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By Mindy Jones
ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

Friday September 28, 2001

For all you Arizona history super-freaks, an exhibit at the Arizona Historical Society's collection showing the changing face of Arizona's workforce from 1928 to 1968 will be on display. The showing will be called "At work in Arizona: the photographs of E.D. Newcomer", and it can be seen today through next April. For more information, call 628-5774.


Calling all tanners! You probably know this already, but over-exposure to the sun causes skin cancer. If you happen to be concerned about this, bring your bronzed self to Old Main Room 222 for a free skin cancer screening courtesy of the WellBeing UA Life & Work Connections. They'll be there from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., and no appointment is necessary. Call 621-2493 for more info.


Remember that scary lady that used to live on your street when you were a kid? Well, Jose Cruz Gonzalez does, and he wrote a play about it. Calabasas Street, his play, is the story a young man who believes his next-door neighbor is a witch, and one day has to go fetch a ball in her backyard. The play will be performed in the Directing Studio, Room 116 in the Fine Arts Building. Tickets are $2, and you can call 621-1162 or log onto arts.Arizona.edu for more information.


It may not be CHiPs, but for those of you who love dramas about the men in blue, check out the Modern Languages Auditorium tonight at 7:30 p.m. for a screening of Wong Kar-Wai's "The Chungking Express." The movie centers around two cops who love fast women almost as much as fast car chases. Danger ensues. Call Charles Scruggs at 621-3527 for the scoop.


If you're getting a little tired of bumping Ludacris and Creed 24-7, come check out a living legend in the jazz annals Sunday night. Trumpeter Winton Marsalis will be bringing the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra to Centennial Hall to shine a little light on the history of jazz, and will be playing standards from legends like Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Louis Armstrong, among others. All you hep cats can get the 411 by visiting or calling the Centennial Hall Box Office, 621-3341. Tickets are priced at $36, $42, and $48.

 
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