Flandrau planetarium makes a comeback

Transcription

Flandrau planetarium makes a comeback
DISCOVERING UA
MAIN GATE SQUARE
RACE TRACK PROGRAM
Book festival grows
Theaters part of expansion
Baffert, Pletcher lead way
The University of Arizona
Spring/Summer 2011
Flandrau planetarium
makes a comeback
SEE PAGE 6
TOURS / 4
MUSEUMS / 10
PERFORMANCES / 14
CAMPUS MAP / 22-23
POETRY / 36
LECTURES / 39
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Rare Student Property With a
“No Party” Policy
Of all the selling points to publicize, one student property
advertises a “quiet environment” and a “No Party” Policy.
If you research
the student
housing market in
Tucson, AZ you
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properties are very similar with only slight differences. Of course,
each has its own advantages and disadvantages. Some properties
include all utilities in the rent. Some do not. Some are luxurious
(one even has a real mini movie theater). Some are miles away.
Some are just steps away from the campus. Some rent to students
only. Some will rent to anyone. Some are for students on a budget
and offer no amenities. And some are similar to resorts in the range
of amenities they offer…you get the idea. But Sahara Apartments
stands alone by advertising a “No Party” Policy.
Sahara Apartments, located less than one mile west of the UofA
campus on N. Stone Avenue, has had a “No Party” Policy in place
VLQFHLWRSHQHG¿YH\HDUVDJR,QWKDWWLPHWKHUHKDYHEHHQQRZLOG
parties, no accidents, no drunken or drug-related injuries, and no Red
Tags given by the police. Red Tags are given to properties when the
police are called for disturbances or illegal activity. Yes, not a single
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“Yes, some people view our ‘No Party’ Policy as a negative and
frankly, some students choose not to live here because of the policy,”
says Ted Mehr, owner and developer of Sahara Apartments. “ We
look at Sahara Apartments as a sanctuary for students where they
can feel safe, secure and free from the usual commotion that goes
on in most student oriented apartment buildings. The kinds of
things that can disturb a student’s sleep or study time. As a studentonly property, we do not consider ourselves to be in the nightclub
business, or the bar and entertainment business. There are plenty
of choices for those activities all around Tucson. We are a student’s
home away from home.”
Sahara Apartments sponsors social events on a monthly basis.
These social activities are held both on and offsite. When they are
offsite, Sahara’s shuttle provides free transportation to the events and
brings the residents back. Residents can have their friends over and
socialize with them in the student lounge, entertain them
in the game room, use the swimming and whirlpools, or study
together in Sahara’s study room with free use of the Internet
connected terminals.
“Safety is the number one thing parents are concerned about when
their child moves away from home,” says Ted Mehr. “The concept
of Sahara was born out of my concern for my own daughter’s safety
as she was preparing for college. I wanted her to be in a safe and
comfortable living environment no matter where she lived. I simply
asked myself, what kind of place would I want my daughter to
live in for the times I could not be there to watch over her? Sahara
Apartments was my answer to that question.”
The concern for safety and security is evident as you approach the
entry gate, or when you step into the
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safety and security measures that are
unmatched by any building Tucson.
The gated property includes an
electronic key system with retrievable
history of every entry into each
apartment and through each gate. The
property is equipped with 80 security
cameras that monitor all public areas
on a 24/7 basis. There is even a network of infrared beams over the
perimeter walls that sound an alarm and calls the owner on his cell
phone if the perimeter walls are breached…regardless of the time
of day or night. “If someone breaches the security of the building,
,ZDQWWREHWKH¿UVWRQHWRNQRZ,I,ZDQWHGLWIRUP\GDXJKWHU,
am sure you would want it for yours. It may be considered overly
protective, but I would prefer to wake up and investigate in the
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happened that could have been prevented,” admits Ted Mehr.
What else needs to be said about Sahara Apartments? They have
a good long list of modern amenities that the students want, such
as ALL utilities included in the rent, VERY high-speed Internet,
kitchens and private bathrooms in each apartment, FREE shuttle
service to and from campus, FREE bicycles for use as long as you
are a resident, lower prices than the on-campus residence halls and
comparable off campus student apartments, and you might have
guessed…Sahara Apartments is the one property with the minimovie theater. Check out Sahara’s Website for all the
information about this unique student property at www.
SaharaApartments.com or stop in and take a tour. The
friendly staff at Sahara Apartments would be happy to
show you around.
Sahara Apartments
909 N. Stone Ave.
Tucson, AZ 85701
520-622-4102
Ted Mehr, Owner
[email protected]
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
On Nov. 17, 1960, Robert Frost dedicated the
University of Arizona’s new Poetry Center, reading
a few of his famous poems before a standing-room
crowd at University Auditorium, now Centennial Hall.
During the visit, U.S. Rep Stewart Udall asked Frost
to read a poem at President Kennedy’s upcoming
inauguration (Frost wrote “Dedication” for Kennedy,
but read “The Gift Outright” at the event). The Poetry
Center continues to celebrate its 50th anniversary
with special guests and events. See Page 36
Contents
Stars realign
for Flandrau / 6
No horsing
around / 26
School field trips are still a
draw for UA’s science center,
which reopened after budget
cuts and brought back laser
shows to boost its popularity.
UA’s Race Track Industry
Program has sent many
grads into top-level jobs,
including trainers Bob
Baffert and Todd Pletcher.
Discovering UA / 12
Expanding
Main Gate / 32
Check out the SW
Indian Art Fair, the
Festival of Books, NCAA
basketball tourney,
classical guitar recitals
and Spring Fling.
Main Gate Square awaits
a planned 14-story project
that would feature a
multiplex movie theater and
more hotel and retail space.
Academic
Calendar
28
Basketball
Schedule
(Men's)
9
Campus Map 22
Dance
18
Film
33
Galleries
29
Getting
Around
5
Libraries
39
Museums
10
Music
19
UApresents / 14
Cosmic Origins / 40
Performances 14
Among the notable
artists coming to UA this
spring are B.B. King,
Kronos Quartet, Martha
Graham Dance Co. and
Blue Men Group.
A speakers’ series at
Centennial Hall will
explore the origin of
space and time, and
whether there’s life
beyond Earth
Steward
Observatory
39
Theater
18
Tours
4
UA Visitor Guide
The University of Arizona Visitor
Guide is published twice a year
by Arizona Student Media in the
Division of Student Affairs. Its purpose is to provide useful information about the UA for visitors to
our dynamic community.
Copies of the UA Visitor Guide are
available at many locations on and
off campus, including the UA Visitor
Center, the Information Desk in the
Student Union Memorial Center and
the UA Main Library.
The UA Visitor Center
811 N. Euclid Ave., 520-621-5130
Design & Production: Cynthia Callahan
Creative Services Manager, Arizona Student Media
[email protected], 520-621-3377
Circulation: 35,000
wc.arizona.edu/ads/visitorguide
The University of Arizona
www.arizona.edu, 520-621-2211
Director of Arizona Student Media: Mark Woodhams
[email protected], 520-621-3408
On the cover: Students from Tucson’s Dunham Elementary meet
Hector Vector, the digital projector for UA’s Flandrau planetarium
Contributing Editor: Mike Chesnick
Advertising & Distribution: Milani Hunt
Marketing Coordinator, Arizona Student Media
[email protected], 520-626-8546
and science center, which reopened after budget cuts.
Photo courtesy of University of Arizona Science: Flandrau
wc.arizona.edu/ads/visitorguide
3
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
UA Tours
Scott Kirkessner photo
Arizona Ambassador Tours are led
by UA students and offered to prospective students and their parents
by the Office of Admissions. The
tours showcase Old Main, Student
Union Memorial Center, Student
Recreation Center and Main Library. Tours are offered weekday
mornings and afternoons, and
Saturday mornings during the fall
and spring semesters. Call 621-3641
for more information. Prospective
students can register online at
admissions.arizona.edu/visit
Campus Tours During the fall and
spring semesters, the UA Visitor
Center and the Arizona Alumni Association sponsor a series of free
public walking and shuttle tours of
the UA campus. Contact the Visitor
Center for a current schedule and
to reserve your spot on a tour. The
UA Visitor Center is located at the
northwest corner of Euclid Avenue
and University Boulevard. Call
621-5130 or email: visitor@email.
arizona.edu
Campus Arboretum Tours take
visitors around the beautiful UA
campus landscape. Discover some
of the oldest, largest and most rare
tree and cactus species in the state
and explore the living heritage
of the University of Arizona. New
theme-based, self-guided walking
tours and maps featuring many of
the unique aspects of the campus
landscape and history will be available in 2011 at http://arboretum.
arizona.edu. Print the brochures
and maps online, pick them up on
campus or give the Campus Arboretum docents a chance to showcase this Tucson treasure to your
group by e-mailing infoarboretum@
ag.arizona.edu. New walking tours
will be debuted in April in celebration of Arbor Day. Reserve a group
tour for this special event today!
Arizona State Museum Group
Tours Visitors can explore the museum on their own or participate in
guided tour opportunities. Docentled tours through the “Paths of
Life” permanent exhibit highlight
the American Indian cultures of Arizona and northern Mexico (Fridays
and Saturdays at 2 p.m., free with
admission, no reservations required). Curator-guided tours give
small groups a behind-the-scenes
look into labs and collections areas
(advanced reservations required,
Monday-Friday 10 a.m.-5 p.m., $12
per person). For more information,
contact Darlene Lizarraga at dfl@
email.arizona.edu or 626-8381.
Steward Observatory Mirror
Lab Tours offer a behind-thescenes look at the cutting-edge
technology and revolutionary
processes involved in making
the next generation of premier
giant telescope mirrors – from
constructing the mold, to casting,
to polishing, to delivering the
finished product on a mountain
top, to viewing the universe. Tours
to this world-renowned facility can
be scheduled for Tuesday through
Friday with reservations required.
Participants must be 7 or older.
Admission is $15 per person, $8
for students. Call 626-8792 or visit
mirrorlab.as.arizona.edu
Situated at the Main Gate of The University of Arizona
…in a vibrant
social and cultural
neighborhood;
Main Gate Square
is just steps from
the front door
- Tucson’s newest full-service hotel
- 9 floors, 233 rooms, 17 suites
- 12 meeting rooms, 11,791 sq. ft.
total meeting space
- Fitness Center, outdoor pool,
whirlpool
- Saguaro Grill restaurant for
breakfast, lunch and dinner
- High-speed internet access in all
guestrooms
- 32 restaurants, 4 museums, and
a multitude of shopping options
all within a 2-minute walk from
the Front Drive
880 E. 2nd St. • Tucson, AZ 85719 • 520-792-4100 • Fax: 520-882-4100
4
www.arizona.edu
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Getting To and Around Campus
The Visitor
Center
Make the UA Visitor Center
your first stop when exploring
campus and learn about the
UA’s attractions, top-ranked
programs and talented community of scholars and students. The Center offers more
than 80 UA and community
publications, Internet access,
information about campus
performances, tour information, parking and more.
The UA Visitor Center is
located at the northwest
corner of Euclid Avenue and
University Boulevard. The
Center is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday and
closed weekends and UA holidays. For more information,
call 621-5130, or visit www.
arizona.edu/parents-visitors
Visitor Garage Rates
Campus parking garage
rates prior to 5 p.m. are
$1 per half hour for the
first two hours and $1
each additional hour,
with a maximum daily
rate of $8. After 5 p.m.,
the rates are $1 per
hour, with a maximum
rate of $4. Garages
are free on weekends,
pending special event
parking restrictions.
From Tucson International Airport
Exit airport northbound on Tucson
Boulevard. Turn left
at Valencia Road, the
first traffic signal. Take
Valencia one block to
the light at Campbell
Avenue. Turn right onto
Campbell, following
the street through a
midway name change
to Kino Parkway. At
Sixth Street, Kino will
become Campbell
again. You will see UA
at the northwest corner
of the intersection of
Campbell Avenue and Sixth Street.
CatTran Shuttle
A free campus shuttle.
For maps and schedules, visit parking.
arizona.edu
Old Pueblo Trolley
The trolley runs between Tucson’s
Fourth Avenue business district and
just outside the UA gates on University Boulevard. The trolley runs Fridays
6-10 p.m., Saturdays 12 p.m.-midnight
and Sundays 12-6 p.m. The fare is
$1.25 for adults and 75 cents for children 6-12 each way on Fridays and
Saturdays. On Sundays, the fare is 25
cents each way for all patrons. All-day
passes are $3.50 for adults and $2 for
children 6-12.
From Interstate 10
Visitors approaching Tucson on I-10
should exit at Speedway Boulevard
(Exit 257). Turn east onto Speedway.
The university will be on the right
after Euclid Avenue.
Parking on Campus
See the campus map (p. 22-23) for
visitor parking garages. Parking in the
Highland Avenue, Main Gate, Second
Street, Park Avenue, Sixth Street,
Cherry Avenue and Tyndall Avenue
garages is on a space-available basis,
7 a.m.-12 a.m. For more information,
visit parking.arizona.edu/visitors
• Individualized Educational
Planning
• Learning Strategies Instruction
• Tutoring
Detailed Campus Map
iiewww.ccit.arizona.edu/uamap
•
•
•
•
Writing & Math Skills Improvement
Academic & Social Programs
Assistive Technology
Leadership Opportunities
P.O. Box 210136 • Tucson, Arizona 85721-0136 • 520-621-1242 • www.salt.arizona.edu
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5
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
By Mike Chesnick
I
Stars
realign
for
Flandrau
Closed nine months because of budget cuts, the
planetarium and science center stages a successful
return by acting as a portal for the UA College of
Science and offering music laser shows again
n years past, staff at UA’s Flandrau science center fielded more
questions about reviving their Pink
Floyd and Led Zeppelin music laser shows than about the origin of
stars.
“You’d be amazed,” said
Shipherd Reed, digital media producer for University of Arizona
Science: Flandrau. “Anytime people
found out you worked here, they
would say, ‘I remember those laser
shows. What happened to them?’”
Well, Flandrau brought back the
laser shows last year, and they’ve
been part of the 35-year-old science
center’s resurgence after a cut in
state funding closed
the planetarium and
some exhibits for
nine months.
“During the time
we were closed, we
were getting phone
calls and e-mails every day and people
very upset that this
great community
resource wasn’t available anymore,” said
Sean Fitzpatrick, digital media and marketing director. “There’s
been a really positive
response from the
community for both
the new mission for
Flandrau and for
bringing back the laser shows.”
In June 2009, UA saved an estimated $200,000 by closing the center’s main attraction – the Hector
Vector star projector – and science
exhibits, which caused nine layoffs.
Flandrau reopened in April
2010 under the umbrella of the UA
College of Science, which relies
on Flandrau to help oversee and
produce exhibits for outreach programs such as the Mount Lemmon
SkyCenter, Biosphere 2, Steward
Observatory Mirror Lab, Tree
Ring Lab and Tumamoc Hill. Grant
money from Biosphere 2 helped
Flandrau to reopen, and the facility
relies in part on money generated
from the laser shows.
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Laser shows were popular at
Flandrau until the late 1990s before being canceled in 2000. Besides the classic Pink Floyd “Dark
Side of the Moon” show, the center
hosted a Halloween show set to
Metallica music and it plans to introduce a U2 show this spring.
On top of that, there’s a big
push to have a full-dome digital
star projector. The old one, Hector Vector, “still stands the test of
time,” Fitzgerald says, but “if you
want any programming, you need
the digital projector.”
School field trips continue to be
a big draw for Flandrau. They give
Southern Arizona students a star
presentation in the planetarium
from Hector Vector and a tour of
the center’s exhibits.
“Cool,” shouted students from
Sierra Vista’s Joyce Clark Middle
School as they played with a laser
exhibit on a recent visit to Flandrau.
In the 1970s, Fitzgerald may
have used a different phrase – “Far
Out” – when he was a Sierra Vista
second-grader touring Flandrau.
“It was my first field trip,”
Fitzgerald, 43, recalls. “When Hector Vector came up out of his well,
he was huge and fearsome.”
During field trips, students also
visit the UA Mineral Museum, on
the science center’s lower floor.
Last year’s exhibit was “Treasures
of the Queen: The Amazing Minerals and Mystery of Bisbee.”
This year's exhibit, "Dangerous
Beauty," features gems and minerals from Afghanistan and Pakistan,
with stories that “talk about how
those minerals are collected and
experiences the mineral collectors and dealers have had” in war
zones, Reed said.
Flandrau had a traveling exhibit,
"History of the Laser," last year.
The hands-on part of the exhibit
will stay, and this spring's traveling
show is "Brain Teasers 2."
In addition, Flandrau sets up
exhibits for the “Marine Discovery” program for kids K-8, which is
taught by UA students and includes
activities such as shark and squid
dissections, a plankton race and a
living tidepool. Reed and Fitzgerald
recently helped deliver a “gigantic”
fish tank to the program.
“(Science) Dean Joaquin Ruiz
has embraced the opportunity for
Flandrau to be a portal to all of the
college of science research, not
just astronomy," Fitzgerald said.
Flandrau also continues to hold
a Science Café downtown at Cushing Street Bar & Restaurant, 198 W.
Cushing Street, with guest speakers
such as Geoffery Notkin, co-host
of the Science Channel’s Meteroite
Men.” Flandrau also has done an
outreach talk in Saddlebrooke, a
retirement community northwest
of Tucson.
“In a broad view, we’re trying
to engage the community to the
fact there’s a lot of exciting re-
If you go
■ Where: Northeast corner of Cherry Avenue and
University Boulevard
■ When: 7 days week (hours vary); observatory,
7-10 p.m.
■ Laser shows: Friday and Saturday nights
■ Hours: Visit Flandrau.org or call 621-7827
■ Exhibits: Science Center–Brain Teasers 2,
Jan. 29-May 8; Mineral Museum–“Dangerous Beauty:
Minerals of the Hindu Kush (Gems and Minerals of
Afghanistan and Pakistan).” Feb. 5-end of July 2011
■ Admission: Science Center and Mineral Museum
$7.50 adults, $5 children four-15; Laser light shows
$10 adult, $7.50 children; Observatory free
www.flandrau.org
search … in terms of knowledge
and economic value,” Reed said.
“(UA) is a world leader in sciences.
People in this community might be
excited about the Wildcats' (athletic teams), but they don’t have a
sense of our global science status.
“We’re trying to make them
feel that we (Flandrau and the
College of Science) are part
of who the UA is as well.”
Left: A Flandrau crowd enjoys a laser show
at the planetarium.
Inset: Students from Liberty Elementary, a
Sunnyside District school, experiment with
battery-operated vehicles during a field
trip.
Above: Brain Teasers 2, a traveling
interactive exhibit, is scheduled to run
through May 8 at Flandrau.
Right: Students from Dunham Elementary, a
TUSD school on East 29th Street near South
Houghton Road, show their spirit in front of
Flandrau.
Photos courtesy University of Arizona Science: Flandrau
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UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
The Jim Click Hall of Champions
A MUSEUM FOCUSING ON EDUCATION, HISTORY & ATHLETICS
Learn About Your Favorite Wildcats t See the Men’s Basketball NCAA Championship Trophy
tLearn About Title IX t History of Men’s and Women’s Athletics at Arizona t Visit Displays
Showcasing UA Olympians and Pro Players t Exciting Rotating Exhibits
Join for Free!
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Hours of Operation: Monday - Friday 9:00 am - 5:00 pm/ Saturday: 12:00pm - 5:00pm/
Sundays & Holidays: Closed tAdmission is FREE!
For more information, please call 520-621-2331 or visit www.arizonawildcats.com
Entrances: Enter the Hall of Champions from either University Boulevard or from inside of
McKale Memorial Center on the third level between the Steve Kerr and Sean Elliott jerseys.
Arizona Student-Athletes
Make a Dif fer ence
Stay current on UA events and
receive exclusive access to
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Please visit www.clubarizona.org
for more information
CONGRATULATIONS TO JUSTINE SCHLUNTZ
2010 NCAA Woman of the Year
Jordan Mara
Track and Field/ Cross Country
Justine Schluntz
Rhodes Scholar
In the past year, UA
student-athletes have
participated in 1,799 hours
of community service.
8
www.arizona.edu
The University of Arizona is the only school in the Pac-10
Conference to have a NCAA Woman of the Year and leads
the nation with a total of four NCAA Women of the Year.
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Arizona Men’s
Basketball
Experience the Doubletree with the
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Jan. 20
Washington (8:30 p.m., Seattle)
Ask for the University of Arizona rate.
Jan. 22
Washington State (6 p.m.,
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Jan. 27
UCLA (7 p.m., Tucson)
Jan. 29
USC (5:30 p.m., Tucson)
Feb. 3
Stanford (7 p.m., Palo Alto,
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Feb. 5
California (6 p.m., Berkeley,
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Feb. 13
Arizona State (7 p.m., Tempe)
Feb. 17
Washington State (6:30 p.m.
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Feb. 19
Washington (4 p.m., Tucson)
Feb. 24
USC (8:30 p.m., Los Angeles)
Feb. 26
UCLA (2 p.m., Los Angeles)
March 3
Oregon State (TBA, Tucson)
March 5
Oregon (TBA, Tucson)
March 9-12
Pacific Life Pac-10 Tournament
(Los Angeles, Calif.)
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April 2 & 4
NCAA Final Four
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9
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Museums
Arizona State Museum
Experience the enduring cultures of
Arizona, the AmeriARIZONA
can Southwest, and
STATE
MUSEUM
northern Mexico at
Arizona State Museum through dyARIZONA
namic exhibitions,
STATE
MUSEUM CENTENNIAL
engaging programs,
HALL
SOUTH
and an educational
museum store. ASM is the region’s oldest and largest anthropology museum
(established in 1893), home of the
world’s largest collection of Southwest
Indian pottery, and an affiliate of the
Smithsonian Institution.
Current Exhibition: “Many Mexicos:
Vistas de la Frontera.” This exhibition
interprets the broad sweep of Mexican
history from the perspective of Arizona
and the borderlands. Three hundred
objects illustrate 3,000 years of varied
Mexican histories and include a Maya
ritual corn vessel, Spanish colonial
retablos, Santa Anna's sword, Maximilian's ring, and a sombrero that may
have belonged to Pancho Villa.
Hours Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Closed Sundays and federal and
state holidays.
Admission $5; free for members,
CatCard holders, students and youth
under 18.
Location 1013 E. University Blvd., east
of Park Avenue and northeast of UA’s
main gate.
Parking Covered parking for a small
fee at the Main Gate and Tyndall Avenue garages; free parking on Saturdays.
Contact 621-6302, www.statemuseum.
arizona.edu
Flandrau Science Center and
UA Mineral Museum
Flandrau, which reopened last year,
provides family activities and access
to groundbreaking science going on at
the University of Arizona. Highlights
include planetarium shows, laser light
shows featuring Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side
of the Moon,” interactive UA Science
exhibits and demonstrations, the Mars
Wall, and a free 16-inch telescope observatory. The UA Mineral Museum is
the longest continually curated mineral
museum west of
the Mississippi
STEWARD
OBSERVATORY
River. It contains
one of the top five
collections in the
FLANDRAU
United States, with
more than 27,000
UA MALL
UA MALL
mineral specimens,
including rare meteorites.
Hours Seven days a week; hours vary
seasonally.
Observatory, Wednesday-Saturday 7-10
p.m. (weather permitting). Laser light
shows Friday and Saturday nights.
Admission Science Center and Mineral
Museum, $7.50 adults; $5 children four15; CatCard holders receive $2 discount; Arizona college students $2 with
ID. Laser light shows $10 adult; $7.50
children; $2 CatCard discount.
Observatory, free and open to the public (donations encouraged).
Location Corner of Cherry Avenue and
University Boulevard
Parking Cherry Avenue Parking
Garage; free parking on weekends and
after 5 p.m. Friday in metered spaces
and many parking lots.
Contact 621-4516, www.flandrau.org
Facebook: www.facebook.com/
uasciencecenter
Twitter: @FlandrauAZ
Center for Creative
Photography
The Center for Creative Photography
collects, researches, preserves, interprets and makes available materials
essential to understanding photography and its history. The center holds
more archives and individual works by
20th century North American photographers than any
other museum in
the world. The archives of more than
60 major American
photographers —
including Ansel
Adams, Harry Callahan, W. Eugene Smith, Edward Weston
and Garry Winogrand — form the core
of a collection comprising about 90,000
works.
Hours Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
weekends 1-4 p.m.
Apply for a U.S. Passport at The University of Arizona Passport Application Acceptance Facility!
The International Affairs Passport Application
Acceptance Facility provides a vital public service,
promotes public relations and is authorized to accept
and execute passport applications for United States
citizens. The facility makes it easy and convenient to
obtain and submit passport applications. This service is
provided to the University campus community as well as
the community-at-large.
On June 1, 2009, the U.S. government implemented
10
www.arizona.edu
the full requirements of the land and sea phase of the
Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative. The new rule
requires U.S. citizens entering the United States at sea
or land ports of entry to have a U.S. passport. Currently,
U.S. passport applicants can obtain their U.S. passport
approximately six weeks after applying. Take advantage
of U.S. Department of State’s fast processing times now
and submit your passport application at the International
Affairs Passport Application Acceptance Facility!
The International Affairs Passport Application
Acceptance Facility is open on a walk in basis. We are
located at 935 N. Tyndall Ave. We offer a passport
photo service on site as well as the International Student
Identity Card for students traveling abroad. We are now
open on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 9:00
to 5:00. For documentation requirements and passport
related fees please visit our website at www.passport.
arizona.edu or call (520) 626-7161.
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Admission Requested donation
Location UA Fine Arts Complex, 1030
N. Olive Road
Parking Park Avenue Garage, pedestrian underpass gives direct access.
Parking directly behind center (off
Second Street) is free on weekends,
and weekdays after 5 p.m.
Contact 621-7968,
www.creativephotography.org
Audrey Flack. Marilyn, 1977. Oil over acrylic
on canvas.
UA Museum of Art
Featuring Tucson’s
premier art collection, the University
MUSEUM ART
OF ART
of Arizona Museum
DRAMA
of Art (UAMA) exhibits art from the 15th
to the 21st centuMUSIC
ries. Always on
display are the Old
Masters from the Kress Collection and
26 panels of the magnificent medieval
Altarpiece of Ciudad Rodrigo, thought
to be the finest 15th century Castilian altarpiece outside of Spain.
Featured this spring:
“The Aesthetic Code: Unraveling
the Secrets of Great Art.” Explore
the basic design principles that
artists have used for centuries.
Through April 10, UAMA Main Gallery.
“Ana Thiel: Layers of Being – A 30
Year Retrospective.” One-person
show by Ana Thiel, one of the preeminent Mexican artists working in
glass. Feb. 12 through May 29, UAMA
Mezzanine, McCall and Gallagher
Galleries
“2011 UA School of Art MFA Thesis
Exhibition.” April 15-May 15, UAMA
Main and South Galleries.
Hours Tuesday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
weekends noon-4 p.m.
Admission $5; free for UAMA members, students, UA employees and
children under 18.
Location Near Park Avenue and
Speedway Boulevard
Parking Park Avenue Garage; free
parking on weekends
Contact 621-7567, www.artmuseum.
arizona.edu
Jim Click Hall of Champions
Discover the heritage and traditions
of Arizona Athletics. Visitors can
learn about their favorite Wildcats, view
the men’s
basketball
national
championMcKALE
ship trophy,
MEMORIAL
CENTER
see which
Wildcats were Olympians and more.
Hours Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.,
Saturday noon-5 p.m. Pac-10 basketball
game days: Hall closes two hours before
game, reopens 15 minutes into start of
first half and closes at start of second
half.
Admission Free
Location North side of McKale Memorial
Center, 1721 E. Enke Drive
Parking Cherry Avenue Garage is free on
weekends, except during special events.
Contact 621-2331,
www.arizonawildcats.com
The Arizona History Museum
Explore southern Arizona history, from
Spanish colonial times through territorial days, at the museum located at
the Arizona Historical Society. See an
original stagecoach, Geronimo’s rifle, an
underground copper mine and a 1923
Studebaker. Museum store has Navajo
and Zuni jewelry, and reproductions of
historic photographs and maps.
Hours Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Closed major holidays.
Admission $5 adults; $4 seniors 60+ and
students 12-18; free for members and
children 11 and younger. Free for all the
first Saturday of the month.
Location 949 E. Second St., between Park
and Tyndall avenues
ARIZONA
Parking Main Gate
HISTORICAL
Parking Garage. Free
SOCIETY
with museum validation in the Arizona
Historical Society
section.
Contact 628-5774,
www.arizonahistoricalsociety.org
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11
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
By Mike Chesnick
1
Southwestern
Indian Art Fair
Budget cuts and staff layoffs
forced Arizona State Museum to
move its signature event to Desert
Diamond Casino last year, but the
18th annual Southwest Indian Art
Fair is back on the UA campus
this year.
The Feb. 19-20
event brings together 200 Native
American artists
from the Southwest, featuring
art demonstrations, food, and
music and dance
performances on
the museum’s
front lawn. You
also can chat with
Da
na
izo
Ar
From
art and book
fairs to basketball,
classical guitar and
carnival action, here are
five can’t-miss events
ily
St
ar
ph
ot
o
Take 5: Discovering UA
the artists
about their handmade works, which
include pottery, Hopi katsina dolls, paintings, jewelry,
baskets, rugs and blankets.
Laura Fragua Cota, a stone
sculptor from New Mexico, is one
of the featured artists.
Proceeds from last year’s event
at Desert Diamond helped bring
it back to UA. The museum also
worked to secure corporate sponsorships and more community
involvement.
When Saturday, Feb. 19, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.;
Sunday, Feb. 20, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Where Front lawn of
Arizona State Museum,
1013 E. University
Boulevard, just inside
UA’s main gate at
North Park Avenue
and University.
Admission $8 adults,
$3 youths 12-16 (11-under free), $12 two-day
passes, UA and Pima
College students free
with school ID.
Contact www.state
museum.arizona.edu/
events/swiaf/
Arizona State Museum photo
2
Tucson
Festival
of Books
Now in its third year,
the Tucson Festival of
Books has quickly become
one of the city’s most-attended
events, drawing more than 50,000
and 450 authors and presenters.
The Arizona Daily Star and the
University of Arizona are the main
sponsors of the March 12-13 festival, which will be held on the UA
Mall and at various buildings on
campus.
Some authors and journalists
scheduled to attend this year include Elmore Leonard, Michael
Blake, Philip Caputo, Frank Deford,
Jonathan Eig, Alice Hoffman, Luis
Alberto Urrea, Jennifer Lee Carrell,
J.A. Jance, Scott Simon and writing
guru Roy Peter Clark.
Music, entertainment, food and
children’s events add to the twoday extravaganza. A children’s storybook character costume parade,
led by a mariachi youth group, usually opens the festival on Saturday
morning.
UA BookStores, which helps put
on the event, received $50,000 from
the 2010 festival to provide au-
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
named after J.F. “Pop” McKale, a
coach and athletic administrator
at UA from 1914-1957. From 19871992, Arizona won 71 consecutive
games at McKale, the 10th-best
home court winning streak in
NCAA history.
When Saturday-Sunday, March 12-13
Where UA Mall, various buildings/classrooms around campus
Admission Free
New performers Author/storyteller
Sam Quinones, Mariachi Nueva Melodia (a middle school mariachi group),
Rogue Theater, Catalina Foothills High
steel drum band, Canyon del Oro High
Canyon Singers, Del Pueblo Brass Quintet, Safar Belly Dancing
Returning performers The El Camino
Royales, TO Boys (Native American
Waila), local teen rock bands Wedgie
and Deceptively Innocent, Determined
Luddites (acoustic, folk music), Winston
Jazz, Flowing Wells High strings and
drama club, Catalina High flute group,
Ocotillo Poetry Slam
Contact tucsonfestivalofbooks.org/
When Thursday, March 17 and Saturday, March 19
Where McKale Center
Tickets www.ncaa.com/sports/
Contact 621-2287
Photo courtesy UA School of Music
3
Where UA Museum of Art, 1031 N. Olive
Road
Admission Free with admission to museum ($5 public, free for UA employees,
students and children). Free concert
tickets for those who don’t want to visit
the museum available by contacting
Tom Patterson at [email protected]
or 621-1157
Contact artmuseum.arizona.edu/
4
NCAA
Regionals
Luke Adams photo
For the 12th time, McKale Center will host NCAA men’s basketball tournament action. You won’t
be able to see Arizona at McKale
if the Wildcats make the 68-team
field, but the second- and thirdround games on Thursday, March
17, and Saturday, March 19, should
feature some of the nation’s topnotch college teams.
McKale last hosted early-round
games in 2005, when Bobby
Knight’s Texas Tech beat UCLA
and Utah downed Oklahoma to
advance to the Sweet 16. In addition, McKale hosted the 1974 and
1980 West Regional, and first- and
second-round action in 1977, 1979,
1987, 1991, 1993, 1997 and 2000.
Opened in February 1973, McKale has a capacity of 14,545 and is
5
For 25 years, students could
walk to Spring Fling, the nation’s
largest student-run carnival, to get
their fill of midway rides, music
and all types of food. It covered
the east and north lawns outside
McKale Center through 1999, when
construction projects pushed the
April event to Rillito Downs.
It’s still not that far to get to
Spring Fling — Rillito is about 4.5
miles north of the UA campus —
and the school says more than
30,000 people still attend the fourday event each year.
The carnival, put on by more
than 3,000 students, helps raise
money for 120 campus clubs and
organizations. The combined gross
profit from the groups averages
$80,000 a year, the school says.
Guitar at UA
Museum of Art
Music professor Tom Patterson
started a weekly guitar concert at
the UA Museum of Art to help his
students overcome performance
jitters, but the shows also are a
chance for visitors to hear some
excellent classical music in a beautiful setting
On most Fridays, from 11 a.m.
to noon, guitar students play for
the public and UA employees on
the museum’s second-floor exhibit
room. Amid 15th-century Spanish
paintings, they perform music from
the Renaissance to modern composers, including Bach, Rodrigo,
Dowland and Assad.
“The students enjoy the opportunity to perform in such a beautiful setting,” Patterson said. “And
the museum’s response has been
very positive.”
The group’s 20 members include
undergraduate, master’s and doctoral students from New Zealand,
Brazil, Mexico, Peru, Norway and
the United States.
Spring
Fling
When Thursday, April 7-Sunday, April
10; Thursday and Friday, 4 p.m.-midnight; Saturday, noon-midnight; Sunday,
noon-8 p.m.
Where Rillito Downs, southeast corner
of North First Avenue and East River
Road
Shuttles Every 30 minutes from Old
Main to Rillito
Contact springfling.arizona.edu
UA Spring Fling photo
thors, lectures, seminars and educational opportunities for students,
faculty, staff and the community.
When Every Friday from 11 a.m.-noon
during the spring semester, except Feb.
25, March 18 and if the museum has
major event.
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UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
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Whitaker
[email protected]
[email protected]
(520) 621-9715
Performances
UApresents
Box Office Hours
Monday-Friday
10 a.m.-6 p.m., Saturday noon-5 p.m.,
Sunday noon4 p.m. and two
CENTENNIAL
hours before every
HALL
performance.
Admission Prices vary
Location Centennial Hall
Parking Tyndall Avenue Garage
Contact 621-3341, www.uapresents.org
Jan. 5-23
Wicked Multiple performances
Co-presented by UApresents and Broadway in Tucson.
Long before that girl from Kansas arrives in Munchkinland, two girls meet
in the land of Oz. One — born with
emerald green skin — is smart, fiery and
misunderstood. The other is beautiful,
ambitious and popular. How these two
grow to become the Wicked Witch of
the West and Glinda the Good makes for
“the most complete — and completely
satisfying — new musical in a long
time,” USA Today says. On Broadway
and around the world, WICKED has won
35 major awards, including a Grammy
and three Tony Awards.
Jan. 28
Soledad Barrio and
Noche Flamenca
8 p.m.
Recognized as the
world’s most authentic flamenco touring
company, Martin
Santangelo, his BESSIE award-winning
wife, Soledad Barrio,
and their company
manifest the essence,
purity and integrity
of one of the world’s
most complex and
mysterious art
forms.
Feb. 12
Joshua Bell, Violin 8 p.m.
Brahms Sonata No. 2 for Violin and
Piano in A Major, Op. 100 Schubert Fantasy in C Major, Op. 159, D. 934 Grieg
Sonata No. 2 for Violin and Piano in G
Major, Op. 13
His playing “does nothing less than tell
human beings why they bother to be
alive,” declares Interview Magazine. For
more than two decades, Bell has en-
14
www.arizona.edu
chanted audiences worldwide with his
breathtaking virtuosity and tone of rare
beauty. He came to national attention
at the age of 14 in a highly acclaimed
orchestral debut and today is equally
at home as a soloist, chamber musician
and orchestra leader. Bell will be accompanied by Sam Haywood on piano.
Feb. 13
KODO 6 p.m.
Using exhilarating rhythms and explosive, thunderous power, Kodo explores
the limitless possibilities of Taiko drumming. Inspired by the traditional culture
of their Sado Island home in Japan, their
passion is exploring the rich possibilities of peaceful coexistence between
humanity and nature. Each drummer
masters traditional Japanese dance
steps, singing and multiple musical
instruments.
Feb. 14
B.B. King 8 p.m.
Throughout the 1990s as well as the
1980s, 1970s and 1960s, there has been
only one King of the Blues — Riley B.
King, affectionately known as B.B. King.
Since B.B. started recording in the late
1940s, he has released more than 50
albums. At 85 years old, B.B. King is a
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award
winner and has been inducted into the
Blues Foundation Hall of Fame and the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Feb. 18
Jazz at Lincoln Center with Wynton
Marsalis 8 p.m.
The Orchestra, 15 of today’s finest jazz
soloists and ensemble players, has
been the Jazz at Lincoln Center resident
orchestra since 1992. Marsalis, the
man Rolling Stone calls “potentially the
greatest trumpeter of all time,” is also
hailed as a creative genius, compassionate humanitarian, legendary trumpeter,
masterful composer, arts advocate and
tireless educator and cultural leader. As
Artistic Director of Jazz at Lincoln Center, he is an evangelist for this uniquely
American-born music — he intends for
it to be not only accessible, but enjoyable.
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Feb. 19
Paula Poundstone 8 p.m.
This self-deprecating comedian with
lightning-fast timing engages members
of the audience in dialog so hilarious
it’s hard to believe it wasn’t rehearsed.
Topical and up-to-the-minute, she treats
even the news from Washington so artfully it draws laughter from both sides
of the aisle. Author of There’s Nothing
In This Book That I Meant To Say, she is
a regular guest on NPR’s “Wait Wait ...
Don’t Tell Me.”
Feb. 20
Academy of St. Martin in the Fields
Chamber Ensemble 7 p.m.
UA Crowder Hall
Brahms String Sextet in B-flat Major,
Op. 18 Shostakovich Prelude and
Scherzo, Op. 11 Mendelssohn Octet for
Strings in E-flat Major, Op. 20
Selected from the foremost-recorded
chamber orchestra in the world, this
ensemble plays with strong cohesion
and discipline. First violinist and guest
leader Andrew Watkinson has served
15 years as director with the City of
London Sinfonia.
March 5
Brian Stokes Mitchell 8 p.m.
Dubbed “The Last Leading Man” by The
New York Times, Mitchell is the quintessential musical theatre performer. At
home on the Broadway stage, the Tony
Award-winning actor has held leads in
Kiss Me, Kate, Man of La Mancha and
Ragtime. The New York Times says,
“It is no exaggeration to say that Brian
Stokes Mitchell is right now in a class by
himself as a Broadway leading man.”
March 6
T.S. Monk: “Monk on Monk” 7 p.m.
T. S. Monk’s 80th birthday tribute to
his father, Thelonius Sphere Monk,
was named
Album of the
Year by both
Downbeat
and the New
York Jazz
Awards.
Monk on
Monk reintroduced
audiences
The Big Blue
House Inn
to the breadth of his father’s genius in
the compositions, arrangements and orchestration that earned him the name,
“The Father of Modern Jazz.” Awardwinning drummer T. S. brings to Tucson
the same 10-piece jazz configuration
his father famously pioneered. “This is
guttural, visceral, tap-your-feet music,”
Monk promises, “and we’re going to
swing you to death.”
March 12
Merce Cunningham Dance Company:
“Legacy Tour” 8 p.m.
This will be among the final performances of this iconoclastic company, one of
the most influential dance companies
of its era. On New Year’s Eve 2011, the
company will close, according to Cunningham’s plan to guide his company
and ensure the preservation of his
artistic legacy. Reviving key works from
Cunningham’s repertory, the program
will feature the last dancers he personally trained. Cunningham, who died in
July 2009, was a leader of the American
avant-garde throughout his 70-year career and is considered one of the most
important choreographers of our time.
March 26
Trey McIntyre
Project 8 p.m.
Bursting with creativity and physicality, McIntyre is
“one of America’s
most surprising
talents,” the New
York Times says.
Since his work
debuted with the
Houston Ballet in
1990, when he was
just 20, McIntyre
has created more than 75 contemporary
ballets for American Ballet Theatre,
New York City Ballet, Hubbard Street
Dance Chicago, Stuttgart Ballet and
other illustrious companies. Using classical ballet as the point of departure,
McIntyre creates emotionally charged
dances that defy categorization, set to
musical scores ranging from Beethoven
and Henry Cowell to Beck, the Beatles
and Ralph Stanley.
Continued on page 17
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UA VISITOR GUIDE FALL/WINTER 2010 15
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Performances
UApresents
Continued from page 15
March 30
Septeto Nacional de Cuba 7:30 p.m.
Founded in 1927 by bassist and songwriter Ignacio Piñeiro, the group performed at the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair.
Now composed of a fourth generation
of musicians, the group’s exceptional
musicianship and artistry is firmly
rooted in the musical explosion of Cuban son in the 1920s and ‘30s, evoking
the nostalgic elegance of the ballrooms
and dance clubs of the era. Piñeiro may
have named salsa music with his song
“Échale Salsita, (throw a little sauce on
it).”
April 3
Kronos Quartet 7:00 p.m.
Moving gracefully among the classical,
jazz and rock repertoires, the Kronos
Quartet's work is “thought-provoking,
ear-opening and just plain beautiful,"
according to the Seattle Times. Violinist
and founder Dave Harrington says, “I’ve
always wanted the string quartet to be
vital, and energetic, and alive, and cool,
and to be absolutely beautiful and ugly
if it has to be. But it has to be expressive of life. To tell the story with grace
and humor and depth.”
April 9
American Legacies: The Del McCoury
Band and Preservation Hall Jazz Band
8 p.m.
Boasting a direct lineage from the earliest incarnations of New Orleans jazz,
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band carries
on the traditions passed forward from
the most prolific jazz heritage. The Del
McCoury Band, the most honored group
in bluegrass history, performs original
and traditional compositions with eloquent harmonies. Together in concert,
these groups create a blend of soul-lifting harmonies as the high and lonesome
sound of the Appalachians meets the
hot and lively jazz of New Orleans.
April 16
Martha Graham Dance Company
8 p.m.
An American genius and treasure,
Graham created an art form that would
become the foundation for modern
dance. Her repertoire of 181 works puts
her on par with Picasso, Stravinsky and
Frank Lloyd Wright as one of the 20th
century’s seminal artistic forces. The
company is now led by Artistic Director
Janet Eilber, who worked closely with
Graham for more than a decade. The
program features mixed repertory followed by the full production of Appalachian Spring.
April 29 - May 1
Blue Man Group 5 Performances
Escape the ordinary and be surrounded
in an explosion of comedy, music
and technology. The New York Times
heralds the show as “one of the most
delightful performance pieces ever
staged.” Although the group is impossible to describe, it is an exciting and
outrageous show that can leave the
entire audience in a blissful, euphoric
state. With no spoken language, Blue
Man Group is perfect for people of all
ages, languages and cultures.
we love having you here.®
Just moments from the UA
Your oasis in Arizona’s
Sonoran desert
Cloud Nine:
The Hampton Bed Experience
May 6
The Johnny Clegg Band 8 p.m.
Musician, dancer, anthropologist, singer,
song writer, academic, activist and
French knight — all describe Clegg, but
none captures the energy and passion
of the man who has become one of
South Africa’s greatest musical exports.
He campaigned against the injustice of
apartheid and was instrumental in putting the new South Africa on the map.
Clegg found teachers and advocates
among Zulu musicians and performed
and recorded with them before such
collaborations were legal. Known for
his energetic stage performances, he
entertains and enlightens with amusing
anecdotes, historical bits and pieces
and anthropological facts.
wc.arizona.edu/ads/visitorguide
17
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UA VISITOR GUIDE FALL/WINTER 2010 17
Tucson, AZ 85710
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
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Feb. 6-27
The Shape of Things by Neil LaBute
Directed by Cathy Hartenstein
Marroney Theatre
Adam is an awkward, overweight
English student and part-time art museum guard. Evelyn is an experienced,
beautiful graduate student in art. After
a chance meeting, Evelyn and Adam
embark on an intense relationship that
causes Adam to go to extraordinary
lengths to improve his appearance and
character. The Shape of Things is a
startling dissection of cruelty and artistic creation that challenges society’s
most deeply entrenched ideas about art,
manipulation and love.
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Feb. 27- March 27
As You Like It by William Shakespeare
Directed by Brent Gibbs
Tornabene Theatre
This pastoral comedy features one of
Shakespeare’s most inspiring characters, the heroine Rosalind. Disguised
as a boy, Rosalind flees her repressive
uncle’s court for the forest of Arden,
where she discovers her true love,
Orlando. As Orlando pines for his lost
love Rosalind, she befriends him in her
guise as a boy and promises to cure
his heartache. One of Shakespeare’s
best-known comedies, As You Like It
examines the cruelties and corruption
of court life and gleefully pokes holes in
one of humankind’s greatest artifices:
the conventions of romantic love.
April 10 - May 1
Into the Woods Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by James Lapine
Marroney Theatre
Literature’s favorite fairy tales are wo-
18
www.arizona.edu
School of Dance
Box Office
ELLER
GITTINGS DANCE
Hours MonTHEATRE
day-Friday 11
a.m.-4 p.m.
UA Mall
and one hour
prior to performance
Admission $10-$25
Location Stevie Eller Dance Theatre,
1737 E. University Blvd.
Parking Cherry Avenue Garage
Contact 621-1162 (box office), 626-4106
www.arizona.tix.com
Campbell Avenue
(/KI@GJ
Box Office Hours
ART
Monday-Friday
11 a.m.-4 p.m. and
DRAMA MARRONEY
Tornabene
THEATRE
one hour before
Theatre
showtime, Marroney
MUSIC
Theatre, 1025 N.
Olive Road
Admission Varies
Location Tornabene Theatre, Marroney
Theatre, southeast corner of Park and
Speedway
Parking Park Avenue Garage, on the
northeast corner of Park Avenue and
Speedway Boulevard
Contact 621-1162, www.tftv.arizona.edu
ven into a Tony Award-winning musical
about parents and children, responsibility, morality and the consequences
of getting what you wish for. Little Red
Riding Hood, Cinderella, the Baker and
his Wife and others head into the woods
to find love, family and destiny. On a
journey of self-discovery, they learn that
their lives are inescapably connected
and that all is not necessarily well after
“happily ever after.” These beloved
characters must unite to fight a common
enemy and each must find a new path to
happiness after the fairy tale ends.
The Legacy Series II brings you four
delightfully different concerts featuring
the master works, faculty choreography
in action-packed performances by UA
Dance Ensemble.
Feb. 10-13
Carmina Burana & Oh!
Carmina Burana is a two-act ballet in
which pastoral scenes alternate with
bacchanalian revels and young lovers
are encouraged to dare. Susan Quinn’s
Oh! is an all-female cast dancing a fusion
of ballet, modern and jazz to a composition of original music. $15, $25, $28
Ed Flores photo
Performances
Arizona Repertory
Theatre
Candice Bergeron
Feb. 24-27
Premium Blend Douglas Nielsen
represents Façade for its 25th anniversary. Sam Watson’s Sculpture Garden
is a recreation inspired by sculptures
at the Hirshorn Sculpture Gardens. Epi-
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
sode No.1 (Recuerdo) shares the legacy
of the late, distinguished choreographer, Bella Lewitzky. Michael William’s
SCAT explores the improvised melodies
and rhythms of Ella Fitzgerald and Mel
Tormé. $15, $25, $28
April 21- May 1
Spring Collection will mix faculty and
student choreography with guest works.
Faculty member Elizabeth George will
create a new work to compliment the
works of guest artist Bonnie Mathis and
a classic modern work created by Martha Graham, Panorama. $12, $24, $26
April 20-30
Fast Forward: Student Spotlight We
“fast forward” to the next generation of
dance artists. The work of UA’s young
choreographers and dancers has been
seen nationally and internationally, and
is sure to leave a mark on you now and
in the future. $12, $23, $25
School of Music
Box Office
ART
Hours MondayFriday 11 a.m.-4
DRAMA
MARRONEY
p.m. and one
THEATRE
hour prior to
performance
MUSIC
Admission Most
concerts are free.
Others are priced from $5 to $30, with
discounts for students, seniors 55 and
over and UA employees
Location Fine Arts Complex, southeast of Speedway Boulevard and Park
Avenue, unless otherwise noted
Parking Park Avenue Garage
Contact 621-2998, 621-1162 (box office),
www.music.arizona.edu
Jan. 20-22
Third International Symposium on
Latin American Music “Post-Centennial
Reflections: Musical Responses to Independence, Revolution and Migration”
Symposium and Concerts. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Call 621-1255, or email sturman@email.
arizona.edu
Jan. 20, 7:30 p.m. Guest artist Julieta
Cedillo, flute (Principal Flutist, Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de México)
with faculty artists John Milbauer, piano,
William Dietz, bassoon. Co-sponsored
by the Mexican Consulate in Tucson.
Crowder Hall, $9, $7, $5
Jan. 23
Amelia Rieman Opera Competition
Student Competition 2 p.m. Crowder
Hall, Free
Jan. 24
Guest and Faculty Artists James Buswell, violin, Carol Ou, cello, Paula Fan,
piano 7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $11, 9, 5
START WITH
A
SOLID
FOUNDATION
Jan. 26
“An Evening of Vocal
Chamber Music”
Faculty and guest
artists Kristin Dauphinais, mezzo-soprano
Michael Dauphinais,
piano, and Friends 7:30
p.m., Crowder Hall, $5
Jan. 30
Roy A. Johnson Memorial Organ Series
Guest artist Brent Hylton, organ. Works
of Couperin, J.S. Bach, Saint-Saëns, Reger
and Near 7 p.m., Holsclaw Hall, $9, $7, $5
Feb. 1
Faculty artist John Milbauer, piano
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5 Masterpieces
from the 20th century, including Stravinsky’s Three Pieces from Petrouchka and
André Boucourechliev’s seldom-played
Archipelago 4. Also featured will be a selection of the elegant works of Mexican
composer, Manuel M. Ponce.
Feb. 2
“Fusion!” Arizona Wind Quintet and
Arizona Graduate Winds Faculty and
Student Artists, John Milbauer, piano
featuring Bohuslav Martinů’s Sextet
7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, $5
Feb. 5-6
President’s Concert Arizona Symphony
Orchestra with Concerto Competition
winners Feb. 5, 7:30 p.m.; Feb. 6, 3 p.m.
Sunday’s post-concert reception hosted
by Friends of the School of Music.
Crowder Hall, $11, 9, 5
Feb. 7
“Let There Be Peace” UA Symphonic
Choir and Korean Students’ Glee Club
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, Free
Living on campus will
provide you with the
academic environment
you need and the social
environment you want.
Our caring, supportive
staff is here for you 24/7
to help make your college
experience a great one.
Campus
Housing
APPLY NOW!
www.life.arizona.edu
520-621-6501
Feb. 8
Brass Faculty and Student Showcase
Faculty Artists Edward Reid, trumpet;
Daniel Katzen, horn; Moisés Paiewonsky,
trombone; Kelly Thomas, tuba/euphonium 7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, Free
Continued on page 20
wc.arizona.edu/ads/visitorguide
19
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
and supple rhythmic sense, all these
made for wonderful listening.” The Ann
Arbor News Holsclaw Hall, $30, 25, 20
Performances
School of Music
Continued from page 19
Feb. 13
Schaeffer Memorial Guitar Competition
Student Competition Finals
2:30 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, $9, 7, 5
Feb. 13
Graduate Choral Conductors Recital
Honor Choir, Kantorei, Recital Choir
and University Singers 7:30 p.m.
Crowder Hall, Free
Feb. 14
“Robert Muczynski: American Voice”
Faculty artists Brian Luce, flute; Rex
Woods, piano; Arizona Wind Quintet
Muczynski, venerable composer and
gifted pianist, was a UA School of Music
emeritus professor. This memorial concert features his most popular chamber
works. 7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
Feb. 19-20
Guest artist David Russell, guitar
47th Annual Grammy Award winner
Feb. 19, 7 p.m.; Feb. 20, 2:30 p.m. “His
luminous sound; the elegant simplicity
and speaking quality of his playing; the
grace of his ornamentation; his precise
Feb. 20
UA Symphonic Choir and Flowing
Wells High School Choralaires
3 p.m. Christ Church United Methodist,
655 N. Craycroft, Free
Feb. 21
Faculty artists Michael Dauphinais,
piano; John Milbauer, piano; Norman Weinberg, percussion; Kimberly
Toscano, percussion, featuring Bartok’s
Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
Feb. 23
Faculty artist Mark
Votapek, cello
Post-concert reception hosted by
Friends of the School
of Music 7 p.m.
Holsclaw Hall, $5
Feb. 25
“¡Bebop México!” – Cuarteto de
Juan Alzate Guest artists Juan Alzate,
saxophone; Iván Lara, bass; Efrén Capiz,
drums; David Villanueva, piano. Cosponsored by the Mexican Consulate in
Tucson 7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
~ Safe, historic
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in the historic
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940 N. OLSEN AVE., TUCSON, AZ 85719
Fodor’s ~ Tripadvisor.com ~ AAA
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March 4
Roy A. Johnson Memorial Organ Series
Faculty artist Pamela Decker, organ
Works by Vierne, Locklair, Liszt, Decker,
Whitehouse 7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, $9, 7, 5
March 5-10
33rd Annual AzJazz Week Faculty,
Guest and Student Ensembles
All concerts 7:30 p.m., Crowder Hall
March 5 Arizona Symphony Orchestra
with Faculty Jazz Artists Featuring
“Concerto for Jazz Band and Orchestra”
by Jeff Haskell $9, $7, $5
March 6 Quite a Night O’Dixie, Olive
Street Stompers and The Original Wildcat Jass Band $9, $7, $5
Please ask for
the Special UA
Visitor Rate!
520-622-6491
Ask for your UA Visitor Rate
• Newly Remodeled
with Refrigerator &
Microwave in ALL
ROOMS
• Free Deluxe Continental Breakfast &
“Make Your Own
Waffles”
• Beautiful Outdoor
Heated Pool
5 minutes to the UA,
• Guest Laundry and Tucson Convention Center,
Downtown Theatre
Pay-per-view Movies
& Arts District, and
• Small Meeting
4th Avenue Shops
Room available
neighborhood
breakfasts and
March 3
UA Philharmonic Orchestra 7:30 p.m.
Crowder Hall, $5
• Free WiFi Internet
Access and Lobby
Computer/Printer
Sam Hughes
irresistible
March 2
Chamber Players 7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall,
$5
Toll-free Reservations
~ Comfortable
and quiet
A beautiful
March 1
Wind Ensemble and UA Symphonic
Band 7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
The Perfect
Place To Stay
…anytime!
Adobe
Rose Inn
Bed & Breakfast
Feb. 27
John Philip Sousa Concert
UA Wind Ensemble and UA Symphonic
Band 3 p.m. Centennial Hall, $5
• Santa Cruz River
WYNDHAM REWARDSSM
Park for walking,
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Tourist Hotspots,
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GROUPS
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WELCOME
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or a week
665 N. Freeway
Tucson 85745
www.tucsonramadalimited.com
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
March 7 Faculty Jazz Night: Kelland
Thomas, Moisés Paiewonsky, Jeff
Haskell, Jay Rees, Robin Horn $9, $7, $5
March 8 UA Concert Jazz Band Free
March 9 UA Studio Jazz Ensemble
$9, $7, $5
March 10 The John Denman Memorial
Concert $9, 7, 5
March 23
Faculty artists Hong-Mei Xiao, viola;
Paula Fan, piano 7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, $5
March 27
Sholin Guitar Competition Student
Competition Finals 2:30 p.m.
Holsclaw Hall, $9, 7, 5
March 28h
Arizona Bach Aria Consort – “Ars
Moriendi, the Art of Dying: In
Praise of Anna Magdalena
Bach, Mother-Musician”
Faculty, guest and student
artists 7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, $5
March 31
“Dreams & Fantasies” Faculty
artist Tannis Gibson,
piano. Solo piano
works by Falla, Ives,
Rachmaninoff,
Bresnick and more.
7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, $5
April 3
Collegium Musicum, early music ensemble 4 and 7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, Free
April 14
Graduate Percussion Quartet
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
April 4
Arizona Wind Quintet joined by
Arizona Graduate Winds Faculty and
student artists 7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, $5
April 17
UA Symphonic Choir Jephte by Giacomo Carissimi and secular music of the
Renaissance 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. Holsclaw
Hall, Free
April 8 & April 10
UA Opera Theater with the Arizona
Symphony Orchestra Mozart’s “Don
Giovanni” Crowder Hall, $15, $12, $10
April 8, 7:30 p.m.; April 10, 3 p.m.
April 10
Arizona Choir World Premiere:
William Hawley, “Make Me Thy Lyre”
2 p.m. Stevie Eller Dance Theater,
Free. Commissioned by the Arizona
Choir. Using the final stanza of “Ode
to The West Wind” by Percy Bysshe
Shelley, Hawley’s setting is for chamber orchestra and eight-part mixed
chorus.
April 13
“Chamber Music Extravaganza”
Works by Brahms and Dohnanyi
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
Faculty Artists Mark Rush, violin;
Hong-Mei Xiao, viola; Mark Votapek,
cello; Jerry Kirkbride, clarinet; Daniel
Katzen, horn; John Milbauer, piano
April 17
UA Steel Bands
3 p.m. Crowder Hall, $9, 7, 5
April 18
Graduate Choral Conductors Recital
Honor Choir and University Singers
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, Free
April 19
UA Concert Jazz Band
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, Free
April 20
UA Studio Jazz Ensemble
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
April 21
Guest artist Richard Sebring and faculty artist Daniel Katzen, horn. 7 p.m.
Holsclaw Hall, Free. Sebring is associate
principal horn of the Boston Symphony
and principal horn of the Boston Pops
Orchestra.
Continued on page 25
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5-11 p.m. Fri. | 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Sat. | 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun.
Bar open 11 a.m. til close
An Del Sol now open
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Fall 2011
Sports bar & restaurant | American and Pacific-rim
wc.arizona.edu/ads/visitorguide
21
SIROW/GENDER
& WOMEN’S
STUDIES
E. FIRST STREET
HELEN STREET
VISUAL
ARTS
GRADUATE
RESEARCH
CENTER
(future)
ART
STUDIOS
MABEL STREET
DRACHMAN STREET
SANTA RITA AVENUE
E. SECOND STREET
ARCHITECTURE
& LANDSCAPE
ARCHITECTURE
INTERNATIONAL
FACULTY & SCHOLARS/
PASSPORT FACILITY
Pedestrian/Bike Underpass
MABEL STREET
TYNDALL AVENUE
MOUNTAIN AVENUE
MOUNTAIN AVENUE
CORLEONE
APTS.
MOUNTAIN AVENUE
FREMONT AVENUE
PARK AVENUE
HIGHLAND AVENUE
E. FIRST STREET
AEROSPACE &
MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING
HELEN STREET
$ = Garages with Visitor Parking and Parking Meters
Telephone Parking & Transportation at 626-PARK (7275) for more information
Locations of special interest, such as museums and performance halls,
are included in the index below
Campus Map
S.A.L.T.
CENTER
ANNEX
VINE
ADAMS STREET
Pedestrian/Bike Underpass
SCHAEFER
POETRY
CENTER
MABEL STREET
DRACHMAN STREET
UMC
PARKING
GARAGE
Construction
Site
Local traffic only during construction
VINE AVENUE
SURGERY
E. SECOND STREET
E. FIRST STREET
UA
POLICE
DEPT.
ARIZONA
CANCER CENTER
UMC
Employee Health/
Human Resources
CAMPUS
AGRICULTURAL CENTER
Campbell Ave. & Roger Road
(3 miles N)
HELEN STREET
DUVAL
AUDITORIUM
DIAMOND
BUILDING
EMERGENCY
DEPT. (ED)
ED
Patient/
Visitor
Parking
UMC
Security
AHSC
BookStore
UITS CLASSROOM
TECH SVCS. (Testing Office)
ENROLLMENT
MANAGEMENT
CURRICULUM
& REGISTRATION
THOMAS
W. KEATING
BIORESEARCH
Emergency Vehicles Only
Construction
ED
Visitor
Parking
ss
Pedestrian/Bike Underpa
EUCLID AVENUE
NUE
CAMPBELL AVENUE
CAMPBELL AVENUE
PBELL AVENUE
Abrams (UAHSC) ........................................... F-2
Administration ..............................................D-5
Aerospace & Mechanical Engineering ...........D-3
Apache .....................................................D, E-7
Architecture & Landscape Architecture .........C-4
Arizona Cancer Center ..................................G-1
Arizona .........................................................A-7
Arizona Stadium ....................................... E-6, 7
Arizona State Museum ..................................B-5
Art and Museum of Art ..................................B-4
Babcock .......................................................G-3
Bear Down Gym........................................ E-5, 6
Bio. Sciences East.........................................D-6
Bio. Sciences West....................................B, C-6
Biomedical Research .................................... F-1
Bioresearch, Thomas W. Keating ................... F-3
BookStore
AHSC ................................................... F, G-2
Flandrau Science Center .......................... F-5
Main (in SUMC) ........................................D-5
McKale Sports Stop ..................................G-6
Student Exchange ....................................A-6
Campus Health ............................................D-7
NEW RESIDENCE HALL
CONSTRUCTION
Student
Exchange
PARK AVENUE
McCLELLAND
PARK
ASM
South
FREMONT AVENUE
Centennial Hall (and Ticket Office) .............B-5, 6
Center for English as a Second Language .....C-5
Chávez, César E. ...........................................C-5
Chemical Science .........................................D-6
Chemistry .....................................................D-6
Children’s Research (UAHSC) ........................ F-2
Civil Engineering .......................................C-4, 5
Cochise .......................................................B-6
Coconino .....................................................B-4
Colonia de la Paz .....................................D, E-6
Communication ............................................C-5
Computer Center (UITS) ................................D-4
Coronado .....................................................A-7
DeConcini Env. & Natural Resources .............B-7
Dermatology (UAHSC) ...................................G-1
Disability Resource Center ............................D-7
Douglass ..................................................C-5, 6
Drachman Hall .............................................. F-3
Drachman Institute .......................................A-4
DuVal Auditorium (UAHSC) ............................G-1
Education, College of ....................................E-5
El Portal ........................................................D-7
Electrical & Computer Engineering ................C-4
PARK AVENUE
TYNDALL AVENUE
TYNDALL AVENUE
UNIVERSITY BOULEVARD
PARK AVENUE
E. SECOND STREET
Eller Dance Theatre................................... F, G-5
Engineering, College of .................................C-5
ER/Amb. Surgery (University Medical Ctr.) ....G-1
Esquire ........................................................B-3
Faculty Center...............................................D-3
Family & Consumer Sciences ........................C-6
Flandrau Science Center & Planetarium ........ F-5
Fluid Dynamics .............................................D-4
Forbes, College of Agriculture & Life Sci. .......C-6
Gila ...............................................................B-5
Gittings ......................................................... F-5
Gould-Simpson, College of Science ...........B, C-6
Graham ....................................................D, E-6
Greenlee ...................................................D, E-6
Harshbarger / Mines & Metallurgy.................C-5
Harvill ...........................................................C-4
Haury (Anthropology) ....................................B-6
Herring .........................................................C-6
Hillenbrand Aquatic Center............................G-6
Hillenbrand Stadium ................................. F, G-5
Hopi..............................................................E-6
Hospital (University Medical Center) .......F, G-1, 2
Huachuca .................................................A, B-6
NEW
RESIDENCE HALL
CONSTRUCTION
Human Resources (in USB) ...........................A-5
Info. Res. & Library Science ..........................E-4
Integrated Learning Center ...........................E-5
International Student Pgms. ..........................A-5
Kaibab ......................................................A, B-6
Keating Bioresearch (BIO5) ........................... F-3
Koffler...........................................................D-6
Kuiper Space Sciences ................................. F-5
La Aldea .......................................................A-6
Learning Services .........................................E-4
Library
AHS.......................................................... F-2
Main .................................................... E-5, 6
Science & Engineering .........................D, E-6
Life Sciences North .......................................G-2
Life Sciences South ......................................B-6
Little Chapel of All Nations ........................D, E-4
Manzanita.....................................................B-4
Maricopa .................................................B, C-5
Marley ..........................................................C-6
Marroney Theatre (Fine Arts Box Office) ........B-4
Marshall ..................................................A, B-5
Martin Luther King Jr. Student Center............D-4
CHEMICAL
SCIENCES
HIGHLAND AVENUE
HIGHLAND AVENUE
EUCLID AV
EUCLID AVENUE
wc.arizona.edu/ads/visitorguide
23
Marvel ......................................................C, D-6
Mathematics.................................................C-6
McClelland, Eller College of Mgmt. ................C-3
McKale Memorial Center (Legacy Lane,
Eddie Lynch Athletics Pavilion Plaza,
Jim Click Hall of Champions) ................ F, G-6
Medical Research ......................................... F-3
Medicine, College of .....................................G-2
Meinel Optical Sciences, College of ............... F-6
Mineral Museum ........................................... F-5
Mirror Lab................................................. F-6, 7
Mohave ........................................................B-4
Modern Languages .......................................E-5
Music (Crowder and Holsclaw Halls) .............B-4
Navajo ...................................................... E, F-7
Nugent..................................................C, D-5, 6
Nursing, College of........................................G-2
Old Main .......................................................C-5
Park Student Union ...................................A, B-6
Parking and Transportation ...........................C-7
Parking Garage
Cherry ...................................................... F-6
Highland ..............................................D, E-3
Main Gate ............................................A-4, 5
Park Avenue .............................................B-3
Second St.................................................D-5
Sixth St. ...................................................C-7
Tyndall .....................................................A-6
UAHSC .....................................................G-2
Passport Facility............................................C-3
Pharmacy, College of ................................ F, G-2
Physics and Atmospheric Sciences ...............C-6
Pima House ..................................................D-4
Pinal .............................................................E-7
Police ..........................................................G-4
Posada San Pedro .........................................D-6
Psychology ...................................................E-5
Pueblo de la Cienega ....................................D-6
Roby Gymnastics ..........................................G-6
Rogers, James E., College of Law ............C, D-3
Rogers Rountree Hall ................................C, D-3
SALT Center ..............................................D, E-4
Santa Cruz ................................................D, E-7
Sarver Heart Center ...................................... F-2
Schaefer Center for Creative Photography .....C-4
Schaefer Poetry Center .................................E-3
MEINEL
OPTICAL SCIENCES
FLANDRAU/
SCIENCE CTR.
& PLANETARIUM
MURPHEY STADIUM
DRACHMAN STADIUM
15th St. & Plumer Ave.
(1 mile SE)
ARID LANDS STUDIES
6th St. & Norris Ave.
(1 block E)
Shantz .....................................................C, D-6
Slonaker .......................................................B-4
Social Sciences.........................................C-5, 6
Sonett Space Sciences .................................E-5
Sonora ......................................................A, B-7
South........................................................B, C-6
Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences ......C-4
Staff Advisory Council ...................................C-3
Steward Observatory ....................................E-5
Student Recreation Center ........................D, E-7
Student Union Memorial Center ....................D-5
Swede Johnson (Alumni Association) ............E-3
Theatre Arts (Tornabene Theatre) ..................B-4
UA Visitor Center ...........................................A-5
Udall Center ..................................................A-4
UITS Classroom Tech Svcs. (Testing Office) ... F-4
University Services Building (USB).................A-5
Veterinary Sci./Microbiology..........................C-6
Villa del Puente .............................................D-7
West Stadium ........................................... E-6, 7
Yavapai .........................................................C-6
Yuma ............................................................C-5
McKALE
SPORTS
STOP
HILLENBRAND
AQUATIC CENTER
DIVING
POOL
RICHARD JEFFERSON
PRACTICE FACILITY
CA
CAMPBELL AVENUE
Conde Nast Traveler Gold List
“World’s Best Places to Stay”
Travel and Leisure
“Top 500 Hotels in the World”
Zagat Survey of Top U.S. Hotels, Resorts & Spas
“Top 50 Small Hotels”
National Register of Historic Places
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Private
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Less than a mile
from The
University of Arizona
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UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Performances
School of Music
Continued from page 21
April 21
UA World Music Gang 7:30 p.m.
Crowder Hall, $5
April 22
Rosewood Marimba Band 7:30 p.m.
Crowder Hall, $5
April 23
Arizona Graduate Winds 1 p.m.
Holsclaw Hall, Free
April 23
UA Percussion Group 7:30 p.m.
Crowder Hall, $5
April 24
Mildred Flood Mahoney Memorial
Organ Recital Shinji Inagi, organ
7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, Free
April 25
UA Chamber Players Ensemble and faculty artist William Dietz, bassoon soloist
7 p.m. Holsclaw Hall, $5
April 27
UA Symphonic Band
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
April 28
UA Wind Ensemble 7:30 p.m.
Crowder Hall, $5
April 29
Arizona Symphony Orchestra and UA
Philharmonic Orchestra 7:30 p.m.
Crowder Hall, $5
April 30
“Plugged In” – CrossTalk, electronic
percussion group 7:30 p.m. Crowder
Hall, $5
May 1
University Community Chorus and
Orchestra featuring music of Haydn and
Mendelssohn 3 p.m. Crowder Hall, $12, 6
May 1
Graduate Choral Conductors Recital
Kantorei and Recital Choir 7 p.m.
Holsclaw Hall, Free
May 3
An Evening of Opera Scenes Opera
Theater 7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, $5
May 4
Student Chamber Music Showcase
Special Event with Classical KUAT-FM
radio hosts James Reel and Ted Prichard
7:30 p.m. Crowder Hall, Free Reception 6:30 p.m., hosted by Friends of the
School of Music
A CAMPUS-WIDE RESOURCE
Disability Resources leads the campus
community in the creation of inclusive
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the disability perspective and the impact
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• Improving the recruitment, transition,
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• Increasing the hiring and retention of disabled
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• Working with faculty and staff in creation of
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• Offering competitive
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fitness programs
Contact us: 520.621.3268
[email protected] • http://drc.arizona.edu
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25
More than 500 graduates of UA’s Race Track Industry
Program hit the ground running
and haven’t slowed down,
including top horse trainers
Bob Baffert and
Todd Pletcher
Senior Candice Curtis met star horse Zenyatta during
an internship at Del Mar Race Track near San Diego.
Andrew Arthur photo
By Mike Chesnick
W
hen Candice Curtis left her
job as a Graceland tour guide to
enter UA’s Race Track Industry Program, it was a bold move for the
Memphis native and self-described
“serious” Elvis fan.
But as Curtis would find out,
she had swapped one “King” for
another.
The UA degree program is at the
top of the charts within the horse
industry, boasting two of the nation’s top trainers – Bob Baffert
and Todd Pletcher – and a host of
other top race track officials.
“I was looking for something
more fulfilling,” Curtis said, about
working at Graceland after graduating from the University of Memphis
with a journalism degree. “And
when I did some research on the
26
www.arizona.edu
(UA) program, I knew it was perfect. The faculty all have professional experience in the industry,
from the regulatory side to racing
secretary to horse training and
breeding.
“There are also many, many opportunities for students to network
with other industry professionals,
and the alumni group is active in
mentoring current students.”
The UA program, or RTIP, offers
two degree concentrations: a business path, for a job in race track
management and marketing, regulation or pari-mutuel organizations;
and an equine management path
for employment in areas dealing
with racing and breeding animals.
Curtis, a 28-year-old senior,
picked the business path, in part
because she needs her sleep.
“As much as I love horses and
being around them, I really don’t
And…
they’re
off!
have a talent for training them and
I don’t like to get up at 4 a.m.,”
Curtis said. “I know that the industry needs new blood to help promote it and educate fans about its
unique practices and the colorful
characters who do get up at 4, and
earlier.”
Curtis is among nearly 50 students enrolled in UA’s program,
which has placed more than 500
graduates in the pari-mutuel racing industry since the RTIP began
in 1975. The Marshall Foundation
building, 845 N. Park Ave., houses
the program on the third floor.
Baffert, who grew up in Nogales,
was part of the original graduating
class. Pletcher, raised in California,
graduated in 1989.
Between the two, they’ve won 11
Triple Crown races – four Kentucky
Derbys, six Preakness Stakes and
one Belmont Stakes – and seven
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
2 famous
grads
Bob Baffert
tion and Testing
Consortium
in Lexington,
■ Eclipse Award for top
Ky. Alums are
trainer: 2004, 2005,
spread out at
2006, 2007
race tracks
across the
■ Triple Crown wins (2)
world, includ■ Kentucky Derby (2010,
ing Japan, Hong
Super Saver)
Kong, Korea,
■ Belmont Stakes (2007,
Ireland and AusRags to Riches)
tralia.
“The industry is so small that everyone knows
everyone,” RTIP director Doug
Reed said. “So if someone walks up
to a race track somewhere – and
asks how do I get into this business? – nine times out of 10, some-
one knows us.”
Added Steve Barham, RTIP associate coordinator: “There are a lot
of alumni out there now that aren’t
the famous ones.”
The program is a haven for what
Reed calls “career changers,” students such as Curtis who have previous degrees in other fields.
“I think most people are worried about a job in this economy,”
Curtis said. “But I am actually more
confident now than I was when I
got my first degree in 2006. I feel
like I have a unique niche to fill,
and the people I have met the past
year and a half have all been willing
to help me reach my goals.”
Curtis spent last summer working for the marketing and media
department of Del Mar Race Track
near San Diego. She has written
articles for Thoroughbred Daily
News and helped TurfPublicists of
America set up Facebook and Twitter pages. Curtis met the owners,
trainer and jockey of Zenyatta, one
of the most decorated horses in
history with 19 straight victories,
last year at the RTIP’s annual Symposium.
The Symposium, usually held in
early December at La Paloma Country Club, brings together what Curtis calls “the mover and shakers in
the industry.” The panel sessions
touch on cutting-edge research in
racing, including track safety and
technology advances.
“Students can’t bet better content than what we can deliver in
the classroom that week,” Reed
said. “The Symposium brings all
the who’s who in racing here. For
students job-hunting, it’s great, and
from the industry’s point of view,
this is the conference to go to.”
RTIP also offers a “mentor
lunch” program, in which a student
picks people in the industry to
meet face-to-face. In Curtis’ case,
she dined with the marketing director of American Quarter Horse Association and talked to the marketing director of Kentucky’s Churchill
Downs.
“It’s really a neat piece to the
puzzle,” said Wendy Davis, RTIP associate coordinator, “because you
don’t have to be job-hunting. You
can say, ‘Hey, can you come lunch
with me.’”
Rillito Park
Todd Pletcher
Students in UA’s Race Track
Industry Program like to hang out
at Tucson’s Rillito Park, which has
hosted horse racing from midJanuary through February since
1943. The 5/8-mile track is at the
southeastern corner of North First
Avenue and East River Road.
“I’ve spent nearly every weekend
at Rillito Park watching the local
racing scene,” student Candice Curtis said.
UA alum and top trainer Bob
Baffert’s first Thoroughbred winner
was Flipper Star at Rillito Park in
1979. The track, a National Historic
Site, is the birthplace of quarter
horse racing and the “photo finish,”
and it hosted scenes from the 2003
movie Seabiscuit, according to its
website.
In the last decade, Rillito has
fought to stay in business, relying on help from the Pima County
Board of Supervisors. For racing
information, call (520) 293-5011.
UA Race Track Industry Program photo
Eclipse Awards as the nation’s top
trainer.
Both had a good 2010. Pletcher
won the Kentucky Derby with Super Saver after 24 previous entries.
Baffert captured the Preakness
Stakes with “Lookin At Lucky,” coowned by Mike Pegram and Tucsonans Karl Watson and Paul Weitman, and earned his 2,000 career
victory.
“Going through the Race Track
Industry Program prepared me to
deal with the inside of the racing
world,” Baffert says in a testimonial on the RTIP
website. “If it
wasn’t for the
Race Track Industry Program,
I probably
would have never graduated
■ Eclipse Award for top
from the UA.”
trainer: 1997, 1998, 1999
The ink UA
Triple Crown wins (9)
gets from Baf■ 1997: Kentucky Derby,
fert and PletchPreakness Stakes (Silver
er is invaluable,
Charm)
but the two
■ 1998: Kentucky Derby,
trainers aren’t
Preakness (Real Quiet)
the program’s
only recruiting
■ 2001: Preakness, Belmont
tools. Dr. Scot
Stakes (Point Given)
Waterman, a
■ 2002: Kentucky Derby,
UA grad, is the
Preakness (War Emblem)
executive direc■ 2010: Preakness (Lookin
tor of the U.S.
At Lucky)
Racing Medica-
27
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Tucson Airport
A1 Airport Shuttle
$25/each way
Spring
Semester Special
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RESERVATIONS (800) 227-6086
www.randolphparkhotelandsuites.com
Academic Calendar
Thursday, Jan. 13
Classes begin
Monday, Jan. 17
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
University Holiday
March 12-20
Spring recess
Wednesday, May 4
Last day of classes
Friday, May 13 & Saturday, May 14
Spring Commencement
Monday, May 30
Memorial Day–University Holiday
Monday, July 4
Independence Day–University Holiday
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Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sun. Noon-5 p.m.
28
www.arizona.edu
Campbell Ave.
Luxury Student Apartment Community
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Shuttle to UA & Pima
The Stadium Sports Grill with a giant
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Ask for “The University of Arizona
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NORTHPOINTE STUDENT APARTMENTS
520 ∙ 888 ∙ 3838 ∙ 850 E. Wetmore
Code: UOFAVG
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Art Galleries
Center for Creative
Photography
The center’s gallery exhibits work by
new photographers and renowned
artists such as Ansel Adams, Edward
Weston, Garry Winogrand and Harry
Callahan.
Hours Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
Saturday-Sunday 1-4 p.m.
Admission Requested donation
Location Fine Arts Complex, 1030 N.
Olive Road
Parking Park
Avenue GaJOSEPH GROSS
ARCHITECTURE
ART GALLERY
& LANDSCAPE
rage. PedesARCHITECTURE
DRAMA
trian underpass gives
direct access.
Parking directly behind
center (off
Second Street) is free on weekends and
after 5 p.m. on weekdays.
Contact 621-7968,
[email protected],
www.creativephotography.org
Joseph Gross Art Gallery
For 30 years, the gallery has exhibited
the work of student, faculty and professional artists in a broad range of media
and concepts. The gallery also hosts
visiting artists and scholars for public
lectures.
Hours Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
Saturday-Sunday 12-4 p.m.
Admission Free
Location Corner of Park Avenue and
Speedway Boulevard, between the Center for Creative Photography and the UA
Museum of Art
Parking Park Avenue Garage. Pedestrian underpass gives direct access.
Parking directly behind center (off
Second Street) is free on weekends and
after 5 p.m. weekdays.
Contact 626-4215,
[email protected]
Two-Headed Tales
Lionel Rombach Gallery
Union Gallery
When it was established in 1977, this
became the first student gallery in
the UA art department. Today, it is an
exhibition space for students to realize
their artistic visions and learn about
gallery management.
Hours Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
Saturday-Sunday 12-4 p.m.
Admission Free
Location Corner of Park Avenue and
Speedway Boulevard, between the Center for Creative Photography and the
UA Museum of Art, inside the Joseph
Gross Gallery building.
Parking Park Avenue Garage. Pedestrian underpass gives direct access.
Parking directly behind center (off
Second Street) is free on weekends and
weekdays after 5 p.m.
Contact 626-4215,
[email protected]
The Union Gallery offers a unique collection featuring a variety of media,
which is on disUnion
play year-round.
Gallery
The gallery has
Gallagher
Theatre
served the community since 1973
by exposing visiCAMPUS MALL
tors to original art
by regional and nationally prominent
artists.
Hours Monday-Friday 12-6 p.m.,
Wednesday 12-8 p.m., and by appointment
Admission Free
Location Inside the Student Union Memorial Center, 1303 E. University Blvd.
Parking Second Street Garage
Contact 621-6142,
[email protected]
Jan. 10-19
Photography Division Group Exhibition
Jan. 24-Feb. 2
La Tapiceria Fronteriza
Curated by John Michael Warner
Feb. 7-16
Annual Juried Visual Communication
Exhibition
Feb. 21-March 2
3D Division Invitational Exhibition
March 7-23
TBA
Rebecca Hamlin
Feb. 14-April 4
Invitational Glass Artists of Latin
America Exhibition
March 28-April 10
Annual First Year Experience Exhibition
April 15-May 15
2001 Master of Fine Arts Thesis Exhibition
April 15-May 16
Visual Communications Capstone
Curated by Kelly Leslie
May 23-Aug. 31
Two-Headed Tales By Yana Payusova
and Joseph Farbrook
May 19- June 1
TBA
Stephen Jensen
Jan. 11-Feb. 11
In His Own Words: The Life and Work
of César Chávez. Throughout his youth
and into young adulthood, Chávez
experienced the hardships of being a
migrant farm
worker and
the sting
of racial
discrimination. Motivated by a dream of justice and equality,
Chávez dedicated himself to community organizing and founded the first
farm workers’ union. Utilizing strikes,
boycotts, marches and other nonviolent
tactics, Chávez worked to secure better
pay, job safety, improved living conditions, and other essential protections.
Featuring 38 photographs paired with
excerpts from his dynamic speeches,
interviews and authoritative writings,
“In His Own Words” documents the full
course of Chávez’s career and examines
the life experiences and philosophical
influences that drove him to dedicate
himself fully to improving the lives of
American farm workers.
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29
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
30
www.arizona.edu
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
UA Mall
INTEGRATED
LEARNING CENTER
Time 6 p.m.
Admission Free
Location Integrated Learning Center
(check for room)
Parking Cherry Avenue Parking Garage
Contact 621-7341
www.russian.arizona.edu
Cherry Avenue
Film
Russian
Russia Lite: Favorite Russian Comedies.
All films in Russian with English subtitles.
Faculty introductions.
Jan. 25
Give Me the Book of Complaints (Daite
zhalobnujiu knigu) 1964. Directed by Eldar Riazanov. Screenplay by Aleksander
Galich and Boris Laskin. A journalist and
his friends visit a pre-revolutionary café.
Although his friends leave, the journalist,
Yuri, stays and meets the restaurant’s
beautiful manager, Tatiana. He writes
a critical article about the restaurant,
which causes Tatiana to see the restaurant and Yuri in a new light.
Feb. 15
The Diamond Arm (Brilliantovaya ruka)
1968. Directed by Leonid Gaidai. 100 min.
FR EC
IE OND
LY
This farce concerns a criminal operation which smuggles gold and diamonds
inside a plaster arm cast. Modest
economist Semyon Gorbunkov and a
swindler named The Count embark on a
series of wild adventures, peppered with
comic dialogue, which spawned several
popular catchphrases.
March 8
Irony of Fate, or Enjoy your Bath!
(Ironiya sud'by, ili s legkim parom)
1975. Directed by Eldar Riazanov. 185
min.
Four friends experience an unforgettable
New Year's Eve during their annual gettogether at a local bath house, where too
much steam and plentiful vodka result in
hilarious and charming consequences.
April 5
A Railway Station for Two (Vokzal
na dvoikh) 1982. Directed by Eldar
Riazanov. 128 min. A man stranded at a
train station after refusing to pay for an
unsatisfactory meal befriends a waitress.
After a series of comic misadventures, a
relationship develops. Unfortunately, he
must go to Siberia to serve a sentence
for a crime he didn't commit.
April 26
Peculiarities of National Fishing (Os-
obennosti natsionalnoi rybalki) 1998
Directed by Aleksander Rogozhkin. 94
min. The Russian male's two greatest
loves, fishing and vodka, are tested to
the breaking point in this comedy about
best friends whose vacation goes hilariously awry. They lose their way on a fishing trip, wind up in Finland, and discover
they have left their vodka and fishing
equipment behind. Naturally, something
drastic must be done to prevent certain
disaster.
Gallagher Theater
Gallagher features films that have just
ended initial box-office release. It's also
a venue for free
advance film
Union
screenings and
Gallery
Gallagher
the University
Theatre
Activities Board
film series.
Location
CAMPUS MALL
Student Union
Memorial Center
Screenings Thursdays-Saturdays. Box
office opens one hour before shows.
Admission $3
Contact 626-0370. See www.union.
arizona.edu/gallagher for current films
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Herb Stratford photo
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Expanding Main Gate
Merchants hope a planned multiplex movie theater
project across from the Marriott will help boost business
Did You Know?
By Mike Chesnick
M
ost of the retail shops and
eateries at Main Gate Square dread
the University of Arizona’s winter
and summer breaks, a time when
many students abandon the campus temporarily.
“It’s like losing 57,000 people,”
said Jane McCollum, who manages
Main Gate Square for the Marshall
Foundation.
That’s why the area can’t wait
for a planned $35 million, 14-story
building project that would add
a multiplex movie theater, hotel
rooms and retail space by the end
of 2012 or 2013.
“It will be good for us, because
people leaving the theaters might
come into eat or have a drink,” said
Brendan McHugh, bar manager
for Gentle Ben’s Brewery Co., the
oldest eatery and bar in Main Gate
Square, established in 1970.
The Marshall Foundation, which
owns most of the retail space in
Main Gate Square, is developing
32
the project with J.L. Investments.
It’s expected to be built on a parking lot east of the nine-story Tucson Marriott University Park, 880 E.
Second St., and north of University
Boulevard. The foundation is working with UA and the city on rezoning, parking and traffic plans.
“There are a lot of moving pieces
and coordination issues,” McCollum said.
Retail space, according to McCollum, would be two stories’ high
on one level, with six to eight theaters on the next level that would
occupy two more stories. The
upper floors would include 130 to
150 hotel rooms – possibly run by
the Marriott. McCollum could not
reveal information on the movietheater operators, retailers or hotel
yet, but she said the end of 2012
or 2013 would be the ideal target
opening date to coincide with the
Above: Fans listen to the UA Pride of Arizona
Marching Band at Main Gate Square during
Bear Down Friday, a pep rally held the night
before every UA home football game.
Louise Foucar Marshall,
who started the foundation
in 1930 that now runs Main
Gate Square, became one of
Tucson’s wealthiest and most
charitable women, thanks to
her real estate deals and investments near UA.
She also faced controversy
after being accused of shooting her husband, Tom Marshall, on April 27, 1931. He
died 23 days later, and Louise
was charged with murder.
On Sept. 23, 1931, an all-male
jury in Nogales found her not
guilty after only 20 minutes,
swayed by the fact she suspected her husband of trying
to poison her twice.
Despite scathing editorials
in the Arizona Daily Star and
Tucson Citizen, Marshall returned to Tucson, continuing
her charitable works until her
death in 1956.
Source: Author Patricia Stephenson’s book, “Trial and Triumph, the Life and Accomplishments of Louise Foucar Marshall.”
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
about $577,000 a year,” McCollum
said. “Now we are giving away
close to a million dollars a year.
Half of that generally goes to the
University of Arizona.
“This year in scholarships, we’re
giving away close to $400,000 during a time that the university really
needs it.”
Another benefit, McCollum says,
is that Main Gate “has actually
helped to recruit students.”
“Parents love the fact, and so do
the students, that they can walk
around and have a nice variety of
restaurants, a lot of different cuisines, and good clothing stores … a
nice area to hang out.
“That’s one of the reasons we
big holiday movie releases.
Main Gate, a two-square-block
area west of campus between Park
and North Euclid Avenues, owes its
roots to Louise Marshall, the UA’s
first woman professor, who built
the first stores at Park and University in 1922 and established the
Marshall Foundation in 1930.
The non-profit corporation donates income from its real-estate
holdings — which has increased
because of the redeveloped Main
Gate Square area — to non-profit
community service and educational organizations in Pima County,
including UA.
“When I first started here seven
years ago, we were giving away
re-developed in the first place. The
UA felt that it was losing students
to ASU because of Mill Avenue
(in Tempe). The comparisons are
apple to oranges. Mill is the downtown of Tempe, whereas we are
the downtown of the university –
although we are trying to broaden
our base, and we have to attract
people from the outside. As the
value of our real estate continues
to go up, it’s important to have
people from the community (be
involved).”
The 1994 acquisition of the old
Geronimo office and retail complex
at the southeast corner of University and Euclid, and the Marriott’s
Continued on page 34
Main Gate Square map
APPAREL
& ACCESSORIES
62 American Apparel
34 Arizona Bookstore
46 Ben’s Bells Open Studio
57 Campus Athletic
23 Cry Baby Couture
10 Finally Made
56 Grand Central Clothing
50 Landmark Clothing
& Shoes
17 Ooo! Out of Ordinary
22 Pitaya
53 Swindlers
16 Urban Outfitters
Future
Entertainment
Venue
BOOKS & OFFICE
SUPPLIES
34 Arizona Bookstore
Future
Retail Space
GIFTS & SPECIALTIES
46 Ben’s Bells Open Studio
54 Campus Candy
23 Cry Baby Couture
78 Main Gate Collaborative
Art Studio
73 Sanctity Tattoo
37 University Perfumes
15 W.H. Smith Gifts (Marriott)
B
HOTEL
15 Marriott Hotel
SPECIALTY FOOD, WINE &
BEER SHOP
54 Campus Candy
26 Wilko
CAFÉS DESSERTS & COFFEE
29 Caffé Lucé
52 Dunkin Donuts/Baskin
Robbins
59 Espresso Art
28 Jamba Juice
25 Red Velvet Cupcakery
39 Starbucks Coffee
30 The Cereal Boxx
4 Malibu Yogurt & Ice Cream
26 Wilko
FINANCIAL
A Arizona State Credit Union
11 Wells Fargo ATM
RESTAURANTS
36 Auld Dubliner Irish Pub
19 Chipotle Mexican Grill
64 Fat Greek
49 Frog & Firkin
58 Fuku Sushi
9 Gentle Ben’s
Brewing Co.
66 Jimmy John’s
41 Joel’s Bistro
1 Johnny Rockets
14 Kababeque Indian
Grill
3 La Salsa Fresh
Mexican Grill
48 No Anchovies
60 O’Hungry’s
69 Oriental Express
32
7
13
45
Paradise Bakery
Pei Wei Asian Diner
Pita Pit
Ramiro Scavo
restaurant, coming
15 Saguaro Grill
31 Saigon Pho
(Vietnamese)
55 Silver Mine Subs
44 Sinbad’s
(Mediterranean)
31B Sultan Palace
(Afghan)
30 The Cereal Boxx
74 Vila Thai Cuisine
21 Which Wich
SALON SERVICES
33 Aveda institute of
Arizona
40 Blades Hair Design
51 Boss Shears
63 Cost Cutters
27 Tan d Sol
11 Spring Nail Salon
24 Style America
SERVICES
2 US Post Office
47 Main Gate Square
5 Marine Officer
Selection Office
73 Sanctity Tattoo
35 The Joint
72 Threshhold, Inc.
67 NorthPointe/The
Reserve at Starr
Pass
TUTORING/TEST PREP
8 Princeton Review
33
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Main Gate
Continued from page 33
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DISCOVER the
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Fall 2011
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See what’s outside your dorm
Car Sharing:
A new program designed to provide hourly car rentals
to students and staff. This is a great program for our
alternative transportation users that may have an
off-campus appointment!
Bike Sharing:
Students and employees may enjoy the use of a free
loaner bike by checking one out from our on-campus
bike share stations.
Biking:
Take advantage of the over 11,000 free bicycle parking
spaces or park your bike with added security at one of
our secure lockers or enclosures. Biking is a joy for the
mind and body – the perfect infusion of healthy energy
to get you where you need to be.
Disability Cart Service
A free service provided to all UA faculty, staff,
and students who have a temporary or permanent
impairment. Carts operate M-F, 7:30 a.m. to 5 P.M.
34
www.arizona.edu
Sun Tran U-Pass:
All UA students, faculty and staff are eligible. The U-pass
gives you unlimited use of Sun Tran. Parking & Transportation pays for up to 50% of the cost of the full fare rate.
Sun Tran provides maps, schedules to help plan your
route! No worries…just time to enjoy your journey.
Cat Tran:
Getting around campus is easier than ever with the
Free CatTran Shuttle. Six routes serve the campus with
over 45 stops. Three routes also serve six off-campus
Park and Ride Lots. Shuttles operate M-F, 6:30 am to
6:30 pm. NightCat operates M-F, 6pm to 12:30 am.
There’s a shuttle sure to suit your needs.
Bike Valet Program
Secure, low cost, valet parking in front of the Nugent
Building. Open M-F, 8am- 6pm.
Call 626-PARK for more info.
More Information:
Parking & Transportation Services
1117 E Sixth St. Tucson, AZ 85721-0181
520.626.PARK (7275)
[email protected]
www.parking.arizona.edu
opening in 1996 helped boost development in the area.
Main Gate Square now boasts 31
restaurants or eateries, 16 retailers
and seven salon shops, in addition
to the Marriott, the Arizona Credit
Union and Arizona Bookstore, the
oldest retailer from 1943. The second oldest is Landmark Clothing
and Shoes, started in 1959 and formerly called Franklins, co-owned
by Mort Edberg and John Finkelstein. Edberg, who’s seen University Boulevard grow from a sleepy
stretch into a thriving area, said
the theaters would be a big draw.
“The foundation,” he said, “is
doing a much better job of attracting people.”
The latest to be attracted is
Ramiro Scavo, the executive chef
of Zona 77, Hacienda del Sol and
Harvest restaurants. The name of
his new restaurant at Main Gate,
in the former Café Paraiso space,
is still up in the air. But he plans to
offer modern American cuisine using local Farmer’s markets for vegetables and other ingredients.
Another recent addition to Main
Gate is “OOO!” – or Outside of Ordinary – a store near the northeast
corner of Tyndall and University
that carries eclectic clothing, jewelry, house wares and art. McCollum
bought a 4-foot metal sculpture
that “is one of a kind because they
aren’t making that type of tomato
can anymore,” she said.
McCollum said the area’s merchants are happy McKale Center is
hosting an NCAA men’s basketball
tournament regional March 17 and
19. The regional draws eight teams
– and their fans – from across the
nation. During the last regional
at McKale in 2005, Main Gate was
packed each day, she said, with
out-of-state fans and local boosters
watching the Wildcats’ tournament
games on television. Fans also can
take a streetcar from Main Gate to
Fourth Avenue, which also features
bars, restaurants and shops.
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Every first Thursday of the
month, Main Gate holds an art walk
from 5 to 8 p.m., complete with
live music and entertainment. Last
year, Main Gate showed an outdoor
movie during the Tucson Festival
of Books on campus. McCollum
hopes to do that again. And during
football season is Bear Down Fridays, which features the UA Pride
of Arizona Marching Band.
During “Wicked,” held at Centennial Hall in January, some of the
area’s retailers and eateries carried
through the theme of the Broadway
musical in their stores and menus.
Events such as Wicked draw
people to Main Gate Square at
night, often a slower time than
lunch, when more students are out
and about. The proposed movie
theaters, McCollum said, could
help sustain the area during weekday and weekend evenings.
“They also can help raise people’s interests in coming to the area
for other entertainment as well,”
she said.
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UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
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Cherry Avenue
Catalina Park Inn B&B
Jan. 4-Feb. 26
Art Exhibition: Vintage Poetry Center
Posters Reception Jan. 20, 7 p.m. In the
1960s and 1970s, UA visual art students
collaborated on publicity for the center’s
reading series. These silkscreened posters present legendary names—from
Swenson to Strand, from Ai to Wright.
Jan. 4-Feb. 26
Library Exhibition: A Look Back at the
Next Word Since 2003, the Poetry Center
has featured group readings by emerging writers who define the concept of
“The Next Word” and have gone on to
enjoy significant acclaim. This exhibit of
photographs, books, and limited editions
follows the poets and their careers.
Jan. 18
6 p.m. Shop Talk: The Poetry of David
Wojahn Poetry Center docent Tony
Luebbermann leads a discussion of
Wojahn's work. A major contemporary
poet, Wojahn is chair of the Creative
Writing department at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Jan. 20
8 p.m. UA Alumni
Reading: Ann Cummins and David
Wojahn Ann Cummins,
a short-story writer and
novelist, is the author
Ann Cummins
of “Red Ant House:
Stories” (2003) and “Yellowcake” (2007).
Cummins, professor of creative writing
at Northern Arizona University, received
her MFA in Creative Writing in 1989.
David Wojahn, author of eight books of
Steve Willis photo
6 Blocks West of Campus
High Speed Wireless Internet
Time 8 p.m. (unless otherwise noted)
Admission Free, open to the public
Location UA Poetry Center, 1508 E.
Helen St. (unless otherwise noted)
Parking Paid parking in Highland Avenue Garage. Free parking in University
parking lots weekdays after 5 p.m. and all
Helen Street
day weekends (except
SCHAEFER
for special events).
POETRY
Contact 626-3765,
CENTER
[email protected].
edu, www.poetrycenter.
arizona.edu
Speedway Boulevard
The Poetry Center
celebrates its 50th anniversary with a
series of events through April 2011. During the anniversary year, the center will
make available online its collection of
recordings of poetry readings dating to
the early 1960s.
Vine Avenue
Great Beds. Great Food.
Friendly Hosts.
Readings/Events
Poetry Center
Feb. 10
8 p.m. Next Word in Poetry Reading:
Rusty Morrison and Fred Moten This
annual event presents cutting edge
voices in contemporary poetry. Rusty
Morrison is a poet and co-founder of
Omnidawn Publishing. She is the author
of “the true keeps calm biding its story”
(2008) and “Whethering” (2005). She is a
contributing editor for
Poetry Flash. Fred Moten teaches in Duke
University's English
department. He is
author of “Arkansas”
(2000), “In the Break:
The Aesthetics of the
Black Radical Tradition” (2003), “I ran
Fred Moten
Laura Harris photo
from it but was still in
it” (2007), “Hughson’s Tavern” (2008),
and “B Jenkins” (2010).
Feb. 15
6 p.m. Shop Talk: The Poetry of Agha
Shahid Ali Poet, essayist, and UA
Creative Writing professor Boyer Rickel
leads a talk on the work of Agha Shahid
Ali (1949–2001), a translator, scholar, and
teacher who received his MFA from the
UA. Agha wrote five books of poetry and
edited an important collection of contemporary ghazals before his untimely death.
Feb. 24
8 p.m. Next Word in Poetry Reading:
Kazim Ali and Ana Božičević Co-sponsored by the Center for Middle Eastern
Studies. Kazim Ali is the author of two
books of poetry, “The Fortieth Day”
(2008) and “The Far Mosque” (2005) and
two novels — “Quinn’s Passage” (2005)
and “The Disappearance of Seth” (2009),
as well as the autobiographical “Bright
Felon:
Autobiography and
Cities”
(2009). He
teaches
at Oberlin
College
Kazim Ali Farrah Ali photo
and
the University of Southern Maine. Ana
Božičević was born in Zagreb, Croatia,
in 1977. Her first book of poems, “Stars
of the Night Commute” (2009), was a
Lambda Literary
Award finalist. With
Amy King, Ana cocurates The Stain of
Poetry reading series
in Brooklyn. She
works at the Center
for the Humanities of
The Graduate Center,
CUNY.
Ana Božičević
Feb. 26
10 a.m. Poetry Joeys
Feb. 28-April 9
Library Exhibition: Literary Publishing
in Tucson In the past 50 years, Tucson
has made indelible contributions to
literary publishing. The exhibit presents
a selection of the rare and handmade
books, trade books, and literary journals
that put Tucson on the map.
March 3
8 p.m. Poetry Out Loud Regional Finals
High school students from throughout
Southern Arizona will perform dramatic
recitations of well-loved poems. The top
two winners will move to the state finals.
March 10
8 p.m. The Art of Editing The editor’s
role is a crucial but often unseen part of
the writing process. Willing Davidson,
Associate Fiction Editor at The New
Yorker, will discuss the process of editing
Henry Roth’s final unfinished manuscript, published posthumously in 2010,
and read passages from the book.
March 10
6 p.m. A Closer Look Book Club: The
Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien
This novel-in-stories about a platoon of
American soldiers in the Vietnam War explores the truth/not-truth of things and
the desperate measures we sometimes
take to tell what we need to tell.
March 19
10 a.m. Poetry Joeys
■
Shop Talks A mini-lecture on the
featured poet, followed by a conversation about the author and the work.
Study packets available. Rodney Phillips, [email protected].
A Closer Look Book Club
In-depth conversation in an informal
setting. The club meets in the Jeremy Ingalls Gallery. Cybele Knowles, knowles@
email.arizona.edu.
■
Poetry Joeys Saturday morning
reading and activity group inspires children ages four through ten to read and
write poems.
March 26
12-6 p.m. Tucson Lit Press Fest Tucson
is home to a number of literary book
publishers. The afternoon will include
readings and other events sponsored by
Chax Press, Cue Editions, UA Press, New
Michigan Press, Kore Press, Spork Press,
and more.
April 7
6 p.m. A Closer Look Book Club: The
Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
by Junot Díaz This winner of the 2008
Pulitzer Prize for fiction is the story of a
second-generation Dominican-American
geek, his family, history, and countries.
April 11
6 p.m. Shop Talk: Poets at Play: Children’s Work by Famous Names Elizabeth Falcón, Poetry Center intern and
elementary education poet-in-residence,
leads a discussion of children’s literature
by Sylvia Plath, Theodore Roethke, and
T.S. Eliot.
April 16
4 p.m. Corrido in Concert 2011 features
the winning lyrics of this year’s High
School Bilingual Corrido Contest set to
music!
April 21
8 p.m. Persona Reading Contributors
read at this celebration of the 2011 issue
of Persona, the UA’s undergraduate literary journal.
April 28
8 p.m. A Reading
by Patricia Smith,
poet, performance
artist, author, and
teacher. Her books
include “Blood
Dazzler” (2008),
Patricia Smith
“Teahouse of the
Almighty” (2006) and “Big Towns.” She
is a four-time individual National Poetry
Slam champion.
Peter Dressel photo
poetry — including “World Tree”
(2011),“Interrogation Palace: New
and Selected Poems
1982-2006” (2006)
and “The Falling
David Wojahn
Hour” (1997) — is
an English professor at Virginia Commonwealth University, and a 1980 graduate of
the UA's Creative Writing MFA program.
Jan. 20
7 p.m. Art Exhibition: Vintage Poetry
Center Posters Reception (see Jan. 4)
Jan. 27
6 p.m. A Closer Look Book Club: Blood
Meridian by Cormac McCarthy McCarthy’s masterwork chronicles the
mid-19th century Texas-Mexico borderlands. Its wounded hero, the teenage Kid,
confronts the extraordinary violence of
the Glanton gang.
Jan. 29
10 a.m. Poetry Joeys
Noelle Watson photo
■
Continued on page 39
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UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
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THE SMART CHOICE
Readings/Events
Poetry Center
Continued from page 37
April 30
10 a.m.-4 p.m. Young at Art Festival Music, theater, and visual art performances
based on youth writing, with featured
performances by Stories that Soar, Stories on Stage, and special guest reading
by SLAM champion Patricia Smith.
May 5-6
8 p.m. Creative Writing MFA Student
Readings Students graduating with their
MFAs from the UA’s top-ranking Creative
Writing program read from their work.
May 12
7 p.m. Intersection of Teaching and
Writing: K–5 Showcase Students, teachers, and families of students showcase
the writing of students in residencies
with University of Arizona students.
Libraries
Arizona State Museum, 1013 E. University
Blvd. Monday-Thursday 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
and by appointment; closed state and
national holidays. 621-4695.
Arizona Health Sciences Library, 1501
N. Campbell Ave. 7 a.m.-9:30 p.m. SundayThursday. 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Friday-Saturday.
Open until midnight for UA and UMC
users. 626-6125.
Center for Creative Photography, 1030
N. Olive Road Monday-Friday 11 a.m.3 p.m. Closed weekends. 621-1331.
Fine Arts, Music Building, Room 233,
1017 N. Olive Road Monday-Thursday
8 a.m.-10 p.m.; Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m.;
Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sunday 1-10 p.m.
621-7009.
Law, 1501 E. Speedway Blvd. MondayThursday 7 a.m.-11:45 p.m.; Friday 7 a.m.6 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sunday
12-11:45 p.m. 621-1413.
Main, 1510 E. University Blvd. Open
Sunday at 11 a.m. until Friday at 9 p.m.;
Saturday 9 a.m.-9 p.m. CatCard required
1-7 a.m. 621-6441.
Science-Engineering, 744 N. Highland
Ave. Monday-Thursday 7:30-1 a.m.;
Friday 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m.6 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-1 a.m. 621-6384.
Special Collections (Main Library),
1510 E. University Blvd. Monday-Friday
9 a.m.-6 p.m.; Closed weekends. 6216423.
Lecture series
Steward Observatory
Since 1922, Steward Observatory has
been hosting public astronomy lectures.
Following each lecture, participants can
view the night sky (weather permitting)
through the observatory’s 21-inch Raymond E. White Jr. Reflector telescope.
Time 7:30 p.m.
STEWARD
Admission Free
OBSERVATORY
Location Steward Observatory,
Room N210, 933 N.
FLANDRAU
Cherry Ave.
Contact Thomas
UA MALL
UA MALL
Fleming, 621-5049,
[email protected], www.as.arizona.edu
Lecture Dates Jan. 24 (Dr. Meg Urry,
Yale University); Jan. 31 (Dr. Eliza
Kempton, Lick Observatory); March 28;
April 11
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39
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Image courtesy NASA / JPL-Caltech /
University of Arizona
Lecture series
Cosmic Origins
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Telescopes and theories can probe the
dawn of time, before the Earth existed,
when the observable universe was tiny,
hot, and dense. Speakers in this series
will explore the origin of space and time,
mass and energy, the atoms in our bodies, the compact objects where matter
can end up, and the planets and moons
where life may flourish.
Time 7:00 p.m.
Admission Free
Location Centennial Hall
Parking Tyndall
Avenue Garage
Contact 6214090, cos.arizona.
edu/cosmic
CENTENNIAL
HALL
Feb. 1
Cosmology: Making Sense of the
Universe
Guy Consolmagno SJ, Astronomer and
Curator of Meteorites, Vatican Observatory, Castel Gandolfo, Vatican City State
Our “cosmology” is the sum of our
assumptions and deductions of how
the universe behaves. But cosmologies
can also be outlined in ways that don’t
use physics and astronomy. The talk
will look at historical cosmologies, and
discuss the sometimes hidden assumptions that underlie modern astronomy.
Feb. 8
Origin of the Universe: The Big Bang
Christopher D. Impey, Distinguished
Professor, Astronomy/Steward Observatory, The University of Arizona
This scientific theory of creation began
13.7 billion years ago when all matter
and radiationñunder conditions of incredible temperature and densityñwere
contained in a region smaller than an
atom. This talk will tell the story of how
an iota of space-time turned into a vast
cold universe of 100 billion galaxies.
40
www.arizona.edu
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Feb. 15
Dark Matter, Dark Energy and Inflation: The Big Mysteries of Cosmology
Michael S. Turner, Professor, Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics, University of Chicago
Turner will discuss the evolution of the
universe from a burst of accelerated
expansion (known as inflation) through
the assembly of galaxies and large-scale
structure shaped by dark matter, to our
present epoch where dark energy controls the ultimate fate of the universe.
The model is based on new physics that
have yet to be revealed and understood.
Feb. 22
Astronomical Alchemy: The Origin of
the Elements
Philip A. Pinto, Associate Professor,
Astronomy/Steward Observatory,
University of Arizona
The origin of the silicon in rocks, the
iron in our blood, and the oxygen we
breathe lies in the lifecycle of stars.
Nuclear reactions, which transform
light elements into heavier ones, cause
stars to shine and explode, seeding the
universe with their production. These
building blocks of ordinary matter help
form planets and the evolution of life.
the Earth close enough to the Sun for
life to form. Gravity also ends the life of
every massive star with a collapse and
a formation of a black hole, the major
topic of this talk.
March 1
Origins of Black Holes: Gravity at Its
Extreme
Feryal Özel, Associate Professor, Astronomy/Steward Observatory, University of Arizona
Gravity is the most important force in
the universe, holding together planetary
systems, stars and galaxies. It makes
the stars hot enough to shine and keeps
Tuesday, March 8
The Oldest Question: Is There Life
Beyond Earth?
Carolyn Porco, Cassini Imaging Team
Leader, CICLOPS/Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colorado
Because nothing unusual was required
for the origin and development of
terrestrial life, life may be pervasive
throughout the cosmos. Porco
addresses the ancient and beguiling
question of whether extraterrestrial
life exists, a question that humankind
is actively seeking the answer in its
explorations of the planetary systems.
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UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
Our advertisers welcome you to Southern Arizona
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Authority, p. 38
30 * UA Athletics –
Jim Click Hall
of Champions, p. 8
31 * UA Bookstores, Back Cover
32 * UA Disability
Resources, p. 25
33 * UA Eller, Management
Information Systems, p. 38
34 * UA Hydrology & Water
Resources, p. 14
35 * UA International Affairs –
Passport Application
Acceptance Facility, p. 10
36 * UA Parking &
Transportation
Services, p. 34
37 * UA Poetry Center, p. 30
38 * UA Residence Life, p. 19
39 * UA SALT Center, p. 5
16 NorthPointe Student
Apartments, p. 28
17 Peppertrees
B & B Inn, p. 34
18 Pima Air & Space
Museum, p. 39
19 QuatroVest, p. 35
20 Ramada Limited
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21 Randolph Park
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22 Reserve at Starr Pass, p. 40
23 Residence Inn by
Marriott, p. 38
24 Riverpark Inn, p. 36
25 Sahara Apartments, inside
front cover
26 Sam Hughes Inn, p. 31
27 Sun Tran, p. 36
28 Titan Missile
Museum, p. 40
A1 Airport Shuttle, p. 28
Adobe Rose Inn, p. 20
Amtrak, p. 25
Arizona Inn, p. 24
Arizona Shuttle, p. 18
Best Western Royal Inn &
Suites, p. 31
Big Blue House, p. 15
Catalina Park Inn, p. 36
Country Inn &
Suites, p. 31
Doubletree Hotel, p. 9
Four Points
by Sheraton, p. 39
Hampton Inn & Suites
Tucson East, p. 17
Hyatt Place, p. 11
Marriott University
Park, p. 4
Mr. An's Teppan Steak
& Sushi Bar, p. 21
41
40 * UA School of Theatre,
Film and Television, p. 41
41 UA Science:
Biosphere 2, p. 35
42 * UA Science: Flandrau, p. 35
43 * UA Science:
Mirror Lab, p. 35
44 UA Science:
SkyCenter, p. 35
45 University Villa
Apartments,
inside back cover
46 Varsity Clubs
of America, p. 28
47 Velo Med Urgent Care, p. 9
48 Westward Look Resort
& Spa, p. 16
* Indicates campus location. See main
campus map (pages 22-23)
for building locations.
48
15
47
16
24
CA
TA
L
IN
A
HI
GH
WA
Y
44
45
ELM
20
9
22
6 8 14
25 7
17
3
11
2
www.arizona.edu
PIMA
46
26
23
21
10
24
29
42
4
13
12
UA VISITOR GUIDE SPRING/SUMMER 2011
wc.arizona.edu/ads/visitorguide
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