fbpx

World Trade Center

Don Bolles, memorial, Wesley Bolin Plaza, journalists, SPJ, House Government Committee, assassinated reporter, organized crime, Senate, USS Arizona, USS Missouri, car bomb, Clarendon Hotel, Tim Eigo, Arizona Attorney Magazine, The Arizona Republic, Arizona Daily Star,
Jan 25, 2023

House committee authorizes placement of memorial to slain journalist Bolles

State lawmakers took the first steps Wednesday to honoring assassinated reporter Don Bolles in the same way Arizona honors various veterans, pioneer women, the Ten Commandments and Jesuit missionary Father Kino. Without dissent the House Government Committee authorized placement of a memorial to The Arizona Republic investigative reporter in Wesley Bolin Plaza.

Feb 21, 2013

Rep. Allen proposes measures to prevent devastating Capitol attack

Calling the Capitol a soft target for terrorist threats that could decapitate the state and destabilize the nation, Republican Rep. John Allen of Scottsdale is pitching a plan to install a full vehicle barrier around the Capitol complex.

Sep 12, 2011

Three with Arizona ties remembered in Pentagon 9/11 memorial

Each of the 184 cantilevered stone-and-steel benches, arcing above a pool of running water benches at the national 9/11 memorial is inscribed with the name of a victim of the Pentagon attack, including three with Arizona ties: Allen P. Boyle, David M. Scales and David W. Laychak.

Sep 6, 2011

Sept. 11 remembrance to be held at Arizona Capitol

A remembrance ceremony on the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks will be held Sunday evening outside the State Capitol in Phoenix.

May 31, 2011

Memorial to 9/11 preaches vengeance and tolerance

Matthew Salenger etched 54 phrases in a circular piece of steel, building Arizona's Sept. 11 memorial one story at a time. He wanted everyone's story to be told. Salenger thought that all of those thoughts could coexist peacefully on a public memorial. He was wrong.

Apr 25, 2011

Kavanagh finally wins crusade to significantly alter 9/11 monument

Five years after it became a political football in a gubernatorial race and four years after it was initially altered, the state’s Sept. 11 monument was once again the target of a Republican lawmaker with a personal connection to the terrorist attacks.

Subscribe

Get our free e-alerts & breaking news notifications!

You don't have credit card details available. You will be redirected to update payment method page. Click OK to continue.