Upload
others
View
0
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
LEGAL RATE CARDLEGAL ADVERTISING RATES 2017
Call Now to ScheduleYour FREE Consultation
1-877-POSITIVEpositivechangestucson.com
6261 N. LaCholla Blvd. Suite 151Tucson, Arizona 85741
I saw a commercial for a company calledPositive Changes. I thought I was comingin to lose 25 pounds, and instead, I lost alifetime of emotional baggage that washolding me down.
I am living proof that it works. And now Iwant to help others.
Come visit me at our newPositive Changes Center in Tucson.
Positive Changes Center Ownerand former Positive Changes ClientMartha Vazquez
By following our Weight Loss Program, our clients lost more���� � ���� ������� �� ����� ���� � ������ ������� �� �study commissioned by Positive Changes and performed byresearchers at the Ohio State University.
I lost25
pounds...Locally owned and independently operated
WILDCATS 1WINFROMOMAHA
Dalbec shutsdownMiss.St.as UAtakes firstgameSPORTS
Final
• •
Saturday, June 11, 2016$1 plus tax • $3 outside Southern Arizona
BELLYFILLERSCheckers&Rally’sdrive-thruchainshavebigplanshere
PAGE A8
COMING SUNDAYLIVING LARGE IN 200 SQUARE FEET: Tiny-house trend gaining momentum in Pima County.
LEE ENTERPRISES • Vol. 175, No. 163For home delivery, call 1-800-695-4492email: [email protected]
INSIDE TODAY’S STARComics/puzzles CL4-5Lottery B7Obituaries A19
Sports B1-7TV CL5Weather B8
W
By Carol AnnAlaimoARIZONADAILYSTAR
University of Arizona Pres-ident Ann Weaver Hart willleave the school’s top jobwhenher contract expires in mid-
2018, but she isn’t going any-where.
After a tumultuous schoolyear in which her leadershipdrew criticism from aroundthe state, Hart’s bosses an-nounced Friday that she willnot seek an extension to herpresident’s contract.
However, she intends to stayon as a faculty member at the
school. Her contract includesa clause that gives her a job asa tenured professor in theCol-lege of Education when shestepsdownas theUA’s leader.
The announcement came intheclosingmomentsofanAri-zonaBoardofRegentsmeetinginFlagstaff.
Hart, 67, who makes$665,000 a year in base pay
as the UA’s president, told theboard she has decided “to be-come a full-time teacher andscholar again.”
It wasn’t immediately clearFriday how much she wouldearn as a facultymember.
Hart holds bachelor’s andmaster’s degrees inhistory andaPh.Dineducationaladminis-tration, all from the University
of Utah. One of her researchinterests is in leadership suc-cession.
She said she intends tospend her last two years aspresident moving the univer-sity forward by implementingchanges from the UA’s strate-gic plan.
Hart to leavetopUApostbutnotuniversity
By Bob ChristieTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PHOENIX — Health insurance companiesthat sell individual policies on the feder-al marketplace in Arizona are seeking majorpremium increases for 2017 as they struggleto adjust to providing coverage under the Af-fordableCareAct.
The filings with the state Department ofInsurance come from six big insurers whowill sell policies next year. They seek averageincreases of 8.7 percent to asmuch as 65 per-cent. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona, thestate’s largest insurer with 43 percent of themarket and the only one serving all 15 coun-ties, is seeking that large boost.
Blue Cross says it has lost $185 million onindividual policies over the last two years.The company says it’s asking for higher rates
By Scott Mayerowitz and Joan LowyTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HAVANA — Six airlines won permissionFriday to resume scheduled commercial airservice from the U.S. to Cuba for the firsttime in more than five decades, anothermilestone inPresidentObama’s campaign tonormalize relations betweenColdWar foes.
The airlines — American, Frontier, Jet-Blue, Silver Airways, Southwest and SunCountry — were approved by the Depart-ment of Transportation for a total of 155round-trip flights per week. They’ll fly from
Healthinsurersseek rateincreases
6USairlinestostart regularflights toCubaBy Robert Burns
THEASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Far fromending the two wars he inher-ited fromtheBushadministra-tion, Barack Obama is wres-tling with an expanded set ofconflicts in the final months ofhis presidency, from Iraq andAfghanistantoLibyaandSyria,with no end in sight.
In Afghanistan, where aTaliban resurgence has upsetWashington’s “exit strategy,”Obama is giving the U.S. mil-itary wider latitude to supportAfghan forces, both in the airand on the ground.
The White House says U.S.
forces are not taking on a newmission in Afghanistan butrather will “more proactivelysupport” government forces.That amounts to an acknowl-edgement that the Afghansneed more help than the Pen-tagonhad anticipated last year,and it is a signal to allies not toabandon the U.S.-led coali-tion.
Defense Secretary Ash Car-ter will be discussing this nextweek in talks at NATO head-quarters in Brussels.
The 9,800 U.S. troops inAfghanistan are scheduled to
Obamawill closeoutpresidencyleaningharder intoAfghanconflict
Blue Cross tells of $185M losson individual policies in AZ
Sayinggoodbyeto ‘TheGreatest’
See HEALTH, A4
RAHMAT GUL / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 2016
A Kabul newspaper account of the U.S. drone strike that killedAfghan Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansoor.See CONFLICTS, A4 See CUBA, A4
JEFF ROBERSON / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A woman reaches out to touch the hearse as Muhammad Ali’s funeral procession passes onlook-ers lining the street Friday in Louisville, Kentucky. An estimated 100,000 people holding signs andchanting, “Ali! Ali!” lined the streets as the hearse carrying his cherry-red casket made its way pasthis childhood home to Cave Hill Cemetery, where a private burial service was held for the three-timeheavyweight champion. “He stood up for himself and for us, even when it wasn’t popular,” said AshiaPowell, waiting at a railing for the funeral procession to pass by. Ali died last week at 74 after a longbattle with Parkinson’s disease.
INSIDE• Celebrities, athletes amongthose at three-hour memori-al honoring the champ / A13
AnnWeaverHartUA president
Moving to tenuredprofessorship whencontract is up in ’18
See HART, A6
on individividi dual policies in AZ
The Arizona Daily Star offers legal advertising including Notice of Trustee Sale, Invitation for Bids, Request for Proposal, Public Notice, Public Hearing, Seizure of Property, Budget Notice, Property Tax Notice, Truth and Taxa-tion Notice, Auction Storage Notice, Articles of Organization, and Pima County Superintendent School Elections. Legal advertising may run Monday-Sunday within either the main sec-tions or the classifieds sections of the paper.
Rate Per Line
Monday-Saturday Per Consecutive Day Per Non-Consecutive Day
To place Legal Advertising, call 520-573-4292 or email [email protected]
12 lines to an inch. No additional discounts apply. A $40 online surcharge is added per ad.
12 lines to an inch. No additional discounts apply. A $40 online surcharge is added per ad.
Monday-Saturday Per Consecutive Day Per Non-Consecutive Day
Sunday $3.71 -
Sunday $124.04 -
Public Notices
Public Notices
IN-COLUMN RATES
MULTI-COLUMN RATES
Rate Per Column Inch
1 Day $2.32 $2.32
2 Days $2.22 $2.32
3 Days $2.05 $2.32
4 Days $1.86 $2.32
5 Days $1.71 $2.32
6 Days $1.61 $2.32
1 Day $77.52 $77.52
5 Days $56.98 $77.52
4 Days $62.37 $77.52
3 Days $69.30 $77.52
2 Days $73.92 $77.52
6 Days $53.13 $77.52
12 lines to an inch. No additional discounts apply. A $40 online surcharge is added per ad.
Monday-Saturday Rate Per Line
LLCs & Articles of Incorporation
1 Day $1.08
LEGAL ADVERTISING I 520.573.4292 I EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 2017