Tucson Citizen.com

Slain Officer Hite remembered with a church park

by on May. 25, 2009, under Local, Special
Tucson police Officer Erik David Hite, 43.  <a href="http://10.4.149.24/archives/photos/search/?search%5Bform%5D%5Bfulltext%5D=Tucson+Police+Dept.+within+BYLINE"/>

Tucson police Officer Erik David Hite, 43. <a href="http://10.4.149.24/archives/photos/search/?search%5Bform%5D%5Bfulltext%5D=Tucson+Police+Dept.+within+BYLINE"/>

Slain Tucson police Officer Erik Hite deserves to be remembered, and folks at the Saguaro Canyon Evangelical Free Church are doing their part.

They will soon be opening the Erik Hite Family Park, complete with a playground where the late officer’s young daughter can play.

Church’s playground dedicated to slain police officer, Arizona Daily Star

On May 31, a dedication ceremony will be held — two days before the first anniversary of Hite’s death….Hite was killed last June by a gunman who led police on a crosstown chase. Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/hourlyupdate/294311.php

Hite is survived by his wife, Nohemy Hite, and 1-year-old daughter Samantha.

The church is located at 10111 E. Old Spanish Trail and the report says memorial bricks are still available for purchase in Hite’s honor. Call 885-7088.

Any tribute to Hite is a beautiful tribute.

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What other ways can we pay tribute to fallen Officer Hite and others who deserve to be remembered?


Pima money going down the toilet

by on May. 25, 2009, under Local, Special

Some areas of Pima County may be going down the toilet, but you can be sure our toilets’ wastewater will be flushed away with ease.

Pima County to receive $10M in stimulus funds for sewer system, Arizona Daily Star

Pima County will receive $10 million from the federal stimulus package to put toward improvements to the regional sewer system.

Pima County Regional Wastewater Reclamation Department will receive the money through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to put toward a regional interconnect that will carry wastewater between the Roger Road treatment plant and the Ina Road treatment plant.

Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/hourlyupdate/294312.php

This is a very good thing.

More federal funds for more projects would be even better.

No complaints, however.

Any money Pima can get from the government is a blessing.

Toilets are a pretty necessary commodity and our sewers should be something that stays in tip-top shape.

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What other areas of Pima County would you like to see improved and why?


Day tripping: Madera Canyon

by on May. 22, 2009, under Family, Local, Special
Dulce Gonzalez, 5, cools off in a running creek at Madera  Canyon.

Dulce Gonzalez, 5, cools off in a running creek at Madera Canyon.

Day trips are a great way to get away without the cost of, say, flying to Paris.

Southern Arizona is rife with riveting adventures and a three-day weekend is the perfect time to take one.

I thank the reader who suggested a day trip feature and hope others contribute their own ideas.

Since the paper had an awesome staff of feature writers, I scoured the archives and found an ideal trip for late May.

DAY TRIP: MADERA CANYON

With the weather heating up, it’s a perfect time for the short trip to Madera Canyon. Nestled in the Santa Rita mountain range, you’ll be protected by foliage as you hike or picnic. (You’ll still want to start relatively early to beat the heat. Temperature tends to be about 10 degrees cooler than in Tucson.)

One of the big draws for the thousands of folks who visit the canyon annually is birding. Among the canyon’s residents are the trogons, Townsend’s warblers, yellow-eyed juncos and gray flycatchers, though there are many, many more – some 200 species have been seen. For a nice, up-to-date list of recent bird spottings, visit friendsofmaderacanyon.org.

Hikers can enjoy a variety of trails, and Madera is also a popular spot for photographers.

Where to eat

Get shade from sycamores at the Madera picnic area, and from oaks across the road at Madera Trailhead Picnic Area; $5 vehicle parking.

Or, for something less rustic, try the Grill on the Green at Canoa Ranch. It’s a Bob McMahon restaurant and features fare similar to Old Pueblo Grille; (520) 393-1933. (Yes, I checked Friday. The place is still open and will be this weekend.)

The drive

About 42 miles south of Tucson. Take Interstate 19 about 25 miles south of Tucson to Exit 63. Turn left onto Continental Road and drive one mile. Turn right on White House Canyon Road and go 14 miles to the top of the canyon.

To learn more

Nogales Ranger District (Santa Rita Mountains, Madera Canyon): (520) 281-2296

fs.fed.us/r3/ coronado

Memorial Day weekend update from the Coronado National Forest

Santa Rita Mountains (Nogales Ranger District)

Open: Madera Canyon campground and picnic areas, Upper White Rock campground, Whipple picnic site, and Calabassas picnic area.

Note: All Pena Blanca Lake recreation areas remain closed due to mercury clean-up efforts.

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Madera Canyon sounds grand, but remember it will probably be packed due to the holiday.

Also remember to steer clear of the Pena Blanca Lake area unless you’re a fan of mercury.


Folks fly far and wide to adopt a pet

by on May. 22, 2009, under Family, Local, Special
Jebediah was adopted locally after he was found wandering around the North Sixth Avenue Dog Park.

Jebediah was adopted locally after he was found wandering around the North Sixth Avenue Dog Park.

Tucsonans who want to adopt a pet don’t have to go very far.

We have midtown’s Humane Society of Southern Arizona, the Northwest Side’s Pima Animal Care Center and a handful of other fully stocked shelters in other areas about town.

We could probably even find a couple of stray dogs or cats just walking around the block a couple times anywhere we live.

But some folks will still travel far and wide to pick up that perfect pet.

One local dude is flitting off to Florida this weekend to purchase the littermate of a pup he already retrieved from Tennessee. (The breeder lives in Tennessee but will be at her time share in Florida.)

His jet-setting is necessary to nab a particular breed of dog.

Then there’s an English couple who were not picky about the breed of cat they needed, just the particular cat.

They glimpsed a photo of a feline on the adoption site Petfinder.com and decided they must have that cat. It looked just like their former cat.

So they flew 4,000 miles from London to Michigan to go get their new pet, named Sparky.

How Far is Too Far? Couple Travels 4,000 Miles to Adopt Cat

“I thought [the shelter] would say ‘you guys are completely mad,” admits Rose Rasmussen, who along with her husband Chris traveled…to pick up Sparky. Preparing the cat for his relocation overseas was no easy feat and required a six-month quarantine, along with microchipping, vaccinations, a blood test, and a health certificate.

But the shelter didn’t think the Rasmussens were crazy. Read story: www.pawnation.com/2009/05/18/how-far-is-too-far-couple-travels-4-000-miles-to-adopt-cat/

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Would you trek thousands of miles to adopt a pet you have not yet met?

Where did you get your pet: shelter, breeder, pet store, other?

What determined your choice?


Clean Elections and term limits: Good ideas that aren’t working

by on May. 22, 2009, under Local, Opinion, Special

On Nov. 4 voters in Legislative District 10 on Phoenix’s Northwest Side elected Doug Quelland to the Arizona House of Representatives.

On May 15, an unelected state commission overruled them and ordered Quelland out of the House for violating rules governing publicly financed campaigns.

Quelland is appealing and can remain in the House until that’s resolved but judging from the evidence gathered by the commission, it’s likely he’ll be forced out.

It’s the second time in two years the state’s Clean Elections Commission has overturned voters’ wishes because a candidate agreed to take public money for his campaign then broke the incredibly complex rules governing that money’s use.

Clean Elections and its cousin, term limits, were supposed to put the citizen back in citizen government. Neither has happened.

The Democrats elected to the Legislature are more liberal and the Republicans more conservative than ever before. The gulf that lies between them has prevented compromise and progress on a whole host of issues.

Candidates who had to put their hand out to numerous constituencies to raise money pre-Clean Elections need now only put their hands out to their parties’ true believers. Because of another good idea gone bad – the state’s redistricting commission, which botched the gerrymandering of state legislative districts – there are few competitive districts in the state. Most candidates need only win their party’s primary to get elected and primary voters tend to be the most strident of party faithful.

Meanwhile, party operatives have figured out how to game the system, turning Clean Elections into more of an oxymoron than a supposed field leveler.

While public financing was supposed to take the corruption out of politics by making candidates beholden more to voters than donors, term limits was supposed to refresh the state house every few years with new candidates bringing fresh ideas to state government.

Instead, candidates have likewise made term limits an oxymoron. Candidates termed out of the House after eight years simply run for the Senate, or vice versa, and almost always get elected.

Quelland’s seatmate from District 10, Jim Weiers, has been in the Legislature for 15 years. He did his eight in the House, including a term as Speaker, got termed out, got elected to the Senate for one term, then jumped back to the House where he was Speaker for two terms. He’s in the middle of his eighth two-year term in the Legislature.

It was this kind of career politician that term limits was supposed to limit.

The great irony is that term limits was unnecessary, there already were term limits every two years.

Voters should be able to give money to whomever they want and elect whomever they want however many times they want.

It’s time for voters to jettison both these laws and re-take responsibility for whom they elect.


Police sergeant’s career deserves kudos and a voodoo doll

by on May. 22, 2009, under Local, Special
Lucky Voodoo Doll honors 31 years of Tucson police service

Lucky Voodoo Doll honors 31 years of Tucson police service

Tucson will miss Sgt. Mark Robinson. At least much of Tucson will.

I recall hearing one reporter complain he was sometimes grumpy, but most people would be after a 31-year police career.

Robinson held a number of positions at the Tucson Police Department.

He worked as a patrol officer, traffic sergeant, burglary investigator and in surveillance, according to a report at KVOA.com.

I’m guessing one of his favorites was his time in the motorcycle unit.

Robinson finished off his decades of service with a finale in the Public Information Office, where I got to know him as my gig as a night cops reporter.

He was cool enough to earn a parting gift. I made him a Lucky Voodoo Doll.

Only one other police officer has thus far merited a Lucky Voodoo Doll. Lt. Decio Hopffer got one for his promotion.

It’s just a little way to thanks for making our community better.


Vail school bus pranksters banned from graduation ceremony

by on May. 22, 2009, under Local, Special

The three Vail School District seniors who caused $10,000 worth of damage to the district bus fleet got a “harsh” punishment.

They were not allowed to attend the graduation ceremony, according to a report from KVOA.com.

The report mentions the two 18-year-olds were booked into jail, but didn’t say what became of the 17-year-old.

Senior pranksters sit out graduation ceremony

“I feel bad for them but I feel that was just punishment for them because it was very bad prank, they deserve it,” says Denise Slay, a parent.

However, they will get their diplomas.

Read story: www.kvoa.com/global/story.asp?s=10406802

Since we don’t yet know what full extent of the punishment will be, hard to gauge if it’s just.

I will agree with others who commented earlier this week that some of today’s youth often seem spoiled and unwilling to face up to consequences.

At least these three guys turned themselves in.

My mom is retiring from teaching this year. She’s had enough.

It’s to the point where parents call to yell at her if their children come home with a B.

One dad went ballistic when his daughter was given lunch detention for breaking a rule about chewing gum.


Dad poisons kids for money

by on May. 22, 2009, under Local, Special

Many lawsuits are ridiculous to being with, but one went from ridiculous to horrifying.

A Georgia dad spiked his two kids’ soup with lighter fluid and prescription drugs with the plan to sue the Campbell’s Soup Co.

Ga. father gets 100 years for poisoning kids’ soup, The Associated Press

William Cunningham was sentenced Thursday after a jury found him guilty on seven counts of aggravated assault….

His 3-year-old son and 18-month-old daughter were hospitalized twice. A family member said the youngsters may suffer lifelong respiratory problems from lung damage caused by the lighter fluid.

Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/hourlyupdate/294019.php

Evidently the fake lawsuit didn’t go forward, but Cunningham’s day in court did.

The report also mentions his wife divorced him.

What’s the worst thing you’ve heard of someone doing for money?


Man arrested after downtown Tucson explosion

by on May. 22, 2009, under Local, Special

A local guy who was just trying to save a little gas money ended up in jail.

Ben Buffalo, 48, wasn’t arrested for trying save the gas money.

Neither was his offense causing a downtown explosion with a device he created from Internet instructions.

He was jailed because police who came to the scene found he had warrants out for his arrest.

Mileage-device blast shakes up Downtown, Arizona Daily Star

Although the explosion was deemed an accident, it brought attention to Ben H. Buffalo, who had warrants for his arrest, said Sgt. Mark Robinson, a Tucson Police Department spokesman.

Read story: www.azstarnet.com/sn/byauthor/293960

This Buffalo guy perhaps could have used some pointers other than those he found on the Internet.

One tip is to avoid attention if you have warrants out for your arrest.

Have you ever tried Internet instructions that failed miserably?

What about helpful instructions?

FYI – the site eHow.com has instructions that range from how to unclog a dishwasher to how to cook a garden snake.


Ryn: Peeps and sweets used to dull the pain

by on May. 22, 2009, under Local, Special

When Tucsonan Lisa Kent lost her job last summer, she gained something else.

Nearly 20 pounds.

Kent, like hordes of others who have been depressed, dejected or just plain in pain had turned to food for comfort.

“Yes, I realized what I was doing,” said the 47-year-old mother of a teen. “But I was so friggin’ depressed I didn’t even care.”

Emotional eating is never about physical hunger. It’s about “stuffing” emotions and the psychological need to fill that deep, dark void that screams out for more M&M’s.

Stuffing emotions through food is not a new phenomenon – Overeaters Anonymous was founded in 1960 – but it has become more pronounced in certain circumstances.

Like in the four months the Tucson Citizen teetered on extinction. Nary a day would go by that at least one person would not bring in at least two dozen donuts. One day we had five dozen.

I learned what a Dilly Bar is.

The break room table was also constantly littered with lollipops, Peeps and giant cookies bearing smiley faces that some would mangle, crush and crumble before eating. One woman stabbed hers with a letter opener.

“Emotional eating takes two forms,” said Nancy Mather, a nutrition specialist at the University of Arizona Extension.

“People can overeat and eat everything in sight. Their equilibrium is off. In the same way, people can not eat anything at all. There’s an anorexic kind or obese kind of emotional eating.”

While I’d much rather generally lose weight than gain it, neither option is particularly healthy.

What’s also unhealthy is some of the food choices that come along with emotional eating.

“People are turning to comfort food,” Mather said. “Things we ate as little children, in good times as families.”

That explains the Peeps.

Mashed potatoes, ice cream, piles of pierogies, anything with “deep fried,” “buttery” or “Aflredo” in the name.

“These tend to be high in carbohydrates,” Mather added.

Fancy dining, or dining out at all, is not really where emotional eaters flock, especially when money is tight.

In a bitter twist, the cheapest foodstuff also tends to be the least healthy. Generic cookies that masquerade as Oreos. Ninety-nine cent potpies.

“I was eating mostly Ramen noodles,” Kent confessed.

Restaurants are dropping like flies in soup, retail sales are down in everything from cars to couches, but one industry is actually thriving.

Candy.

“I ate chocolate a lot,” Kent said. “I just started getting those things for a quarter or 50 cents. M&M’s made me feel a little better. Believe it or not, the blue ones did.”

While candy sales dipped a bit in 2008 from the previous year during the Christmas, Halloween and even Valentine holidays, the National Confectioners Association reports overall sales were higher throughout the 12-month period.

Kent scored a new job in March. Her weight and compulsive eating both dropped.

“My weight went down a little bit,” she said. “It’s not like I’ve really been trying to lose weight. But I cut out the sweets and stuff. I’m not craving them anymore.”

Support groups have also helped others who battle with food.

“I would recommend Overeaters Anonymous,” said Sally H., whose last name could not be used because, well, it’s anonymous.

“Come check it out if you have a problem with food, if you feel hopeless and have nowhere to turn.”

She said eating issues are a constant struggle but the group makes it easier.

“They understand what I mean when I say a banana can steal my serenity,” she said.

Ryn Gargulinski is a poet, artist and performer who will continue to write her weekly column every Friday for TucsonCitizen.com. Listen to a preview of her column at 8:10 a.m. Thursdays on KLPX 96.1 FM. E-mail rynski@tucsoncitrizen.com


Speeding motorists could pay their way out of a ticket

by on May. 22, 2009, under Local, Special

Speeders may be able to skip sitting in a lengthy traffic safety class or having points litter their licenses.

Folks may be able to quash a speeding ticket with a little cash if a bill passes next year, according to an Associated Press report.

AZ Senate bill would let offenders skip traffic school

A provision buried in the package of bills for the 2010 budget would let errant motorists essentially buy their way out of trouble. They could pay a flat fee of $282 and walk away, with no ticket, no record — and no time lost.

Read story: www.azstarnet.com/metro/293986

Anyone pulled over for speeding, at least in the Tucson area, is usually going more than 10 mph above the limit.

Speeding tickets in that range usually clock in around $200 to begin with.

Neither is the driving school option cheap.

Paying your way out of a ticket sounds like a viable option, since it would only be another $80 or so.

The option should not – and would not – apply to those who were driving under the influence, blasting through a red light or other heftier offenses.

What do you think?

How many speeding tickets have you gotten in Tucson?

Would you have chosen to pay the extra cash to make them go away?


Friday’s Top 10 news digs

by on May. 22, 2009, under Local, Opinion

Every morning I will post my top 10 stories I’m digging that day with a little commentary to go with each. Here’s today’s list:

1. Pixar moves ‘Up’ with its 10th movie – USA Today – Disney might own Pixar after buying the company for $7.4 billion in 2006. But when it comes to brand loyalty among family moviegoers, Pixar is the new Disney.

Is it weird for a middle-aged man to be excited about going to see a “kiddie” movie? Pixar rocks.

2. 100 years at the Brickyard – USA Today – Conceived by four local businessmen as a venue for the city’s competing automakers to test their mettle (and metal) as the machine grew in stature, the Brickyard quickly evolved into a drawing board in the development of cars, racing and safety.

They still have this race? I used to love open wheel racing back when A.J. Foyt was wheel-to-wheel with Rick Myers and Al Unser in hot pursuit. Now, it’s all about Danica Patrick’s underwear ads and a bunch of foreign guys from Formula 1. Plus, all racing, including NASCAR, has become go really fast, crash. Go really slow under caution. Go really fast again, crash. Go really slow under caution. Go really fast again … Blech.

3. Grief and honor at Arlington – USA Today – Each day, as I walk among the headstones lining these rolling hills, I’m mindful that more than 300,000 veterans and their dependents are buried here.

One of the most emotional days of my life was an afternoon I spent at Arlington. When my father died a few years ago, he was buried at the military cemetery in Phoenix. He spent nine years in the Air Force, 1946-1955, and was medically retired after an auto accident. Nevertheless, he raised a military family. I spent five years in the Army, two active, three reserve. He had Alzheimer’s and the last year of his life he was only capable of staring at the ceiling and moaning or whistling, strangely. So when he died, I was more relieived than sad. I’d said my goodbyes long before his death. At the various funeral events, I didn’t shed any tears. But at the graveside, when the Air Force honor guard leaned over and gently offered the American flag to my mother, whispering to her “On behalf of a grateful nation” I lost it. When you’re out grilling your hot dogs or whatever Monday, be sure to take a moment and remember what Memorial Day is really all about.

4. 6 money fixes you should consider now – Arizona Republic – The economy has been under so much strain lately that it pays to know where you stand financially and devise a plan to solve your money problems.

My wife and I started doing almost all of these last year, the most important completely eliminating our credit card debt. But we’re a consumer economy and reduced consumer spending is part of what’s causing the economic crisis. But after just surviving layoff by a whisker, I’m in no rush to start spending again.

5. Leinart shows signs of growth on, off the field – Arizona Republic – He is somewhat chiseled now, hardened by a new commitment to the weight room and life in the NFL. He takes pride in being the second-team quarterback.

If he keeps throwing more interceptions than touchdowns, he’ll always be the second-team quarterback.

6. Detention facility near Sahuarita is ruled out – Arizona Daily Star – Now, the district will work with the Tohono O’odham Nation to build the facility on tribal land near South Sandario Road and West Ajo Way, said district Chairman Austin Nuñez.

Nimbys win again. I wonder what the folks over at Sandario and Ajo think?

7. AZ Senate bill would let offenders skip traffic school – Arizona Daily Star – A provision buried in the package of bills for the 2010 budget would let errant motorists essentially buy their way out of trouble. They could pay a flat fee of $282 and walk away, with no ticket, no record — and no time lost.

They need to hurry up and pass this bill, get it signed by Brewer and make it retroactive so I don’t have to go to traffic school next Saturday.

8. Legislation would replace vouchers with tax credits – Arizona Daily Star – Legislation introduced in both the House and the Senate would allow corporations and insurance companies to divert up to $5 million a year from what they owe in taxes and give it instead to organizations that help certain students pay the cost of attending private or parochial schools.

Same stink, different pig.

9. Sources: FBI asking questions on Arpaio – Arizona Republic – Five public officials involved in ongoing disputes with the Sheriff’s Office confirmed federal agents asked them questions that seem to focus on one theme: possible misuse of power by Arpaio and other sheriff’s representatives, perhaps related to the ongoing disputes between the sheriff, county supervisors and top county administrators.

Arpaio’s toast.

10. State should heed bulletin from Calif. – Arizona Republic – Nevertheless, the message from California seems to be that, while voters don’t like budget cuts and will complain bitterly about them, they like the probable alternatives even less.

Don’t listen to California. To argue that because California voters rejected a tax increase to fix their state budget, then Arizona voters will do the same is fallacious. We have no idea what Arizona voters will do if offered the opportunity to chose paying more taxes to preserve education funding and whatnot. The real motive here is a fear that Arizona voters will pass a tax increase. Don’t be afraid of voters, let them decide. This is a democracy, after all.


Today’s top 10 news digs

by on May. 21, 2009, under Local, Special

Like most journalists, I read a lot of news. I start out every morning reading three newspapers entirely – USA Today, Arizona Daily Star and the Arizona Republic – (used to be four, guess which one I don’t read anymore?) then during the day I get deluged with RSS feeds from Google and other places.

Some stories I used to forward to reporters, others to family and friends.

There’s no reason I still can’t do that for the good and loyal readers of TucsonCitizen.com.

Every morning I will post my top 10 stories I’m digging that day with a little commentary to go with each.

Here’s today’s list (and I know it’s not morning but from now on it will be in the morning):

1. Pelosi’s struggle with truth exposes deeper problems – USA Today – Now that it’s politically expedient to denounce torture, Pelosi denied knowledge and smeared the CIA.

Ain’t she great? Blue Dogs better wise up and start pushing their weight around the House and find a new Speaker or Dems may find their rise to power short lived (assuming Cheney and Steele go away before the ‘10 elections)

2. Faith, medicine at odds – USA Today – Most states have legal exemptions that provide some protection to parents who withhold medical care on religious grounds.

The First Amendment runs into parental rights and the state’s duty to protect children from abuse. When is a mother deeply religious and entitled to raise her children under the edicts of her religion, even though those edicts may prohibit modern medical practices, and when is she just stone cold crazy and needs to have her kids taken away? Glad I’m not the judge.

3. City takes hit on bond rating – Arizona Daily Star – “What it means is the cost of borrowing will be higher,” Plagman said, adding the timing is particularly bad because the city is “already in a budget crisis position.”

Former Citizen reporter Carli Brosseau was working on this story before she was laid off. She told me she heard this from several people in the city on the day Mike Hein was fired who told her that the bond rating was toast because of Hein’s outster. Apparently, the bond people had told the city Hein’s firing would affect the bond rating. Not sure how or why that might be but he sure was a nice guy. Most affable person I’ve ever met. Even when he hated me he still greeted me with a big smile, warm hello and a firm handshake. Hein’s firing probably had nothing to do with it, but it’s interesting to me that the bond hit was predicted the day he was fired and now it’s come true. Coincidence?

4. Bill expands state gambling venues – Arizona Daily Star – The plan is open-ended. Anyone who sets up a new racetrack elsewhere in Arizona would also have the right to operate a casino on site, though Tobin’s measure would set a limit of 10 track-based casinos.

Do we really need more places for poor people to lose their money? Their’s a sucker born every minute. (My friend Patrick Cavanaugh calls the state lottery a tax on stupid people. I love that. Still buy a ticket every week, though.)

5. S. Ariz. may need 3 more trauma-care centers – Arizona Daily Star – Paying for the new trauma centers will present a challenge, Rhee said. Currently, there is no public funding from the local, county or state level to support trauma, according to the report.

Should have been on the front page, IMHO.

6. Panel says 3 years of job losses likely – Arizona Republic – Metro Phoenix is likely to experience an unprecedented three consecutive years of job losses in a recession expected to last at least two years, experts predicted Wednesday during the Economic Club of Phoenix’s annual outlook lunch.

Oy. Phoenix is the state’s economic engine – so goes Phoenix, so goes Arizona. This is not good.

7. Prison officials suspended in inmate death – Arizona Republic – Three prison officials have been suspended while the state investigates the heat-related death on Wednesday of a woman who had been placed in an outdoor cage for several hours.

We still put people in cages? Can’t we do better than this? I’m all for punishing criminals but this is ridiculous. Was Carr, the floor walker, in charge up there? “These here spoons you keep with you. Any man loses his spoon spends a night in the box…”

8. Why do atheists feel they have to bore us? – Arizona Republic – Charlotte Allen is the author of “The Human Christ: The Search for the Historical Jesus” and a contributing editor to the Minding the Campus website of the Manhattan Institute.

If this woman is looking for Jesus, I think she missed him. What a (dirty word).

(This story was in the print edition of the Arizona Republic but not on its web site. The same column ran in the LA Times Sunday, so I grabbed the link from there.)

9. Bill revives land swap for copper mine – Arizona Republic – U.S. Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, D-Ariz., introduced legislation Wednesday that throws her support behind a controversial underground copper mine near Superior that developers say could turn into the largest source of copper ore in North America.

A Democrat floats a bill that would help start a mine? Must be a lot of Republicans in her district.

10. In space, anyone can hear you tweet - USA Today – “Astro Mike” to his followers — has fired off nearly two dozen missives known as tweets, musing on such experiences as looking out the shuttle’s windows.

Story’s OK, but I thought the headline rocked. Then I tried to find its link on the web and saw that every news outlet on the planet that ran this story used the same or similar hed. Still cool, though.


Memorial Day promises friends, fun, cookies

by on May. 21, 2009, under Local, Special
Break out the flags and smiles for Memorial Day

Break out the flags and smiles for Memorial Day

Memorial Day has the distinction this year of falling on the same day as Cookie Monster’s birthday and Geek Pride Day.

Of the three, of course, Memorial Day is the classiest, a much-needed tribute to the men and women who have sacrificed themselves for our country.

Tucson Memorial Day activities include:

• Memorial Day parade and ceremony at Veteran’s Memorial Park at Tucson Estates, time to be announced

• Rita Ranch’s Memorial Day Service at Purple Heart Park, 10050 E. Rita Road, time to be announced

• F-16 flybys over cemeteries, honoring those who have died for our country, by Arizona Air National Guard’s 162nd Fighter Wing based in Tucson

• Barbecues, picnics and lots of ants

• A lengthy, three-day weekend with a free day Monday (for most folks, or at least for many)

• Sales on couches, appliances and other big items that no one can afford right about now anyway

Tucson Cookie Monster birthday activities may include:

• Binging on Oreos, Fig Newtons and almond creations

• A rush to the store to buy furry blue puppets

Geek Pride Day should contain:

• A Star Trek marathon

• Dressing up as Mr. Spock

• Dressing up as Cookie Monster

Are you perhaps dating a geek and don’t even know it?

Check out the article Top 10 Signs You Are Dating a Geek and other Tucson dating articles at: www.examiner.com/x-5836-Tucson-Dating-Examiner

You may even find some tips that get you a date for Memorial Day.

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What’s your favorite thing to do on Memorial Day?

Buy a couch? Eat a cookie? Hang out with a geek?

Don't forget to honor our military on Memorial Day

Don't forget to honor our military on Memorial Day


Arizona official wants stricter immigration law enforcement

by on May. 21, 2009, under Local, Special

PHOENIX (AP) — One of Arizona’s staunchest critics of illegal immigration says politicians who don’t aggressively enforce immigration laws should be removed from office.

Sen. Russell Pearce has proposed prohibiting cities and counties from having policies that limit the full enforcement of federal immigration law.

The Mesa Republican called a hearing Thursday morning at the Legislature to examine so-called sanctuary policies.

Many local police bosses in Arizona have resisted the push in recent years to dive deep into immigration enforcement. They have said it would detract from their traditional roles in investigating thefts, assaults and other crimes and would jeopardize the trust they have built in immigrant communities.

It’s the last paragraph that grabs me.

Am I interpreting it wrong or are local authorities essentially saying: “We’re too busy with other stuff to worry about this federal law junk. Besides, we don’t want to offend anyone.”

What do you think? Is Pearce just being a pain or is this a legitimate concern?