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The Herald SIERRA VISTA

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014 — 75¢

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FEDERAL UNION OPPOSES FORT CUTS LOCAL, A7

Attorney blocks supervisors’ effort Rheinheimer prevents outside counsel on ballot issue BY DEREK JORDAN

derek.jordan@svherald.com

BISBEE — As it turns out, when the Cochise County Board of Supervisors disagrees with its attorney, it can’t just go out and hire an-

other one to argue its case. To avoid having to argue against the opinion of the Cochise County Board of Supervisors in court, the Cochise County Attorney’s Office is preventing the board from obtaining outside counsel on the issue of placing two candidates, who received incorrect information from the elections office, on the Gen-

eral Election ballot. Last week, the board had sought to pursue what it believed to be fair by allowing two independent candidates for Justice of the Peace, G eorge Nerhan and C.J. Garan, to remain on the ballot after it was learned they were told the wrong number of signatures were needed by the former director of the

county elections office. The county attorney’s office advised against allowing Nerhan and Garan on the ballot after determining there was no legal recourse for candidates who did not collect the proper number of signatures. Also last week, the board of supervisors voted to direct the county attorney’s

office to seek a declaratory judgement on the matter from a judge of the Cochise County Superior Court, in order to get an independent ruling and to prevent any of the candidates from having to pay the legal costs of fighting the board’s decision.

See BALLOT, Page A6

Through high water

UNLIVABLE

Second vehicle stuck on rural road in same month BY DEREK JORDAN

derek.jordan@svherald.com

PHOTOS BY MARK.LEVYSVHERALD.COM

Danielle and Joey Juhl survey some of the mold in their child’s bedroom Thursday. The family camped out in the living room due to the water damage for a few days before discovering mold. Joey and Danielle then had to move into a hotel with their two children on Aug. 8.

Mold puts tenant, landlord at odds

See RESCUE, Page A7

Palominas secretary remembered

Both sides consider possible legal recourse BY DANA COLE

be salvaged.

dana.cole@svherald.com

Leaking cooler

SIERRA VISTA — Wearing hazmat protective clothing, environmental specialists have been removing items from a mold infested house at 4914 De Medici in Sierra Vista. Neighbors drive by slowly and watch as PuroClean employees in protective clothing and special masks enter the home and come out with furniture, bedding, clothing and toys, items that belong to Joey and Danielle Juhl and their two young children. Most of the family’s belongings are water damaged and because of mold concerns, cannot

The Juhls, who had been renti ng t he house from Dwayne Head for a year, were forced to leave when the master bathroom ceiling collapsed on Aug. 2, revealing severe water damage throughout the home’s roof along with suspicious looking dark areas that appear to be mold colonies. From the time they moved into the house, the Juhls have had problems with evap or at ive c o oler a nd roof leaks, problems they have taken to the landlord whenever di f ferent issues occurred. “Until the ceiling caved in, we had no idea how bad the situation really was,” said Danielle Juhl. “We had signed a one year lease con-

SIERRA VISTA — Cochise County Search and Rescue personnel were recently sent out to a rural road near the New Mexico border to perform a swift water rescue for the second time in less than a month, this time to aid a man whose became stuck in a flowing wash. The man’s Chevrolet S-10 Blazer became stuck after it was struck by a wall of rushing water when he attempted to cross Cave Creek at Foothills Road in Portal on Friday afternoon, said Sg t. David Noland, coordinator of the search and rescue team. “It turned his S-10 Blazer and pushed it right off the road and into the main channel of the wash,” said Noland, who was the first to arrive on the scene, along with fellow search and rescue member Sgt. Ursula Ritchie.

PuroClean employees sort through damaged and destroyed items in the Juhl’s garage Thursday. tract with Dwayne in August 2013 and, even though we weren’t always happy with how he was taking care of problems, he would assure us that everything was OK, that he had made the repairs. Because of the lease, we didn’t want to be in violation of the contract, so we stayed in the house.” Problems with the rental started almost immediately with the leaking evaporative cooler, where water was pouring off the roof at the back of the house. When Head was contacted he told the Juhls to turn the cool-

er off until he could make repairs, which he did do. When the cooler continued to have problems, he replaced it with a new one. “It was a larger unit than the one we were using before and the new one he installed never really worked right. We were forced to keep it on ‘low cool’ even during times when it’s really hot outside.” Not long after the new evaporative cooler was installed, water started leaking from the ceiling in the

See MOLD, Page A2

WHAT ARE THE POTENTIAL HEALTH EFFECTS OF MOLD? Mold exposure does not always present a health problem indoors. However, some people are sensitive to molds. They may experience symptoms such as nasal stuffiness, eye irritation, wheezing, or skin irritation when exposed to molds. Some may have more severe reactions, especially among workers exposed to large

If you paid 75 cents for this newspaper at a news rack or store, we thank you! Remember, you can save $163 per year by having it delivered to your home every day. Just call (520) 458-9440.

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amounts of molds in occupational settings. Severe reactions may include fever and shortness of breath. Immunocompromised persons and persons with chronic lung diseases like COPD are at increased risk and may develop fungal infections in their lungs.

SPORTS COMICS ADVICE CROSSWORD CLASSIFIED

Whiteley was ‘face, voice and pulse’ of school BY ADAM CURTIS

adam.curtis@svherald.com

SIERRA VISTA— A week ago, the Whiteley family lost its matriarch and Palominas Elementary School lost its mom. Every morning since taking the job about 18 years ago, Betty Whiteley opened the school office and greeted everyone who came in. Whiteley was the school’s secretary but that title falls f lat at the feet of a woman who radiated unconditional love, not only for her family at home, but for the one at school too. After receiving a diagnosis of lung cancer, the first thing Whiteley fretted about was not being there to open the school on its first day this year, said Nichole Mitchel l, W hiteley’s daughter. Fortunately, she was able to return to work but then

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EVENT OF THE DAY The Democratic Women of Southeastern Arizona meet at 11 a.m. at the Pueblo del Sol Country Club in Sierra Vista.

See WHITELEY, Page A6

This paper is published for valued subscriber K Kawabata of Sierra Vista and the rest of Cochise County.


A2

COMMUNITY/LOCAL

HERALD/REVIEW

MOLD: Lessons learned

AROUND YOUR TOWN Progress toward a Positive Future for Sierra Vista will be discussed by Henrietta “Hank� Huisking, Sierra Vista City Council Member, at a meeting of the Democratic Women of Southeastern Arizona (DWSEA) on Tuesday, Aug. 19, at the Pueblo del Sol Country Club in Sierra Vista. She will share her insights and updated information on recent economic development efforts and other future-oriented initiatives sponsored by the city. The lunch meeting begins at 11 a.m., with the cost being $15, which can be paid at the door. RSVPs should be made to President Kathy Marvin at 803-6697 by Aug. 15. All interested persons are welcome to attend! The Huachuca Mineral & Gem Club will meet Wednesday, Aug. 20, at 7 p.m. at the Cochise College Library Conference Room. The club welcomes Tom Tierney, of the local gold prospectors’ group, who will speak on “Prospecting and the Benefits Thereof.� The gold prospectors participate in the club’s annual show by a display of prospecting equipment and live demonstrations at their outdoors booth. The HMGC show will be Oct. 11 and 12, 2014. The public is welcome to this month’s meeting. For more information, please call Ingrid at 459-3718. The Sierra Vista Camera Club will meet Aug. 20 at the Sierra Vista Public Library in the Mona Bishop Room beginning at 5 p.m. John and Barbara Niesel will present the “Grand European Adventure.� A 40 minute DVD program of their 31-day Eurorail tour covering five countries and nine cities in Europe. Check out the Club’s web site at http://svcameraclub.com/ for more information about the program, and generalinfo about the camera club. The Sierra Vista Camera Club welcomes anyone with an interest in photography. Meetings are held on the third Wednesday each month. Presentation is open to the public. Thursday, Aug. 21, at 2:30 p.m., the University of Arizona Cochise County Cooperative Extension will present a physical activity in the classroom workshop at the U of A Sierra Vista campus, in room 503, at 1140 N Colombo Ave. This free nutrition class is designed for K-8 classroom teachers and will include benefits and components of physical fitness for children, ideas for incorporating physical fitness into the classroom, classroom physical activity resources, and other topics. For more information, please call Brenda Holzer at (520)

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

FROM PAGE A1

458-8278 ext. 2170. The Huachuca Area School Retiree’s Association will host a picnic on Thursday Aug. 21 at Veterans’ Memorial Park. HASRA is an organization of retired school employees, both certified and classified. The gathering will begin at 3:30 p.m. at Ramada 1 on the west side of the park for social time and a potluck will begin at 4 p.m. New retirees and retired school employees from any state are welcome. Bring a lawn chair for additional seating. Come meet new friends and enjoy a picnic in the park. For more information, call Roger, 456-9114. The Fort HuachucaSierra Vista Association of the United States Army (AUSA) is sponsoring a free course in money management on Aug. 21. The course will take place from 5 to 6 p.m., with an additional hour for questions at the Murr community center. AUSA Board member, retired colonel Chris Miller’s presentation provides financial information obtained from more than 29 years of investing, consulting and researching how money works and various investment strategies. The course will cover: compounding, value of military pension, closed and open end credit, how to keep more of the money you make, financial terminology, and basic ways to invest. The course is open to all adult military, civilian, and contractor personnel on Fort Huachuca. AUSA will provide free refreshments and informative handouts. The Thunder Mountain Marine Corps League Detachment 1283, the local chartered detachment for the Marine Corps League, will meet Thursday, Aug. 21, at the Old Cochise County Complex at Foothills Drive and Highway 92, at 7 p.m. All Marines or interested parties may attend. Membership in the League is available to all active duty, reserve, retired and interested Marines and FMF Navy Corpsmen. Associates interested in supporting the League are also encouraged to attend. The Happy Achers’ Senior Group of the Sierra Vista United Methodist Church, located on the corner of Buffalo Soldier Trail and St. Andrews Drive, will have its August potluck in Fellowship Hall on Thursday, Aug. 21. Jon Messenger will present original folk and western tunes. His songs bring to his audiences a haunting and authentic portrait of cowboy life. Bring a covered dish, join us at 11:10 a.m., for a good time and bring a guest if you can. For more information call 378-1924.

bedroom where the Juhls’ 7-yearold daughter slept. Once again, the landlord was called to fix the problem. He got the leak stopped and removed the ceiling’s water damaged area, replacing the wallboard with a plywood patch and painting over it. The Juhls were told by Head that all was well, the problem resolved. But what Joey and Danielle did not know then, is the landlord had been making repairs to a roof that had a history of problems, findings confirmed in a preliminary report by John Bates, a mold expert who owns the Tucson-based company Enviro-Due Diligence. In a report following an inspection of the home, Bates reported, “Areas were observed in the home to have been repaired, and we suggest they were in response to earlier water intrusion, remedied by wallboard replacement and new paint.� His report also states, “Responsible care of the roof and appropriate actions in a timely manner when water had first intruded would have averted the high humidity within the home and the subsequent mold growth on furniture, clothing and other personal items.� Joey says that he and Danielle were shocked to learn they were living in a house with a mold problem. “Dwayne made numerous visits to this house to make repairs on the roof and would go up into the crawl space and look around. Not one time did he tell us there was a mold issue,� said Joey. “When he made repairs, he was literally covering water damaged areas, trapping moisture and creating an environment for mold. What is most disturbing is that he knew we have two young children. Had we been told the real extent of this problem, we never would have risked the welfare of our children and stayed in the house.�

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PuroClean team members document mold and water damage on furniture and other home items. LEFT: The master bathroom incurred so much water and mold damage the ceiling caved in.

After contacting Head for comment, he acknowledged repeated visits to the home to make numerous repairs to the roof. “Not long after they moved into the house there was a roof leak and I made repairs to the roof, patched areas where there were leaks and replaced the leaking cooler,� he said. “After I patched some areas and installed the new evaporative cooler, we had a few light rains and the repairs held up real well. They (Juhls) seemed happy with what I had done,� he said. “Then we had a big monsoon downpour with a strong wind and the roof started leaking again. I believe the rain pushed through a vent located near the cooler because of the wind and that’s why we started having problems with water leaking inside the house.� Head says he owns five rentals, of which three have problematic roof leaks that will require a tremendous amount of money to repair. He says he now has an attorney and is in the process of filing bankruptcy, as he does not have the financial resources to make the repairs. “Between the three rentals with roof problems, it has cost me an enormous amount of money to make the repairs, and there’s no end in sight. I’ve owned these houses for about 12 years now and they’re getting older and will require a lot additional work, so I’ve signed all three rental properties over to the bank. I’m following my attorney’s advice and I’m getting out of the rental business,� Head added.

in our daughter’s room and did not want her sleeping in there.� Joey contacted Head and described the collapse. He asked the landlord what he could do to help them. “I asked him to contact his insurance company so an adjuster could come out and start the process to repair the damage,� Joey said. After hearing from Joey, Head went out to the house to look at the damage and determined it was too extensive for him to repair. He told the Juhls he would be contacting his home owner’s insurance right away and would be requesting an adjuster come out as soon as possible. On Aug. 4, he gave the Juhls the $ 500 security deposit they had paid at the time they moved into the house and told the family they would have to move out. “We did not have the money to move out, nor did we know where to turn for help,� said Danielle. “We decided to camp in the living room until we heard what the insurance adjuster decided after he inspected the damage.� While the Juhls say they were in a tough position with two children and no money to move, Head claims they were uncooperative. “There was no way anyone could start making repairs on the house with people living in there,� he said. “They were rude and uncooperative and made harassing phone calls. I finally called the police and filed a report against them to stop the harassment.� The insurance adjuster arrived on Aug. 8, inspected the damage and declared the house uninhabitable and recommended the family move out immediately. He also told Head, who was on site for the adjuster’s visit, the damage is not something the insurance company would cover. In addition, it was the insurance adjuster who told the Juhls to file a claim with a renter’s insurance policy they had through Farm Bureau. “The day we contacted Farm Bureau, they arranged for us to move into a hotel and they also arranged for PuroClean to go out to the house and remove as many of our household items as possible,� said Danielle. “Our renter’s insurance is a godsend. If nothing else comes out of our experience, I urge all renters to get insurance. It’s well worth it.�

Tensions escalate

Initial findings

It was close to midnight on Aug. 2 when the master bathroom ceiling collapsed, crashing down around Joey as he was standing at the bathroom sink. “At that point, we gathered the kids up and we moved into the living room were we camped out until the next morning,� he said. “We didn’t trust the patched area

PuroClean, a company that calls itself the “paramedics of property damage� responds to water, smoke, mold and other biohazards. “This is one of the worst mold cases I’ve ever seen where a family is still living in the residence,� said Lorena L. Tiburcio, the Sierra Vista PuroClean fran-

The landlord responds

Specializing in the

PHOTOS BY MARK.LEVYď˜łSVHERALD.COM

Tired Eyes?

chise owner. Tiburcio said four employees worked on sanitizing and removing the contents of the home for three days, hoping to salvage as much of the household items possible. “They lost almost all their furniture because of the damage,� she said. “It’s very sad.� It was Tiburcio who contacted Enviro-Due Diligence to perform a mold inspection. Bates arrived at the residence midday on Thursday and took air samples to be submitted to a lab. “I found many walls expressing high moisture content, which usually occurs if moisture is present within the wall,� he said. Along with the bathroom with the collapsed ceiling, Bates also observed water damage in the children’s bedrooms. “The ceiling had collapsed from moisture and wallboard was strewn across the shower on which the shingles were attached,� he noted. “Numerous dark areas, appearing to be mold from long-time exposure to moisture was observed above the ceiling. The wallboard ceiling appeared wet with subsequent mold growth on the backside.� He also noted two other bedrooms that had water accumulation above the ceiling, with leakage in the children’s bedrooms. “The potential is high for these ceilings to also partially, or fully collapse if the water intrusion is not stopped,� Bates noted. Airflow from the hole in the master bathroom appeared to be downward, possibly “carrying unseen mold spores throughout the home.� Bates submitted air samples to a lab and will be compiling a report once he receives the findings.

What now? The Juhls have found another rental home and will be moving from the hotel in September. “Our son has been experiencing severe allergic reactions that started about nine months ago,� said Danielle. “Since we had no idea we were living in a mold infested house, we never considered mold as a possible source for the allergy. Now that we know, it’s been helpful to his pediatrician. Also, since moving into the hotel, his condition has already improved.� Because of what the family has been through they are considering legal options, Danielle said.

Learning lessons As renters, both Joey and Danielle Juhl say they have learned some valuable lessons after enduring a problem in a home they were renting. First, they urge all renters to acquire renter’s insurance. They also recommend learning the laws that protect renters and landlords. Two documents that can be accessed online, the Arizona Landlord Tenant Act and the Arizona Tenant’s Rights and Responsibilities provide a wealth of information, said Danielle. The website for the Landlord Tennant Act is: www.azhousing.gov. To access the Tenant’s Rights and Responsibilities handbook go to www.azag.gov. Type in Tenant’s Rights and Responsibilities and click the search option.

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NATION/WORLD

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

10

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

HERALD/REVIEW

FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WHAT AN 1AUTOPSY INDEPENDENT FOUND

A3

Arizona loose with its rules in executions, records show BY FERNANDA SANTOS AND JOHN SCHWARTZ

Dr. Michael Baden, a pathologist hired by Michael Brown’s family, says the Missouri teen was shot at least six times by police. The unarmed 18-yearold whose fatal shooting by police has sparked a week of protests in suburban St. Louis suffered a bullet wound to his right arm that may indicate his hands were up or his back was turned, he said. But the pathologist said the team that examined Michael Brown can’t be sure yet exactly how the wounds were inflicted, citing the need for more information.

New York Times News Service

AP PHOTOS

A man bends down in prayer as police try to disperse a small group of protesters Monday in Ferguson, Mo.

SAY THEY’VE SECURED MOSUL 2 KURDS DAM Boosted by two days of U.S. airstrikes, Kurdish forces say they’ve wrested back control of Iraq’s largest dam from Islamic State militants. Earlier, the Islamic State group, which two weeks ago captured the Mosul Dam spanning the Tigris River just north of the city of Mosul, denied the claim, insisting it was still in control of the facility. The retaking of the dam would mark the first major victory for the Iraqi and Kurdish forces battling the Islamic militants since U.S. airstrikes began earlier this month. However, the conflicting accounts that emerged Monday underscored the challenge facing Kurdish and Iraqi forces trying to reassert themselves after weeks of setbacks.

6 U.N. MAKES NEW PLEA IN EBOLA FIGHT

The global health agency says African countries hit with the virus should begin exit screening all passengers leaving airports, sea ports and major ground crossings. The agency didn’t spell out which countries should start screening passengers, but noted that the Ebola outbreak involves transmission in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leona and a “small number of people in Nigeria.” All countries, even those unaffected by the outbreak in West Africa, need to strengthen their ability to detect and contain new cases without doing anything that unnecessarily interferes with international travel or trade.

POPE SAYS ISLAMIC STATE MUST BE 3 ‘STOPPED’ Francis says efforts to stop Islamic militants from attacking religious minorities in Iraq are legitimate, and that it should be a global effort on how to intervene. “In these cases, where there is an unjust aggression, I can only say that it is licit to stop the unjust aggressor,” Francis said. “I underscore the verb ‘stop.’ I’m not saying ‘bomb’ or ‘make war,’ just ‘stop.’ And the means that can be used to stop them must be evaluated.” Francis also said he and his advisers were considering whether he might go to northern Iraq himself to show solidarity with persecuted Christians. But he said he was holding off for now on a decision.

CONSEQUENCE OF IVORY 7 VICIOUS DEMAND A study finds that poachers killed an estimated 100,000 elephants across Africa between 2010 and 2012, a huge spike in the mammals’ death rate. Warnings about massive elephant slaughters have been ringing for years, but Monday’s study is the first to scientifically quantify the number of deaths across the continent by measuring deaths in one closely monitored park in Kenya and using other published data to extrapolate fatality tolls across the continent. “The current demand for ivory is unsustainable. That is our overarching conclusion. It must come down. Otherwise the elephants will continue to decrease,” said Iain Douglas-Hamilton, founder of Save the Elephants.

EFFECT OF FRACKING ON 8 THE TEMBLORS

Local citizens line up to collect water on a street in Donetsk, Ukraine on Monday.

4 REFUGEES SHELLED IN UKRAINE

Kiev accuses pro-Russia separatists of killing dozens of civilians in an attack on a convoy fleeing a besieged rebel-held city. The rebels denied any attack took place, while the U.S. confirmed the shelling of the convoy but said it did not know who was responsible. The refugees were attacked with Grad rockets and other weapons imported from Russia as their convoy traveled on the main road leading from Russia to the rebel-held city of Luhansk. Oleksiy Dmytrashkivsky, a spokesman for the Ukrainian government’s military operation in the east, later told The Associated Press that 15 bodies had been recovered from the smoldering vehicles and servicemen were collecting the body parts of at least 10 more people.

AN ICONIC FOOD CHAIN IS TRYING 5 HOW TO CHANGE ITS IMAGE McDonald’s is growing frustrated with its reputation for serving cheap, greasy fare, and they’re courting the media to change that perception. At a dinner McDonald’s hosted for reporters and bloggers, waiters served cuisine prepared by celebrity chefs using ingredients from the chain’s menu. It’s just one way McDonald’s is trying to change its image. In the past 18 months, the chain has introduced the option to substitute egg whites in breakfast sandwiches and rolled out chicken wraps as its first menu item with cucumbers.

A study finds that man-made earthquakes, a side effect of some high-tech energy drilling, cause less shaking and in general are about 16 times weaker than natural earthquakes with the same magnitude. Distance matters in this shaking gap, however. For people within 6 miles of the fault, artificial and natural quakes feel pretty much the same, U.S. Geological Survey geophysicist Susan Hough said.

9 GAZA WAR TRUCE EXTENDED

Egypt announces a 24-hour extension in peace talks between Hamas militants and Israel so that a long-term arrangement in the Palestinian territory can be reached. Egyptian mediators shuttled between the sides Monday, but gaps appeared to remain wide. Hamas is demanding an end to a seven-year Israeli-Egyptian blockade of Gaza that has devastated the local economy. Israel wants guarantees that Hamas, which fired thousands of rockets into Israel during the fighting, will be disarmed. In an apparent attempt to pressure Hamas, Egypt said early Monday it would co-host an international fundraising conference for Gaza, but only if a deal is reached. Israel, meanwhile, said in recent months it had arrested nearly 100 Hamas operatives in the West Bank.

SOLAR PLANTS SCORCH 10 EMERGING BIRDS IN MIDAIR Workers at a state-of-the-art solar plant in the Mojave Desert have a name for birds that fly through the plant’s concentrated sun rays — “streamers,” for the smoke plume that comes from birds that ignite in midair. Federal wildlife investigators who visited the BrightSource Energy plant last year and watched as birds burned and fell, reporting an average of one “streamer” every two minutes, are urging California officials to halt the operator’s application to build a still-bigger version.

PHOENIX — In an execution in 2010 in Arizona, the presiding doctor was supposed to connect the intravenous line to the convict’s arm — a procedure written into the state’s lethal injection protocol and considered by many doctors as the easiest and best way to attach a line. Instead he chose to use a vein in an upper thigh, near the groin. “It’s my preference,” the doctor said later in a deposition, testifying anonymously because of his role as a five-time executioner. For his work, he received $ 5,000 to $ 6,000 per day — in cash — with two days for practice before each execution. That improvisation is not unusual for Arizona, where corrections officials and medical staff members routinely deviate from the state’s written rules for conducting executions, state records and court filings show. Sometimes they improvise even while a convict is strapped to a table in the execution chamber and waiting for the drugs coursing through his veins to take effect. In 2012, when Arizona was scheduled to execute two convicted murderers, its Corrections Department discovered at the last minute that the expiration dates for the drugs it was planning to use had passed, so it decided to switch drug methods. Last month, Arizona again deviated from its execution protocol, and things did not go as planned: Convicted murderer Joseph R. Wood III took nearly two hours to die, during which he received 13 more doses of lethal drugs than the two doses set out by the state’s rules. While it is unclear whether the constant changes have led to cruel and unusual punishment, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals became so disturbed in 2012 about the expired drugs that it chastised the state, saying Arizona “has insisted on amending its execution protocol on an ad hoc basis.” While the court permitted the two executions to proceed and they went off without a hitch, the 9th Circuit nonetheless observed that Arizona had a “rolling protocol that forces us to engage with serious constitutional questions and complicated factual issues in the waning hours before executions.” Douglas A. Berman, an expert on criminal sentencing at Ohio State University, said corrections officials tended to have a cavalier attitude that might now be backfiring on them. As Berman archly put it, “What’s the big deal, as long as the guy ends up dead and I’m not literally torturing the guy along the way?” Prison officials and execution teams, he said, “don’t see any adjustment that they are making as likely to cause unnecessary suffering or pain.” Legal cases in Arizona, which has been a particular target of death penalty opponents, offer an unusual window on execution protocols and actual practices. There have been 37 executions in Arizona since 1992, of which 14 were overseen by the current director of the Corrections Department, Charles L. Ryan. Ryan, who has no medical training, has said in depositions that the state’s protocol gave him virtually unlimited discretion to deviate from the written guidelines, essentially making him the ultimate arbiter in executions. He personally authorized the repeated doses of drugs given to Wood, who had murdered his estranged girlfriend and her father. Five of the 15 doses of lethal drugs were administered to Wood while his lawyers pleaded to a federal judge to stop the execution, which by then had dragged on for well over an hour. “There’s the protocol that’s in place and there’s what happens, and those aren’t necessarily the same thing,” said Dale A. Baich, an assistant federal public defender who represented Wood. “What we’ve learned from this execution is that the Department of Corrections was making it up as it went along.” Ryan has affirmed that the length of Wood’s execution — one hour and 57 minutes — and the amount of drugs Wood received comply with state law, which calls for the administration of “an intravenous injection of a substance or substances in a lethal quantity sufficient to cause death.” He declined a request for an interview; a spokesman, Doug Nick, said this was because of the continuing search for an independent team to assess Wood’s execution.

Militias further complicate situation on Texas border MISSION, Texas (AP) — On a recent moonlit night, Border Patrol agents began rounding up eight immigrants hiding in and around a canal near the Rio Grande. A state trooper soon arrived to help. Then out of the darkness emerged seven more armed men in fatigues. Agents assumed the camouflaged crew that joined in pulling the immigrants from the canal’s milky green waters was a tactical unit from the Texas Department of Public Safety. Only later did they learn that the men belonged

to the Texas Militia, a group that dresses like a SWAT team and carries weapons but has no lawenforcement training or authority of any kind. The situation ended peacefully with the immigrants getting arrested and the Border Patrol advising the militia members “to properly and promptly” identify themselves anytime they encounter law-enforcement officers. But the episode was unsettling enough for the Border Patrol to circulate an “issue paper” warning other agents.

The presence of armed militia members working on their own in a region known for human smuggling, drug smuggling and illegal immigration has added one more variable to an already complex and tense situation. Although the Aug. 6 incident in Mission resulted in no harm, it’s not hard to imagine deadlier outcomes throughout the Rio Grande Valley, a wide area patrolled by more than 3,000 borAP PHOTO der agents, as well as hundreds of state troopers, game wardens, In this Aug. 9 photo, the main canal supplying water deputies and local police officers. to the city of Mission, Texas is shown.


Opinion

A4 GOVERNMENT CONTACT

Opinion Editor: Eric Petermann 515-4610 eric.petermann@svherald.com Tuesday August 19, 2014

U.S. SEN. JOHN MCCAIN • MAIL: 241 Russell Senate Office Building Washington DC 20510 • TELEPHONE: (202) 224-2235 • E-MAIL: mccain.senate.gov/. Click on the “contact” menu at the top of the screen and complete the contact form.

OUR VIEW

Dealing with bad medicine

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od liver. That’s the reference Sierra Vista City Council member Tom Reardon made to the results of a survey that compared the city’s pay scale. Consulting firm Segal Waters said last week that Sierra Vista is pitifully low in paying its public safety and senior management positions compared to other places. Police and firemen, for example, are almost 20 percent below the municipalities and governments surveyed by the consultant. To catch up, Sierra Vista needs to increase its pay to city employees more than $512,000 over the next two years. Back to our Reardon reference, the consultant’s recommendation tastes like cod liver medicine to fellow council members and local taxpayers. The natural first reaction is “... or what?” Being told to pay up, promptly, makes anyone who carries the responsibility of paying the bill, bristle. Being told the amount that you are paying is comparably paltry, is both embarrassing and frustrating, especially for Sierra Vista. In the face of declining state shared revenues and climbing mandatory pension payments, the city has kept control of its budget through attrition. As employees have retired or left, these positions have not been filled and the duties have been distributed to the existing staff. Ask just about anyone at City Hall who has been there for a few years, and they can tell you that the job they were originally hired to do, has been changed with more responsibilities added. By doing this, Sierra Vista has maintained a level of public services that are close to what it offered before the economy collapsed and the state slashed shared revenues with schools and municipalities. Public employees across the board have accepted the reality that private sector employees are also dealing with in today’s world. Pay scales are stagnant and it’s good to have a job, let alone worry about getting more compensation. But the survey conducted by Segal Waters shows that the city has fallen behind the wages paid by other public employers. The consequence of this is already evident in the city’s public safety service. Police officers hired and trained by the local department leave for better paying jobs elsewhere — notably Phoenix. Firemen trained here, leave for other departments where the pay is better. For the long-term, the consequence may be that Sierra Vista can’t attract the level of talent desired for the city’s top management positions. This is an interesting and complex challenge for the City Council. Let’s see how they handle the bad medicine they have been given.

Where’s the Justice at Justice?

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ASHINGTON — Jim Risen is gruff. The tall slab of a reporter looks like someone who could have played an Irish Marine sergeant in an old World War II movie. “Editors think I’m a curmudgeon,” the 59-year-old admits, laughing. Eric Lichtblau, the reporter who sits next to Risen in The Times’s Washington bureau and who won a Pulitzer with him for their remarkable stories about the Bush administration’s illegal warrantless wiretapping, says Risen revels in his prickly, oldschool style, acting contrary on everything from newfangled computers to the Bush crew’s fictions about Saddam and W.M.D. to cautious editors. “He’s pushed to go places that often editors are unwilling to go,” Lichtblau said. “He’s never taken the safe route.” Once Lichtblau took him to a pick-up basketball game and, naturally, Risen got in a fight with a lobbyist about the rules for being out of bounds. As Carl Hulse, The Times’s chief Washington correspondent, wryly puts it: “Whether it’s editors or government officials, Jim definitely won’t take no for an answer, but he will certainly give it.” Over lunch near the White House on Friday, Risen, dressed in his Men’s Wearhouse shirt and khakis and his brown Ecco walking shoes, talked about having the sword of Damocles over his head, as the reluctant star of a searing mediagovernment showdown that could end with him behind bars. “It’s surreal to be caught up in a news story instead of writing about one,” he said, in his soft voice. He said he was inspired by the Watergate hearings to get into journalism and that he inherited his skepticism about government from his mom, who grew up in Indiana during the Depression, the daughter of an Irish railway machinist who was often out of work. Every time she saw the pyramids on TV, she would say, “I wonder how many slaves died building that?” Risen said he’s not afraid that

F.B.I. agents will show up one day at the suburban Maryland home he shares with his wife, Penny. (His three sons are grown, and one is a reporter.) But he OMMENTARY has exhausted all his legal challenges, at the MAUREEN DOWD including Supreme Court, against the Obama administration. “I was nervous for a long time, but they’ve been after me for six years so now I try to ignore it,” he said, musing that he’s already decided what he’ll take to prison: Civil War books and World War II histories. The Justice Department is trying to scuttle the reporters’ privilege — ignoring the chilling effect that is having on truth emerging in a jittery post-9/11 world prone to egregious government excesses. Attorney General Eric Holder wants to force Risen to testify and reveal the identity of his confidential source on a story he had in his 2006 book concerning a bungled C.I.A. operation during the Clinton administration in which agents might have inadvertently helped Iran develop its nuclear weapon program. The tale made the C.I.A. look silly, which may have been more of a sore point than a threat to national security. But Bush officials, no doubt still smarting from Risen’s revelation of their illegal wiretapping, zeroed in on a disillusioned former C.I.A. agent named Jeffrey Sterling as the source of the Iran story. The subpoena forcing Risen’s testimony expired in 2009, and to the surprise of just about everybody, the constitutional law professor’s administration renewed it — kicking off its strange and awful aggression against reporters and whistle-blowers. Holder said in May that “no reporter who is doing his job is going to go to jail,” trying to show some leg and signal that his intention is benign, merely to put pressure on Sterling so that he will plead guilty before his trial. The president and the attorney general both spoke nobly about the First Amendment after

players on the course that had blocked his favored vehicular access to the 18th fairway with a parked car. Regarding this incident, the police log in the Herald did not mention Mr. Blanchard’s name and stated that no ordinance addressed his extraordinary behavior. If another citizen threatened people by driving erratically on a vehicle-prohibited park, a disorderly conduct arrest or minimally a citation would likely be the result. It seems Mr. Blanchard has recently stopped driving across the park, perhaps because of the impending election, but in my view his past chronic misbehavior (and

his intransigent attitude) raises a red flag about his fitness for office. With all due respect to his past service to our city and based on his own misbehavior, I appeal to Sierra Vista voters to remove Mr. Blanchard from office by voting for other candidates in the upcoming city council election.

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two reporters were arrested in Ferguson, Mo., while covering the racial protests in the wake of Michael Brown’s death. Obama said that “here, in the United States of America, police should not be bullying or arresting journalists who are just trying to do their jobs and report to the American people on what they see on the ground.” Holder seconded the sentiment, saying that “journalists must not be harassed or prevented from covering a story that needs to be told.” So why don’t they back off Risen? It’s hard to fathom how the president who started with the press fluffing his pillows has ended up trying to suffocate the press with those pillows. How can he use the Espionage Act to throw reporters and whistleblowers in jail even as he defends the intelligence operatives who “tortured some folks,” and coddles his C.I.A. chief, John Brennan, who spied on the Senate and then lied to the senators he spied on about it? “It’s hypocritical,” Risen said. “A lot of people still think this is some kind of game or signal or spin. They don’t want to believe that Obama wants to crack down on the press and whistle-blowers. But he does. He’s the greatest enemy to press freedom in a generation.” Risen points to recent stories about the administration pressing an unprecedented initiative known as the Insider Threat Program, which McClatchy described as “a government-wide crackdown on security threats that requires federal employees to keep closer tabs on their co-workers and exhorts managers to punish those who fail to report their suspicions.” Risen may be trapped in Ibsen, but Obama is channeling Orwell. DIANA WEST is on vacation. Her column will return on Aug. 26. MAUREEN DOWD, winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for distinguished commentary, became a New York Times Op-Ed columnist in 1995 after having served as a correspondent in the paper’s Washington bureau since 1986. She has covered four presidential campaigns and served as White House correspondent.

OUR READERS’ VIEWS Chronic misbehavior To the Editor: Thanks to Mr. Bob Blanchard for past service on the city council. His choice to run again for office necessitates that the following be publicized. Mr. Blanchard has had multiple contacts with police because of citizen complaints about his driving across A.V. Anderson Disc Golf Park, presumably to walk his dog(s). To my knowledge, he has never been arrested or cited for this behavior, seemingly because of his position in city government. Once he drove with great speed in an erratic manner around

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

Ken Charters Sierra Vista

Carry your own bag To the Editor: Regarding the plastic bag issue in Bisbee, I do not know about the rest of the European countries, but Germany has charged a fee of

Publisher Emeritus: Robert J. Wick Publisher Emeritus: Walter M. Wick Publisher: Philip Vega SIERRA VISTA

5-pennies per bag for as long as I can remember. That is why all the German shoppers carry their own, mostly woven-and very prettybaskets. I realize they go shopping more often. Traditionally, it used to be every day for the freshest of produce, meat, and other groceries. I see plenty of people here in Sierra Vista (myself included) who carry their own variety of bags — and we don’t even have to pay 5-cents — but it would be an alternative for those who are “against” doing away with the bags, and they would thus have a choice!

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

Jo Babbie Sierra Vista

Business Manager: Joan Hancock Circulation Manager: Jeremy Feldman Production Director: Scott Green B I S B E E D A I LY


STATE

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

HERALD/REVIEW

A5

Ousted official accuses Border Patrol of cover-up

DERRY, N.H. — Senate hopeful Scott Brown again got help from a former Republican presidential nominee, as Sen. John McCain spoke to a crowd of GOP faithful at a town hall meeting Monday. McCain, who won the state’s presidential primary twice, stumped for Brown a few weeks after 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney came to a farm in southern New Hampshire to do the same. Republicans are targeting several seats as they try to reclaim the majority in the Senate. If Republicans get the six seats they need to take the chamber, McCain would become chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Brown’s election would also knock out one McCain’s current committee colleagues, New Hampshire’s first-term incumbent Democrat Jeanne Shaheen. The town hall was ostensi-

bly a foreign policy discussion, though it veered into other issues including health care and veterans issues. It became a setpiece event for both to repeat oftstated criticisms of the Obama administration and Congressional Democrats. “Since he’s become president, I have never seen the world in more turmoil than it is in today,” McCain said. “Look at Iraq, look at Afghanistan, look at Syria, look at the number of people who have been slaughtered, 170,000 in Syria, while we have watched.” Brown, who faces two other Republicans in a Sept. 9 primary, kept at the theme and pulled Shaheen back into the fray, repeating his claim that she has voted over whelmingly with Obama. “Our allies don’t trust us. Our foes don’t fear or respect us. And we’re in trouble,” he said. “We need good leadership. We do not need rubber-stamping of the policies of the president.”

Dean Spiliotes, a longtime political analyst in the state, said McCain’s visit will give Brown a boost from the more moderate wing of the party. “(Brown) understands that the battle in the state, in that particular Senate race, is for the center once he gets past the primary,” Spiliotes said. “McCain has done well with the kind voters Brown will need to win in the general.” Brown was elected to the Senate from Massachusetts in a special election in 2010, then lost the seat in 2012 and moved to New Hampshire in December. He faces a primary challenge from former U.S. Sen. Bob Smith and former state Sen. Jim Rubens. McCain also reflected on his time in New Hampshire, where he first campaigned for president in 1999. He won the 2000 presidential primary but lost the nomination to George W. Bush. McCain won the primary again in 2008 on his way to the GOP nomination.

GOP governor’s primary hot in final week BY BOB CHRISTIE

The Associated Press

PHOENIX — The race for the Republican nomination in Arizona’s governor’s primary is down to a final week On Monday, GoDaddy founder Bob Parsons wrote a $1 million check to a political action committee backing his former corporate lawyer, gubernatorial candidate Christine Jones, and Gov. Jan Brewer joined former Mesa Mayor Scott Smith in Prescott for an event backing his candidacy. The day was to wrap up with a candidate forum in northern Arizona attended by four of the six GOP candidates — state Treasurer Doug Ducey and former Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas did not plan to attend. Parsons’ $1 million check to the Better Leaders for Arizona PAC brings his donations to the group to more than $2 million. He said he was putting his money in the race to counter negative ads targeting Jones that he believes are coming from Ducey backers. “I could have very well went the dark money route through a couple of LLCs, and never been disclosed that I was involved in it,” Parsons said in an interview. “She has got dark money that I believe that can be traced to all the lobbyists supporting

Mr. Ducey just attacking her left, right and center. So what I’m doing is, I’m stepping up and helping her fight back.” Ducey spokeswoman Melissa DeLaney said Parsons’ claims were “both unwarranted and false.” Others in the race include Secretary of State Ken Bennett, who continues to make the most of the $754,000 in Clean Elections funding he’s received. Despite being outspent by large amounts by Jones Ducey, Bennett spokesman Matt Roberts said Monday his candidate is still very much in contention. The campaign is relaunching televisions ads this week and doing a large radio buy as well. “The only poll that matters as we know is the one that occurs next Tuesday, and we think we’re in the discussion,” Roberts said. Former Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas also is doling out his Clean Elections funding on campaign ads, while former U.S. Congressman Frank Riggs continues to hold daily events. Smith has scheduled a press event for Tuesday with Brewer and Republican mayors from across the state as he tries to capitalize on what his backers say is his momentum as he seeks to best Ducey, the per-

ceived front-runner. The event was announced as an outside group began running ads targeting Smith and a Mesa man filed a complaint with the secretary of state’s office alleging Smith failed to note trips he took as mayor on his financial disclosure reports. Smith spokesman Drew Sexton said the trips were paid for by the U.S. Conference of Mayors as part of his official duties as the group’s president and were not gifts. In a move some saw as a sign that Ducey thinks he’s ahead of the pack, he’s not attending the final two candidate forums. In addition to Monday’s event in Flagstaff, the Arizona League of Cities and Towns is hosting a forum in Phoenix featuring Democratic candidate Fred DuVal and all the Republicans in the race except Ducey. DeLaney dismissed such speculation, saying he’s had other events planned for some time. But Smith’s backers think he’s in the hunt. And Parsons pointed to a $758,000 check Jones wrote to her own campaign last week as a sign that she thinks she’s in the hunt as well. “And I know Christine Jones well enough to know that if she didn’t think she could win this thing, she wouldn’t be doing that,” Parsons said.

Carondelet to pay $35M to settle false claims charge TUCSON (AP) — Federal authorities say an Arizona nonprofit corporation has agreed to pay $ 35 million to resolve allegations that two of its Tucson hospitals submitting false claims to Medicare and other federal health care programs for nearly seven years. The Carondelet Health Network does business in Tucson as Carondelet St. Mary’s Hospital and Carondelet St. Joseph’s Hospital. Prosecutors say the two hospitals billed Medicare, the Federal Employees Health Benefit Program and the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System for inpatient rehabilitation facility services that weren’t properly reimbursable. They say the patients weren’t

appropriate for inpatient rehabilitation facility services. Prosecutors say the settlement resolves false claim allegations from the hospitals from April 7, 2004 through Dec. 31, 2011. They say it also resolves a whistleblower’s lawsuit that was filed in November 2011.

Arches, Canyonlands national parks ban drones S A LT L A K E C I T Y ( A P ) — Drones are now officially banned in Arches and Canyonlands national parks in southeastern Utah. Kevin Moore, acting chief ranger for the two parks, says the unmanned aircrafts disrupt

wildlife and are an intrusion on visitors looking for tranquility. They have seen an increase in use of drones in the last two years. In June, National Park Service Director Jonathan Jarvis directed all parks to take steps to prohibit the use of the increasingly popular aircraft that are often used to take photos and videos. The agency’s office in Moab, Utah, announced the rule in the two Utah parks Monday. The ban also extends to Hovenweep and Natural Bridges national monuments. Two large national parks, Grand Canyon in Arizona and Zion in Utah, have already changed thei r r u les to ban drones.

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gave the news organization a “sweeping and unauthorized” interview. Immigration advocates have raised concerns about border agents’ use of deadly force against people who throw rocks at them along the Mexican border. When Customs and Border Protection announced in June that Tomsheck was being replaced as head of internal affairs, his departure was greeted as a positive step by those same advocates. Tomsheck says that border politics and internal policy hampered his efforts to investigate shootings. Mark Morgan, FBI deputy assistant director for inspections, has been appointed interim head of the internal affairs office for Customs and Border Protection.

Tuesday, 8/19 LET’S BE COPS [R] DIGITAL 11:10 2:00 4:50 7:40 10:30 THE EXPENDABLES 3 [PG13] DIGITAL 1:00 4:15 7:30 10:45 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY [PG13] 3D 12:50 4:05 7:20 10:20 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY [PG13] DIGITAL 10:30 1:30 4:35 7:50 10:15 THE HUNDREDFOOT JOURNEY [PG] DIGITAL 1:05 4:20 7:25 10:25 ONCE A PRINCESS [NR] DIGITAL 4:00 7:00

INTO THE STORM [PG13] DIGITAL 11:30 2:05 4:40 7:15 9:50 STEP UP: ALL IN [PG13] 3D 10:35 4:45 10:35 STEP UP: ALL IN [PG13] DIGITAL 1:35 7:35 WHAT IF [PG13] 10:55 1:40 4:30 7:10 9:55 HERCULES [PG13] 3D 1:25 HERCULES [PG13] DIGITAL 10:50 10:00 THE GIVER [PG13] DIGITAL 11:05 1:45 4:25 7:05 9:45

WANTED For Probation Violations

NAME: Julio Polanco SEX: Male WEIGHT: 165 HAIR: Black

AGE: 23 RACE: Hispanic HEIGHT: 5’11” EYES: Brown

PLACE OF BIRTH: New York ID MARKS: Tattoo: right forearm-“Savage” OFFENSE: criminal trespass and criminal damage REMARKS: Polanco is believed to be in the Huachuca City area. He has worked as a cook. CAUTION: Polanco absconded from probation on 06/22/12.

PLEASE DO NOT ATTEMPT TO APPROACH HIM. IF YOU SEE HIM PLEASE CALL YOUR NEAREST POLICE DEPARTMENT If you have any information regarding this person, please contact Cochise County Adult Probation at 1-520-432-8812.

With the help of the public we’ve been able to apprehend 68 wanted absconders to date

Doing our part to help keep Sierra Vista safe.

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BY RIK STEVENS

The Associated Press

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McCain campaigns in New Hampshire for Scott Brown

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AP PHOTO/JIM COLE

Former New Hampshire presidential primary winner, U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Az., right, speaks as former U.S. Senator from Massachusetts Scott Brown listens during a town hall meeting Monday in Derry, N.H. McCain is supporting Brown’s bid for a U.S. Senate seat from New Hampshire where he moved to. He’s in a primary contest against former U.S. Sen. Bob Smith and former state Sen. Jim Rubens. The winner of the Sept. 9 primary will face Democratic incumbent Jeanne Shaheen.

WASHINGTON (AP) — A Border Patrol official who was removed from his position in June is accusing the agency of covering up “highly suspect” deaths in clashes along the southern border. James F. Tomsheck tells the Center for Investigative Reporting that at least seven deaths along the border since 2010 were “highly suspect,” according to a story by the non-profit news organization based in California. “In nearly every instance, there was an effort by Border Patrol leadership to make a case to justify the shooti ng versus doi ng a genuine, appropriate review of the information and the facts at hand,” Tomsheck said. Tomsheck was re moved as head of the internal affairs office for U.S. Customs and Border Protection in June. He is still with the agency, working as executive director for national programs. He has filed a whistleblower complaint with the federal Office of Special Counsel. Tomsheck did not return emails or phone messages seeking comment Monday. The Center for Investigative Reporting said Tomsheck


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WEATHER/OBITUARIES/LOCAL

HERALD/REVIEW

BALLOT: Candidates can contest

WEATHER 5-DAY FORECAST FOR SIERRA VISTA

FROM PAGE A1

TODAY

TONIGHT

WEDNESDAY

Drenching t-storms; flood risk

A couple of evening thunderstorms

Variable clouds, a t-storm or two

High 80° RealFeel: 86°

Low 61° RealFeel: 60°

79° 61° RealFeel: 88°/60°

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Variable clouds, a t-storm or two

Mostly sunny, a t-storm in the p.m.

Partly sunny

77°

62°

81°

RealFeel: 78°/62°

64°

84°

RealFeel: 86°/64°

65°

RealFeel: 94°/64°

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

SUBMITTED

REGIONAL WEATHER Snowflake 77/58

Prescott 76/57 Wickenburg 90/72

Phoenix 94/78

Globe 85/66

FROM PAGE A1

Reserve 81/59

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

death came suddenly and unexpectedly. Apparently unrelated to the cancer, Whiteley suffered a cardiac arrest a week ago, on Aug. 12, and died. She left behind many r el at ive s i nc lud i n g fou r d au g hter s a nd 10 g ra ndchi ld ren. She also left a school c o m mu n it y r e e l i n g wit hout her ki nd, persistent presence. Livi n g i n Japa n, Mitchell spoke to her mom almost daily on the phone. “She would tell me about the school and some of the kids that were out there. She just really considered them all her family,” Mitchell said.

SUN AND MOON

‘The school mom’

Safford 88/70

Casa Grande 87/71

Silver City 80/61

Willcox 81/64

Tucson 83/69

Ajo 96/76

WHITELEY: Loved the Wildcats

Show Low 69/52

Coolidge 93/75 Gila Bend 95/78

Betty Whiteley reads to a class of students at Palominas Elementary School. The school’s longtime secretary, Whiteley died suddenly on Aug. 12.

St. Johns 77/58

Payson 76/60

Lordsburg 86/67

Sells 90/70

Tombstone 80/63

Green Valley 84/69 Sierra Vista 80/61 Nogales 78/62

Bisbee 78/61 Douglas 80/63

Cananea 76/58

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

UV INDEX TODAY

ALMANAC

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

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

0.08” 0.22” 0.01” 6.86” 6.61” 9.07” -2.21” -2.46”

Temperature: High Low

88° 66°

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

8am 10am Noon 2pm 4pm

Sunrise today Sunset tonight

5:49 a.m. 7:01 p.m.

New

First

Full

Last

Aug 25

Sep 2

Sep 8

Sep 15

ARIZONA CITIES City

Today Wed. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

City

Casa Grande Flagstaff Globe Grand Canyon Green Valley Holbrook Kingman L. Havasu City Mesa Nogales

87 64 85 68 84 81 88 99 94 78

Phoenix 94 Prescott 76 Safford 88 Sedona 80 Show Low 69 Superior 83 Tombstone 80 Tucson 83 Window Rock 76 Yuma 103

71 49 66 48 69 60 65 82 77 62

t t t t t t t t t t

92 68 86 72 86 82 87 98 94 80

72 49 65 46 68 58 63 78 74 62

t t t t t t t t t t

Today Wed. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 78 57 70 62 52 68 63 69 51 79

t t t t t t t t t pc

96 79 92 82 72 88 80 87 78 100

74 57 68 61 52 67 62 70 52 76

t t t t t t t t t t

U.S. / MEXICO WEATHER TODAY

Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice

Cold Warm Stationary

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

NATIONAL CITIES City

Today Wed. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

City

Today Wed. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boston Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Charlotte, NC Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Kansas City

87 67 87 80 98 82 90 86 75 94 84 87 84 85 88 83 95 86 88 85 81 90 87 89 94 85 94 90

Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Pittsburgh Portland, ME Portland, OR Reno Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, PR Santa Fe Seattle Tampa Washington, DC

97 95 81 92 81 80 92 92 81 96 87 95 83 82 75 81 90 87 90 77 98 76 72 89 84 78 92 85

City

Today Wed. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

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

71 75 91 99 68 75 82 78 85 62 91 90 73 72

64 55 72 62 75 64 64 63 59 77 69 69 59 65 69 66 76 68 62 67 65 71 58 75 77 68 75 72

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

81 66 93 80 97 83 83 80 76 94 86 91 81 84 86 81 96 86 85 89 82 87 82 89 94 86 95 92

63 53 75 62 76 66 58 62 60 78 69 70 58 68 70 64 77 67 60 74 61 70 57 77 79 70 75 75

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

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

Today Wed. Hi Lo W Hi Lo W

91 89 116 90 69 93 109 88 84 84 96 110 65 91

79 72 85 70 50 75 87 80 73 65 60 89 46 60

t 90 78 t s 91 71 s s 115 84 s s 91 72 pc sh 66 49 sh s 94 75 s s 110 86 s t 87 80 r s 85 72 s s 85 64 s s 97 61 s s 116 94 s sh 66 48 pc s 88 58 s

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

74 77 63 78 64 64 73 77 66 75 69 74 66 67 55 57 58 58 73 61 78 69 61 78 56 57 78 70

56 53 78 81 47 66 70 69 77 48 77 79 61 57

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

91 94 82 92 78 84 93 91 82 98 92 95 85 81 77 77 91 85 93 82 96 76 73 89 77 72 92 87

73 76 64 79 64 70 73 77 68 74 73 75 68 66 57 58 59 59 77 63 78 69 60 79 55 54 78 72

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

t 71 56 t s 78 60 s t 91 80 sh pc 101 83 s pc 68 45 pc pc 76 66 pc s 84 67 s r 83 70 sh t 86 77 t r 61 49 s t 91 78 t s 92 79 s pc 76 65 t pc 69 55 pc

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

“She was the most wonderful person. She was kind of like the school mom. She just took care of all of us,” Pa lomi nas ki ndergarten teacher Robin Hodgeson said. “She will be greatly missed for t he f r iend t h at she was.” Si x t h- g rade te acher Johnny Neese not only knew W hiteley, he taught her daughter Brittany when she attended Palominas. “ T h e b ot t o m l i n e with Betty was that she was pretty much the cornerstone of the school, and I don’t take t hat lig ht ly,” Neese said. “Even though she had a large family on her own, I think she considered everybody here a family too.” Darcey Wimer, also a si xth-g rade teacher, is a copy machine jinx and just Monday morning, when the machine got jammed, she thought how, if Whiteley were t here, she would’ve walked in and known just what to do. “ E v e r y b o d y c ou ld r ely on her,” Wimer said. Shau nd a Jacobs, the school’s No Child Left Behind teacher, s a i d W h it e l e y w a s the glue that held the school together. “She would brighten my day with the smile that glistened from her face every day,” Jacobs said. “She touched the hearts of so many that came in contact with her. The parents, children, staf f members loved her dearly.” In her 15 years at Palominas school, kindergarten teacher Deni Austin came to know Whiteley well. When Austin hit hard times, Whiteley was always there to help. When she had her grandchildren, Whiteley was there to hold them. “Betty was the ray of sunlight every morning, she loved the kids and the staff. If someone forgot their lunch or had no lunch money, Betty was there without hesitation to make sure the student had

HOW TO PAY YOUR RESPECTS There will be a a public viewing for Betty Whiteley held at the Hatfield Funeral Home, located at 830 S. Highway 92, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. tonight. A funeral service will be held on Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, located at 2100 Yaqui Street. Following the funeral service, Whiteley will be laid to rest at the Southern Arizona Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery.

lunch,” Austin said. W hiteley also hap pened to love popping bubble wrap. “We k new when a new shipment of supplies had arrived at school, we could hear the ‘popping’ all the way down the hall,” Austin said. “Whenever we had extra bubble wrap we would load Betty’s desk up with it. We waited to see how quickly we could start hea ri ng t he …pop… pop…pop!” B a rba r a C on log ue k n ew W h it e l e y fo r about 10 years, working as a rotating character education teacher and as a special education teacher at Palominas. Whiteley was kind to a l l, depended on by all and liked by all, she said. “Betty was the face, voic e a nd pu l s e o f P a lo m i n a s s c ho ol ,” Conlogue said. Fifth-grade teacher Tim Kearney will rem e m b e r W h i t e l e y, not o n ly for b ei n g a b e aut i f u l p er son , but also for her love of the University of Arizona Wildcats. T h e w ay h e s e e s it, now she’ll have a front row seat to watch t he Wi ldcats’ teams in action. “Every home game, ever y away g a me, every game,” he said. There are no words t h at su m up ever ything one feels towards W hiteley, Palominas school secretary Jessica Maldonado said. “She was a one and only, and there isn’t anyone that can take h e r pl a c e . S h e n o t on ly was t he secre tary at Palominas, but she was the motherly f ig u re to t hose who didn’t have one,” Maldonado said. “She was the nurse that helped heal all wounds even if it was by simply giving a smile reassuring that one will survive. She was the ‘ears’ that listened to not on ly teachers’ life stories but the students’, and made them feel better without even saying a word. “She was the smile that greeted everyone who walked through the Palominas door,” she said.

A fter emerging from 20 minutes of closed-door executive s e s sion , Ch a i r m a n Pat Call summarized the situation. “It turns out that since the county attorney’s office gave an opinion opposite of the opinion that the board had, that the county attorney’s office would not be able to represent the board in court,” he said. “It’s also within the county attorney’s purview to not allow the board of supervisors to go out and hire a n i ndependent attorney to represent us in court. The county attorney, Mr. Rheinheimer, said that he would not approve the board going outside of the county attorney’s office to hire a private attorney to represent us in front of a superior court judge for a declaratory judgement in this matter.” The result of Monday’s special board meeting is that the two candidates will remain on the ballot and it’s up to the candidates to contest that, if they so desire. “It essentially takes the county attorney’s office, in a way, out of the mix at that point, and the candidates are really arguing the case against each other, which is really the way it should be,” County Attorney Ed Rheinheimer said. If that occurs, the county would not object to any order from the court to pay for “reasonable and just” attorneys fees for the prevailing party, said Britt Hanson, chief civil deputy attorney

OBITUARY

for Cochise County. “Your goal was to not see it cost the other candidates anyt hi ng i n at tor neys fees, if I understand correctly, and if they prevail, it won’t cost them anything,” Rheinheimer said to the board of supervisors at the meeting. State law gives authority to the county attorney’s of fice to approve of any outside attorney to represent any office of the county, he said. If his office were to do that, it would still not solve the underlying issue. “It still creates the same conflict, where, if the board were to hire an outside attorney to file for this declaratory judgement, the county attorney’s office would still be in the positions of arguing against what the supervisors’ outside lawyer was arguing in court,” he said. While the supervisors indicated that they understood the position the attorney’s office was taking and why it was doing so, they stood by their previous decision. “I agree, but who loses out here is the equity side of it. Somebody needs to be able to argue that equity mea ns somet hi ng,” Supervisor Richard Searle said. Since the elections office falls under the authority of the board of supervisors, ViceChairman Ann English said the board had an obligation to try to make correct the issue as best it can. “I have a feeling, if I did something wrong, I’m trying to make it right,” English said.

Laura Belle Moutz

July 8, 1950 — August 16, 2013. Laura Belle Moutz, 63, died peacefully in Sierra Vista on Aug. 16, 2014, after a long illness. Laura was born on July 8, 1950, in Fort Riley, Kan. Parents were Robert “Bob” and Letha Priddy Moutz. The Moutz family moved to Sierra Vista in 1955 and lived across from the Geronimo Drive-In Theater. She attended Carmichael schools and graduated from Buena High School in 1968. She is survived by her children, Laura Federspiel, Nancy Blaisdell, Jonathan Mock and Jessica Campbell; grandchildren, Garrett Kopylowski, Sedona E.M. Kopylowski, Anthony J. Mock-Icenhower, Sydney P. Icenhower, Tyler Campbell-Benge, Valerie Benge and Kyle Benge; siblings, Daniel, Richard, Sam, Ralph and Rose Moutz; and many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her mother, Letha in 1996. Laura was employed by the Arizona Department of Economic Security, and enjoyed lunches with the governor. She is remembered as a sweet, kind and gentle person. She loved nature and going to the San Pedro River Reserve. She enjoyed having her children Jonathan and Jessica take her to Schlotzsky’s Deli. She loved seeing her grandchildren. Even toward the end, seeing them still brightened her face. She always kept her sense of humor. She is greatly missed by her family and friends.

ON THIS DATE Today is Tuesday, August 19, 2014. On this date in 1857, the first scheduled mail to go through Arizona arrived in Tucson. On this date in 1904, 2 inches of rain fell in one hour in Globe. Six people drowned and 20 businesses were destroyed. ASSOCIATED PRESS SIERRA VISTA

Sierra Vista Advertising/Editorial . . . . . . . . (520) 458-9440 Sierra Vista Circulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (520) 458-9440 Bisbee Advertising /Circulation . . . . . . . . . . (520)432-2231 (USPC 496-020 and UPSC 0569--40) Published daily, including holidays 102 Fab Avenue, Sierra Vista AZ 85635. Editorial, Advertising, Business and Circulation offices: 102 Fab Avenue, Sierra Vista AZ 85635 12 Main Street, Bisbee AZ 85603 Periodicals postage paid at Sierra Vista AZ 85635 Postmaster: Send address changes to Sierra Vista Herald, 102 Fab Avenue, Sierra Vista AZ 85635 If you missed your paper, call: (520) 458-9440 in Sierra Vista or (520) 432-2231 in Bisbee Entire contents copyrighted August 19, 2014, by Sierra Vista Herald, Inc. No materials in this issue may be reproduced in any manner without expressed written permission of the publishers. Sierra Vista Herald, Vol. 59, No. 316; Bisbee Daily Review, Vol. 116, No. 124.


LOCAL/STATE

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

HERALD/REVIEW

Federal union official opposes fort cuts SHARE YOUR OPINION The public has an opportunity to express their views on the potential loss of 2,700 positions on Fort Huachuca as part of the Supplemental Programmatic Environmental Assessment for Army 2020 Force Structure Realignment — commonly called SPEA. Comments must be made by Monday, Aug. 25, and can be done by email at usarmy.jbsa.aec.nepa@ mail.mil

SIERRA VISTA — Saying the sequestration law is forcing the Army to find ways to cut funds and manpower, a national vice president of the federal employees union, whose district includes Fort Huachuca, wants the law to be ended for national security and economic reasons. In a recent letter to Arizona’s two Republican U.S. Senators – John McCain and Jeff Flake — George E. McCubbin III stated, “I request that you immediately work with your colleagues to overturn the onerous sequester law that is forcing the Army to consider draconian options that are devastating to our national security as well as to your constituents and the local economy … .” Monday, McCubbin, National Vice President for American Federation of Government Employees District 12, told the Herald/Review what some may not realize if the forecast cuts at the southern Arizona Army post — as many as 2,700 military and civil service positions — it could become the basis in a future BRAC to close the fort. The Herald/Review first reported the potential cuts in a March 20 article based on an interview with Maj. Gen. Robert Ashley Jr., commander of the Intelligence Center of Excellence and the fort. McCubbin said more importantly are the high-tech missions on the fort which are critical to defending the nation and are needed because of the continuing and growing tensions in the word.

Gang member arrested after assault MESA (AP) — Authorities say a gang member is in custody for allegedly hitting a man on the head with a beer bottle while yelling racial slurs at a Mesa bar. Bond was set at $10,000 for 28-year-old Joseph David Burgoyne at his initial court appearance Monday. He was arrested early Saturday on suspicion of aggravated assault and gang crimes. Police say Burgoyne is a documented member of a “criminal street gang with white supremacist ideologies.” Burgoyne is accused of yelling racial slurs at a black man at a bar in Mesa before assaulting the victim. Witnesses say Burgoyne continued to yell racial slurs until he left the property.

While AFGE District 12 covers all federal employees in Arizona, California, Hawaii and Nevada, his letters to the two senators are the first ones he has sent, noting he is preparing to send others to U.S. House of Representatives members from Arizona, including Democrat Ron Barber, whose second district includes the fort, seeking their support to rectify the problematic federal sequestration law Congress enacted. In his letter to McCain and Flake he said he wants them to “express your strong opposition to the recently published Supplemental Environmental Assessment for Army 2020 Force Realignment, which assumes the Army will reduce its force structure active duty soldiers with a commensurate reduction in the civilian workforce.” McCubbin said the point will be the same in his letter to Arizona’s members of the U.S. House of Representatives. A retired Border Patrol agent who worked out of Arizona’s Casa Grande Station, he said a problem with the federal government is if they see some reductions of problems, something he experi-

enced in the Border Parol, automatically there is rush to reduce personnel and funds. But in the case cutting the armed forces, “it makes no sense for the Army to plan reductions in the Fort Huachuca military and civilian workforces that are applied in an across-the-board, salami slice fashion Army-wide without regard to mission, military value or ability to reconstitute either the civilian or military force,” his letter states. Based on his figures, if the entire 2,700 position reduction is enacted, “46 percent of the permanent civilian and military Army workforce in Arizona, located at Fort Huachuca will be eliminated … ,” and the yearly loss to the state income will be $193.5 million to $209 million in sales revenue and $2.7 million lost in sales tax, with the area outside the post’s gates suffering the most. Such an impact will be devastating “and the state of Arizona cannot sustain this type of loss because of gridlock in Congress that is causing the Army to reduce its size to levels not seen since before World War II,” McCubbin wrote the two Arizona U.S. senators. His letter to the senators noted he is concerned about the assumptions made in the SPEA and if they are instituted, they “could weaken the fort and make us vulnerable for closure in a BRACtype scenario regardless of our mission or military value … the proposed losses in military and civilian personnel threaten to make our facilities less efficient and less valuable to the soldier we are designed to serve.”

RESCUE: Another incident Aug. 5 FROM PAGE A1 Using a length of rope tied to a tree, the two were able to make their way through the rapidly moving water, which had reached nearly waist-level at its peak, and reach the stranded vehicle about 100 feet from shore. An Arizona Department of Public Safety helicopter provided a spotlight to illuminate the scene while they worked, securing the

man with a life jacket and helmet before guiding him safely back to shore without incident, Noland said. This was the second time that a vehicle became stuck in that same location since the start of the monsoon, the first having occurred Aug. 5. “They don’t think the water is that deep and they can just drive across. They don’t realize it doesn’t take much water to make your car

SV I M

float,” Noland said. Over the last few summers, the search and rescue team has been called out to an average of about five swift water rescues. Noland urged motorists not to take any chances and to obey any posted signs or ba r riers t hat wa r n of f looded pat hs and roadways. “It’s muddy water, so you don’t know how deep it is, the road could be washed out and it could be 5, 10 feet deep,” he said. XNLV167747

BY BILL HESS

bill.hess@svherald.com

Sierra Vista Internal Medicine Specialist in Adult Care

SVIM welcomes Tom Harris, PA-C. Tom is now ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS. Tom Harris, PA-C

520-458-8145

David J. Knapp, M.D.

$PMPOJB EF 4BMVE t 4VJUF " t 4JFSSB 7JTUB ";

Help us

Celebrate the Arts The Sierra Vista Herald/Bisbee Daily Review is going to be publishing a special Tempo issue on Sept. 18th. Kickoff to the Arts Season. This is the eighth year the newspapers are publishing this section. The deadline for material to be submitted is September 2, 2014. As part of this, we are inviting local arts groups to provide information for our listing in the section. Submit your information/images to Features Editor, Janet LaValley at 102 Fab Ave. in Sierra Vista, or by email to janet.lavalley@

svherald.com. Email is the preferab preferable ble method d the Herald/Review would like to receive your you ur material. Feel free to submit as much information as you would like, and feel free to use seperate pages to complete the necessary items if you do submit them in hard copy. If you are submitting by email, please do not put the text in an attachment. Instead, simply put it in the body of an email. If you group would like to submit a photo of an event or of the group itself, emailed photos should be in JPEG format, at least 6” wide and 200 pixels per inch. Pictures will be used on a space-available basis.

Name of Group: How would you describe your group? (circle): BAND | GALLERY | ARTS ORGANIZATION | ARTS CLUB | PERFORMING ARTS | OTHER (please explain) Please provide/email a description of your group:

Please attach/email a list of your organization’s upcoming performances through Sept. 15, 2015. Include date, time, location, admission cost (ticket sales information), and contact information. Public contact information: Name: Address: Website:

Phone Number: Email: Person submitting form:

A7

PUBLIC NOTICES SEARCHABLE ONLINE OR SIGN UP FOR SMART SEARCH Go to www.publicnoticeads.com/az/ To search public notices Statewide or you can sign up for the FREE SMART SEARCH and have Notices delivered to you Via email

THE POWER OF PRINT AND THE ADDED VALUE OF THE INTERNET PUBLIC NOTICES • PUBLIC NOTICES

Today’s Listings Notice of Hearings BORJON-SCOTT, ANTHONY IVON ROSE YBARRA, JULISSA

NOTICE OF HEARING

PUBLIC NOTICE Attorneys for the Department of Child Safety IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF COCHISE In the Matter of: BORJON-SCOTT, ANTHONY IVON ROSE d.o.b. 04/20/2010 BORJON-SCOTT, AIDEN WYATTVICKTORY d.o.b. 08/11/2011 Person(s) under 18 years of age. No. 201400034 DCS’S NOTICE OF HEARING ON DEPENDENCY PETITION (Honorable D. Corey Sanders) TO: RYAN JOHN SCOTT and JOHN DOE (a fictitious name), parents and/ or guardians of the abovenamed children. 1. The Department of Child Safety, (DCS or the Department), by and through undersigned counsel, has filed a Dependency Petition pursuant to Title 8, of the Arizona Revised Statutes, Rules 4.1 and 4.2 of the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure; and Rule 48(D) of the Arizona Rules of Procedure for the Juvenile Court. 2. The Court has set a Publication hearing on the 16th day of OCTOBER, 2014 at 11:00 a.m., at the Cochise County Superior Court, Cochise County Superior Court, Division VI, 100 Quality Hill, Bisbee, Arizona 85603, before the Honorable D. Corey Sanders for the purpose of determining whether any parent or guardian named herein is contesting the allegations in the Petition. 3. You and your children are entitled to have an attorney present at the hearing. You may hire your own attorney or, if you cannot afford an attorney and want to be represented by an attorney, one may be appointed by the Court. 4. You have a right to appear as a party in this proceeding. You are advised that your failure to personally appear in court at the initial hearing, pretrial conference, status conference, or dependency adjudication, without good cause shown, may result in a finding that you have waived your legal rights and have admitted the allegations in the Petition. In addition, if you fail to appear, without good cause, the hearing may go forward in your absence and may result in an adjudication of dependency, termination of your parental rights or the establishment of a permanent guardianship based upon the record and the evidence presented to the court, as well as an order of paternity, custody, or change of custody in a consolidated family law matter and an order for child support if paternity has been established. 5. If you are receiving this Notice by publication, you may obtain a copy of the Dependency Petition, Notice of Hearing, and Temporary Orders by submitting a written request to: ERIC LEVY, Office of the Attorney General, 333 W. Wilcox Drive, Suite 304, Sierra Vista, AZ 85635. The assigned case manager is Heather Slater and may be reached by telephone at (520)459-2965. 6. Requests for reasonable accommodation for persons with disabilities must be made to the court by parties at least three working days in advance of a scheduled court proceeding and can be made by calling (520)432-8520. 7. You have the right to make a request or motion prior to any hearing that the hearing be closed to the public. DATED this 30th day of July, 2014. THOMAS C. HORNE Attorney General ERIC LEVY Assistant Attorney General PUBLISH August 5, 12, 19, 26, 2014 _________________________

PUBLIC NOTICE THOMAS C. HORNE Attorney General ERIC LEVY Assistant Attorney General State Bar No. 026675 CFP/PSS 333 W. Wilcox Drive, Suite 304

Sierra Vista, AZ 85635 (520)4596523 Telephone (520)458-7317 Fax Eric.Levy@azag.gov Attorneys for the Department of Child Safety IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF COCHISE In the Matter of: YBARRA, JULISSA JO d.o.b. 02/27/2007 Person(s) under 18 years of age. No. 201400038 DCS’S NOTICE OF HEARING ON DEPENDENCY PETITION TO: JOHN DOE (a fictitious name), parent and/or guardian of the above- named child. 1. The Department of Child Safety, (DCS or the Department), by and through undersigned counsel, has filed a Dependency Petition pursuant to Title 8, of the Arizona Revised Statutes, Rules 4.1 and 4.2 of the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure; and Rule 48(D) of the Arizona Rules of Procedure for the Juvenile Court. 2. The Court has set a Publication hearing on the 23rd day of OCTOBER, 2014 at 1:30 p.m., at the Cochise County Superior Court, Cochise County Superior Court, Division VI, 100 Quality Hill, Bisbee, Arizona 85603, before the Honorable Donna M. Beumler for the purpose of determining whether any parent or guardian named herein is contesting the allegations in the Petition. 3. You and your child are entitled to have an attorney present at the hearing. You may hire your own attorney or, if you cannot afford an attorney and want to be represented by an attorney, one may be appointed by the Court. 4. You have a right to appear as a party in this proceeding. You are advised that your failure to personally appear in court at the initial hearing, pretrial conference, status conference, or dependency adjudication, without good cause shown, may result in a finding that you have waived your legal rights and have admitted the allegations in the Petition. In addition, if you fail to appear, without good cause, the hearing may go forward in your absence and may result in an adjudication of dependency, termination of your parental rights or the establishment of a permanent guardianship based upon the record and the evidence presented to the court, as well as an order of paternity, custody, or change of custody in a consolidated family law matter and an order for child support if paternity has been established. 5. If you are receiving this Notice by publication, you may obtain a copy of the Dependency Petition, Notice of Hearing, and Temporary Orders by submitting a written request to: ERIC LEVY, Office of the Attorney General, 333 W. Wilcox Drive Suite 304, Sierra Vista, AZ 85635. The assigned case manager is Donna Mehling and may be reached by telephone at (520)459-2965. 6. Requests for reasonable accommodation for persons with disabilities must be made to the court by parties at least three working days in advance of a scheduled court proceeding and can be made by calling (520)432-8520. 7. You have the right to make a request or motion prior to any hearing that the hearing be closed to the public. DATED this 30th day of July, 2014. THOMAS C. HORNE Attorney General ERIC LEVY Assistant Attorney General PUBLISH: August 5, 13, 19, 26 2014

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Sports

B Nadal out of U.S. Open Defending champion pulls out due to wrist injury Page B6

Sports Editor: Matt Hickman 515-4612 sports@svherald.com Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Simms, Dungy may not use ‘Redskins’ on TV BY BARRY WILNER

AP Pro Football Writer

KRISTI O’BRIEN•SPECIAL TO THE HERALD/REVIEW

Brandon Schilling celebrates his Trophy Dash victory Saturday at Tucson Speedway. The Super Late Model Main Event featured 19 cars competing for the checkered flag. Dylan Jones took the win. Schilling finished fourth in the main event.

Weather permitted Rain holds off for action-packed night of racing entertaining all at Tucson Speedway BY KRISTI O’BRIEN

COMPLETE RESULTS, B3

Special to the Herald/Review

TUCSON — Auto racing appeals to the young and the old. Whether sitting in the stands cheering on a favorite racer, or sitting behind the wheel chasing the checkered flag — the sport has no age limit. Roy Cates, 77, watched Saturday as a field of Bandolero drivers, some only 8-years-old, gave it their all in the main event at Tucson Speedway. Cates knows the dedication that each of the young drivers gives their sport. Cates built cars for the track back in the 70s. His brother raced. “I built the cars and he’d run them,” Roy Cates said. Roy and Ray Cates have many wins to their credit which has landed them on the Speedway’s Hall of Fame. Bandolero driver Dezel West took the checkered flag with Roy Cates, a veteran in the sport, looking on. A field of Late Models followed Josh Strango onto the track for the main event. Rick Butler, from fourth, took the early lead, but soon lost it to Brad Moyer. By lap three, Paul Banghart had made his way from the back of the pack to contend with Butler and Moyer for the lead. With Butler on the outside, and Banghart on the inside, the three raced three wide until lap four when Blake Leuth spun in turn four. With nowhere to go, John Lashley hit Leuth causing major damage to both cars. Lashley was able

to continue the race, Leuth became a specatator. Banghart and Butler restarted side by side. Moyer looked on from third as the two battled it out until lap eight when Banghart took the lead. He held on to the lead for his second victory of the year. In the Hornet division, Brandon Olds and Carlos Giordanelli put on a show battling for the top spot. Giordanelli held his line as Olds tried to take the lead. Contact was made and Olds headed to the pits with a flat tire. Giordanelli opened a sizeable gap on the field before taking the checkered flag. The top spot in the Legends feature changed hands a few times before Dustin Ash took over on lap 15 leading the field to the checkered flag. Nineteen Super Late Models lined up to race 50 laps with Matt Levin in the pole position. By lap two, Curtis Lansing had taken the lead with Joe Paladenic and Levin battling for second. Contact was made sending Paladenic spinning on the backstretch. Track rules send the spinner to the back, leaving Paladenic with 35 laps to work his way back up to the front. On lap 16 it was a three-wide battle for third with Brandon Schilling, Ron Norman and Dylan Jones. It was Jones who had the better of the fight and got to work on Levin.

Coming into lapped traffic on lap 27, Levin and Jones got together on the frontstretch. Both drivers were able to resume the race from the back of the field. Norman and Lansing raced side by side for the lead. With five to go, Jones was back in contention making it a three-way battle for the top spot. Jones took over on lap 47 and led the field to the checkered flag. Teammates John Nahooppi and Ray Mros led a 15-car field of Pro Stocks around for the main event. Ken Hunt led the field into lap two, while Nahooppi and Jason Davis battled for second. Alex Flores took over the lead, but Hunt used lapped traffic to reclaim his position on lap 10. Flores got the lead back on lap 17, taking his second victory of the year. David Levitt had the pole in his No. 28 Modified for the 40-lap feature race. By lap two, Levitt was fighting off Keith Lopez and Will Hunholz. By lap three, Hunholz was the new leader pulling away from the field. Lopez dove to the inside on lap 22 taking second. Levitt gave it everything he had on the final lap trying to pass Lopez, but settled for a third-place finish. Racing resumes on Sept. 6 with the Minuteman 50 sponsored by the Arizona Army National Guard and KFFN Radio. Featured will be the Super Late Models in a double points race, Pro Stocks, Modifieds and Hornets. For information, visit www.tucsonspeedway.com.

NEW YORK — Two influential NFL voices — including CBS lead analyst Phil Simms, who will handle Washington’s Week 4 game — said Monday they likely won’t use the term “Redskins” when discussing the franchise. “My very first thought is it will be Washington the whole game,” Simms told The Associated P ress on Monday. Si m ms wi l l work t he T hu rsd ay ni g ht package the network acquired this season and will have GiantsRedskins on Sept. 25. He isn’t taking sides in the debate over whether Washington’s nickname is offensive or racist. But he says he is sensitive to the complaints about the name, and his instincts now are to not use Redskins in his announcing. “I never rea l ly thought about it, and then it came up and it made me think about i t ,” S i m m s a d d e d . “ T here a re a lot of things that can come up in a broadcast, and I am sensitive to this.” His broadcast partner, Jim Nantz, says it is “not my job to take a stance.” NBC’s Tony Dungy, one of the most promin e nt voic e s i n t h e league as a Super Bowlwinning coach and now as a studio commentator, plans to take the same route as Simms. “I will personally try not to use Redskins and refer to them as Washing ton,” Dung y said in an email. “Personal opinion for me, not the network.” CBS is allowing its announcers to decide on their own whether to call the team the Redskins. So is Fox, which handles the NFC and will televise most of Washington’s games. “As long as their nickname is the Redskins, I?l l continue to cal l them the Redskins,” said Hall of Famer Troy Aikman, the lead analyst for Fox.

Cardinals DT Dockett tears ACL in practice, out for season BY BOB BAUM

The AP Sports Writer

GLENDALE — Arizona Cardinals defensive tackle Darnell Dockett, one of the most durable players in the NFL over the past decade, tore the ACL in his right knee during practice Monday and will undergo season-ending surgery. The team said the extent of the injury was revealed in an MRI. The 6-foot-4, 290-pound Dockett has missed only two games in 10 NFL seasons. He has started 156 of the 158 games in which he appeared. Dockett was hurt in an 11-on-11 drill. He limped away but had to be helped onto a cart. Dockett lay on his back as he was carted off the field. Before the extent of the injury was known, defensive tackle Calais Campbell talked about the importance of Dockett to a defense that was ranked sixth in the league last season. “He’s a great player, a guy we count on day in and day out to be a leader and take us where we want to go,” Campbell said. Dockett, Campbell and nose tackle Dan Williams formed a formidable defensive front that helped the Cardinals rank first against the run.

PHOTO BY ROB SCHUMACHER/THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC

Cardinals defensive end Darnell Dockett is attended while down in pain during NFL football training camp Monday in Glendale. Dockett left the field on a cart. Two of Dockett’s teammates on Arizona’s 2009 Super Bowl team were quick to tweet their support. “I literally been sick to my stomach for the past couple hours thinking about (Dockett), one of my closest friends,” Chicago safety Adrian Wilson said. “Speedy recovery my friend.” New York Giants safety Antrel Rolle wrote “everyone plz say a prayer for one of my best friends and wish strength and a speedy recovery plz. No injury will keep him down.”

Dockett is a three-time Pro Bowl selection and four-time team captain. “I played against him for three of those years when I was in Seattle,” Cardinals tight end John Carlson said. “He’s a beast.” Dockett has spent his entire career with Arizona. He and Larry Fitzgerald are the longest-tenured players on the squad. Both were drafted by the Cardinals in 2004 — Fitzgerald in the first round out of Pittsburgh, Dockett in the third round out of Florida State. Dockett played in his first 104 games before a shoulder sidelined him for one contest in 2010. He missed another game in 2012 with a hamstring injury. The knee injury is another blow to the already-depleted middle of Arizona’s defense. Inside linebackers Karlos Dansby and Daryl Washington, the heart of the unit a year ago, are gone. Dansby signed a free-agent contract with Cleveland. Washington is suspended for the season for violating the league’s substance abuse policy. Arizona could, at least, get a bit of good news later this week when safety Tyrann Mathieu is taken off the physically unable to perform list. He is coming back from surgery to re-

pair a torn ACL and LCL. “Praying for my brother,” Mathieu said in a tweet. The vocal, emotional Dockett had talked about the optimism of the coming season, saying that anything short of the playoffs would be a big disappointment. The Cardinals were 10-6 last year, in Bruce Arians’ first season as head coach, but failed to make the playoffs. The injury will further test the skills of defensive coordinator Todd Bowles. Frostee Rucker moved into Dockett’s spot with the first unit for the remainder of Monday’s practice. Rucker, an eight-year NFL veteran, appeared in all 16 games for Arizona last season, one as a starter. He started all 16 games for Cleveland in 2012. Others who could play the position are third-round draft pick Kareem Martin out of North Carolina and fifth-round draft pick Ed Stinson out of Alabama. The team also might look at the free-agent market and could pick up someone when other teams make late cuts. Earlier on Monday, Arians criticized the play of that very defensive front in Saturday’s 30-28 loss at Minnesota.


B2

BASEBALL

HERALD/REVIEW

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore New York Toronto Tampa Bay Boston

W 71 63 64 61 56

L 52 59 61 63 68

Kansas City Detroit Cleveland Chicago Minnesota

W 69 66 62 59 55

L 55 56 61 66 68

Los Angeles Oakland Seattle Houston Texas

W 73 73 67 52 48

L 50 51 57 73 76

East Division Pct GB WCGB .577 — — .516 7½ 3 .512 8 3½ .492 10½ 6 .452 15½ 11 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .556 — — .541 2 — .504 6½ 4½ .472 10½ 8½ .447 13½ 11½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .593 — — .589 ½ — .540 6½ — .416 22 15½ .387 25½ 19

L10 7-3 5-5 3-7 6-4 6-4

Str W-2 W-2 L-1 L-2 L-2

Home 34-26 29-29 33-26 28-34 29-34

Away 37-26 34-30 31-35 33-29 27-34

L10 8-2 4-6 5-5 4-6 4-6

Str W-2 L-1 L-1 L-1 L-2

Home 33-28 33-29 37-24 31-30 26-33

Away 36-27 33-27 25-37 28-36 29-35

L10 6-4 3-7 7-3 5-5 3-7

Str W-1 L-5 L-1 W-1 W-1

Home 41-23 40-21 34-32 29-36 23-38

Away 32-27 33-30 33-25 23-37 25-38

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Monday’s Games Philadelphia 4, Seattle 1 L.A. Angels 4, Boston 2 Baltimore 8, Chicago White Sox 2 Kansas City 6, Minnesota 4 Tuesday’s Games Houston at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Seattle at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. Detroit at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Texas at Miami, 4:10 p.m. Baltimore at Chicago White Sox, 5:10 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Toronto at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. Kansas City at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Oakland, 7:05 p.m.

Washington Atlanta Miami New York Philadelphia

W 70 65 62 59 55

L 53 60 62 67 70

Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago

W 70 67 64 61 54

L 55 57 61 64 70

Los Angeles San Francisco San Diego Arizona Colorado

W 70 65 58 53 49

L 56 58 65 72 75

East Division Pct GB WCGB .569 — — .520 6 1 .500 8½ 3½ .468 12½ 7½ .440 16 11 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .560 — — .540 2½ — .512 6 2 .488 9 5 .435 15½ 11½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .556 — — .528 3½ — .472 10½ 7 .424 16½ 13 .395 20 16½

L10 8-2 6-4 7-3 4-6 3-7

Str W-7 W-4 W-2 L-2 W-1

Home 38-24 37-28 36-30 30-32 27-36

Away 32-29 28-32 26-32 29-35 28-34

L10 7-3 6-4 2-8 2-8 5-5

Str W-4 W-2 L-6 L-3 W-2

Home 34-28 37-26 39-25 32-29 28-31

Away 36-27 30-31 25-36 29-35 26-39

L10 4-6 4-6 6-4 4-6 4-6

Str L-3 W-2 L-1 L-3 W-2

Home 30-30 32-32 34-27 25-39 31-31

Away 40-26 33-26 24-38 28-33 18-44

Monday’s Games Chicago Cubs 4, N.Y. Mets 1 Washington 5, Arizona 4, 11 innings Atlanta 7, Pittsburgh 3 Philadelphia 4, Seattle 1 St. Louis 6, Cincinnati 5, 10 innings Tuesday’s Games Arizona at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. Seattle at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. Texas at Miami, 4:10 p.m. San Francisco at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m. Toronto at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. Cincinnati at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. Kansas City at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Oakland, 7:05 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.

Dbacks rally in ninth, fall to Nationals in 11 BY HARVEY VALENTINE

The Associated Press

WA S H I N G T O N — Arizona Diamondbacks manager Kirk Gibson’s description of the decisive inning Monday night amounted to a contest between youth and experience. Experience won. Adam LaRoche hit a game-winning solo home r u n wit h t wo outs in the 11th inning to help the Washington Nationals beat the Diamondbacks 5-4 Monday night for their seventh straight win. LaRoche’s game-ending shot came after the first three Diamondback s re ache d ba se against winning pitcher Craig Stammen (3-4) in the top of the 11th, but Arizona failed to score. “We had some young guys up there,” Gibson said. “They didn’t get it done and they had a veteran guy in LaRoche. He’s a good breaking ball hitter, and got one hung a little bit and he hit it out.” Stammen struck out 23-year-old Jake Lamb and 24 -year-old Didi Gregorius before pinch

hitter Cliff Pennington grounded out. “We missed our opportunity, me striking out instead of putting the ball in play,” Gregorius said. Gibson was quick to point out the duo’s successes Monday night, as they combined to drive in three runs, t wo on a Gregorius homer. “You’ve got to give them credit. They both contributed,” he said. “They’re younger, and it’s kind of an excitable moment and they’ll get better the more times they go through it.” It was the third walkoff win in as many days for N L -East leadi ng Washington. LaRoche sent a 3-1 pitch from Will Harris (0-3) off the wall in the back of the Nationals bullpen and was mobbed by his teammates at home plate. “I got every bit of it, I did,” LaRoche said after his first career walk-off homer. A rizona tied it 4 - 4 when David Pera lt a led off the ninth with a solo homer off Tyler Clippard. Washington trailed 3-2 when Denard Span

ANGELS 4, RED SOX 2 Los Angeles

Boston

Los Angeles Boston

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

h 2 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 7

002 000

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

B.Holt rf Pedroia 2b D.Ortiz dh Cespds lf Napoli 1b Mdlrks 3b Bogarts ss Betts cf Vazquz c

ab 4 5 3 5 4 3 4 3 4

Totals

35 2 9 2

000 100

r 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

h bi 21 20 20 01 00 00 00 10 20

020—4 001—2

E_Tazawa 2 (3). DP_Los Angeles 1, Boston 1. LOB_Los Angeles 5, Boston 12. 2B_Calhoun (23), Trout (34), D.Ortiz (24). CS_Aybar (9), Freese (3). Los Angeles C.Wilson W,10-8 Morin H,8 Salas H,5 Grilli H,7 Jepsen S,1-3

IP

H

R

5 1-3 2-3 1 1 1

5 1 1 0 2

1 0 0 0 1

Boston Workman L,1-7 Tazawa Mujica WP_Tazawa.

7 1 1

6 1 0

ER BB SO 1 0 0 0 1

2 2 0

5 1 0 0 0

2 0 0

5 0 3 0 1

2 5 2 2 0 0

Umpires_Home, Mike Muchlinski; First, Tom Woodring; Second, Mike Winters; Third, Andy Fletcher. T_3:22. A_35,170 (37,499).

CARDINALS 6, REDS 5, 10 INNINGS,

Cincinnati ab BHmltn cf 4 Bruce rf 5 Frazier 3b 4 Mesorc c 4 Ludwck lf 5 Phillips 2b 4 Ondrsk p 0 B.Pena 1b 4 Cozart ss 4 Leake p 2 Ju.Diaz p 0 Heisey ph 1 MParr p 0 Negron 2b 0 SFrmn p 0 Maness p 0 Bourjos cf 0 Totals 37

St. Louis r 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

h 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8

bi 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

MCrpnt 3b Wong 2b Hollidy lf MAdms 1b JhPerlt ss Przyns c Tavers rf Rosnthl p Grenwd p Jay cf-rf Mstrsn p SRonsn ph CMrtnz p Descals ph

Totals

ab 5 5 4 5 5 4 4 0 0 4 1 1 0 1

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

h bi 10 00 21 31 32 11 10 00 00 10 00 00 00 11

39 6 13 6

Cincinnati 000 040 001 St. Louis 201 000 110 One out when winning run scored.

0—5 1—6

E_Pierzynski (2). DP_Cincinnati 2, St. Louis 1. LOB_ Cincinnati 8, St. Louis 7. 2B_Bruce (20), B.Pena (17), Cozart (16), Leake (2), M.Carpenter (30), Ma.Adams 2 (28), Jh.Peralta (32), Descalso (7). HR_Bruce (14). SB_B.Hamilton (46). CS_Taveras (1). Cincinnati Leake Ju.Diaz M.Parra Ondrusek L,3-3

IP

H

R

7 1 1 1-3 0

8 2 0 3

4 1 0 1

St. Louis Masterson 5 5 4 C.Martinez 2 1 0 S.Freeman 2-3 1 0 Maness 1-3 0 0 Rosenthal BS,5-41 1 1 1 Greenwood W,2-1 1 0 0 Ondrusek pitched to 3 batters in the 10th.

CUBS 4, METS 1 Chicago

Chicago New York

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

4 1 0 1

1 0 0 0

5 0 1 0

4 0 0 0 1 0

2 0 2 0 1 0

5 2 1 0 1 0

h 0 1 2 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 9

000 000

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

ab Grndrs rf 4 DnMrp 2b 4 DWrght 3b 4 Duda 1b 3 dArnad c 4 dnDkkr lf 2 Black p 0 Mejia p 0 Lagars cf 3 Flores ss 3 CTorrs p 1 Niese ph 1 Evelnd p 0 Totals

001 100

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

h bi 10 10 00 11 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

30 1 4 1

012—4 000—1

IP

H

R

7 1 1

3 0 1

1 0 0

1 0 0

2 3 0 2 0 2

5 1-3 2 2-3 1

3 2 2 0 2

0 1 1 0 2

0 1 1 0 2

2 0 1 1 0

Chicago Hendricks W,5-1 N.Ramirez H,12 H.Rondon S,18-22 New York C.Torres Eveland BS,1-2 Carlyle L,1-1 Black Mejia PB_d'Arnaud.

ER BB SO

6 1 3 1 0

Umpires_Home, Adrian Johnson; First, Greg Gibson; Second, Phil Cuzzi; Third, Will Little.

Seattle h 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6

bi 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

Philadelphia ab 5 2 4 2 4 3 0 0 3 4 3 1

Revere cf Ruiz c Utley 2b Howard 1b Byrd rf Ruf lf Giles p Papeln p Asche 3b ABlanc ss JWllms p GSizmr lf

Totals

000 030

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

h bi 20 00 00 10 11 20 00 00 10 13 00 00

31 4 8 4

010—1 00x—4

DP_Seattle 1, Philadelphia 1. LOB_Seattle 7, Philadelphia 11. 2B_Ackley 2 (24), Byrd (24), Ruf (3). HR_A. Blanco (1). SB_Revere (36). CS_Morrison (1). Seattle Elias L,9-10 Leone Wilhelmsen Furbush Rodney

ab Heywrd rf 4 ASmns ss 5 FFrmn 1b 4 J.Upton lf 5 CJhnsn 3b 5 LaStell 2b 4 Gosseln 2b 1 Laird c 5 Bonifac cf 3 ESantn p 3 Avilan p 0 Hale p 0 Doumit ph 1 Russell p 0 Totals 40

r h 1 3 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 7 15

600 011

bi 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 6

GPolnc rf JHrrsn ss NWalkr 2b RMartn c PAlvrz 1b SMarte cf Snider lf Morel 3b Worley p I.Davis ph JGomz p Axford p JuWlsn p GSnchz ph Totals

000 100

ab 5 4 3 2 4 4 4 4 1 1 0 0 0 1 33

r 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

h bi 00 10 21 00 00 32 20 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 93

010—7 000—3

E_N.Walker (4), J.Harrison (5). DP_Atlanta 2, Pittsburgh 2. LOB_Atlanta 9, Pittsburgh 7. 2B_S. Marte (22), Snider (7), Worley (1). HR_Heyward (10), A.Simmons (6), N.Walker (17), S.Marte 2 (8). S_Worley. SF_Heyward. Atlanta E.Santana W,13-6 Avilan H,8 Hale H,4 Russell Pittsburgh Worley L,5-3 J.Gomez Axford Ju.Wilson WP_E.Santana.

IP

H

R

ER BB SO

5 1-3 1 2-3 2

9 0 0 0

3 0 0 0

3 0 0 0

2 0 1 0

4 0 0 1

6 1 1-3 2-3 1

9 4 0 2

6 1 0 0

5 1 0 0

2 0 0 0

8 0 1 1

T_3:00. A_31,669 (38,362).

PHILLIES 4, MARINERS 1 r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

Pittsburgh

Umpires_Home, Angel Hernandez; First, Vic Carapazza; Second, Paul Nauert; Third, Larry Vanover.

T_2:53. A_23,271 (41,922).

ab AJcksn cf 4 Ackley lf 4 Cano 2b 4 KMorls 1b 3 Rodney p 0 Seager 3b 3 Zunino c 4 Morrsn rf-1b 3 CTaylr ss 2 BMiller ph 1 Elias p 2 Leone p 0 Wlhlms p 0 EnChvz ph 1 Furush p 0 Denorfi rf 0 Totals 31

Atlanta

Atlanta Pittsburgh

LOB_Chicago 9, New York 4. 2B_Rizzo (20), Dan. Murphy (34). HR_J.Baez (5), Rizzo (28), Duda (22). CS_den Dekker (3).

Seattle 000 Philadelphia 001

ER BB SO

BRAVES 7, PIRATES 3

New York

ab Alcantr cf 4 J.Baez 2b 5 Rizzo 1b 4 SCastro ss 4 Valuen 3b 4 Ruggin rf 4 Castillo c 3 Szczur lf 3 Coghln ph-lf 1 Hndrck p 3 NRmrz p 0 Sweeny ph 1 HRndn p 0 Carlyle p 0 Niwnhs lf 1 Totals 36

IP

H

R

4 2 1 2-3 1-3

3 3 1 1 0

1 3 0 0 0

ER BB SO 1 3 0 0 0

Philadelphia Je.Williams W,1-0 7 3 1 1 Giles 1 2 0 0 Papelbon S,29-32 1 1 0 0 Je.Williams pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.

6 1 0 0 0

4 2 1 1 0

3 4 0 3 0 1

ORIOLES 8, WHITE SOX 2 Baltimore

Chicago

ab Markks rf 5 Pearce 1b 5 Flahrty 3b 0 A.Jones cf 5 N.Cruz lf 3 Lough ph-lf 1 DYong dh 5 JHardy ss 5 C.Davis 3b-1b 3 CJosph c 2 Schoop 2b 4 Totals 38 Baltimore Chicago

r h 2 3 0 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 2 2 1 0 1 0 1 1 8 12

010 000

bi 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 3 8

De Aza lf AlRmrz ss JAreu 1b A.Dunn dh AGarci rf Gillaspi 3b Flowrs c JrDnks cf GBckh 2b

ab 3 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3

Totals

29 2 3 2

011 000

r 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h bi 00 10 00 00 12 00 00 10 00

050—8 200—2

LOB_Baltimore 7, Chicago 1. 2B_Pearce 2 (19), D.Young (10), Schoop (13), Al.Ramirez (25). HR_Markakis (11), N.Cruz (32), J.Hardy (7). CS_Jor. Danks (2).

Trainer’s room Dia mondbacks : SS Chris Owings, on this disabled list wit h a strained left shoulder, began a rehab assignment Sunday with the team’s Arizona Rookie League affiliate, going 2 for 3. N a t i o n a l s : We r t h (sore shou lder) was in the starting lineup for the first time since Au g. 10. . OF Nat e McL out h, out si nc e Aug. 2 with right shoulder inflammation, was scheduled to undergo an Arthrogram — an MRI procedure that involves dye being injected into the joint — on Monday to help determine the extent of his injury.

Up next Diamondbacks: R H Chase Anderson (7-4, 3.16) is 2-0 with a 2.19 ER A in his last si x starts. Nationals: R H Ste phen Strasburg (9-10, 2.53) pitches Tuesday at Nationals Park, where he’s 7-2 with a 2.41 ERA this season. NATIONALS 5, DIAMONDBACKS 4, 11 INNINGS, Arizona ab Inciart cf 4 A.Hill 2b 4 DPerlt rf 5 Trumo lf 4 MMntr c 4 Pachec 1b 4 Lamb 3b 3 Gregrs ss 5 Nuno p 2 Paul ph 1 Ziegler p 0 OPerez p 0 AlMart ph 1 Stites p 0 Pnngtn ph 1 Harris p 0 Totals 38

H

R

7 2

3 0

2 0

ER BB SO 2 0

0 5 0 2

Chicago Sale L,10-3 6 8 3 Belisario 1 2-3 1 1 Surkamp 0 0 1 Lindstrom 0 3 3 Cleto 1 1-3 0 0 Surkamp pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.

3 1 1 3 0

2 0 0 1 0

8 1 0 0 2

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

h 1 0 1 1 3 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9

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

Washington ab 4 5 4 5 3 4 4 4 2 0 1 0 0 1 0

Span cf Rendon 3b Werth rf LaRoch 1b Dsmnd ss Harper lf WRams c ACarer 2b Zmrmn p Thrntn p Frndsn ph Clipprd p Storen p Hairstn ph Stmmn p Totals

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

h bi 10 11 11 11 00 10 22 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

37 5 8 5

Arizona 000 010 021 00—4 Washington000 000 220 01—5 Two outs when winning run scored. DP_Washington 2. LOB_Arizona 8, Washington 3. 2B_Inciarte (9), Span (34). 3B_Rendon (6). HR_D. Peralta (6), Gregorius (5), LaRoche (19), W.Ramos (6). SB_Inciarte (9). CS_Span (5). S_Pacheco. SF_Lamb, Werth. Arizona Nuno Ziegler BS,8-9 O.Perez Stites Harris L,0-3

IP

H

R

7 1 1 1 2-3

5 2 0 0 1

2 2 0 0 1

ER BB SO 2 2 0 0 1

2 0 0 0 0

7 1 2 1 1

Washington Zimmermann 7 4 3 3 Thornton 1 0 0 0 Clippard BS,4-5 1 2 1 1 Storen 1 1 0 0 Stammen W,3-4 1 2 0 0 Zimmermann pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.

3 0 0 1 1

2 1 0 1 2

Umpires_Home, Bob Davidson; First, John Tumpane; Second, Bill Welke; Third, James Hoye. T_3:16. A_21,292 (41,408).

ROYALS 6, TWINS 4 Kansas City

Minnesota

ab Aoki rf 4 L.Cain rf 1 Infante 2b 4 S.Perez c 3 Kratz ph-c 2 BButler 1b 4 AGordn lf 4 Wlngh dh 5 Mostks 3b 5 AEscor ss 3 JDyson cf 3 Totals 38 Kansas City Minnesota

IP Baltimore B.Norris W,11-7 Brach

made it 1-0.

r h 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 2 0 2 0 2 1 3 0 1 1 0 1 1 6 13

000 000

bi 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 6

DaSntn cf Dozier 2b Mauer 1b KVargs dh Arcia rf Plouffe 3b Parmel lf Fryer c KSuzuk ph EdEscr ss

ab 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 1 2

Totals

34 4 7 4

030 000

r 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0

h bi 10 00 10 10 21 13 10 00 00 00

111—6 103—4

DP_Minnesota 1. LOB_Kansas City 10, Minnesota 4. 2B_A.Gordon (29). HR_Kratz 2 (5), Arcia (12), Plouffe (9). SB_Da.Santana (12). Kansas City J.Vargas W,10-5 W.Davis Crow G.Holland S,38-40

IP

H

R

7 1 1-3 2-3

4 0 3 0

1 0 3 0

ER BB SO 1 0 3 0

1 0 0 0

3 1 0 0

HBP_by Elias (Utley), by Je.Williams (C.Taylor).

HBP_by B.Norris (De Aza), by Surkamp (C.Davis).

Umpires_Home, Tim Timmons; First, Tim Welke; Second, Todd Tichenor; Third, Clint Fagan.

Umpires_Home, Lance Barksdale; First, Kerwin Danley; Second, Ron Kulpa; Third, Mark Ripperger.

Umpires_Home, Tripp Gibson; First, Chris Guccione; Second, Eric Cooper; Third, Tom Hallion.

Minnesota May L,0-2 4 2-3 7 3 3 4 1 Swarzak 3 1-3 4 2 2 0 2 Pressly 1 2 1 1 1 0 Umpires_Home, Chris Segal; First, Dan Iassogna; Second, David Rackley; Third, Fieldin Culbreth.

T_3:19. A_42,973 (45,399).

T_2:52. A_28,102 (43,651).

T_3:02. A_17,686 (40,615).

T_3:09. A_25,559 (39,021).

HBP_by M.Parra (Bourjos), by Masterson (Leake). WP_Leake, Masterson.

Lindstrom pitched to 4 batters in the 8th.

AP PHOTO/LUIS M. ALVAREZ

Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Vidal Nuno throws against the Washington Nationals during the first inning of a baseball game, Monday in Washington.

Pittsburgh continues slide with 7-3 loss PITTSBURGH (AP) — Jason Heyward and Andrelton Simmons homered to begin a six-run first inning, and the Braves beat the sliding Pirates for their fourth consecutive victory, 7-3. The early outburst was enough for Ervin Santana, who allowed t h ree solo homers among nine hits in 5 1-3 innings. Santana (13-6) improved to 8-1 over his past 10 starts. Pittsburgh has lost six in a row. Starling Marte went deep twice, and Neil Walker added a homer that became the first to reach the Allegheny River beyond right field at PNC Park this season.

Cubs 4, Mets 1 NEW YORK (AP) — Kyle Hendricks and two relievers held New York to four or fewer hits for the fifth straight game, Anthony Rizzo and Javier Baez hit long homers, and the Cubs rallied for a victory over the Mets. Hendricks (5-1) gave up just three hits in seven innings, allowing only Lucas Duda’s home run in the fourth. T he rookie righthander won his fourth straight start — yielding four earned runs over 29 1-3 innings.

Angels 4, Red Sox 2 BOST ON (A P) — Mike Trout and Albert Pujols hit consecutive RBI doubles, and the Angels extended their AL West lead with a victory over the Red Sox. It was the fifth win in six games for the Angels, who moved a half-game ahead of idle Oakland. David Ortiz reached base four times with a double, single and two walks for the Red Sox, who have lost three of four after winning four straight. Angels starter C.J. Wilson (10-8) labored through 5 1-3 innings, giving up one run and five hits with five walks and five strikeouts. B r a ndon Workman (1-7) lost his sixth straight start, giving up two runs and six hits in seven innings.

Phillies 4, Mariners 1

PHILADELPHIA (A P) — Jerome Williams took a three-hitter into the eighth inning, Andres Blanco hit his first homer in three years, and the Phillies beat the Mariners in an interleague game. Making his second start since joining the Phillies, Williams (1-0) allowed one run and three hits in seven-plus innings. Blanco connected for a three-run shot off reliever Dominic Leone in the fifth to give the Phillies a 4-0 lead. It was his first home run since July 1, 2011.

Cardinals 6, Reds 5, 10 innings ST. LOU IS (A P) — Jhonny Peralta’s 10thinning single, his third hit of the game, drove in the winning run to give the Cardinals a victory over the Reds. Jay Bruce homered, doubled and knocked in four runs for the Reds, giving him nine RBIs in four games. Brandon Phillips returned from le f t t hu mb su r ger y wearing a brace and was 0 for 4 with a walk. Logan Ondrusek (3-3) entered with one out in the 10th and gave up consecutive singles to Matt Holliday, Matt Adams and Peralta. Ondrusek (strained right shoulder) was activated from the disabled list earlier in the day.

Royals 6, Twings 4 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Erik Kratz homered twice after replacing an ailing Salvador Perez, a n d J a s o n Va r g a s pitched seven strong innings to lead the firstplace Royals to a victory over the Twins. Vargas (10-5) allowed one run on four this and struck out three, but had his scoreless innings streak snapped at 17 when Oswaldo Arcia hit a solo homer in the seventh. Perez had two hits and two RBIs before leaving in the seventh because of discomfort in his right knee, helping the Royals win for the 21st time in 26 games.

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doubled with one-out in the eighth against Brad Ziegler and Anthony Rendon followed with a triple to tie it. Jayson Werth then scored Rendon with a sacrifice fly. Miguel Montero had three hits for Arizona, and rookie Ender Inciarte extended his hitting streak to 18 games. Arizona had taken the lead in the top of the eighth. Lamb drew a lead-off walk off Jordan Zimmermann, and Gregorius sent a 3-2 fastball into the Nationals bullpen for his fifth home run. Wilson Ramos had given Washing ton a 2 -1 lead with a two run homer off Arizona starter Vidal Nuno in the seventh. Nu n o, w i n le s s i n eight starts with the Diamondbacks, pitched well, allowing two runs and five hits over seven innings. Zimmermann went seven-plus innings, allowing three runs on four hits. In the fifth, the first t wo Di a mondback s r e ache d ba s e v i a a wa l k a nd a si n g le. Jordan Pacheco bunt the runners over, and Lamb’s sacri f ice f ly


SPORTS

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

SPORTS ON TV WNBA PLAYOFFS

All times subject to blackout and change

CYCLING 12:30 p.m., NBCSN — USA Pro Challenge, stage 2, Aspen to Mount Crested Butte, Colo. LITTLE LEAGUE WORLD SERIES 9 a.m., ESPN — World Series, consolation, Vancouver, British Columbia vs. Nashville, Tennessee, at South Williamsport, Pa. 12 p.m., ESPN — World Series, elimination, at South Williamsport, Pa. 4:30 p.m., ESPN— World Series, elimination, at South Williamsport, Pa. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5 p.m., MLB — Regional coverage, Cincinnati at St. Louis or Toronto at Milwaukee SOCCER 11:30 a.m., FSN — UEFA Champions League, Leverkusen at Kobenhavn FS1 — UEFA Champions League, Arsenal at Besiktas 1:55 p.m. ESPN2 — Supercopa de Espana, Atletico Madrid at Real Madrid YOUTH OLYMPICS GAMES 4 p.m., NBCSN — Swimming; gymnastics (men’s all-around), at Nanjing, China (same-day tape)

at Washington, 4:05 p.m., FSA

WED at Washington, 4:05 p.m., FSA

THU at Washington, 1:05 p.m., FSA

Bisbee Pumas

Buena Colts

Arizona Cardinals

Phoenix Mercury

Arizona D’backs

TODAY

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-3) Eastern Conference Atlanta vs. Chicago Friday, Aug. 22: Chicago at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 24: Atlanta at Chicago, 4 p.m. x-Tuesday, Aug 26: Chicago at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Indiana vs. Washington Thursday Aug. 21: Washington at Indiana, 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23: Indiana at Washington, 2 p.m. x-Monday, Aug. 25: Washington at Indiana, TBD Western Conference Phoenix vs. Los Angeles Friday, Aug. 22: Los Angeles at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 24: Phoenix at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. x-Tuesday, Aug. 26: Los Angeles at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Minnesota vs. San Antonio Thursday Aug. 21: San Antonio at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23: Minnesota at San Antonio, 4 p.m. x-Monday, Aug. 25: San Antonio at Minnesota, TBD

MLS GLANCE EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Sporting KC 12 6 6 42 36 23 D.C. 12 7 4 40 36 26 Toronto FC 9 8 5 32 33 34 Columbus 7 8 9 30 32 32 New York 6 7 10 28 35 34 New England 8 12 3 27 30 36 Philadelphia 6 9 9 27 36 39 Houston 7 12 4 25 25 42 Chicago 4 6 13 25 29 35 Montreal 4 14 5 17 23 41 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Real Salt Lake 11 4 9 42 38 28 Seattle 13 7 2 41 38 30 FC Dallas 11 7 6 39 43 32 Los Angeles 9 5 7 34 35 23 Vancouver 7 4 12 33 33 29 Portland 7 7 10 31 39 39 Colorado 8 10 6 30 34 35 San Jose 6 9 6 24 25 27 Chivas USA 6 11 6 24 21 36 Sunday, Aug. 17 D.C. United 4, Colorado 2 Wednesday, Aug. 20 Los Angeles at Colorado, 6 p.m. San Jose at Seattle FC, 7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 22 Real Salt Lake at FC Dallas, 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23 Montreal at New York, 4 p.m. Chicago at Toronto FC,4 p.m. Chivas USA at New England, 4:30 p.m. Houston at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. D.C. United at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m. Vancouver at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 24 Seattle FC at Portland, 2 p.m. San Jose at Philadelphia, 8 p.m.

Arizona Wildcats

Cochise Apaches

Tombstone Yellowjackets

TRANSACTIONS

LOTTERY FANTASY 5: 05-06-10-28-40 PICK 3: 9-9-0

ALL OR NOTHING (Evening) 02-05-06-08-11-13-14-15-16-19

AP PHOTO/JAE C. HONG

New Los Angeles Clippers owner Steve Ballmer listens to questions from the media during a news conference held after the Clippers Fan Festival on Monday.

Steve Ballmer debuts as LA Clippers owner LOS ANGELES (AP) — Sweating, clapping and shouting until he wa s ne a rly ho a r s e, Steve Ballmer introduced himself to Los Angeles Clippers fans at a rally on Monday celebrating his new ownership of the NBA team. The former Micro soft CEO made his way through the crowd inside Staples Center to Eminem’s “Lose Yourself,” exchanging highfives and chest-bumping as he took the stage in front of 4,500 fans. Ballmer paid a record $2 billion for the team in a sale that was confirmed by a judge last week. The name of dis-

B3

SCORES AND STANDINGS

Today

THIS WEEK

HERALD/REVIEW

graced former owner Donald Sterling, who controlled the team for 33 years before being banned for life by the NBA for racist remarks, was never uttered during the rally. “We’re looking forward,” Ballmer pro clai med, havi ng re moved his blue Clippers hat. Ballmer’s fervor was in stark contrast to Sterli ng, who never spoke to the media and was famously frugal when it came to spending on the team during decades of losing — despite having amassed a fortune through real estate.

BASEBALL Commissioner’s Office Suspended Pittsburgh RHP Michael Clemens (Bristol-Appalachian) 68 games for violations of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. American League BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned OF Jackie Bradley Jr. to Pawtucket (IL). Recalled OF/ INF Mookie Betts from Pawtucket. Sent OF Allen Craig to Pawtucket for a rehab assignment. DETROIT TIGERS — Assigned RHP Kevin Whelan outright to Toledo (IL). SEATTLE MARINERS — Optioned OF James Jones to Tacoma (PCL). Recalled LHP Roenis Elias from Tacoma. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Claimed 1B Matt Hague off waivers from Pittsburgh and assigned him to Buffalo (IL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Optioned RHP Bradin Hagens to Reno (PCL). Recalled RHP Will Harris from Reno. Sent SS Chris Owings to the AZL Diamondbacks for a rehab assignment. CINCINNATI REDS — Optioned RHPs Curtis Partch and Dylan Axelrod and C Tucker Barnhart to Louisville (IL). Reinstated 2B Brandon Phillips and RHP Logan Ondrusek from the 15-day DL. COLORADO ROCKIES — Optioned INF Ben Paulsen to Colorado Springs (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES — Optioned LHP Robbie Erlin to El Paso (PCL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Agreed to terms with OF Nate Schierholtz on a minor league contract and assigned him to Syracuse (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association DETROIT PISTONS — Signed F Cartier Martin and C Aaron Gray. TORONTO RAPTORS — Signed F/G Jordan Hamilton. FOOTBALL National Football League NFL — Named Peter O’Reilly senior vice president of events. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Placed LB Dom DeCicco on the waived-injured list. Claimed LB Justin Jackson off waivers from Detroit. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Released LS Tyler Ott. Re-signed TE Justin Jones. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Released DE Damik Scafe. Signed DL Doug Worthington. HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Agreed to terms with G Michael Leighton on a one-year contract. OTTAWA SENATORS — Signed D Mark Borowiecki to a three-year contract extension. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Signed F William Nylander to a three-year, entry-level contract. SOCCER Major League Soccer COLUMBUS CREW — Named Andy Loughnane president of business operations, Mike Malo senior vice president and chief marketing officer and Clark Beacom vice president of ticket sales, services and operations. COLLEGE BIG 12 CONFERENCE — Named Levietta McCullough championships assistant.

DAYTON — Named Ryne Romick pitching coach. FAYETTEVILLE STATE — Named Lamont Hinson assistant athletic director for media relations and sports information director. LA SALLE — Named Morgan Oberlander graduate assistant swimming and diving coach. LIMESTONE — Named Briana Che assistant strength and conditioning coach. MONMOUTH (N.J.) — Named Duane Woodward men’s assistant basketball coach. NEBRASKA — Announced men’s basketball G Andrew White III has transferred from Kansas. NYU — Named Kelsey Huntoon women’s assistant volleyball coach. OKLAHOMA — Suspended RB Joe Mixon for the season. PROVIDENCE — Named Bryan Koniecko men’s tennis coach. RANDOLPH-MACON — Named Ashley Reed women’s assistant basketball coach. TEXAS-PAN AMERICAN — Named Armen Kirakossian men’s golf coach. TEXAS A&M-COMMERCE — Announced RB Joe Bergeron has transferred from Texas.

NFL PRESEASON GLANCE AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF N.Y. Jets 2 0 0 1.000 38 New England 1 1 0 .500 48 Miami 1 1 0 .500 30 Buffalo 1 2 0 .333 49 South W L T Pct PF Jacksonville 1 1 0 .500 35 Tennessee 1 1 0 .500 44 Houston 1 1 0 .500 32 Indianapolis 0 2 0 .000 36 North W L T Pct PF Baltimore 2 0 0 1.000 60 Pittsburgh 1 1 0 .500 35 Cleveland 0 2 0 .000 12 Cincinnati 0 2 0 .000 56 West W L T Pct PF Denver 2 0 0 1.000 55 Kansas City 1 1 0 .500 57 Oakland 1 1 0 .500 33 San Diego 1 1 0 .500 41 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF N.Y. Giants 3 0 0 1.000 64 Washington 2 0 0 1.000 23 Dallas 0 2 0 .000 37 Philadelphia 0 2 0 .000 63 South W L T Pct PF New Orleans 2 0 0 1.000 57 Atlanta 1 1 0 .500 23 Carolina 1 1 0 .500 46 Tampa Bay 0 2 0 .000 24 North W L T Pct PF Chicago 2 0 0 1.000 54 Minnesota 2 0 0 1.000 40 Detroit 1 1 0 .500 39 Green Bay 1 1 0 .500 37 West W L T Pct PF Arizona 1 1 0 .500 60 Seattle 1 1 0 .500 57 San Francisco 0 2 0 .000 3 St. Louis 0 2 0 .000 31 Saturday, Aug. 16 Green Bay 21, St. Louis 7 Baltimore 37, Dallas 30 N.Y. Giants 27, Indianapolis 26 N.Y. Jets 25, Cincinnati 17 Pittsburgh 19, Buffalo 16 Miami 20, Tampa Bay 14 Houston 32, Atlanta 7 Minnesota 30, Arizona 28 Sunday, Aug. 17 Denver 34, San Francisco 0 Carolina 28, Kansas City 16 Monday, Aug. 18 Washington 24, Cleveland 23 Thursday, Aug. 21 Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 22 Carolina at New England, 4:30 p.m. N.Y. Giants at N.Y. Jets, 4:30 p.m. Jacksonville at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Oakland at Green Bay, 5 p.m. Chicago at Seattle, 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23 Tampa Bay at Buffalo, 10:30 a.m. Dallas at Miami, 4 p.m. Tennessee at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Washington at Baltimore, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 5 p.m. New Orleans at Indianapolis, 5 p.m. St. Louis at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Houston at Denver, 7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 24 San Diego at San Francisco, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Arizona, 5 p.m.

PA 27 58 30 54 PA 30 47 39 40 PA 33 36 13 66 PA 16 67 36 48

PA 55 6 64 76 PA 48 42 36 36 PA 47 34 39 27 PA 30 35 57 47

LITTLE LEAGUE WORLD SERIES at South Williamsport, Pa. Sunday, Aug. 17 Seoul 8, Humacao 5 Las Vegas 13, Chicago 2, 4 innings Tokyo 9, Guadalupe 5 Philadelphia 7, Pearland 6 Monday, Aug. 18 Consolation: Rapid City 5, Brno 3 Guadalupe 6, Perth 2, Perth eliminated Pearland 11, Lynnwood 4, Lynnwood eliminated Maracaibo 2, Humacao 1, Humacao eliminated Chicago 8, Cumberland 7, Cumberland eliminated Tuesday, Aug. 19 Consolation: Vancouver vs. Nashville, 9 a.m. Game 21: Guadalupe vs. Maracaibo, 12 p.m. Game 22: Pearland vs. Chicago, 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 20 Game 23: Seoul vs. Tokyo, 12 p.m. Game 24: Las Vegas vs. Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 21 Game 25: Winner G21 vs. Loser G23, 12 p.m. Game 26: Winner G22 vs. Loser G24, 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23 International Championship Game 27: Winner G23 vs. Winner G25, 9:30 a.m. United States Championship Game 28: Winner G24 vs. winner G26, 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 24 At Lamade Stadium Third Place Loser G27 vs. Loser G28, 7 a.m. World Championship Winner G27 vs. Winner G28, 12 p.m.

TUCSON SPEEDWAY Saturday Final Bandoleros: 1. Dezel West, 2. Austin Snyder, 3. Joey Paonessa, 4. Brock Rogers, 5. Austin Edwards, 6. Gabby Valenzuela, 7. Colin Stocker, 8. Seth McDonald Legends: 1. Dustin Ash, 2. Cameron Morga, 3. Blake Rogers, 4. Austin Mansfield, 5. Devyn Stocker, 6. Charlie Corrie, 7. Robert Scott, 8. Gary Wegener, 9. Shane Skaggs Hornets: 1. Carlos Giordanelli, 2. Tony Helm, 3. Ryan Pagano, 4. Steven Bickford, 5. Andrea McGuinness, 6. Brandon Olds Pro Stocks: 1. Alex Flores, 2. Jeremy Smith, 3. Calvin Catlin, 4. Ken Hunt, 5. John Nahoopii, 6. Ray Mros, 7. Gene Preston, 8. Al Peters, 9. Rick Durazo, 10. Alex Levin, 11. Sandra Kirby, 12. Zoram Ruiz, 13. Jason Davis, 14. Shane Widick, 15. Brad Kleifgen. Late Models: 1. Paul Banghart, 2. Rick Butler, 3. Brad Moyer, 4. John Lashley, 5. Bobby Hillis, 6. Cory Lyon, 7. Blake Leuth, 8. Josh Strango Modifieds: 1. Will Hunholz, 2. Keith Lopez, 3. David Levitt, 4. Glenn Littrell, 5. Loren Sheffield, 6. Bobby Erdman, 7. Matt Rice, 8. Brian Gardner, 9. Lance Bonlender, 10. Gary Cheek, 11. Scott Walker, 12. Rod Hiestand Super Late Models: 1. Dylan Jones, 2. Ron Norman, 3. Curtis Lansing, 4. Brandon Schilling, 5. Cassie Gannis, 6. Rick Butler, 7. Joe Paladenic, 8. Matt Levin, 9. Ron Searle Jr., 10. Scott Strachan, 11. Mariah McGriff, 12. Brian Harrington Jr., 13. Matt Vincent, 14. Joey McCullough, 15. John Lashley, 16. Brent Adams, 17. Will Hunholz, 18. Alan Levin, 19. Mike Foster.

NASCAR NATIONWIDE MONEY LEADERS Through Aug. 16 1. Chase Elliott, $752,255 2. Regan Smith, $733,999 3. Kyle Busch, $686,425 4. Trevor Bayne, $682,974 5. Elliott Sadler, $634,955 6. Ty Dillon, $622,889 7. Kyle Larson, $604,289 8. Brian Scott, $601,439 9. Brendan Gaughan, $561,074 10. Chris Buescher, $550,394 11. Ryan Sieg, $534,354 12. Ryan Reed, $529,124 13. Dylan Kwasniewski, $527,119 14. James Buescher, $515,349 15. Landon Cassill, $512,237 16. Dakoda Armstrong, $506,209 17. Jeremy Clements, $503,589 18. Mike Bliss, $500,840 19. Jeffrey Earnhardt, $489,733 20. Brad Keselowski, $486,330 21. Joey Gase, $480,344 22. Eric McClure, $432,212 23. J.J. Yeley, $406,354 24. Derrike Cope, $404,664 25. Kevin Harvick, $373,110 26. Tanner Berryhill, $365,930 27. Josh Wise, $362,983 28. Matt Kenseth, $332,465 29. Blake Koch, $306,731 30. Jamie Dick, $291,943 31. Matt DiBenedetto, $275,738 32. Sam Hornish Jr., $259,785 33. Mike Harmon, $247,878 34. David Starr, $239,825 35. Mike Wallace, $231,946 36. Ryan Blaney, $220,175 37. Kevin Lepage, $205,447 38. Jeff Green, $198,247 39. Chad Boat, $187,740 40. Carlos Contreras, $183,966 41. Carl Long, $182,683 42. Joey Logano, $173,315 43. Joe Nemechek, $162,350 44. Robert Richardson Jr., $161,964 45. Josh Reaume, $152,191 46. Tommy Joe Martins, $145,676 47. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $137,595 48. Kasey Kahne, $127,920 49. Paul Menard, $122,650 50. Cale Conley, $116,740

NASCAR SPRINT CUP MONEY LEADERS Through Aug. 17 1. Brad Keselowski, $5,025,968 2. Jeff Gordon, $4,880,282 3. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $4,670,989 4. Jimmie Johnson, $4,652,352 5. Jamie McMurray, $4,414,446 6. Kevin Harvick, $4,398,393 7. Matt Kenseth, $4,317,746 8. Joey Logano, $4,312,012 9. Kyle Busch, $4,266,114 10. Denny Hamlin, $4,078,866 11. Greg Biffle, $3,715,479 12. Austin Dillon, $3,633,823 13. Clint Bowyer, $3,559,704 14. Aric Almirola, $3,491,203 15. Paul Menard, $3,491,112 16. Brian Vickers, $3,487,513 17. Carl Edwards, $3,471,612 18. Kyle Larson, $3,357,930 19. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., $3,316,995 20. Marcos Ambrose, $3,248,775 21. Tony Stewart, $3,178,572 22. Martin Truex Jr., $3,097,178 23. Kasey Kahne, $3,052,304 24. Casey Mears, $3,011,400 25. AJ Allmendinger, $3,001,146 26. Ryan Newman, $2,889,119 27. Kurt Busch, $2,798,714 28. Justin Allgaier, $2,686,070 29. David Gilliland, $2,668,344 30. David Ragan, $2,658,411 31. Danica Patrick, $2,547,699 32. Michael Annett, $2,493,652 33. Alex Bowman, $2,327,918 34. Reed Sorenson, $2,311,146 35. Cole Whitt, $2,232,225 36. Josh Wise, $2,228,750 37. Landon Cassill, $2,062,690 38. Ryan Truex, $1,600,322 39. Travis Kvapil, $1,252,316 40. Trevor Bayne, $1,071,523 41. Joe Nemechek, $1,050,136 42. Michael McDowell, $1,033,089 43. Parker Kligerman, $829,833 44. Brian Scott, $682,322 45. Terry Labonte, $608,387 46. Bobby Labonte, $569,036 47. J.J. Yeley, $544,467 48. Michael Waltrip, $497,773 49. David Stremme, $493,038 50. Dave Blaney, $452,307

PGA TOUR FEDEXCUP LEADERS Through Aug. 17 1. Rory McIlroy 2,582 $6,965,896 2. Jimmy Walker 2,493 $5,337,340 3. Bubba Watson 2,173 $5,185,611 4. Matt Kuchar 1,921 $4,129,969

5. Jim Furyk 1,851 6. Dustin Johnson 1,769 7. Sergio Garcia 1,700 8. Jordan Spieth 1,692 9. Patrick Reed 1,666 10. Chris Kirk 1,571 11. Zach Johnson 1,552 12. Brendon Todd 1,542 13. Webb Simpson 1,536 14. Martin Kaymer 1,525 15. Adam Scott 1,479 16. Rickie Fowler 1,471 17. Harris English 1,469 18. Justin Rose 1,447 19. Ryan Moore 1,429 20. Kevin Na 1,413 21. Brian Harman 1,349 22. Hideki Matsuyama1,287 23. Keegan Bradley 1,278 24. Bill Haas 1,268 25. Matt Every 1,250 26. John Senden 1,157 27. Marc Leishman 1,137 28. Graham DeLaet 1,113 29. Tim Clark 1,111 30. Ryan Palmer 1,068 31. Kevin Stadler 1,067 32. Gary Woodland 1,059 33. Charles Howell III 1,042 34. Jason Day 1,028 35. Charley Hoffman 1,026 36. J.B. Holmes 1,007 37. Camilo Villegas 1,002 38. Freddie Jacobson 987 39. Kevin Streelman 972 40. Matt Jones 970 41. George McNeill 962 42. Seung-Yul Noh 950 43. Graeme McDowell 948 44. Justin Hicks 923 45. Phil Mickelson 921 46. Will MacKenzie 920 47. Brian Stuard 891 48. Russell Knox 885 49. Daniel Summerhays 869 50. Russell Henley 864

$4,635,595 $4,249,180 $4,371,100 $3,854,682 $3,624,449 $3,016,867 $2,988,989 $3,171,295 $3,193,111 $4,007,537 $3,390,693 $3,942,317 $2,898,822 $3,493,734 $3,063,063 $2,762,427 $2,351,854 $2,526,844 $2,697,889 $2,225,378 $2,506,290 $2,275,285 $2,523,670 $2,397,501 $2,030,286 $2,202,952 $2,147,004 $2,222,419 $1,853,837 $2,590,907 $1,912,449 $2,166,254 $1,526,574 $1,868,882 $2,007,480 $1,895,087 $1,914,991 $1,842,371 $2,009,330 $1,544,061 $2,119,875 $1,812,878 $1,689,125 $1,350,830 $1,414,948 $1,748,520

WTA NEW HAVEN OPEN AT YALE RESULTS A U.S. Open Series event Monday At The Connecticut Tennis Center at Yale New Haven, Conn. Purse: $710,000 (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Peng Shuai, China, def. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine, 6-4, 6-3. Garbine Muguruza, Spain, def. Sara Errani (7), Italy, 6-2, 3-6, 6-1. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, Czech Republic, def. Belinda Bencic, Switzerland, 6-4, 5-7, 6-3. Sam Stosur, Australia, def. Kurumi Nara, Japan, 7-6 (5), 6-7 (10), 6-2. Caroline Garcia, France, def. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (4). Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, 6-4, 6-3. Eugenie Bouchard (3), Canada, def. Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia, 6-1, 6-1. Kirsten Flipkens, Belgium, def. Misaki Doi, Japan, 6-3, 4-6, 6-2. Caroline Wozniacki (4), Denmark, def. Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2. Doubles First Round Casey Dellacqua, Australia, and Stefanie Voegele, Swizerland, def. Oksana Kalashnikova, Georgia, and Alicja Rosolska, Poland, 7-6 (3), 6-1. Anabel Medina Garrigues, Spain, and Yaroslava Shvedova (5), Kazakhstan, def. Shahar Peer, Israel, and Katarzyna Piter, Poland, 6-4, 6-1. Caroline Garcia, France, and Monica Niculescu, Romania, def. Anna-Lena Groenefeld, Germany, and Klara Koukalova, Czech Republic, 6-0, 5-7, 14-14.

LPGA PLAYER OF THE YEAR STANDINGS Through Aug. 17 1. Stacy Lewis, 200 2. Inbee Park, 160 3. Michelle Wie, 151 4. Lydia Ko, 128 5. Lexi Thompson, 104 6. Anna Nordqvist, 96 7. Jessica Korda, 76 8. Karrie Webb, 72 9. Shanshan Feng, 66 10. Cristie Kerr, 65 11. Suzann Pettersen, 64 11. Mo Martin, 64 13. So Yeon Ryu, 55 14. Azahara Munoz, 53 15. Mirim Lee, 52

ARIZONA FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Aug. 29 UNLV, 7:30 p.m. Sep. 4 at UTSA, 5 p.m. Sep. 13 Nevada, 8 p.m. Sep. 20 California, TBA Oct. 2 at Oregon, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 11 Southern Cal, TBA Oct. 25 at Washington St., TBA Nov. 1 at UCLA, TBA Nov. 8 Colorado, TBA Nov. 15 Washington, TBA Nov. 22 at Utah, TBA Nov. 28 Arizona St., 1:30 p.m.

ARIZONASTATE SCHEDULE Aug. 28 Weber St., 7:30 p.m. Sep. 6 at New Mexico, 4 p.m. Sep. 13 at Colorado, 7 p.m. Sep. 25 UCLA, 7 p.m. Oct. 4 at Southern Cal, TBA Oct. 18 Stanford, TBA Oct. 25 at Washington, TBA Nov. 1 Utah, TBA Nov. 8 Notre Dame, TBA Nov. 15 at Oregon St., TBA Nov. 22 Washington St., TBA Nov. 28 at Arizona, 1:30 p.m.

ARIZONA CARDINALS SCHEDULE Sept. 8 San Diego, 7:20 p.m. Sept. 14 at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m. Sept. 21 San Francisco, 1:05 p.m. Sept. 28 BYE Oct. 5 at Denver, 1:05 p.m. Oct. 12 Washington, 1:25 p.m. Oct. 19 at Oakland, 1:25 p.m. Oct. 26 Philadelphia, 1:05 p.m. Nov. 2 at Dallas, 10 a.m. Nov. 9 St. Louis, 1:25 p.m. Nov. 16 Detroit, 1:25 p.m.


B4

ENTERTAINMENT

HERALD/REVIEW

SUDOKU

YESTERDAY’S ANSWERS

ASTROGRAPH

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

GARFIELD

By Eugenia Last

TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 2014

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

FAMILY CIRCUS

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Continue your pursuit for knowledge and enlightenment. The more you learn, the greater will be the opportunities for a lucrative and rewarding career. Your intelligence and sociable nature will make you a genuine asset to any venture you undertake. Think big and follow your dreams. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — This is a particularly good time for collaborations or partnerships. You will get a helping hand from an unexpected source, and will move much closer to achieving a long-term goal. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Keep your personal life out of your workplace. If your domestic affairs are dominating your thoughts, your productivity will suffer and career woes are likely to develop. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Make a move toward greater independence. A business of your own, no matter how small in the beginning, will give you an outlet for your creative talent that will prove very lucrative. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Don’t let your head rule your heart. Remember to share your feelings with those you care about. The response you get will put you at ease and encourage a closer bond. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) — Your fight for what is right will continue. If you see someone treated unfairly, take a stand. You will gain respect, support and an invitation to work collectively toward a worthy cause. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) — A business acquaintance will need a helping hand. The assistance you offer will be appreciated and rewarded, but make sure you take time out to nurture your own needs, as well. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Getting out of the house to attend an inspirational or stimulating event will allow you to meet new people and form lasting friendships. A joint venture looks promising. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — You may feel laden with responsibilities. Strive for balance between your work and personal duties. Find a calm place where you can relax and let your imagination entertain you. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You have a remarkable capacity for knowledge. Keep well-informed by participating in intellectually oriented groups. By expanding your expertise, you can make great strides toward your future goals. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Don’t be nonchalant about your achievements. Speak up and make sure that your accomplishments are noticed. Self-promotion is necessary to let others know what you have to offer. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — It’s best to deal with personal matters on your own. Don’t let misunderstandings fester. Be the first to offer a compromise. Professionalism will speak volumes about your ability to lead. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You can get a lot accomplished if you tackle your tasks head-on. Find a quiet place conducive to finishing what you start. Collaborative efforts will not be in your best interest.

ALLEY OOP

BEETLE BAILEY

B.C.

ZITS

BABY BLUES

THATABABY

Comment on this new comic at eric.petermann@svherald.com

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

Want to pick-up a copy of your own?

HERALD REVIEW S I E R R A V I S TA

B I S B E E D A I LY

Then get them daily at these locations: SIERRA VISTA Arby’s – 2180 E. Fry Auto Zone – 812 E. Fry Bakers Dozen – 397 W. Fry Bella Vista Motel – 1101 E. Fry Beverage Warehouse – 3888 E. Fry Buffalo Soldier Shell – 5200 E. Hwy 90 Buzz Breads – 1706 S. Hwy 92 Cafe O-Le – 400 E. Fry Chamber of Commerce SV – 1 E. Wilcox Dr. Circle K – 97 N Garden Ave. Circle K – 2275 Buffalo Soldier Trail Circle K – 2275 E. Buffalo Soldier Trail Circle K – 97 N. Garden Ave. Circle K – 200 S. Hwy 92 Circle K – 720 S 7th St. Circle K – 102 E. Fry. Circle K – 3651 S. Hwy 92 Circle K – 95 Rainbow Way

Comfort Inn – 3500 E. Fry Country House Rest. – 4373 S. Hwy 92 Dairy Queen – 1706 S. Hwy 92 Denny’s – 2397 E. Fry Express Stop – 2632 E Fry Blvd. Food City – 85 S. Hwy 92 Frys Supermarket – 4351 E. Hwy 90 Golden Dragon Restaurant – 2151 S. Frontage Rd. Highway 92 Cafe – 4235 S. Hwy 92 IHOP – 1906 S. Hwy 92 Landmark Cafe – 400 W. Fry Little General Store – 1860 S. Hwy 92 McDonald’s – 3536 Canyon De Flores McDonald’s – E. Fry Motel 6 – 1551 E. Fry Mountain Steppes Apartments – 4250 E. Foothills Dr. Mountain Vista Apartments – 4400 E. Busby Dr. My Place Restauant – 1081 E. Fry Oasis Apartments – 4250 E. Busby Dr.

Papas 50’s Diner – 3500 Canyon De Flores Peter Piper Pizza – 155 S. Hwy 92 Premier Beverage House – 256 W. Fry Safeway Store – 2190 E. Fry Safeway – 2190 E. Fry Sierra Suites – 391 E. Fry Sierra Vista Chevron – 1796 E. Fry Sierra Vista Food CO-OP – 96 S. Carmichael Ave. Sierra Vista Food Mart – E. Fry Sierra Vista Herald – 102 Fab Ave. Sierra Vista Transit – 2050 W. Wilcox Dr. Super Stop – 5217 S. Hwy 92 Super Stop – 1497 E. Fry SVRHC Therapy – 2151 S. Frontage Rd. Valero – 3999 E. Fry Walgreen’s – 1950 E. Fry Walmart – 1240 – 500 N. Hwy 90 Wick Building – 333 W. Wilcox Dr. Windemere Hotel – 2047 S. Hwy 92

For more pick-up locations, visit: www.svherald.com/dealers


TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

BLONDIE

BORN LOSER

HAGAR

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

ENTERTAINMENT B5 Child claims to see the paranormal HERALD/REVIEW

DEAR ANNIE: My 5-year-old son has been claiming to see the paranormal. I’m sure part of it is just his imagination. But sometimes he describes in great detail people and even pets who have died. He mainly claims to see a cousin he never met, but whom he can describe accurately. Sometimes, he will sit up in bed and start talking to a wall, saying he is talking to his cousin. Now he says he can see someone else. He isn’t sure who it is, but it frightens him. My son won’t even walk past the bedroom door without me or another adult with him and the bedroom light on. We don’t let him watch scary movies or anything like that. Is it possible that he is really seeing these things? I’ve mentioned it to a few different ministers who just laughed it off and said there is no such thing as the paranormal. Any advice would be appreciated. — A Fan of Your Work DEAR FAN: The fact that your son doesn’t watch scary movies does not mean he hasn’t been exposed to ads for them or comments from friends. Nonetheless, our concern is not that your son is making it up. Sometimes manifestations of the paranormal can indicate a medical problem. Please take him to his doctor for a complete checkup, including a neurological exam. DEAR ANNIE: A couple in our social circle have developed a disgusting habit in recent years, and no one knows how to approach them about it. These people blow their noses at the dinner table every time they sit down and then return their dirty tissues to

their pockets and carry on eating. This is not just a gentle dab at the end of the nose. It’s a full-blown empty-thesinus kind of thing. These people are well educated with good jobs. I’m sure they would be devastated if NNIE S we said something, but it has reached the point AILBOX where we no longer accept dinner invitations KATHY MITCHELL if we know they will AND MARCY SUGAR be there, because this nose blowing turns our stomachs. We can’t understand how no one in their family has mentioned it to them. Is this a social faux pas, or are we too picky? — Disgusted DEAR DISGUSTED: It is definitely a social faux pas to blow one’s nose at the dinner table. One can wipe a sniffle, but blasting more than that should be done in the privacy of the bathroom. Should it happen again in your presence, simply say, “My goodness, Horace! Your allergies must be getting worse. You’d make all of us more comfortable if you used the powder room to take care of that.” The two of them may be mildly miffed, but making people sick at the dinner table is not appropriate.

A ' M

ANNIE’S MAILBOX is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chicago IL 60611.

Strategies to control urinary incontinence WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

MALLARD FILLMORE

RETAIL

DEAR DOCTOR K: I’ve had urinary incontinence ever since I gave birth last year. Why? DEAR READER: Many women who give birth vaginally go on to develop loss of bladder control. This is called urinary incontinence. Childbirth can cause two types of incontinence. If urine leaks out when you jump, cough or laugh, or during any activity that puts pressure on your bladder, you have stress incontinence. You have urge incontinence (overactive bladder) if you feel a strong, overwhelming urge to urinate, even when your bladder isn’t full. You probably also release some urine before you make it to the bathroom. How does vaginal delivery lead to incontinence? Your urinary system and reproductive organs are supported, in part, by your pelvic floor. This is a network of muscles that extends from your pubic bone to your tailbone. The pelvic floor muscles are the muscles you tighten when you are trying to avoid urinating. (I’ve put an illustration of female reproductive and urinary organs on my website, AskDoctorK. com.) As a baby makes his way through the vaginal birth canal, he may stretch — or even tear or damage — the pelvic floor muscles. You are more likely to have pelvic floor damage if your baby weighs more, if you’ve had more than one vaginal birth and if you spend more time in the “pushing” stage of labor. Having an episiotomy (a surgical cut made to expand the vaginal opening during delivery) also increases the risk of pelvic floor damage. Delivery by cesarean section protects against severe incontinence. But some women do develop incontinence even if they have had only cesarean sections. The following strategies can help you manage your incontinence: • BLADDER TRAINING. This program of urinating on schedule

enables you to gradually increase the amount of urine you can comfortably hold. • FLUID MANAGEMENT. Cutting down on the amount of fluids you drink can help bring incontinence under SK R control. • PELVIC FLOOR EXERCISES. These DR. ANTHONY exercises strengthen KOMAROFF your pelvic floor muscles. • BIOFEEDBACK. Some studies have found that biofeedback can help if added to bladder training or pelvic floor exercises. The evidence for this is not very strong. • COGNITIVE BEHAVIOR THERAPY. This type of “talk therapy” is used to help people cope with, and control, both physical and psychological disorders. It is sometimes used in addition to bladder training and pelvic floor exercises. • AVOIDING CERTAIN BEVERAGES. I’ve had patients who discovered that their incontinence improved if they avoided alcoholic and carbonated beverages, coffee and tea. I don’t think scientific studies provide strong support for this practice, but if it helps a patient, I urge them to continue it. • LOSING WEIGHT. If you are overweight, losing weight may help improve your incontinence. If these changes are not sufficient, ask your doctor about other treatment options, including medication and surgery. Medications can be particularly helpful with urge incontinence. Yet all medicines have side effects, and the strategies I mention above usually control the problem successfully.

A D .K

DR. KOMAROFF is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. Go to his website to send questions and get additional information: www.AskDoctorK.com.

BRIDGE

By Phillip Alder

MARVIN

MUTTS

Confucius said, “Men’s natures are alike; it is their habits that carry them far apart.” That certainly applies to bridge players — although claiming that all players’ natures are alike would be stretching the truth. This week we are exploring some common habits of players that can cost points. Look at the North and East hands. Against four hearts, West leads the club six. How should East plan the defense? South opened with a weak two-bid, showing a respectable six-card suit and 5-10 high-card points. One can be a tad liberal when nonvulnerable. North understandably took a shot at game. He knew that they might lose the first four tricks in the black suits, but maybe the contract was laydown, or perhaps West might lead a diamond, letting South run for home with hearts headed by the king-queen. The adage that does not work on this deal is “return your partner’s suit.” That is much more likely to be right in no-trump than in a suit. Here, if East returns a club, West wins the trick but is endplayed. He cannot do better than to exit with a diamond to dummy’s jack. But South

continues with the heart ace and another trump to take one spade, five hearts and four diamonds. East can see three probable winners in the heart king, club ace and club king. (West would not have been likely to lead from jack-high clubs.) The fourth trick has to come from spades. If West holds that ace, there is no hurry, but if he has the king, there isn’t a moment to lose. At trick two, East must shift to the spade seven (top of nothing). Then the contract will fail.


B6

FOOTBALL/SPORTS

HERALD/REVIEW

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI

Washington Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III (10) runs away from Cleveland Browns defensive end Armonty Bryant (95) during the first half of an NFL preseason football game Monday in Landover, Md.

Manziel struggles in Browns’ loss to Redskins BY JOSEPH WHITE

AP Sports Writer

AP PHOTO/SETH WENIG, FILE

In this July 24 file photo, New York Giants running back David Wilson runs the ball during NFL football camp in East Rutherford, N.J.

Ex-Giants RB Wilson to train in triple jump

NEW YORK (AP) — Two weeks after ending his NFL career due to a neck injury, former New York Giants running back David Wilson is turning to track and field. The 23-year-old Wilson, who competed in the triple jump during high school and at Virginia Tech, intends to train in the event with an eye on making the United States team for the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Speaking to reporters Monday at Citi Field, where he addressed school children as part of the “Citi Kids” program before the Mets played the Chicago Cubs, Wilson said he has already been working out and will start training with his former track coach on campus at Virginia Tech. Wilson was drafted by the Giants in the first round, 32nd overall, out of Virginia Tech in 2012.

L A N DOV ER , Md. (A P) — Johnny Manziel and Brian Hoyer didn’t make Mike Pettine’s decision any easier. Good luck picking a starting quarterback after this mess, Coach. Manziel struggled to hit open receivers and added another gesture to his repertoire — a middle finger apparently aimed at the Washington Redskins’ bench — while Hoyer completed only two passes in five series. Neither the hot-shot rookie nor the nondescript sixth-year veteran looked ready to claim a No. 1 NFL gig, failing to live up to the big-time setting of a final audition in the Cleveland Browns’ 24-23 Monday night loss to the Washington Redskins. Pettine has said he plans to announce his regular season starter Tuesday. His choices are Manziel, the No. 22 overall pick in the draft who completed 7 of 16 passes for 65 yards and an touchdown, and Hoyer, who was 2 for 6 for 16 yards. And those stats were padded by series against the Redskins’ backups. In the first quarter — when Washing ton’s starters were in the game — Manziel was 2 for 7 for 29 yards, while Hoyer was 0 for 2. Manziel was even

mocked by Redskins linebacker Brian Orakpo, who raised both hands and performed the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner’s “money” gesture after a sack by teammate Ryan Kerrigan. Manziel appeared to have a message of his own for the Redskins. He raised the middle finger of his right hand as he jogged away from the Washington sideline after a play late in the third quarter. To be fair, the first two passes by Hoyer could be classified as drops by his receivers, but he also failed to move the team when an interception gave the Browns the ball at Washington’s 15 in the second quarter. After a running play and two incompletions, including a pass high and through the hands of Andrew Hawkins in the end zone, Cleveland had to settle for a field goal. Looking for a hint as to which way Pettine is leaning? It’s worth noting that Hoyer started for the second consecutive game and played mostly with the firstteam offense, while Manziel was sent out with the backups to play in the second half. Manziel took advantage by leading a 16-play, 68-yard drive capped by an 8-yard pass to Dion Lewis for Cleveland’s first touchdown. In a sloppy game that included 21 penalties and five turnovers,

anyone using a nickname like “Johnny Footbal l” at times seemed like an insult to the sport. The Browns were particularly susceptible to the NFL’s new emphasis on hindering receivers: Cleveland’s defense was whistled five times for holding or illegal contact in the first quarter alone, including twice on one play. The Redskins don’t have a quarterback competition, but thei r for mer Heisman winner — Robert Griffin III — also needs some work to get to regular season form. He finished 6 for 8 for 112 yards, including an unwise off-balance throw that was picked off by Joe Haden. RG3’s three drives ended with a fumbled pitch by Alfred Morris, the interception, and a goalline stuff by the Browns defense when Morris was unable to punch it on four runs from firstand-goal from the 3. The designed runs are being marginalized under new Redskins coach Jay Gruden, but Griffin was nevertheless hit hard several times as he scrambled four times for 24 yards. At least the game had an exciting ending. Connor Shaw hit Emmanuel Ogbuehi on a 45-yard Hail Mary at time expi red. T he Brow ns’ 2 -poi nt c onver sion at t empt f a i le d .

Coach K still the big man on campus

AP PHOTO/CHARLES KRUPA, FILE

WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) — On the first day of classes at the United States Military Academy, he was clearly the big man on campus. In much of the basketball world, he’s Coach K. Around here, he’s Mike Krzyzewski, Army class of 1969. Krzyzewski returned to his alma mater on Monday with the U.S. national team, which toured the campus, ate lunch with cadets in the mess hall and held an open practice for military personnel and families. The basketball was limited on a day Krzyzewski spent more time addressing the crowd than his players during practice. But even with the Basketball World Cup opener just 12 days away, he thought the trip benefited his team no matter how much

work the players did. “To spend a day here is better than any offensive or defensive drill you could have,” Krzyzewski said. “It bonds the team together and that’s what today was about.” The team traveled about 90 minutes by bus Monday morning from New York to the upstate campus where Krzyzewski played under Bob Knight and later returned to coach the Black Knights. He gets back here at least once a year for a ceremony where an award named in his honor is given, but it’s hard to imagine he’s ever more popular on campus than he was Monday, when he received a loud ovation in the mess hall and was cheered louder than any of the 16 NBA players on the roster before practice.

In this Sept. 7, 2013, file photo, Rafael Nadal, of Spain, returns a shot to Richard Gasquet, of France, during the semifinals of the 2013 U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York.

Nadal withdraws from U.S. Open BY HOWARD FENDRICH

AP Tennis Writer

Reigning champion Ra fael Nada l pu l led out of the U.S. Open because of an injury for the second time in three years Monday, leaving Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer as the men to beat at the year’s last Grand Slam tournament. Nadal announced his wit hd rawa l, bl a med on a bad right wrist, one week before play b e g i n s at F lu s h i n g Meadows.

“I am sure you understand that it is a very tough moment for me since it is a tournament I love and where I have great memories from fans, the night m atche s, so m a ny things,” a posting on Nadal’s Facebook page read. “Not much more I can do right now, other than accept the situation and, as always in my case, work hard in order to be able to compete at the highest level once I am back.” The second-ranked Nadal plays left-hand-

ed, but he uses a twohanded backhand. T he 14 -ti me major ch a mpion wa s hu r t July 29 while practicing on his home island of Mallorca ahead of the North American hard-court circuit. The next day, Nada l a nnounced he needed to wear a cast on his wrist for two to three weeks and would be sitting out tournaments in Toronto and Cincinnati. The 28-year-old Spaniard also said at that time he expected to return for the U.S. Open.

AP PHOTO/MIKE GROLL

United States basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski, center, and team members applaud for cadets running an indoor obstacle course at the U.S. Military Academy on Monday in West Point, N.Y. Krzyzewski is a 1969 graduate of the academy.


Living

LOOK FOR CLASSIFIEDS INSIDE

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

PHOTOS BY BEATRICE.RICHARDSONSVHERALD.COM

Lab technician Andy Daynes, left, and his brother Dr. Lincoln Daynes, optometrist, stand in their lab on Thursday. Daynes Optical Express celebrates its 20th anniversary in Sierra Vista in November. BY DEREK JORDAN

derek.jordan@svherald.com

SIERRA VISTA — With four months left to go, already 2014 has been a banner year for Daynes Optical and its owner, Lincoln Daynes. Not only will Daynes be celebrating the 20th anniversary of starting his own practice come November, carrying on a tradition of optometry going back to his grandfather, but he was also one of only three optometrists in the state to be considered for the Arizona Optometric Association’s Optometrist of the Year. Having been a member in good standing of both the American Optometric Association and the Arizona Optometric Association for more than 2 5 yea rs, Day nes said the recognition this year was likely the result of both his history with the organizations and his political and humanitarian work. “I put on a fundraiser for Sen. Gai l Gri f f i n, Rep. David Stevens and Rep. David Gowen about a year ago, and I think people looked at that and said, ‘Hey, this g uy is trying to do something for us, so let’s nominate him for Optometrist of the Year,’” he said. Over the years, Daynes h a s a l s o c o nt r ibut e d time, manpower and services to underprivileged children both in Arizona and Mexico through his work with the Arizona c h ap t e r o f Volu nt e e r Optometric Services to Humanity. Also, earlier this year, Daynes took it upon himself to join about 20 other optometrists in the state to achieve board certification, something previously unnecessary for his field until a recent push for it by the American Optometric Association and other industry groups. T he boa rd cer ti f ic ation, which is an ongoing controversial issue among many in the field, will help increase the viability of optometrists in the health care community and help them to be a part of medical panels in the future, he said, though there were other reasons for pursuing the

2014 a banner year for local optometrist

Dr. Lincoln Daynes talks about his optical store on Thursday. Daynes was one of three finalists for the 2014 Arizona Optometric Association Optometrist of the Year Award. AT RIGHT: Optometrist Dr. Lincoln Daynes explains a new “eye puff tester,” the I-Care Tonometer, which measures intraocular eye pressure.

certification. “I want to practice at the top of my game, and I just want to review everything. My main reasoning is just to be the best optometrist I can be,” Daynes said. Daynes got his start in the field at the age of 13, when he worked in his father’s shop making hard contact lenses. He went on to learn the various aspects of production of lenses as he continued to work t h rough high school. “I just ki nd of g rew into it. It was a job. My brother Andy has done the same thing. He is my lab manager. We both grew up in the lab making glasses,” he said. D ay n e s w e nt o n t o g radu ate wit h honors from Pacific University. For a decade he worked in Tucson before moving down to Sierra Vista 20 years ago to start his own practice. “The opportunity presented itself to buy this practice and start a one hour optical. So that was the idea, to give people better ser vice at good pricing,” he said. When asked to explain the secret of his longevity, Daynes said it was all about customer service. “By putting the patient first and taking care of the patient, and we appreciate ou r patients, it’s led to a large patient base and our success,” he said.


C2

HERALD/REVIEW

Editor’s Note: Community Meetings will now be run by weeks — some meetings run the first and third week, or the first week only, and so on ... they will appear on those weeks. Some meetings run every week and will appear every week. • Air Force Association Cochise Chapter 107 Executive Committee: 11 a.m. third Friday, Thunder Mountain Activity Center (TMAC), Fort Huachuca. Visitors welcome. 1tcgmp@aol.com 236-3335. • Al-Anon, Bisbee: 7 p.m., Monday, St. John’s Episcopal Church, and 7 p.m., Wednesday, Trinity United Methodist Church, 255-0745 or 559-3647. • Al-Anon, Sierra Vista: 9:30 a.m., Sunday, to 10:30 a.m., Wick Building Room 106(a), and 6 p.m. Wednesday, Serenity Club, 227-5793 or 378-3640. • Al-Anon, One Minute at a Time: Noon, Thursday, St. Andrew Church, 439-9703. • Al-Anon, Bisbee: 7 p.m., Monday, St. John’s Episcopal Church, and 7 p.m., Wednesday, Trinity United Methodist Church, 255-0745 or 559-3647. • Al-Anon, Sierra Vista: 9:30 a.m., Sunday, to 10:30 a.m., Wick Building Room 106(a), and 6 p.m. Wednesday, Serenity Club, 227-5793 or 378-3640. • AA Willingness Group: Monday, Wednesday and Friday, noon, St. Andrews Church. Open to all. • AA High Noon Group: MonSaturday, noon, Serenity Club, 5049 Hwy. 92. Open to all. • AA Thunder Mountain Men’s Group: Tuesday, 6 p.m., Country Estates Baptist Church, 5700 Hwy. 92. Closed meeting. • AA H.O.W. Group: Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., Church of Christ, 815 El Camino Real. Open to all. • AA Sierra Vista Group: Monday, Thursday, Saturday, 8 p.m., Church of Christ, 815 El Camino Real. Open to all. • AA Back to Basics: Monday, 7:30 p.m., Good Neighbor Alliance, 420 N. 7th St. Open to all. • AA High on Life: Tuesday-Saturday, WIck Building, 333 Wilcox Drive. Thurs/ Sat. Open to all, Tuesday, Wed. and Friday closed. • AA Highway 92 group: Wed. Thur., 6 p.m. Serenity Club, 5049 Hwy. 92.; Sun., Mon. 7 p.m., same location. Open to all. • AA New Beginning Group: Friday, 8 p.m. Lions Club in Huachuca City. • American Ex-Prisoners of War: 2 p.m., third Saturday, Elks Lodge, 4597295. • American Sewing Guild: 1 p.m., third Thursday, SSVEC conference room. 378-2749 or 458-7183. • Better Breathers Club: 3 p.m., third Tuesday,conference room at the hospital, 417-4528. • Bisbee Community Chorus rehearsals: 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Bisbee High School music room. • Bisbee Homeless Shelter: 5 p.m., Wednesday, Shelter in Tintown, 4327839. • Bridge Group: Every Wednesday at the Elks Lodge, 1 Elks Lane off of Wilcox Drive. Members and non members are invited to play. We think we are the “best party bridge game in town.” Call 458-6790 for information. • Bridge, ACBL Sanctioned Duplicate: 12:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday and 6:30 p.m. Thursday, 999 E. Fry Blvd., Suite 214, 432-3883. • Bridge every Wednesday at the Elks Lodge, located at 1 Elks Lane off of Wilcox Drive in Sierra Vista. Members and non-members are invited to play. We think we are the “best party bridge game in town.” Please call 458-6790 for information. • Christians in recovery is a 12-step program to bring the Gospel of Jesus Christ to those seeking recovery and wholeness in their lives. Spirit in Recovery meets every Thursday evening at 6:30 p.m. at Mustang Mountain Cowboy Church, 2281 N. Highway 90, next to Stan’s Fence in the old Whetstone Feed Store in Whetstone. Come join us as we help each other through Biblical scripture to aid us in recovery from our addictions, whatever they may be. • Cochise College Community Band: 6:30 p.m., Thursday, 458-3423. • Cochise Music Teachers Association (CMTA): 9 a.m., third Thursday, Francie Schofiled’s Piano studio, 458-5704. • Cochise and Western Model Railroad Club: meets Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 7 p.m. at 680 Fort Ave., in Sierra Vista. Members can run trains on over 800 feet of HO and N-scale track, get help troubleshooting, and enjoy the camaraderie of fellow Model Railroading enthusiasts. Other club activities include day trips to photograph railroad operations, road shows and an annual club dinner. We provide a positive environment for kids to learn about model railroading and to work with friends and family members on related projects and activities. We welcome visitors of all ages on meeting nights or visit www. cmrrc.com. E-mail: cacole2@cox.net for directions. • Committee for Prevention of Child Abuse: meets the Third Tuesday each month except August and December at the Oscan Yrun Community Center at 11:30 a.m. small conference room. • Confederate Secret Service Camp

COMMUNITY MEETINGS-THIRD WEEK/LIVING 1710, Sons of Confederate Veterans: 6 p.m., third Thursday, Country House Restaurant, 456-6956 or camp1710@ earthlink.net . • Covenant Recovery: 6 p.m., Friday, Sierra Vista Baptist Church, 458-2273. • Democratic Women of Southeastern Arizona: 11 a.m., third Tuesday, Pueblo del Sol Country Club, 459-1054. • Elks, Sierra Vista bingo: 6:30 p.m. on Thursday,10:30 a.m. on Friday, Elks Lodge, 458-2065. • G.A.R.D. — Guided Abusive Relationship Discussion: 5 p.m., Wednesday, Copper Queen Hospital conference room. Women only. • Gardeners Club, Sierra Vista Area: 1 p.m., third Thursday, 4001 E. Foothills Drive, svgardenclub.org . • Good Neighbor Alliance: 5:15 p.m., third Tuesday, Cochise County Complex, 439-0776 or visit www. svshelter.org . • Greater Sierra Vista Kennel Club: 7 p.m., third Tuesday, 458-2893 or info@ gsvkc.org. • Grief and Loss support group: 3 p.m., first and third Monday, 2039 E. Wilcox Drive, Suite B, 458-9450. • The Happy Achers senior group has a potluck every third Thursday at 11:10 a.m. at the Sierra Vista United Methodist Church on the corner of Buffalo Soldier and St. Andrews Drive. Call 378-1924 for info. • Hereford Natural Resource Conservation District: 9:30 a.m., Sierra Vista, Cochise County Complex Conference Room, Highway 92 and Foothills Drive. • Huachuca Audubon Society: 7 p.m., third Tuesday, room 702 at Cochise College, 378-4937. • Huachuca Mineral and Gem Club: 7 p.m., third Wednesday, Horace Steele Room at Cochise College, 459-3718. • Huachuca Mountain Rubber Stamp Club: 9 a.m., third Saturday, social hour begins at 8:30 a.m., Huachuca Lions Club, 458-4119. • Huachuca Women’s Bowling League: Tuesday mornings, Desert Lanes (FH), 459-3119 or (915) 345-6056. • Kiwanis Club of Bisbee: 6:45 a.m., Bisbee Senior Center, 432-6638 or kiwanisclubofbisbee@gmail.com. • Kiwanis Club of Sierra Vista: 6:45 a.m., Thursday, Sun Canyon Inn, 3782992. • Kiwanis Club of Sierra Vista — San Pedro: Noon at Manda Le Restaurant and Lounge, 3455 Canyon de Flores. Contact Candie, 559-0637. • La Leche League (breastfeeding support group): 10 a.m., third Saturday, Pantano Christian Church, 216-3151. • Lettuce Get Healthy group: meetings are on the third Sunday of every month, 1:30 p.m. at United Methodist Church. For information, call Tony at 378-2141. • Lions Club, La Salida del Sol chapter: 7 to 8 a.m., Wednesdays, The Country House restaurant, lionwap. org/sierravistaazam . • Lions Club, Tombstone: 6:30 p.m., first and third Wednesday, 22 W. Allen St., 457-3255 or 457-3451. • Low-Vision Support Group:10 a.m., Tuesday, Oscar Yrun Center, 458-6441. • Loved Ones Incarcerated support group: Please call for locations and times, 234-6076. • Mom’s Group: Tuesday, Room 5 in Fellowship Hall of Sierra Vista United Methodist Church, 378-1870. • Mothers with Young Children: 6 p.m., first and third Monday, Faith Presbyterian Church, 378-9400. • NAMI Connections Support Group: 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, 4755 Campus Drive., 4593228. • NAMI Connections Support Group (Bisbee): 5:30 p.m., first and third Monday, Bisbee Y at 26 Howell Ave., 459-3228. • Narcotics Anonymous — Afternoon Serenity (O/D): 3 p.m., Sunday, St. Andrew the Apostle Catholic Church. • Narcotics Anonymous — Just For Today Group (O/D/Sm): 6:30 p.m., Monday, St. Paul’s Missionary Baptist Church. • Narcotics Anonymous — One Promise, Many Gifts (O//D): Noon, Tuesday, St. Andrew the Apostle Catholic Church. • Narcotics Anonymous — It’s in the Book (O/SH/D): 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Good Neighbor Alliance. • Narcotics Anonymous — No Matter What (O): 7 p.m., Wednesday, Oscar Yrun Community Center. • Narcotics Anonymous — Just for Today Group (O/SS): 5:30 p.m., Thursday, St. Paul’s Missionary Baptist Church. • Narcotics Anonymous — Willing to Change (O/W): 6 p.m., Friday, St. Andrew the Apostle Catholic Church. • Narcotics Anonymous — We Do Recover (C/SH): 7:30 p.m., Friday, St. Andrew the Apostle Catholic Church. • Narcotics Anonymous — We Do Recover (C/D): 7:30 p.m., Saturday, St. Andrew the Apostle Catholic Church. • Overeaters Anonymous: 6:30 p.m. on Monday, 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, 11 a.m. on Saturday, Church of Christ in Village Meadows, 456-6928 or 4171645. • Overeaters Anonymous Bisbee: Do you worry about the way you eat? Overeaters Anonymous will meet every Tuesday, starting Jan. 7 at Bisbee Chiropractic, 120 Naco Road in Bisbee

at 6 p.m. No dues, fees or weigh-ins. Everyone welcome. For information, call (520) 432-5126 . • Palominas Tea Party: 7 p.m., Monday, Church of Palominas, 2552212. • Prenatal Childbirth Classes: 6 p.m., Monday or Thursday, Lenio Conference Room, 417-3079. • Range Riders 4 Wheelers: 6:30 p.m., third Wednesday, Landmark Cafe, 2275401 or www.rangeridersnet.com . • Reformers Unanimous: 7 p.m., Friday, 200 N. 5th St., 236-5642. • Reserve Training Unit (6402d, points only): 6:30 p.m., first three Tuesdays, 249-2040. • Sierra Vista Table Tennis Club: meets for play at the Ethel Berger Center each Tuesday, Thursday and Friday morning, and at R & J’s Table Tennis Facility (Roy’s Place), 7433 Brumby Lane, on Monday evenings and Saturday mornings. All ages and skill levels are welcome (children must be accompanied by an adult). For information: http://www. sierravistatabletennisclub.org. • Sierra Vista Fit Club: 5:30 p.m. Monday, 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Apache Middle School gym, 266-1122 or http:// facebook.com/SierraVistaFitClub . • Sierra Vista Historical Society: 1 p.m., third Thursday, library conference room. 378-0733. • Sierra Vista Camera Club: Meets monthly at the Sierra Vista Public Library in the Mona Bishop Room. More information at 236-1182 or http:// svcameraclub.com . • Sierra Vista Group AA. 815 El Camino Real, 8 p.m. Thursday, Saturday. Jody Hensley, 459-1644. • Sierra Vista Low Vision Support Group: Meets 10 to 11:15 a.m. every Tuesday at the Oscar Yrun Center on Tacoma St. Meetings provide information about various types of vision loss; new technologies for the vision impaired; relevant speakers; sharing and socializing. No dues or fees. For information, contact Bill Hall at 458-6441. • Sierra Vista Parkinson’s Support Group: Meets monthly the third Tuesday of the month except for June, July and August, from 1:15 p.m. to 3 p.m. at the Mona Bishop Room at the Sierra Vista Public Library. People with Parkinson’s from the area and their spouses and caregivers are encouraged to come. For information, contact Carol Chamberlain, 520-6788309. • Sierra Vista Poker group: 7 p.m., Friday and Saturday,164 Fry Blvd. 2260536 sierravistapoker.com. • Sierra Vista Masters Softball League: 8:30 a.m., Tuesday and Thursday on Field One behind the police station. 378-0464. • Southwest Association of Buffalo Soldiers: 6:30 p.m.,third Tuesday, Cochise County office buildings, swabuffalosoldiers.org. • Southwest Sierra Vista Resident Association: 6 p.m., third Thursday, VFW Post 9972, 458-1506 or go online to swsvra.assn@hotmail.com . • Spanish Conversation Club: Wednesday, 452-8811. • SVRHC Bereavement Support Group: 4 p.m., Monday, Moorman Outpatient Services Building, 417-3654. • SVRHC Breastfeeding Support Group: 9 a.m., Monday, Wellness Depot lat the mall, 459-8210. • The Thunder Mountain Woodcarvers have a woodcarving meeting every Wednesday and Friday at the Ethel Berger Center from 1 to 3 p.m. All novice and experienced carvers are invited; there are no dues or fees. Call 458- 6592 for information. • Thunder Mountain Twirlers Square Dance Club: 7:30 p.m., Friday, Sierra Lutheran Church, 378-6719 or 8036743. • Toastmasters, Bisbee Mules: 5:30 p.m., Monday, Double P. Steakhouse in Bisbee, 227-1677 or BisbeeMulesTM@ yahoo.com . • Toastmasters, Cochise: 6:30 p.m., Tuesdays, Landmark Cafe, 227-1677. • Tombstone Vigilettes/Vigilantes: 6:30 p.m., third Friday, 22 Allen St., in Tombstone, 803-1319. • Tombstone Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution: 10 a.m. third Saturday, Sierra United Methodist Church, 458-8088. • T.O.P.S. AZ Chapter 0090: 6 p.m., Tuesday, Weigh-in 5:15 to 5:45 p.m., First Christian Church, 458-8639. • T.O.P.S. AZ Chapter 215: 9 a.m., Friday, Weigh-in 7:45 to 8:45 a.m., Fellowship Hall of the Church of Christ 378-0732. • Veteran Peer Support Group: 5:30 p.m., Tuesdays and Saturdays, 1201 E. Fry Blvd., 459-2624. • Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9972: 7 p.m., third Tuesday, 549 Veterans Drive. • Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary Post 9972 : 7 p.m., third Wednesday, 549 Veterans Drive. • The Women of Sierra Evangelical Church invite you to join their quilting organization, which sends quilts to our national church for onward shipment to needy overseas destinations. We still do this, but have also discovered a great need here in our own community. You need not be a member of the church to join our group. We meet the first and third Thursday’s of each month from 9 a.m. to noon. The church is located at 101 N. Lenzner Ave.

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The BS about power

Hawaiian Elvis performance at 2:00pm Elvis’ Hawaiian Dancers at 4:00pm Hawaiian Buffet will begin at 5:00pm We will be accepting a donation of $8.00 per meal with a percentage going to the Alzheimer’s Association.

COACHING COMPASS

L

et’s break open the lid on the belief that power must be tightly controlled in order to be effective — Baloney! Power, like abundance and love, multiplies when you give it away. That is why I cannot understand why leaders are so afraid to share power and empower others. Power multiples when you give it away — really! In Leading with Soul, Boleman and Deal wrote “When people have a sense of efficacy and an ability to influence their world, they usually seek to be more productive. They direct their energy and intelligence toward making a contribution rather than obstructing progress or destroying their enemies.” At Saturn automobile factories, employees were empowered to stop the assembly line any time they saw something wrong. The employees shared a sense of pride and ownership in their product because they shared the power to affect quality control. Another benefit of shared power is the reduction in conflict. We often suppress our feelings when we feel powerless. When this happens, our anger can only be contained for so long, then the conflict and anger

DR. MARIA CHURCH comes spewing out, often times in a rage. Empowered people empower others. In a Love-Based Leadership organization, shared power equals shared ownership. You cannot have one without the other. Have you empowered someone today? If not, what is holding you back? DR. MARIA CHURCH, CPC, is a leadership coach, speaker, and author of Love-Based Leadership: Transform Your Life with Meaning and Abundance, her upcoming books, A Course in Excellence: 21 Spiritual Lessons on Leadership, Love, and Life, and co-authored book, Very Bad Bosses: Never Get in a Pissing Match with a Skunk & Other Sage Advice for Surviving Workplace Villains. She also hosts Dr. Maria TV at http://drmariachurch.com/ drmariatv/. Maria holds a doctorate of management in organizational leadership, teaches at several universities, and is CEO of Dr. Maria Church International LLC, a leadership coaching, development, and training firm. You may reach her at Coach@DrMariaChurch. com.

New trustees selected at Sierra Vista Regional Health Center SIERR A VISTA — Sierra Vista Regional Health Center selected four new members to its Board of Trustees. The four new Trustees are Dr. William Elliott, Mary Gomez, Mignonne Hollis and Ruth Quinn. Bruce Dockter, Board of Trustee chairperson said, “We are fortunate to have individuals with diverse perspectives become part of the hospital Board of Trustees. Each person brings their skills and talents to the Board that will help us address health care concerns for the communities we are privileged to serve.” Already familiar with the hospital, Dr. Elliott is the Director of Medical Education and the Director for the Internal Medicine Residency Program for SVRHC. Dr. Elliott said, “I see a great deal of potential for our community. As a Trustee, I see the opportunity to have a voice in the future growth of the hospital and its services. This could possibly include expanding the graduate medical education and residency training.” Mary Gomez, a third generation Arizona native adds, “It is such an exciting time for SVRHC. As a member of the Board, I look forward to learning more about hospital governance, participate in the planning for the new hospital, and serve as a resource for public

BOARD OF TRESTEES Bruce Dockter, Chairman of the Board Chief Bill Miller, Vice Chair Elizabeth Patten, Secretary Andrea Dunlap William Elliott, DO Warren Gluck, MD Mary Gomez, RN, MN Jarrett Hamilton, DPM Mignonne Hollis Joanna Michelich, PhD Max Mirot, MD Ruth Quinn Rev. Virginia Studer Susan Warne, JD Dr. Dean French, SVRHC President & CEO health matters.” Currently the Executive Director of the Sierra Vista Economic Development Foundation, Mignonne Hollis said, “Health care is an important pillar of our community. As a new Trustee, I am looking forward to strengthening our community partnerships to build a better community.” Ruth Quinn, a former active duty Soldier, and an Army wife for 27 years, has always been involved in serving her community, both military and civilian. She mentions, “As a Board member, I look forward to learning more about our local health care system and helping to make it more understandable and accessible to both communities.”

New drug helps some bald patients regrow hair The first thing Brian H. noticed was that he could grow a real beard. It had been years since that had been possible. Brian, 34, who asked that his last name be withheld, suffers from alopecia areata, an autoimmune disease aff licting about 1 percent of men and women, causing hair to fall out, often all over the body. Brian enrolled this year in a study at Columbia University Medical Center testing whether a drug approved for a bone marrow disorder could help people with alopecia. After successfully testing on mice two drugs from a new

class of medicines called JAK inhibitors, which suppress immune system activity by blocking certain enzymes, the researchers began testing one of the drugs, ruxolitinib, on seven women and five men. But Dr. George Cotsarelis, a dermatologist at the University of Pennsylvania, urged c aution. B ec au se patients in the study received twicedaily pills, rather than topical cream, he said they were “treated systemically with a very toxic drug” that can cause liver and blood problems, infections and other ailments. NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

aatt Prestige in August

Please join us for our Third Annual

Tropical Luau

TUESDAY AUGUST 19, 2014

Friday, August 22 6-8 pm

Prestige Assisted Living at Sierra Vista

Please RSVP by August 20 to (520) 452-1402 4400 Avenida Cochise Sierra Vista, AZ 85635


TUESDAY AUGUST 19,2014

HERALD/REVIEW

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REACHING MORE THAN 30,000 PEOPLE EVERY DAY IN PRINT OR ON-LINE ANNOUNCEMENTS Ft. Huachuca Thrift Shop inside the Main Gate Tues & Thurs 9a-3p 1st Sat of Month 9a-1p or find us on Facebook ft.huachucacommunity thriftshop CASH ONLY Volunteers & Donations Needed.

FOR SALE GENERAL Craftsman New Tools. 1/2 STD/Metric Sockets $25 per bag, 3/8 STD/Metric Sockets $25 per bag, 1/4 STD/ Metric Sockets $25 per bag, 1/2 3 Quick Release Ratchets $15 each, 3/8 3 Quick Release Ratchets $10 each, 1/4 3 Quick Release ratchets $10 each, 8 Ratcheting Wrenches Metric $35 set, 8 Ratcheting Wrenches STD $35 set. All new. Call (520) 236-7097

Need a loan despite bad credit? Honest lenders won’t guarantee a loan before you apply. Call the Federal Trade Commission to find out how to avoid advance-fee loan scams. 1-877-FTC-HELP Pet door for sliding door A message from 10x16 opening $25, The Sierra Vista Herald/ Wood Table 32’W Bisbee Daily Review 48”L. on cast iron and the FTC. pedestal $20, Entry OCHOA’S FARM door 36” $25, Old Green Chile Available maps of Arizona (1) Beginning August 15 1880. Nordic Track Call (520) 204-9243 5400 Treadmill $295, for more information. Ab machine $99, Recumbent cycle $99. ANTIQUES 459-2085 Antiques & Collectibles Walk Behind Desperately Needed!!! Weed Trimmers & Don’t Be A Hoarder! Lawnmowers. Especially needing NaCall (520) 803-9444 tive American jewelery, Rock and Roll HELP WANTED LT’s, Gold & Silver A1 Communications Top Dollar Paid. Now Hiring We Make House Calls. CABLE INSTALLERS 678-7554 or 432-4009

AUCTIONS/ESTATE SALES Upcoming Auctions Check for info tumbleweedauction.com

BOATS 2 BOATS 12 ft Row Boat, Sears, aluminum, $400. 10 ft Jon Boat with Gamefisher motor, $600. Call (520) 378-0696

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(520) 458-9600 FOR FREE FREE WOODEN PALLETS!! Located behind the Sierra Vista Herald 400 Veterans Dr. Please Keep the Area Tidy!

FOR SALE GENERAL 13” 7 inch (1800 ft) reel to reel BASF Recording Tapes. Each with plastic storage case. 8 used once. 5 new. $50. (520) 906-3368

Must have own transportation (Truck/SUV preferred) Clean MVR & Background. Will train the right person. Medical, Dental & 401k Available. Call 520-245-9529 or email résumé Employment@a1 communications.net Bookkeeper/Administrative Assistant. Quickbooks knowledge a must. Duties include leasing & sales. 1993 Frontage Rd. Suite 102, Sierra Vista. AZ 85650 Carl’s Jr. is Hiring Experienced Managers Starting salary, $10/hr. Come in for an application. 2080 E. Fry Blvd., Sierra Vista. Certified Medical Assistant or LPN for busy family practice in Sierra Vista. Minimum 2yrs clinical experience. Full time with benefits. Competitive compensation. Send Resume To: MA/LPN, Box 702 c/o Sierra Vista Herald 102 Fab Ave Sierra Vista, Az 85635

Antique Coins- 50 plus antique coins of various nationalities and Child Care Director denominations. $20. and Asst. Director (520) 906-3368 Childtime in Sierra Vista, AZ seeks a DiBEWARE CHECK rector & Asst. Director. OVERPAYMENT $1000 Sign On Bonus SCAMS for Director & The FTC gives the $500 Sign On Bonus following tips to avoid for Asst. Director! check overpayment Must have child related scams: course credits & prior •Never accept a childcare center mgmt check for more than exp. Director qualificayour selling price tions req’d. •Never agree to wire Send resumes to Kalli back funds to a McCoury at buyer kmccoury@learning•Resist pressure to caregroup.com or fax “act now” to 248-697-9006. EOE •Only accept checks Customer Service from a local bank Growing Global Comand visit the branch pany w warehouse in to verify legitimacy SV requires customer For more information service support to visit: manage deliveries: www.ftc.gov invoicing, shipping documentation, setting TOTAL GYM ULTIMATE up shipments, procin absolute NEW conessing purchase dition w/accessories orders, etc. MS Office Squat Stand & Pilates Skills needed, Bar, AB Crunch Boards, Dip Holders, experienced preferred, send resume and Wing Accessory, Manexpected wage to ual & Nutrition Guide dhefu@aol.com $125 520-803-1510

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DIRECT CARE WORKER Assist individuals with developmental disabilities in daily therapeutic activities. Requirements:, 21 yrs of age, good driving record, dependable, pass fingerprint clearance. Experience helpful but training is provided. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! PT $9.00/hr Bilingual preferred. Apply in person at: Horizon Human Services, 4341 S Hwy.92, Suite D, Sierra Vista AZ 85650 EOE/M/F D/V

Newspaper Journalist (Fort Huachuca, AZ)

Complete Double Bed Set. Includes mattress, boxpsring, headboard and frame. $180 obo. Nightstand $10. Coffee Table $5. End Table $10. Lamp $5. Conventional TV $5 . Call Donald (520) 224-4913

Enjoy working with the elderly? AccentCare is seeking quality, compassionate CAREGIVERS in the Sierra Vista area. We offer training, a variety of shifts, paid mileage, and competitive wages. Interested? Contact Denise Borgstadt at 520-661-8371. Or email her at

Journalist wanted. Aerotech News, publisher of The Fort Huachuca Scout in Sierra Vista, AZ is accepting resumes for the position of Journalist for the Fort Huachuca base newspaper. Applicants must have minimum 3 years experience as a print journalist. Thorough knowledge of AP style a must. Submit resume and at least three published samples to Publisher, Aerotech News 456 E K-4, Suite 8, Lancaster, CA 93535, or email to paulkinison @aerotechnews.com

Custom made five piece, brass trim, bedroom set: Dresser with mirror has ten drawers, is six feet long. Two night stands Chest of drawers, three drawers and can be used as a desk. Make up bench. $1000 for all. (520) 378-2616 or (520) 255-5498 Luxury Sleeper Sofa. Seldom used. Like new condition. Red Ultra Suede. MSRP, $3600. $600 firm. Dick, 458-8019.

Part Time Merchandiser New Reclining Sofa and Compensation: $11.00 Loveseat. $750. If inper hour plus $30.00 a terested please call week gas allowance Ralph, home (520) and 30.00 a month 459-6757 or cell (520) cell phone allowance 234-2058. The largest alcoholic beverage distributor in dborgstadt@accentcare.com the state of Arizona EOE/M/F/D/V needs a Merchandiser Fri., Sat., Sun. Must Experienced Animal have a valid AZ liBather needed at Paw cense, a smart phone, Passion, 100 N 6th St. Own transportation. Please call Please apply to position 520-255-4887 2014-031 on Experienced www.alliance-bever Framers Needed: age.com.M/F/H/V AlliApply in person, must ance Beverage is an have valid ID, pass Equal Opportunity drug test. B & B GenEmployer eral 4636 E. Buffalo Soldier Trail Sierra Part time Maintenance Vista, AZ 85635 person needed at an RV park in Benson. For Experienced Remodel more information call Installers Wanted (520) 720-0024 •Residential & Light Commercial Preschool Teachers •Must have own tools •Valid Drivers License The Center for •Clean driving record Academic Success •EPA Certified Preschool is accept•Strong Customer ing applications for Service Skills Part- Time Teachers. Working hours Pay based on will be between 20 experience. Benefits – 30 hours a week. Call for interview Requirements: (520) 803-8884 Must have a high HELP WANTED school diploma or Pueblo del Sol GED Must be able to Country Club pass a finger print Part Time / Full Time screening or already • Line Cook have a valid finger • Dining Room and print clearance card. Banquet Server Must have a CPR and • Beverage Cart First Aide Class or • Driving Range / Golf able to complete the Cart Attendant class with-in one Applications available at month of employ2770 St. Andrews ment. Drive, Sierra Vista, AZ The ideal candidate will enjoy working Holiday Inn Express with children and be Sierra Vista able to prepare lesis accepting applicason plans that focus tions for Experienced on early childhood Housekeepers. development. Please apply in person Please send a reat 1902 S Hwy. 92. sume to jhilderLincare, leading nabrand@cpic-cas.org tional respiratory comor fax to 520pany seeks friendly, 417-99100 For attentive Customer more information Service Representacontact Jena Hildetive. Phone skills that brand at 520provide warm cus439-3526. CAS is an tomer interactions a Equal Opportunity must. Maintain patient Employers. files, process doctors’ orders, manage computer data and filing. RN's/LPN's Growth opportunities No Evenings, Weekends are excellent. Apply in or Holidays!! person 2700 E. Fry The Mariposa CommuBlvd Suite C-1 or call nity Health Center, Inc. 520-459-1671. in Nogales, AZ is curDrug-free workplace. rently accepting appliEOE. cations for the Peer Support Specialist Full-Time positions of 25 to 29 hours two Registered Nurse positions one Wilcox (RN)/Licensed Practiand Benson. 8.75 cal Nurse(LPN). Curhour to start. Work in rent Arizona Licensure the field of wellness is required. Experience and recovery in outpatient clinic setcenter contact ting preferred. Bilindhorn@nazcare.org gual in English-Spanor fax (602) 535-3229 ish preferred. Excellent benefits. Please PT/FT Dental fax resume to Assistant An needed for busy but fun 520-281-1112. office. Experience pre- Equal Opportunity Afferred. Fax resume to firmative Action Employer 520-459-7877

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C4 HERALD/REVIEW

TUESDAY AUGUST 19,2014 HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

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NOW HIRING NEW Positions Available Starting Salary $

9.50 hr

XNLV170357

It’s easy to place your classified ad! Call 458-9440 or visit us at www.svherald.com

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Reporter Needed in Sierra Vista, AZ

Apply Online www.aegiscareersusa.com

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Let us help advertise your business/service at a low cost.

Backhoe, Trenching, Leveling, Clean-up, Light Demolition, Mowing Stump Removal. Mesquite Removal References. Call (520) 732-0686 Not a licensed contractor

CARPENTRY Carpenter Services •Roof Coating Save $ •Framing & Trim, •Drywall, Texture & Painting•Tile & Wood Flooring •Remodeling Not a licensed contractor

(520) 442-7040

CARPET CLEANING J.R.’s Carpet Cleaning Fast Drying. Pet Stain Removal Call For Free Estimate. 520-559-1429

CLEANING SERVICE

HEATING & COOLING

ILSE’S HOUSE CLEANING SERVICES Free Estimates. Call 266-2576 or 456-0485 WHITE GLOVE PRO/ CLEANING SERVICE, LLC. Specializing in Move-Ins/Move-Outs & Construction Free Estimates. Diana 520-266-2487

•Bill’s Evaporative (Swamp) Cooler Service• Sales, Service, Repairs, also Duct Cleaning Veteran Owned. 520-732-9367 Licensed,Bonded, Insured. Not a licensed contractor

HOME IMPROVEMENT

ELECTRICAL CHUCK’S ELECTRIC Guaranteed Lowest Prices. 40+ years. Not a licensed contractor 520-559-7026 Licensed Electrician ROC #267177. Same Day Service Free Estimates (520) 236-5284

HANDYMAN A&O Home Repair Handyman-Reasonable Rates (520) 220-1632 ROC # 290947

Red’s Odd Jobs Residential Handyman and House Cleaning General Labor Free Estimates. Afford(520) 249-3063 able. Owner operated Ref’s. (520) 559-2409 Not a licensed contractor

•Shingle and Flat Roof Specialists •Exterior Painting •Insurance Work •Gutters •Fascia Repair Owner Always On Site

DRYWALL No Job Too Small Tuxedo Quality Drywall, Stucco & Home Repair. 29 years exp. (520) 236-7414 ROC#251322

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Credit Cards Accepted

520-227-6720 ROC 245780 Remodeling & Restoration

HOME REPAIR & RESTORATION

•Bathroom Pros •Garages •Porches & Patios •Flooring & Painting •Popcorn & Drywall Insurance and Restoration "Yes, We Do That Too!" Credit Cards Accepted

520-227-6720 ROC#245780

Sierra Vista Home Maintenance All Types of Home Repairs & Improvements. Painting, Drywall, Roof Coating, Coolers & Remodeling Call for details. Bonded & Insured ROC#282990 (520) 559-6772

Let Us Make Your Home A Better Home! For A Free Estimate Call 520-678-9120 or 520-249-7614 ROC# 201337 •Licensed •Bonded •Insured Military & Senior Citizen Discounts Visa & MC Accepted www.betterhomesof sierravista.com

LANDSCAPING Glenn’s Affordable Lawn Service, Tree Trimming Mowing, Weed eating, Cleanup 520-236-6914

LOST AND FOUND

CAREGIVER (Asstd Living Facility) Day Classes – 3.5 wks plus externship Begins Sep 2

PHLEBOTOMY SKILLS (Entry Level) Weekend Classes – 2 days Begins Sep 13 CLINICAL MEDICAL ASST (CMA) Day Classes – 20 wks incl. externship Begins Sep 17 PHLEBOTOMY TECH Eve Classes – 3 wks plus externship Begins Sep 29 REGISTER NOW! Horizon Health Care Institute 155 Bartow Dr, Sierra Vista 520-439-9551 www.horizonhealth careinstitute.com

THINKING OF GETTING A NEW PUP? Contact us for tips on finding the right puppy for you and your family. Greater Sierra Vista Kennel Club 520-378-4114

SERVICES OFFERED Avail: Caregiver, AZ C.N.A 20+yrs exp. Excellent refs. All certs/ lic current. 678 9851 Jan’s House & Petsitting Service Phone: 520-456-3506 Cell: 520-456-1671

TRUCKS/VANS/ SUVS 1972 Chevy Pickup LWB 1/2 Ton. Fresh 350 & 400 trans. $8000 in new parts! $5000 obo. Call (520) 732-0686

TRAVEL TRAILERS/ CAMPERS/RVS ROADMASTER “Falcon 2” Tow Bar $350.00. REESE 5th Wheel Slider Hitch w/ Rails, 16,000lbs tow weight. $450.00 obo (520) 378-0751

Feeling Lost? LOST AND FOUND FOUND DOG: mix female, with black stripes. No Found on Los on 8/15. 458-7605

Terrier brown tiger collar. Reyes. (520)

Shading your ad makes it easy to be found! Ask us how...

458-9440

For information call 458-9440

LANDSCAPING

LANDSCAPING

PLUMBING

REMODELING

Mr. Fix It of Sierra Vista Water & Mold Restoration Insurance Claim Specialists (520) 227-8194 www.mrfixitsv.com ROC #257090

IGO

A+ TYLER’S YARD, TREE & LANDSCAPING, LLC We Do It All! No Job Too Large or Small! Trees, Shrubs, Cactus, •Yard Clean-Up and Palm Tree & Much More Maintenance Lic. Bonded. Insured •Haul Away Services ROC#273911(K-21)Dual FREE ESTIMATES Free Estimates Call ROOFING 520.481.7569 Tyler 520-234-5369 cell 520.226.2587 BEC’s Roof Restoration Border & Elastomeric CoatMARTIAL ARTS Groundskeeping ings Power wash, all Karate Shotokan Grounds Maintenance cracks & joints sealed. Classes M, W, F Grounds Clean-Up Three coats of www.olympickarate Bush/Hedge Trimming Elastomeric Coating shotokan.com AND MORE! Free (520) 732-9367 Sensei is Estimates 432-5700 Veteran owned Silver Medalist 1995 YEAR ROUND SERVICE Not a licensed contractor Pan-American Games El Mirage Yard LOOK US MOVING Maintenance, LLC ROOFING, LLC Quality service at Timothy’s Free Estimates favorable prices. Moving & Packing Emergency Service Insured, Call Robert of Sierra Vista All Kinds of Roofs (520) 226-5931 Loading, Local Pick-up, ROC#273893 Long Distance. Jasmine Landscaping (520) 266-1915 Service With A Smile! & Irrigation LLC (520) 732-7440 Cell: (520) 358-2310 All Your Needs! Luis (Lucas) Fucuy Office 520-366-9873 520-226-2003 PAINTING Lic/bonded/insured ROC# 289392 * SONORAN PAINTING Interior & Exterior. Timothy’s Free Est., Lic, Bonded, Landscaping Services & Insured. Roc#219565 of Sierra Vista Joe, (520) 227-1457 •Artistic Pruning B & M Painting •All Trees & Palms Interior & Exterior •Mowing •Trimming Free Estimates •Gardens •Gravel 559-3718 Cell 520-358-2310 Not a licensed contractor Office 520-366-9873 PLUMBING Not a licensed contractor Huachucha Plumbing LLC All plumbing services Licensed Bonded and Insured (520) 459-6303 www.svherald.com/classifieds ROC # 198096 MONDAY

BACKHOE

CLEANING SERVICE

MONEY

ADULT CARE Private Caregiver (CNA) Available 9 years experience in medical field. AZ & VA Nurses Aide Licenses, FBI background check, CPR & 1st Aide Certified and have excellent references. Call Diana 234-3000

Accelerated! Affordable! Achievable!

NURSING ASST (CNA) Eve Classes – 5 wks incl. externship Begins Sep 8

The Sierra Vista Herald/Bisbee Daily Review, an award-winning, 7-day-a week morning newspaper in Southern Arizona, has an immediate opening for a full-time general assignment reporter with emphasis on sports, community reporting and data entry. Accurate reporting on deadline, strong typing skills and reliable transportation are musts. This is a great opportunity for someone looking to make a start in the profession with opportunities in place for advancement. Familiarity with social media, Adobe InDesign and Photoshop are pluses, as is a journalism degree or equivalent experience. E-mail resume, cover letter, clips and references to eric.petermann@svherald.com. S I E R R A V I S TA

Referral Bonuses Attendance Bonus Performance Bonus Ample Overtime Health/Dental/ Insurance Available Performance Bonuses Advancement Opportunities Abound

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

Im selling two twin-size LOST TORTOISE: AfriMurphy bed frames. can Spurd 100+lbs, The frames are Oak name is Fred. Lost on plywood (3/4”). Mat- Hereford Rd. Reward. tress not included. The Call (520) 378-1412 or photo only shows one (520) 255-3172 but they are identical PERSONALS except for pull handles. Complete mount- ADOPT: A warm, ing hardware included. kind-hearted, loving I’m asking $400.00 for couple hopes to beeach (negotiable if you come parents. A lifepurchase both). time of security My number is awaits. Expenses paid. 520-227-8381. Text Stephanie & Jason @ or call for more infor1-800-672-8514 mation. ADOPT: Joy-filled home with INSTRUCTION/ loving hearts is anxEDUCATION ious to start our family! Alex + Tony (800) HEALTH CAREER 838-0809 (exp.paid) COURSES Starting in September PETS & ANIMALS

It’s easy to place your classified ad! Call 458-9440 or visit us online at www.svherald.com

Residential, LLC MIKE LLOYD & Family Resident Since 1969 Veteran Owned Buena Class of ‘73 Specializing in Handicap Accessibility (personal experience) Home Builder & Remodel Expert •Room Additions •Flooring •Windows & Doors •Kitchen & Bath •Curb & Driveways •Paint & Texture Pro

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

Densmore’s Tractor Service •Cleanup & Hauling •Grading •Drainage Correction •Brush & Rock Removal •Rock Spreading. Free Estimates. (520) 678-2455 Not a licensed contractor

ROC #290737 (520) 490-1838

SWIMMING POOLS

Experience Innovation Craftsmanship Locally Owned & Operated • New Pools • • Remodeling • • Pool Cleaning • • Repairs • Residential/Commercial Free Estimates Call Tom Giuffrida 520-508-6051 ROC#A-19, 285105 B-6,267415

TREE SERVICE

A+ TREE SERVICE Tyler’s Tree Service,LLC Serious Bucket Truck, Tree Pruning/Removal, Stump Grinding. Lic., Bonded, Insured. ROC#273911(K-21)Dual Free Estimates Call

520-234-5369 JW TREE SERVICE Tree Removal, Pruning, Bucket Truck For Safety Free Estimates 234-6209


TUESDAY AUGUST 19,2014

HERALD/REVIEW

What do you want to sell?

AND

Advertise it here ... and reach 28,000 people!

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Sell

ADVERTISE IT HERE AND SELL IT FAST!

2007 Palomino Thoroughbred 5th Wheel

1986 Chevy Corvette

D L O

2006 Honda TRX68 ATV

1993 Ford F250 S

Call 520-255-8083

Call 520-591-5100

Good work truck in excellent mechanical condition. 171,000 miles. RWD, gas, auto. New tires, good battery. $2,500 OBO.

2007 Dodge Ram 1500

D 2003 Yamaha LElectric O SGolf Cart

2010 Keystone Cougar 27' 5th Wheel

Price reduced to $5,000. No reasonable offer refused.

Model 829RL. Ultra lite, can be pulled w/half-ton P/U, 4 seasons model. 14' slideout, AC, sleeps 4. $16,900

6 cyl, 6 spd transmission, 56,400 miles, AC, short bed. AM/FM CD, custom rims, quad cab, 2WD. Great gas mileage. $9,999

Call 520-732-9367

Call 520-732-9367

Low hours, original owner. Cammo color. $4,000.

8-15

Excellent condition, travels 25mph. Runs perfect and street legal. Battery charger & enclosure incl. $2,200 OBO. 8-19

and 2007 Toyota Tundra Double Cab, long bed. Both for $37,500 OBO. Will sell trailer separately.

Call 520-378-4957

2001 Chevy Duramax 2500 HD Diesel

2009 Nash Travel Trailer

6.6L, 4 door extended cab, 2WD, 148k miles. All new fuel injectors, tires & battery. $9,995 OBO.

Model 22h, manufactured by Northwood with solar battery maintainer. Very clean, nonsmoker. Brand new tires & battery. $12,000 OBO.

Mark 520-732-7753

Call 520-266-1586

D

2000 Harley Davidson Sportster 883 Great condition. 2,900 miles. $3,950

Call 520-266-1356

Box L Truck 17'O

S

Retired U-Haul, rebuilt engine, new tires, ball joints and radiator, 239k miles. Excellent condition. In Douglas. $4,500 OBO.

We make it easy! Just call us at 458-9440 to get started!

IT’S YOUR CALL © 3/14 VHA

Confidential help for Veterans and their families

Confidential chat at VeteransCrisisLine.net or text to 838255

8-15


C6 HERALD/REVIEW

TUESDAY AUGUST 19,2014

REAL ESTATE & RENTALS We are pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achievement of equal opportunity throughout the nation. We encourage and support the affirmative advertising and marketing program in which there are no barriers to obtain housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicaps, family status or national origin. All real estate advertising herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicaps, family status or national origin or intention to make such preference, limitation or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Cash in on your

1 Acre Corner Lot in Huahcua Mountain Village.(520) 227-2910

APARTMENTS FOR RENT 1BR, unfurnished, quiet neighborhood. $535, gas & water incl. 520-266-0277 CALL 458-9440 TO PLACE AN AD Efficiency Apartment Studio Apartment, $490. All utilities included. Very clean, new paint & floors. Includes. Stove & fridge, Cable & Satellite ready. Personal parking spot and quiet neighborhood. Security deposit $590 & $625. Available. Now.Tombstone. (520) 805-2441

Advertise with us! 458-9440 SIERRA VISTA HERALD · BISBEE DAILY REVIEW

FOR SALE

BISBEE AREA RENTALS

ACREAGE

CONDO/TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT

CONDO/TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT

3BR house w/ garage. ! Valley Viejo 109 Graham, Bisbee. 4335 C Plaza Vista. Townhome Responsible tenant 2BR/ 1BA. Washer, Beautiful 2BR/2BA, 2 w/references only. dryer, DW, fridge, cov- car garage, fireplace, $650+ dep. S&G paid. ered parking. $600. 1256 sf, pool, Jacuzzi, Mike, (520) 432-2149 520-271-5671 AC. Gas heat, cooking & hotwater. Large Carmelita 1032 WARREN covered patio. $725 Spacious 2BR, living Spacious 1,800sf 2BR, per month. 2 ba. Condo. Arizona room. dining room, (520) 220-8198 completely refur- Room, 2 Car Garage, bished. Utilities paid. open & bright floor Very Spacious plan, Fenced yard, RV 2BR/2BA. Near Mall , $690. 520-378-1824 Parking, $850/ mo. Fort, and all schools. To place an ad, call Call (520) 378-2601 or Central location, walk 520-458-9440 227-6497 to everything! FireWarren- Newly painted place, 1200 sf. Water 2BR/1BA Upstairs with 1BR. Small patio. Off paid. $625. Block balcony. W/D. Sewer, street parking. Utlities wall 520-490-1314 trash incl. $650/ paid. $640. or 378-2784 month.(520) 456-0170 Call (520) 378-1824 Call 520-458-9440 HOMES FOR SALE today to place your ad COMMERCIAL SIERRA VISTA in the classifieds! RENTALS 3BD Brick home in town RENT TO OWN Professional near Coronado. A/C, Townhome 2 Bedroom Office Space brand new remodel $750/mo. 4440-D 1600-3200 sq ft $99,500 Buena Loma Way. Don Call Randy (520) 266-0999 Cairns 458-7655 (520) 227-7597 Custom built Beautiful home 4bd,2 ba, 2,383ft, $298.000 1/2 acre lot, Lots of custom features Open House Aug 17 Sunday noon-5 4288 S.Hackberry Drive 520-975-1512

BY OWNER

HOUSES FOR RENT

ADVERTISE Rentals Available

YOUR HOUSE AND SELL

Custom Home on 8 Fenced Acres in Hereford 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, almost 2,400sf. Stamped concrete front and rear porches, large bedrooms, plenty of storage, detached garage. $277,000

IT FAST!

Call 520-508-9237

Call 520-678-4858

447 N. 1st, Tombstone A Must See! Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath with pool, hot tub and attached 1 bath apartment with separate entry. $224,900.

Call 520-456-4092

! SOLD

3BR/2BA Doublewide. Den, furnished, appliances, laundry room. Fenced front yard, firepit, 8x10 shed/workshop, lots of parking w/motorhome hookups. Price reduced $38,500 OBO OWC.

Four Acres 1998 Manufactured Located in Double Adobe on McBride Road. 3BR/2BA, new carpet throughout. $58,000. $3,000 down, owner will carry.

4-4

642 Little Bear Trail SV Village. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, top-of-the-line doublewide. Beautifully updated. Landscaped, quality appliances, permanent skirting. AC, storage. Reduced to $60,000.

Call 520-459-3320

D! L O S 1196 Quail Hollow Drive ON TH

E 1S T

WEEK

END

Nearly remodeled 3BR/2BA, corner lot, nice neighborhood, large back yard, 16" tiles, oak cabinets. Only $118,000.

COLOR PHOTOS OF THESE HOUSES ARE AVAILABLE ON-LINE! For color photos, go to www.svherald.com and click on Classifieds · To advertise your home, call Classified Advertising at 458-9440.

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

Sierra Vista Realty 520-458-4388 Office 520-227-6694 Cell Ask for Brad Snyder 2063 N Elder 4BR/2BA block home. with 3 car garage in nice neighborhood in Whetstone just off Oak st. New carpet and tile throughout, all appliances fenced yard with RV gate. $850/mo + deposit. (520) 234-0864 3776 Barraco Drive. 3BD/2BA Excellent views, quiet neighborhood, A/C, tiled dining room. $1000/month + deposit. (520) 458-7820. or (520) 249-6989.

HOUSES FOR RENT

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE

3 Bdrm 2 BA home in Country Club.1900 SQ Ft. Ceramic tile throughout. Central AC/heat. Beautiful landscaping. Pets ok with deposit. Available Sept 1st. 2927 Hagen Ave. Call Cathy 520-249-0175.

GREAT LOCATION! Golden Vista Estates, 5110 Clearview Ave., Sierra Vista. 3Br. 2Ba. Manufactured home on half acre. Metal car port and storage shed as well as oven and refrigerator included. Only $59,900. Call 520-378-6252 for appointment.

3BR/2BA Newly remodeled clean home with all the amenities + MANUFACTURED fenced yard. 4931 Ev- HOMES FOR RENT ergreen. $880/mo. $350/mo, 1/3 elec. 33’ (520) 220-4279 travel trailer, water, 3BR/2BA, AC $800 sewer, trash incl. Ref’s 3BR/2BA 2CG $950 req’d. 520-559-3718 1BR/1BA 2BR/1BA Grass and “Cowboy House” in trees. Assistance Pets Palominas $550 ok. $510 + security 2BR/1BA Duplex $650. dep. 520-456-9043 CANYON MEADOWS REALTY 378-2422 590 Camino de Tundra. 4BR, 2BA, 2 car garage 4BR/2BA in PDS Country Club. Beautiful Mobile Home on 1 3709 Miller St. acre in Whetstone. $1000/mo. + dep. Fenced yard, landAVAILABLE NOW scaped, porches and Call: 520-803-9746 storage shed. $850/ 4BR/2BA home in mo + deposit. (520) Country Club Estates. 234-0864 Large yard & patio with tiki bar. Basket- New 4BR/3BA, 4 acres ball court, freshly off E. Ramsey on Grasspainted, oversized ga- hopper Lane, 2432 sf, rage, storage, refrig- sunken family room, erator, gas range, over large eat-in kitchen, the stove microwave, jack and jill bathnew dishwasher, rooms,. All appliances, French doors, Jacuzzi 360º mountain views tub in master bath. A/C. $1150 per month. Available Now!. 775-848-3186 $1150, military disRemodeled 2 & 3 BR count available. (520) $350 & Up + Deposit. 236-8440 Whetstone area 5122 Galileo. 3BR/2BA. (520) 456-9071 Ceramic floors, fenced WHETSTONE yard, 16x20 garage in 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms backyard, new AC/ Starting at $295/ mo heater. newly remod10 mins from main eled. $900/month + gate 520-266-2206 deposit. Or for sale. (520) 459-2010 “We can erase your Available NOW clean bad credit3BR/2BA in PDS, near 100% Guarenteed!” school. elementary The Federal Trade Pets OK w/deposit. Commission says $900. (520) 266-2719 the only legitimate 4785 Paseo Arruza Dr. credit repair starts Just updated 3Bd 2Ba and ends with you. home, AZ room.2 car It takes time and a garage, fenced yard. conscious effort to Pets welcome. 1331 pay your debts. Any Tacoma St. $900/mo company that claims Available Sept 1. to be able to fix your 520-266-1927. credit legally is lying. Month to month on this 1 BR furnished home. Learn about managing Clean & quiet. $375. credit and debt Call 458-7477 at ftc.gov/credit Newer, 3BR/2BA. 4263 Tierra Bien Ct. A message from the $1050/mo. $700 dep. SV Herald, the Bisbee Available on or near 9/1 Review and the FTC. Call 520-249-8621


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