The music died / P. 20
Skyline wrestling champ/ P. 25
An edition of the East Valley Tribune
Sunday, March 14, 2021
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Light glimmers in Mesa after dark year
INSIDE
This Week
BY TOM SCANLON Tribune Managing Editor
NEWS ........................ 6 Could Mesa become Arizona's second-largest city?
W
hat might be remembered as “The Time of the Great Pandemic” or, simply “COVID Year” began in Mesa with a series of warnings and closures. The pandemic of�icially hit Mesa a year ago March 17, when Mayor John Giles declared a state of emergency, shuttering libraries, museums and other indoor gather-
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Charts on the city of Mesa’s coronavirus website show the virus spread in the city has dropped off sharply since January, reflecting trends in the county, state and country. Mesa likely had its first cases in March 2020, though ZIP code data was not available until April. (City of Mesa)
17
COMMUNITY ..........
Dobson teacher and move to mandatory Holocaust lessons.
OPINION ...............
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Mayor John Giles on city's anti-discrimination law. COMMUNITY ............................... 17 BUSINESS ..................................... 20 OPINION .. ..................................... 23 SPORTS ........................................ 25 GET OUT ...................................... 28 PUZZLES ...................................... 29 CLASSIFIED ................................. 30 Zone 1
Arizona National Guard busier than ever BY MIKE PHILLIPS Tribune Contributor
T
he three hikers stranded in snow near Sedona were in a tight spot. After days of sub-freezing temperatures stuck in a rock crevice without food, they were showing signs of frostbite. As they braced for another cruel night, they heard the whomp-whomp-whomp of an Arizona National Guard Blackhawk Helicopter piloted by Maj. Shannon Lancaster. After a few harrowing minutes last January, the hikers were aboard the aircraft and headed to safety. “They got a jolt of motivation when they saw us,“ said Lancaster, a Mesa resident who has spent a decade �lying helicopters for the Guard. “It de�initely gets you going when you put your training to work and you know
you’re saving people’s lives.” The Arizona National Guard has been feeding off that life-saving adrenaline for the past year. Not since World War II has a greater percentage of Arizona Guard been deployed – whether responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, �ighting wild�ires in several states, securing the southern border, serving overseas, or assisting communities during a summer of civic unrest.
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It’s been a busy year for the Arizona National Guard, including Mesa residents Maj. Shannon Lancaster and her husband Sam, who at times had to scrambled to find a babysitter for their 2-yearold son Paxton. (Mike Phillips/Tribune Contributor)
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