Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The center was founded in 1995 Kathy Wooldridge. As an alcohol-free haven, Scrappys hosted national bands, such as Botch, Fall Out Boy, Give Up the Ghost, and a wide variety of Tucson native bands like The Bled, Versus the Mirror, Blues, The American Black Lung, Line of Fire, The Mean Reds, and Beyond the Citadel of Coup de Grace.
KTUC is the oldest station in Tucson, signing on the air on July 10, 1926; 98 years ago ().Originally it broadcast on 1370 kilocycles, using the call sign KGAR. [3] It was owned by Tucson Motor Services, with studios on South 6th Avenue.
"All Right Now" is a song by English rock band Free, released on their third studio album, Fire and Water (1970). It was released by Island Records , a record label founded by Chris Blackwell . Released as the album's second single , "All Right Now" peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart and number four on the US Billboard Hot 100 singles ...
Pima Community College (PCC) is a public community college in Pima County, Arizona.It serves the Tucson metropolitan area with a community college district consisting of five campuses, four education centers, and several adult education learning centers.
Edna W. Runner has been operating the Edna W. Runner Tutorial Center in Jupiter, Florida for 35 years on February 5, 2021.
The construction permit that was built as KDWI-TV was not the first the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) had awarded for channel 9 in Tucson. Radio station KCNA (580 AM) received a construction permit in December 1952 to set up a station; [2] when it relocated its transmitter facility in 1951, it installed a television "saddle" to support a future antenna on one of its towers. [3]
In fall 2007, the Poetry Center moved into a 17,000-square-foot (1,600 m 2) building named for Tucson arts patron Dr. Helen S. Schaefer. The Poetry Center's new building, designed by Line and Space, LLC, makes the Center's entire collection of contemporary poetry fully accessible for the first time in decades.
Both services have translators outside of the Tucson area, expanding coverage to such cities as Nogales, Sierra Vista, Bisbee, and Safford. [ 22 ] In 1966, John Walton donated the facility of daytime-only radio station KFIF (1550 kHz) to the university so he could purchase KTAN (580 AM) , with its superior facility and signal. [ 23 ]