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BY RALPH ZUBIATE Tribune Managing Editor
The image of a hospital chaplain is pretty standard.
A man in a collared shirt slips into the patient’s room as machines beep and hiss.
A stole is kissed and placed over the back of the neck. Oil is applied to the patient’s forehead, and a prayer is muttered. Maybe a squeeze of a hand and a word whispered in an ear. Then, the chaplain quietly slips away.
“That’s Hollywood,” said Mario Valadez, manager of spiritual care with Dignity Health in the East Valley. “This is not Hollywood.”
Chaplains do provide spiritual care, but the reality can be more raw than that. They deal with illness, death, uncertainty, doubt and fear. Often, chaplains become counselors of a sort, a sounding board for patients and families at a critical time in their lives.
“Chaplains are trained to help any person. Those of faith, or no faith or little faith,” said Valadez, who oversees 10 chaplains at both Chandler Regional and Mercy Gilbert medical centers.
Chaplains are primarily Protestant or Catholic but are trained in different traditions, such as Muslim, Jewish, Baha’i, Buddhist, Jehovah’s Witness, Native American, Mormon, even atheist.
“There’s no agenda of me sharing my faith with you,” Valadez said. “I have to find out what you have as values.”
Chaplains are from all walks of life. All have gone through seminary and some are certified in clinical pastoral education.
“The primary reason one comes in is to help and be compassionate to those in pain and suffering,” said David Yanez, chaplain at Banner Baywood Medical Center and Banner
BY JIM WALSH Tribune Staff Writer
Dale Churchill and his family have been honoring the British aviators killed in flight training at Falcon Field during World War II for more than 30 years, carrying on a legacy established by his late father.
Dick Churchill owned a vintage World War II aircraft and was one of the first pilots to fly in a missing man formation during an annual ceremony to honor the 23 fallen Royal Air Force pilots killed during training exercises. The slain fliers are buried at the Mesa City Cemetery. The casualties also included four American instructors and an American cadet.
Dale and his brother, Brian, launched the Wings of Flight Foundation to continue the tradition, keeping alive the fallen cadets’ memory.
“It’s respect to the fallen and respect to the history of Falcon Field,” Dale Churchill said.
But the organization’s future is in peril after Mesa terminated the foundation’s month-tomonth lease at one of two vintage World War II hangars, giving them an extension until May to find a new home for two planes and countless artifacts, including some historic photos.
“I have no idea where we’re going,” Dale Churchill said.
The organization’s predicament prompted an online petition signed by more than 1,000 people on national crowdfunding website standunited.org. In addition, at least 50 supporters showed up at Monday’s Mesa City Council meeting, wearing red shirts as a political statement, to make a last-ditch plea to rescind the eviction.
“It’s more than just a hangar. This is a World War II hangar,” said Kurt Tingey, a Wings of Flight supporter. “There’s a number of World

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BY PETER CHENG Tribune Staff Writer
Ken Singh knows soil. He comes from a farming family and worked in erosion control for 30 years. Now, Singh is using that knowledge to convert the 70-acre former Rio Salado golf course in Tempe into an organic oasis known as Singh Meadows.
Holding up a large clump of earth, Singh explains to a visiting group from the Arizona Green Chamber of Commerce, “See that white material? When microbes die, they create humus; humus becomes a protein. That’s what gives soil texture and structure. If this is not here, then it’s man-made.
“The whole idea is that we need to go backwards,” Singh said.
Singh already has an established reputation as a leader in the East Valley’s “green” movement. The “city, state and county all came to me. They know my farms, they know what I do,” he said. “I started a green program for ASU seven or eight years ago.”
Singh and his wife, Lee, also own and operate Singh Farms in Scottsdale, which hosted a popular weekend market until they shut it down last year due to a parking dispute. The farm now supplies the market and restaurant at Singh Meadows, just behind the Big Surf water park.
“For three whole years, I have been getting rid of chemicals,” Singh said


of the Tempe site. “Why would I do that? Because I know what it is doing to humanity. We all work hard for our families, but our families are not living with clean air, clean food and clean water, but that should be a given to us.”
The Meadows still resemble a golf course at this point, with lingering sand traps and hanging safety nets, but the pungent odor of chemical fertilizers is absent and the clubhouse has been converted into a gourmet bistro/juice bar and market.
Inside the market, organic candles, fresh breads from MJ Bread in Phoenix and plenty of seasonal organic produce and honey from the farm are sold.
The restaurant is run by chefs Frank Belosic and Jay Bogsinske, who appreciate the opportunity to get their hands dirty and cook the old-fashioned way.
“It’s a full circle. We started out in this business wanting to cook. That’s why we did this,” Belosic said. “You get bigger and bigger and then you’re managing people, but now we’re back doing what we wanted to do in the first place, and that’s cook.
“We cook what the farm gives, us so whatever grows, whatever is coming up that week is harvested and brought here. Then we wash it; we go through it and separate the leaves of the beets, roasting the beets, using the leaves in salads.”
Bogsinske said the farm location gives the chefs an advantage.
“The key to this is just freshness, freshness, freshness. The stuff wasn’t on
a truck forever, it wasn’t on a week ago, there is no truck,” Bogsinske said. “The only things that are coming in here is stuff from the monks down in Florence. They brought us, yesterday, 600 pounds of lemons, things like that. Hence, today we have lemonade.”
Tempe’s sustainability manager, Braden Kay, has worked closely with Singh on this project. He said that Singh was awarded a 50-year lease through a competitive bidding process. City documents show that the property was provided rent-free for the first three years, but that Singh Organic Soils will be responsible for improving the land during that period.
As for the future of the Meadows, Singh is keeping an open mind.
“We have a lot of other people with ideas that are inclusive, like concerts. I don’t want to deny anything,” he said.
“I’m just going to keep cleaning the earth. I want to put butterfly gardens in. I want to clean the wash, I want parking lots in the back, and then we’ll see what big guy has in store for us. Let’s see where it goes,” he said.
“If it was contrived, I could do that, but let’s see what we get if we don’t contrive it. Let’s just stumble and fall,” Singh said. “It’s the joining of the minds that might create something that we’ve never seen before. That would be my excitement because I have no clue what that might be.”
“If I can have a place where kids can roll in the grass and do nothing, I’m good to go,” he said.


Heart Hospital in Mesa.
“You have to be compassionate and giving. If not, you shouldn’t be here. If you’re not sympathetic (to their belief system), you can at least listen,” Yanez added. “You need to meet them where they are.”
‘Why, God?’ precedes a call
Gene Sellards is an on-call pastor for Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital and St. Luke’s Medical Center in Phoenix.
“I make myself available for anybody who has spiritual issues,” he said. “The main thing is being available.”
For some hospital patients, it’s a time to confront the big questions.
“They’re lying in bed,” Valadez said, “and it may be the very first time they ask, ‘Why, God?’ That’s when we get a phone call.”
The most difficult cases Valadez sees are unexpected deaths.
“Those are the most challenging, personally,” he said. “That’s the hardest.”
He cited child drownings and sudden heart attacks. He recalls one time being called in on Christmas Day.
“A father with two young kids and a wife was opening presents,” he said. “Suddenly, he has a cardiac arrest and dies. That’s tough.
“For the rest of their lives, that’s their Christmas memory. Nothing you say could take away the pain.”
When he was a chaplaincy student, Valadez’s first case was a trauma call. A nurse asked him to join the family as a man who had been in an automobile
accident was brought in through Emergency.
He saw the man on a gurney with gruesome injuries, and it was apparent that he was not going to survive.
“I had to see that, then go be with the family, his two daughters,” he said. “I walked in, and they knew it was not a good outcome.
“I didn’t know the rawness of that, what I’d be getting into. But somehow, by the grace of God, I’m still here.”
Yanez, who retired from the Air Force, says he feels the most conflict when he steps into a difficult family situation.
“It doesn’t always happen, but sometimes there is a difference of opinion, even when there’s something written down,” he said.
“The family may be at odds with what to do with a loved one. It could be that Dad said no machines, but some want to keep him alive. I have to be an umpire, arbitrator between both sides,” he said.
Valadez sometimes acts as a mediator in family meetings with medical personnel.
“When you get that diagnosis – say, a cancer diagnosis – sometimes the family is like a deer in the headlights. I might interrupt and say, ‘We need time to digest this information.’
“You have to step in for the family,” Valadez said.
Sellards has been at bedside during end-of-life situations. “About a dozen times,” he said.





War II planes in there. It’s a unique place, eclectic if you will.”
“We have historical homes that we don’t bulldoze,” he said. “I believe this needs a similar sort of protection.”
Pilot Billy Walker drew a round of applause when he asked the city to cancel the eviction notice.
“Why evict them? It makes no sense. It contradicts what the city has emphasized since World War II. They preserve the aviation history of Falcon Field,” Walker said.
Vice Mayor David Luna, who represents northeast Mesa, said he is sympathetic to Wings of Flight but that the city determined the hangar cannot house a museum because it does not meet the building code.
“We want to continue to preserve the history of the airport. We don’t want to turn our backs on them,” Luna said. “We are trying to accommodate them in another hangar. We don’t want them to leave the airport.”
He said the city gave Wings of Flight an opportunity to secure a long-term lease but ended up picking a different company because of its economic development potential. Mesa has signed a lease with
Precision HeliSupport, which has 10 employees and potential to grow to 30, and officials consider the hangar vital to turning the airport into an “economic driver,” Luna said.
Precision Heli-Support is a helicopter maintenance business owned by Native Americans in Alaska and the Kuskoskwim Corp.
“Putting them in another hangar, I don’t think, will put them at a disadvantage,” Luna said. “It’s a great foundation. They do great things. We consider them part of the Falcon Field family.”

But Dan Condon, a Wings of flight supporter, said that Precision HeliSupport should go into a modern terminal building and that an organization specifically dedicated to preserving the memory of the flying school should be located in the historic terminal.
“They are pulling the rug out from under us. Historical planes need to be in the historical hangar,” Condon said.
On a recent visit, there were three historical planes in the hangar, including a trainer flown by Dick Churchill, with

his name stenciled on the side. Historical photos displayed on the wall showed the school during its heyday, occupying what is now a city park where a fireplace one located inside the pilot’s lounge is all that survives, along with a commemorative plaque. It shows the hangars, which remain, and dormitories that are gone.
The plaque says that 1,380 British pilots were trained at the facility, along with 116 Americans. “They shall renew their strength and mount on wings like angels,” it says.
Dale Churchill said Wings of Flight believes it was treated unfairly, that a lease


offered at another terminal that is half the size of the present facility is unacceptable, and that he plans to file a complaint against Mesa with the Federal Aviation Administration. He said the foundation was assured it would at least keep half the hangar, where they are now housed, even though they applied to lease the entire hangar and to establish a vintage aircraft restoration business.
Instead, the city notified the foundation that it had lost out on the bid for the entire 20,000-square-foot hangar and was being evicted from the 10,000 square feet it has been leasing. The foundation is supposed to relocate by May 7.
“We were lied to for years. Every time I paid the lease, I asked for a long-term lease,” Churchill said. He said he was reassured that the foundation’s half of the terminal was “not in play.”
Dale Churchill said the hangar is the former location of the Champlin Fighter Museum, which disbanded when the collection was sold off and owner moved to Seattle, a great loss of a historical asset. He said city officials told him he could make some improvements to some doors and that the hangar could be brought up to code. Churchill and his supporters said that it is a mistake to think about their













“I’ve had to get to somebody’s bedside so we can say a prayer before we unplug. That’s tough, too, because the minute you leave, all the wires and plugs are pulled, and that person is off to eternity, whatever way they’re going. That’s not up to us to decide.”
At those times, he said, his ministry reaches more than the patient.
“The family needs it worse than the one passing away,” he said.
All chaplains have to deal with stressed patients and families.
Yanez said, “They want me to share scripture and prayer, especially when they’re withdrawing care. If they’re fearful, you talk about their fear. They often have fear, anxiety, doubt. They want peace with God.
“More than 50 percent of the people I talk to are not attending church. They have kind of been forgotten – I hate to stay that.”
Valadez said, “We don’t go talk to the family, we go listen to them.”
That said, chaplains don’t always know whether they’ve helped people in the long run.
“It’s hard to tell the impact you’ve had,” Valadez said. “I hope I’ve blessed people.
“Once, I was shopping at Target, and somebody looked at me, and she started crying. She said, ‘Chaplain Mario?’ I didn’t remember her. I’ve seen hundreds of families. But she remembered me.
“She said, ‘You were there for me and my family when my husband died. We’ll never forget you,’
“You become part of their forever memory.”
He’s also comforted those that wouldn’t seem to want a chaplain –atheists.
“One woman, an atheist, said, ‘You were so helpful, how you were present with me.’
“It’s always a great reminder that we all have this human experience. Even if you can’t relate on a religious level, you can relate on a human level,” Valadez said.
Atheists reach out to Yanez also. “They want to know, ‘Could there be something to God?’”
He has been present for deathbed conversions, too. “But those are not pushed,” he said.
The patients and families aren’t the only ones who need a little assistance. Doctors and nurses face their own
struggles with compassion fatigue –burnout.
“We try to help them find renewal,”
Valadez said. “Doctors appreciate what we do.”
Doctors don’t often approach them for spiritual help, but many do participate in a Blessing of the Hands, a prayer said for safety and skill of a doctor.
“They are appreciative,” he said.
Not all of a chaplain’s work is so dire. Sellards’ sensitivity to patients’ needs brought an unexpectedly humorous moment.
“I always try to make sure if they’re looking for a priest or a pastor,” he said.
“One time, I got a call, and I said, ‘Do they want a pastor or priest?’ They said, ‘I’ll check.’
“The guy came back on the line and said, ‘You’ll do.’”
Yanez has been part of a few happier occasions at Banner Baywood.
“I have performed weddings here –not too much,” he said.
In fact, the Tribune reported on a wedding ceremony Yanez performed at Banner Baywood a few years ago. A Florida couple got married so the bride’s ailing mother could witness the ceremony.
Susan and Eliu Irizarry tied the knot in the intensive care unit, where Susan’s mother was receiving treatment for a life-threatening illness. The couple had been planning to get married in Las Vegas, but the bride wasn’t sure her mother would be able to hold on.
Yanez described the ceremony as “very intimate and personal.”
Sellards became a chaplain late in life.
He retired from his own sportsrelated retail business and was looking to dive deeper into his faith. He got a master’s degree in Biblical leadership and now ministers in jails, institutions, and retirement and nursing homes, along with St. Luke’s.
He views his service as a gift from God.
“The Lord’s opened a lot of doors for me,” he said.
Volunteering is important to him.
“If you’re on a payroll, you’re obligated. If you’re a volunteer, you want to be available,” he said.
“The blessing is all mine from volunteering. I wouldn’t do it for money. I wouldn’t have near the interest in pay than I have in doing it for nothing.
“My payday comes later,” he chuckled.












BY JIM WALSH Tribune Staff Writer
Moments after securing a path to freedom, at least temporarily, for a 17-year-old defendant accused of committing sex crimes in the Hamilton High School locker room, defense attorney Ken Countryman fired an early salvo in the blame game bound to ensue from the unseemly hazing scandal.
Defending client Nathaniel William Thomas as a “great kid” who is innocent of sexual assault and child molestation charges, Countryman sought to pin blame on the Hamilton coaches who he said failed to supervise and control the locker room properly.
“This case is about a severe lack of supervision by the coaches,” Countryman said. “We’re not disputing there were activities that happened in the locker room. But activities of this nature in the locker room committed by Mr. Thomas, absolutely not.”
“There was clearly a ‘Lord of the Flies’ mentality going on in the locker room,” Countryman said.
Countryman was referring to the 1954 novel by Nobel Prize-winning author William Golding. It describes the failure of a group of British boys, stranded on a Pacific island after a plane crash, to govern themselves with no adult survivors.
Despite having good educations, the boys regress into primal behavior, including murder, before they are rescued.
Countryman never named Hamilton football coach Steve Belles, who was acclaimed for his success on field before Thomas, a football player with a B average, and the others were arrested on March 30. Countryman referred to Belles as a good coach but also criticized him. “He’s the head coach. He clearly is someone who did not supervise his locker room properly,” Countryman said.

Earlier, during his arguments at the hearing, Countryman argued repeatedly and adamantly that Thomas did not commit the sex crimes alleged in a criminal complaint, and he also sought to focus blame on the previously esteemed Hamilton coaches.
“We have adults, coaches, who let senior members of the football team enforce rules,” Countryman said. “We have a lot of contradictory evidence and nothing to support.”
Belles has been placed on indefinite leave by the Chandler Unified School District and is not allowed on the school’s campus. He has not commented since then.
Before he lambasted the Hamilton coaches, Countryman won a major victory for Thomas when he persuaded Maricopa County Superior Court Commissioner Kevin Wein to impose a $25,000 bail, with electronic monitoring and other restrictions. Thomas was relased from custody Thursday.
“It’s not to investigate these crimes,” Grimsman said about the month-long delay she sought in Thomas’ release. “It’s to investigate additional crimes, bad behavior by this defendant.”
But Wein set the bond only after Grimsman chose not to pursue a Simpson hearing, in which she certainly would have revealed more details about the unsavory case in an attempt to prove “proof evident and presumption great” that the crimes were committed, the legal justification for jailing a sex crime defendant without bond.

(Special to the Tribune)
Nathaniel William Thomas is a “great kid” who is innocent of sexual assault and child molestation charges, said his defense attorney, Ken Countryman.
Previously, at Thomas’ early morning initial court appearance, another court commissioner had found that statements from victims about Thomas being responsible for the assault were ample justification to hold Thomas without bond.
The decision landed Thomas in custody for about a week.
room and sexually violated.
The complaint also describes another incident where a 14-year-old boy was held down in the locker room, his pants were removed, sexual intercourse was simulated and the defendant “touched his bare buttocks.”
Countryman commented on the charge after winning the relatively low bail, saying, “he did not violate anybody’s rectum.”
But Grimsman also elaborated on brief comments in the court records that said the victims were threatened with physical injuries if they contacted police and revealed what happened. She said many of these threats occurred on social media, and she asked Wein to bar Thomas from using social media as a condition of his release.
Although Wein refused to grant the monthlong delay in Thomas’ release, he did bar Thomas from social media as a condition of release. He also emphasized the importance in this case of a standard term of release, which bars defendants from having contact with victims or witnesses.
“The weight of the evidence provided so far is paltry at best,” Countryman said.
He said there was no DNA evidence, and he alluded briefly to the existence of a video, but he said Thomas is not implicated in any sex crimes by the video.
Prosecutor Frankie Grimsman had requested a $150,000 bail, along with at least 30 days in jail, to give Chandler police adequate time to investigate whether Thomas or the three unnamed juveniles also in custody should face additional charges.
Heavily redacted records released earlier in the week portrayed the locker room as a house of horrors, saying that between fall 2015 and January 2017, “multiple assaults were committed against at least four separate juvenile victims under the age of 15 years old while at Hamilton High School.”
The report describes an incident that resulted in an aggravated assault charge, in which Thomas is accused of grabbing and holding a victim “while simulating sexual intercourse in the Hamilton locker room.”
The court document also describes a sexual assault in which a 14-year-old boy was held down in the Hamilton locker


“Contact means everything. If that happens, release conditions will be reexamined and my guess is that he will end up in jail,” Wein said.
A week in which many details about the case emerged ended with a strong show of support for Thomas by his friends and family, on the eve of his release, with many teens standing in Wein’s courtroom to vouch for him.
At least three of the charges alleged in the complaint are dangerous crimes against children that could result in a decades-long sentence if Thomas is convicted.
– Reach Jim Walsh at 480-898-5639 or at jwalsh@timespublications.com.






Gilbert police are investigating after a steel company employee was killed on the job April 2.
Matthew Ellsworth, 34, died after he was hit in the head by a steel beam while at work at S&H Steel, near Cooper and Guadalupe roads. Fire officials say paramedics treated Ellsworth and took him to a nearby trauma center, where he died a short time later. The investigation into the incident continues.


A Senate-passed bill that would ban teen texting and driving won’t advance this session. Rep. Phil Lovas, R-Peoria, who chairs the House Rules Committee, confirmed last week that he is refusing to give a hearing to the bill, which would make the use of hand-held communication devices illegal for teens during the first six months they have a license.
Lovas told Capitol Media Services he is "personally ambivalent'' about making the practice illegal.
Lovas' refusal to advance the bill annoyed Rep. Karen Fann, R-Prescott, who shepherded SB 1080 through the Senate on a 24-6 margin. The bill also was approved by the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure by a 7-1 vote.

◆ A slow-speed chase partly through the East Valley tied up traffic on the Loop 202 and 101 freeways on April 3. The chase began as Allen K. Bartoli failed to yield on Interstate 10 west of Phoenix. After stop sticks were deployed on the 202 around Tempe, the chase slowed as Bartoli rolled for miles on the car’s rims. The car was finally stopped, and police used stun guns on Bartoli, who was wanted in Pinal County.
◆ Another wrong-way driver caused a collision on April 2. The driver was traveling south in the northbound lanes of Loop 101 and crashed with another vehicle near Broadway at about 5:30 a.m. Minor injuries were reported. The wrong-way driver is being investigated for DUI.
◆ A homicide was reported April 1 at Central on Broadway Apartments, 2145 W. Broadway in Mesa. At about 11 p.m., police were called after shots were heard. They found an unconscious man at Broadway and Valencia Road. The man, 30, was dead at the scene, and a suspect was questioned by police.
◆ A man was shot dead in Chandler, reportedly over a television, on April 1. Police were called to a residence just after 6 p.m. near Chandler Boulevard and McQueen Road. Christian Acosta, 24, had a shotgun wound and died at the scene. Delano Marquis Ortiz, 25, was arrested as a suspect.































































BY EMILY L. MAHONEY Cronkite News
When Magdalena Schwartz, now a pastor in Mesa, immigrated to America from Chile in 1998, she played guitar for people in jail because she felt it was a way she could volunteer without speaking English.
It was there she met a woman who had been wrongfully arrested because of a language barrier with police, she said.
“She had been abused by her husband,” Schwartz said. “One day, the police came to the house, and the police spoke with the husband because he spoke English and she didn’t. So, she was accused and she never committed the crime … it really touched my heart.”
Since then, she has led the effort to build trust between law enforcement and the Latino community. She said police departments have made substantial progress, but there’s still more to do get more bilingual Hispanic officers working the streets.
While Latinos make up about 24 percent of the population of the Valley’s biggest cities, about half that proportion
– just over 12 percent – of the police officers in those cities are Latino, according to a Cronkite News analysis.
“It’s superimportant for our officers to reflect the community that we serve, because that helps us as officers to be able to connect and also know some of the issues that are going on with our community,” said Det. Lily Duran, a spokeswoman for Tempe Police.

Another metric of the Valley’s progress is its comparison to national statistics: While the Valley’s average Latino makeup is 24 percent, well above the national average of 17.6 percent, its Latino officer makeup is about the same as the national average, reported in a 2013 report from the U.S. Department of Justice.
Tempe Police Department much more closely reflects its city’s Latino demographic, with 16.4 percent of
their officers being Latino and the city’s Latino representation at 22.6 percent.
Schwartz is the president of the East Valley Christian Leaders Alliance, which has partnered with an increasing number of Valley police departments to create better communication between law enforcement and the Latino community.
Schwartz said now more than ever police departments need to make sure that message is clear so crimes can be properly investigated to keep neighborhoods safe.
facility as a conventional museum. It is not open regularly to the public, but it welcomes visitors, such as Boy Scouts and other children, by special arrangement.
Some people simply walk in when they see the doors open and have no idea Falcon Field's birth was tied to British Field Training School Number 4, even though they are Mesa residents.
“We are going to be a working flying museum,” with museum-quality vintage planes, Condon said. “We are not going to be a traditional museum.”
He said the foundation heard the city's call for economic development and took on investors to start a vintage plane restoration business, but it has been unable to move forward becaues of the lease.
Steve Wright, a city spokesman, said the request for proposals included requirements for economic development and capitol investment in the hangar. He said there were four bids and Precision Heli-Support won out.
He said the foundation is valued by the city but “it’s just not the right fit for this particular location.”
– Reach Jim Walsh at 480-898-5639 or at jwalsh@timespublications.com.





BY MIKE BUTLER Tribune Staff Writer
Like any craft brewing startup, Honor Brewing’s goal is to make great beer. But this company also aims much higher with a unique mission to honor fallen and wounded veterans and give back to their families.
You’ll soon be seeing the Virginia brewery’s distinctive packaging – featuring a logo of well-worn combat boots – in East Valley package stores. Honor’s four craft beers will also be available on tap at select restaurants and bars. The beer is distributed in Arizona by Young’s Market Company.
Honor partner Dave Keuhner was in Mesa recently to launch a tap at the Brass Tap that honored the memory of Marine Sgt. Christopher Lee Flatt. With a special tap handle designed to look like a dog tag, Honor’s Night Vision Maple Porter was flowing and fueling lots of bittersweet memories.
“I was so happy to see it was a porter,” said Christopher’s father, Gordon Flatt. “I don’t drink IPAs. It pairs perfectly with my son. We drank a lot of beers together.”
Christopher, who grew up in Mesa, served in Iraq and received a medical discharge. He suffered from PTSD and
Girl Scouts-Arizona Cactus-Pine Council has presented the Girl Scout Gold Award to the 33 scouts this year, seven in the East Valley.
The Girl Scout Gold Award is the highest honor a Girl Scout can receive, and is the equivalent to becoming an Eagle Scout in the Boy Scouts. In order to earn the award, a Girl Scout must create a project that continues to give back to the community long after she moves on, and often take as long as 18 to 24 months to complete.
The winners in Chandler are Amanda Molina, Claire Mushet and Kathlene Hartle. In Mesa, Lauren Hawks, Paige Brown and Rachel Spielberger were given awards. Gilbert resident Sarah Perrin also won.
had difficulty settling into civilian life.
He took his own life in 2011, leaving behind a pregnant fiancée and a 4-yearold daughter.
“It was a huge, huge, horrible shock,” said Stacy Chatham, Christopher’s sister. “It was absolutely devastating. We were all going to go to Hawaii for the wedding.”

Learn about the people who live, work and play in Tempe at Who’s Your Neighbor, a free luncheon lecture series on cultural awareness.
The periodic lectures are intended to create a greater understanding of each other in an effort to eliminate biases.
On Wednesday, April 12, “Creating Welcoming Spaces for Individuals With Autism” will be presented at the Tempe Council Chambers, 31 E. Fifth Street. Speakers will include Arielle King, registered behavior technician, and James Hopkins, special education teacher.
This free program includes lunch. RSVPs are encouraged to assist with food count. Information: 480-350-8979.
Honor Brewing has amassed more than 1,400 soldiers’ stories in 38 states now, but this one really hit home to Keuhner. He was just 6 years old when he lost his father, who served two tours in Vietnam as a Special Operations helicopter pilot.
He, too, came back a very different man. His official cause of death was a car crash. Keuhner doubted it was an accident.

Keuhner dedicated a second tap at the Devil’s Advocate in Tempe to honor the memory of Sgt. Gene Lamie, who was killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq. He said all families of heroes are encouraged to submit a tribute story at honorbrewing. com/tribute.
The company has donated more than $200,000 to veteran’s advocacy groups such as Warrior 360, Hope for the Warriors, HeroHomes, Angels of
Nancy Parra-Quinlan, a STEM teacher from Kino Junior High School in Mesa, has been named the Frank Luke Chapter of the Air Force Association 2017 Teacher of the Year.
Parra-Quinlan has taught for 23 years but concentrated in science and STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) for the past 10.
At Kino Junior High, Parra-Quinlan has developed a far-reaching program that attracts students anxious to learn more than core STEM subjects. In her classes, she says, “We build rockets, dissect sheep brains, do 3-D print projects and program robots.”
America’s Fallen and the LCpl. Cody S. Childers Memorial Fund.
As the night at the Brass Tap wound down, Flatt decided to get a growler of his son’s beer to go.
“I think it’s a great tribute to them all –not just my brother,” Chatham said. “It’s a really good idea.”
“It’s not about how they died,” said Keuhner. “It’s about how they lived. We can’t bring them back, but we can say thank you.”
Public invited to comment on Chandler sign regulations
Chandler is seeking public comment on proposed amendments to its sign regulations. The Planning and Zoning Commission will conduct a public hearing to review and hear public comments on the proposed sign code at 5:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 19, in the City Council Chambers, 88 E. Chicago St. Proposed amendments to Chandler’s sign code allow for signs previously not allowed, including A-frame and T-frame signs for businesses, and allows for placement of some sign types in public right of way. In addition, the maximum number of temporary signs allowed for events occurring on private property, such as garage sales and open houses, would increase to 10.
BY SRIANTHI PERERA Tribune Staff Writer
Amy Daly, the nurse at Islands Elementary School, also functions as a school mother, counselor, social worker, teacher, homework helper, referee between siblings and more.
These secondary titles that rise above her regular duties are part of why Islands Principal Chris Birgen nominated her to become America’s Greatest School Nurse.
“We need more people like her in this world, especially in education,” he said. “She steps out of her role and acts as a caregiver.”
The nationwide competition, organized by Pfizer pharmaceutical company, has selected Daly as Arizona’s finalist. Now, it’s the public’s turn to vote for her as she competes with a representative from each state to win the grand prize: an ultimate summer vacation.
“I love what I do. I love taking care of the kids. It’s completely humbling to be recognized,” said Daly, who lives in Chandler and has three children of her own.
Islands Elementary, part of Gilbert






Public Schools, has a student body of about 530. From 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Daly attends to 40 to 60 students each school day. Most of the visits are for everyday cuts and bruises, headaches, nausea and other common ailments. She also treats and administers medication to those with chronic conditions such as asthma, diabetics, heart issues and seizures.

Then, she keeps an eye on students who have broken bones and are hobbling on crutches or wheelchairs. At times, she has to attend to an emergency, such as when a teacher suffered a stroke and a child was in an accident just outside the school grounds.
“Some just come when they need a hug,” Daly said. Students hail from all socioeconomic

levels: homeless children to those from high-income families.
For those who need it, Daly has a fridge stocked with food, bathroom with a shower, washing machine and well-organized closet full of clothes. If a child does not have health insurance, she gets the family connected to free health care, and if they need eyeglasses, she refers them to clinics that help. She also routinely administers the state-
mandated hearing and vision tests.
Then there are those students she calls “frequent flyers,” those who complain of a headache at a particular time each day.
“If I do see a trend that they’re trying to get out of class, I will work with the teacher and talk with the student and find out if there’s a reason why they’re wanting to get out at the same time,” she said.
“Your goal most of the time is to get them calm and figure out what they’re in for and play that detective to figure out what’s going on with them. There’s usually a reason,” she added.
When Daly left her former employer, St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix, her colleagues teased her saying she was going to “deal with band aids.”
“I assured them that there was much more to it than that, and I have been amazed at what I’ve had opportunities to do here,” Daly said. “It’s very different than hospital work. It’s one of those positions where you really have opportunities to make differences in children’s lives.”
See NURSE on page 14
EASTER BRUNCH
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BY PETER CHENG Tribune Staff Writer
The Chandler Lions Club is teaming up with high school students to give people a “dining and drama in the dark” event that will show them how the blind experience life.
During the April 18 show at Hamilton High School, guests will wear blindfolds so they can’t see their plates or the stage for an hour.
Called “Blinded by De-Light,” the dinner theater production is a collaboration of the Leo Club –Hamilton High’s extension of the Lions Club – along with the Hamilton Theater Company and the school’s culinary students.
They will present a theatrical version of the espionage thriller “The 39 Steps,” in what is designed to be “a sensory experience to create a better understanding among the public as to the challenges that men and women with disabilities may face every day and how they’re able to overcome those challenges,” said Chandler Lion Diana Moore, the events coordinator.
This event marks the 100th year of Lions Club International, an organization with a long history of working with the blind and visually impaired. Last year, the Chandler Lions, now in its 78th year, donated 187 pairs of eyeglasses along with other vision services to Chandler area youths in need.
Helping to coordinate the event are two blind members of the Chandler Lions –Steve Welker, who lost his sight 22 years ago when he was in an auto accident with a drunk driver; and Bill Fullerton,
from page 13
When they were younger, Daly’s three children – Conner, now 17; Kira, 15; and Brayden, 13 – attended Islands Elementary. This helped with Daly’s daily schedule, when she and her children had the same commute. It also helped when Conner was diagnosed with leukemia in sixth grade.
“Having this job, and just the Islands family that I work with, really gave me the flexibility to make sure that I was available for him when he was getting his treatment,” she said.
In her spare time at work, Daly also mentors two other school nurses at GPS. They meet monthly to talk about
a retired government administrator who lost his vision in 1969 during the Vietnam War.
Welker proposed the “dinner in the dark” idea after attending a similar event in California.
“It’s a real eye-opener for people to, just for an hour, see what it’s like to have to negotiate a plate totally blind and to learn to use their other senses, mostly their sense of feel, sense of taste, being able to hear, to experience the meal,” he said.
Welker, a former insurance agent, currently works as an author and motivational speaker.
After the accident, he received rehabilitation therapy from the Arizona Center for the Blind and Visually Impaired and now sits on its board.
“One of the key purposes of Lions is to help with the blind and visually impaired community. That goes clear back 100 years ago with Helen Keller, when she spoke at one of the early Lions conventions and they decided at that time that they wanted sight and vision to be one of their key areas of interest,” Welker said.
Fullerton, 70, lost his left eye from an infection caused by the injury, but he was able to maintain some vision in his right eye through a series of corneal transplants up until his 60s.
Now, he is part of the small percentage of the blind population that doesn’t even have light perception.
He still recalls the event that ultimately led to his blindness.
He was on patrol on a rainy night and the soldier in front of him stepped on what “was probably a mortar round
their experiences and challenges. One challenge of being a school nurse is that they have to rely on their own judgment and experience, without any other help, most of the time.
Daly would relish an opportunity to win this competition. The prize, a summer vacation with her husband, Bryan, and maybe two of their best friends, does sound good. He is a truck driver who delivers medical equipment and supplies to hospitals and patients.
Daly will receive $500 for becoming the finalist in Arizona.
Will she win the big prize?
“I want her to win. I think it’ll be a great, great reward for her,” Birgen said.
Voting continues through April 16 at americasgreatestschoolnurse.com.
that had been rigged up as a booby trap.”
“It blew up, and the man immediately behind him got the blast from the waist down and I got the blast from the waist up,” he said.
Fullerton said he hopes “Blinded by De-Light” will provide the sighted with a sense of the challenges that confront blind people.
“We blind people have a lot more experience dealing with you sighted folks than sighted folks have dealing with blind people,” Fullerton said, adding:
“This a way sighted folks to become a little more empathetic with what we blind folks have to put up with. And I think that’s a good thing.”
The production of a theatrical event like “DeLight” presents its own challenges.

Christina Vail, Hamilton High theater instructor and director, said that she has never worked on a program like this before, but that she and her students are excited about the challenge.
“We think (the biggest challenge) is clarity of our sound, making sure that our sounds are helping to tell the story. Not so much the words that we’re saying but the sound effects that we choose. I think we have to think more about where that sound is coming from and moving around the space more,” Vail said.
from page 12
Chandler businesses and residents can review the proposed amendments to the sign code at chandleraz.gov/planning, complete an online survey and submit comments.
Segments of seven major Chandler streets will be slurry sealed to prolong their life beginning Monday, April 10. The work is expected to be completed by the end of June.
The coating of asphalt emulsion mixed with aggregate will be applied.
A map showing the locations of the pavement maintenance projects can be found by clicking
The play is at 6 p.m. April 18 in the Hamilton High School Cafeteria. Tickets are $20 and must be purchased in advance.
Participants can bring their own blackout masks or rent one from the Lions for $3 the night of the event. Tickets: Diana Moore at 480-883-0960 or RuthJon Wick at 480-895-3569.
on the Road Construction & Street Closures link at chandleraz.gov/transportation. Information: 480-782-3500.
Veterans who did not graduate high school because they entered the military are being offered the chance to walk with Hamilton High graduates.
The Class of 2017 will graduate May 17 at the Wells Fargo Arena at Arizona State University.
Veterans are asked to send a copy of an honorable discharge to Art Sloane, 23610 S. Desert Burst Court, Sun Lakes, AZ 85248. Information: 480-802-6810.
BY PETER CHENG Tribune Staff Writer
Owner Jim Labrie opened the first Bug & Weed Mart in Mesa in 1979 and has been helping Valley do-it-yourselfers keep their properties weed- and pest-free ever since.
The business has expanded to five Valley locations. At 78, Jim is still very much in charge of marketing and operations, but son Joe handles most of the physical work these days.
“It was 1979 and my dad walked in the store, at a different name at the time, and a gentleman explained to him that he could easily do what a pro does, with the same stuff for a lot less money, and on his own schedule,” Joe Labrie said.
“He found a lot of success in it and went back and asked the guy if he was interested in selling his business.”
Despite its longevity, Bug & Weed Mart tends to fly under the radar.
sell, and this gave him an opportunity to sell people what they needed,” Joe said.
Joe started helping around the shop in high school.
“I’m one of six kids, and all of us at some point were involved in Dad’s weird little bug business. I’m the only one who’s returned,” he said with a laugh.
Joe considers himself a “corporate refugee” like his father. He started working for the business again about seven years ago when they were opening a new location in Phoenix.

“I thought it would be a temporary thing, but he’s aged and the business continues to grow. I enjoy it and it gives me a chance to reunite with my dad, too,” Joe said.
That original Mesa location was moved to a 1,000-squarefoot storefront in the Mesa South Center on Gilbert Road and South Avenue in 1987.
The site has recently received a head-to-toe remodel.

but now we can keep track of all of our stores, it’s all in one system,” Strong said.
and people-friendly, and the store offers organic solutions based on citric acid or other plant extracts.
“It’s one of those businesses you don’t think about much until you have a problem,” Joe said. Jim was a pharmaceutical salesman in a corporate environment for a lot of years but “always wanted to do things his way instead of being told what he had to
New dental office opens, offers free procedure
Risas Dental and Braces is offering four hours of free dental care on Saturday, April 15, to celebrate the opening of its newest Chandler office.
From 8 a.m. to noon at 125 E. Ray Road in Chandler, Risas will be offering a free cleaning, cavity filling, extraction, or exam and X-ray on a first-come, firstserved basis.
The practice recommends that patients show up well before 8 a.m. The day will also feature music, giveaways and food. Inforn: 623-900-7596, risasdental.com
“We have renovated all of our signs and our labels; they’ve redone all of the shelves” to improve the customer experience, said store manager
Devon Strong.
The new point-of-sale system is the most significant upgrade.
“This system is great because we used to have the old-fashioned cash register,
The Drury Inn & Suites Phoenix Chandler Fashion Center has opened in Chandler.
The 210-room hotel includes 3,000 square feet of meeting space. It is at the Loop 202 freeway and Price Road, near the East Valley mall and commercial hub.
The Chandler property is Drury’s fourth in the Phoenix market.
National retailer Banana Republic has closed two stores in Arizona, including one at Chandler Fashion Center.
Professional exterminators can be expensive. Strong said that with a little time and elbow grease, Bug & Weed Mart customers can save up to 80 percent of what exterminators charge.
Strong said “there’s been an increase in bedbugs in this last year, and recently termites, but overall scorpions are our biggest-selling problem.”
The professional-grade solutions offered at Bug & Weed Mart are pet-
Apparel retailer Gap Inc., which also operates Old Navy, Gap, Athleta and Intermix, had declining sales for five straight quarters last year. It had said it would shutter a number of stores both in the U.S. and internationally. It’s not clear whether or not these stores closed because of declining sales, or because of an expired lease and higher rent.
The Mesa City Council on March 20 approved a resolution laying the groundwork for FujiFilm Electronic Materials to expand its current facility, west of Mountain road and north of
Joe said the business has grown steadily over the years, and it doesn’t see many ups and downs.
“Customers like us because you come in and the same manager is there,” Joe said.
“Over time it’s proven the value of doing business the right way, and hopefully were continuing to do that.”
“My goal is to not screw up in the next 40 years what Dad’s done in the last 30.”
Pecos road, 20 acres to the west over to Signal Butte Road.
City spokesman Steven Wright said Fujifilm will determine the timeline and the estimated cost of the project. FujiFilm declined to comment on the expansion process.
The rezoning request covers approximately 50 acres and also includes the existing facility. Last year, FujiFilm expanded 5.82 acres to the north of its current facility, and the rezoning includes that.
The company manufactures chemicals for the semiconductor industry. It opened its Mesa facility in 1995, one of only two locations in North America.

BY DAVID LEIBOWITZ Tribune Columnist
It’s midmorning on a Wednesday in late March and the rock music wafts down from the big house on the hill. You’re working from home, but the sounds of Kid Rock and the drunken blare of partiers keeps cracking your concentration. The din makes you think ahead, to that blessed Valley moment when the calendar flips to April and the annual siege comes to an end.
And now the time has come. It’s over. They’re gone and those of us who remain behind – those of us fortunate enough to call Arizona home – can level with one another.
Cactus League baseball is great. But the hundreds of thousands of out-of-towners who travel here from places like Pekin, Illinois, to see their beloved Cubbies touch their toes and swing a Louisville Slugger during spring training?
Yeah, I could do without those folks for, like, say, eternity.
I’ve read the Cactus League economic impact reports and I understand how tourism revenues drive our state and local economies. Each year, according to the most recent Cactus League stats, spring training baseball creates more than $544 million in riches for the state, its employers and mom-and-pop businesses. That’s courtesy of the nearly 2 million baseball fans who flip through the Cactus League turnstiles yearly –including an estimated 53 percent who attend the games either from another state or another country.
My issue? Mostly it’s the people who feel like they’ve come here not from another state, but from another planet.
I’m talking about the vast influx of “bros” who show up each spring from Detroit and Cleveland and LA and DC for an extended “guys baseball weekend.” These weekends appear to consist of wearing backwards baseball caps, smoking cigars that smell like a Third
World nation back alley, and doing their best to get drunk each day by 11 a.m. – Eastern Standard Time. Again, I get it: Bros consume massive amounts of Scottsdale nightclub booze and Mastro’s New York strip steaks. They help Uber drivers and cabbies pay their mortgages, and they have made Sloan Park the hottest spot in Mesa since Sonic opened a drive-thru for covered wagons.
Kidding about that last one, but you get the point. Cactus League visitors are a necessary evil. We should probably do our best to be courteous, but it’s the kind of courtesy you extend to the last guests at a house party when you’re tired and it’s midnight: “This has been so great. Good to see you. Here, let me pack a Ziploc of Cheese Doodles and salami for you, for the road.”
Don’t let the door hit you on the wallet on the way out.
If I sound ungrateful for the economic contribution of grown men wearing Pete Rose jerseys so tight they resemble sausage links and the thrice-weekly
opportunity to discuss the necessity of sunscreen with Milwaukeeans slowroasted to a medium rare pink, all I can say is, there’s only so many times you can force a fake smile while explaining that, yes, the 60 and the Superstition Freeway are the same road.
I believe the civic hype: The Cactus League has been a valuable Valley tradition since 1947, and we’re lucky to host those 15 major-league teams for weeks on end. We’re lucky to have all those rental cars swerving across three lanes on the 202, and fortunate that at least once a year, there’s a reason for to people visit the fine town of Peoria. There’s at least 544 million reasons why we should grin and bear it. And we will, I’m sure.
What’s that old baseball saying? Wait till next year.
Bro, I am freaking stoked.
BY BETH LEWIS Tribune Guest Writer
It seems only one person in Arizona actually supports the proposed A-F school grading system – and that’s Gov. Doug Ducey.
As an educator, I’ve taught in “A” schools and in “D” schools. I can assure you that teachers work just as hard in the so-called D schools, if not harder, and the students and families are just as invested in education.
So, what are the real primary differences between “A” and “D” schools? I’ll tell you: ZIP code, wealth and skin color.
Year after year, our Legislature defunds public schools, dealing our poorest schools the hardest blow. Yet they have the nerve to ask, “Why are poor students behind the curve?”
Grading schools has a human impact, and it’s not a positive one. A “D” grade carries a stigma and becomes a self-
fulfilling prophecy. It shames kids and families into believing their schools are not worthwhile, their hard work will not pay off, and their teachers are not making the grade.
Families yank their kids out of “failing” schools and prospective families and teachers choose to move elsewhere, leaving behind only those students with the fewest resources who would benefit most from high-quality teachers and motivating classmates.
The State Board of Education recently sought input on their proposed grading system, and received vehement opposition from teachers, parents and administrators.
It has been opposed by the Arizona Chamber, Arizona school administrators and the Arizona School Boards Association. I’ve even been told that members of the ad hoc committee responsible for seeking input don’t support it – they know that this system measures poverty, not achievement.
So, who does support this grading system? It’s a simple answer: Ducey and the board he appointed – a board which has complained about the volume of calls it has received in opposition.
Members of the board’s ad hoc committee responsible for finalizing the letter grading system were directed from the outset that 80 percent of the formula would be based on AZMerit scores and 10 percent on English Language Learner testing.
In other words, 90 percent of the assessment they were seeking input on was already determined. Does that sound like the board was really seeking input?
But let’s talk about that 10 percent of wiggle room the board supposedly was willing to negotiate.
Thus far, Ducey’s board has refused to consider teacher retention rates and parent satisfaction surveys, which are excellent indicators of a school’s culture.
It rejected the notion that school
clubs or activities should count toward a grade, even though a majority of parents support such a metric. Finally, it denied awarding “bonus points” to schools in poverty, the very schools that have been denied equitable funding for decades. It seems to me the measly 10 percent they sought feedback on isn’t really up for discussion after all.
As a teacher, I wrote this column because I need your help.
Let Gov. Ducey and your local legislators know that when they say they’re seeking input, they need to honor that input. Call and tell them you want a better way to measure school success. Stand with teachers, principals and lifelong education advocates by insisting our students receive an equitable and fair education.
Remember, education never fails.
BY RALPH ZUBIATE Tribune Managing Editor
Gilbert is one of the youngest and fastest-growing towns in Arizona. It was incorporated in just 1920 and already has more than 247,000 residents.
According to the Town of Gilbert website, it was established in 1902 when the Arizona Eastern Railway was seeking to establish a rail line between Phoenix and Florence.
A rail siding was established on property owned by William “Bobby” Gilbert. The siding, and the town that sprung up around it, eventually became known as Gilbert.
I am seeking to start a group of like-minded individuals to continually push our society to achieve Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Second Bill of Rights. These rights include:
• The right to a meaningful job that provides opportunities for advancement and for adequate recreation.
• The right of every person to earn enough
Now, Gilbert is one of the trendiest locations in the East Valley, home to a hopping downtown filled with restaurants, hot spots and foot traffic. Visit during any weekend and you’ll find a lively, hip community. That isn’t at conflict with the familyfriendly atmosphere of the town. The median age is 32.7, and 77 percent of the population is under the age of 45. Young families and soccer moms dominate.
What do they all know? That Gilbert has dozens of places to be proud of, more than just the iconic Water Tower. And the East Valley Tribune will let Gilbert residents brag on their town beginning April 10, as voting begins for the annual
Best of Gilbert special section. This special issue will highlight the places that make Gilbert great, voted on by the people that dine, shop and work there.
We’ll feature more than 50 categories this year, among them Best Breakfast Spot, Best Burger Location and Best Asian Food. In the services category, you’ll be able to pick Best Hair Salon/ Barber, Best Auto Repair, Best Holistic Services and more. Tell us your favorite schools and teachers. Medical favorites are available, too.
We’re adding some categories this year, like Best Landscaper, Best Deli/ Sandwich Shop and Best Orthodontics. As always, we encourage you to vote
provide for their family a decent living.
• The right of every businessperson, large and small, to trade in an atmosphere of freedom from unfair competition and domination by monopolies at home or abroad.
• The right of every family to a decent home.
• The right to adequate medical care and the opportunity to achieve and enjoy good health.
• The right to economic protection from the fears



of old age, sickness, accidents and unemployment.
• The right to a good education. I seek to create a group called EPIC – End Poverty In Chandler. If you are like me and you believe that these ought to be natural rights of every citizen and you are interesting in working to create a society that recognizes these rights, please send me an email at Endpovertyinchandler@gmail.com. After gauging public interest, I would like to
online for places listed, and to add your own, too. Don’t see your favorite sports bar listed? Write it in!
However, votes for businesses and services that are not based in Gilbert will not be counted.
This is your chance to tell everybody what you like best about Gilbert, and to say “Thank you” to your favorite places. Voting takes place April 10-30 online at eastvalleytribune.com. The special Best of Gilbert 2017 issue will publish May 28.
Good luck to all the best businesses and people in Gilbert.
– Contact Ralph Zubiate at 480-898-6825 or rzubiate@timespublications.com.
schedule regular meetings where we can discuss how to make these rights a reality. This would not be limited to people in Chandler; all people would be welcome. The important thing is that we come up with ideas on how to create a just society and bring these ideas to our communities to allow everyone to live industrious, meaningful lives.








BY JASON P. SKODA Tribune Prep Sports Director
The ruling to allow high school coaches to have practices yearround with their teams is a big unknown.
“I’m anxious to see how this plays out,” Mesa wrestling coach David DiDomenico said. “From what I know, they didn’t ask the coaches what they thought about it. It wouldn’t have mattered if they surveyed us or not. The AIA will make their choices and decisions anyway. The pendulum already swung.”
However it is viewed by administrators, coaches, parents and athletes, it is coming to Arizona high school sports.
July 1 will mark the beginning of a new era for the Arizona Interscholastic Association and the schools it serves as coaches have the shackles come off – even as states like Texas, where high school football reigns, have backed away from the idea.
Several athletic directors, who have to police out-of-season participation longer, have said too much has been made of it, and others call it a touchy subject.
The legislative council had little problem moving ahead with year-round practice, passing it with a 39-5 vote on March 3. Yet AIA Executive Director Harold Slemmer is on the record saying he is believes the ramifications will have a “ripple effect on the culture of sports” and head sports down a path “we might regret in a few years.”
Once it became clear that the idea of year-round practice was gaining steam, Mesa district athletic director Steve Hogen requested a committee to oversee the new rules.
“My goal was at the very least to come out of it with some sort of checklist that I could take back to my district saying this what you need to do in order to stay legal,” Hogen said. “A majority of schools are doing it the right way. Some
are circumventing the rules to their advantage.
“(AIA lawyer Mark Mignella) asked if you are doing what you can to get around the bylaw, why have the bylaw at all? It was a good question. I agreed in part.
If we have a bylaw creating a culture of cheating and circumventing the rules because they are getting together out of season already, why have the bylaw?”
Now, coaches can practice at all times without having to charge a $50 camp fee for offseason workouts or create a culture where a leader on the team “suggests” the players get together for workouts.
“I had a football coach see all of the other sports wearing his school colors and practicing out of season, and he said he wants to be able to do that,” Hogen said. “The same coach asked about 7-on7 (leagues) and how the other schools are doing it.
“I explained to him all that is involved with the insurance and other aspects. He said, ‘I just want to do it and not go through that stuff.’”
The new ruling will most likely lead to 7-on-7 leagues in winter and spring in addition to the current summer leagues.
Coaches such as Desert Ridge’s Jeremy Hathcock are at the forefront.
The trend is to create all-star 7-on-7s teams that travel nationally.
Hathcock, who had his projected starting quarterback go through the summer 7-on-7 season with an all-star team rather than the Jaguars’ squad last year, approves of the change.
“If we are going to do it, we better do it right,” he said. “If they are with us, it eliminates the middle man. We have the kids’ best interest at heart.”

While football is most prominent, the ruling could very well affect other sports even more, especially if the football team decides to practice outside of spring football.
“We share athletes no problem at Desert Ridge,” said Hathcock, whose son played football and wrestled. “But

people are who they are. You aren’t going to change them. You can’t stop a parent from being that person who pushes their kids to give up something for another. That’s not what we want.”
While some are claiming all hell is about to break loose, the majority are saying nothing much will change. Coaches aren’t going to get paid more (a stipend of about $4,000 in most cases) and they need breaks from the players just as much as the players need a break from them.
Most of the East Valley schools have a class during the school day already dedicated toward a particular sport.
“I really don’t think for the most part coaches are going to do it,” Hogen said. “There will be some change in 7-on-7, but overall I don’t think they want to coach year-round.
“At some point, when you practice so much, it can create negative returns, and if someone does go after it fully it might very well backfire.”
– Contact Jason Skoda at 480-898-7915 or jskoda@evtrib.com. Follow him on Twitter @ JasonPSkoda.
BY JASON P. SKODA Tribune Prep Sports Director
The Chandler boys volleyball team has been upgraded.
The Wolves began the year on no one’s short list of 6A Conference title contenders. Not after finishing .500 last year and bringing back a roster full of youngsters, including five sophomores.
Five weeks into the season, that line of thinking has changed as the Wolves continue to impress.
They have won more games than all but one previous season since 2009, thanks in large part to winning the Chandler Howl Invitational to start the season and finishing as runner-up at the Brophy Invitational last weekend.
Chandler was 22-3-4 overall through Wednesday’s action and 8-1 in power point matches to sit at No. 3 in the rankings.
In other words, any midseason list of contenders must include Chandler right along with Perry, Brophy, Highland, Boulder Creek and a few others.
“We were surprising people early on, but I think now they know that this is a different team than what Chandler has
been putting on the floor in recent years,” third-year coach and former Chandler plaer Bobby Robson said. “We have played at a high level at times, but we have a tough schedule the rest of the way. There is a lot of room for growth.”
One indication came early in the week, when Chandler played its first match since the Brophy tournament against Basha, a program down on its luck this year. The Wolves struggled to put the Bears away in the first two sets despite winning in three.
It was similar to their first match after winning the Wolf Howl when they were swept away by Brophy, never scoring more than 15 against the Broncos.
“We can’t let that happen,” sophomore setter Trey Weinstein said. “We have to be ready to play our best every time out or it is going to cost us one of these times. Against Brophy, we came out too confident and they showed us we weren’t ready for them.
“We can play with anyone when we play hard the entire time.”
The Wolves haven’t had many letdowns considering they have lost only three times in the first 29 matches, but that’s where the expectations of this team have
risen to. Still, some outside the program are wondering just how good they are.
“We’ve told people Chandler is going for it this year, and we’ve kind of been laughed at,” Chandler leading hitter Jonny Bowles said. “It drives us. People don’t expect much from us, and we are trying to prove them wrong.”
One of the keys has been the development of the offense since the start of the season. Early on, the offense was geared toward getting the ball to Bowles, a 6-foot-7 junior opposite hitter, but now Weinstein is going to a number of different players at the net.

Bowles led the way with 158 kills on a 41.6 hitting percentage. Mason Mullins and Elijah Swinton are next at 66 and 53 kills each.
“Our passing is getting better,” he said. “We are getting everyone involved and not just Jonny. Now, I am able to set to anyone and run the offense the way I am supposed to.”
Jalen Gibson-Starks (38 kills) and Tyler Haddad (25 kills) have done some damage as well.
























































BY JASON P. SKODA Tribune Prep Sports Director
The Hamilton football program has long been at the top of the high school football landscape in Arizona.
It reached that pinnacle before Steve Belles arrived and will more than likely remain there, despite a slight downturn in recent years, whenever he has coached his last game for the Huskies.
When that will be is in flux now that he has been “reassigned” and can no longer be “present” on campus for an indefinite period after six Hamilton football players were arrested last week in connection with hazing incidents during a 17-month span.
The charges that have been levied take it way past the connotation of “hazing.”
“Pink bellies,” being made to carry someone’s shoulder pads, rookies dressing up as women or characters and getting taped to a goal post are all examples of incidents that have long been part of the culture of athletics at every level.
It’s demeaning, bullying and painful, and used annually as a tool to re-establish
the hierarchy of a program. It used to be accepted, and even condoned in some cases.
Kidnapping, child molestation, sexual assault and aggravated assault step way beyond that. Even though the details of the Hamilton situation are still sketchy, the thought of someone being put through something of this manner should make everyone ill.
Arrests have been made and court dates will follow.
What follows next for the football program is far less cut and dried.
Belles, who has led the program to five state titles, is regarded as one of the best coaches in the state. He has been around Arizona football since he was the quarterback for state champion St. Mary’s in 1984.
There have been allegations of recruiting, including a direct accusation by Coolidge football coach Cayle Ferguson in 2013 involving player J.T. Gray. All top programs go through those, and there were a few smaller incidents, but all signs pointed to Belles running a solid program that won nearly every time the Huskies stepped on the field. The big question that remains is how
much did the coaching staff know about the incident(s)?
Coaches have to have a pulse of what is going on even if the varsity roster is near 100 players. If he doesn’t, then an assistant or two had better be tied into the locker room, letting the top man know what is going on at all times.
I’d think some kind of hint had to make its way into the coach’s office. If so, then that is one of the hardest things in this whole incident to comprehend. If anyone – especially an adult who is meant to serve as a mentor and protector of our kids while in their care – let this behavior continue, then additional charges should be forthcoming.
From the few people within the program who have shed some light on the situation, that doesn’t seem to be the case.
It appears that everyone at the coaching level was blindsided.
For the sake of everyone involved, especially the victims and the families, let’s hope that’s the case. Otherwise, there may be no coming back for Belles or anyone else tied to the program.
– Contact Jason Skoda at 480-898-7915 or jskoda@evtrib.com. Follow him on Twitter @ JasonPSkoda.
Robson, who was a senior on the 2011 squad that made the state semifinals, says Chandler is ready to keep the winning going this year and beyond.
“We still have matches left that will push us a bit,” he said. “It will get us ready. I think what we are doing this year is what I expected next year, so we are ahead of schedule. We can have a good little run for the next few years with a talented sophomore class.
“It’s about setting new goals. Now our thought process is we can win the whole thing if we do the right things and play hard every time.”
The Wolves are not getting ahead of themselves. They know top programs like Perry, Boulder Creek and Brophy will be tough to surpass.
“We’ve done some good things, but there is more to come,” Swinton said. “If we don’t play well when it counts the most (in the postseason), then that’s on us. The talent is there, and the coaches do a good job of preparing us. We are going to have to get past some good teams.”
– Contact Jason Skoda at 480-898-7915 or jskoda@evtrib.com. Follow him on Twitter @ JasonPSkoda.

today
schedule


BY RABBI DEAN SHAPIRO Tribune Guest Writer
Passover is the Jewish Feast of Freedom.
Each spring, we tell the story of our people’s exodus from Egypt and eat foods that enhance the story through symbolic and sensory stimulation. One of them is the Hillel Sandwich.
The Hillel Sandwich isn’t the tastiest food, but it packs a powerful punch. Imagine two pieces of matzah – the brittle cracker we eat in place of bread. Matzah is the bread of affliction, reminding us of the many people who eat meager fare. On one piece, there’s “charoset.” That’s a sweet, reddish paste made of fruit, nuts and wine that evokes the mortar our ancestors used in their labors. The other piece holds the “maror,” or bitter herb. American Jews
FAITH CALENDAR
SUNDAY, APR. 9
TRADITIONAL PASSOVER SEDER
Chabad of Mesa is hosting an evening of inspiration, humor and song in a traditional Passover Seder. The full four-course dinner includes salmon and roast chicken, fine wine and handmade matzo. The Seder is English friendly, so you will feel right at home.
DETAILS>> 6:30 p.m., 941 S. Maple. Cost is $30 for adults, $10 for students, $5 for children under 12. RSVP to chabadmesa@gmail.com. Information: 480-659-7001 or chabadmesa.com.
MONDAY,
RELIVE THE PASSOVER EXODUS
Chabad of the East Valley’s community Seder will feature rich discussion about Passover, food and singing. Rabbi Mendy Deitsch, director of Chabad of the East Valley, will facilitate the inter-generational program. The advance RSVP price for the Seder is $45 for an adult and $25 for a child. Family plans are available upon request. After April 1, the price increases to $55 for an adult and $40 for a child. No one will be turned away due to lack of funds. Sponsorship available. DETAILS>> 7:15 p.m. at the Pollack Chabad center for Jewish Life, 875 N. McClintock Drive, Chandler. Information and reservations: 480-855-4333, info@ chabadcenter.com or chabadcenter.com.
JESUS THE CHRIST EASTER PAGEANT
This pageant is a drama, dance and musical story about the birth, life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Presented Tuesday-Saturday, April 11-15.
DETAILS>> 8 p.m., Mesa Arizona Temple Grounds,
generally use horseradish, a pungent sinus-clearer that allows us to taste the bitterness of oppression. It’s an odd combination of tastes and textures, but it manages to hit the spot.
Each person has their own formula for mixing the charoset and the maror. Some favor a bold bite of bitterness. Others add lots of sweet to drown out the harshness of the horseradish.
That’s not all. Matzah is thin and brittle. The stickiness of the charoset holds it together, but an over-eager bite can cause the whole thing to disintegrate right into your lap.
The sandwich is named for Rabbi Hillel, a sage who lived in the first century C.E. The sandwich he invented originally contained only bitter herb and was eaten along with lamb.
The Hillel Sandwich is a lot like life –a mixture of bitter and sweet. Although some lives appear blessed and enviable,
525 E. Main St., Mesa. Information: 480-964-7164 or easterpageant.org.
SATURDAY, APR. 15
FAMILY EASTER CELEBRATION
Snedigar Sportsplex hosts a free Easter Egg Scramble for kids up to 9 years of age. There will also be information booths, displays, interactive amusements and a family Easter basket giveaway.
DETAILS>> 9 a.m.-noon, 4500 S. Basha Road, Chandler. Information: 480-782-2735 or chandleraz.gov/easter.
SPECIAL NEEDS EGG HUNT
Compassion Church in Gilbert is hosting a free Special Needs Egg Hunt. There will be special hunts for children on the autism spectrum, for those who are blind or visually impaired, for those in wheelchairs or who have other mobility restrictions, and a general hunt for siblings and children with other disabilities.
DETAILS>> 10 a.m.-noon, Compassion Church, 919 E. Guadalupe Road, Gilbert. Registration: compassionaz. ccbchurch.com/form_response.php?id=18. Information: facebook.com/events/1809515829314082.
SAT-SUN, APR. 15-16
EASTER AT CORNERSTONE
Festivities will follow Easter services at Cornerstone Church in Chandler. Cornerstone will host an egg hunt, a giant maze and obstacle course, a petting zoo, a live DJ and family Easter basket giveaways. Food vendors will be onsite for the April 15 services only.
DETAILS>> April 15 at 2, 3:30, 5 and 6:30 p.m. April 16 at 7:45, 9:05, 10:35 and 11:55 a.m. 1595 S. Alma School Road. Information: cornerstoneonline.com/easter.
actually, everyone grapples with some degree of pain and disappointment. Others appear to lead bland lives, but have a fascinating inner world that they share with no one, or just a select few. Whatever the mixture, some people focus on the bitterness of their lives. Others primarily experience the sweetness.
What’s more, the whole concoction can crumble at any time. All that we acquire can be lost. All it takes is one burst blood vessel, one stormy night or one round of layoffs, and the foundation of our life is revealed as sand. The Hillel Sandwich reminds us that life is brittle.
How are we to live in this precarious state? Some focus only on the joy and ignore the reality of life. When loss comes to them, it hits even harder when it comes because it also destroys their worldview. They reel from the damage, having been lulled into the illusion that
NEW CHURCH FOR EASTER
Song of Life United Methodist Church has opened a San Tan Campus at the Copper Basin YMCA, 28300 N. Main St. in San Tan Valley. The church will celebrate with a special Easter Sunday service and an Easter egg hunt on Sunday, April 16.
DETAILS>> Regular worship services are at 10:30 a.m. Sundays. Information: Jim Van Husen at jvh1111@gmail. com or 480-560-8117.
NEW CHURCH IN MESA
The Lawrence Memorial A.M.E.Z. Church has opened in Mesa with the Rev. Albert Bolden leading as pastor. DETAILS>> Sunday School at 9 a.m., worship at 10 a.m., 931 E. Southern Ave., Suite 108. Information: 480-393-3001, tlmchurch.info.com, f@ TheLawrenceMemorialChurch.
VALOR CHRISTIAN OUTLINES MISSION
Valor Christian Center in Gilbert offers “great praise and worship and great messages for today’s living,” according to Associate Pastor Thor Strandholt. “Our mission is evangelizing, healing and discipleship through the word of God.”
DETAILS>> 10 a.m. Sundays and 7 p.m. Thursdays. 3015 E. Warner Road. Information: valorcc.com.
High school and middle school students meet to worship and do life together.
DETAILS>> 5 p.m. at Horizon Presbyterian Church, 1401 E. Liberty Lane. 480-460-1480 or email joel@ horizonchurch.com.
today will be just like yesterday. Others focus so much on what’s missing in their lives that they miss the goodness that bursts through like spring daffodils.
This is a truth of the Exodus story, too. Even Pharaoh, king of Egypt, experiences the greatest pain. Even the Hebrews, enslaved for generations, experience jubilation. Nothing lasts forever.
The Hillel Sandwich is a reminder: In good times, don’t forget that there is pain. In trying times, remember that there is good. Neither the bitter nor the sweet can they be avoided, nor are they permanent. Taste it all, for it is the very stuff of life.
The Hillel Sandwich from the Passover Seder – all of life in a single bite.
Rabbi Dean Shapiro is the spiritual leader of Temple Emanuel of Tempe. Contact him at rshapiro@emanueloftempe.org and visit his “Rabbi Dean Shapiro” page on Facebook.
Children can learn and experience Jewish life. Chabad Hebrew School focuses on Jewish heritage, culture and holidays.
DETAILS>> 9:30 a.m. to noon, for children ages 5-13 at Pollack Chabad Center for Jewish Life, 875 N. McClintock Drive, Chandler. 480-855-4333, info@ chabadcenter.com, or chabadcenter.com.
Ongoing morning study of two classics of rabbinic literature by medieval philosopher Moses Maimonides (the “Rambam”). At 10 a.m., Prof. Norbert Samuelson, Grossman chair of Jewish Philosophy at ASU and TBS member, teaches “Maimonides’ Guide of the Perplexed: What Jews Ought to Believe.” At 11:15 a.m., TBS member Isaac Levy teaches “Maimonides’ Mishneh Torah: How Jews Ought to Behave.” Readings in both Hebrew and English.
DETAILS>> Community Room of the administration building at Temple Beth Sholom of the East Valley, 3400 N. Dobson Road, Chandler. 480-897-3636.
Unity of Mesa says its service offers “a positive path for spiritual living” through “transformational lessons, empowering music and various spiritual practices with an open-minded and welcoming community.”
DETAILS>> 9 and 10:45 a.m. 2700 E. Southern Ave., Mesa. Nursery available for infants through kindergarten at service times. Youth ministry classes are open in the Education Annex at 10:45 a.m. Information: 480-892- 2700, unityofmesa.org, lori@ unityofmesa.org.
All on a peaceful spiritual path are welcome and
honored in this inclusive, loving, thriving Unity Community. Join us for Interfaith CommUNITY Spiritual Center’s Sunday Celebration Service
DETAILS>> 10:30 a.m. Toddlers and children meet during our service. Interfaith CommUNITY Spiritual Center, 952 E. Baseline, Suite 102, Mesa. Information: info@interfaith-community.org.
SUNDAY CELEBRATION SERVICE
Inspirational messages and music to lift your spirit. A welcoming community committed to living from the heart. Many classes and events offered. We welcome you! DETAILS>> 10 a.m. Sundays at Unity of Tempe, 1222 E. Baseline Road, Suite 103, Tempe. Information: 480-7921800, unityoftempe.com.
CHURCH PRAYER CALL
The Lawrence Memorial A.M.E.Z. Church in Mesa has a prayer call every Monday.
DETAILS>> 7 p.m., 1-712-775-7085. PIN 162106#.
JOIN CHRIST-CENTERED YOGA
This Flow 1-2 class (intermediate) is free and open to the community.
DETAILS>> 6-7 p.m., Mountain Park Community Church, 2408 E. Pecos Road. Greg Battle at 480-759-6200 or gbattle@moutainpark.org.
CLASS TARGETS THE GRIEVING
Classes for those grieving over death or divorce. DETAILS>> 6:30 p.m., Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 739 W. Erie St., Chandler. 480-963-4127.
STRUGGLING TO FIND SUPPORT
Support group for those struggling with how to deal
with a loss in life.
DETAILS>> 7 p.m., 1825 S. Alma School Road, Room C201, Chandler. Pastor Larry Daily, 480-963-3997, ext. 141, larrydaily@chandlercc.org or chandlercc.org.
PROSPERITY RECIPES AT UNITY OF TEMPE
Internationally known speaker and author Maureen G. Mulvaney brings back her Prosperity Recipes class series to Unity of Tempe on Monday evenings. Cost: $10 per session
DETAILS>> 6:15-8:15 p.m., Unity of Tempe, 1222 E. Baseline Road, Suite 103, Tempe. Information: 480-7921800, unityoftempe.com.
MESA BIBLE STUDY
The Lawrence Memorial A.M.E.Z. Church conducts Bible study on Tuesdays.
DETAILS>>6:30 p.m., 931 E. Southern Ave., Suite 108. Information: 480-393-3001, tlmchurch.info.com, f@ TheLawrenceMemorialChurch.
CELEBRATE RECOVERY
Celebrate Recovery is a Biblical program that helps us overcome our hurts, hang-ups, and habits. Through teaching, worship, and sharing in small groups, you will find genuine people devoted to help discover the power of Christ through the recovery process.
DETAILS>> 6:30 p.m., Central Christian Church, 933 N. Lindsay Road, Mesa. Information: Eric at 480-924-4946.
Mountain Park Community Church is offering an ongoing GriefShare programs to help people deal with the pain of losing a loved one.
DETAILS>> 6:30-8 p.m., 2408 E. Pecos Road, Ahwatukee. To register: mountainpark.org and click on Launch. Information: Alex at 480-759-6200.

HOPE, an acronym for “Help Overcome Painful Experiences,” offers support for men and women who seek God’s grace and healing.
DETAILS>> 6:30 to 8 p.m. Mountain Park Community Church, 2408 E. Pecos Road. mountainpark.org.
SENIORS ENJOY ‘TERRIFIC TUESDAYS’
The program is free and includes bagels and coffee and a different speaker or theme each week. Registration not needed.
DETAILS>>10-11 a.m., Barness Family East Valley Jewish Community Center, 908 N. Alma School Road, Chandler. evjcc.org or 480-897-0588.
UNITY YOGA AT UNITY OF TEMPE
Center in Mind, Body & Spirit at our weekly Unity Yoga classes with Mary Jo “MJ” Kuzmick. Bring your own mat (2 blankets & blocks, if you have them). Suggested love offering: $8 a class.
DETAILS>> 10 a.m., Unity of Tempe, 1222 E. Baseline Road, Suite 103, Tempe. Information: 480-792-1800, unityoftempe.com.
HEBREW READING COURSE
Chabad of the East Valley is offering a Hebrew Reading Crash Course to all Jewish members of the East Valley community. The class will take place over five weeks.
DETAILS>> 7:30-8:30 p.m. until April 12, 875 N. McClintock Drive, Chandler. Cost: $50. Information: 480855-4333 or rabbi@chabadcenter.com.
CELEBRATE RECOVERY MEETS
Celebrate Recovery says it “brings your relationship with the Lord closer to your heart as it heals your hurts, habits and hang-ups.” Participants can discuss issues ranging from feeling left out to addictions. “Nothing is too small or too large.”
DETAILS>> 6:20 p.m. at Mountain View Lutheran Church, 11002 S. 48th St., Ahwatukee. mvlutheran.org/ celebraterecovery or email cr@alphamvlc.com.
WOMEN’S BIBLE STUDY OFFERED
Living Word Ahwatukee women’s Bible study and fellowship that offers “a short, low-key time of praise and worship in music and message.” It’s also an opportunity to meet other Christian women in Ahwatukee.
DETAILS>>10-11:30 a.m., Living Word Ahwatukee, 14647 W. 50th St., Suite 165, Ahwatukee. Free child care.
‘A COURSE IN MIRACLES’
Longtime “A Course in Miracles” student and teacher Rev. Julianne Lewis leads this interactive time of discussion and sharing. This group is appropriate for ACIM beginners as well as experienced ACIM students— and everyone in between.
DETAILS>> 1-2:15 p.m. Interfaith CommUNITY Spiritual Center, 952 E. Baseline, Suite 102, Mesa. $10 love donation. Information: revj4u@gmail.com.
MEDITATION ON TWIN HEARTS
“Every day you take a shower. Practicing Twin Hearts Meditation is like taking a spiritual shower. When your aura is clean you experience a higher level of awareness. When your aura is clean you see through things more clearly. Even good luck increases.”
DETAILS>>7:30-9:30 p.m., Unity of Tempe, 1222 E. Baseline Road, Suite 103, Tempe. Information: 480-7921800, unityoftempe.com.
THURSDAYS
BETH MOORE BIBLE STUDY
St. Peter Lutheran Church will be presenting Beth Moore’s study “Jesus the One and Only” for 11 weeks. DETAILS>> 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. 1844 East Dana Avenue, Mesa. The workbook that accompanies the study can be purchased at Lifeway Christian Store.



By GetOut Staff
Whether you celebrate Easter at church or with brunch, the East Valley offers a number of holiday activities for the entire family. From egg hunts to pageants, here are some egg-speriences you’ll want to put on your calendar.
Kick off your Easter weekend at the world’s largest annual outdoor Easter pageant. From Tuesday, April 11, to Saturday, April 15, Mesa Arizona Temple puts on the production “Jesus The Christ.” More than 475 cast members re-enact the story of Jesus, including his life, death and resurrection, in a 65-minute professionally produced musical play.
The show starts at 8 p.m. each night and costs nothing to attend. However, you should show up a few hours early to get a seat. The Mesa Arizona Temple is at 525 E. Main St., Mesa. Learn more at easterpageant.org.
On Thursday, April 13, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., kids under 8 can enjoy the Trick-or-Treatstyle Tiny Tots Egg Hunt along Mesa’s Main Street. Stop at businesses flying a balloon to receive one egg per child. The Easter Bunny will also be around for photos. Learn more at facebook.com/kidtasticmesa.
If you aren’t averse to a drive, Schnepf Farms in Queen Creek hosts its annual
Celebrate the true meaning of Easter with the world’s largest, outdoor pageant, titled “Jesus The Christ.” It features more than 475 actors, singers and dancers, plus live animals as they tell the story of Jesus’ life, death and resurrection.
DETAILS>> 8 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday, April 11-15. Mesa Arizona Temple, 525 E. Main St., Mesa. Cost: Free. easterpageant.org.
‘The Marvelous Wonderettes’
Journey back to 1958 and follow four girls
Easter Egg-citement on Saturday, April 15, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Kids can enjoy egg hunts, Easter cookies, rides, a hot dog lunch and photos with the Easter Bunny. Tickets cost $25 per kid and $3 to $10 per adult. If you plan to go, however, you’ll want to buy soon as tickets go fast. Learn more at schnepffarms. com.
For a more eggconomical event that might be less of a drive, Snedigar Sportsplex in Chandler offers its free Family Easter Celebration. From 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, kids up to 9 years old can participate in age-divided egg hunts. Plus, enjoy interactive activities, rides, photos with the Easter Bunny, food and a Family Easter Basket Giveaway. The complex is at 4500 S. Basha Road, Chandler. Learn more at chandleraz.gov.

a chicken burglar?). It takes place at Red Mountain Library, 635 N. Power Road, Mesa, from 2-3 p.m. on Saturday. You can call 480-644-3100 for more info.
If you’re looking for an Easter play that isn’t of a religious nature, check out “Who Stole My Eggs?” The fun free mystery, courtesy of East Valley Children’s Theatre, scrambles to capture an egg thief (possibly
as they attend the Springfield High School prom. Learn about their lives through more than 30 hits from the ’50s and ’60s, including “Lollipop,” “Dream Lover” and “Lipstick on Your Collar.”
DETAILS>> Mondays and Tuesdays, April 10-11, 17-18. Hale Centre Theatre, 50 W. Page Ave., Gilbert. Tickets: $18-$30. 480-497-1181. haletheatrearizona.com.
Enjoy carnival 35 rides, fair food, shopping pavilions, and exhibits of agriculture and livestock. Entry (except parking) is free Wednesday-Friday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
DETAILS>>Times vary, Wednesday-Sunday, April 12-16. Arizona State Fairgrounds, 1826 W. McDowell Road, Phoenix. Tickets: $9 adult, kids under 8 free; Parking $8. maricopacountyfair. org.
On Easter Sunday itself, scoot over to Rawhide Western Town in Chandler for the annual Easter Egg-Stravaganza (tired of the egg puns yet?) from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Rawhide offers an Easter buffet at the Steakhouse that ranges from pancakes to top sirloin. Then the kids can wear themselves out in an egg hunt. Tickets cost $21.95 for adults
When lovable hillbilly Will Stockdale gets drafted into the Army Air Corps (the precursor to the Air Force), he sets his sights instead on serving in the infantry. His journey turns the Air Corps upside down in this hilarious play.
DETAILS>> Wednesdays-Saturdays, April 12-May 13. Hale Centre Theatre, 50 W. Page Ave., Gilbert. Tickets: $18-$30. 480-497-1181. haletheatrearizona.com.
Hailing from the famed Peabody Institute in Baltimore, this five-piece virtuoso brass ensemble presents an evening of unforgettable music.
DETAILS>> 7:30 p.m., Thursday, April 13. Mesa Arts Center, 1 E. Main St., Mesa. Tickets: $30-$45. 480-644-6500. mesaartscenter.com.
and $9.95 for kids 4-12. Register your spot at 480-502-5600 or at reso@rawhide.com.
Learn more at rawhide.com.
If you want an event not traditionally Easter-related, head over to Organ Stop Pizza in Mesa on Easter Sunday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. You can partake in all-youcan-eat pizza and salad while enjoying a special concert from the Mighty Wurlitzer. Lunch costs $12 for adults, $10 for kids 3-9, and you do not need to purchase tickets in advance from www.organstoppizza.com.
This skating extravaganza features four stories with beloved characters that include Tinker Bell, most of the Disney princesses, and – of course – the cast of Disney’s megahit “Frozen.”
DETAILS>> Times vary, Thursday-Saturday, April 13-16. Talking Stick Resort Arena, 201 E. Jefferson St., Phoenix. Tickets: $11.25-$85. 602-379-7800. talkingstickresortarena.com.
For Mesa’s regular 2nd Friday Night Out, the theme is independent music and features a range of live local bands. Plus, enjoy more than 60 art booths, food trucks and a drawing to win an electric guitar.
DETAILS>> 6-10 p.m., Friday, April 14. Downtown Mesa, Main Street between Center and Robson. Cost: Free. 2ndfridaynightout.

BY JAN D’ATRI Tribune Contributor
We’re approaching Easter week, and many of you will be gathering with family and friends next Sunday the big holiday meal!
If you’re looking for a real rock-star appetizer for your Easter buffet or patio parties, you will never go wrong with bruschetta. Here’s my go-to recipe and a how-to video to take all the guesswork out.
Ingredients: (serves approx.8-10)
8 large ripe Roma tomatoes, sliced in half and cored and chopped medium fine
1/2 sweet yellow onion, chopped fine
4 gloves of garlic, minced or chopped fine
1/4 cup fresh grated Parmesan cheese
2 tablespoons extra virgin oil
8-10 fresh basil leaves, chopped fine. (Do not use dry)
Kosher salt and fresh ground pepper to taste
1 baguette, sliced thin
1/4 cup olive oil and about 1 tablespoon of Parmesan cheese for sprinkling on the bread.
Directions:
Cut baguette into thin slices. Lay the pieces on a cookie sheet. Put some olive oil in a small cup and brush the slices with oil using a pastry brush or spoon. Top with a very light sprinkle of grated cheese. Broil or bake at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes or until the slices are toasted golden brown. Remove from oven and set aside.
In a medium bowl, combine the tomatoes, onion, garlic, cheese, basil, parsley, salt and pepper and lightly toss. Add olive oil and blend all ingredients well.
Place a teaspoonful of tomato mixture on top of each bread slice. Sprinkle with a hint of grated cheese. Garnish with fresh basil.
– Check out my One Minute Kitchen video here: http://www.jandatri.com/ recipes/bruschetta/?category_id=384

1 Scrooge’s cry 4 Astronaut Grissom
7 Indiana politico Bayh
11 Egg
13 Fire residue
14 Predicate part
15 Thin tie with a clasp
16 Shelter, at sea
17 Corp. bigwig
18 Honey bunch?
20 Rhett’s shocking word 22 Fresh
24 Shortcoming
28 Custodian
32 Broadcasting
33 PC picture
34 Set of tools and parts
36 Singer Campbell
37 Naval prisons
39 Own
41 Rachmaninov or Prokofiev
43 -- -jongg
44 Volcanic outflow
46 Luxury boat
50 Bullets and such
53 Autumn mo.
55 Entrance
56 Serve tea
57 Pi follower
58 Napoleon’s exile site
59 Nervous
60 Evergreen type
61 Plaything
1 Goes up and down 2 Acknowledge
3 Hawaiian dance
4 Guy’s partner
5 Secondhand
6 Bundle of wheat
7 1990s Burt Reynolds sitcom
8 Annoy
9 Exist
10 Peacock network
12 Trumpet-shaped flower
19 Encountered
21 Cow’s call
23 Stir-fry pan
25 Hay bundle
26 Falsehoods
27 Sea eagles
28 Triangular sails
29 Land measure
30 Black (Fr.)
31 Tear
35 Male cat
38 Caribbean, for one
40 Express
42 Tusk material
45 Liniment target
47 Stallion, as a child
48 Vagrant
49 Salver
50 Gorilla
51 Chic, in the ‘60s
52 Coffee holder
54 AAA job Sudoku

BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI GetOut Contributor
Gilbert resident Cameron Earl admits that when he was producing the movie “Tim Timmerman, Hope of America,” he asked himself why he was doing it.
But the pros outweighed the cons and he’s thrilled that the film will screen at Harkins Superstition Springs 25 in Mesa from Friday, April 7, through at least Thursday, April 13.
Garnering a 90 percent audience rating on Rotten Tomatoes, the family-friendly, coming-of-age high school comedy is a semi-autobiographical story of writer and director Cameron Sawyer’s experiences as a student body president in Utah in the mid-1990s. He calls himself “quite possibly the worst high school student body president in high school history.”
“The director and the other producers, we’re LDS,” Earl said. “We wanted to make not a religious film – which a lot of people do and a lot of them are our friends and we like them – but a good, clean film that was a good movie.
“Sometimes that isn’t very easy to do. Not all movies are good, even if they have a good message.”
“Tim Timmerman” takes place in 1994,
the year that most of the producers graduated high school. Earl received his diploma in 1995.
“It really shows off a lot of the things that existed at the time,” Earl said. “Pearl Jam, Better Than Ezra and The Scorpions’ music are in the film. Our wardrobe designer made sure that everybody looked like they were from the 1990s. We had cars from the 1990s.
“That’s an era that’s starting to become popular again. A lot of the fads have turned back to the ’90s. That’s nostalgic for people our age. That resonates with them.”
Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder gave his blessing to use the song “Deep” in the movie. They Might Be Giants allowed the team to use “Birdhouse in Your Soul” in the trailers.
“Eddie Vedder was huge in the ’90s and he’s been really kind to independent filmmakers,” Earl said. “He was the first person to say that he wanted to be in our film.
“They Might Be Giants was an incredible band to work with. They were super-kind and they loved the trailer and loved the idea of our film. Growing up, you never think you’re going to be able to interact with these bands. These bands are legendary. They Might Be Giants was my
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BY PAUL MARYNIAK Tribune Executive Editor
Ever since Shannon Rush of Tempe became the owner of a bistro at age 28 last October, she has been revamping the wine list and tweaking its menu.
Now, she’s introduced something at My Wine Cellar that isn’t likely found anywhere in the East Valley but a fancy resort: high tea.
Three weeks ago, Rush introduced high tea – as well as brunch.
Both are available only between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturdays at the longtime happy hour watering hole and nightspot at 5030 E. Warner Road, although My Wine Cellar will do a high tea for a private party most any time.
The high tea concept harkens back to Rush’s youth in Brunei in some ways.
“It’s something I kind of grew up with, something my mom and I did when I was growing up,” she said. “Out here, the only high-tea offerings are at the resorts, where you have to spend over $100. I wanted to offer a somewhat more approachable way to experience high tea to people who don’t want to drive that far.
“Besides, it’s cute,” she added.
My Wine Cellar’s high tea offers more than a pot of Earl Grey Tea and cucumber sandwiches.
For $55 per person, it includes four different kinds of finger sandwiches, fruit and scones and four different small desserts. Oh, and your choice of 10 different gourmet teas – or $2 mimosas.
As for brunch, “it’s something we’ve been talking about for a while and are executing now,” Rush said.
“It’s my impression people like to drive north to find a really good, unique brunch,” she said. “We worked very hard on something you wouldn’t find anywhere else.”
In other words, don’t expect a Grand Slam or assembly-line hash browns with scrambled eggs.
Her eclectic mix of cuisines produce dishes like Farmers Quiche, with cauliflower, leeks, Brussels sprouts, red potatoes, roasted tomato and mixed green salad; poached eggs with 12-spice pork bellies and blistered asparagus; praline sourdough French toast with walnuts and salted caramel cream; and two sunny-sideup eggs with roasted bell peppers and slow-braised traditional machaca beef.
About the only familiar item is chicken
and waffles – except they are green tea waffles with lychee syrup.
Rush’s climb to restaurant ownership followed an unusual path.
After moving to the U.S. when she was 18, she ended up in Philadelphia, cutting her restaurant teeth in a city known for a wide variety of innovative kitchens.
She came out west about five years ago and ended up working in Tempe’s landmark House of Tricks –and became a regular patron at My Wine Cellar.
Eventually, she got a job there as general manager, and when former owner Zoya Vora-Shah decided she wanted to do some traveling and get out of the business, Rush was there to buy the business.

“I knew I was going to buy it for a while,” she said. “All in all, I feel pretty good about it. I have a great team, which helps a lot.”
Being able to do it the way she wants has meant some significant changes.
“We’ve had three and they all sold out,” Rush said, noting the classes appeal to a broad cross section of people “from 21-year-olds to retired folks.”
Besides getting the word out that My Wine Cellar is a place to consider for a leisurely Saturday late-morning or earlyafternoon experience, she aims to put the restaurant on a bigger stage.
“I want to make it a destination place,” she said.
Reservations are required for high tea and recommended for brunch. More information: 480-598-9463 or MyWineCellarPHX.com.



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favorite band from the ’90s.”
Earl was raised in Tempe, and even though he was private and homeschooled, he attended activities through Corona del Sol High School. He studied marketing at Brigham Young University after a failed attempt at Intro to Film class.
“I just didn’t fit in,” he said. “Everybody was artsy and I wasn’t. There’s nothing wrong with that, but I didn’t fit in. I had made little videos and movies and worked in video production forever.
“The director of ‘Tim Timmerman’ and I were friends at BYU. He said he was going to film school and, in my head I said, ‘What a huge waste of time.’ I felt bad about it. He did his first short film called ‘She’s a Fox,’ then I realized he was good at it.”
When Sawyer told Earl about “Tim Timmerman,” he was excited to come onboard.
“I said I would produce it, not even knowing what a producer did,” he said. “I wanted to make movies, but a producer isn’t really an ‘artist.’ A producer is a business guy. They need artists and business logistics people. That was a better fit for me.”
“Tim Timmerman” has been successful at Utah theaters and is now expanding
to markets across the country. It received acclaim on the festival circuit, too, at the Academy Award-qualifying Heartland Film Festival; the St. Louis International Film Festival and the Woods Hole Film Festival in Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
Harkins, Earl said, welcomed “Tim Timmerman.”
“The Harkins folks are really friendly to independent filmmakers,” Earl said. “They have been so kind and gracious. It’s cool that my friends and family get to see the film. I spent a lot of time making it.”
The movie is rated PG-13 due to a brief scene regarding marijuana.
“It’s rated PG-13, but it’s the cleanest PG-13 movie in the history of the MPAA,” he said with a laugh. “There’s an antidrug message. We have a DARE T-shirt in the movie.
“It’s about doing the right thing, even though it’s hard. In the beginning, Tim doesn’t really care about other people. He just does what he can to get ahead. As he goes on his journey, he learns that doing the right thing is hard to do but it makes you a better person.
“The life journey may not be what you wanted it to be, but a different life path can give you more than you ever thought you could get. That’s the message of the film. That’s a good message for all of us. Once you walk out, you feel good.”

PatriciaGene(Moran)
PatriciaGeneConnelly(Moran)diedMonday,February27,2017in NorthglennColorado.PatwasbornonApril14,1928inPeoria,Illinois toImogeneandEdwardMoran.PatattendedBradleyUniversityin PeoriawheresheearnedaBachelorofArtsdegreein1951andwas activeinthePIBetaPhiSorority.Pattaughtschoolfor32yearsin schooldistrict21intheChicagoareabeforeretiringin1985andmovingtoMesaArizona.Patissurvivedbyher byherfourchildren,Debby Simmons,DianeSeitz,JenniferPazderski,andRobConnelly;8grandchildren;16greatgrandchildren.Sheisprecededindeathbyherhusband,FrankConnelly;son-in-law,FrankSimmons;andgreatgrandson, JustinNiyork.
PleaseSigntheGuestbookat: eastvalleytribune.com
Age60,ofLawtey,Florida,passedawayonFebruary25,2017,inJacksonville,Florida.Davidissurvivedbyhisfather,GuyC.PoppyofMesa, Arizona,hisbrother,StephenC.PoppyofLakeButler,Florida,andhi s s isters,GailM.HumeofTheWoodlands,Texas,JoEllenBurnso f ApacheJunction,Arizona,andM.ElisabethSloanofMesa,Arizona,an d m anyniecesandnephews.DavidgrewupinMesa,graduatingfrom W estwoodHighSchool,buthasbeenaresidentofFloridaforman y y ears.
A memorialdinnerwasheldforfamilyandfriendsatDavid’sfavoriterestaurantwherehewasrememberedwithmuchhumorandjoyasamanof manytalentswhooftengavehelp,knewhowtohaveagoodtime,an d livedlifesimply.

Hasapositionworkingasa
LeadOperator
UnderthedirectionoftheMSIDDWellDept. Coordinator,theLeadOperatorwillworkto bepartofateamwhoisresponsiblefordaily supervisionofthePumpCrew,complete scheduledrepair/maintenancework,track& maintainreq.inventorylevels,maintenance, troubleshoot,repair,replaceand/or enhance/improvetheDistrict’sdeepwelland irrigationboosterpumps,transportofequipmentandsuppliestoandfromjobsites,state ofallmaterialsandpipesforinstalls,inspect andevaluatesalvageableequipmentforreuse,understandallsafetyandoperating functionsofpumphoistandassociated equipment.Responsibleforinspections,service,andmaintenanceonpumphoist.Coordinatewithnecessarydepartmentsforrepair,service,and/ormaintenanceofassignedequipmentand/orvehicles,operate equipmenttoincludebutnotlimitedtoforklift, cranetruckandflatbedtruck.Responsiblefor crosstrainingofassignedpersonneland maintainingasafeworkenvironment. Musthave1-3yearsofexperience,anda HighSchoolDiplomaorequivalentandCDL orbeabletoobtainwithinfirst6months. Mustbeabletooperatevehicleswitheithera stickshiftorautomatictransmission,must passbackgroundcheckanddrugscreen.
Foradetailedjobdescription,go to:www.ed3online.org Pleasesendresumeto christina.sandsness@ed-3.org














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573, 575
Notification
• Fare Adjustment: The $2 fee for purchasing fare on board the bus will be removed as of June 1, 2017.
Provide feedback April 17 to May 19, 2017. Greater detail and an online comment card are available at valleymetro.org
Comments may also be emailed to input@valleymetro.org or mailed to:
Valley Metro Community Relations
101 N. 1st Ave., Ste. 1300, Phoenix, AZ 85003
Public Hearing: May 15, 2017
Open House: 5:00 to 5:30 p.m. / Hearing: 5:30 to 6:15 p.m.
Valley Metro Boardroom
101 N. 1st Ave., 10th Floor, Phoenix, AZ 85003
For disability accommodations and alternative formats, call 602.262.7433 or email sadames@valleymetro.org
*Service changes are proposed at this time and will be finalized following the public comment period.
valleymetro.org
FACT: Last Sunday, April 2, marked 225 years since the Coinage Act of 1792, which authorized the production of U.S. silver dollar coins. Prior to this coins from many European nations circulated freely in the colonies. The Spanish silver dollar (also known as pieces of eight) was used the most.


The Flowing Hair dollar was the first dollar coin produced by the U.S. federal government in 1794 and 1795. The coin had a bust of Liberty on one side (with flowing hair) and an eagle surrounded by a wreath on the reverse side.
In 1880 a coin publication wrote that a good quality specimen of the 1794 dollar was valued at $50. However, in 2013 a 1794 specimen sold for over $10 million, which was the highest price paid for a coin at the time.
































































































































