Tucson Citizen.com

Posts Tagged ‘Local-History/Culture-Local’

Once a newsboy, he grew into avid reader of Citizen

Saturday, May 16th, 2009
Newspaper carriers gather at the Tucson Citizen sometime between 1914 and 1940, when it was downtown at Stone Avenue and Jackson Street. "The building and its equipment are designed to save time and labor," a Citizen story said.

Newspaper carriers gather at the Tucson Citizen sometime between 1914 and 1940, when it was downtown at Stone Avenue and Jackson Street. "The building and its equipment are designed to save time and labor," a Citizen story said.

The year must have been about 1938 when one of my older brothers decided I was too attached to my mother’s apron strings. He told mom and me I was to start working at the Citizen newspaper as a newsboy selling the paper.

My brother had been a newsboy but was now working inside. Giving out the papers and checking in the vendors was one of his duties. He had been recruited by two friends and neighbors, Frank and Ed Casanova. Frank later became circulation manager for the Citizen.

When the Casanovas took my brother to the Citizen, they signed him up as Mandrake, a nickname they gave him because of a “Beanie cap” he used. I was signed up under the same name. People thought it was a family name.

There was a code among newsboys at that time that was honored by the vendors. Some of the boys had “corners” or areas where only they could sell the paper. I was assigned to the Pioneer Hotel, the best “corner” of all. I am sure my brother and the Casanovas had something to do with that.

A corner across the street from the Pioneer Hotel, where Steinfeld’s and later Jacome’s department stores were located, belonged to the Carr brothers. They were the only African-American newsboys at the time. Their given names were Robert E. Lee and Daniel Boone.

While selling the Citizen at the Pioneer Hotel, I often saw entertainment stars.

One day the Pioneer Hotel bellhop captain asked me and my friend, George Arce, to pose with a tall gentleman for a still camera picture. He later gave us a picture copy each. It turned out the tall gent was Marion Morrison, better known as John Wayne.

I remember that when I started as a newsboy, the Citizen was located at a building that later became the Chamber of Commerce, in the area close to St. Augustine Cathedral. The newspaper at that time cost 3 cents, but soon went to 5 cents. Newsboys were better off when the paper cost 3 cents because you checked in 2 cents and kept 1 cent. Many people gave you a nickel and said “keep it,” so you made 3 cents. When the paper went up to 5 cents, you had to check in 3 cents and kept 2.

Close by the Citizen building and across the street from the cathedral was Brichta’s Service Station, which was a newsboy and carrier hangout. Some of us left our bicycles there while we sold the paper.

Many newsboys became carriers and office help, as with my brother and the Casanovas. Edgar Suarez sold papers during my time and kept working for the Citizen until his retirement. He must have worked there over 50 years. Some other relatives were printers at the Citizen: Cousin Albert Elias, cousin Arturo Moreno and his father before him, Francisco Moreno, who founded “El Tucsonense,” a Spanish-language Tucson newspaper. Most of Arturo’s 10 children worked for the Citizen in some capacity. The Tully family was employed for many years and there were others.

After 70 years of reading this newspaper, I will miss it very much. The sports pages through the years, especially when Corky Simpson wrote, were top-notch. The comics were for the most part superior. I still remember Blondie, Joe Palooka, Lil Abner, Dick Tracy and many more.

Some people say the paper became too liberal, others say it was too conservative. Older readers like myself just took it all in and formed our own opinions. I would say a contributing factor to the demise of newspapers is all the new electronic media. People now find it easier than reading a newspaper. I regret the loss of jobs for the staff and wish them well in relocating.

Adios. Au revoir. Auf wiedersehen. And goodbye.

Thomas F. Elias

Staffers recall Citizen memories

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

One of the funniest things that ever happened to me was when I met the Dalai Lama.

After the press conference he walked straight over to me, pinched both cheeks and asked me in a whisper, “Are you from Mexico?”

I responded, “NO, I’m from Arizona.” He then whispered something more in my ear.

As I looked around I noticed every camera in the room had turned on me. I made every newscast, and my family in Casa Grande even saw it.

When a reporter pulled me aside and said, “Oh my God, you must be blessed. What did the Dalai Lama say to you?”

I responded, “He said I was the darkest Mexican he ever saw.”

FRANCISCO MEDINA

Photographer

It’s odd for the “highlights” of my career to be marked by tragedies. Major news events on deadline put a journalist to the test, the times you look back on and marvel at how so much got done in so little time and was done well. I can see exactly what I was doing at work when the first shuttle blew up, when the tragedy in Bhopal was revealed, when students were killed at Columbine, when we went to war in Iraq and, of course, on Sept. 11, 2001. I remember so clearly saying, “Paul, did you see that (Associated Press) bulletin that a plane flew into the World Trade Center?”

Despite 24-plus years of cynicism and deadline pressure for nearly every working hour of every working day, I’m going to miss the whole thing.

Newsrooms are odd places. They are places where daily discussions — of grammar and design, politics and current events — involve everyone within earshot and we never agree.

Journalists are odd creatures, many overflowing with sarcasm, cynicism and vitriol. I love them!

MJ McVAY

Designer

There is no way to condense 13 years into a few quips and memories. So, on a grand scale, the Citizen has been about family – literally and figuratively.

I have worked in the same room as my husband, Mike, for all of my 13 years here, though not always at the same time. (There were rumors, for a while, that we were the same person). Both our children were born while we worked here, and with no actual family in town, it was coworkers who came through when our first came three weeks early.

Catherine, said oldest child, grew up in this newsroom. She was here for at least a couple of hours every day until she started preschool. The library ladies were her grandmas, the newsroom staff her aunts and uncles.

She even spent New Year’s Eve 1999 – at the tender age of 5 1/2 months – in the newsroom, because we both had to work in case Y2K shut down the world.

It didn’t. But she has a commemorative T-shirt to prove she was there.

TERESA TRUELSEN

Editor/designer

This newsroom, since I arrived here in June of 2006, has always had great, great people. They’re pros; and they have always put the needs of the readers first. Tucson will be poorer for the newspaper’s folding because the loss of all that talent in one place.

WAYNE BAKER

Copy editor

My first job over 40 years ago was as a paperboy for the Tucson Citizen. I had a route that ran from First Street to 10th Street between Tucson Boulevard and Country Club.

In 1967 I got a job as a cub reporter for the Citizen and I ended up with the Pima County Board of Supervisors as part of my “beat.”

Covering Pima County back before the days of open meeting laws was a hoot. The three county supervisors would meet before the official meeting and decide the agenda. The guys let me in the room, but did not let my female counterpart from the Star inside. Being an afternoon paper with a deadline for the home delivery edition of noon, I’d often file my story about what the supervisors decided before the meeting was over, so the Citizen could beat the Star.

I got to experience the last days of the old-style newsroom. We used manual typewriters, and if the City Desk didn’t like our copy, they’d wad it up and throw it back across the newsroom. The older reporters were grizzled guys with bottles of whiskey in their desk drawers. Nothing like the antiseptic cubicle newsrooms of today with glowing computer screens.

I didn’t last long at the Citizen after the night a military jet crashed into a supermarket on South Alvernon. In the midst of that chaos, I failed to get the names of a bunch of Air Force colonels who showed up the next day to inspect the smoking ruins who didn’t have their names on their jump suits, and Nellis Air Force Base (from whence they came) wouldn’t give up their names. So the paper had to run a picture with “5 unidentified colonels.” Officially I was told I “lacked a proper sense of immediacy.” So, off to law school I went to become a lawyer, a profession where immediacy is not a virtue.

HUGH HOLUB

Former staff member

In 2005, my brother, Dontia, was in his early 20s playing varsity tennis for San Diego State University, where he was set to graduate with a degree in psychology. Devastating news came during the late evening hours on Sept. 23: Dontia had been in a vehicle wreck that day and had passed. I left immediately for California. My family was not fully financially prepared for his passing and in speaking with my editor that week about requesting additional time off I told her about the difficulties my family was experiencing. That day, she informed the Tucson Citizen staff about the situation and the staff began collecting funds to help with the funeral expenses. Days later, the staff sent the funds to my parents. I have seen the Citizen staff do this with numerous others — whether it was for a newborn child or a devastating event. These are testimonies of what the Tucson Citizen family represent.

La Monica Everett-Haynes

Former staff member

I’ve been amazingly fortunate that for the past 32 years I’ve been paid to read and write for a living while working at the Tucson Citizen.

For many years, on the Citizen’s dime, I was able to travel across America, and once to Japan, to cover sporting events. It was a pretty good gig.

But the coolest time was from 1991 to 1994 when I did my first stint on the copy desk. I had the power, as the late man on my shift, to stop the presses for breaking news stories – with the approval of the managing editor, of course.

With a touch of a button on my phone, I had a direct connection to the pressroom, and the thundering machines would come to a halt while we remade the paper.

I was always tempted to do a Humphrey Bogart impression (he played an editor in “Deadline U.S.A.”) when I shouted out “Stop the presses,” but it would have been lost over the roar.

DAVE PETRUSKA

Copy editor

One of the more amazing moments I experienced at the Citizen was being with the Tucson-based science team for the Phoenix Mars Lander mission when the spacecraft safely settled on the planet’s surface May 25, 2008.

The craft faced a danger-filled “seven minutes of terror” as it used the Martian atmosphere, a parachute and 12 descent thrusters to slow from 12,500 mph to a soft landing to end its 10-month, 422-million mile journey.

The 400 people packing the Tucson Science Operations Center waiting for confirmation of safe landing erupted in joy as the Lander’s first images from the Martian surface were shown on large screen monitors. The “live” images took 15 minutes to travel from Mars to Earth.

ALAN FISCHER

Reporter

I was about 5 when my oldest brother started delivering papers for the Citizen. Every afternoon, I helped him fold them and wrap a rubber band around them. I felt proud, as though I were part of something very important.

Many years later, I got my first newspaper job at the Citizen.

I remember the night Old Tucson burnt down. I went to the newsroom about 7 p.m., thinking a few old-timers would be there – in those days, the newsroom starting lighting up about 3 a.m. to put out the afternoon paper. At 7 at night, everyone should be home and exhausted, gearing up for the next day.

But the newsroom was hopping, keyboads going at a rapid pace, phones pressed to reporters’ ears. The sense of loss was palpable as we all worked to get the story about the blaze.

But we also wanted a story — stories, really — that talked about what the old movie set meant to Tucson’s economy, Tucson’s tourism, Tucson’s citizens.

We all worked late into the night and got those stories. We wrote with compassion, knowledge and precision.

We all were part of something very important.

KATHLEEN ALLEN

Former staff member

When I arrived at the Tucson Citizen’s police press room for my first shift in December 1999, I carefully inched toward the one-room office and opened the door just enough to peek inside. I was visibly nervous; a big fish at the college paper, I was suddenly a nobody with a notepad, thrown into an internship at a professional news operation.

“Are you Dave Teibel?” I asked, my voice quivering.

The man put down a newspaper and adjusted his Coke-bottle glasses to get a closer look at me. “I am,” he curtly replied.

Knowing a bit about Teibel’s storied career in Tucson, I said “Well, it’s truly an honor to meet you, sir.”

I expected to hear “Nice to meet you, too.” That’s what normal people say.

Instead, he groaned and put his feet on the desk, opened his newspaper and proudly muttered, “Yes … yes it is.”

That brief conversation scared me half to death and I nearly quit on the spot. But then, somehow, we began to click.

Over the next three years, this wonderful man – part pit bull, part teddy bear – helped craft the person I’ve become today. He did the same for dozens of rookies before and after me.

DAVE CIESLAK

Former staff member

One top memory: Arizona softball coach Mike Candrea leading Team USA to a gold medal in softball at the 2004 Olympic Games in Greece. His team dominated, not that it was a surprise in going 9-0 and outscoring opponents 51-1. What struck me, though, was his humility, poise and pride in the journey. It came just five weeks after his then-wife, Sue, passed away from a brain aneurysm while on the pre-Games tour.

I remember him in the dugout, hand on chin, taking in the team celebration on the field. Heartfelt and memorable.

“I thanked them all for the greatest moment of my life,” he said at the time. “I love this team.”

And, through it all, he didn’t get a medal. Coaches don’t get medals.

“That’s not what this is about,” he said.

STEVE RIVERA

Reporter

Nothing in my 21 years at the Citizen has been personally more life changing than covering the Tucson International Mariachi Conference.

My first encounter with the conference showed me that this was a world-class tradition with instrumentalists and singers to rival the best orchestras and opera companies in the country. But in time I realized that I was watching history unfold before my eyes as Mexican Americans recast their self-image through their culture and set sail toward a future of higher education and pride in their personal and collective accomplishments.

What seemed at first concerts and workshops became the seeds of the transformation of a people, and it was my good fortune to be there to write about that historical pivot point as it was unfolding.

DAN BUCKLEY

Reporter/videographer

I’ll miss all the cursing and yelling.

Before becoming a foul-mouthed vulgarian journalist, I was a repressed foul-mouthed vulgarian hospital executive (executive being a relative term) who had to do all his cursing outside the staid confines of the hospital and the inpatient admissions office.

Dilbertian cubicle life is hushed and chaste. Mere hells and damns can elicit gasps from the cubists and frantic calls to HR and personal injury attorneys.

Raising your voice to a fellow employee was almost always followed by a trip to the HR office and mandatory anger management training.

But not in a newsroom. Here we let the expletives fly. Yelling at co-workers and editors is de rigueur.

My first day here, the border reporter yelled at the city editor. The photo editor yelled at the sports editor and the o\n\ned page designer yelled at the photo editor (a lot of people yell at the photo editor, and vice versa). A general assignment reporter yelled at everybody.

I thought to myself, “I’m home.”

I dread returning to the monk’s life of the grownup corporate world. Here’s hoping another newsroom needs a fat bastard editor who can say f*** you with the best of ‘em.

MARK B. EVANS

Assistant city editor

I did not choose a career as a journalist to be a government watchdog, expose corruption or to influence people. I became a journalist to make money while writing the Great American Novel. And along the path of becoming the next Jack Kerouac, I was led to a newsroom described by an editor friend of mine as a place “similar to the island of misfit toys.”

It was a melting pot of tree huggers, gun-lovers, cowboys and city slickers, vegetarians, meat eaters, animal lovers, beer drinkers, rock and rollers and hip hoppers.

What I remember most about those 10 years in the dusty and dark newsroom at Park and Irvington was the enjoyment of working in a place and having a career where you had access to inside information (off the record), met famous people (Tiger Woods), and had the rush of chasing breaking news.

There was never a dull moment in the Citizen newsroom. Everyday was different and as reporters our desire for knowledge was never-ending. I am a better person, a better public servant, and thanks to the Tucson Citizen I am a man who knows a little about a lot rather than a lot about one thing.

More importantly, working on “the island of misfit toys” taught me tolerance and open-mindedness to those who are different than I. Now if I could just finish that novel…

MICHAEL GRAHAM

Former staff member

Even on this doomsday I feel truly blessed to have worked in the Tucson Citizen newsroom.

I have spent over five years in this newsroom, and it has not only improved me as a photographer and a news person, but it has truly fostered my appreciation for knowledge.

I must give credit to my unforgettable mentor P.K. Weis. He reinvigorated my love of photography. And when I became a legitimate photographer, he taught me how to be a better photographer and the importance of connecting with all the people I photograph.

He instilled a confidence in me.

For Mr. Weis and the Tucson Citizen, I am more than grateful. I am a better person.

RENEE BRACAMONTE

Photographer

Drug trafficking was really starting to heat up along the Arizona border in the early ’90s. I spent a lot of time with the U.S. Border Patrol.

I remember walking through the brush with two agents on a moonless night and being forbidden from using my electronic flash to take pictures since we were being watching by drug runners. I slept in the back of a beat-up Border Patrol truck for four hours while agents tracked drug-runners by moonlight – no headlights or tail lights.

I had the privilege of covering the Arizona Wildcat football and basketball teams at home and on the road for six years.

My first NCAA tournament trip was to Denver in 1989. I walked into the Associated Press darkroom and said that I needed film processing services. The AP photographer running the lab, an intimidating 6-foot-7-inch bearded fellow, stood over me and yelled at me for not calling ahead and following procedures. I was speechless. Another wire service photographer put his arm around me and quietly pulled me out of the room. He helped smooth things over so I could process film.

During this trip, I was rooming with columnist Corky Simpson. I finished transmitting photos at 3 a.m. following the game (it took 30 minutes to transmit each photo in those days) and quietly snuck into the hotel room to get some sleep. At 6 a.m., the drapes were thrust open to daylight. I bolted up from bed to Corky proudly proclaiming that he was going out running. I knew it was going to be a long, sleepless tournament.

I worked some strange hours to cover for P.K. Weis, the photo editor, when the Citizen was a true afternoon daily.

I woke up at 2:30 a.m. each day one week to make it to work at 4 a.m. to cover P.K.’s shift. Managing editor Dale Walton strolled into the newsroom around 4:30 a.m., looking dapper with coat and tie and ready to tackle the news day. By the news meeting at 5:30 a.m., the tie was loosened and he looked completely disheveled and exhausted.

It was then I knew I never wanted to be a managing editor.

The same day, I fell asleep on the shoulder of the sports editor during the afternoon meeting.

RICK WILEY

Former staff member

In 1996 our current interim publisher, then business editor, Jennifer Boice hired me right out of journalism school.

I said, “Are you sure you want to hire a single mom with three kids?” I’m glad she did.

Over the past dozen years not only have my children grown up – but I have as well.

I’ve had the opportunity to reach out and talk to people I normally would not have had access to including several political figures and entertainment icons such as Jay Leno, Roseanne Barr, Phyllis Diller and Don Rickles.

The interview that sticks in my mind is when Sen. John McCain made me sick. This is not a political comment.

About four years ago he came to the Citizen and I interviewed him. He had a horrible head cold. He sneezed into his hand and then shook mine. It was a bit sticky. A few days later I was sick. Thanks, senator!

LORRIE BROWNSTONE

Assistant city editor

I was a huge baseball fan as a kid. I’d watch any game I could on TV, hardly missed a Baseball Tonight on ESPN, and read every copy of the Star’s or Citizen’s sports section that I got my hands on.

So imagine my excitement, when as a young adult and covering sports for the Tucson Citizen, I had the opportunity to interview one of my childhood heroes in the clubhouse after a Diamondbacks spring training game. We’re talking someone whose poster used to hang on my wall as kid – how exciting, right?

The entire time I talked with him he had one foot propped up on a bench, a cigarette in one hand, a beer in the other, and his eyes glued to a golf tournament on the clubhouse TV. He never even once looked over at me during the interview. Talk about having your bubble popped.

In 2005, I was sent out to Desert Diamond to cover the weigh-in for the next night’s fight between Demetrius Hopkins and Tucson’s Nito Bravo.

Hopkins was the nephew of Bernard Hopkins, who at 40 was the oldest man to ever hold the Middleweight Championship in boxing and who had defended his title, a world record, 20 times.

The publicist asked me if I wanted to talk to Bernard Hopkins and I said yes, obviously.

So the publicist walked me to the bar where Bernard was sitting and told him who I was. As he was talking to Bernard, I turned around and looked – there was a long line of boxing fans going back out the door – all waiting to talk to and get an autograph from Bernard Hopkins.

Bernard Hopkins told me to sit down with him at the bar so I could interview him. He talked to me for over half an hour – about everything from his nephew, to his own career, to the weather and even the big pancakes the casino served him for breakfast.

Meanwhile, I had a large and growing line of inpatient boxing fans – most of whom were drinking. If there wasn’t a famous boxer sitting next to me – I think I might have needed a bodyguard. (On a side note, the next night, at the fight, I got to interview Oscar de la Hoya too.)

MICHAEL CACCAMISE

Copy editor

My four underpaid, overworked years at the Tucson Citizen were, without doubt, among the most joyful of my career. The Citizen taught me how to report, how to write, and to honor the classic Finley Peter Dunn mandate to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.

I last lived and worked here in 1985, so the smaller city I knew and the larger newspaper I loved have been gone for a while (though the beer garden at the Shanty is still strangely, wonderfully unchanged after 24 years). The Citizen of that era honored good writing more than most newspapers, thanks in large part to the influence of Dick Vonier. We took on ambitious stories, including an epic series examining the flood of Central American refugees in the ’80s that made Tucson a center for the Sanctuary Movement, and an investigation of flaws in a major child abduction and murder case. For the latter, I was personally gratified to be labeled “Inspector Closeau” by a sputtering County Attorney Steve Neely, who was angered by our findings.

The paper had some memorable foibles. One was the paper’s fondness for publishing animal tales on the front page, a proclivity I once demonstrated by stapling a year’s worth of such stories together end to end, producing a paper chain of doggy heroes and record-breaking snakes and cats that could carry a tune that ran from the break room bulletin board some 39 feet into the hallway. In typical Citizen fashion, another reporter was assigned to write a story about my little project (which I suppose was better than canning me).

The story about animal stories ran, naturally, on the front page.

ED HUMES

Former staff member

There was always something about the Citizen, something that set us apart.

What it always came down to was a staff that cared – cared about Tucson, cared about each other and cared about doing the best job possible, even as resources dwindled to nothing.

We were the scrappy underdog (hate that phrase), frequently beating the competition on breaking news and in sheer writing talent.

More importantly, we had heart. We always wanted to do our best, to be the best.

And we had fun. When I was moved to the “Big House” after working in our downtown office for years, I was assigned a desk in what had to be the most fun corner in the universe.

I was surrounded by irreverent, brilliant, funny and sometimes a bit dysfunctional folks. We pulled pranks. We got in trouble. Once we got so rowdy, Art Rotstein of the Associated Press tape recorded us. We were appalled at our own behavior.

But we did the best journalism of our lives.

It’s hard to imagine Tucson without the Tucson Citizen.

But life will go on. It always does. News will happen. I just hope someone who cares as much as we did is there to cover it.

GABRIELLE FIMBRES

Reporter

Being able to go to the State of the State address with Mark Kimble has always been one of my favorite memories of working at the Citizen. I sat with legislators, mayors and the governor just feet away from me. I will always remember seeing the mayor of Phoenix stick his cell phone in his sock. I felt like a kid in a candy store. This was the culmination of my government classes in public education.

Later, on that same trip I found out how knowledgeable he was not just about news but our state and its history in general. Upon buying lunch at McDonald’s (Mark is also a health nut), we discussed Fife Symington’s new career path in the food industry. Mark then revealed to me that during his childhood Mr. Symington saved some kid from drowning. Later, when Fife got indicted and convicted this kid came back into his life and rescued him by granting him a presidential pardon. The kid’s name was William Jefferson Clinton. So if it wasn’t for Symington, Clinton would be dead by now.

That day was one of the days that I learned the most in any job and one more thing that will be with me for the rest of my life, thanks to the Citizen and thanks to Mark.

ARNIE BERMUDEZ

Artist/designer

In this world of celebrity overload, we in the journalism business in Tucson don’t get that many opportunities to interview celebs, let alone have them admit to something publicly that had previously remained buried in their past.

But when I interviewed ABC sportscaster Al Michaels in 1977, that’s exactly what happened.

Some background: Michaels was sports editor of The State Press, the student paper at Arizona State University, in 1965. While there he perpetrated a hoax on The Arizona Republic’s sports staff by inventing a fictitious athlete from Fredonia High School in northern Arizona. Michaels and his school buddy George Allen concocted baseball star Clint Romas, then kept embellishing a legendary career for him through calls to the Republic sports desk. As long as the Republic kept printing the stats and linescores, they would keep calling in with ever-more outrageous feats by Romas.

The hoax fell apart when the Republic finally decided to call Fredonia to do a story on Romas and found out he didn’t exist. Just who had conned the Republic remained a mystery, though – at least until Michaels admitted it to me in the interview and I published his account.

How did I know about the hoax and to ask Michaels about it? Let’s just say a reporter never reveals his sources.

The best part of this for me was hearing Michaels’ hearty laugh when first hearing Clint Romas’ name, and then his regaling me with some of the juicier facts behind the hoax. Try getting that from a celebrity today.

BRUCE JOHNSTON

News editor

The first day of my first story, then-city editor Jim Wyckoff told me to go to the scene, every time. Do an interview over the telephone, he warned, and you’ll miss the bullet hole in the window, or the refrigerator magnet, or the family photo that could provide little nuggets of insight. If you want to chronicle human moments, he advised, be there to see the tears and anger and pain and beauty.

I learned about the power of words to nudge and inspire.

I did piece on a crime victim who needed surgery to save her eyesight. Readers responded with donations to provide the medical care her insurance company wouldn’t.

In that moment of a community pulling together, any sense of victory was tempered by sobriety. What I wrote had the power to move people, to influence policy, to change lives.

I felt awe, then humility, that people trust me to tell their stories and to be an accurate filter of their experience.

RHONDA BODFIELD

Former staff member

Black Friday is my favorite shopping day of the year. I love the deals, the chaos and getting home at noon with all my Christmas and birthday shopping done. I hate getting up before dawn, but justify it with the thought that I’ll get to take a long afternoon nap.

For Black Friday 2007, I agreed to be the reporter out covering the chaos. It meant that I would have to be up at 3 a.m., and also meant dragging along my 14-month-old foster child, Bamm Bamm. I thought he would sleep in the stroller the whole time.

He ended up staying awake for most of the trip, but managed to be the easiest part of completing the story. After our first stop to interview the folks in line at Mervyn’s I got back into my truck to head to Circuit City.

My truck wouldn’t start. I had four stores to hit in less than two hours and I had a dead battery. At each store photographer Xavier Gallegos had to jump my battery. When it came time to file my story, I did it while sitting in my truck in the Tucson Citizen parking lot typing on my laptop with my engine running and my little boy finally sleeping.

HEIDI ROWLEY

Former staff member

On a whim, after spending the 1948 Fourth of July weekend in Tucson, I sought and landed my first post-Princeton job at the Citizen. Elated, I found my desk in the seven-reporter newsroom, sat down, and admitted: “I don’t know how to type.” To which the veteran newsman next to me offered wise counsel: “Fake it.”

I managed to hunt-and-peck my way through four enjoyable stints at the state’s oldest paper for a total of 20 years. Closing my initial stay as acting sports editor, I joined the FBI in 1951, only to return a year later as city editor, 1952-55. Alcoholism slowly had a grip on me, so I wandered far and often until the Citizen gave me another chance as day police reporter (1962-64).

My stories were generally good, my behavior wasn’t, so I disappeared again until finding recovery in AA (9/24/69). By 1971, I was welcomed home for one last fling – as political writer, columnist and editorial page editor – until 1983. Thanks for the memories.

ASA “ACE” BUSHNELL

Former staff member

Deaths

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Compiled by Daniela Vizcarra. For information, call 573-4561

Robert Dean Anderson, 85, May 12, salesman. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Marion Ernest Balentine, 85, April 15, self-employed. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Jose Guy Benavidez, 47, May 12, housekeeping. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Scott Archer Boyce, 44, March 30, plumber. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Denise Therese Brewer, 51, April 12, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Steven M. Brooks, 61, May 5, laborer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Jane E. Cashman, 63, April 3, administrative assistant. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Artemisa G. Castro, 67, April 8, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Christina Corona, 52, May 8, telecommunications. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Ann Cunningham, 86, May 10, mail clerk. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

James Watson Day, 80, April 10, engineer. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Virginia Loraine Downing, 80, April 15, cashier. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Helen Vincent Drachman, 74, April 19, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Janet Dzing, 73, May 5, company supervisor. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Laurence R. Green, 92, May 12, farmer. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Jean Hilton, 68, May 4, needlepoint designer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Louise S. King, 78, May 13, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Edward Moore, 93, May 12, chemist. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Mary O. Morton, 91, May 5, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Richard Oakley, 81, of Green Valley, May 10, sales. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Cynthia Orr, 57, May 7, teacher. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Mark D. Paschal, 54, April 2, laborer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Frank Charles Ramsower, 91, May 11, business owner. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Nene Catherine Rocheford, 64, May 8, business owner. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Beverly Ruppelius, 82, May 10, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Matilda Jane Sanchez, 73, May 13, housekeeping. Heather Mortuary

Robert L. Sandin, 96, May 11, teacher. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Raza Shah, 38, May 5, inmate. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Monica Freund Silver, 73, May 8, self-employed. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Zack Staples, 87, May 9, engineer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Frederick Travis, 75, May 9, mechanic. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Barbara E. Vallefuoco, 83, May 11, homemaker. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Richard Zormeier, 73, May 12, carpenter. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Deaths

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Compiled by Antonio Garcia. For information call, 573-4561.

Bonita Anderson, 64, May 9, homemaker. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Franklin Barrett, 88, May 9, U.S. Air Force. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Jeramiah Bass, 84, May 5, mining explorer. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Daniel R. Brooker, 56, April 30, airplane mechanic. Angel Valley Funeral Home

Donald F. Cass, 58, May 5, self-employed. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Harry R. Cattrell, 86, of SaddleBrooke, May 6, U.S. Air Force. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Elizabeth Jane Coons, 87, April 29, registered nurse. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Christina Corona, 52, May, 8, customer service. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Clara May Criswell, 74, May 10, registered nurse. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Tanya Rugh Walker Cumbest, 64, May 8, cosmetologist. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Carolyn Edwards, 47, April 16, respiratory therapist. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Doris Maxine Ely, 81, April 10, systems analyst. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Claudia Y. Esquer, 24, of Marana, May 10, retail sales. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Vera Mae Forshaw, 81, April 14, business owner. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Carla S. Gamez, 50, May 4, newspaper sales. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Maria C. Gonzalez, 64, May 5, homemaker. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Laurence R. Green, 92, May 12, dairy farmer. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Myrtle Gladys Giachetti, 97, May 5, bookkeeping. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Charles L. Hartshorn, 74, May 4, U.S. Navy. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Faye Ann Hawkins, 78, April 6, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Wera Holmgren, 97, of Green Valley, May 5, homemaker. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Bertil L. Johnson, 71, April 14, quality inspector. Desert Sunset Cremation & Burial

Melvin L. Kenley, 87, of Oro Valley, May 4, executive. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Robert D. Kennie, 70, May 10, truck driver. Heather Mortuary

James M. Langford, 69, April 1, counselor. Desert Sunset Cremation & Burial

Carolyn A. LeBoeuf, 73, May 9, homemaker. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Helen B. Major, 85, May 10, hotel cook. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Lillian Mendoza, 83, May 9, unit clerk. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Vivienne Oxman, 90, May 9, homemaker. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Esperanza Palmer, 80, May 12, homemaker. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Maria Concepcion “Concha” Pesqueira, 87, May 7, presser, Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

E. James Robinson, 83, of SaddleBrooke. May 5, manager. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Elizabeth Ruelas, 71, May 10, supervisor. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Betty G. Schroedor, 78, May 8, nurse assistant. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Duane B. Seaman, 93, May 11, retail sales. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Richard A. Straub, 70, May 10, construction worker. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Frank Taylor, 91, May 2, executive. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Mary Su Tuttle, 33, May 7, university student. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Barbara E. Vallefuoco, 83, May 11, homemaker. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Fern S. Warner, 79, May 8, teacher. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Gloria Zehowicz, 82, May 8, cashier. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Tucson-linked folk singer Edmonson dies at 76

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009
Edmonson

Edmonson

PHOENIX – Travis Edmonson, a folk music singer and songwriter of the 1950s and ’60s who was considered a pioneer by artists such as the Kingston Trio, has died. He was 76.

Edmonson died Saturday at a Mesa hospital, said longtime friend Mike Bartlett. Although Bartlett did not know the cause of death, he said Edmonson, who had a stroke in 1982, had suffered from numerous health problems.

Bob Shane, founding member of the Kingston Trio, was in college when he first saw Edmonson perform in San Francisco. Edmonson became his idol.

“He was probably the finest solo entertainer I’d ever seen,” Shane told The Associated Press from his Phoenix home. “He had a command of the stage that was just unbelievable.”

Shane said he and fellow band member Nick Reynolds were inspired watching Edmonson, who at the time was a member of the Gateway Singers.

“When we were seniors, we used to drive up and catch the Gateway Singers quite often. I’d say he definitely had an influence on the Kingston Trio because we enjoyed watching what they did as a group. But we decided not to use a girl which they had. So we cut it down to the trio.”

Edmonson was born in Long Beach, Calif., and spent his childhood in the border town of Nogales. His family’s proximity to Mexico helped to shape his passion for Latin music.

Bartlett said as a boy, Edmonson would sleep outside by the border. After dark, he would go to Mexican restaurants to watch mariachi musicians.

While studying at the University of Arizona, Edmonson won an amateur performing contest and decided to pursue a career as an entertainer. He formed a folk music duo with Bud Dashiell called Bud & Travis. The two recorded eight albums between 1959 and 1965. After they split, Edmonson sang solo and then joined Shane, who had split from the Trio.

Their act, Shane & Travis, lasted only four weeks before Shane opted to start the New Kingston Trio.

“We had a lot of fun but, as I said, things were happening quite quickly from the singing. . . . We had some differences but not things we were upset about,” Shane said. “He wanted to go one way, and I wanted to go another. So, we said, ‘See you later.’ ”

Some of Edmonson’s signature songs included “I’m a Drifter” and “Malaguena Salerosa.”

In the 1970s, Edmonson moved back to Tucson where he continued to perform and advise younger musicians such as Linda Ronstadt. Shane said Edmonson was often thought of as an ambassador of music in the Tucson area.

The stroke left Edmonson paralyzed on his left side. He was unable to perform, but he still liked to write songs and meet with other musicians. Bartlett said Edmonson always cared about helping struggling, younger artists.

“Big people didn’t necessarily impress him, but the little guy was the one he always had his eye on,” Bartlett said.

He is survived by his wife, Rose Marie Heidrick, and one son and five daughters from previous relationships.

Funeral services will be private with a public memorial planned for a later date.

Historical Commission will hand out annual awards May 31

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

The Tucson-Pima County Historical Commission will honor locals who’ve advanced the cause of historic preservation at a ceremony May 31.

Past winners include people involved with the Southern Pacific Depot, the El Presidio project and the Fort Lowell Historic District.

This year’s awards will be given from 3 to 5 p.m. at San Pedro Chapel, 5230 E. Fort Lowell Road.

Entry is free.

For more information, call 791-4213.

DEATHS

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Compiled by Jared Juan. For information, call 573-4561.

Roy L. Austin, 76, April 29, automobile porter. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

Mabel J. Bronk, 91, May 9, manager. Heather Mortuary

Irwin L. Collum, 91, May 2, supervisor. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

Thelma E. Delbridge, 97, April 29, teacher. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

John Fleming, 55, April 25, laborer. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Concepcion O. Fox, 65, April 18, housekeeper. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

Donald Dean Fuller, 75, April 21, business owner. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Henry Joseph Gellerman, 94, April 30, radio operator. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Paul R. Govafn, 55, April 25, truck driver. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

David Carl Gunderson, 63, April 14, bus driver. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Benjamin Monroe Hamilton, 83, of Oro Valley, May 8, merchant. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Jose R. Jimenez, 64, May 3, miner. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

Robert “Bob” Marshall Lawton, 80, May 6, architect. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Beatrice Theresa Liebesman, 90, May 6, teacher. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Dorothy E. Orton, 92, April 3, clerical. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Marjorie Semon Pake, 84, April 25, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Jennifer Lazano Pineda, 36, May 2, homemaker. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Luis Lee Anthony Reynoso Jr., infant, April 30. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Matthew T. Scott, 13, May 2, student. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

Jose Luis Soto, 69, May 2, construction. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

Douglas Ernst Thomson, 79, May 4, electrical engineer. Desert Rose Cremation & Burial

Wayne Walter Vannoy, 69, of Oro Valley, May 9, business owner. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Ida B. Winning, 93, April 29, bookkeeper. South Lawn Mortuary and Cemetery

Ask the Astronomer

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

Q: I missed the Eta Aquarid meteors earlier this month. Will there be another good meteor shower that I can see soon?

A: Not until this summer. Usually the best and most predictable shooting star show is the Perseid meteor shower in August, but that is being supplanted by the Geminids around Dec. 13-14. This year the Perseids peak on the nights of Aug. 11-12 and 12-13, but the moon will interfere after 10:30 p.m. on the peak night of Aug. 12-13. If it’s cloudy on those nights, you can still see some Perseid meteors on the nights of Aug. 10-11 and 13-14, even through moonlight.

448 to get degrees Saturday from University of Phoenix

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Look out, world, 448 new graduates from the University of Phoenix’s greater Tucson locations will be heading your way.

The commencement ceremony, which honors those who completed degrees online or at one of five southern Arizona locations, is 10 a.m. Saturday at the Tucson Convention Center, 260 S. Church Ave.

About 4,000 guests are expected to attend, according to a news release from the university.

Of the 448 degrees being awarded, four are associate’s degrees; 235 are bachelor’s degrees; and 209 are master’s degrees.

The most popular degrees awarded to this batch of grads are bachelor’s degrees in business management and master’s in business administration.

There are two campuses in Tucson, plus one each in Sierra Vista, Nogales and Yuma.

Deaths

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Compiled by Daniela Vizcarra. For information, call 573-4561

Socorro Anna Aguirre, 70, April 29, homemaker. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Mary G. Barrios, 81, May 2, housekeeper. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Ignacia Bartlett, 96, April 28, hairdresser. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

John F. Barwell, 86, May 6, engineer. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Ethel Block, 90, May 2, accountant. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Carol Ann Bray, 74, May 2, homemaker. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Maria Jesus Chaboya, 87, April 29, homemaker. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Cleo Christofferson, 83, May 1, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Joyce Crawford, 90, April 28, psychologist. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Warren D. Decker, 65, April 11, security guard. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Jesus Q. Elias, 104, May 4, cobbler. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Jose M. Fernandez, 92, May 4, pipe fitter. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Pablo Caballero Figueroa, 76, May 1, horse trainer. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Frances G. Flores, 93, April 28, homemaker. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Shirley M. Fry, 93, May 4, cook. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

James Gardner, 76, May 5, property officer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Faith M. Gildea, 50, May 2, caregiver. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Reinalda Duarte Gomez, 89, May 1, homemaker. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Leonard Griffith, 86, April 29, banker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Troy G. Hanusa, 44, May 1, truck driver. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Fern B. Heinrich, 90, May 1, accountant. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Eliza Y. Jacobs, 88, April 22, homemaker. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Clare Kendall, 49, May 4, farmers market grocer. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Cruz Leon, 74, April 27, teacher’s aide. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Catherine McBride, 84, April 30, homemaker. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Willis McCarter, 88, May 6, manager. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Jose Luis Moreno, 50, May 2, custodian. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

John D. Murdaugh, 94, May 2, U. S. Postal Service. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral home

Antonina Occhipinti, 93, May 6, housekeeper. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Virginia Slater, 72, May 3, nurse. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Carmen G. Soltero, 77, April 27, cook. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Irving Turbin, 85, April 30, sales. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Urbaldo Urbano, 76, April 30, supervisor. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Betty Elaine Villano, 71, April 30, manager. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Sara Joyce Whitaker, 80, May 5, artist. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Mary Wollard, 72, April 30, clerk. Hudgel’s Swan Funeral Home

Irene Pacheco Zepeda, 69, April 30, homemaker. Carrillo’s Tucson Mortuary

Deaths

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Compiled by Antonio Garcia. For information call 573-4561.

James Amato, 87, May 1, insurance sales manager. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Franklin Barnes, 69, April 26, gunsmith. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Helen Blair, 72, April 22, homemaker. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Irene T. Bohl, 87, April 24, engineer. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Esther Chapman, 97, April 28, homemaker. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Clyde Stephon Cherry, 89, of Oro Valley, May 1, U.S. Air Force. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Edward B. Daniels, 93, May 1, traffic safety worker. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Darrell Davis, 34, April 25, landscaper. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Sprague E. Enos, 78, April 28, computer operations. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Jaynie L. Erdman, 51, April 26, homemaker. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Mary Ann Ford, 61, April 21, salesperson. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Adele H. Fox, 92, May 5, office manager. Bring’s Memorial Chapel

Barbara Grask, 78, May 2, homemaker. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Rodney Hall, 62, of SaddleBrooke, April 21, buyer. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Susan Hall, 62, May 1, homemaker. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Carmella D. Harrison, 81, April 30, homemaker. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Matthew J. Huntley, infant, April 30, Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Susan Jackson, 67, May 3, rancher. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Joshua Kmak, 25, May 1, restaurant manager. Bring’s Memorial Chapel

Dusti Kreitner, 81, May 2, homemaker. Bring’s Memorial Chapel

Lauren Love, 23, of Tempe, May 1, student. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Sheryl Montgomery, 52, April 30, bank teller. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Marian L. Nelson, 85, May 4, billing clerk. Bring’s Memorial Chapel

Mark Anthony Newbold, 79, May 2, copper miner. Desert Sunset Funeral Home

Carl A. Olson Jr., 81, May 4, salesman. Heather Mortuary

Richard Paige, 58, May 3, Pilates instructor. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

James Fulton Quinn, 55, May 1, technician. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

William Richman, 59, of Mesilla, N.M., April 23, truck driver. Adair Funeral Homes Dodge Chapel

Richard Douglas Rucker Sr., 90, April 30, dentist. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Miles N. Sintetos, 58, April 29, stone mason. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Donald Charles Sjogren, 83, of Oro Valley, May 4, business owner. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Cullen D. Snodgrass, 45, April 29, nursing assistant. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Lena Szczurek 85, April 27, secretary. Vistoso Memorial Chapel

Robert Joseph Terry, 77, of Oro Valley, April 30, construction. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Patrick Joseph Tramontano, 39, May 2, restaurant manager. Adair Funeral Homes Avalon Chapel

Frances Trolinger, 84, May 1, waitress. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Patricia Zimmerman, 91, May 1, teacher. Bring’s Broadway Chapel

Tucson sees first 100-degree day Thursday

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Tucson hit 100 degrees Thursday, according to the National Weather Service.

It was the sixth-earliest advent for the benchmark in Tucson.

Temperatures here soared in the early afternoon and by 1:53 had hit the 100-degree mark.

If you want some solace, it felt like only 94.

Yep, it’s a dry heat.

Duo revive vacant downtown building with art exhibit

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Graphic artists Julie Ray and Rachelle Diaz count 26 vacant buildings in a tight cluster of downtown streets.

They are taking it upon themselves to bring life back to them, first with art exhibits that they hope will inspire businesses to move in.

Ray and Diaz are doing the first such exhibit from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturday inside the McLellan Building, 63 E. Congress St. The exhibit will continue through the summer in McLellan’s four exterior window boxes on the Scott Avenue side.

The Downtown Scavenger Hunt Exhibit will showcase photos and thoughts shared by participants in a scavenger hunt March 1. Participants followed clues to find 10 vacant buildings between Broadway and Pennington Street, and Stone and Fifth avenues.

“We are getting them to imagine the possibilities with the buildings downtown,” said Diaz, who has a Tu Scene blog devoted to visual arts events. “What would you do if you could open a restaurant? What would you serve?”

The exhibit will also include historic photos of the McLellan Building. Diaz and Ray will re-enact their Ignite Tucson presentations from last year, five-minute PowerPoint presentations with 20 images shown for 15 seconds each. The duo also want to talk with exhibit visitors about ways to fill the empty buildings.

“Our philosophy is these spaces should be full,” said Ray, who has a Burrito Files blog, where she asks people, if Tucson were a burrito what would be in it. “Let’s continue to make this place more vibrant. Let’s start with these spaces.”

Ray and Diaz are calling their project Pop Up Spaces. They won the support of McLellan Building owner John Wesley Miller, and they want to get exhibits from other artists into other empty buildings.

“We want to connect with more property owners and managers,” Ray said. “We are inviting the public to come downtown and interact with these buildings.”

The live scavenger hunt was March 1, but Ray said people can still go on the hunt by visiting popupspaces.org for clues and submitting comments and photos online.

Second issue of American Indian journal comes out this week

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

The second issue of Native Perspectives, an independent student-produced American Indian news journal, comes out Wednesday.

The public is invited to a release party at 6 p.m. at the Cellar Bistro, on the underground level of the Student Union Memorial Center at the University of Arizona.

The 12-page journal contains essays, interviews and articles from UA students and Tucson residents, according to a news release from the Native American Journalists Association.

The journal was founded by Candace Begody, a UA journalism senior and former Tucson Citizen intern.

Needing a waila fix? Special on KUAT airs Monday night

Monday, May 4th, 2009
The Joaquin Brothers play at a 1963 prom at St. John's Indian School, a boarding school in Laveen, just south of Phoenix.  The band members (from left) are brothers Daniel Joaquin, Fernando Joaquin and Angelo Joaquin Sr.

The Joaquin Brothers play at a 1963 prom at St. John's Indian School, a boarding school in Laveen, just south of Phoenix. The band members (from left) are brothers Daniel Joaquin, Fernando Joaquin and Angelo Joaquin Sr.

The annual Waila Festival is off for now, due to budgetary reasons. But a waila special on KUAT-TV on Monday may take the edge off.

“Waila! Making the People Happy” is a half-hour film by Quechan tribe member Daniel Golding about the Tohono O’odham social dance tradition. The show airs on Channel 6 at 10:30 p.m. Monday.

A cousin of the northern Mexican norteño tradition, waila features polkas, cumbias and Schottisches. But while the musical repertoire of both norteño and waila overlaps, waila is a strictly instrumental tradition, played by ensembles typically made up of saxophones, button accordion, bajo sexto (a 12-string rhythm guitar), electric bass and drums.

The main instrumentation and musical styles came from 19th century European settlers. But over the years the Tohono O’odham have put their own spin on the music and made it their own.

Typical waila dances run sundown to sunup, and the band has a repertoire to span that time period.

Tucson has gotten to know the waila tradition better through the annual Waila Festival, which began in 1989 and has in recent years been a May event on the University of Arizona campus. But with the economy in a bind, the money that the festival usually borrows from the Arizona Historical Society is just not there this year, according to festival co-founder Angelo JoaquinJr.

“It was a cash flow problem,” Joaquin explains. To Joaquin and the festival committee it would be too hard to get everything together for a spring festival this year. But the group sees the current problem as an opportunity.

“It’s time for us to regroup and look at what’s really important and where we want to go from here,” Joaquin says. “I hope that there is quite a bit of support out there and people will work to help us put it on again next year.”

In fact, there may be two events – one in late spring, the other in winter.

The committee is focusing on creating an indoor dance to highlight more the orchestral style of waila. To be held sometime between November and January, the event hopefully will be a draw for winter visitors who likely will be surprised to see Native Americans playing and dancing to polka music.

Breaking from Native American stereotypes was on the mind of filmmakerl Golding when he started making “Waila! Making the People Happy.”

Golding, 42, first heard the music as a child growing up on the Fort Yuma-Quechan Reservation along the California border of Arizona.

A magazine article jogged his memory of the music, which is also called Chicken Scratch. He started researching the project in 2000 and began shooting in 2002-2003.

He called on Ron Joaquin (brother of Angelo Joaquin Jr.) – a second-generation member of the pioneering waila saxophone band The Joaquin Brothers – and started attending the Tucson Waila Festival, as well as “battle of the bands” events.

“What was neat was just learning how a Native people have adapted this musical style to fit into their own community,” Golding says. “A lot of times it seems like we’re portrayed as living in the past, in movies and TV. This is an opportunity to really show how Native people have adapted something that was given to them, made it their own and created this new contemporary tradition. I think that’s very empowering for people to see and learn about the Native communities.”

Although the project mainly focuses on the Joaquin Brothers, it shows some of the other bands in the project, too, Golding says.

“Talking to people even around Phoenix and Tucson, they’re totally unfamiliar with the Indian people that live right there,” he notes. “It’s almost like this cultural divide right there. People don’t get to experience it even though it’s right there in their own backyard. This is an opportunity for people to step into their world visually and see and experience what’s going on.”

For more information on this and other Daniel Golding films visit hokanmedia.com. And don’t miss “Waila! Making the People Happy” on Monday night.