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The Coliseum most recently hosted Sam Smith on his In The Lonely Hour Tour in the summer of 2015. The Phoenix Suns would also return to the Veterans Memorial Coliseum for a pre-season scrimmage on October 3, 2015, as a part of their "We Are PHX" movement, as well as unveiled signs commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Coliseum's existence ...
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It is currently used yearly to host the Arizona State Fair and the Maricopa County Fair, as well as for other events. The Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum, an arena at the fairgrounds, hosted the Phoenix Suns of the National Basketball Association from 1968 to 1992. In 1992, the team moved to what is known today as Footprint Center
Erie Veterans Memorial Stadium: 15,600 unknown Highmark Amphitheatre 5,000 1949 Highmark Events Center: 3,750 June 17, 1990 The Pavilion at Star Lake: Burgettstown: 23,000 Rhode Island; September 1925 Brown Stadium: Providence: 20,000 January 27, 1950 Veterans Memorial Auditorium: 1,931 June 12, 1915 Strand Ballroom & Theatre: 1,980 1928
US Supreme Court upholds Arizona rights to Colorado River water. [50] 1964 Phoenix Municipal Stadium opens. Barry Goldwater loses the election for President of the United States. 1965 Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum opens. East wing of the Phoenix Art Museum opens, resulting in almost tripling the museum's space. [36]
Memorial Coliseum (or Veterans Memorial Coliseum in some cases) may refer to: Alexander Memorial Coliseum, Atlanta; Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, Fort Wayne, Indiana; Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Phoenix, Arizona; XL Center Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Hartford, Connecticut; Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Jacksonville, Florida
In 1965, the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum opened on the grounds of the Arizona State Fair, west of downtown, and in 1968, the city was surprisingly awarded the Phoenix Suns NBA franchise, [96] [97] which played its home games at the Coliseum until 1992. [98]
Paul Coze (born Paul Jean Coze-Dabija, 29 July 1903 in Beirut, Ottoman Empire, died 2 December 1974 Phoenix, Arizona) was a French/Serbian-American anthropologist, artist, and writer, most notable as a French authority on Native Americans, and for his public art in the 1960s.