The store shown on Ruthrauff was originally a QuickMart store...not a Circle K. Ditto for the liquor store on the same corner of Fairview and Miracle Mile where the Golden Pin Lanes sits..for a while.
I'm in on this. I live inside a "republican bubble", Kentop. I have LARGE political messages posted in my reasonably large pickup. I haven't been pulled over for about ten years, the last time was late at night by a PCSO deputy who very politely informed me that I had a "dim brakelight". Yes, I did, and it was repaired the next day. No ticket, no written warning, just a calm chat about what needed to be done.
I don't recall if this incident was toward the end of the month. Maybe I can get a polygraph test to help jog my memory.
Which roads would be repaired, which would be rebuilt? There are NO specifics (as usual) and NO guarantees that the funding will stay on road improvements.
(Sorry, bikers, we don't need to pass ROAD repairs, only to see funds diverted to more work on the Loop. If you want more bike paths, put up a proposition for that work).
The County cannot be trusted to perform repairs to the roads. More than 20 years of history proves that.
ONE..count it..ONE sentence? The GOP primary, as is often the case, received little to no coverage in ANY media other than local radio. How about digging in a bit to understand AND REPORT how Nick Pierson pulled off an over-50% win, in a district that covers half of the south end of Arizona?
I'll believe whatever happens WHEN it happens. As of right now, there aren't enough bodies to fill the airwaves with local FRESH programming.
One thing that would be a HUGE improvement is a step back to 1960s radio, when most stations in Tucson had an actual NEWS DEPARTMENT. Something that no radio station, and for that matter, most TV stations in the market have today. You could rely of stations to bring the news to your ears every hour. Sometimes two or three times each hour!
What happend at the Supes meeting? What happened at the City Council? How about the school board (and not just TUSD)? There used to be actual REPORTERS covering those meetings, taking notes, recording actual events, writing comprehensive detailed reports then BROADCASTING the news! None of the rip-n-read from the lame excuse of a local daily newspaper...no..it was REAL reporting. BOTH sides of stories, and since there are usually nore than just two sides..ALL sides got air time.
Maybe we could get all of the basics covered. Remember high school newspapers? In the day, even those could get WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, HOW, and most importantly WHY something happened, or was about to. J-school at the UofA could use a refresher on that aspect of reporting. Network newsreaders forgot how to do that...so have most editors.
The only positive thing I can find about the entire Broadway widening project, if it moves forward, will be bulldozing the Starbucks at Broadway and Campbell. (Like there aren't enough of THOSE in Tucson.)
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BTW...where did you guys dig up that ancient picture?
I don't recall if this incident was toward the end of the month. Maybe I can get a polygraph test to help jog my memory.
(Sorry, bikers, we don't need to pass ROAD repairs, only to see funds diverted to more work on the Loop. If you want more bike paths, put up a proposition for that work).
The County cannot be trusted to perform repairs to the roads. More than 20 years of history proves that.
Vote NO on Proposition 463.
ONE..count it..ONE sentence? The GOP primary, as is often the case, received little to no coverage in ANY media other than local radio. How about digging in a bit to understand AND REPORT how Nick Pierson pulled off an over-50% win, in a district that covers half of the south end of Arizona?
One thing that would be a HUGE improvement is a step back to 1960s radio, when most stations in Tucson had an actual NEWS DEPARTMENT. Something that no radio station, and for that matter, most TV stations in the market have today. You could rely of stations to bring the news to your ears every hour. Sometimes two or three times each hour!
What happend at the Supes meeting? What happened at the City Council? How about the school board (and not just TUSD)? There used to be actual REPORTERS covering those meetings, taking notes, recording actual events, writing comprehensive detailed reports then BROADCASTING the news! None of the rip-n-read from the lame excuse of a local daily newspaper...no..it was REAL reporting. BOTH sides of stories, and since there are usually nore than just two sides..ALL sides got air time.
Maybe we could get all of the basics covered. Remember high school newspapers? In the day, even those could get WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, HOW, and most importantly WHY something happened, or was about to. J-school at the UofA could use a refresher on that aspect of reporting. Network newsreaders forgot how to do that...so have most editors.