Local Tucson news, United States of America
News Alert: In Tucson Man Passed Away due to his Car crashed with Traffic Pole
Tucson: On Christmas Eve- December, 24, Man died on the spot because of a serious car crash in 10 frontage roads. According to the Police statement: He is identified as Jesus Francisco and ages 47, he was over-speeding, and he was not wearing a seat belt due to careless driving he got hit with traffic pole, and he died on the spot.
News Alert: In Tucson Man Passed Away due to his Car crashed with Traffic Pole
Tucson — In the area, a towing crew pulls an anti-submarine Navy P-3 aircraft to the "flush field" to remove its fuel. Instead they hook up to another F-18 and take it to the "wash table" for maybe the last thorough cleaning it ever gets.
Furthermore, a small army of specialization painters ' fans spray protective coating on rows upon rows of mothballed C-130 transport planes along a dirt lot, about a mile away.
Introduction to a regular Thursday morning at the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Unit, the most popular 4-square-mile parking lot in Tucson with nearly $34 billion in military power.
The earlier version of this article mistakenly said that a power outage caused the hit and run crash. A separate incident from the crash was the hit and run crash that caused a power outage. About the same time, and close to each other, the crashes happened.
Friday night, police reported, a car crash caused a power failure on the south side of Tucson. A vehicle hit a pole on East Irvington Road and South Mountain Avenue, resulting in a power outage affecting the intersection between Irvington Road and South Park Avenue and the surrounding area.
Policemen aimed traffic with traffic backed up at the Irvington Road and Park Avenue intersection. Tucson police spokesman Sgt. Pete Dugan said a separate collision involving a truck and a pedestrian occurred on East Irvington Road, near South Park Avenue. The crash caused injuries that were "life-threatening."
According to police, Irvington Road was closed to traffic between Park Avenue and Campbell Avenue. The incident is still being investigated by police. No additional details were released.
Operating rooms and emergency vehicles are no longer the only places in Tucson to find intravenous hookups. Instead, think of IV lounges with reclining chairs or even a refurbished truck for your next fluid infusion.
Part of a trend followed by Hollywood stars who allegedly spend hundreds per hanging bag, people here are starting to use IV treatments— also known as infusions— for hangovers, to boost athletic performance, or to enhance their teint. So many previous night's cocktails?
The $150 bag is marketed as a way to help the body recover, with a liver "boost" and nausea and pain medicines
In the blazing sun, long walk? Quickly restore the electrolytes. Beauty boost? Get the vitamins and minerals that flow.
In emergency rooms and hospital beds, IVs have long been used to treat malnutrition, or to fight infection or cancer by injecting the treatment right into the blood. It's a way to help a person with severe pain and blood pressure that is dangerously low.
And yet now, as a business venture, IVs are becoming more common. That raises questions as to whether the service offered is worth the squeeze, both on the needle and on the pocket.
TUCSON — Tucson Authorities are investigating and running a fatal hit on the southside of Tucson on Friday, Nov. 1.
Authorities reporting a severe injury hit and run crash involving a vehicle and a pedestrian, officers from Operations Division South responded to the area of east Irvington Road and south Campbell Avenue.
Tucson Fire had been on the scene and took Mark Anthony Valenzuela, 59, to the Medical Center at Banner University, where he passed away from his wounds. Investigators with the Tucson Police Traffic Division found that when he was hit, the pedestrian was not in a crosswalk and crossed Irvington Road from south to north.
Once it struck the pedestrian, the car involved was westbound on Irvington Road. The male driver did not stop after reaching the pedestrian and westbound, according to witnesses.
Witnesses reported the vehicle as a big, dark-colored, elevated pickup truck with off-road tires. At the scene, pieces of the metallic navy-blue vehicle are found. The parts of a Nissan Titan Pickup Truck are believed to belong.