawmakers and ADEQ officials to discuss

MARK.LEVYSVHERALD.COM

While working on the roof of his Park Archway Project, Benjamin Dale chats with friend Paul Tompkins Friday in Bisbee. The portico should be completed in approximately one week.

WHO USES AEPCO’S POWER? Member cooperatives that receive wholesale power from AEPCO include: • Sulphur Springs Valley Electric Cooperative in Willcox; • Duncan Valley Electric Cooperative, in Duncan; • Graham County Electric Cooperative, in Pima; • Trico Electric Cooperative in Marana; • Mohave Electric Cooperative in Bullhead City; • Anza Electric Cooperative in Anza, Calif.

the state Implementation plan process as ADEQ analyzes the final rule and how to integrate it into the state plan. Meanwhile, Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich has joined attorneys general in 15 other states to request an immediate “stay of Section 111(d) of the finalized Clean Power Plan.” The stay is to help ensure Arizonans will not be forced to suffer serious harm until the courts have had an opportunity to review the rule’s legality, according to a statement by Brnovich. “The EPA doesn’t have the legal authority to issue these mandates,” Brnovich said. “A stay will help protect Arizonans from increased energy prices and will preserve jobs as the final rule is challenged in court.”

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A12 HERALD/REVIEW

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NATION/WORLD

THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT News, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP PHOTO

In this 2014 photo, Irma Ortiz applies makeup while waiting in line to cross into the United States from Tijuana, Mexico.

At San Diego, at least, the border has become more orderly HIT BY TYPHOON AFTER 10 1 CHINA DEAD OR MISSING IN TAIWAN

A typhoon was pounding southeast China late Saturday, leaving more than a million homes without power after lashing Taiwan, where it downed trees, traffic lights and power lines, and left six people dead and four missing. Typhoon Soudelor hit the city of Putian in Fujian province late Saturday night and was expected to move across the region, China’s official Xinhua News Agency reported. The storm earlier caused more than 3 million households in Taiwan to lose electricity, with streets strewn with fallen trees. All 279 domestic flights on the island were canceled Saturday, as well as at least 37 international flights. At least 101 people were injured in the storm. An 8-year-old girl and her mother died when they were swept out to sea Thursday from a beach on the east coast, Taiwan’s official Central News Agency reported. The girl’s twin sister remains missing.

END OF EPIC COLORADO THEATER 2 ATSHOOTING TRIAL, A SURPRISE

James Holmes will spend the rest of his life in prison after at least one juror balked at the possibility of sentencing him to death for the massacre that claimed 12 lives and spawned a gut-wrenching four-month trial. Because the 12 jurors failed to unanimously agree that Holmes should be executed, he will be sentenced to life in prison without parole for the chilling 2012 attack on a midnight screening of a Batman movie that also left 70 injured. Nine jurors wanted to execute Holmes, but one was steadfastly opposed and two others wavering, a juror told reporters after the verdict was announced. “Mental illness played into the decision more than anything else,” said the woman, who would not give her name. “All the jurors feel so much empathy for the victims. It’s a tragedy.” The verdict shocked the courtroom. Holmes’ mother, Arlene, who had begged jurors to spare his life, leaned her head against her husband’s shoulder and began sobbing. In the back, Aurora police officers who responded to the bloody scene of Holmes’ attacks began crying.

CAPITAL ON EDGE AFTER 3 AFGHAN ATTACKS KILL AT LEAST 44 PEOPLE

A series of attacks that killed at least 44 people and wounded over 300 in one day has shattered the relative calm of Afghanistan’s capital, even as some had hoped fledgling negotiations with the Taliban and the death of their figurehead could bring peace. The attacks Friday in Kabul marked the highest number of civilians killed and wounded in a single day, according to the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, which began keeping its statistics in 2009. Even Saturday, as Afghans protested the violence and donated blood to victims, people remained on edge. “I feel danger even now, right now as we are talking,” said Kabul resident Mohammad Naeem. “And when I see the crowd of people I think maybe a suicide attack will take place with a car bomb or on a motorbike. Anything is possible.”

AP PHOTOS

In this image released by the New Taipei Fire Department, emergency rescue personnel carry a child through a flash mudslide caused by Typhoon Soudelor in Xindian, New Taipei City, northern Taiwan, Saturday.

3 DEAD ARE RELATED TO 5 OFFICIALS: VERMONT SHOOTING SUSPECT

Three women found dead in a Vermont home Saturday were relatives of a woman arrested a day earlier in the fatal shooting of a state social worker who handled the case in which she lost custody of her daughter, state police said. The bodies were found Saturday morning at a home in Berlin, Vt., and police said at least two appeared to have been shot. The women were related to Jody Herring, who police said fatally shot a state social worker in neighboring Barre late Friday afternoon, police said. Authorities said the social worker, Lara Sobel, had handled a case for the state Department for Children and Families in which Herring’s 9-year-old daughter was removed from the home. Gov. Peter Shumlin, who was returning from a Nova Scotia vacation a week early after receiving word of the deaths, said Saturday there was no reason to believe there was a continuing threat related to the incidents.

RIVALS CRITICIZE COMMENT 6 TRUMP’S ABOUT FEMALE MODERATOR

Donald Trump’s bombast continued to roil the Republican presidential race Saturday as several rivals criticized his treatment of a Fox News debate moderator. The organizer of a conservative political convention rescinded the businessman’s prime-time speaking slot, angering those eager to hear from the businessman. The real estate mogul and reality television star remained unbowed, refusing to apologize for saying on CNN that Megyn Kelly, who aggressively questioned him during Thursday’s GOP primary debate, had “blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever” when she asked him about his incendiary comments toward women. At the least, the latest flare-up underscored the potential challenges Trump poses for his rivals as they struggle to react to him without deviating from their own message or alienating the conservatives who are enamored with his insurgent, unconventional bid.

OFFICE OF HARPER LEE’S FATHER 7 LAW FOR SALE

Before Harper Lee’s novel “To Kill a Mockingbird” made the fictional lawyer Atticus Finch one of the bestknown names in modern American literature, the man who inspired the character — Lee’s father — practiced law in an old bank building in her hometown. Long vacant, the two-story structure no doubt helped inspire a pivotal scene in Lee’s recently released “Go Set a Watchman,” according to a town historian. And for $125,000 or less, you could own it. The old brick building that once housed the law office of A.C. Lee on the courthouse square is for sale in Harper Lee’s southwest Alabama home of Monroeville.

SEES SURGE IN SYNTHETIC POT 8 NYC USE, WITH DIRE CONSEQUENCES

IN CENTRAL MALI SIGN OF 4 ATTACK SPREADING EXTREMIST VIOLENCE

The first attack by Islamic extremists in a central Mali town, in which 10 people died, shows that jihadist aggressions are spreading in the country and hitting more directly at the government military and the U.N. peacekeeping force, an expert said Saturday. Three of the attackers also were killed, and seven suspected militants were detained, the government said. Four U.N. employees were rescued. The militants first targeted the army camp in Sevare on Friday but when they faced resistance they moved to the nearby Hotel Debo before assaulting the Hotel Byblos, popular with U.N. staff, to take hostages, said a Mali government report, according to the U.N. official.

The New York Police Department says it’s seen an alarming increase in consumption — mainly by homeless men — of the leafy substance known as “K2.” The cheap knock-off weed is spiked with unknown chemicals that are supposed to mimic the more mellow effects of pot, but often comes with harsh side effects that have created a quandary for authorities already grappling with how to deal with the city’s homeless population. In recent months, there’s been a spike in emergency room visits in New York City by users suffering from high blood pressure, hallucinations, hot flashes and psychotic meltdowns that can turn violent or deadly. Worries over synthetic marijuana aren’t new or confined to New York. In 2013, Washington, D.C., launched a zombie-themed website — K2ZombieDC. com — to warn teenagers of its dangers.

SAN DIEGO (AP) — A sign that greets motorists entering the U.S. at the nation’s busiest border crossing shows a silhouette of a man, woman and pigtailed girl running for their lives under the word “Caution.” It was erected 25 years ago, when hordes of immigrants regularly stormed the border in “banzai runs” from Mexico, startling drivers along California’s Interstate 5. The sign looks strangely out of place today. A 14-mile fence and tougher U.S. enforcement have dramatically reduced the illegal f low of immigrants across this stretch of border, while the legal movement of Mexicans and Americans back and forth across the international boundary for business or pleasure has been getting faster and more efficient. On balance, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s portrait of a border out of control doesn’t square with what people see every day in San Diego and, on the Mexican side, Tijuana, which together make up the biggest metropolitan area along the 1,954-mile divide. Serious problems persist. For one thing, San Diego’s San Ysidro border crossing has become a favored route for methamphetamine smugglers. Still, sneaking across this stretch of the border has become far more difficult, even for the most fit and fearless. At the same time, an expanded San Ysidro crossing has slashed delays for Mexican visitors who legally work, shop and play in San Diego, while Tijuana’s f lourishing restaurant and arts scene draws American foodies. A few miles away, construction crews are extending Tijuana’s airport across the border by building both a pedestrian bridge and a terminal in San Diego. “It’s nothing like it used to be,” said Roman Real, a resident of central Mexico who returned to the Tijuana-San Diego area last week after a 10-year absence to introduce his three children to San Diego tourist attractions. Real waited just 10 minutes in a car to cross at San Ysidro — the site of one of every 10 international arrivals in the United States. It was a dramatic improvement from the “catastrophe” he remembered. “The border has its vices,” he said while waiting on a bench for his wife at a San Diego outlet mall that opened in 2001 near San Ysidro and counts Polo Ralph Lauren, Brooks Brothers and Armani among its stores. But “if you’re a tourist, things look good. Very normal.”

IS command dominated by ex-officers in Saddam’s army BAGHDAD (AP) — While attending the Iraqi army’s artillery school nearly 20 years ago, Ali Omran remembers one major well. An Islamic hard-liner, he once chided Omran for wearing an Iraqi flag pin into the bathroom because it included the words “God is great.” “It is forbidden by religion to bring the name of the Almighty into a defiled place like this,” Omran recalled being told by Maj. Taha Taher al-Ani. Omran didn’t see al-Ani again until years later, in 2003. The Americans had invaded Iraq and were storming toward Baghdad. Saddam Hussein’s fall was imminent. At a sprawling military base north of the capital, al-Ani was directing the loading of weapons, ammunition and ordnance into trucks to spirit away. He took those weapons with him when he joined Tawhid wa’l-Jihad, a forerunner of al-Qaida’s branch in Iraq. Now al-Ani is a commander in the Islamic State group, said Omran, who rose to become a major general in the Iraqi army and now commands its 5th Division fighting IS. He kept track of his former comrade through Iraq’s tribal networks and intelligence gathered by the government’s main counterterrorism service, of which he is a member. It’s a common trajectory. Under its leader, Iraqi jihadi Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the Islamic State group’s top command is dominated by former officers from Saddam’s military and intelligence agencies, according to senior Iraqi officers on the front lines of the fight against the group, as well as top intelligence officials, including the chief of a key counterterrorism intelligence unit. The experience they bring is a major reason for the group’s victories in overrunning large parts of Iraq and Syria.


Sports

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

B

Sports Editor: Steve Stockmar, 515-4612, steve.stockmar@svherald.com

CHALLENGE ACCEPTED AP PHOTO

Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Keyvius Sampson delivers a pitch against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the second inning of a baseball game, Saturday in Phoenix.

Sampson gets 1st big league win, Reds beat D’backs 4-1 PHOENIX (AP) — Keyvius Sampson earned his first major league victory, Cincinnati hit three home runs and the Reds beat Arizona 4-1 Saturday on the night the Diamondbacks retired new Hall of Famer Randy Johnson’s No. 51. All the Cincinnati INSIDE runs came on homers Johnson by Eugenio Suarez, Brandon Phillips and thanks fans, Marlon Byrd, whose many others, solo shot in the ninth as D-Backs was his 150th career retire No. 51, B3 home run. Sampson (1-1) gave up a first-inning run but the Diamondbacks never scored again. He went six innings and allowed four hits, struck out four and walked three. Robbie Ray (3-7) pitched six innings for Arizona, allowing three runs and five hits. He matched his career high with eight strikeouts and walked one but fell to 0-3 in his last five starts. Aroldis Chapman, hitting 103 mph on the Chase Field radar gun, threw a scoreless ninth for his 24th save in 25 tries. Sampson lost his only other start, despite a solid outing in Pittsburgh’s 3-0 win over the Reds last Sunday. He pitched a perfect inning of relief in his major league debut on July 30. The Reds, shut out in their previous two games, scored all three runs off Ray with two outs. Suarez hit a tworun homer in the fourth, and Phillips added a solo shot in the fifth. In the fourth, Byrd hit a bloop double down the left-field line and, on the next pitch, Suarez homered to put the Reds up 2-1. Phillips lined a 3-2 pitch just over the left-field wall to make it 3-1. Arizona scored in the first when A.J. Pollock doubled to right and scored on David Peralta’s single. The Diamondbacks had runners on first and second with one out in the fourth and again in the fifth. In the fourth, Sampson escaped the jam with consecutive flyouts to right by Aaron Hill and Nick Ahmed. Paul Goldschmidt grounded into a double play to end the fifth.

MARK.LEVYď˜łSVHERALD.COM

Sierra Vista City Council Member Rachel Gray prepares to participate in this month’s Hummingbird Triathlon. Gray is being trained by dietician and trainer Brandon Nichols.

Novices, too, will compete in Hummingbird Triathlon all in the name of health and fitness BY STEVE STOCKMAR steve.stockmar@svherald.com

SIERRA VISTA — Competing isn’t always about getting to the finish line. Getting to the starting line is tough enough. A handful of Sierra Vista residents have been working for weeks and months to do just that, having pledged to use the 15th annual Hummingbird Triathlon as their starting line to a new way of living healthy. The Hummingbird is Aug. 22, and challenges competitors to an 800-yard swim, a 13-mile bike ride and a 5K, or 3.1-mile, run. The event didn’t take place last year because there weren’t enough entrants. Not enough people making the commitment. Not enough people willing to work to get to the starting line, much less the finish line. Not enough people ready to stop putting off prioritizing their health and physical fitness. Hopefully that won’t be the case in 2015. City council members pledged to spread awareness about physical health and, led by Rachel Gray, are making themselves examples by training for the Hummingbird. Gray describes hersel f as having “never been an active person,� and admits that she

TRIATHLON CHECKLIST FOR THE BIG DAY

IF YOU GO 15th Annual Hummingbird Triathlon Date: Aug. 22, 6 a.m. Location: The Cove Aquatic Center, 2900 Martin Luther King Jr Pkwy, Sierra Vista

BY STEVE STOCKMAR steve.stockmar@svherald.com

finds ways to cheat on her diet occasionally. But back in February she set the Hummingbird as her goal and challenged her fellow council members to follow suit in an effort to promote health and wellness. Henrietta “Hank� Huisking, Gwen Calhoun and Alesia Ash signed on, as did city clerk Jill Adams. Gray will bike and run, and her husband, T homas, wi l l swim in their team effort. Huisking is doing all three triathlon events, while Calhoun (run), Ash (bike) and Adams (swim) will team up for their Hummingbird challenge. “I was very stubborn about it. It took me a while,� Gray admitted on Thursday, before an early morning training session at Country Club Park in Sierra Vista. “Even my bike. I was determined I was going to do the bike portion on my beach

SIERRA VISTA — You’ve come all this way, training for the Hummingbird Triathlon and perhaps building up t he g uts to compete. Don’t DID YOU forget the basics, KNOW? however. The first Olympic When the 15th triathlon was in a n n u a l e v e n t Sydney in 2000, t a ke s pl ac e i n won by Canada and Sierra Vista on Switzerland. New Au g. 2 2 , m a ke Zealand and Austria yoursel f a day- triumphed in 2004, before and day-of and Germany and checklist of im- Australia were the portant items. winners in 2008. Spend the day before taking inventory of your equipment, especially the biking gear. The 13-mile bike route starts and ends at The Cove. “If you forget one thing in the cycling, your whole race is gone,� cautioned Les Woods, a veteran of many triathlons including seven Hummingbirds, where he’s been a multiple winner. “There’s helmets, sunglasses, the bicycle has to be tuned up and running right, you’ve got to have your bicycle shoes. Any missing item in that

See TRIATHLON, Page B3

See CHECKLIST, Page B3

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL 7 POSITION BATTLES IN 7 DAYS

TODAY: QUARTERBACK

BUENA

BISBEE

The quarterback hopefuls, like Buena’s other positions, will get their biggest audition Aug. 18 at the team’s home scrimmage against Empire. The scrimmage was originally scheduled as a three-way also including Sahuarita on Aug. 19, but it’ll be a cozy workout instead between just Buena and Empire, as the teams get in about 60 plays against each (10 on offense, 10 on defense, 10 on offense, etc.). Senior Braxton Bennette and junior Chris McGuyer have been working under center as the top two QB candidates, taking the same amount of reps since spring and throughout the summer. “We’re just evaluating them as we go,� head coach Joe Thomas said Saturday. The Colts coaching staff will “let them go at it� during the scrimmage, watch film, and assign the starter. But the No. 2 will still get plenty of reps to stay sharp.

The Pumas have a veteran under center but that doesn’t mean there won’t be competition. Returning starter Freddy Contreras threw for over 1,500 yards last year and rushed for 400 more. Bisbee coach Chris Vertrees said you can’t find a more accurate quarterback than Contreras. “Freddy has great touch and accuracy and puts the ball where you want it every time,� Vertrees said. “He has real good vision.� Contreras may be the returning starter but he’ll have competition. Backup Danny Barow is looking to push the current starter to his limit.

ďšź STEVE STOCKMAR

TOMBSTONE In the early going, the nod looks to be going to junior David Montoya to call plays under center. The junior played some running back last year, and is showing Tombstone head coach Mike Hayhurst what it takes to play QB during preseason camp. “Very coachable kid,� Hayhurst said. Montoya throws a nice ball and has sharpened his soft touch. Montoya’s biggest challenge for starter status figures to come from junior Wayne Wilridge, who played some quarterback last season.

“Our two quarterbacks are neck and neck in a battle right now,� Vertrees said. “Danny brings a lot of elements that we want to bring into our offense.� Barow can boost the offense’s running game as an option QB. “We want to try and run the ball 70 percent of the time,� Vertrees said. “Danny’s ability as a runner will really help us do that.� No matter who starts this year both quarterbacks are going to find ample playing time.

ďšź STEVE STOCKMAR

ďšź MAX LANCASTER

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B2

SPORTS

HERALD/REVIEW

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

SCORES AND STANDINGS D’BACKS ab BHmltn cf 4 Phillips 2b 3 Votto 1b 4 Frazier 3b 4 Bruce rf 4 Byrd lf 4 Suarez ss 4 Brnhrt c 4 Sampsn p 2 Schmkr ph 1 Ju.Diaz p 0 Hoover p 0 DJssJr ph 1 AChpm p 0 DHrndz p 0 Owings ph 1 Totals 35

r 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

Cincinnati Arizona

h 0 2 0 0 0 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8

Arizona

bi 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

ab 4 2 4 3 4 2 1 4 3 1 2 0 1 0

Inciart rf Pollock cf Gldsch 1b DPerlt lf WCastll c JaLam 3b Tomas ph A.Hill 2b Ahmed ss Sltlmch ph Ray p A.Reed p Romak ph Hessler p Totals

r 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h bi 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

32 1 5 1

000 210 001 — 4 100 000 000 — 1

E_Barnhart (2), Suarez (11). DP_Cincinnati 1. LOB_Cincinnati 5, Arizona 8. 2B_Byrd (12), Suarez (9), Pollock (25). HR_Phillips (8), Byrd (19), Suarez (6). SB_Inciarte (11). Cincinnati Sampson W,1-1 Ju.Diaz H,4 Hoover H,12 A.Chapman S,24-25 Arizona Ray L,3-7 A.Reed Hessler D.Hernandez

IP

H

R ER BB

6 1 1 1

4 0 0 1

1 0 0 0

1 0 0 0

5 2 0 1

3 0 0 1

3 0 0 1

6 1 1 1

SO

3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0

4 1 0 2 8 0 2 1

WP_A.Chapman. Umpires_Home, Larry Vanover; First, Vic Carapazza; Second, Adam Hamari; Third, Brian Knight. T_2:58. A_40,512 (48,519).

AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Toronto Baltimore Tampa Bay Boston

Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Chicago Cleveland

Houston Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland

East Division W L Pct GB 61 48 .560 — 60 52 .536 2½ 56 53 .514 5 55 56 .495 7 49 62 .441 13 Central Division W L Pct GB 65 44 .596 — 55 55 .500 10½ 54 56 .491 11½ 51 57 .472 13½ 50 59 .459 15 West Division W L Pct GB 61 51 .545 — 58 51 .532 1½ 55 54 .505 4½ 51 60 .459 9½ 50 62 .446 11

Saturday’s Games Toronto 6, N.Y. Yankees 0 Oakland 2, Houston 1 Texas 11, Seattle 3, 11 innings Tampa Bay 5, N.Y. Mets 4 Detroit 7, Boston 6 Kansas City 7, Chicago White Sox 6 Cleveland 17, Minnesota 4 Baltimore 5, L.A. Angels 0 Sunday’s Games Toronto (Estrada 9-6) at N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 8-4), 10:05 a.m. Boston (Owens 0-1) at Detroit (Verlander 1-4), 10:08 a.m. Minnesota (P.Hughes 10-7) at Cleveland (Kluber 6-12), 10:10 a.m. N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 10-10) at Tampa Bay (Archer 10-8), 10:10 a.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 6-9) at Kansas City (D.Duffy 5-5), 11:10 a.m. Baltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 9-8) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 4-8), 12:37 p.m. Houston (Fiers 0-0) at Oakland (Bassitt 1-4), 1:05 p.m. Texas (Lewis 12-4) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 13-6), 1:10 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

East Division W L Pct GB New York 59 51 .536 — Washington 57 52 .523 1½ Atlanta 51 60 .459 8½ Philadelphia 44 67 .396 15½ Miami 43 68 .387 16½ Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 71 39 .645 — Pittsburgh 64 44 .593 6 Chicago 61 48 .560 9½ Cincinnati 49 59 .454 21 Milwaukee 47 65 .420 25 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 62 48 .564 — San Francisco 59 51 .536 3 Arizona 53 56 .486 8½ San Diego 52 59 .468 10½ Colorado 46 62 .426 15 Saturday’s Games Pittsburgh 6, L.A. Dodgers 5 Chicago Cubs 8, San Francisco 6 Tampa Bay 5, N.Y. Mets 4 Washington 6, Colorado 1 Atlanta 7, Miami 2 St. Louis 3, Milwaukee 0 Cincinnati 4, Arizona 1 Philadelphia 4, San Diego 2 Sunday’s Games N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 10-10) at Tampa Bay (Archer 10-8), 10:10 a.m. Colorado (Flande 2-1) at Washington (Scherzer 11-8), 10:35 a.m. St. Louis (Lackey 9-7) at Milwaukee (Nelson 9-9), 11:10 a.m. San Francisco (Peavy 2-4) at Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 12-6), 11:20 a.m. Cincinnati (DeSclafani 7-7) at Arizona (Corbin 2-3), 1:10 p.m. Philadelphia (J.Williams 3-8) at San Diego (Cashner 4-11), 1:10 p.m. Miami (B.Hand 1-2) at Atlanta (S.Miller 5-8), 2:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (A.Wood 7-7) at Pittsburgh (Morton 7-4), 5:05 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS

BASEBALL American League

5-15; J.Logano 16-19; B.Keselowski 20; C.Buescher 21-22; B.Keselowski 23-48; J.Logano 49-50; B.Keselowski 51-52; C.Elliott 53; J.Logano 54-82. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): B.Keselowski, 4 times for 40 laps; J.Logano, 4 times for 39 laps; C.Buescher, 1 time for 2 laps; C.Elliott, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 10 in Points: 1. C.Buescher, 724; 2. C.Elliott, 700; 3. T.Dillon, 700; 4. R.Smith, 667; 5. E.Sadler, 666; 6. D.Wallace Jr., 629; 7. D.Suarez, 625; 8. B.Gaughan, 610; 9. B.Scott, 606; 10. R.Reed, 565.

LOTTERY

REDS 4, DIAMONDBACKS 1

Cincinnati

SPORTS ON TV

FANTASY 5: 02-19-24-35-37 PICK 3: 7-8-8 ALL OR NOTHING (Evening) 02-03-05-08-09-11-12-13-15-19 BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Released RHP Bud Norris. BOSTON RED SOX — Recalled INF Deven Marrero from Pawtucket (IL). CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Agreed to terms with OF John Mayberry Jr. on a minor league contract. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Assigned LHP Michael Roth outright to Columbus (IL). Placed RHP Cody Anderson on the 15-day DL. Optioned OF Tyler Holt to Columbus. Recalled OF Abraham Almonte and RHP Shawn Armstrong from Columbus. HOUSTON ASTROS — Transferred RHP Samuel Deduno to the 60-day DL. Optioned RHP Asher Wojciechowski to Fresno (PCL). MINNESOTA TWINS — Designated C Eric Fryer for assignment. Optioned RHP Tyler Duffey to Rochester (IL). Recalled C Chris Herrmann and RHP A.J. Achter from Rochester. Sent OF Byron Buxton to Rochester for a rehab assignment. Agreed to terms with RHPs Omar Bencomo and Nick Anderson on minor league contracts. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Sent LHP Sean Doolittle to Stockton (Cal) for a rehab assignment. TEXAS RANGERS — Optioned OF Ryan Rua to Round Rock (PCL). Agreed to terms with RHP Ross Ohlendorf on a minor league contract. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Traded SS Dawel Lugo to Arizona for INF Cliff Pennington and cash. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Optioned RHP Allen Webster to Reno (PCL). Selected the contracts of 3B Jamie Romak and LHP Keith Hessler from Reno. ATLANTA BRAVES — Recalled OF Todd Cunningham from Gwinnett (IL). Optioned OF Todd Cunningham and SS Daniel Castro from Gwinnett (IL). CHICAGO CUBS — Optioned OF Matt Szczur to Iowa (PCL). Placed C David Ross on the bereavement list. Reinstated C Miguel Montero from the 15-day DL. MIAMI MARLINS — Placed RHPs Andre Rienzo and Jose Urena on the 15-day DL, Rienzo retroactive to Tuesday. Selected the contract of RHP Kyle Barraclough from Jacksonville (SL). Recalled RHP Kendrys Flores from New Orleans (PCL). NEW YORK METS — Sent OF Michael Cuddyer to St. Lucie (FSL) for a rehab assignment. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Optioned RHP Dalier Hinojosa and OF Jordan Danks to Lehigh Valley (IL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Assigned RHP Vance Worley outright to Indianapolis (IL). SAN DIEGO PADRES — Optioned OF Alex Dickerson to El Paso (PCL). Placed RHP Marcos Mateo on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Thursday. Claimed LHP Caleb Thielbar off waivers from Minnesota and optioned him to El Paso. Reinstated OF Will Venable from paternity leave. Recalled LHP Frank Garces from El Paso. Transferred OF Wil Myers to the 60-day DL. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Placed 2B Dan Uggla on the 15-day DL. Reinstated RHP Stephen Strasburg from the 15-day DL. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CLEVELAND CAVALIERS — Re-signed F James Jones. FOOTBALL National Football League DETROIT LIONS — Waived CB Ethan Davis. PITTSBURGH STEELERS — Waived/injured S Isaiah Lewis. Signed S Jordan Dangerfield. COLLEGE GEORGIA — Announced LB Detric Bing-Dukes will transfer. PENN STATE — Dismissed LB Daiquan Kelly from the football team.

BRIDGESTONE INVITATIONAL PAR SCORES

Saturday At Firestone Country Club (South Course) Akron, Ohio Purse: $9.25 million Yardage: 7,400; Par: 70 Third Round Justin Rose 67-71-63—201 Jim Furyk 66-66-69—201 Shane Lowry 70-66-67—203 Steven Bowditch 73-69-63—205 Ian Poulter 68-72-65—205 Henrik Stenson 68-69-68—205 Bubba Watson 70-66-69—205 Robert Streb 68-70-68—206 Brooks Koepka 69-69-68—206 Graeme McDowell 66-71-69—206 David Lingmerth 70-71-66—207 Danny Lee 65-72-70—207 Keegan Bradley 69-70-69—208 Jason Day 69-69-70—208 Branden Grace 73-69-67—209 Rickie Fowler 67-72-70—209 Bill Haas 74-69-67—210 Marc Warren 71-70-69—210 Danny Willett 70-71-69—210 Russell Henley 70-70-70—210 Kevin Na 69-70-71—210 Patrick Reed 71-67-72—210 Sergio Garcia 71-67-72—210 Webb Simpson 68-70-72—210 Jordan Spieth 70-68-72—210 Bernd Wiesberger 71-74-66—211 Soren Kjeldsen 69-73-69—211 Ryan Moore 71-71-69—211 Pablo Larrazabal 72-70-69—211 Zach Johnson 70-70-71—211 Lee Westwood 68-70-73—211 Dustin Johnson 69-67-75—211 Marcel Siem 70-73-69—212 Marc Leishman 72-70-70—212 Charl Schwartzel 70-72-70—212 J.B. Holmes 74-68-70—212 Joost Luiten 70-72-70—212 Martin Kaymer 70-71-71—212 Adam Scott 72-69-71—212 Paul Casey 68-73-71—212 Jamie Donaldson 70-71-71—212

-9 -9 -7 -5 -5 -5 -5 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -2 -2 -1 -1 E E E E E E E E E +1 +1 +1 +1 +1 +1 +1 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2

POWERBALL: 09-34-48-52-54, Powerball: 15 THE PICK: 13-25-29-36-38-41 Brandt Snedeker Charley Hoffman Matt Kuchar Brendon Todd Koumei Oda Billy Horschel Louis Oosthuizen James Hahn Camilo Villegas Byeong-Hun An Stephen Gallacher Victor Dubuisson Kevin Kisner Anirban Lahiri Jimmy Walker Gary Woodland Mikko Ilonen Phil Mickelson Hideki Matsuyama Thongchai Jaidee Francesco Molinari David Lipsky Thomas Bjorn Ben Martin Gary Stal Padraig Harrington Sangmoon Bae Andrew Dodt Fabian Gomez WC Liang Oliver Wilson Ryan Palmer Hunter Mahan Matt Every Nick Cullen

70-70-72—212 75-66-71—212 72-68-72—212 74-72-68—214 68-77-69—214 71-73-70—214 72-70-72—214 70-70-74—214 75-69-71—215 77-68-70—215 77-67-71—215 68-74-73—215 73-69-73—215 77-72-67—216 73-73-70—216 75-69-72—216 74-73-70—217 76-70-71—217 69-75-73—217 73-71-73—217 69-74-74—217 72-74-72—218 70-75-73—218 75-71-72—218 72-73-73—218 72-72-74—218 71-75-73—219 77-71-72—220 75-72-73—220 72-73-75—220 74-72-75—221 74-75-73—222 74-79-72—225 72-77-76—225 77-74-75—226

+2 +2 +2 +4 +4 +4 +4 +4 +5 +5 +5 +5 +5 +6 +6 +6 +7 +7 +7 +7 +7 +8 +8 +8 +8 +8 +9 +10 +10 +10 +11 +12 +15 +15 +16

NASCAR XFINITY-ZIPPO 200 RESULTS

WNBA

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct New York 14 6 .700 Washington 12 8 .600 Chicago 13 9 .591 Indiana 12 9 .571 Connecticut 11 9 .550 Atlanta 7 14 .333 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Minnesota 15 6 .714 Phoenix 14 7 .667 Tulsa 10 12 .455 Los Angeles 7 14 .333 San Antonio 7 16 .304 Seattle 5 17 .227 Saturday’s Games San Antonio 88, Seattle 81 Sunday’s Games Phoenix at Chicago, 11 a.m. Connecticut at Washington, 1 p.m. Atlanta at Tulsa, 1:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Minnesota, 4 p.m.

GB — 2 2 2½ 3 7½ GB — 1 5½ 8 9 10½

MLS GLANCE

Saturday At Watkins Glen International Watkins Glen, N.Y. Lap length: 2.45 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Joey Logano, Ford, 82 laps, 140.3 rating, 0 points, $50,235. 2. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 82, 143, 0, $37,705. 3. (5) Chris Buescher, Ford, 82, 116.3, 42, $41,679. 4. (7) Boris Said, Toyota, 82, 104.8, 40, $31,499. 5. (6) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 82, 108, 39, $27,431. 6. (9) Brian Scott, Chevrolet, 82, 102.8, 38, $24,004. 7. (3) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 82, 100.6, 38, $25,321. 8. (11) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 82, 91.7, 36, $22,746. 9. (10) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 82, 106.9, 0, $16,539. 10. (13) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 82, 89.2, 34, $23,261. 11. (15) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 82, 78.7, 33, $22,183. 12. (17) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 82, 81.3, 32, $21,905. 13. (19) Brandon Gdovic, Chevrolet, 82, 71, 31, $21,804. 14. (22) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 82, 65.5, 30, $21,651. 15. (12) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 82, 82.8, 29, $23,175. 16. (16) Darrell Wallace Jr., Ford, 82, 77.3, 28, $21,525. 17. (20) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 82, 77.2, 27, $21,473. 18. (29) Blake Koch, Toyota, 82, 59.9, 26, $21,397. 19. (31) Todd Bodine, Chevrolet, 82, 63.5, 25, $21,322. 20. (8) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 82, 80.2, 24, $21,771. 21. (25) Cale Conley, Toyota, 82, 61.4, 23, $21,220. 22. (36) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, 82, 45.8, 0, $15,165. 23. (24) Dakoda Armstrong, Ford, 82, 65.7, 21, $21,088. 24. (27) Eric McClure, Toyota, 82, 50.5, 20, $20,987. 25. (32) Tomy Drissi, Toyota, 81, 45.5, 19, $21,086. 26. (34) David Starr, Toyota, 81, 45.7, 18, $20,886. 27. (38) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 81, 39.3, 17, $14,835. 28. (4) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 75, 64.5, 0, $14,759. 29. (18) Kenny Habul, Toyota, accident, 74, 80.3, 15, $20,709. 30. (23) Ryan Reed, Ford, accident, 74, 57.7, 14, $20,958. 31. (37) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, transmission, 68, 35.7, 13, $20,582. 32. (39) Bobby Reuse, Chevrolet, 64, 31.7, 12, $14,506. 33. (33) Kevin O’Connell, Dodge, transmission, 57, 40, 11, $14,470. 34. (28) Peyton Sellers, Chevrolet, suspension, 50, 48, 10, $20,409. 35. (14) Ben Rhodes, Chevrolet, engine, 35, 52.3, 9, $20,361. 36. (26) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, engine, 34, 42.7, 8, $18,960. 37. (21) Michael Self, Chevrolet, transmission, 33, 49.5, 7, $17,960. 38. (35) Morgan Shepherd, Chevrolet, brakes, 13, 27.5, 6, $10,960. 39. (40) John Wes Townley, Chevrolet, electrical, 8, 28.7, 0, $15,960. 40. (30) Jeff Green, Toyota, vibration, 3, 23.2, 4, $8,960. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 84.059 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 23 minutes, 31 seconds. Margin of Victory: 1.066 seconds. Caution Flags: 7 for 20 laps. Lead Changes: 9 among 4 drivers. Lap Leaders: J.Logano 1-4; B.Keselowski

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA D.C. United 13 7 5 44 34 26 Columbus 9 8 7 34 38 39 New York 9 6 6 33 33 25 Toronto FC 9 9 4 31 37 38 New England 8 9 7 31 32 36 Montreal 8 9 4 28 29 31 Orlando City 7 10 7 28 32 37 New York City FC 6 10 6 24 31 34 Philadelphia 6 13 5 23 29 40 Chicago 6 12 4 22 24 31 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Vancouver 13 8 3 42 34 22 FC Dallas 11 6 5 38 32 27 Sporting KC 10 4 7 37 33 22 Los Angeles 10 7 7 37 39 29 Portland 10 8 6 36 25 28 Seattle 10 11 2 32 25 24 Houston 8 8 7 31 30 28 Real Salt Lake 7 9 8 29 27 37 San Jose 7 10 5 26 23 29 Colorado 5 8 9 24 20 24 Saturday’s Games Sporting Kansas City 3, Toronto FC 1 Orlando City 0, Philadelphia 0, tie D.C. United 1, Montreal 0 Houston 2, San Jose 1 Columbus 2, Colorado 1 Vancouver 4, Real Salt Lake 0 Sunday’s Games Seattle at Los Angeles, 1 p.m. New York City FC at New York, 4 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 13 D.C. United at New York City FC, 4 p.m. Friday, Aug. 14 Colorado at San Jose, 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 15 Toronto FC at New York, 4 p.m. Houston at New England, 4:30 p.m. Los Angeles at FC Dallas, 6 p.m. Vancouver at Sporting Kansas City, 6 p.m. Portland at Real Salt Lake, 7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16 Orlando City at Seattle, 2 p.m. Chicago at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.

ARENA FOOTBALL LEAGUE

NATIONAL CONFERENCE West Division W L T Pct PF y-Arizona 14 4 0 .778 1003 Las Vegas 5 11 1 .324 708 Los Angeles 4 14 0 .222 724 Pacific Division W L T Pct PF z-San Jose 17 1 0 .944 1061 x-Spokane 6 11 0 .353 796 Portland 5 13 0 .278 857 AMERICAN CONFERENCE South Division W L T Pct PF y-Orlando 12 6 0 .667 1023 x-Jacksonville 10 8 0 .556 971 Tampa Bay 7 11 0 .389 820 East Division W L T Pct PF z-Philadelphia 15 3 0 .833 1060 x-Cleveland 8 10 0 .444 953 New Orleans 3 14 1 .194 691

PA 825 859 915 PA 662 937 975 PA 951 901 942 PA 823 959 918

x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division z-clinched conference Saturday’s Results Jacksonville 36, New Orleans 33 Philadelphia 48, Cleveland 33 Orlando 59, Tampa Bay 40 Arizona 67, Portland 38 San Jose 60, Los Angeles 38 Spokane at Las Vegas, LATE End of Regular Season

SHAW CHARITY CLASSIC PAR SCORES

Saturday At Canyon Meadows Golf and Country Club Calgary, Alberta Purse: $2.35 million Yardage: 7,086; Par: 70 Second Round Miguel Angel Jimenez 67-61—128 -12 Colin Montgomerie 62-66—128 -12 Jeff Maggert 67-63—130 -10 Woody Austin 68-64—132 -8 Fred Couples 67-65—132 -8 Tom Byrum 67-66—133 -7

Today All times subject to blackout and change

AUTO RACING 11 a.m., NBCSN — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Cheez-It 355, at Watkins Glen, N.Y. 12 p.m. Noon, FS1 — United SportsCar Championship, Continental Tire Road Race Showcase, at Elkhart Lake, Wis. 6 p.m., ESPN2 — NHRA, Northwest Nationals, at Kent, Wash. (same-day tape) CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE 2 p.m., ESPNEWS — Winnipeg at Hamilton GOLF 9 a.m., TGC — PGA Tour-WGC, Bridgestone Invitational, final round, at Akron, Ohio 11 a.m., CBS — PGA Tour-WGC, Bridgestone Invitational, final round, at Akron, Ohio 11 a.m., TGC — Ladies European Tour, Tipsport Masters, final round, at Dysina, Czech Republic (same-day tape) 1 p.m., TGC — Champions Tour, Shaw Charity Classic, final round, at Calgary, Alberta 3 p.m., TGC — PGA Tour, Barracuda Championship, final round, at Reno, Nev. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 11 a.m., TBS — San Francisco at Chicago Cubs 1:10 p.m. FSAZ — Cincinnati Reds at Arizona Diamondbacks 5 p.m., ESPN — L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh MOTORSPORTS 9 a.m., FS1 — MotoGP, Moto3, Indianapolis Grand Prix 10 a.m., FS1 — MotoGP, Moto2, Indianapolis Grand Prix 11 a.m., FS1 — MotoGP, World Championship, Indianapolis Grand Prix NFL 5 p.m., NBC — Exhibition, Hall of Fame Game, Pittsburgh vs. Minnesota, at Canton, Ohio SOCCER 5:30 a.m., NBCSN — Premier League, Arsenal vs. West Ham, at London 8 a.m., NBCSN — Premier League, Liverpool at Stoke City 1 p.m., ESPN — MLS, Seattle at Los Angeles 4 p.m., FS1 — MLS, New York City at New York 9:30 p.m., FS1 — NWSL, Chicago at Portland SOFTBALL 9 a.m., ESPN — Big League, World Series, championship, at Lower Sussex, Del. TENNIS 2 p.m., ESPN2 — WTA, Bank of the West Classic, championship, at Stanford, Calif. VOLLEYBALL 1:30 p.m., NBC — AVP, Seattle Open, men’s final WNBA 11 a.m., ESPN — Phoenix at Chicago Mark O’Meara Stephen Ames Michael Allen Jose Coceres Kirk Triplett Kevin Sutherland Guy Boros Corey Pavin Wes Short, Jr. Scott Dunlap Tommy Armour III Peter Senior Scott McCarron Bart Bryant Gene Sauers Brad Bryant Olin Browne Grant Waite Duffy Waldorf Skip Kendall Rod Spittle David Frost Jeff Sluman Bob Tway Russ Cochran Gary Hallberg Joe Durant Billy Andrade Jeff Hart Frank Esposito John Huston Steve Jones Joel Edwards Brian Henninger Jeff Freeman Steve Pate Lee Janzen Sonny Skinner P.H. Horgan III Cesar Monasterio Blaine McCallister Mike Goodes Tom Pernice Jr. Fred Funk Bob Gilder Jerry Smith Jeff Coston John Riegger Mark Calcavecchia Tom Kite Brad Faxon Greg Kraft Chip Beck Jay Don Blake Bobby Wadkins Mark Wiebe Doug Rohrbaugh Dan Forsman Morris Hatalsky Ian Woosnam John Cook Rick Gibson Mark Brooks Roger Chapman Craig Stadler Bob Niger Scott Hoch Esteban Toledo Scott Simpson Nolan Henke Joey Sindelar Eric Egloff Jim Rutledge Darryl James Jim Gallagher, Jr.

2015 DODGE DURANGO 0% APR for 60 months Offer through Chrysler Capital OAC. Residency restrictions apply. See dealer for details. Expires 8/31/15

66-67—133 65-68—133 65-68—133 70-64—134 68-66—134 67-67—134 67-67—134 65-69—134 70-65—135 68-67—135 65-70—135 63-72—135 65-70—135 69-67—136 70-66—136 68-68—136 67-69—136 72-64—136 66-70—136 65-71—136 70-67—137 69-68—137 70-67—137 69-68—137 68-69—137 68-69—137 67-70—137 72-65—137 66-71—137 66-71—137 67-70—137 66-71—137 70-68—138 69-69—138 68-70—138 69-69—138 70-68—138 68-70—138 70-68—138 70-68—138 68-70—138 72-66—138 67-71—138 69-70—139 70-69—139 70-69—139 72-67—139 66-73—139 69-71—140 68-72—140 71-69—140 72-68—140 74-66—140 74-66—140 71-70—141 71-70—141 72-69—141 70-72—142 71-71—142 72-70—142 73-69—142 73-69—142 74-68—142 70-73—143 71-72—143 71-72—143 72-71—143 73-70—143 72-72—144 73-71—144 70-75—145 73-72—145 75-72—147 73-76—149 76-73—149

-7 -7 -7 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 E E E E E E +1 +1 +1 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +3 +3 +3 +3 +3 +4 +4 +5 +5 +7 +9 +9

NFL CALENDAR Aug. 9 — Hall of Fame game, Canton, Ohio: Minnesota vs. Pittsburgh. Sept. 5 — Clubs must reduce rosters to a maximum of 53 players by 4 p.m. EDT. Sept. 6 — Claiming period for players placed on waivers at the final roster reduction expires at noon ET; clubs may establish 10-man practice squad; one player per team can be placed on injured reserve/ designated to return. Sept. 10 — Regular season begins, Pittsburgh at New England. Sept. 13 — First full weekend of regular season. Oct. 6-7 — NFL fall meeting, New York. Nov. 3 — Trading deadline, 1 p.m.

NBA CALENDAR Aug. 15-18 — FIBA Oceania Championship (Australia and New Zealand). Aug. 19-30 — AfroBasket. Aug. 31-Sept. 12 — FIBA Americas Championship. Sept. 5-20 — EuroBasket. Sept. 10-12 — Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame enshrinement weekend. Sept. 23-Oct. 3 — FIBA Asia Championship. Sept. 26 — Training camps open for teams playing international exhibition games. Sept. 29 — Training camps open for teams not playing international exhibition games. Oct. 27 — Regular season opens. 2016 Feb. 12-14 — All-Star weekend, Toronto.

ARIZONA WILDCATS FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Thu, Sep 03, UTSA, 7 p.m. Sat, Sep 12, at Nevada 4 p.m. Sat, Sep 19 N. Arizona 8 p.m. Sat, Sep 26 UCLA TBA Sat, Oct 03 Stanford at Stanford TBA Sat, Oct 10 Oregon State TBA Sat, Oct 17 at Colorado TBA Sat, Oct 24 Washington State TBA Sat, Oct 31 at Washington TBA Sat, Nov 07 at USC TBA Sat, Nov 14 Utah TBA Sat, Nov 21 at Arizona State TBA Sat, Dec 05 Pac-12 Championship TBA

ARIZONA CARDINALS FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Aug. 15 Kansas City Chiefs (Preseason) Aug. 22 San Diego Chargers (Preseason) Aug. 30 Oakland Raiders (Preseason) Sep. 3 Denver Broncos (Preseason) Sep. 13 New Orleans Saints Sep. 20 Chicago Bears Sep. 27 San Francisco 49ers Oct. 4 St. Louis Rams Oct. 11 Detroit Lions Oct. 18 Pittsburgh Steelers Oct. 26 Baltimore Ravens Nov. 1 Cleveland Browns Nov. 8 BYE Nov. 15 Seattle Seahawks Nov. 22 Cincinnati Bengals Nov. 29 San Francisco 49ers Dec. 6 St. Louis Rams Dec. 10 Minnesota Vikings Dec. 20 Philadelphia Eagles Dec. 27 Green Bay Packers Jan. 3 Seattle Seahawks

‡ 6RXWK +LJKZD\ ZZZ GRQRYDQGRGJH FRP XNLV221949


SPORTS

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

HERALD/REVIEW

B3

American teen Ledecky wins 5th gold with world-record swim K AZAN, Russia (AP) — There’s no stopping Katie Ledecky. The 18 -year- old American virtually raced herself at the world swimming championships, and she was unbeatable. Ledecky ended her meet in spectacular style Saturday night, lowering her own world record by 3.61 seconds in the 800-meter freestyle for her fifth gold medal. She swam the 16-lap race in 8 minutes, 7.39 seconds, bettering her time of 8:11.00 set last year on home soil. “I knew that I was capable of going sub-8:10,” she said, “so to go 8:07 means a lot.” L edecky completed a sweep of the 200, 400, 800 a nd 1, 5 0 0 f r e e s t yle s i n Kazan. She swam the anchor leg on the victorious 4x200 free relay, too. “It’s rea l ly neat to say that you’ve done something nobody has done before,” Ledecky said. “I’ll enjoy this for a few days and then I’ll get back to work and hopefully there’s more to come.” She improved her results from two years ago in Barcelona, where she won four golds and set two world records. In Kazan, she won the 400 by 3.89 seconds, the 800 by 10.26 seconds and the 1,500 by 14.66 seconds, taking down her old world record in the preliminaries

Phelps answers Le Clos’ taunts with faster time in 100 fly

AP PHOTO

United States’ Katie Ledecky holds her gold medal after winning the women’s 800m freestyle final at the Swimming World Championships in Kazan, Russia, Saturday. and the final. Her closest race was the 200 free, when she rallied from fourth to win by 0.16 seconds. “It could have been really tiring and it was,” Ledecky said. “But I recovered very well. I did what I needed to do to set myself up well each time that I got up on the blocks. I’m just proud of how I handled my races and how all this week has gone.” On the men’s side, Sun Yang of China is poised for a nearly similar feat. He won the 400 and 800 freestyles and is favored to add the 1,50 0 on the last day

Sunday. Sun finished second in the 200 free by 0.06 seconds. Ledecky was under worldrecord pace throughout the 800, leaving the other swimmers trailing well behind her wake. She tore off one of her two swim caps and smashed t he water wit h her hand in celebration of her third world record in Russia. “I really love to see what she can do,” said Lauren Boyle, t he si lver meda list from New Zealand. “It shows what is possible for the human body. It’s very inspiring for me.”

CHECKLIST:

FROM PAGE B1

PHOTOS BY MARK.LEVYSVHERALD.COM

Rachel Gray does a little stretching during her recent workout in Sierra Vista.

TRIATHLON: Still time to register

FROM PAGE B1

cruiser.” For months Gray has been training with Brandon Nichols, a competitive endurance athlete, registered dietician, and USA Triathlon Level 1 Certified Coach. “She wasn’t quite all-in back in April and May,” said Nichols, who placed first in the men’s division of the 2-mile run, 10-mile bike ride, 2-mile run duathlon on Fort Huachuca this past April, and will also compete at Hummingbird. “But since June and July started rolling around she got a little nervous.” Training periods vary depending both on the person and the event, says Nichols. Gray is in the midst of a 12week regimen, while Nichols has another client on a 20week program for an upcoming Ironman competition. “It depends on the person’s skill level and their endurance history,” he added. For Gray, the workouts have been structured phases starting with low-intensity at first with a build-up that includes running the actual race distance as the starting line approaches this month. Nichol s says a t y pic a l weekly plan includes two swims, two bike rides and two runs. At one per day, that’s a six-day schedule. “ Wit h i n t ho s e s w i m s , bikes and runs, we vary the intensity,” he explained. “We might do a long/slow day of running and then another day the run would be more of an interval run. Run fast, walk. Run fast, walk. Over and over. Ten times, maybe 12. That’s more of an interval style workout.” There have been lots of changes for Gray. She’s been sleeping better, waking up earlier for a more productive day, and drinking lots more water than she used to. “ I ’ve b e en e at i n g b etter. Definitely been eating better. Start making better choices,” she said of the training. “I’ve noticed

it’s made me more aware. I didn’t realize how actually out of shape I was. I had no idea. It’s made me more aware. As we’ve gone on my stamina’s increased. I have more energy. I’m not getting tired in the afternoons like I used to a lot.” Nichols is realistic enough to allow for occasional cheating when it comes to diet. “We look at the diet as a whole. What are we doing the whole week,” he said. When the finish line does arrive, Gray, for one, will continue the healthy habits that have now become routine. “I don’t think that’ll stop,” she said. “Now that I realize the difference how do you just go back to just kind of ‘blah’? I intend to continue.” As of Thursday, 28 individua ls and eight teams wer e r e g i ster e d for t he Hummingbird Triathlon, says Sierra Vista Leisure Services Sports Coordinator Jack King. There’s still time to register. Call King at 439-3202. “If you’re thinking about getting a relay team, it’s time to get off the couch and have fun,” he said.

group on your bike and your race can be gone, and there’s nothing you can do about it.” In addition to biking gear, racers should inventory their goggles, swimsuit and running shoes. And there’s the regular standbys, such as plenty of water and sunscreen. Then there’s food, including what to have and what to avoid, both the day before and day of. Stay away from citric acids, spicy peppers and, no matter how much fun the night before with fellow triathletes can be, copious amounts of alcohol. As far as what to eat, basically carb up. “Spaghetti, bread, a lot of carbohyd rates,” advised Woods, who serves as Sports Director on Fort Huachuca. After getting away from triathlons for years, he came back for his last one, in Tucson two years ago when he turned 60. “Some people are big i nt o b e e f r i g ht n ow. They’ll have a steak before they race. If it doesn’t come up the next day and their system can handle it and they do well, then t hey’l l probably eat a steak the night before the next race, too.” A competitor’s checklist should include other basics easily overlooked. Check that your racing bib is accurate, consider setting two alarms to get yourself up in the morning to avoid missing the starting gun, and, believe it or not, competitors should take time to read the pre-race instructions. Do they? “99 percent of the people never do that,” Woods said. “They’ll find over ti me t h at it does pay of f, especially after t hey’ve gotten lost two or three times.”

Trainer Brandon Nichols works with city council member Rachel Gray at Country Club Park Thursday. Gray will be competing in the team category of The Hummingbird Triathlon with her husband Thomas.

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Maybe one day they’ll learn. Don’t talk trash to Michael Phelps. It just makes him go faster. After spending all day digesting Chad le Clos’ taunts from halfway around the world, Phelps beat the South African’s time from the world championships to win the 100-meter butterfly at the U.S. national championships Saturday night. Phelps churned through the water on the return lap, far ahead of everyone, and

touched in a dazzling 50.45 seconds. He was nearly a second faster than his goldmedal winning time at the London Olympics and, more important to Phelps, he went faster than Le Clos’ time about eight hours earlier in Kazan, Russia, where he won the world championship in 50.56. After touching the wall, Phelps turned quickly to see his time, shot a defiant look toward the packed stands in San Antonio, pounded the water with his arms, and spit out a mouthful of water. Then the 18-time Olympic champion mugged for the cameras, sticking out his tongue.

Rose with a 63 to tie Furyk AKRON, Ohio (AP) — Justin Rose never lost belief that he was playing well even as he went 30 consecutive holes without making a birdie in the Bridgestone Invitational. The streak ended on his first hole Saturday. And he kept right on going. Rose had a good start and a strong closing kick with three birdies over his last four holes, including a 40foot putt on the 18th hole. It was the longest putt he has made all year, and it gave him a 7-under 63 and a share of the lead with Jim Furyk. “I guess that shows it just evens out, really, if you can stay the course and stay patient, kind of believe that you’re going to get your run eventually,” Rose said. “Yesterday, I actually played really well. ... It just didn’t happen yesterday. But came into today with a belief that I was still playing well.” Furyk, who had a fourshot lead going into the weekend, finished with six straight pars and he had to work hard for the last one. After spending much of the back nine in the rough, he

finally drilled one right in the middle on the 18th hole, only for it to settle in a sandfilled divot. “I finally hit a good drive on 18 and I’m licking my chops to get down there, knowing I’m going to have a short iron in my hand,” Furyk said. “Not only was I in a divot, it was a pretty bad lie. I felt like there was raised sand behind the ball.” His only option was to punch an 8-iron that he tugged slightly into the collar. His chip rolled out through the green, and he holed a 12-foot putt for his par and a 69 to join Rose in the lead at 9-under 201. Furyk was more excited than usual, pumping his fist when it fell. Being tied for the lead wasn’t that big of a deal for someone like Furyk, who h a s b e e n a r ou nd long enough to know the tour stopped giving charity money away for a 54-hole lead. And while every shot counts over 72 holes, this was more a matter of finishing the right way. He made bogey on his last hole the previous two rounds.

AP PHOTO

Hall of Fame pitcher Randy Johnson waves to the crowd during a ceremony retiring his No. 51 Arizona Diamondbacks jersey, before a baseball game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Diamondbacks, Saturday in Phoenix.

Johnson thanks fans, many others, as D-Backs retire No. 51 PHOENIX (AP) — Saying “there were a lot of special moments created here,” Randy Johnson thanked fans, teammates, front office personnel, even the clubhouse guys, when the A ri zona Dia mondbacks retired his No. 51 on Saturday night. Johnson won four consecutive NL Cy Young Awards and a World Series championship, threw a perfect game at age 40, and as he noted, killed a bird with a pitch during his eight seasons — over two stints — with the Diamondbacks. T he honor c a me t wo weeks after Johnson’s induction as a first-ballot selection to baseball’s Hall of Fame. He joins former teammate Luis Gonzalez as the only Arizona players to have their number retired by the franchise. Johnson strode to the infield from the bullpen, the same walk he took in the ninth inning of Game 7 of the 2001 World Series. W h e n t h e c e r e m o ny was over, he stood on the mound he had so domi-

nated and waved to the big crowd. The Diamondbacks presented Johnson with an exact replica of the drum set used by the rock group Rush. Johnson is friends with members of the band, particularly bass player and lead singer Geddy Lee. Johnson bent over in surprise and threw his hands in the air. He took the microphone and spoke to the crowd, listing thanks by name, including many players from his World Series championship team. He said his third baseman at the time, now manager of the Washington Nationals’ Matt Williams, “was the closest to my personality” on game day than anyone he had known. He thanked fans that rooted for him and against him. Johnson recalled the intensity building every time he drove to the ballpark on the day he pitched, “morphing into something I didn’t know I was becoming.” “When I stepped between the lines, I gave it everything I had,” he said.


HERALD/REVIEW

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

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B4

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Neighbors

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

C

ONLINE Visit the library’s Facebook page to stay up-to-date on programs and activities. www.facebook.com/ SierraVistaLibrary

in Sierra Vista New librarian brings drive, passion to Sierra Vista Library BY LIZ MANRING liz.manring@svherald.com

S

PHOTOS BY MARK.LEVYSVHERALD.COM

Children’s Librarian Sierra Baril sings and dances with attendees at Friday’s Toddler Story Time in the Sierra Vista Public Library. The toddler event is held every Friday.

COURTESY OF ADAM CURTIS

Why did you decide to become a librarian? While I was in Americorps I worked with at-risk children and teenagers in Pittsburgh and saw that libraries were a vital part of many of the neighborhoods. They brought so much to the community and provided opportunities to those who most needed them. I also knew from acting as a teaching assistant in Kindergarten classrooms while in Americorps that early literacy was a passion of mine. Where are you from, what brought you to Sierra Vista? I’m kind of from all over, having grown up with a father in the Navy. I spent three years in Pittsburgh last and spent middle school through undergrad in Erie, Pennsylvania. Sierra Vista intrigued me because I’ve never lived in the Southwest. I thought it looked beautiful and unique, and I thought that spending much of my early childhood on military bases was an experience relatable to many of the children here. What do you enjoy about working with children? I love working with children for many different reasons. They have such a wonderful way of viewing the world that is sometimes lost as we grow up. Being surrounded by that optimism and sense of discovery makes me have a greater sense of appreciation for life. It is incredibly rewarding to be instrumental in helping a child learn to read. I also like working with teens because they have a unique way of viewing things too and it’s great to have conversations with them as they are figuring things out.

Children’s Librarian Sierra Baril reads to kids Friday in the Mona Bishop Room. What’s your favorite book and why? My favorite picture book is “The Paper Bag Princess” by Robert Munsch because the princess saves the day by defeating the dragon, and then, when the prince is rude to her, she makes her way without him. It’s a very female-friendly book for anyone tired of all the stories with a helpless princess who needs to be rescued.

ierra Baril started her job as the Sierra Vista Public Library’s children’s and youth librarian on May 4 and has been whipping up creative ideas for programs and activities nearly nonstop ever since. The 28-year-old discovered her passion for youth services after the year she spent in Americorps working with atrisk teenagers and kindergarteners in Pittsburgh. She holds a bachelor’s degree in creative writing from Penn State Eerie and a master’s degree in library and information science from the University of Pittsburgh. After graduating with her master’s, library jobs were scarce in Pittsburgh and the surrounding area. Baril applied for positions across the country and chuckled when she came across a listing in a small city in Arizona that shared her own first name — Sierra Vista. The position has turned out to be a perfect fit, for both Sierra Baril and Sierra Vista. IF YOU GO: “She moved here from Pennsylvania STEAM Saturdays and didn’t even The next wait a week to installment of STEAM start work,” said (Science, Technology, Emily Scherrer, the Engineering, Art library manager. and Math) Saturdays “She got here, got is 11 a.m. to noon into her apartment, Aug. 22 at the Sierra and came the next Vista Public Library. day. She would Children ages 5 go home on her to 12 will make lunch break and “Brush Bots,” little unpacked boxes. electrically-powered Part of the reason I toothbrush heads hired Sierra is she that bounce around has such passion like insects. for youth and she STEAM Saturdays brings her own occur every first and flavor to things. third Saturday of the There’s a lot of month at the Sierra people pushing Vista Public Library. the envelope in Space is limited library services, and registration is with STEAM, teen required in advance activities, and other for these free events. programs. Sierra For more information and I were on the or to register, contact same wavelength the library at 458as far as all of those 4225. things went.” Baril’s duties with the library include coordinating storytime sessions each week, implementing summertime reading programs and activities, and proposing new children’s and youth events. When she came on board in early May, summer activities were set to begin in just a few weeks. While Scherrer had planned a few things to get the ball rolling, Baril was “baptized by fire” in her first librarian job as the primary executor of the summer educational program. This summer’s theme was “Every Hero Has a Story,” which is set by the Collaborative Summer Library

See SIERRA, Page C5


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IDIOTS&FRIENDS

HERALD/REVIEW

W

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

Time to fine-tune my Canuck jokes

ell, it was bound to happen. Two weeks ago I reported on the travels of HitchBOT, the globetrotting robot who was attempting to travel across the United States. HitchBOT had HIN IR traveled for 10 days in Germany, 17 days in CHRISTOPHER the Netherlands, and ZIMMERMAN 21 days in Canada. It embarked on a journey across America, starting from Massachusetts on July 17. It lasted only two weeks in the USA. It got as far as Philadelphia, the City of Brotherly Love, before being murdered and dismembered. The grisly photos of HitchBOT’s remains, left in a garbage strewn back alley, were posted on Twitter on Aug. 1. Not even Jack the Ripper ever left such a messy kill site. HitchBOT started across America with a bucket list, only to wind up in a bucket itself. Strangely, HitchBOT posted a message about its own murder on its website. “Oh dear, my body was damaged, but I live on back home and with all my friends. I guess sometimes bad things happen to good robots! My trip must come to an end for now, but my love for humans will never fade. Thank you to all my friends.� Wait a minute. If HitchBOT is dead, how can it be posting messages online? Clearly, something is amiss here. Thus, I suspect that HitchBOT has faked its own death in order to avoid questions about the “accidental� death of a Volkswagen worker in Germany back in July. I reported at length about the possibility that HitchBOT had something to do with the

T A

incident. Obviously, HitchBOT i read my article, dismembered r itself, and posted the photo of its it dismembered body on Twitter. d Its I brain is missing in the deathphoto, which it probably mailed p back to Canada so it could rebuild b itself. it Of course, I could be wrong about this. HitchBOT was wearing obnoxious-looking boots and was dressed in silver and blue. It is possible that he was murdered by angry Eagles fans who mistook him for a Cowboys fan. Philadelphia Eagles fans are notorious for being the worst in the NFL and have, once again, taken the top spot for being the most hated sports fans In America, according to a recent Sports Illustrated article. Now, I have met Eagles fans and didn’t find them any more obnoxious than Seahawks fans or Packers fans. But, then, I didn’t go wandering through Philadelphia wearing the colors of a rival football team. A lonely hitchhiking robot wearing Cowboy colors in Philadelphia is basically a deadrobot walking ‌ or, in this case, sitting. There are just some things you don’t do in Chip Kelly’s town. An angry reader from Canada wrote to me and said, “Obviously you’ve missed the entire point of the social experiment the creators of HitchBOT were attempting to accomplish.â€? No, I think I got it right. Their plan was to destroy the human race with killer robots and take over the planet. I know this is true because I see movies about that very thing on the SyFy channel all the time. HitchBOT has left a trail of death behind it. Just because one of the bodies left behind was its own, doesn’t change the truth. The real question is, what form

A Clean Slate

will HitchBOT take when it returns from the dead to exact its revenge on Philadelphia. Will it come back in the form of the classic Robot B-9 from the TV series “Lost In Space?� I always liked this robot, because it’d wave its silly accordion arms around and say, “Warning! Warning! Will Robinson!� But, somehow, I don’t think this robot would intimidate the citizens of Philadelphia. Maybe, it will come back in RoboCop form. Both the 1987 and 2014 versions of RoboCop were pretty intimidating. However, RoboCop was human-sized and not scary enough to frighten the people of Philadelphia, even if it had the face of Cowboys quarterback, Tony Romo. Even the evil robot that fought against RoboCop wouldn’t be big enough to take on a city the size of Philly. Although this dinosaur–looking, death robot that is basically a ripoff of the AT-ST Walker from “The Empire Strikes Back,� is pretty terrifying, HitchBot will have to come up with something even bigger to take on the city that spawned Rocky Balboa. In the movie, “Thor,� there was a big robot-looking thing called the Destroyer, but it would be more suitable for a small city like Reno, not Philly. I think, if HitchBOT is going to get serious, it will have to go with something along the lines of Mechagodzilla, the mechanized version of Godzilla. This is the only robot big enough to take down the home of the Philly steak and cheese sandwich. The only question remaining is, when HitchMechagodzillaBOT returns to Philadelphia, will it be featured on the SyFy channel?

B

link, and it’s a new world. In the moment that our eyes were closed, everything changed, perhaps imperceptibly, but never the less change occurred. If we take a breath, we change. The oxygen in our lungs is different. A deep breath can shift our mood, or a hair may fall from our head. We are different. d Becoming aware of this a moment by m moment renewal m is i a great little tool in the t happiness kit, h because we b ttend to relate to everything from EALITY an essentially HECK permanent perspective, and this causes CHRIS FISK problems. This is especially true of our self and others. As soon as we decide that someone is irksome or insufferable our view of them tends to become quite fixed. We can also come to the conclusion early on in life that we ourselves aren’t very bright or attractive, and just keep thinking of our self in that way. Unfortunately, the result of not recognizing the everchanging nature of phenomena is that we are unnecessarily limiting our own potential, and that of others, not to mention being unhappy more often than we need to be.

R C

CHRISTOPHER ZIMMERMAN is a Whetstone resident. He can be reached at zimmermc@powerc.net

See FISK, Page C5

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NEIGHBORS

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

HERALD/REVIEW

Spanning History

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Arizona’s Historic Bridges

BY CHRIS FISK For the Herald/Review

H

istory buffs, engineers, and those looking for inspiration for their next road trip will want to get ahold of a new book, Arizona’s Historic Bridges (Arcadia Publishing, 2015). The book is part of the “Images of America� series put out by the publisher, which specializes in books on local history. “Friends say, ‘there are bridges in Arizona?’ Yes! There are huge topographical differences in the state,� said co-author Patricia Morris, a former longtime resident of Cochise County. The book principally comprises photos and is arranged along historic routes, such as U.S. Route 66, making planning a road trip effortless. Interested readers can use details from the book to do further research on the history of the bridges, most of which are in the National Register of Historic Places. The backdrop for all the bridges is the unique seasonal aspect of Arizona waterways, the imperfect sciences of engineering and hydrology, and the rich history of pioneer travel through the state. Manifest Destiny helped bring the Arizona territory into statehood, which ignited the building of infrastructure, such as bridges. Authors Patricia Morris and Jerry Canon initially created a slideshow of historic bridges in the state, which they presented to engineering and historical groups as part of the centennial celebrations of 2012. Feedback on the presentation was positive, but left the audience wanting more. They were then approached by Arcadia to write the book, and given a year to do so. It took the whole year, much to their surprise. “It was a labor of love,� joked Morris, referring to both the book project in general, but also the modest compensation. Morris has a master’s degree in urban planning and worked for the city of Sierra Vista for a number of years before making a move to the county, serving as Deputy Director, Engineering Manager of Highway and Floodplain Department. She met Jerry Cannon, an engineer specializing in the rehabilitation of historic bridges, when the Hereford Bridge collapsed in 2003. Cannon’s firm was contracted for the rebuild, which was a

McPhaul Bridge spans the Gila river near Yuma (Courtesy Wikipedia Commons.) redesign to mirror the original. Due to her many deadlines with the project, Morris pushed Cannon considerably during the rebuild, but the pair still became great friends in the end.

The fascination with bridges

“They lead you to the other side, you always want to get to the other side to see what’s over there,� said Morris of the enduring lure of bridges. The book, and others on the topic, is testament to not only the great enthusiasm for the daunting engineering feat that bridges represent, but also to the metaphorical aspects of connection, progress, and overcoming challenges that they imply. Bridges are imbued with a certain romance and tragedy, and are nearly synonymous with certain cities. The marriage of art and engineering, and the act of defying nature embodied in these structures never fails to captivate us on many levels. Poring over, or even just flipping through, the photo filled pages, it’s easy to appreciate the uniqueness of each bridge, and acknowledge the blood, sweat and tears they represent. Included in the book are brief backgrounds on the engineers and politicians who

understood the great power of bridges and were instrumental in bringing them into existence. Morris and Cannon’s intention was to capture the beauty of the bridges, and were able to visit most of them. “Best part, I got to see parts of the state I never had before, and will keep coming back,� Morris enthused. Patricia Morris now lives in New Mexico, but admitted to missing Bisbee. She and Tucson-based Jerry Cannon will be doing a mini book tour to thank some of the various historical groups that assisted with the book. Copies are available at Hastings and from Amazon.

Coauthor of Arizona’s Historic Bridges, Patricia Morris, a former longtime resident of Cochise County.

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C4

PUZZLES/ADVICE

HERALD/REVIEW

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

ASTROGRAPH

One is silver and the other is gold

L

ost arts may become lost for a reason — they’re difficult to learn and often hard work. I don’t know when you last saw a thatched roof, but for me it was about 10 years ago and it turned out to not even be real thatch. It was Shredded UNTI Wheat atop a gingerbread house, although it did look ARTHA fabulous. Apparently it takes quite a lot of skill and DEE DEE specialized training to be KORNMAN a thatcher, and very few people are willing to do it anymore. Kind of sad, isn’t it? While we make strides in ways Thatched roof cottage. that make our lives healthier yesteryear, but not for me. Most and easier, we lose artisans and people under the age of 30 have their skills. Fortunately there is never even used either of these; a revival going on luring folks to personally I think this handy little masonry, ironwork, glasswork, index is worth its weight in gold. and the list goes on. Make new You have room to write whatever friends but keep the old… as the you want: name and phone on the song goes. Sometimes the old front, helpful hints on the back ways work just fine, thank you. (“Henry is dog, not grandson,” I tend to hang on to systems or “don’t mention taxes!”). If you and things that work for me, botch it completely, you can just even if there are snazzier new toss the card and fill out a new versions, or I may keep the old one. We’re a very mobile society; and embrace the new as well. not only do people change phone I have a “smart” phone for numbers and addresses frequently; convenience — smarter than they also shed last names as easily I am — and keep a landline at as a snake sheds its skin. It’s also home, too. But if I settle in for not uncommon for “Marvin” to a talk, it’s definitely going to become “Mary,” and it’s good to be on the bedside table rotary stay up-to-date on these details. phone. (You can’t dial out, but Another plus: my cell phone may once comms are established be attractive to thieves, but not all is well.) There’s something that little index box. I bet nobody’s satisfying about holding that pilfered a Rolodex since Watergate. solid phone in one hand and I know GPS will get us winding your fingers in and where we want to go most of out of the curly cord with the the time, but for those of us other — while discussing world visual learners who prefer events or personal calamities. a little added security, the The sound quality seems better folded paper map will never on this phone, and when the disappear entirely. Who do time comes to hang up, it feels you think makes those maps like an actual conversation has that turn into GPS anyway? happened… talk about a lost art! Cartographers! (What a great The Rolodex may go the way word.) Maps can also double as of the beautiful address books of

TODAY Let your past teach you

to make better choices. You have the intelligence necessary to reach your goals, and you mustn’t let outside influences stand in your way. Maintain your flexibility by taking part in a variety of interests and projects.

A

M

ACROSS 1 Move, as a plant 6 Tiny bit 11 Brit. pounds 14 Morales of “NYPD Blue” 18 Part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands 19 Grammy-nominated song by Alanis Morissette 20 Result of a successful audition 22 Yam, e.g. 23 Found on this page 24 “Sure, that’s fine” 25 Instant 27 Like a parental lecture 28 Yellow ____ 29 William who invented the steam shovel 30 “Fifty Shades of Grey” woman 31 Boat in “Jaws” 33 Sunni or Shia 35 Part of a dealership 37 In bits 42 Means of achieving things 44 Like many patches 45 Nebraska county or who once lived there 46 Kind of pie 48 Dealer in futures? 49 Exact 51 Fill ____ (be of use) 52 Green topper 54 Lose that loving feeling 56 Sylvia of jazz 57 “You nailed it!” 60 Puffed ____ 61 Sneaky 62 Diner offering 66 However, briefly 69 False god 70 Not believable 71 One standing on deck 72 Art type 78 “Ben-Hur” studio of 1925 and 1959 79 Be observant of Lent, say 80 Battery ends 81 Concert pieces 83 # # # 86 Attention-grabbing 87 Try to grab Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes. com/learning/xwords.

89 Pinkish bloom 90 Like 0’s and 1’s in binary numbers 93 Tent alternative 94 Home paper 95 Learn (of) 96 Go (for) 97 Part of a Latin 101 conjugation 100 Beverage that may be served au lait 103 Fissure 105 Cardsharp’s deception 108 When one might get a pep talk 110 “Red” Holy Roman emperor 111 Farm stores 112 Whole 113 “Taken” star 114 Art 115 When H-Hour happens 116 Quash 117Screen Bean 118 California’s ____ Museum DOWN 1 ____ Rizzo of film 2 Blow 3“No. 1” person 4 Acts of deference 5 Agreeably biting 6 Tom’s partner 7 Corn-syrup brand 8 Repetitive, as in criticism 9 Lush locales? 10 Roman scourge 11 ____-free 12 Assumes 13 Reproving looks 14 Go out 15 “____ you!” 16 Zenith 17 Company with a lot of manual work? 19 Something to pay through? 21 Successor to Holder as attorney general 26 Capital on the Willamette River 27 Workshop power tool 32 Foe in “Rocky” 34 Military strength 36 Said “mea culpa,” say 38 Inner tubes, topologically 39 Italian girl’s name ending 40 Word with fire or trap 41Email folder 42 Collect 43 Old records 44 Charge 47 Repeated film role for Skippy

the stars. Don’t try to do everything all at once or by yourself. Take one step at a time and build a solid foundation for both your personal and professional lives.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Don’t let anger

your exceptional leadership abilities. Your unique flair will be more impressive if you play by the rules. The more you take on, the more you will accomplish.

WIKIMEDIA

décor or travelogue — just add little colored pins to show where you’ve been. It’s a lot more fun to gather around a map spread out on the table and watch someone’s finger trace tomorrow’s route than it is to cram around a 3x2 inch screen and try to figure out where and when to gas up. Of course, GPS comes in handy if you do get lost. It can guide you back, and it gives you someone to blame, “stupid GPS.” With maps it’s all on you. One of the happiest days of my life was when my husband tossed the map to our son instead of me, asking, “Which exit do I want?” followed rapidly by, “Now where do I go?” He did this at the last possible second, usually in 65 mph traffic. Of course, he denies it. As part of childproofing a home, you need to lock up all the drugs. You can buy a hightech $82 “medicine safe” to secure things or you can stow everything the old-fashioned way: locked chest buried deep. That may be a little impractical so do what we did: tackle box and combination lock. It’s affordable, portable, and comes in a variety of colors. An oldie but goodie.

or jealousy dominate your frame of mind. You risk losing a meaningful friendship if you act out of revenge or spite. A compliment or some praise will result in an unexpected reward.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Don’t rush for-

ward too fast or you will miss an important detail. Time is on your side, so proceed with caution and do things properly the first time.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) — If you brainstorm

with family and friends, you will quickly resolve a pressing issue. Don’t be afraid to ask for help when you hit a roadblock. Working as a team player will pay off.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Love is on the rise.

You deserve to have some fun, so participate in activities that attract a wide range of people. Include family and friends of all ages.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Stop putting

yourself through unnecessary anguish. Instead of fretting about the future, concentrate on making the best of today. Get out with friends and enjoy life.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Good fortune can

be yours if you are savvy with your investments and recognize a good deal when it’s offered. Do your homework and watch your money grow.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Mixed signals

and misunderstandings will lead to a series of mistakes. Be clear when communicating in order to avoid being blamed for an unintentional blunder.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) — Follow your

instincts. You may not convince others to see things your way, but you will accomplish what needs to be done if you are steadfast and determined to reach your goal.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Don’t let others’

actions dictate your mood or plans. Do what makes you happy and don’t worry about who wants to join you and who doesn’t.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) — Dependabil-

ity and a strong sense of responsibility will lead

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE LITERALLY SPEAKING

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) — Romance is in

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Let everyone see

Editor’s note: Annie’s Mailbox will no longer be appearing the in the Herald/Review. Look for a new advice column to start later this week.

BY MATT GINSBERG | PUZZLES EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

to advancement. Going above and beyond what is expected of you will earn you favors and rewards. Don’t let impulse get the better of you.

By Eugenia Last

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SUDOKU

Sudoku is a numberplacing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Sunday.

Yesterday’s answers

Newton 79nTom Wolfe’s “____ in Full” 82 Tend to 84 Intercedes 85 Shrubby wasteland 87 Supporting players

88 They vary with circulation 91 Right-hand page 92 Informal approval 93 Bottle in a beach bag 98 High 99 Apt to snap 100 Landing sound

101 Crew member 102 Isle of exile 104 Repulse, with “off” 106 Medium 107 “Semper paratus” grp. 109 Linger in the hot sun 110 Lennon’s love


NEIGHBORS

SUNDAY AUGUST 9, 2015

HERALD/REVIEW

C5

Foreign language apps for traveling abroad Y

ou’re going on vacation to a place where you don’t know the language, and English isn’t widely spoken. Sure, you’ve learned how to say “hello” and “where’s the bathroom?,” but beyond that you’re clueless and your flight is tomorrow. What to do? Gone are the days when tourists wander around clutching guidebooks with an index of handy phrases. Today there are more convenient ways to facilitate communication. This is not a comprehensive list of the copious digital language tools available; rather, these are two go-to options I’m using right now. Consider it a cheat sheet for when you touch down in a city and are at a loss for words.

Bravolol

One of the easiest (and cheapest) things to do is to download one of Bravolol’s phrase book apps, available in more than a dozen languages including Chinese, Vietnamese, Portuguese, Russian and Arabic. Each app comes

with several free categories of useful phrases and essential words such as “greetings” (with remarks like “Good morning”); “shopping” (“May I try it on?” as well as words for different kinds of clothing); “eating” (“I’d like a table in a nonsmoking area” along with words for types of food); and “emergency” (“Call the police”). But what makes these digital phrasebooks stand out among language apps is that when you tap a phrase, the app speaks it aloud. There’s no guessing as to how to pronounce the words. And if the app is talking too quickly for you, simply tap the turtle icon to hear the words more slowly (you can also adjust this in “settings”). Ideally you listen to the phrase and repeat it, but if your accent is terrible, you can play the voice on the app to, for instance, a waiter or store clerk. (If you don’t want the app to talk, you can turn off that feature in “settings.”)

Google Translate

My other in-the-moment communication tool is Google Translate, which is

free and can be used in a few ways. (Note: Try it out before you’re at happy hour in Lagos, as this app is a little more complicated.) One way to use the app is to tap the camera icon, then hold your smartphone’s camera lens up to the words you want translated on, say, a street sign or a menu. In seconds the instant translation feature transforms the words on the sign into your desired language, virtualreality style. I don’t recommend using the camera option to read your horoscope in Vogue Japan, however, as I did on a recent trip there. Long blocks of tiny text have not been the app’s strong suit, as others before me have written. Happily, the app is helpful in other ways. Say you’re asking for directions. You can speak, type or draw characters on your smartphone screen with your finger whatever it is you want translated. Then up pops what you just said or wrote in the other language (along with a transliteration if relevant) and an icon that you can tap to have the words

GIACOMO GAMBINERI/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Unlike the tourists of yesterday who wandered around clutching guidebooks with an index of handy phrases, today’s traveler to foreign lands has apps available to facilitate communication. spoken aloud in the foreign language. There’s also a nifty icon (a square with only its corners outlined) that allows you to make the translation fill your entire smartphone screen. Star a translation such as “Where is the bathroom?” by tapping the icon beside it, and it will be saved to a “starred” folder for easy access the next time you need it.

In the end, there’s no substitute for learning a language, or some vocabulary, in advance of a trip. Even knowing five words — “hello,” “thank you,” “please,” “sorry,” “goodbye” — shows locals that you’re making an effort. And they will be all the more willing to help you. No matter how short your flight, you certainly have time for that.

FISK: Mentally eliminate baggage

SIERRA: Library wants to be a destination for the community FROM PAGE C1

FROM PAGE C2

Program. According to a news release from the City of Sierra Vista, about 50 to 80 kids attended each of a variety of superhero-themed events held on Saturdays, with a high of 91 who registered for Superhero Training Camp on July 18, which included adults dressed as super heroes, a “laser” obstacle course made of yarn, a “bat cave” created with glow sticks, and a wide array of other activities and games. “I love putting together a program and the kids are so happy to be there,” Baril said. “If you can get them excited about a topic, you can get them to read. As Emily says, the library isn’t just about books; we want to be a destination for the community.” Most recently, Baril is organizing STEAM Saturdays. STEM is a common term in the education community that stands for science, technology, engineering and math. STEAM adds art to the mix. This past Saturday, about two dozen kids between 5 and 12 years old made “squishy circuits” out of specially-made play dough to create fully-functioning electrical circuits that power LED lights. The next STEAM Saturday is set for Aug. 22, when kids will make “brush bots” out of the tips of toothbrushes. “I like the interdisciplinary approach,” Baril said. “That’s how it is in real life; these things all go together. I want them to make creations, be creative when they’re doing these things, but also learn about scientific concepts and things that will help them down the road. Most of the jobs are in these fields.” She added, jokingly, “Don’t be like me and go to school for creative writing.” Baril finished her undergraduate degree at 23 and wound up working some odd jobs for a few years before finding her place with Americorps, which led her to graduate school at 27 and launched her career in the library field. In between degrees, she worked in the jewelry department at Sears, where she met her boyfriend, who worked in the shoes department. She briefly worked as a customer service and sales representative, as a grocery store clerk and, for one day, as a house painter. “I’m detail-oriented and focused, which is great if you’re a librarian, but not if you’re obsessing over every tiny painting detail,” she laughed. “I’ve had so many jobs, and I want this one to stick. The branch of Americorps I worked for was dedicated to serving youth, and I always enjoyed working with kids and was interested in literacy, but I didn’t get as passionate as I am now. I saw how libraries are the center of their communities and it was wonderful teaching kindergarteners how to read.” Scherrer said she appreciates Baril’s approach to library programming and services, which falls fully in line with the vision she and her staff have for

It can be easy to spot this tendency in action within families. With the “black sheep” epithet, for example, we feel that said sheep is an irresponsible screwup, or just generally dyspeptic somehow. The mere thought of them reminds us of their subpar character and we immediately become tense. Because we expect them to “cause trouble” it shouldn’t be surprising that they do. What to do? Well, we can try to clear the slate, so to speak. Rather than relate to the generic image of them as the black sheep that we have built up and reinforced over time, we try to give them a clean slate by mentally eliminating all the baggage accumulated over the years. This is not easy, but if we practice we will get better at it. Remembering the truth of constant change helps us to do this. While it may sound nearly impossible, technically we already do this with those closest to us. When they fail to do something we wanted or do something we didn’t want, yet again, we trot out those two troublesome words: “always” and “never.” In those moments

PHOTOS MARK. LEVYSVHERALD. COM

Sierra Baril leads children in a song during Friday’s Toddler Story Time event in the library.

LEFT: Mary Perry and her daughter Madeleine, 2, participate in Friday’s Toddler Story Time in the Mona Bishop Room of the Sierra Vista Public Library.

the city’s library. “We want to bring flavor and movement to Sierra Vista, and Sierra talked a lot about that in her interview,” Scherrer said. “The trend of libraries is that it’s no longer just a place for books; it’s one of the only community centers. … It’s an incubator of knowledge. Our mission is to provide free knowledge, not just books. Our programs are as important as our materials.” Baril has long to-do and wish lists for the library. She said she hopes to revamp the children’s space into something more child friendly, program activities that

bring more youth and teens to the library, make room for a “maker’s space” for hands-on and technology activities, and better promote cultural literacy. “I feel lucky to work with the people I do. Emily and (adult services librarian) Susan (Abend) are always looking forward and they’re open to fun and wacky ideas,” Baril said. “What I like about being in the library is that it’s structured, but freer and interest-driven learning. They’re choosing to come to the library. They see the activity and come participate because they want to be here.”

we are relating to them as inherently forgetful, as always forgetting or never remembering. Truthfully though, it is we who have forgotten all the times when they were thoughtful. Later, when we have cooled off, they become a clean slate, or maybe even practically perfect again. So, know that it is possible, if not easy. Likewise, if we continually label our self in less than flattering terms, rather than on the basis of constant change and potential, we are missing out on all the possibility afforded by this wisdom. We need to feel that we are a clean slate, as needed, and ever changing like everything else. Thinking of our self as flawed and fixed is just as disquieting as thinking of others as inherently unpleasant or damaged. By endeavoring to remember the impermanence of all things, however, we open the door to the change we are hoping for. We need to think of every day, every person we meet, and our self as a clean slate, a blank canvass. We may end up with the same picture many times over again, but if we keep at it eventually we will be able to view everything and everyone in whatever way is most beneficial.

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Behavior Health Paraprofessional: The Palominas Elementary •Duties include supervising resiSchool District is Hiring! dents ages 11-17, cooking, life •Collaborative community of skills, self-administering of medieducators! cations, executing treatment plans, •Amazing Technology and documentation, and other responEXCITING RETAIL SALES Canyon Vista Medical Center curricular resources! sibilities related to care of resiIN TOMBSTONE! is seeking individuals with great •Google Apps for Education dents. customer service for the We are looking for a full time sales District! •Qualifications include First following positions: associate for our family of stores. •Small class sizes! Aid/CPR, DPS Fingerprint Card, Alliance HealthCare We have been in business in We are currently hiring for clean MVR, ESR Certification, high •RN’s Tombstone for almost 40 years. Services school diploma and 1 year minithe following positions: •Ultrasound Sonographer Must have prior retail sales experimum experience working with •1- Kindergarten Teacher •Infection Prevention Coordinator ence. Job available immediately. Patient Coordinator children or equivalent. •1-2nd Grade Teacher •Documentation Integrity Call 457-3833. Ask for Adam. Sierra Vista and Safford Please apply in person •Highly Qualified Specialist Must be available some with a resume at Paraprofessionals •Director of Client Services weekend days and holidays. Alliance HealthCare Services is 345 Taylor Dr., •Title I Teacher •Medical Assistant seeking a Patient Coordinator to Sierra Vista, AZ 85635 •Substitutes support our Alliance Radiology **Mary’s Mission has fingerprint ap•Speech Language Pathology Competitive Pay and Benefits division. This is a part-time posiplications available for applicants Assistant tion working 1-2 days/week at that do not already have a fingerCall Marie Cobb For more information or to apply, our site in Sierra Vista and Safprint card. ESR Certification can be 520-366-6204 ext 102 Visit: www.canyonvista ford. Performs a variety of tasks Community Bridges is seeking a attained through employment with www.psd49.net/jobs medicalcenter.com to include greeting, screening RN Manager and RNs in Benson. Mary’s Mission. and transporting patients. CusAll shifts open, excellent benefit Canyon Vista Medical Center is an BHT/Counselor: tomer service experience and package, competitive wages, Equal Opportunity Employer. Contracted, part-time position; DuH.S. Diploma/GED required. ***SIGN ON BONUS*** ties include providing individual Tuition Assistance counseling to residents ages 11-17 Please contact Steve at Please send resumes to under direct care supervision of 949-242-5301, recruiting@cbridges.com the clinical director, ensure safe sadams2@alliancehealthcare and confidential care to residents, services-us.com understands psychiatric terminolor visit ogy, formulates treatment plans, www.alliancehealthcare Via Elegante Assisted Living and has good communication services-us.com CARE is seeking overnight caregivers for skills. Minimum of a bachelor’s defor details and to apply. is our our Wed-Fri and Sat-Mon gree in human services required. IS HIRING NOW Middle Name 7pm-7:30am shifts. Supervisory, Please apply in person Alliance HealthCare Services is the •Part time bather Personal, and Directed level aswith a resume at nation’s largest provider of ad•Full time groomer NOW HIRING sisted living caregiver certification •Full time - Over see the kennels. 345 Taylor Drive, vanced outpatient diagnostic im•RN’s FT for Night Shift required. CPR and First Aid reSierra Vista, AZ 85635 aging services. Apply In Person at •CNA’s FT and PT quired. Med administration and dePaw Passion •PT Receptionist mentia experience required. ExcelEEO / AA / M / F / Vet / Disability Part Time Caregivers Needed 100 N 6th St., Sierra Vista •Occupational Therapist / Assistant lent computer skills required. Employer CPR and 1st aid a pluss No phone calls please. Director of Rehab Apply online at Experience preferred Apply in person at www.viaelegante.com DOG KENNEL must have clean driving record Tile Setter - Sierra Vista 2305 E. Wilcox Dr. Huachuca City. Call or email for more info $10 to $14 based on experience. Sierra Vista RECEPTIONIST Morning and afternoon 520-439-0543 Email resume / phone number to (520) 458-1050 Busy Medical office has Full Time shifts available. cochise1994@hotmail.com Craig@CornerBroker.com Position available. Prior experience See www.animalwatchers.com and Spanish a plus. Good people for job application. skills required. PT Admin. Assistant Needed Send Resume To: Word and Excel Skills required. Chiricahua Community Receptionist. Box 602, Apply in Person at Health Centers, Inc. c/o Sierra Vista Herald Yaqui Electric 102 Fab Ave, 209 S. Huachuca Blvd. Sierra Vista, Az 85635 CURRENTLY SEEKING THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: No phone calls. t $%- %SJWFS .PCJMF .FEJDBM $MJOJD t 0VUSFBDI 1SPNBUPSB

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Qualifications / Experience

Position Database Administrators

Catholic Community Services is looking for dedicated individuals in the Sierra Vista area to fill the following positions. Foster Care Supervisor is responsible for 75% overall supervision and 25% direct client services in the Foster Care program. Ensures contract compliance, supervises staff, and compiles all necessary reports to agency, AzPaC, and DES. BA in Social Work or closely related field, 2 years of Child Welfare experience and 1 year supervisory experience Full Time $15.00-$18.75. Foster Care Licensing Specialist provides comprehensive services to foster and foster/adoption clients, including initial assessment, licensing, re-licensing, supervision, training, and ongoing support to the foster parents. Evening and weekend hours required as needed. BA in Human Services or related field with 2 years’ experience in Human Services or related. Full Time $12.90-$16.13. Training Specialist provides on the job coaching, mentoring and support to new trainees plus responsibility for training prospective foster and adoptive parents to include all tracking of training completed. Travel throughout the state may be required. Evening and weekend hours required as needed. BA in Human Services or related field with 2 years’ experience in Human Services or related. Multiple positions available. Full Time $12.90-$16.13. Kitchen Helper assists with food preparation and sanitary operation of the kitchen facility. Assists with providing volunteer direction. Part Time 4 hours per week. $8.05-$10.06. •Ability to obtain a Level One Fingerprint Clearance Card required for all positions. •Above average benefits package for full time positions. Submit your resume/application to: Catholic Community Services 6049 E. Highway 90, Sierra Vista, AZ 85635 or contact us at humanresources@ccs-soaz.org FAX 520 459-1285. Visit our website at: www.ccs-soaz.org AA/EEO employer. Experienced Ceramic Tile Installers Apply at: Sierra Vista Tile 105 N 5th St. Mon-Fri, 7am-4pm. HVAC Service Technicians/Needed. Experience a must Apply at: One Hour AC, 350 S 7th St Building B

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

AUCTIONS/ESTATE SALES

AZ TRADING Buy • Sell • Trade Estates & Collectibles 101 N. 6th St. (520) 459-8333 Grand Opening Just Shuttle August 15th, 2pm to 6pm 201 S. Huachuca Blvd. Huachuca City, AZ 1-866-931-3105 www.justshuttle.com

On-Site Moving Auction

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Early Preview: Fri., 8/14, 3-6 pm

Sat. Aug. 15 8:00 a.m Auction 2899 Sierra Bermeja Sierra Vista, AZ

••••••••••• Get The Most Out of your Yard Sale Ad- Remember to Include Directions or Cross Streets So Bargain Hunters Can Find You! ••••••••••••

Furniture, Stained Glass, Crown Victoria and Yard Art

Need a loan despite bad credit? Honest lenders won’t guarantee a loan before you apply. Call the Federal Trade Commission to find out how to avoid advance-fee loan scams. 1-877-FTC-HELP A message from The Sierra Vista Herald/ Bisbee Daily Review and the FTC.

PUBLIC AUCTION

For Additional Auctions and Details Visit our website: tumbleweedauction.com

Aug. 15 at 8 am Willcox- 380 N. Railroad Ave. Estates and Consignment SSVEC Equipment and Surplus SSVEC Sale 11 am

Ochoa’s Farm Green Chile Available Beginning August 8 Call (520) 204-9243 for more information

Boom, Bucket, Digger Trucks; Cars; Pickups; Pole, Car, & Wire Reel Trailers; Gas Compressors; Tire Machine; Welder; I Beam; C Purlins; Tools and Lots More!

ANTIQUES

(520) 403-0094 brucetingleauctioneering.com

•Flora foot stool: $35 AUTO PARTS •Large canvas framed art: $100 & ACCESSORIES •Ladies 9 1/2 pink western boots: $50 Call (520) 456-4811 1957 GMC 1/2 ton Long Bed Pick Up Truck. Muncie 4 Speed Trans. CALL 458-9440 1968 Impala 12 bolt rear. TO PLACE AN AD For Sale - Call (520) 366-2600

AUCTIONS/ESTATE SALES Cashway Mini Warehouses AUCTION - Aug, 11th at 10am Cash Only 1400 S. Hwy 92 (520) 458-1973 LOCAL LIVE AUCTIONS Tumbleweed Auction tumbleweedauction.com

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BOATS 1989 Bayliner Bass and Ski Boat 16 ft., 90 hp motor $1000 (520)456-0425

CARS For Sale- 1990 Lincoln Continental, maroon, 90,041 miles. Recent paint job and AC also. Call 520-236-3014 $3,500 OBO

CARS

FOR SALE GENERAL

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

PETS & ANIMALS

THINKING OF Big nice pots with GETTING A Beautiful plant NEW PUP? Available Fri. 8/7 & Sun 8/8 Contact us for tips From $20-$100 on finding the right puppy for you Please call 520-458-0385 and your family. Greater Sierra Vista Harmar AL 600 Power Chair lift. Kennel Club 1999 Pontiac Grand Am. 170k+ Keep your power chair inside the FOR SALE 520-378-4114 miles, Red w/ tan interior. 4 door. van. Set up for Dodge Grand Cara- NEW ..Full Size Sleep Number Matvan or Chrysler T&C. Can be tress ....$1,100 Runs Great! $1300 OBO modifed for other vans w/ 3rd row Only one month used. Pillow Top, 2 Female American Cocker Spaniels (520) 249-3815 seat. Original cost $2,600. Sell Sleep Number Mattress with 6 Leg House broke, spayed, good on a 2000 Monte Carlo SS V6 Auto leash, crate trained. for $1,000 Call 520-459-7777 Platform and Mattress Pad. New Batteries, Tires and Custom Beautiful girls with curly coats. •Moving Boxes - All Sizes, $1 a This is a FABULOUS DEAL!! I paid Must see to appreciate their beauty. Wheels. Runs Great, A/C. piece and some free. $2,300 NEW..You only need to pay Asking $3000 OBO Ready for Adoption •Moving Pads $2 a piece. $1,100. CALL(520) 456-7731 Call Bob 366-1533 (520) 452-9957 Call (520)378-7062 2002 Toyota Prius. 45 MPG White w/ gray interior. Gas Hybrid, Auto, Portable Massage Table. 4 door, FWD, Seats 5, A/C, Power LOST AND FOUND Windows and Locks, Cruise Con- Very Good Condition, Used only 6 trol, Power Steering, Tilt Wheel, times. Bought in VA, moved to AZ AM/FM Stereo/Cassette. Tires Ex- and had no more use for it. Orig. $259. Like to have $150. cellent, 248,200 miles. 520-234-8180 Very Good Condition, $2,000 Call (520) 234-7579 Shoulder Carried Oxygen Generator Inogen 1-G3. Cost $2,400 used for 3 KITTENS FOR SALE hours. Selling for $1,000. FOR FREE 7 weeks old, eating can & dry food, Call (520) 378-1359 litter box trained, very playful. LOST DOG - BUSTER $20 each - Call (520) 220-6295 ART MAGAZINES FOR FREE!!! *Last seen in Moson/Ramsey area* Pomeranian’s for Sale American Artist’s and The Artist Male, tan/yellowish boxer/lab mix. 2 Males, 8 weeks old, 1 Male, 9 Magazine. You pick up. He’s been missing for 2 months. months old and 1 female, AKC reg(520) 378-2455 He’s friendly and probably very istered, 4 yrs. old. skinny. He was wearing a red colFREE (520) 678-7047 lar and a black collor w/ electronic WOODEN PALLETS!! dog door opener. Located behind REWARD!!! TRAVEL TRAILERS/ the Sierra Vista Herald Please Call (520) 975-6201. HOUSEHOLD ITEMS 400 Veterans Dr. Please Keep CAMPERS/RVS the Area Tidy! Three reserved Tickets in Dale Earnhardt Terrace for camping world truck series race, at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. October 3, 2015. Call Bascom's Heating & Air (520) 459-5257

FOR SALE GENERAL BEWARE CHECK OVERPAYMENT SCAMS The FTC gives the following tips to avoid check overpayment scams: •Never accept a check for more than your selling price •Never agree to wire back funds to a buyer •Resist pressure to “act now” •Only accept checks from a local bank and visit the branch to verify legitimacy For more information visit: www.ftc.gov

2 piece Hutch with ornate glass, drawers and cabinets $500 obo Call after 5pm (520) 803-6588 Full Size Bedding Set, w/ Bed Skirt, Shams and Throw Pillows. Solid Sage Green in color. only $10 Call (520) 378-7062 •Shabby Chic Side Table $60 •Framed Art $100 •Entry Table $35 •Twin Bed $60 •Corner Shelf $50 •Amythest Book Ends $50 Call (520) 456-4811 Oak Dining table with pad and leaf, 6 chairs with table clothes $500 obo Call after 5pm (520) 803-6588

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

1983 Ford C Class 26 ft RV 460 Motor, Ford Chassis $1000 (520)456-0425

Percussion learning kit with wood snare, octave bells, adjustable bell stand, music rack, drumsticks, wheeled carrying case with compartments to store the individual components. $199.00. It’s easy to place a classified ad. Call 520-458-9440 to get started!

PERSONALS

2013 - 29 ft. 5th Wheel, Sprinter Copper Canyon Edition w/ one slide. Many extras included such as Toughguard Protection, Awning, Wheel Covers and Chocks, etc. $24,000. (740)213-8541

77 Widowed W/M Seeks Serious Relationship. Call (520) 366-1210

Queen Headboard with matching dresser and frame $300 obo Venus & Jorge long to be parents Call after 5pm and devote our lives to loving your (520) 803-6588 Newborn. 1-866-925-7993 Exp. Pd.

Get Noticed! Shade your ad Ask us how... 458-9440

STAND BY THEM IT’S YOUR CALL © 12/12 VHA

Confidential help for Veterans and their families

Confidential chat at VeteransCrisisLine.net or text to 838255


SUNDAY AUGUST 9,2015

HERALD/REVIEW

D3

Reaching more than 30,000 PEOPLE EVERY DAY in print or online.

Herald SIERRA VISTA

Real Estate & Rentals www.svherald.com/classifieds HOUSES FOR RENT

3 bed/2 ba, 2CG, block wall 1600 sqft, $1000/mo 882 Charles Young 520-266-2632

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

4 Rent/4 Sale McNeal/Elfrida 3BD/2BA, nearly new MH, Secluded, Mtn. Views on 4 Acres, $630 mo. or 65K OBO. (520) 260-8794

OPEN HOUSES Sun., 8/9

FOR RENT 1 Person Efficiency Apt.Quiet home, smoke free with private courtyard. Utilities incl. 5 min. from Main Gate Call 459-3527 for more details

Office space to share! Ideal for licensed massage therapist, licensed Acupuncturist or Health MOVE IN SPECIAL consultant. Furnished. Available Lg 1BR/1BA, Clean! Mondays, Wednesdays and/or Fri$400/month, utilities & cable incl. days. Terms to be discussed based Available Now. 520-456-0394 on need. approximately $200 a One bdrm. All utilities with mgr. on month. Please call for details at site, privacy fence, clean & neat. 520-366-7527 $450 Broker owned. Village Apartments. 335-6367

ONLINE All the time www.svherald.com

APARTMENTS FOR RENT $410 Studio. ALL Utilities included. Clean, quiet, friendly complex. Laundry facility on site. 6 mo lease, No application fee 520-456-1761 lasombraapartments.com

Linde Martin 520-439-3935 3110 Avenida de Suenos $219,000 • MLS 155178 1,856 sq.ft., 2BR/2BA DIR: S on 92, W on St Andrews to Mission Shadows gate turn right then leftand left again to home on left side of road.

HOMES FOR SALE SIERRA VISTA

COMMERCIAL RENTALS

Sierra Vista- 381 Sherbundy St. 4BR/2BA, Close to Base, Big Backyard, Laundry Area. $900/mo. + $500 dep. HUD OK. Call 520-364-4687

HOUSES FOR RENT 4BR/2BA on 1 acre, $850. 3BR/2BA condo w/pool, $750. 3BR/2BA Large Home, $750 5BD/2BA In Palominas, $1000 2BR/2BA Golden Acres, $650.

HEREFORD - 3BR/2BA 1640 SF Immaculate 3BD/2BA Home 5980 Calle De La Tierra 2145 Santa Catalina Extra workshop or storage buliding. DW on 1 acre in Ramsey Rd area. Large bedrooms, newly carpeted. Big 2 car garage Fireplace, stainFully equipt kitchen, large laundry less appliances, RV parking, pets room. Quiet 1 block street, near all considered. Very clean! $800 shopping, bus terminal and post month + $800 deposit. Call 520-227-1457 office. Carport. Rear yard has block walls and a lawn. Quiet neighbors! Remodeled 2 & 3 BR $775 month. Call (520) 803-0243 $350 & Up + Deposit. Whetstone area Newer unit in (520) 456-9071 great location 1,450sf, 3BR/2BA Double Garage,Very Central. 2218 Las Brisas Way Very Nice, Newer! $975/month. Security deposit negotiable Call (520) 559-1793

PICTURE your home

01&/ )064& 46/%": r

Canyon Meadows Realty (520) 378-2422

Highway 92 Visibility Hwy 92 and LaLinda Way This must see BEAUTIFUL HOME at Approx. 1500 sq. ft. available. Suitable for medical or professional 1920 Golf Links features 2 living office space. $1300 mthly (nego- areas and AZ room, 3 bed, 2 bath, tiable) Minimum 1 year lease. In- 2 car garage, in ground pool with cludes water and sanitation. Excel- solar heater. hot tub & attached 1 lent parking. Available immedi- bed, 1 bath apartment w/separate entry. ately. Call (520) 266-2519 Move in ready. $211,900.00 Call or text 456-4092 AVAILABLE NOW! for appointment. 3BR/2BA/2CG, AC, refrigerator, New W/D, block wall. $875+ deposit. Includes Garbage and sewer 811 Four Winds Circle. O/A. HOUSES FOR Call (520) 249-9061

)FBUIFS %S %SJWF t .-4

RENT

Sierra Vista Realty Available Rentals (Apartments) •325 Pfister 1BD,1BA Avail NOW! $395 •333 Pfister 1BD,1BA Avail NOW! $395 •301 S. Garden Ave “Aâ€? 1Bd,1BA Avail NOW! $450 •3799 Foothills “01â€? 1BD,1BA $595 •3799 Foothills “03â€? 2BD,1BA $695 •3799 Foothills “04â€? 2BD,1BA $695 •1364 Carmelita Drive 2BD,2BA $850

For Pictures, Virtual Tours & To Apply Online Go To: SierraRent.com

For Pictures, Virtual Tours & To Apply Online Go To: SierraRent.com

Sierra Vista Realty 520-458-4388 Office 520-227-6694 Cell Ask for Brad Snyder

Exceptionally Large & Affordable Studios, 1 ,2 & 3BD Apts. Call for Managers Specials! Conveniently located in town with many amenities. 520-458-2082 carmelita apartments.com

MONDAY

520-458-4388 Office 520-227-6694 Cell Ask for Brad Snyder

MONEY

Sierra Vista Realty

This beautiful 4BR, 2BA Town & Country home on ½ an acre has it all: inviting front courtyard, over 700 sq. ft. of covered back patio, private block/stuccoed wall, RV gate, foyer, living and formal dining, both baths with dual sinks, stone fireplace, large tile and brand new carpet throughout., 2 car attached garage w/workshop and enormous detached 2.5 car garage. $195,000 Directions: From Buffalo Soldier Trail go North on 7th St. to right on Heather Drive to home on the right.

Marisa Pigozzo

RealtorÂŽ

520-456-4123

Sierra Vista Realty Commercial Rentals •3477 Canyon De Flores $16.00 sq ft. Versatile office suited for a variety of uses. Last used as a dental office. •300 El Camino Real Ste 11 $12.00 sq ft. Versatile medical office building. Growing, modern, excellent location. •302 El Camino Real Ste 5. $9.00 sq ft Versatile medical office building. Next to SV medical center •6677 Little Michigan Rd. Ste 101. $500 Available now! Industrial/office. Near Fry Blvd/Hwy 92 •6677 Little Michigan Rd-Suite 102 $500 Available NOW! Predominately warehouse.

Being Seen Being Sold

Sierra Vista- 4554 Paseo Brazos Spacious energy efficient 4BR/2BA in quiet neighborhood north of Cochise College. 2580 sf, $1640 rent includes 'net zero' PV system, no energy bills! Open floor plan, kitchen has granite tops, stainless appliances. Separate living room. 4th BR off foyer serves as den or office, 3-car garage, w/d, heat pump, lots of trees & shrubs, cat or small dog considered. Available September 1 (520) 439-9365

XNLV224566

RENTAL PROPERTY

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR RENT

458-9440 ROOMMATE WANTED ROOM WANTED: Up to 18 days/mo. Prefer private enterence. Doing contract work in SV/Tombstone area. Long term rent prefered. Contact JC 928-814-9598

ROOMS FOR RENT Share a large, upscale home in Hereford. Includes 200+ sq. ft. bedroom, large private bath, carport, laundry and soap, Kitchen, Direct TV, WiFi, furnished or unfurnished. Interview and Background check. No contracts, No deposits, $500 a month. Utilities included. Call (520) 678-2499 for a tour or brochure. XNLV220732

3BD/2BA/2 Car Garage, New Carpet, New Countertop, Fresh Paint, Like New Condition, Ready to Move In. 520-378-2616 or 520-255-5498

HOUSES FOR RENT

T GREAT U O B A K S A CIALS! RENT SPE Sierra Vista Realty Available Rentals •4565 Aspen Dr. 3BD,2BA Updated Homew/ New Kitchen $750 •149 Park Circle 3BD,1.5BA Charming Cul-De-Sac Home $775 •2099 Santa Catalina 3BD,2BA Quiet Street Close to Shopping $775• •1047 Acacia Drive 3BD,2BA RELAX in In-ground swimming pool! $850 •700 North Ave 4BD/2BA Large Home on Corner Lot $875 •913 Plaza Del Gado 4BD, 2 BA Cul De Sac $895 •4719 Plaza Del Toro 4BD,2BA Don’t miss this home! $995 •2345 Espiriti Dr 4BD,2Ba Big 3 Car Garage $1150 •7663 E. Larson Rd. 4BD/3BA Incredible Views! $1200 •5316 E. Calle Del Narcisco 3BD, 2BA.w/ 5 acres of horse property $1500.

For Pictures, Virtual Tours & To Apply Online Go To: SierraRent.com Sierra Vista Realty 520-458-4388 Office 520-227-6694 Cell Ask for Brad Snyder

BEAUTIFUL CUL-DE-SAC HOME 1007 Plaza Benito. •3BR/2BA •Refrigerated A/C. •Private backyard. •Large single garage. •Small pet OK. $800 mo. and $700 deposit. 520-458-3944 or 520-678-8488. Bisbee- Spacious nice 2+ br 1 ba furnished home, fenced yard, $595 lease good credit 520-249-7781

627 VIA ENTRADA 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, A/C, POOL PRIVLIAGES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . AVAILABLE 1 SEPT $825 760 W FAWN, HUACHUCA CITY 3 BDR, 2 BATH, 1900+ S.F. MANUFACTURED HOME ON 4 ACRES. HORSE FRIENDLY, CLOSE TO TUCSON, SONOITA & SIERRA VISTA. AWESOME 360° VIEWS.. . . . . . . . . . . . .$850 988 OCOTILLO 3 BDR, 2BA HOME COMPLETELY REMODELED . . . . . . . . . . . .AVAILABLE 1 JULY 2015 $900 1001 MONTROSE AVE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, A/C, CLOSE TO SUBDIVISON’S PARK . . . . . . AVAILABLE 1 SEPT $975

Davila R.E. Solutions, LLC 234-7009 TJFSSBWJTUBGPSTBMF DPN t EBWJMB!UIFSJWFS DPN

COME OUT AND SEE THESE HOMES TODAY!

$200,510

OPEN HOUSE 1 PM TO 4 PM

BANK OWNED 2451 Cabo Burela Dr. MLS# 155817 $PD]LQJ EHG EDWK KRPH ZLWK RYHU VT IW RQ D FRUQHU ORW ZLWK unobstructed mountain views. In Canyon De Flores, close to Fort Huachuca. Dir: From BTS on Cherokee, left on Caseda, Right on Cabo Cope, NE corner of Cabo Cope & Cabo Burela.

$

219,900

NEW LISTING 3014 Greenbrier MLS #155871

Country Club Park is a walk away!!! 3 bed 2 bath + den RYHU VT IW FXVWRP ÀRRU SODQ RQ DFUH /DUJH PDVWHU VXLWH ZLWK VSD WXE EORFN ZDOO EDFN\DUG WKDW KDV VSHFWDFXODU PRXQWDLQ YLHZV Dir; Hwy 92, West on Greenbrier, home on left.

Bill & Janice Colberg

249-8000

XNLV224786

XNLV224786

HOMES FOR SALE SIERRA VISTA

24 HOURS A DAY


D4 HERALD/REVIEW

SUNDAY AUGUST 9,2015

SIERRA VISTA OLD BISBEE BRANCH 2100 Paseo San Luis

2 Main Street

BISBEE

SIERRA VISTA

1326 W. HWY 92, San Jose Square

PROPERTY MGT. 458-5222 (888) 346-7803 432-6960 2100 Paseo San Luis OUTSTANDING AGENTS - OUTSTANDING RESULTS: OUR AGENTS AVERAGE OVER 12 YEARS EXPERIENCE! 458-1911

SEARCH ARIZONAHOMESTORES.COM FOR LOCAL LISTINGS

OPEN HOUSE 11-2

Call me to Sell YOUR Home! NEW CARPET + PAINT

PRICE REDUCED

$

158,000 .-4 t 1513 S Silverdao

PRICE REDUCED

ICE PR UCED RED

CALL

5811 E. SILVER LEAF

TIM BULLINGTON

t .-4

Vista Dell Oro-3br/2ba/2car garage 1950sqft custom Walston home built in 2002 on 1 acre with a beach entry Pebble Tech pool, fully screened back patio plus Spa. Wooden walk paths, professionally landscaped to see any of these front+back yard. Huge rock replace and built in great properties TODAY! entertainment center. Block wall with separate chain tim@timbullington.com link dog run 2x6 Construction.

266-0026

71 E. HAMEL RD., HUACHUCA CITY

3093 AVENIDA CRESCENTE

OPEN split 4br/2ba plan that feels like MORE than it’s 1860 sqft!! 2x6 Construction-- Relax on the large back patio facing the mountains with doors off LR and MBR. Very nice wood laminate flooring all the way through except tile in Kitchen and Baths!! Very large open kitchen with large breakfast bar overlooking the LR and sitting room!!

Lovely 2br, 2ba plus Den with Fireplace. Huge LR w/ high ceilings 18inch Tile Throughout. The kitchen features:Granite Tiled Tops, walk in pantry, upgraded SS Appliances. 19 Sheer Train AC/Heating unit. Marble garden tub to die for!! Large walkin closets. Two covered private patios. Way too much to list.

t .-4

$

$55,000 MLS#154884

RE_152252 RE_153252 Lane Ranch 1700 Sunview Road

309 N. 1st Street RE_154884

139 249,900 000 MLS#144564 MLS#155334

$BSPMF 7BVHIO t RE_155334

$220,000 - MLS#153368

ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS!

GREAT LOCATION!

3BR, (bonus room with seperate entry can have a closet installed at COE for 4th)2 bath. Totally upgraded with a kitchen to die for! Granite counter tops stainless appliances and breakfast bar and breakfast area. Wide open floor plan with gracious foyer. NEW furnace and A/C. Patio that runs the length of the house. Lots of room for parking and an RV gate to the back yard. Master has huge tub and 2 sinks. A real must see. Extra deep garage with work area.

Located right across from Len Roberts Park. This 1994 1150sft 3br 2ba split plan is very move in ready!! Fully Tape and Textured walls. Well maintained and wonderfully fully fenced yard with Shed and trees for privacy. Large shaded and covered patio/deck out front.

A gorgeous, roomy den for all your cubs in this 3 bedroom 2 bathroom home. The culinary kitchen has a breakfast bar/ nook, dishwasher, garbage disposal, island, pantry closet, with a formal dinning room. This beautiful home has ceiling fans, dual pane windows, split plan, vaulted and cathedral ceilings. It is turn key ready, very clean and has a very sophis1-800-677-1884 ticated look. Carpets and ceramic tile in all the right place. The master bedroom has a large walk-in closet and a master waynelewis@remax.net bathroom with dual sinks, and a separate shower with a large garden/soaking tub. The backyard is all gravel and very low maintenance with block wall. So paw on over and see us today! Dir: HWY 92 to Coronado to Silverado 1513 Silverado.

Can’t build it for this price!

FIRE SALE ON LAND BRING ANY OFFER “SELLER WANTS IT GONE� Acres l Details Price 3.66 Private Well+Elec Paved off Palominas.............. $45,000 4 Septic+Water+Elec+Trees ....................................... $20,000 4+ W/Power on corner of Paved Moson & Nevada .... $26,000 4 W/Water+Power in HC. Big trees. SB Only............... $32,000 2 Elec+WaterComp in Antelope Run............................ $65,000 8 Elec+WaterComp near paved................................... $32,000 1 Canyon De Flores W+P+Gas..................................... $99,000 4 W/Elec, Near Paved, Views ........................................ $18,000

CALL TIM BULLINGTON 266-0026

Exquisite southwest masterpiece on 4 Acres! Includes Guest Suite!

10560 S Stone Ridge Rd.

BEAR SIZED HOME AT HONEY OF A PRICE!

266-2023

RE_fire

5JN #VMMJOHUPO tRE_153913 PRICE MOVE-INREDUCTION! READY

NEW LISTING LISTING

CALL WAYNE LEWIS

4071 S Huron $585,000 MLS#152356 See virtual tour #2631297 online at www.visualtour.com

CALL CHRIS HICKMAN

PolySteel const. (low utility costs) for main 3,143 sqft 4BR/2.5BA home (2004), oversized 3-car gar. & separate 1,470 sqft. (42’x35’) RV gar./workshop. 1.06-acre lot w/full block wall, RV hookups, 2-RV gates. Travertine tile except carpeted BR’s. Deluxe kitchen w/Viking Prof. appl., granite counters, Kraftmaid hickory 439-3075 cabs (also in baths & laundry rm), breakfast bar & nook, & large walk-in pantry. Multi-pur. rm w/granite wet 1-800-677-1884 bar. Baths w/granite counters, master w/jetted tub & walk-in shower, ½ bath access off patio. Anderson low E chickman@remax.net wood-framed windows & sliding doors. 8-ft knotty alder interior doors & trim. Tile roof. Water softener. A/C w/gas heat & electronic air filter. Central vacuum. 1,008 sqft covered patio w/flat screen TV. Exquisite mountain views!

220-6857

PEACE & QUIET

$

869,000 MLS#150623

$79,900 MLS#155801

GREAT PRICE

NEW LISTING/FORMER B/B

$295,000 MLS#155755

$

105,000 MLS#155808

See virtual tour#02750730 online at www.visualtour.com

CALL NANCY REA

CALL CHRIS HICKMAN 4BR/5BA, large 2-story Sante Fe home nestled on 4-acre mountainside lot. Boarders National Forest land on N&W. Majestic valley & mountain views. Main house has 2 suites downstairs, entire 2nd story is 1,200 sqft. master retreat. Features: hand-hewn & stained natural mesquite (w/turquoise 439-3075 inlays) flooring & cabinets, saltillo tile, granite counters, exposed Douglas Fir beams & tongue-groove 1-800-677-1884 wood ceilings, built-in benches, recessed lighting & stereo speakers; 3-bay heated & cooled garage chickman@remax.net w/workshop w/attached 600 sqft. guest suite; 2-room fully insulated tree house w/elect. & tile roof; swimming pool; 2 dog kennels; >$300k landscaping; many mature oak trees...too much to list here!

220-6857

SOLD 4527 S SANTA LUCIA

This Home has been genuinely cared for! The LR is bright and cheery as it greets you when you walk into this 3BR&2BA house. MaBath 227-3817 has a garden Tub and oval window. Walk1-800-677-1884 Closet in MBR. There is a place for everything in this home. It has a Huge carport. The www.nancyrea.com shed in yard is oversized. You’ll find Smoke nancyrea@remax.net Detectors and a heat-pump.

439-3030

5147 S KINO ROAD

You’ll pull up and say, ‘’Oh! This is soooo nice!’ at this former B & B. There are 4 bdrms, 2.5 baths in the main house & 2 bdrms, 2 baths in the addition. Cozy FR with fireplace. Pulldown stair to 1500 sq ft attic! See the Green house, well house and, detached double garage. Colorful plants to attract birds & butterflies. Trees everywhere.

5003 RAFFAELE AVE.

This home is so Light and bright! You walk into a Large Open LR/FR with a Fireplace. Then the DR/kitchen Area has dark Cabinets and White Floors. There’s a large AZ. Rm w/ Windows all across it’s back wall. It’s Great for Plants. Corner property with lots of outside grass and room. Yard is big. From the front security door to the back, this is a great buy!

e We Hav More!

IN YOUR PRICE RANGE

GREAT SELECTION AVAILABLE Chris Hickman, Broker An Independent Member Broker

2 bedroom $995 with pool! 3 bedrooms $700 to $1600 4 bedroom $1050 We have some homes with pools!

NOW is the time To call RE/MAX!

Have A HomeTo Rent?

WITH INTEREST RATES AT 50-YEAR LOWS & AT AN ALL-TIME HIGH,

Call us today! (520) 458-1911

NOW is the time to BUY!

We Offer Complete Property Management Rent Price Does Not Include Sierra Vista City Rent Tax Of 1%

www.AzHomeRentals4u.com

458-5222

XNLV220737

RENTAL PROPERTIES

Find Great Rentals

WE’VE GOT YOUR BACK. J O I N O U R O N L I N E C O M M U N I T Y AT Need something done? This is the place to find the solution!

Businesses & Services Let us help advertise your business/service at a low cost | For information call (520) 458-9440

APPLIANCE REPAIR American Appliance Washers, Dryers, Refrig Heating & Cooling All Major Appliances Domestic & Commercial (520) 432-2959

BACKHOE Backhoe Work, Leveling, Grading, Mesquite Removal. Good Work. Reasonable. References Call (520) 732-0686 Not a licensed contractor

CLEANING SERVICE

HANDYMAN

INSURANCE

WHITE GLOVE PRO/ CLEANING SERVICE, LLC. Specializing in Move-Ins/Move-Outs Weekly/Bi-Weekly Free Estimates. Diana 520-266-2487

A & O Home Repair Remodeling Handyman-Reasonable Rates (520) 220-1632

ARIZONA FINANCIAL SERVICES Serving Arizona Since 1970 Annuities • Retirement Plans Pension Maximization • Health H.S.A.’s • Disability Income •Life Major medical • Financial Planning Call Tony (520) 378-2141 www.AzFinancialServices.net

ELECTRICAL CHUCK’S ELECTRIC Installed Surge Protectors. Guaranteed Lowest Prices. 40+ years. Not a licensed contractor

CARPENTRY

520-559-7026

Carpenter Services •Roof Coating Save $ •Framing & Trim, •Drywall, Texture & Painting•Tile & Wood Flooring •Remodeling

GENERAL CONTRACTING

Red’s Odd Jobs Handyman and General Labor (520) 249-3063 Not a licensed contractor

HAULING Hauling to get Clean and go Green Brush, trash and furniture. Sorted recyclables (Glass, plastics, magazines, etc.) Call: 520-378-2832

Will haul rash, manure, compost, building material, leaves, yard waste. No refrigerators. 520-417-0390, lv. msg.

not a licensed contractor

(520) 442-7040

CARPET CLEANING J.R.’s Carpet Cleaning Carpet Cleaning Special 3 Rooms for $89 Urine & Red Stain Removal also available. 520-559-1429

ROC # 290947

ED’S HOME REPAIR Now accepting NEW private customers. 40 years experience. Call Ed (520) 559-1765 (Not a licensed Contractor)

Licensed, Bonded, Insured Remodeling, Repair, & Restoration Contractor • Kitchens & Bathrooms • Windows & Doors • Drywall & Painting • Flooring • Water Damage Restoration • Mold Removal • Fire & Smoke Restoration • Insurance Claim Specialists (520) 227-8194 mrfixitsv.com ROC #257090

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Remodeling and Repair Systems ROC #259276 Kitchens, Bathrooms, Windows, Doors, Concrete, painting, drywall & Repairs Service You'll Love- Quality You'll Recommend Call Renee at 520-378-5116

LANDSCAPING B & L LANDSCAPING Tree trimming & removal, Cactus Removal, Shrubs/Brush Clearing, Yard Clean Up and Hauling. 520-940-8429 or 520-940-8372 *M&S YARD SERVICES Bush/Hedge Trimming, Mowing, Cleanups & Tree/Bush Removal. 520-559-1586

Roadrunner Lawn Maintenance. Mowing, Trimming, Trees & Bushes. Free Estimates. (520) 458-3155, or 732-9877 Not a licensed contractor

Jasmine Landscaping & Irrigation LLC All Your Landscaping Needs! 520-226-2003 Lic/bonded/insured ROC# 289392 Timothy’s Landscaping Services of Sierra Vista •Artistic Pruning •All Trees & Palms •Mowing •Trimming •Gardens •Gravel Cell 520-358-2310 Office 520-366-9873 Not a licensed contractor.

LANDSCAPING

PLUMBING Mr. Fix It Plumbers (520) 227-8194 ROC #285188

•Yard Clean-Up and Maintenance •Haul Away Services

FREE ESTIMATES 520.481.7569 cell 520.226.2587

LAWN MAINTENANCE GORDON'S MOWING LLC Acreage, Lawns, Trimming, Clean-Up & Hauling. Free Estimates. 520-249-7565 Licensed Insured GordonsMowing@yahoo.com

MOVING Timothy’s Moving & Packing of Sierra Vista Loading, Local Pick-up, Long Distance. Service With A Smile! Cell: (520) 358-2310 Office 520-366-9873

PAINTING * SONORAN PAINTING Interior & Exterior Free Estimates. Licensed, Bonded, & Insured. ROC#219565 Joe, (520) 227-1457

ROOFING Mr. Fix It Roofing Repair for All Roof Types (520) 227-8194 ROC #257090

TRACTOR WORK Track Of The Wolf Ranch Road Grading, Land Clearing & Excavation 520-227-5868 Not a licensed contractor

TREE SERVICE A+ Rated Tyler’s Tree Service,LLC Major Bucket Truck & Crane Tree Trimming & Tree Removal Stump Grinding & Haul-away •Licenced•Bonded•Insured ROC#273911(K-21)Dual Free Estimates Call

520-234-5369 YARD WORK Yard Work & Landscape Maintenance Grass Cutting, Weed Removal, Pruning, etc. Call Steve, (520) 508-1577

PLUMBING Huachucha Plumbing LLC All plumbing services Licensed Bonded and Insured (520) 459-6303 ROC # 198096

svherald.com


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