Start: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 12:00 am
End: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 11:59 pm
The new aquarium will tell the story of the importance of water to the desert: one freshwater gallery and one saltwater gallery featuring native fish, invertebrates and other aquatic life. Visits to the aquarium are included in the General Admission price, but capacity is limited. Go to www.desertmuseum.org for admission details.
Start: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 12:00 am
End: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 11:59 pm
MON, WED, FRI 3-4:30 PM This 1 1/2 hour class 4weeks at a time all year; will aid in skill techniques for walking, rising from chair, turning in bed, voice, eyes, communication and alertness 3 times a week 1 1/2 hrs each four weeks $125.00
Start: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 9:00 am
End: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 5:00 pm
As respected spirits within the Hopi culture, the katsinam (plural of katsina) are an integral part of this agricultural society. They embody the spirit essences of all things in the natural world—they are the guardians of life. This particular katsina is a contemporary interpretation of Tsitoto, the Tobacco Flower katsina, who appears in a variety of ceremonies on the three northern Arizona mesas. Carved by Hopi artist Gerry Quotskuyva in 2008 for Tohono Chul, it is a superb example of the evolution and advancement of the time-honored artisanship of Hopi katsina carving.
Start: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 9:00 am
End: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 5:00 pm
Through touch, we have the ability to physically interact with our surroundings and intimately discover the range of textures and forms that make up our world. For artists who are blind/visually impaired or deaf/hearing impaired the relationship to touch is often intensified in each work of art, enabling viewers to become active participants in a similar sensory investigation. Tohono Chul is exploring how artworks can engage the many senses by celebrating the artistic achievements of students from the Arizona Schools for the Deaf and the Blind.
Start: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 9:00 am
End: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 5:00 pm
The Tubac Presidio hosts a retrospective exhibition of artwork by the late Tubac artist, Walter Blakelock Wilson (1929-2011). Wilson's portraits, landscapes and architectural imagery have made their way into several museums and over 300 corporate and private collections. His historical paintings feature Native Americans, frontier personalities and dramatic southwest vistas and landscapes. Included with park admission $5 adult, $2 youth 7-13, children free.
Start: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 10:00 am
End: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 11:15 am
Qigong - the Mother of t'ai chi is based on principles of living in harmony with one's inner nature. Delight the senses as we invoke color, sounds, and nature with simple, easy to learn and apply exercises for self wellness. Classes adapted to individuals level of mobiity. All ages and life stages can maintain or regain natural health and wellness. No experience required. Wear comfortable clothing and shoes. Drop ins welcome.
Start: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 11:30 am
End: Fri, Mar 15, 2013 12:30 pm
This is a movement program to improve balance, mobility, relieve pain and increase an overall feeling of well being. We focus on the fundamental principles of this moving meditation for health. Simple movements are designed to be safe, comfortable and fun. Ultimately this practice is for longevity and self contentment. Classes adapted to individuals level of mobility and may be practiced seated. No experience required. Wear comfortable shoes and clothing.
Start: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 12:00 am
End: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 11:59 pm
Local vendors will, as always on 3rd Saturdays, be showing and selling their work and all courtyard shops/galleries will be open. In addition, classes will be offered in various HOLIDAY CRAFTS: gourd art, wet felting, chair caning, spinning, coil basketry and more. FUN for the whole family! LIVE MUSIC from Greenwood, 11-1, then other local musicians, free parking and refreshments. So please come, SHOP LOCAL and enjoy!
Start: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 12:00 am
End: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 11:59 pm
The new aquarium will tell the story of the importance of water to the desert: one freshwater gallery and one saltwater gallery featuring native fish, invertebrates and other aquatic life. Visits to the aquarium are included in the General Admission price, but capacity is limited. Go to www.desertmuseum.org for admission details.
Start: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 8:00 am
End: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 9:30 am
Join Jim Gessaman or Mike Sadatmousavi for an introduction to birdwatching basics and a casual stroll through the grounds of Tucson Audubon's Mason Center. Visit the Mason Center during this time to walk the trail, see the buildings and satisfy your curiosity about this wonderful Tucson Audubon property! The bird walk begins at 8am and takes a little over an hour. Sign up is required. Email volunteer@tucsonaudubon.org
Start: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 9:00 am
End: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 5:00 pm
As respected spirits within the Hopi culture, the katsinam (plural of katsina) are an integral part of this agricultural society. They embody the spirit essences of all things in the natural world—they are the guardians of life. This particular katsina is a contemporary interpretation of Tsitoto, the Tobacco Flower katsina, who appears in a variety of ceremonies on the three northern Arizona mesas. Carved by Hopi artist Gerry Quotskuyva in 2008 for Tohono Chul, it is a superb example of the evolution and advancement of the time-honored artisanship of Hopi katsina carving.
Start: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 9:00 am
End: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 5:00 pm
Through touch, we have the ability to physically interact with our surroundings and intimately discover the range of textures and forms that make up our world. For artists who are blind/visually impaired or deaf/hearing impaired the relationship to touch is often intensified in each work of art, enabling viewers to become active participants in a similar sensory investigation. Tohono Chul is exploring how artworks can engage the many senses by celebrating the artistic achievements of students from the Arizona Schools for the Deaf and the Blind.
Start: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 9:00 am
End: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 5:00 pm
The Tubac Presidio hosts a retrospective exhibition of artwork by the late Tubac artist, Walter Blakelock Wilson (1929-2011). Wilson's portraits, landscapes and architectural imagery have made their way into several museums and over 300 corporate and private collections. His historical paintings feature Native Americans, frontier personalities and dramatic southwest vistas and landscapes. Included with park admission $5 adult, $2 youth 7-13, children free.
Start: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 8:00 pm
End: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 10:00 pm
Come hear Tucson and District Pipe Band for St. Patrick's Day. March 16th at the Fox and Hound between 8-10pm and on March 17th at Old Father Inn between 8-10pm
Start: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 12:00 am
End: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 11:59 pm
The new aquarium will tell the story of the importance of water to the desert: one freshwater gallery and one saltwater gallery featuring native fish, invertebrates and other aquatic life. Visits to the aquarium are included in the General Admission price, but capacity is limited. Go to www.desertmuseum.org for admission details.
Start: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 9:00 am
End: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 5:00 pm
As respected spirits within the Hopi culture, the katsinam (plural of katsina) are an integral part of this agricultural society. They embody the spirit essences of all things in the natural world—they are the guardians of life. This particular katsina is a contemporary interpretation of Tsitoto, the Tobacco Flower katsina, who appears in a variety of ceremonies on the three northern Arizona mesas. Carved by Hopi artist Gerry Quotskuyva in 2008 for Tohono Chul, it is a superb example of the evolution and advancement of the time-honored artisanship of Hopi katsina carving.
Start: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 9:00 am
End: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 5:00 pm
Through touch, we have the ability to physically interact with our surroundings and intimately discover the range of textures and forms that make up our world. For artists who are blind/visually impaired or deaf/hearing impaired the relationship to touch is often intensified in each work of art, enabling viewers to become active participants in a similar sensory investigation. Tohono Chul is exploring how artworks can engage the many senses by celebrating the artistic achievements of students from the Arizona Schools for the Deaf and the Blind.
Start: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 9:00 am
End: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 5:00 pm
The Tubac Presidio hosts a retrospective exhibition of artwork by the late Tubac artist, Walter Blakelock Wilson (1929-2011). Wilson's portraits, landscapes and architectural imagery have made their way into several museums and over 300 corporate and private collections. His historical paintings feature Native Americans, frontier personalities and dramatic southwest vistas and landscapes. Included with park admission $5 adult, $2 youth 7-13, children free.
Start: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 10:45 am
End: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 11:45 am
Teaching New Thought Spirituality for a new way of living. Every Sunday, 10:45 AM Visioning Meditation; 11:00 AM Sunday Celebration Service & Youth Church followed by Refreshments and Socializing. Rev. George Wrigley, Senior Minister.
Start: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 8:00 pm
End: Sun, Mar 17, 2013 10:00 pm
Come hear Tucson and District Pipe Band for St. Patrick's Day. March 16th at the Fox and Hound between 8-10pm and on March 17th at Old Father Inn between 8-10pm
Start: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 12:00 am
End: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 11:59 pm
The new aquarium will tell the story of the importance of water to the desert: one freshwater gallery and one saltwater gallery featuring native fish, invertebrates and other aquatic life. Visits to the aquarium are included in the General Admission price, but capacity is limited. Go to www.desertmuseum.org for admission details.
Start: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 12:00 am
End: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 11:59 pm
MON, WED, FRI 3-4:30 PM This 1 1/2 hour class 4weeks at a time all year; will aid in skill techniques for walking, rising from chair, turning in bed, voice, eyes, communication and alertness 3 times a week 1 1/2 hrs each four weeks $125.00
Start: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 12:00 am
End: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 11:59 pm
The Centerfield Nationals are seeking Host Families for the 2013 summer season. The Centerfield Nationals are collegiate summer baseball team that plays in the Pacific Southwest League of the National Baseball Congress. Every summer our organization brings in college players from all over the United States to play baseball. Our season runs from Memorial Day weekend through the first week in August. We are looking for families that love baseball and would be willing to open their home to a college baseball player this summer. This is a great opportunity especially for families with young children as they will have a mentor for the summer. All that we ask of Host Families is to provide a bed to sleep on for our players. If you are interested in hosting a Nationals player this summer please respond to this ad or call us at (520)440-4487. We look forward to having you and your family as part of our 2013 team!
Start: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 9:00 am
End: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 5:00 pm
As respected spirits within the Hopi culture, the katsinam (plural of katsina) are an integral part of this agricultural society. They embody the spirit essences of all things in the natural world—they are the guardians of life. This particular katsina is a contemporary interpretation of Tsitoto, the Tobacco Flower katsina, who appears in a variety of ceremonies on the three northern Arizona mesas. Carved by Hopi artist Gerry Quotskuyva in 2008 for Tohono Chul, it is a superb example of the evolution and advancement of the time-honored artisanship of Hopi katsina carving.
Start: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 9:00 am
End: Mon, Mar 18, 2013 5:00 pm
Through touch, we have the ability to physically interact with our surroundings and intimately discover the range of textures and forms that make up our world. For artists who are blind/visually impaired or deaf/hearing impaired the relationship to touch is often intensified in each work of art, enabling viewers to become active participants in a similar sensory investigation. Tohono Chul is exploring how artworks can engage the many senses by celebrating the artistic achievements of students from the Arizona Schools for the Deaf and the Blind.
This week’s Oro Valley Council meeting could be interesting, as it appears council members Mike Zinkin and Bill Garner finally got their way o…
Anybody who owns a television, radio, or has access to the Internet has heard of the Miami Heat. We have stamped nicknames upon them such as “…
The country is having an important debate about how much of our personal information the government should collect. The privacy issue is makin…
Q: What causes a laptop’s screen to suddenly have a tiny black spot in the middle of it and is there anything I can do about it? — Thomas
As Oro Valley Safeway Manager Mike Hennings prepares for retirement after 42 years with the company, he says the career is all he’s ever known.
"We have the best location of any educational institution in America. The University ought to make itself famous with a telescope." With those words, part of his long and persistent effort to bring a world-class observatory to the University of Arizona campus, pioneering astronomer Andrew Ellicott Douglass set forth his best argument. Arriving at the UA in 1906 from the Lowell Observatory outside Flagstaff, Douglass sought almost immediately to take advantage of Tucson's dry climate and clear night skies, using his renowned 1910 Halley's Comet observations as proof of the region's unique potential. As he wrote in a 1908 guest editorial in the Arizona Daily Star, "Nothing advertises a climate better than a big telescope." The paper's editors agreed: "The fame of its observatory would be greater than any other institution of like character in the United States. The atmospheric conditions are such as to demand recognition and consideration from the scientific men of all nations," according to a Feb. 6, 1910 editorial. Douglass unsuccessfully lobbied the state Legislature for funds but in 1916 secured a $60,000 donation, at first anonymously from Oracle resident Lavinia Steward, in memory of her late husband Henry B. Steward. Construction on Steward Observatory began that year, and on April 23, 1923, the UA formally dedicated the facility, with its state-of-the art 36-inch reflecting telescope at last making Tucson an astronomer's paradise. "Not only was this the first big donation (to the UA), it was the start of research at the University in a very real way," says Buell Jannuzi, current director of Steward Observatory and head of the astronomy department. From those ambitious beginnings – the Steward telescope was nicknamed the "All-American" because it was the first astronomical telescope built using all American-made products – the observatory and astronomy department have branched out in all directions, to radio, X-ray and ultraviolet astronomy, adaptive optics, space-based telescopes and the renowned Steward Observatory Mirror Laboratory, which constructs gigantic mirrors for the next generation of astronomy, the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope and the Giant Magellan Telescope. "Douglass wanted more than just a major telescope for the University of Arizona; he wanted Steward Observatory to produce discoveries and to share them with the world. I think he would agree that his successors have continued to develop the quality of research we're producing, using technological innovations not as the end points, but as tools to further scientific discovery," Jannuzi says. "Our aspirations are the same as those of Douglass; we are just pursuing them with more modern tools." Built on what was then the far east side of Tucson, Steward Observatory has been overtaken by campus expansion yet remains an iconic fixture of the UA, its white brick and dome now housing the 21-inch Raymond E. White Jr. Reflector telescope, used primarily for undergraduate education and public outreach, which has been a part of the observatory's mission since its dedication. The original 36-inch scope relocated to Kitt Peak in 1963 and remains in use by the Spacewatch Project. Leadership for Steward Observatory has maintained a remarkable continuity, with just seven directors over its 90 years, including Peter A. Strittmatter, who served 37 years as director and led a remarkable period of growth and development. "I think (Douglass) would agree the soul is still there in the observatory, and we're continuing the mission he set out for us," Jannuzi says, reflecting on what drew him to astronomy in the first place. "It's fun, like philosophers or theologians do, to think about the big questions. Often times we're working on some small part of a research project, but it's all part of a larger effort to understand the universe and how we relate to it."
PHOENIX -- Voters who have seen how medical marijuana works in Arizona may get a chance to extend the ability to use the drug to all other adults.
At what point can we safely say that a filmmaker has cemented himself as a true mover and shaker in the industry? Probably around the time when multi -billion dollar production companies begin trading ownership of entire franchises like two boys swapping baseball cards, in order to obtain rights to co-produce his work. This is where Christopher Nolan’s career has taken him. Once it became clear that Nolan’s newest cerebral project, Interstellar, would be produced by Paramount rather than Warner Bros., the latter felt it best to place a few of its cards on the table in order to obtain a piece of Nolan the cash cow. Paramount named its price of allowing Warner Bros. to co-produce the upcoming film, and it was exclusive rights to produce a sequel to 2009’s Friday the 13th, as well as a new Southpark film.
The sporting world, in its very nature, harbors an inherent athletic Darwinism. The strong continually trump the weaker opponents, until only two competitors remain. However, this inborn trait of competition becomes complicated, and is often compromised in the sport of boxing. It is a sport in which weight classes and multiple league promotions become barriers that rob fans of dream matchups. Given this complicated boxing climate, it often becomes difficult for polarizing figures of the sport to cement their legacy as all time greats unless they take enormous risks by fighting out of their normal weight class. And amongst current pugilists, there are none more polarizing than the eccentric Floyd “Money” Mayweather.
VA CORE, the bipartisan legislation introduced by U.S. Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, D-Ariz., to help tackle the substantial claims backlog at the Department of Veterans Affairs, today passed the House of Representatives as an amendment to HR 1960, the Department of Defense reauthorization bill. The passage is Kirkpatrick’s first legislative victory for veterans during the 113th Congress, building on her veterans-related accomplishments from the 111th Congress. She is Ranking Member of the House Veterans’ Affairs Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.
Northwest Tucson Spotlight Youth Productions is continuing its tradition of having nearly 50 actors put on a summer play. This year’s performance is Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast”.
Common Core is the current administration’s attempt to federalize K-12 education with a one size fits all curriculum. The takeover is occurring in violation of the Constitution and federal law. It is essentially the nationalization of compulsory education.
A 5-year-old girl who set up a lemonade stand across the street from the Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kan., on Friday raised more than $10,000 in the name of peace.
By now, most folks have heard the term “xeriscape.” Xeriscape doesn’t mean a dry, barren landscape, it refers to a landscape that requires minimal additional water, and is the best way to landscape in our dry climate.