The neighborhood southeast of Grant and Oracle roads is a little dodgy. But it has something going for it that I'll bet your neighborhood doesn't.
The neighborhood southeast of Grant and Oracle roads is a little dodgy. But it has something going for it that I'll bet your neighborhood doesn't.
Do you trust a business based on its age? What if its age is 103? How about a newborn?
Where, oh where, have the wigs all gone?
Then and still now: The barrio is where tourists go to find color in Tucson.
Nothing quite says "welcome gem shows" like this view along Tucson's freeway.
An old business is being remembered on the south side of downtown.
Meet the new asphalt guardians of Tucson pedestrians
It has been in the 80s this week, but that has not stopped Tucsonans from decorating for the holidays.
Most people associate the Virgin de Guadalupe with Mexico, but she is the patroness of all of the Americas. And that includes Tucson, where her image is present all over the central city and south side.
The U.S.S. Arizona Memorial on the University of Arizona campus will be dedicated Sunday at 3 p.m. The public is invited to pay their respects to the 1,177 sailors and Marines who died on the ship 75 years ago.
Borovich had already shown himself bold as a boy. As a teen, he wouldn't take "no" for an answer at the Navy recruitment depot. He became a seaman and died in the attack on Pearl Harbor.
That headline, or variations, was published in newspapers across the country in January 1942. This is the story of families who enlisted in the military when a son or brother was killed on the U.S.S. Arizona.
This is the story of the Tucson teen who was one of the youngest men to die on the U.S.S. Arizona and his link to the ship's two top commanders.
Those are a few of the job titles of the 1,177 sailors and Marines who died 75 years ago on the U.S.S. Arizona. Medallions with the men's names are being installed on the University of Arizona Campus this week. A public remembrance ceremony will begin at 3 p.m. Sunday on the mall in front of the Student Union. All of this week True Tucson will tell the story of some of the men who died in the attack at Pearl Harbor.
The helmet decorations are one of my favorite parts of El Tour de Tucson.
Do you know the story of this "ghost sign" in downtown Tucson?
I am often asked if I feel safe downtown at night. My answer is yes except at one intersection on Congress Street.
I'll bet that Vermont doesn't have this October color.
Door knockers and handles with snakes and lizards say "welcome to Tucson."
Check out the signs of autumn in Tucson.