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Siloam Springs
Herald Leader
Wednesday
May 4, 2016 • 50 cents
Volume 122 • No. 49
Your Hometown Newspaper since 1892Local news, sports and community information
2 Sections • 20 Pages
Copyright 2016 © NAN LLC
Polaroid Pop-Up
Downtown event held Friday
Page 6A
Hard work pays off
Seniors Capehart and Lyon making
most of final track season
Page 1B
■ Contact Us
Phone: (479) 524-5144• Fax: (479) 524-3612
Mail: 101 N. Mt. Olive, Siloam Springs, AR 72761
Email:
[email protected]
Website: http://hl.nwaonline.com The Siloam Springs Public Library will be
offering an additional Preschool Story Time
at 11 a.m. on Wednesdays. This story time
will follow the same format as the story time
that is offered on Thursdays at 11 a.m. Ms.
Julia will be leading the additional story
time. For more information, contact the
library at 524-4236.
■ At A Glance: Additional story time
’08 tornado victim memorialized in park
The south side of Siloam
Springs now has a park located
where a deadly tornado claimed
the life of a 15-year-old girl after
a tree fell on her as she slept.
That teenager, Eliana Stepha
-
nie Chacon, died that fateful
morning of May 2, 2008, but her
spirit lives on in the park that
now bears her name.
The Eliana Chacon Memorial
Park opened Saturday, April 30,
at 228 E. Lake Francis Drive,
a plot of land that previously
housed Choice Mobile Home
Park.
The property was later known
as Rosebud Trailer Park, which
the city of Siloam Springs
bought in October 2013 and
unveiled last weekend in front
of about 50 people, mostly
Chacon’s family members who
visited from the northern Mexi
-
can state of Chihuahua.
“This is a special day for me. In
this place, I lived many wonder
-
ful moments with my daughter,
and here is where I saw her last
smile,” said Margarita Rodri
-
guez, Chacon’s mother, during
the ribbon cutting. “Many days
and nights I came here to cry,
but now I will come to enjoy the
smiles of the children, and to
remember her.”
Holland Hayden, commu
-
nications director for the city
of Siloam Springs, described
Chacon as a wonderful young
woman who was revered by the
community, and stressed the
importance of giving something
to the Spanish-speaking popula
-
tion, which makes up 20 percent
of the city.
“We’re really excited to bring a
park to the south side of Siloam
Springs. I think that the south
side has needed a park for a
long time, and it just gives it an
extra special feeling for it to be a
memorial park,” said Hayden, as
she shed a few tears.
“It just gives them a sense of
belonging and a sense of clo
-
sure for them with Eliana,” said
Mayor John Mark Turner. “We
want to reach out and embrace
them and make sure that they
understand that they’re part of
our family here.”
n Eliana Chacon Memorial
Park opened Saturday in
Siloam Springs.
By Jose Lopez
Staff Writer n
[email protected]
Jose Lopez/ NWA Democrat-Gazette
Margarita Rodriguez, second from left, gathers her thoughts as she speaks during the ribbon cutting for the
Eliana Chacon Memorial Park Saturday in south Siloam Springs. Rodriguez’s daughter, Eliana Chacon, was
15 when she died May 2, 2008, after a tornado ripped through the area, causing a tree to fall on top of her
in the family’s trailer as she slept. The city of Siloam Springs bought Rosebud Trailer Park, the site of this
tragedy, in 2013 to turn it into the Chacon Park, with construction beginning Jan. 11, 2016. Standing with
Rodriguez are her translator, Debbie Andrade, from left, and her children Alan Daniel Chacon, 28, and Edwin
Chacon, 18, who survived the tornado at age 10.
Local kids will be getting a
taste of entrepreneurship dur
-
ing National Lemonade Day this
Saturday.
Students from the Boys and
Girls Club of Western Benton
County, Siloam Springs High
School, Gentry Middle School
and local home-school groups
will be selling lemonade at six
locations throughout Siloam
Springs and at the Chicken Coop
in Gentry.
A map of all the lemonade
stands in Northwest Arkansas,
including information bubbles
with the name of each stand and
hours of operation, is available at
nwa.lemonadeday.org.
This is the second year in a row
that Northwest Arkansas groups
have participated in National
Lemonade Day, according to
Sarah Heimer, executive direc
-
tor of Big Brothers Big Sisters of
Northwest Arkansas, the local
administrator of the program.
This year more than 1,000 kids in
the region will be participating in
the event, she said.
National Lemonade Day
was founded in 2007 as a way to
A taste of entrepreneurship
n National Lemonade Day
set for Saturday.
By Janelle Jessen
Staff Writer n
[email protected]
American Legion forms honor guard
American Legion Post 29 has a
new honor guard that provides
military honors for local veter
-
ans’ funerals and a color guard to
post flags at civilian events.
The 12-member guard was
formed last September and has
since performed at 23 funerals,
said Jim Gillig, co-commander
of the honor guard and adjutant
of Post 29. The color guard, com
-
prised of the same members, has
posted flags at civilian ceremo
-
nies such as those at John Brown
University, Siloam Springs High
School, Siloam Springs Library’s
grand opening and most recently
at the Oklahoma Arkansas Honor
Flight send-off ceremony for
veterans at the Cherokee Casino.
The group was recently certi
-
fied to perform funeral honors
by Military Funeral Honors of
Arkansas and has performed fu
-
nerals at the National Cemetery
in Fayetteville, Gillig said.
During funeral ceremonies,
the honor guard stands at atten
-
tion and salutes the veteran as
they arrive at the cemetery, he
said. They play taps, shoot three
rounds of rifle fire and fold the
flag to be presented to the family.
See TORNADO on Page 3A
See HONOR GUARD on Page 3A
See LEMONADE DAY on Page 3A
John Brown University will
hold spring commencement for traditional undergraduate stu
-
dents at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 7. The graduate and degree com
-
pletion ceremony will take place at 2 p.m. Both ceremonies will be held in the Bill George Arena on JBU’s Siloam Springs Campus.
John Brown University will
graduate 207 students in the traditional undergraduate pro
-
gram and 147 students in the graduate and degree completion programs. This year’s graduating class represents 25 states and 20 countries.
Robbie Castleman, professor
of Biblical Studies at John Brown University, will give this year’s commencement address. Castle
-
man is a member of the Bible and theology faculty, received
John Brown
graduation
to be held
Saturday
From Staff Reports
See GRADUATION on Page 3A
Janelle Jessen/Herald-Leader
Dennis Bergthold, owner of 2B’s Auto, donated a minivan to the Ameri-
can Legion Honor Guard. Also pictured, from left, are honor guard
members Jim Gillig, J.W. Smith and Chuck Lankford. The van will be
used to transport members of the guard and their equipment to funer-
als and events.
By Janelle Jessen
Staff Writer n
[email protected]