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Stanton: Tucson Citizen staffers are the best

The Tucson Citizen is staffed by a hardworking yet motley crew of professionals, the likes of whom I may never work with again

Members of the Winelord rock trio are (clockwise from lower left) Jessica McVey, Tucson Citizen reporter Polly Higgins and Amy Shapiro. For more information, upcoming performances and song clips, go to <a href="http://www.myspace.com/winelord">www.myspace.com/winelord</a>.

Members of the Winelord rock trio are (clockwise from lower left) Jessica McVey, Tucson Citizen reporter Polly Higgins and Amy Shapiro. For more information, upcoming performances and song clips, go to <a href="http://www.myspace.com/winelord">www.myspace.com/winelord</a>.

Like a fistful of diamonds flung across the desert floor, the gems of the Tucson Citizen were all set to scatter.

Then Tuesday, two prospective buyers for our newspaper materialized unexpectedly, prompting Citizen owner Gannett Co. Inc. to put a stop to our expected Saturday closure – for now.

Instead of certain death, we’re poised to twist in the wind until sales negotiations and other high-level business decisions can be settled.

And while none of us wanted our beloved Citizen to die, the sudden switch is unsettling at best.

Those who already had other jobs lined up had hoped to collect their severance pay in addition to new salaries, putting them ahead of the game.

They were good to go – to install elevators or restore faded photographs, to process Social Security applications or publicize missile designs, to plot political strategies, to teach, to blog or to travel with camera in hand.

Now, who knows? The sudden shift is a surprise of shocking dimensions.

No last-minute buyers materialized for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, which published its last edition Tuesday. Nor did a savior materialize for my friends at the Rocky Mountain News, which stopped publishing Feb. 26.

Yet our little Citizen has drawn the notice of two wannabe publishers – even though Gannett has said it plans to keep its half of the lucrative joint operating agreement with the Arizona Daily Star.

It would be as good as a Jimmy Stewart movie if a real buyer with deep pockets swept in and saved us all. None of us expects that, though.

Instead, the fates have simply pushed the pause button. Should someone decide to buy us and proceed with a skeleton crew, though, they’d have some hot hires on their hands, with extra talents to spare.

Dan Buckley is our videographer and Teya Vitu covers downtown. In real life, Dan writes operas for kicks and Teya travels the world to attend operas – and to see every Shakespeare play performed. Which he has.

Polly Higgins has worn many hats in features; in life she wears cool shoes, spoils beagles and stars in a rock band.

Eric Sagara covered plenty of beats, then took the initiative to become an expert on computer-assisted reporting – building complex databases, Web sites and more.

Sheryl Kornman has been shuffled from one duty to the next time and again. But with her Los Angeles Times experience and language acumen, she’s the one we turn to for Spanish translations, source names and numbers and more.

Behind the scenes, Rose-Mary Grzasko fixes our glitches and crafts clever headlines. Whether grinning or glowering, she never lets our standards slip.

Then there’s Mark Kimble, the distinguished panelist on “Arizona Illustrated” and the voice of reason on this paper.

Unbeknownst to most, Mark’s also a selfless soul, administering compassion throughout this community in volunteer work that very few people would take on willingly.

Plus he’s stood up for me for five years. He’s earned a nomination to sainthood.

Returning to Tucson from Denver after a quarter-century, I didn’t know I was coming to work for “The Little Engine That Could.” But the Citizen’s citizens could – and have. And throngs of loyal, cheering readers have been making it all worthwhile.

I suspect we at the Citizen “can’t” much longer, though. So thanks for the memories, kids. You’re the best. And what a shame that the best paper didn’t win.

After 30 years of true love, newspapers and Billie Stanton have filed for divorce. Reach Stanton in her next life at billiestanton@gmail.com.

Dan Buckley is the Citizen videographer who likes to write operas.

Dan Buckley is the Citizen videographer who likes to write operas.

Teya Vitu is the Citizen reporter who covers downtown and travels the world to attend operas.

Teya Vitu is the Citizen reporter who covers downtown and travels the world to attend operas.

Citizen Online Archive, 2006-2009

This archive contains all the stories that appeared on the Tucson Citizen's website from mid-2006 to June 1, 2009.

In 2010, a power surge fried a server that contained all of videos linked to dozens of stories in this archive. Also, a server that contained all of the databases for dozens of stories was accidentally erased, so all of those links are broken as well. However, all of the text and photos that accompanied some stories have been preserved.

For all of the stories that were archived by the Tucson Citizen newspaper's library in a digital archive between 1993 and 2009, go to Morgue Part 2

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