posted to Cue Sheet by James Reel
I haven't blogged in the past few days because the temptation has been too great to make some sort of political comment, and this is not a political blog. You can probably guess where I stand on many issues from the mere fact that I write for an alternative weekly--but it's not safe for you to make assumptions about anyone's politics just because they work in public broadcasting. Here at KUAT radio, I'd guess that the liberals and conservatives are pretty evenly balanced. (I count Libertarians and their sympathizers as conservatives: free-market Republicans who lean liberal on social issues.) So don't let me hear you complain about the "liberal media." What's the most talked-about cable news network? The arch-conservative Fox News. Which direction do almost all the talk-radio hosts you're likely to hear lean? Right. Have the nation's major newspapers gone easy on the Bush Administration after having obsessed over trivial and non-existent issues during the Clinton Administration? Obviously. There is a very strong, loud conservative voice in the American media, and only in comparison to that does centrist public radio seem to skew to the left.
radio-life,
November 5th 2008 at 8:55 —
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If you listened to my newscasts this morning and felt like you didn't get ALL the local election results, you're right.
![Vote2008][vote2008-minibar]
To get everything in (without much detail), I'm guessing it takes about five minutes. The problem is that I'm only allowed 3 1/2 minutes within Morning Edition.
Luckily, our website is rather robust and has captured the Pima County and Arizona results from the election offices. If you didn't hear everything you wanted, just click here for all the results you'll ever need.
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News,
November 5th 2008 at 6:39 —
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posted to Cue Sheet by James Reel
The Arizona Daily Star has been slamming the downtown Rio Nuevo project pretty heavily this year, documenting huge expenditures with few results. Now Greg Shelko, the director of the project, is fighting back with a response to the most recent Star article (now gone from the free part of the Web site). I don't know how much play Shelko's response will get, so I'll post it here (distributed by Ward 1 City Council member Regina Romero):
Many of you have read recent coverage by the Sunday, October 27, 2008
Arizona Daily Star of the City’s Rio Nuevo project has been
inaccurate, misleading, biased, absent essential facts and fraught with
the selective use of others to support the reporter’s opinions about
the redevelopment of downtown. There are (4) key areas of concern.
False Reports of Audit Activity
The City’s financial management systems meet all professional
governmental accounting standards (GASB; http://www.gasb.org/),
withstand annual independent audit scrutiny, and are always deemed
proper. The Star’s assertion that it has performed “the first
public audit” (July 27, 2008) is false.
The Star’s Arbitrary and Misleading Accounting
The Star reports Rio Nuevo expenditures in ways that do not accurately
reflect how funds were spent. The amount spent on construction is
around $30 million- nearly twice what was reported by the Star!
That’s a big difference and seriously misinforms the readers.
The Star made much ado about “public relations” expenditures,
implied wrongdoing and solicited harsh comments from members of the
public. The Star failed to report that those “public relations”
expenditures included legally required public notices published in the
Star, neighborhood notification mailings, Spanish language materials,
and workshops for Citizen Advisory Committee members- expenditures that
are necessary to keep the public informed of meetings and enable public
participation in the process. This reporting is dishonest and a
disservice to the public.
Biased Allegations and Purpose of the District
The Star reported that we are spending money on “things that while
not prohibited, aren’t what excited voters” in 1999. This recurring
theme is simply not true. The stated purpose of Rio Nuevo tax increment
multipurpose facilities district is to support multifaceted development
including cultural and recreational amenities and improvements, historic
recreations, new and expanded museums, mixed use development, and the
Tucson Convention Center (TCC) Arena. These are quite clearly the
purposes for which the money has been used and how bond authorization
requires future funds to be spent.
Lack of Information about Progress:
The Star never reports in any meaningful (quantifiable) detail what
private activity is taking place, the time it takes to revitalize a
downtown, or the impacts of the financial markets and state of the
economy on those efforts.
We have spent $37.1 million on design and construction. We have spent
$11.3 million on real estate acquisition and archaeological and
environmental clearances. We have spent $3.6 million on planning
activities. These are necessary predevelopment investments the City
must make if it’s going to realize $2 to $3 billion invested in
downtown over the years and decades to come.
Although the Star repeatedly wants to use the 1999 vote as the starting
line for measuring performance, (1) tax increment revenue (money) to
support projects and planning did not start accumulating until 2004.
(2) without the revenue extension approved the State Legislature in
2006, the City would not have the financial capacity to deliver on
museums and other cultural attractions, hotels, an arena, and the
infrastructure necessary to leverage private sector reinvestment.
As we all know, the challenges to downtown revitalization are
extraordinary and complex. The Star’s routine visitations to the
past, and its consistently biased reporting on downtown affairs, are a
disservice to the community, financially harmful to downtown
stakeholders, and undermines years of planning and investment.
The Star’s irresponsible journalism is not only replete with
violations of the Star’s own ethical code. It is also a disservice to
the community. And it is also financially damaging to property owners,
businesses and investors in the downtown.
quodlibet,
November 4th 2008 at 8:07 —
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After the polls close, keep in touch with this website for the results.
![Vote2008][vote2008-minibar]
Join us on KUAZ beginning at 5 p.m. for coverage throughout the evening. At 10:00 p.m., Arizona Illustrated on Channel 6 will have live coverage of the local races. That coverage (hopefully) also will be streamed at our website, here
You can also get real-time election results on our Vote2008 election page. Pima County is expected to have slow-going on returns, so don't expect to have the all the races called tonight.
If you want to go directly to the source for ALL state races and statewide vote counts, visit the Secretary of State's page for results. It's a bit hard to navigate, but it should have everything you want to know.
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November 4th 2008 at 6:57 —
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posted to Cue Sheet by James Reel
The Day of the Dead is upon us, a fine time to call to your attention a CD by the local early-music vocal ensemble Musica Sonora. The group has available a CD recorded during a 2006 concert featuring Tomás Luis de Victoria’s Officium Defunctorum, or Requiem Mass, and it’s a perfect tie-in with Day of the Dead activities in the Spanish-speaking New World.
For a bit of background, let’s turn to the program notes distributed at the concert:
Día de los Muertos [is] a tradition celebrated particularly in Mexico and parts of Central America and the United States, in which the souls of the dead visit the living for a short time to eat favorite foods and commune with the living. In pre-Columbian times, the festivities were held for a month, but after the advent of the Spanish in the New World, the tradition was blended with elements of Catholicism and restricted to two days. Dead children return to their families on Nov. 1 (All Saints’ Day) and deceased adults visit on Nov. 2 (All Souls’ Day). Family graves are cleaned and altars prepared, decorated with marigolds, copal incense, candles photographs of the deceased, and special food. Children (living but perhaps dead, as well) eat sweets in the shape of skulls and _pan de muerto_ is found in local bakeries. To honor the dead and their living loved ones, we offer a performance of this Requiem Mass.
In the Catholic tradition, the Office of the Dead is said on All Souls’ Day for the benefit of souls in purgatory and at other times for a particular dead person, and dates from the eighth or ninth centuries, actually predating the Requiem Mass itself. It includes psalms, passages from scripture and other elements, divided into Vespers, Mass, Matins and Lauds. The Mass for the Dead, also called the Requiem Mass after the first words of the introit (“Requiem aeternam”), dates from the 14th century. Unlike the usual sort of Mass of the Catholic liturgy, in which the lectionary changes with the church calendar, the Requiem Mass is fixed, with texts specific to the form. More joyful Mass elements, such as the Gloria and Credo, are omitted.
With Victoria’s Officium Defunctorum as a centerpiece, our program extends back in time to include works from Requiem Masses by Cristobal de Morales and forward to instrumental composers of the 17th century.
One of those other composers is Francisco de Peraza (1564-1598, making him about a generation younger than Victoria and two generations the junior of Morales). This program includes two short organ tientos of Morales, played by Jeffri Sanders; the music sounds a bit exotic, suggesting at least a faint Middle Eastern influence (don’t forget the centuries-long Moorish domination of Spain, which had ended less than a century before this music was written). As for the Victoria Mass, it includes a great deal of lovely, smoothly flowing polyphony, as well as some segments of plainchant—including the famous Dies Irae, the “Day of Wrath” motif that would later find its way into several Romantic-era works, including nearly every major composition of Rachmaninov.
The Musica Sonora performances under the direction of Christina Jarvis are quite fine; I only wish that the group had been able to include program notes, rather than just track listings, in its four-page CD booklet. I assume the disc is available only at Musica Sonora concerts and through its members and director; you’ll find contact information at the group’s Web site.
Classical Music,
October 31st 2008 at 8:53 —
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AZPM has special coverage of the election Tuesday night, on both radio and TV.
![Vote2008][vote2008-minibar]
Join us on KUAZ beginning at 5 p.m. for coverage throughout the evening. At 10:00 p.m., Arizona Illustrated on Channel 6 will have live coverage of the local races.
You can also get real-time election results on our Vote2008 election page. Until then, you can visit that page and catch up on the races, watch debates, find your polling place, read the propositions, etc.
Don't forget to vote!
News,
October 30th 2008 at 11:00 —
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