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Page 29 text:
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Its Showtime When movie ticket prices at major Tucson theaters hit the $4.50 mark, students took an interest in the smaller campus-area movie houses. Although the buildings were not the latest in movie house design, nor were program schedules featuring the most recent Hollywood concoc- tions, the theaters nonetheless kept up business. The Student Union Gallagher Theater screened contem- porary and classic films, charging $1.50 for students. The year ' s most successful draw was George Lucas ' Star Wars, which the theater waited several years to acquire. The New Loft Theatre, an independent operation locat- ed on the fringe of the campus, featured foreign, art and cult films. Favorite films included The Man Who Fell to Earth, Woody Allen film festivals, the cultish Night of the Living Dead and The Rocky Horror Picture Show. THEATERS 25
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Page 28 text:
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' Q- ; 1. Students que up for one of the approximately 200 films screened each year at Gallagher Theater. 2. The New Loft, 504 N. Fremont Ave. 3. For Rocky Horror fans, the show starts long before the midnight screening does. 4. Two Rocky Horror cast members rehearse scenes they will re-enact be- neath the screen during the show. 5. Gallagher cashier Marci Bowman arranges her cash drawer for the opening night of 2001: A Space Odyssey. 24 THEATERS - I I M i,
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Page 30 text:
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Ghost towns Old time Arizona Ghost towns have been a familiar part of the old west, allowing interested visi- tors to see how its territories pioneers survived in this untamed region. Arizona is filled with these old relics, but many Tucsonans don ' t realize just how close they are. The excitement of visitng a ghost town is long-lasting, for a visit to a ghost town is a trip into Arizona history. There are many abandoned towns that are just a short drive from Tucson. In merely an hour and a half, an adventurer can explore Sunnyside, Arizona, a weath- er tarnished village that shows the world what life was like in southern Arizona back in the 1800s. A trip to an Arizona ghost town is a fine way to spend a weekend. A ghost town is a natural source of education, helping Arizonans to better understand the old way of life.
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