LLC
Concerts in the Canyon By Teresa Propeck
Last Picture Show – Apache Drive in Closes
The American railroad is the stuff of legend and folklore, inspiring poems, novels, film and song. On Saturday, August 31, Verde Canyon Railroad’s Rhythm on the Rails serves passengers a special blend of trains and tunes with this onboard concert in the Canyon. The brilliant scenery serenaded by the clickety-clack of steel wheels along the rails is an American lullaby. This summer’s musical line-up will equal the thrills of the Canyon’s rare riparian wilderness for an audio-visual sensation hard to find elsewhere. As the train covers a wide range of scenic highlights, seven musical acts cover a wide range of genres from jazz to blues, rock to country, spoken word to instrumental. The passenger cars each provide an intimate concert venue as the acts travel the length of the train, performing a set of songs in each coach.
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Healing Where Western Medicine Fails
Rhythym on the Rails, Continued on page 38
By Linda Gross
He was called the “greatest warrior” and the “worst Indian who ever lived.” He brought hope to his people and terror to his enemies. And he survived the most bloody of conflicts in the settling of the Arizona Territories of the late 1800s – to tell his story “in his own words”. When he surrendered in 1886 to General Miles, he and his band of 16 warriors were the last Apaches to do so, bringing a close to the Apache Wars which stretched for nearly ten bloody years throughout the Arizona Territory and parts of Mexico. “Once I moved like the wind,” he told General Miles. “Now I surrender to you and that is all.” Yet, unlike so many of the conquered, Geronimo’s voice was not silenced with his surrender. Although it would be twenty years before he got to tell his story, a book would be published in 1906 “in his own words.” It was not without a good deal of controversy and a string of objections from the U.S. War Department. Had it not been for the persistence of a young Superintendent of Schools in Lawton Oklahoma who befriended the old warrior at Ft. Sill the words of Geronimo may never have made it to paper. Geronimo, Continued on page 36
In remembrance of Father Gino, a dedicated carpenter and priest By Jenn Walker
The first time I met Father Gino Piccoli, he was shuffling around barefoot inside St. Francis Church on the San Carlos Apache Reservation, a bandana wrapped around his forehead and tools on the floor. He had been working on the interior of the church throughout the afternoon. I had heard Piccoli had done great things with the church, and was there to see for myself. It was the first and last time I saw him. Months later I learned that Piccoli passed away in April on his way to the hospital, after 16 years spent serving as the church friar. He was 72. Father Gino, Continued on page 35
A Day in the Life – Pinal Little League Page 31 LLC
To ShowLow
To Young Whitewater Rafting Starts Here
288 Roosevelt Dam & lake i v er
– IN HIS OWN WORDS
Building the Apache Spirit
Sa lt R
GERONIMO
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Apache Lake
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Guayo’s On The Trail
Miami
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Bullion Museum
Besh Ba Gowah
60 70 Chamber
Globe Historic District
Area Maps Centerfold
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