Mar 31 – Apr 6, 2022

Mar 31 - Apr 6, 2022 / Vol. 37 / No. 13

Rock & Roll Memories: Remembering The Days And Nights Of The Pedestrians

Editor’s note: This article is excerpt from the liner notes accompanying The Whole Enchilada, a three-album compilation of Tucson desert rock from 1978 to 1994. It’s by singer-songwriter Billy Sedlmayr, who co-founded late-’70s band The Pedestrians. Dave Segar and I grew up beneath Tucson’s Santa Catalinas. Went to school together, played sports, chased girls, but…

The Daily Agenda: Candidates Hit Their First Deadline

It’s comeback season for politicians … It’s lawsuit season for bills … And Gosar sees the light? Editor’s note: The Arizona Agenda is a Substack newsletter about Arizona government and politics run by Rachel Leingang and Hank Stephenson. You can find their archives and subscribe at arizonaagenda.com. Today is the deadline for candidates to file…

Two Bills: The Zombie Apocalypse Is Not Over Yet

We are still likely months away from a merciful end of the Arizona Legislature’s 2022 session (expected sometime in May or June), but legislative rules may well revive pot legislation that has been on life support for the past few weeks. In a session with few cannabis bills, as legislators focused more on punishing schools…

Steel, Crochet, Plastic, Clay, A Day at the Sculpture Tucson Festival: Taking in the many mediums and approaches to art at the largest outdoor sculpture show in Arizona

Megan McCarter is a mom who works 40+ hours a week at a construction company, but, instead of sleeping, she likes to put her BFA in sculpture to work by welding one-of-a-kind art pieces. Her recent work explores themes like infusing femininity into metalwork, or using oxidation to represent how humans change. Her piece, “Feel Free…

New Nuggets

SOCIAL EQUITY: Last week, the Arizona Department of Health Services announced it would hold the social equity lottery on April 8 at 1 p.m. Social equity licenses are intended to help repair some of the damage done to individuals and communities through the decades-long war on cannabis. After months of anticipation, and several lawsuits, the…

Tucson Salvage: Have You Seen This Ghost of Speedway Boulevard?

The following is one of the most heart-bending stories I’ve come across. He said his mother had his sister murdered. He had lost contact with all his relatives. I told you about him several weeks ago in these pages (“Jeremy, Portrait In Cardboard and Marker,” Feb. 3). Now, I’ve heard harrowing stories from Jeremy’s relatives…

City Week: Weekly Pics

Editor’s Note: While we are delighted to see Tucsonans once again gathering for fun events, we are also aware that variants are in circulation. Please consider getting vaccinated against COVID if you haven’t yet. Grace Rosario Perkins: The Relevance of Your Data. The newest exhibition at MOCA Features 14 large-scale paintings by Grace Rosario Perkins,…

Care To Dance? Ballet Tucson Scores Another Balanchine

George Balanchine’s ballet “Who Cares?” will be the highlight of Tucson Ballet’s Spring concert this weekend.  “We are very excited about that!” says Margaret Mullin, associate artistic director. The jazzy dance, inspired by Balanchine’s love affair with New York City, “is the fifth Balanchine piece in our repertory.” In the last few years, the company…

XOXO: Mark Your Calendars

Mark your calendars… Thursday, March 31  In Brad Kahlhamer’s paintings, you may find ancestral talismans, skulls, totem poles, fragments of song lyrics, eagle feathers, geometric designs, cartoons, katsina dolls and company logos. He was born in Tucson (1956) to native parents and raised by a German-American adoptive family. Many years before establishing a career in…

Feast On This

I think I may have gained about 10 pounds over the last few weeks as I’ve explored the southside restaurant scene. It’s been a few years since I have indulged in such a feeding frenzy and I have to say it was a blast. The old institutions like Mi Nidito and Crossroads are still on…


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