Carlie Scupin stepped into the batter’s box in a critical spot in Saturday’s Super Regional win at Arkansas. Bases loaded. Two outs. Arizona only nursing a one-run lead in the sixth inning.
The.
When Tucson once thrived as a top moviemaking location for Hollywood
Tucson was a major player in the film industry in the 1970s and 1980s. The Old Pueblo reached its height of Hollywood productions in the 80s.
By: Pat Parris
and last updated 2021-05-11 10:10:29-04
TUCSON, AZ (KGUN) â There was a time when the city of Tucson was the backdrop for a number of major motion pictures.
From
Major League, Tucson played a prominent role in the movies of the 1980s.
But it was a famous line in the 1974 movie
Alice Doesn t Live Here Anymore that introduced moviegoers to Tucson.
Arizona first baseman
Carlie Scupin was named the Pac-12 Player of the Week on Monday after crushing the ball in a four-game series sweep vs. Utah.
Scupin had six hits and three walks in 11 plate appearances, including two homers, a double and six RBI. She had at least one hit and one RBI in all four wins, including the game-tying RBI single in the series finale, a 3-2 victory.
The Tucson High grad is just the second freshman in Arizona softball history to be a two-time Pac-12 Player of the Week honoree, the other being
Jessie Harper in 2017.
Scupin had been hitless in four straight games leading up the Utah series, but got on track thanks in part to some adjustments she made to her swing.
Ron Barber
Tillie Douglas visits her grandfather Ron Barber Jan. 9, 2011, the day after he was wounded in a mass shooting in Tucson.
State senators are considering an Arizona bill that would allow anyone 18 years and older to keep a loaded gun inside their vehicle while in a school parking lot; the bill has already cleared the state House.
Under current law, guns on school grounds have to be unloaded and in a vehicle under the control of an adult. If that adult leaves the vehicle, it has to be locked, with the gun out of sight.
This bill would change some of that.
Youth On Their Own helps local kids reach their goals through community support This file photo shows a student writing on a desk in a classroom. (Source: Live 5/File) By Lauren Renteria | April 1, 2021 at 5:41 PM MST - Updated April 1 at 6:26 PM
TUCSON, Ariz. (KOLD News 13) - For the better part of a decade, Rashel Olalde dreamed of going to college. But when high school came around, she found herself at a roadblock.
Grades weren’t a problem, Olalde was doing well, but with her immediate family living in Mexico, money was tight. Then a teenager at the beginning of her sophomore year, Olalde had moved away from Mexico and in with her aunt and uncle. She enrolled at Tucson High but without the help of her parents, so affording things like clothes and day-to-day items teenagers need became more difficult.