‘100 Years, 100 Quilts’ honors Arizona’s centennial

Ever since her first trip to Arizona in 1992, Angelika Haeber knew she wanted to move to the Grand Canyon State.

“I was just blown away with (Arizona),” said Haeber, 65, a retired German teacher who is originally from Germany and now lives in Green Valley. To remember her experience, Haeber  ultimately made a quilt that reflects her images of Arizona.

And now that quilt, “Arizona Dreaming,” and quilts made by people around the state, will be featured in an exhibit called “100 Years, 100 Quilts” to celebrate Arizona’s centennial next year.

Organizers believe the “100 Years, 100 Quilts” exhibit will be the largest centennial commemoration using quilts in the country. The Arizona Centennial Quilt Project and the Arizona Historical Society are working together to organize the exhibit, which is funded through grants and donations.

The idea for the exhibit came out of a conversation about Arizona’s centennial among members of the Arizona Quilt Study Group, a group that explores the history of quilting.

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Despite arsenic, Tombstone water taps keep running

[caption id="attachment_58" align="alignleft" width="551"]Johnny Fields sells his Tombstone Tolerable Water from his stand on Third Street. Although branded as aged water from local wells, the water is shipped from Phoenix. (Photo by Andrew Schaeffer/ASNS)[/caption]

Arsenic levels in Tombstone’s tap water have increased because the town’s supply of mountain water has been reduced and well usage increased, but residents continue to drink from the faucet.

“I’ve lived here for 17 years, and I’ve always drank right from the tap,” said Kari Lord, manager of Tombstone General Store. “Everyone I know still drinks from the tap, too.”

The store is one of the few local sellers of bottled water, but Lord said she has not seen an increase in the demand for their imported water.

“I don’t think it’s a big deal,” she said. “And I think the rest of the town feels the same way.”

Susan Addison, an owner of Ike’s Mini Market, agreed. Her gas station/mini-mart also has free tap water for patrons, and she said people still come in to get that over bottled water.

“I still drink it,” she said. “The water’s been passed by the state. I think it’s still safe. It’s just higher levels of arsenic.” 

 

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Keeping water flowing to Tombstone no easy task

 

Kevin Rudd stepped out of his truck in Carr Canyon, his $200 hiking boots crunching on the loose rock underfoot. He reached into the backseat for a short dagger because he’d forgotten his gun.

Slinging a bag over his shoulder, he began the mountain trek he makes every weekday.

Rudd, who came to town as a neophyte by way of Tucson, Scottsdale and the Florida Keys, found a Tombstone in trouble when he began his job as the city’s public works project manager.

The town too tough too die had only two aqueducts bringing mountain water to its 1,000-plus people, and they’d both run dry. 

This summer’s Monument Fire ripped through Carr and Miller canyons in the Huachuca Mountains, and subsequent landslides wreaked havoc on the town’s water lifelines. A chance meeting with Mayor Jack Henderson and then $50,000 in emergency funding from Gov. Jan Brewer led Rudd to Tombstone, where he has been charged with keeping the town from drying up.

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Salsa dancing sizzling in Southern Arizona

[caption id="attachment_52" align="alignleft" width="700"]salsa_003Gerardo Armendariz runs through salsa dance techniques in a class before the Sunday Salsa Social at Arizona Ballroom in Tucson. The social is held every second and fourth Sunday of the month. (Photo by Josh Morgan/ASNS) [/caption]

 

Rodrigo Fernandez swiveled and shook his hips with what looked like chaos inside the Tucson ballroom but in fact was the precision of his body moving with each pounding beat of the salsa music.

Fernandez, 28, a junior network administrator at DLC Resources Inc. in Phoenix and a 2005 University of Arizona graduate with a double major in computer science and math, said dancing salsa in his spare time is one of his passions.

“I say, people should try dancing at least once in their life,” said Fernandez, who speaks softly and always with a slight smile. “I think it’s one of those things you have to do before you are no longer on Earth.”

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UA grad remembers Sept. 11, the day her husband was taken from her

Christie Coombs’ husband was senselessly taken away from her in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, but the Yuma native who now lives in Abington, Mass., has dealt with her sorrow for the last 10 years by giving back to others in need.

Coombs, a 1982 University of Arizona journalism graduate, lost her husband Jeffrey, a 1981 UA business graduate, when the plane he was on slammed into the World Trade Center in New York.

On Sept. 11, 2001, Jeffrey Coombs boarded American Airlines Flight 11 in Boston, on his way to Los Angeles on a business trip for his job at Compaq Inc.

Flight 11 was the first airplane to hit the World Trade Center.

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