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For one family, a century of newspapering is at an end

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer
THE FINAL EDITION

DYLAN SMITH

dysmith@tucsoncitizen.com

The Internet killed the newspaper.

No, it’s the economy, stupid.

Or overleveraged publishing chains. Left-wing columnists. Whatever the cause, change is in the air of the publishing world, but it’s blowing faster than ever.

From the cover of Time to a slew of bloggers, the changes sweeping the news business are an untiring meme.

Newspapers big and small are stopping their presses, not to replate with the latest scandal, but to lay off their staffs, shutter the doors, retire the nameplates.

It may be news, but it’s not new. My family has been involved, off and on, in the newspaper game for more than a century. Each generation saw social shifts and technological advances challenge their publishing acumen.

My great-grandfather got into journalism in 1900. George M. Smith began writing for the Naperville (Ill.) Clarion fresh out of high school. After attending Wheaton College, just outside of Chicago, where his father taught, he worked his way through a succession of reporting jobs.

In 1913, he purchased the Du Page County Tribune, a weekly in Wheaton, setting himself up as editor and publisher.

Printing a newspaper in those days was a labor-intensive operation. Every line of type was set by hand, using individual die-cast metal letters, thousands per page.

Hot lead and Linotypes

In 1915, the Tribune purchased a new typecasting machine – a Linotype. Headlines still had to be made up by hand, but the body text of stories was cast in lines – slugs – by molding hot lead. Linotypes were complex contraptions, prone to breakdown, with 90-character keyboards.

The paper was successful under George’s leadership. To speed production, he invested in another Linotype. In 1933, in the midst of the Depression, it became a daily, and the nameplate was changed to the Wheaton Daily Journal. A subscription to the solidly Republican paper ran 5 cents per week.

My grandfather, Robert Smith, followed in his dad’s footsteps, writing a column for the Journal, and studying journalism at South Dakota State College – where he met my grandmother, Eileen.

She’d been active in her high school newspaper, which was a full page in the local Milbank (S.D.) Herald Advance, printed every week. She studied printing and journalism in college before graduating in 1938.

“There were not that many women in printing – really just a few of us in the whole field of journalism.” she said.

“At the college, we set some type by hand, but mainly with the Linotype. Working the hell box (where miscast slugs and wrongly-set type were discarded, to be sorted out later) wasn’t much fun. We had to go through and pull out all the letters and put them back.

“Everything was done by hand. The letterpress was hand-fed, which was a lot of work.

“Bob was very good at setting type. I suppose it came easy to me. I’ve been able to do a lot of computer work – at the museum and such – because of it, using a different keyboard than a typewriter.”

They both put themselves through school working for the college press – writing, proofreading, making up pages.

World War II came soon after my grandparents graduated, interrupting Bob’s endeavors in journalism with a stint in the South Pacific for him and California for Eileen. Two boys also arrived, my uncle, Joel, and my dad, Steve.

After the war, the Wheaton Daily Journal responded to its growing market.

“Everybody brought two papers – the Chicago paper (Tribune) and the Journal. People were working in Chicago, taking the train in.”

Many commuters began to identify more as Chicagoans than as members of their formerly sleepy suburbs. The ubiquity of radio and the growing television market – pioneered in the ’30s by The Chicago Daily News – challenged the small suburban publishers.

George Smith died in February 1949, having spent his life putting ink on paper, telling stories.

My grandfather and his two brothers stepped in to run the family business. Bob took over as editor, the others managing the business side.

Hand-set to high-tech

While the presses weren’t hand-fed anymore, pages were still cast in hot metal. Steve Smith – my dad – recalls the pressroom as a noisy, messy place.

“My father used to come home with burns” from working on the Linotype, he recalls. “You talk about a complicated machine. And that was a tough bunch of guys. He had a crown on one tooth from getting hit with a wrench by a pressman.”

The changing business and inevitable conflicts among the brothers led to a sale of the Journal in 1953.

Bob went into teaching, eventually becoming a journalism professor at the University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire. Before he died in 1975, he was working to move the college’s program to a new computerized system.

From hand-set to high-tech, in a lifetime.

My dad went to college to study printing just as technology was shifting.

In the late ’60s, newspapers were moving to more-efficient platemaking processes and high-capacity web presses.

Colleges were still teaching outdated photoengraving techniques, even as the new technology penetrated the business. A career based on a fading process didn’t seem too viable.

Besides, the art department held more attraction. It didn’t take long for my dad to drop his journalism and printing courses.

My journey through journalism began in high school, where I learned how to type – badly – and paste up a news page by hand, using hot wax and type output from a primitive computer system at the local Prescott Courier.

After some schooling at the University of Arizona, I wrote and edited copy for a string of Tucson alternative papers whose names are mostly lost to history.

I served a stint as editor and publisher of ¿K? Magazine, an arts and culture monthly, in the mid-1990s. Despite the streamlining of the desktop publishing revolution, print publishing remained an expensive proposition.

Learning the code

In the late ’90s, I moved into Web design, learning an alphabet soup of languages: html, xml, js, css and more.

A few years ago, the Citizen was kind enough to take me on, and eventually let me manage the Web site.

In the short time I’ve been here, the technology we use has dramatically shifted. From basic html pages to rich applications that feature video and databases, the addition of reader comments and forums, the focus of the Citizen online has changed along with the culture of the Internet.

But the impressive values of the Citizen staff have remained: accuracy, fairness, truth.

This may well be the last piece I write for a daily newspaper. It leaves me with a bit of an empty feeling, sitting at my desk, preparing for the Citizen’s last edition, knowing that my family’s history with the printing press has stopped rolling.

The family paper, having changed hands several times through the years, continues as the Wheaton Sun – a suburban weekly that’s part of the Sun-Times group.

Yes, they’ve got a Web page.

And like many newspaper chains, the Sun-Times recently filed for bankruptcy.

I hope to carry on my ancestors’ legacy of reporting. Given the trend, that will have to be in some online-only capacity. I’ll miss the smell of fresh ink, but I enjoy the 24/7 challenge of keeping the news fresh.

No matter if it’s delivered by a paperboy on a bike, or via the never-ending stream of the Internet, it’s all about telling stories.

What newspaper history says about the future of news

Ink in the blood

Many Citizen staffers have families with long histories in the newspaper business.

Alan Fischer’s father, George Fischer, was in the newspaper industry his entire life. He started as a carrier for the Grand Forks (N.D.) Herald as a youth, and became a pressman. He brought his skills here, working as a pressman for Tucson Newspapers from 1965 until his retirement in the late ’80s.

B. Poole’s mom, Norma Poole, and sister, Cathy Rowe, were typesetters for newspapers in Illinois during the ’60s and ’70s.

P.K. Weis’ grandfather P.K. Weis Sr. was a reporter for the Moberly (Mo.) Monitor in the early 1900s. Senior began his career as a printer’s devil when he was a young boy.

Polly Higgins’ grandfather Rathbun R. Higgins wrote a column called “The Stamp Man” for the Chicago Heights Star from 1948 to 1960 and resurrected it for the Columbus (Ind.) Republic 1967-82.

Garry Duffy’s father, Joseph L. Duffy, was an assistant to Roy Howard, of Scripps-Howard newspapers, in the late ’40s and early ’50s.

Fernanda Echávarri’s great-grandfather Jesús María Benítez Martínez, was a columnist for the local daily in Querétaro, Mexico, from 1973 to 1997.

Randy Harris’ grandfather was circulation manager of the Danville (Ill.) Press-Democrat from the age of 15. His mother was women’s editor for the Marion (Ind.) Chronicle-Tribune in the ’60s and ’70s.

Bruce Johnston descends from three generations of journalists on both sides of his family. Both of his great-grandfathers owned weekly newspapers in Canada. The papers passed on through the next two generations in his family. One still publishes today, although no relatives still work for it.

Ray Suarez’s grandfather Edgar worked for TNI in the mailroom and advertising. Grandmother Beatriz was a switchboard operator, while Ray’s father, Stephen, worked in the composing room. Aunt Selina works in circulation for Gannett, while another aunt, Eloina, worked the switchboards. All told, Ray says that his family has put in 117 years working for TNI and the Citizen.

Tucson reacts

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Citizen Staff Report
THE FINAL EDITION

Tucson reacts

Citizen Staff Report

The Citizen staff called area political, business and cultural leaders for their reaction to Friday’s announcement that the Citizen will cease printing a paper. Their comments follow:

“Well, it’s too bad it had to be you guys. I honestly have always thought the evening paper here was far superior to the morning paper.”

Bob McMahon

owner, Metro Restaurants

“It’s a sad day for our region. We’re losing an institution that was a watchdog of our local governments. We’re losing competition between newspapers that led to more aggressive reporting and better information. We’re losing a part of our history and our collective memory. The Citizen and all of Pima County deserved much better from Gannett.”

Ann Day

Pima County supervisor

“The Tucson Citizen is the oldest newspaper in Arizona. It’s a large loss for future readers and for us who have depended on the Citizen every day of our lives.”

Gabrielle Giffords

U.S. congresswoman

“That’s a dark day in Tucson’s history. The Citizen always gave balanced coverage. That has always been very healthy for Tucson. You lose a second voice, a second opinion. Two voices are better than one as far as I’m concerned.”

Jack Camper

executive director, Tucson Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce

“The presence of two daily newspapers in a city guarantees there will be accurate and objective news reporting. . . . The loss of the Citizen puts the responsibility on the Daily Star to do the task well. ”

Glenn Lyons

Downtown Tucson Partnership

“I just think it’s a real blow to the community, a real loss. I think it will diminish the level of balance and independent journalism that we need to keep the community informed.

“I think the Citizen has always done a good job of digging for the facts and making important information accessible. The quality of the local news reporting at the Citizen has always stood out. It’s a real loss.”

Karin Uhlich

City Councilwoman

As a small nonprofit theatre business owner it was writers like you, Rogelio (Olivas), and Chuck Graham that made a tremendous difference to our organization. The Citizen gave all live theatres in town an equal footing. The Citizen was willing to listen to a small organization in the Tucson arts community by covering or critiquing their next production. I for one, as an executive director of a 25-year-old community theatre, whose members worked thousands of hours to bring theatre to Tucson, will miss the Citizen for its support.

Priscilla Marquez

former executive director of Catalina Players

“Even when I was a reporter and anchor, one of the things I always told students was you don’t get all your news from television. I’m truly going to miss the Citizen. I always looked to the Citizen for clear, straightforward reporting of what was happening downtown.”

Nina Trasoff

city councilwoman

“As a Tucsonan, elected official and a proponent of citizen engagement, I am deeply saddened by the closing of our state’s oldest newspaper and will have the working families impacted by the shutdown in my thoughts during these though economic times.”

Rodney Glassman

city councilman

“Anytime you lose an institution in the media like a newspaper that’s been publishing more than 100 years is sad. There’s bound to be a void in the coverage. I understand the feeling of abandonment of employees, but also in the community, not getting information.”

Richard Elías

Board of Supervisors chairman

“The more media outlooks citizens have the better,” Romero said. “It’s really important that we have different perspectives from different newspapers.”

Regina Romero

Tucson councilwoman

Referring to the Web site, which will offer only opinion pieces: “That’s great. I’ll make sure I pay attention to that.”

“More and more people are getting their news online these days.”

Ray Carroll

Pima County supervisor

Man, 39, shot, killed near South Side home

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

CARLI BROSSEAU

Tucson police found 39-year-old Julio Alonso Carreon slain in a
South Side driveway early Friday morning, spokesman Sgt. Fabian Pacheco
said. Homicide detectives are investigating.

Tucson Police Department was responding to reports of gunshots when
they found Carreon in the 1400 block of East Ganley Terrace Drive, near
South Park Avenue and East Bilby Road, Pacheco said.

Carreon was found lying the the dirt driveway of a home minutes after police received the reports, about 2:20 a.m., he said.

Pacheco said Carreon appeared to have sustained gunshot wounds, and the home he was lying near was not his own.

A man, a woman and a child were inside the home but unharmed,
Pacheco said. Police are trying to establish the relationship between
Carreon and the home’s occupants.

The shooting does not appear to be random nor gang-related, he said,
though no motive had been established as of 7:30 a.m. Friday morning.

At that time, police were in the process of getting a search warrant
for the home and canvassing the neighborhood for witnesses.

Two vehicles were reported leaving the home after shots were fired, Pacheco said, though descriptions were conflicting.

Police had not identified a suspect as of 7:30 a.m.

DOC: 2 would-be escapees caught on Tucson prison grounds

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

DAVID L. TEIBEL

dteibel@tucsoncitizen.com

Two prisoners serving life sentences at the Arizona State Prison Complex-Tucson tried to escape Thursday but were caught on the grounds, a state Department of Corrections news release said.

Inmates Joshua Aston, 22, and John Wells, 48, have been transferred to maximum security at the Arizona State Prison Complex-Eyman in Florence, according to the release.

The pair set off an alarm near a perimeter fence about 9 p.m. Wednesday, according to DOC. By 3 a.m. Thursday, both had been caught.

Arizona Department of Corrections investigators are trying to piece together how Aston and Wells got as far as they did in the escape attempt, said Bill Lamoreaux, a Corrections spokesman.

Aston is serving a life sentence for murder.

Wells has been imprisoned here for 11 years after being transferred from a Maryland prison, where he was serving time for three armed robberies and three escapes.

Aston was admitted to the Department of Corrections in May 2007, the statement said. He was found guilty of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder by a Maricopa Superior Court jury in March 2007 for the killing of Pedro Corzo.

Corzo, 35, a manager for Del Monte Fresh Produce, was killed in January 2004 while visiting remote farms in the western part of the county.

He was driving on a road between Dateland and Harquahala Valley when he encountered a roadblock of boulders, according to sheriff’s deputies.

When he got out of his car to clear the rocks away, he was shot by Justin Harrison. Aston, Harrison’s cousin, also was accused of shooting Corzo.

Investigators believed the shooting was part of a bizarre odyssey in which Aston, accompanied by Harrison and a younger brother, left their homes near St. Louis and drove to Arizona with an apparent intent to engage in crime. They were arrested near Billings, Mont., a few days after the killing.

In May 2005, Harrison, 26, was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to first-degree murder in a deal to sidestep the death penalty.

Aston, who was 16 when Corzo was killed, escaped the death penalty in 2005 when the U.S. Supreme Court banned death sentences for people who commit murder while juveniles.

Details of Wells’ crimes were not available, said Mark Vernarelli, a spokesman for the Maryland prison system.

Vernarelli said he did not have information on why Wells was transferred here, but Vernarelli said Wells had been in prison on and off in Maryland, serving time on a variety of convictions since he was 19 years old.

Maryland routinely transfers prisoners to other states for various reasons under what are called interstate compacts, Vernarelli said.

The Arizona Republic contributed to this article.

DEATHS

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

Compiled by Daniela Vizcarra. For information, call 573-4561

Robert Dean Anderson, 85, May 12, salesman. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Marion Ernest Balentine, 85, April 15, self-employed. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Jose Guy Benavidez, 47, May 12, housekeeping. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Scott Archer Boyce, 44, March 30, plumber. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Denise Therese Brewer, 51, April 12, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Steven M. Brooks, 61, May 5, laborer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Jane E. Cashman, 63, April 3, administrative assistant. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Artemisa G. Castro, 67, April 8, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Christina Corona, 52, May 8, telecommunications. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Ann Cunningham, 86, May 10, mail clerk. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

James Watson Day, 80, April 10, engineer. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Virginia Loraine Downing, 80, April 15, cashier. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Helen Vincent Drachman, 74, April 19, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Janet Dzing, 73, May 5, company supervisor. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Laurence R. Green, 92, May 12, farmer. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Jean Hilton, 68, May 4, needlepoint designer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Louise S. King, 78, May 13, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Edward Moore, 93, May 12, chemist. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Mary O. Morton, 91, May 5, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Richard Oakley, 81, of Green Valley, May 10, sales. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Cynthia Orr, 57, May 7, teacher. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Mark D. Paschal, 54, April 2, laborer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Frank Charles Ramsower, 91, May 11, business owner. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Nene Catherine Rocheford, 64, May 8, business owner. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Beverly Ruppelius, 82, May 10, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Matilda Jane Sanchez, 73, May 13, housekeeping. Heather Mortuary

Robert L. Sandin, 96, May 11, teacher. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Raza Shah, 38, May 5, inmate. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Monica Freund Silver, 73, May 8, self-employed. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Zack Staples, 87, May 9, engineer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Frederick Travis, 75, May 9, mechanic. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Barbara E. Vallefuoco, 83, May 11, homemaker. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Richard Zormeier, 73, May 12, carpenter. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Ex-jail nurse on trial for alleged sexual abuse of four inmates

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

SHERYL KORNMAN

skornman@tucsoncitizen.com

The sex-crimes trial of a former Pima County Jail nurse got under way Wednesday as four former inmates testified he touched their breasts for sexual pleasure during visits to the jail’s medical suite.

The alleged incidents took place in July and August 2007, according to prosecutor Shawn Jensvold.

Christopher Erin Johnson, 26, who no longer works at the jail, is accused of five felony counts of sexual abuse and five felony counts of unlawful sexual conduct.

The prosecutor alleges four women were victims of his unlawful behavior while jailed when he was employed there as a nurse.

Defense attorney Thomas S. Hartzell suggested at least one alleged victim mistook Johnson’s placing “these sticky pads” on her bare chest for an electrocardiogram as sexual contact.

Dorsey Gradis, a registered nurse, said she worked at the jail while Johnson was employed there. She said “there is no reason to touch the nipple or manipulate the breast” while attaching EKG leads to the chest. Leads are normally placed around the breast, she said.

One alleged victim testified Wednesday that Johnson, aware she was jailed on a prostitution charge, asked her if she performed a particular oral sex act well.

She said he placed her hand on his erect penis as she sat on an exam table and, as she was leaving the exam room, held her shoulders and pressed his penis into her back. He was wearing cotton medical scrubs, she said

She said he gave her his phone number and asked for a date.

One woman told jurors Johnson’s pupils became dilated and his breathing changed as he conducted a “breast exam.”

And another witness testified he felt her breast with the palm of one hand and then “flicked my nipple.” She had been seven months pregnant, she said. She also said Johnson told her she had “pretty breasts.”

“I told him he was creeping me out and I pulled down my shirt” and left the exam room, she said.

The former inmate said Johnson told her to lift her shirt so he could place his stethoscope on her bare chest.

All the alleged victims picked Johnson out of a photo lineup provided by detectives.

Hartzell suggested that the complainants – most of them convicted felons, he noted – made up their stories or misunderstood Johnson’s actions during medical exams.

In court documents filed in May 2008, Hartzell stated his client “recently revealed a traumatic head injury in his past which requires an independent evaluation to determine what extent potential brain damage may have contributed to the complained-of behavior.”

Hartzell asked, court records show, that the jury be told before deliberating that legal defenses to a charge of sexual abuse are that the defendant “was not motivated by sexual interest” and the act was done “in furtherance of lawful medical practice.”

The trial is being heard before Pima County Superior Court Judge Jane Eikleberry.

Parents sue city after man swept away

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

SHERYL KORNMAN

skornman@tucsoncitizen.com

The parents of Roy J. Harris, the 28-year-old swept away in a flooded wash July 19, filed suit against Tucson seeking damages for his death.

The suit, filed by Mary and Roy Harris on April 10, says the city had a duty to maintain 15th Avenue north of Mabel Street, “at or near” the Bronx Wash “in a reasonably safe condition for drivers.”

The suit states the city should have known of the road’s tendency for flooding and that floodwaters created an unreasonably dangerous hazard to drivers.

The parents asked the court for reasonable damages.

Michael Graham, spokesman for the city Transportation Department, said he could not comment on the lawsuit. The city attorney’s office did not return a call Wednesday requesting comment.

The remains of Harris have not been found. Marana police said testing of bones found last month that could be Harris’ are not complete, but results may be released in May.

DEATHS

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

Compiled by D. Chavez. For information call, 573-4561.

Eugene Castillo, 57, of Sells, April 26, miner. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Dorothy Ann Dwyer, 81, April 19, homemaker. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Steven James Hernandez, 22, April 20, student. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Darrell F. Jacobs, 69, of Pine River, Minn., April 26, plumber. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Stanley W. Kampe, 62, April 23, meter reader. Heather Mortuary

Consuelo C. Kelly, 78, April 24, civil service. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Leona Florence Koch, 98, April 26, homemaker. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Janet M. Mitchell, 55, January 30, cashier. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Consuelo Mithoff, 88, April 26, bookkeeper. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Olivia Navarro, 68, April 22, occupation unavailable. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Jack Willard Pearson, 80, April 25, physician. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Robert Clayton Wilhelm Sr., 68, April 23, business owner. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Steven W. Wilson, 64, April 21, accountant. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Janice Marguerite Wyatt, 80, of Oro Valley, April 24, homemaker. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Deputy: 1 killed, 1 hurt in apparent random shooting

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

DAVID L. TEIBEL

dteibel@tucsoncitizen.com

A man mortally wounded at a car wash in a Monday night shooting and another who was wounded are thought to be the victims of a random attack, a Pima County sheriff’s spokeswoman said Tuesday morning.

Francisco Antonio Calvillo, 20, was killed, Deputy Dawn Barkman said, but the wounded man’s name was not released. Both Nogales men may have been in the process of moving to Tucson, she said.

Barkman said the men were at a car wash in the 2600 block of West Valencia Road when a black Audi pulled up about 11:10 p.m. Monday.

A man wearing dark clothing, a baseball cap and a mask stepped out of the car and opened fire on Calvillo and his companion, Barkman said. After firing several rounds, the man got back in the Audi and left.

Though a motive has not been determined for the shooting, Barkman said, “at this point, it appears to be random.”

Detectives have not determined whether the gunman was the Audi’s sole occupant or whether he was accompanied.

Calvillo and his friend were taken to a hospital where Calvillo died about 2:30 a.m. Tuesday, Barkman said.

Detectives ask anyone knowing anything about the shooting to call 911 or 88-CRIME.

Heat wave about to subside

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

ALAN FISCHER

afischer@tucsoncitizen.com

Cooler temperatures and fewer allergens should make Tucson a nicer place.

The city topped out at 97 degrees Tuesday, and Tucson will likely not see 100 degrees for several weeks, said John Glueck, a meteorologist with the Tucson office of the National Weather Service.

Gila Bend topped 100 Tuesday, and lower deserts in Pima County were expected to be close to the century mark, Glueck said.

The agency has an official temperature station at Tucson International Airport but not in outlying areas, he said.

AccuWeather.com reported the high in Tucson on Tuesday as 96 degrees.

The record high for Tuesday was 104 degrees in 1989, a year well known for early hot temperatures, Glueck said.

The earliest Tucson has seen 100 degrees was April 19 of that year, he said, with May 26 being the average date for cracking 100 over the past 113 years.

Don’t expect to feel the century mark here soon.

“There is a significant cooling trend coming up,” he said. “This will bring an increase in wind later this week and cooler temperatures, which will below normal the early part of next week.”

And allergies should be less of a problem, said Mark Sneller, owner of Aero Allergen Research Inc.

Tuesday results from an air sampling instrument near East 22nd Street and South Wilmot Road showed pollen at 68 grains per cubic meter, he said.

Mesquite recorded 25 grains per cubic meter, grasses were 13, paloverde registered 12 and there were small amounts of creosote, pecan, olive and pine and a trace of ragweed, he said.

Readings of 200 to 300 grains per cubic meter are typically needed before people notice allergy problems, Sneller said.

Some local areas could see counts up to 10 times higher than at the test site, he said.

Dry weather makes allergy complaints rise. Moist respiratory systems can better handle allergens, Sneller said.

“In a general sense, the worst is over for the season. We will still have traces of this or that,” he said.

“The next big adventure in pollen and mold will be in August and September, but it all depends on the rainfall,” he said.

Man, 24, found slain in North Side rental house

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

DAVID L. TEIBEL

dteibel@tucsoncitizen.com

Tucson police are saying little as they investigate the slaying of a 24-year-old man found in his North Side rental house Monday.

Austin Wood was found dead about 2:30 p.m. inside the home in the 700 block of East Joan Place, northeast of East Prince Road and North First Avenue, police spokesman Sgt. Mark Robinson said.

Wood is thought to have died at least 24 hours before his body was found, Robinson said.

A friend had gone to retrieve property he had left at Wood’s home, Robinson said. Getting no response at the door, the friend used his key to let himself into the house that Wood rented from family members.

Though Robinson said the friend immediately knew something was wrong, the sergeant refused to elaborate except to say the friend left the home and called 911.

The friend is not a suspect in Wood’s killing, Robinson said.

To protect the investigation, he would not say if the body had obvious wounds that could explain how Wood was killed, nor would he discuss a possible motive in the case.

He asked anyone knowing anything about the killing to call 911 or 88-CRIME.

Two killed in Ajo Highway head-on crash identified

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

DAVID L. TEIBEL

dteibel@tucsoncitizen.com

Two motorists killed Monday in a head-on collision west of Tucson were identified Tuesday by state Department of Public Safety officers.

Steven Hernandez, 22, and Maria Alloway, 64, died, Officer Quentin Mehr said. Hernandez’s passenger, Nicholas Barnes, 24, remained hospitalized Tuesday. All are from the Tucson area.

Hernandez was driving a 1999 Dodge van west on West Ajo Highway near South Kinney Road when he entered the eastbound lane about 4:30 p.m. and collided with a 2000 Chevrolet pickup driven by Alloway, Mehr said.

Authorities found Hernandez dead at the scene. Alloway was taken to a hospital where she died.

DPS officers are continuing an investigation to try to learn why Hernandez drove into oncoming traffic.

DPS identifies 2 motorists killed in Monday collision

DEATHS

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

Compiled by Antonio Garcia. For information call, 573-4561.

Arlo N. Adams, 90, March 14, salesman. Abbey Funeral Chapel

David M. Archer, 82, of Oro Valley, March 30, mortgage broker. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Patricia A. Birch, 80, April 4, homemaker. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Marie C. Blocksom, 85, April 4, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Eva Brizendine, 85, March 25, salesperson. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Anna M. Campos, 54, April 1, homemaker. Abbey Funeral Chapel

William H. Carver, 69, April 1, U.S. Air Force. Abbey Funeral Chapel

Verle W. Cottrel, 85, April 2, truck driver. Abbey Funeral Chapel

George F. Dennerlein, 72, April 3, insurance adjuster. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Jackson Edwards, 86, April 4, hospital technician. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Joyce M. Eckel, 73, April 1, truck driver. Abbey Funeral Chapel

Darlene Fletcher, 80, April 2, manager. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Frances J. Godwin, 80, April 5, retail buyer. Bring’s Memorial Chapel

Peter Hallet, 67, April 1, maintenance. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Rosita Hartshorn, 77, April 5, homemaker. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Arlene Hitz, 93, March 30, homemaker. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Gertrude Iverson, 91, April 7, salesperson. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Howard W. Jenson, 79, of Oro Valley, April 2, business owner. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

William Knapp, 67, April 5, truck driver. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Robert W. Kuenzi, 72, March 20, business owner. Abbey Funeral Chapel

William T. Leib, 82, April 1, U.S. Air Force. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Annamarie Martindale, 93, April 7, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Mickey McArthur, 81, of Sonoita, March 6, farmer. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Vivian Miller, 96, April 4, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Reid R. Olszak, 67, March 30, manager. Abbey Funeral Chapel

Mary T. Patterson, 94, March 29, meat wrapper. Abbey Funeral Chapel

Jerry Reis, 73, of Green Valley, March 28, business owner. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

John K. Powers, 84, April 5, U.S. Air Force. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Barbara Roe, 92, April 4, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

David Ruddell, 85, of SaddleBrooke, March 30, vice president. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Clifford Shank, 82, April 3, musician. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Hope Suarez, 83, April 1, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Clifford G. Toner, 49, March 29, astronomer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Joy P. Wester, 77, April 6, homemaker. Abbey Funeral Chapel

Elfriede V. Wilcox, 78, April 4, homemaker. East Lawn Palms Mortuary & Cemetery

William R. Wyatt, 84, April 2, public health service. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Cops: Gang shooting kills teen, 18, on S. Side

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

ERIC SAGARA

esagara@tucsoncitizen.com

Authorities are investigating a gang-related shooting that killed an 18-year-old man on Tucson’s South Side Wednesday afternoon.

Tucson police spokesman Sgt. Fabian Pacheco said the shooting occurred around 4 p.m. and was caused by a gang-related argument. Police have not released the name of the victim.

The 18-year-old was riding in a car with a friend when he saw the suspected shooter sitting at a bus stop on the east side of 12th Avenue across the street from Mission Manor Park, Pacheco said.

His friend parked the car at the nearby Parkview Apartments, where the victim got out and started arguing with the suspect, Pacheco said.

While the two were arguing, a beige Jeep Grand Cherokee pulled up with a female driver and male passenger.

The suspected shooter brandished a handgun and shot the victim at least once before getting into the Jeep, Pacheco said.

The Jeep drove off and the victim’s friend got into his car and began following it, Pacheco said.

The chase ended a short time later when the Jeep got into a collision near South Sixth Avenue and West Irvington Road. The suspect fled and was still at large Wednesday night, Pacheco said.

Pacheco said the victim was taken to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Police closed South 12th Avenue northbound from Drexel to Bilby roads while detectives investigated at the crime scene, Pacheco said. Police expected the road would be closed for several hours Wednesday evening.

Cops: Teen killed in gang shooting on Tucson’s South Side

Fire at slain man’s house began in carport

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Citizen Staff Writer

DAVID L. TEIBEL

dteibel@tucsoncitizen.com

A fire Tuesday morning that destroyed the home where a man was found slain Saturday started in the carport and spread to a neighboring home, a Tucson fire spokeswoman said.

While the point of origin for the fire has been determined, its cause still is under investigation, Capt. Tricia Tracy said Wednesday.

The fire destroyed the home at 1812 W. Astolat Road that slaying victim Dominic D. Sandoval, 49, shared with his son, Rocky J. Sandoval, 25.

The father was found dead in the home Saturday. His son was arrested in the killing and booked into Pima County Jail on a charge of first-degree murder. He was ordered held in lieu of $175,000 bail, authorities said.

Police have not released a cause of death or a motive for the killing.

Tucson police spokesman Sgt. Fabian Pacheco said investigating officers found “evidence consistent with a violent confrontation” in the Sandoval home.

The fire caused an estimated $150,000 damage to the Sandoval home and $50,000 to a neighboring home, Tracy said.

The Sandoval home was vacant and boarded up at the time of the fire, Tracy said.

There were no injuries in the fire.