The Union Democrat 08-15-2015

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Crow's Beatles caper still nets attention, A2 InSidefOdtly!

MORE INSIDE:Angels Campblaze 60 percent contained; Falling tree limb kills tvvo campers,A5

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1HE MOTHERLODE'S LEADING INFORMATION SOURCESINCE 1854 • SONORA, CALIFORNIA

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WEEKEND

AUGUST 15-17, 2015

Sonorawatermain

TOD AY'S READER BOARQ

CLASS OF '65

BRIEFING

Bear attackMariposa County man recounts fighting off bear, says his 10-pound dog, Bengi, barked and tried to bite the bear from behind.A3

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Board of SupervisorsFinal Tuolumne County budget would add 31 positions over last year. A3

Plague — Plague found in dead animals, prompts Tuolumne Meadows Campground closure.A3

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TUD: Line replacement unlikely due to worse problems elsewhere

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ROadWOrk — A list of roadwork planned in Tuolumne and Calaveras counties, including times, dates, locations and possible delays.A3

By GUY McCARTHY and JASON COWAN The Union Democrat

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The agingwater main where a fl re hydrant lateralbroke Thursday and unleashed an estimated 90,000 gallons of water in one hour, flooding hillside yards, laundry rooms and an apartmentbroke twice before in the past 10 years, Tuolumne Utilities District officials said Friday. At its height, the broken hydrant lateral on North Shepherd Street allowed water to flow from the roughly 80-year-old cast iron main at a rate of 500 to 600 gallons per minute, David Andres, TUD interim general manager, and Don Perkins, TUD operations manager, said. The two times the main broke before in the pastdecade were in September 2006 and September 2008, Andres and Perkins said. The hydrant lateral that broke Thursday isprobablyjustas old as the castiron main, Andres said. "Clearly there's a problem going on with that water main," said property owner B.Z. Smith, whose daughter lives on North Shepherdnear the spotwhere thehydrant

OplnlOn —Michael Moore darkens the cineplex door; Why Bernie Sanders' big crowds count.A4

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Poll questionThis week's poll question asks, "Do you agree withTUD's decision to ease water restrictions?oVote online at www.uniondemocrat. corn.A4

Maggie Becki Union Democrat

Purchasephotos online atwww.uniondemocrat.corn

Sandy Ruoff Fisher, of Sonora (above, at left), and Susie Bacigalupi Carrington, of Columbia, look over Sonora High School Wildcat newspapers from 1963 to 1965.

Sonora grads take trip down memory lane

Stabbing suspect

By SEAN CARSON

— Hardin fails to show for court hearing.A5

The Union Democrat

When gas was 39 cents a gallon and a dollar could buy the most popular meal in town, Sonora High students would spend hours cruising South Washington Street with stereos cranking out rock' n' roll. That strip of road between the Red Church and the town's lone stop sign holds

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of 1965 as they prepare for a 50th reunion next weekend. Quarter-mile drag races down Highway 49 to Parrotts Ferry Road were also popular. day n i gh t fo o tball games, cruising "main," or a show at one of two movie theaters were highlights for students in the 1960s, said Sandy Fisher who has helped

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• SIERRA ECOSUMMIT 2015:Water-conservation practices the focus of annual Groveland festival.B1 •YOUR HOME, YOUR HAVEN:Designer shares easy ways to incorporate vacation souvenirs into home decor.B1

o rganize the event for t h e

past 45 years.

Chamber looks to fill vacancies amid turmoil

ISTrsactmar Ikete Caiai; Mimi Hotkoat;

many memories for the class

E CO S U M M I

krmy Jorm;Meryeaa Webster; Jackie Seta; Doaae Wiutema

Courtesy photo

Lettergirls from the Sonora High School 1965 yearbook are (from left) Linda Guissi, Mimi Holland, Mary Jorm, Maryann Webster, Jackie Bean and Donna Williams. ''When you stop to think about it, there was nothing else," said fellow organizer Ellen Wilson Sundborg. Sundborg, born and raised in Shaws Flat, said she was shy a student.

She worked at the Sears in downtown Sonora during high school and married class of 63 graduate Howard Sundborg her senior year. See REUNION / Back Page

By ALEX MacLEAN The Union Democrat

SPORTS • HOT SHOTS:The Black Oak Casino Hot Shots beat Calvary Chapel 10-7.C1

SummervilleParentNurserySchool

Doster to head up preschool program

NEWS TIPS?

this week voted to hire Diane Doster as the director/teacher of the Summerville Parent Nursery School. The preschool has one teacher-director employed by the district and is staffed by parents who volunteer in the classroom and, in exchange, pay minimal monthly dues for their children to attend. "Parents make sure the kids are behaving and listening," said

By SEAN CARSON The Union Democrat

PHONE: 770-7153,5884534 NEWS: editorounIondemocrat.aim FEATUR ES: featuresluniondemocrat.cor n SPORTS: spoiisIuniondemocratcom EVENTS ANDWEEKENDER: weekenderlunIondemocrat atm IETTERSi lettsrsOunIondemocratixtm CAIAVERAS BUREAU:770-7197 NEINSROO MFJO RD532-8451 SUBSCR IBERSERVICES: 533-3814

A popular preschool teacher ousted from her job five years ago will lead classes again next week, but the return may be short-lived as funding for her new position will be cut next year. The Summerville Union High School District Board of Trustees

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Keturah Wilk, co-president of the Summerville Parent Nursery School Board of Trustees.uOn aver-

age,there are 25 children to five or six parents. The kids get a lot of attention — that's the cool part — not to mention the networking between parents. It's just a good community." Doster said she experienced the

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Dignity Health

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Saturday, September 26 7 AM to Noon• At the Hospital

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See CHAMBER/Back Page

Sunday:High 105, Low 62 Monday:High 104, Low 63

Mark Twain Medical Center 209.754.3521 marktwainmedicalcenter.org

late Wednesday through an email to those on the chamber's mailing list. "The main purpose of today is to see if we can get some board members," said Tomas Hernandez Jr., president of the chamber's Board of Directors. Most of the board resigned following the discovery of missing funds that were report-

Today:High 101, Low al

.....As S ports................. ObituarieS........

Groveland. The meeting was announced

See DOSTER/Back Page

.....A2 O p inion .............. .....Ca S ierra Living......

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As the Tuolumne County Sheriff's Office investigates missing funds from the Yosemite Highway 120 Chamber of Commerce, a small group of concerned Groveland residents met Friday morning to talk about the organizatio n'sfuture. Nine people attended Friday's meeting at the Pizza Factory off Highway 120 in

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