Close
Welcome!
Login|Signup
Login|My Dashboard|Register
Logout|My Dashboard
May 18, 2013
Contact | About | Subscribe | Advertise | Work for The Explorer | E-Edition | Newsletter Signup
Clear
66°
Clear
Googleplus Facebook Twitter Mobile Version Facebook
  • HOME
    • CONTACT
    • ADVERTISE WITH US
    • ABOUT THE EXPLORER
    • SUBSCRIBE
  • NEWS
    • TODAY'S HEADLINES
    • ORO VALLEY
    • MARANA
    • ANNOUNCEMENTS
    • SUBMIT NEWS

    Top Story

    • (May 18) Today's Top Headlines - Pennsylvania woman tries to poison families with burritos

      Police say an eastern Pennsylvania woman tried to poison her husband and daughter with burritos laced with prescription medicine.

      • Updated: 7:52 am
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • (May 18) Today's Top Headlines - Powerball soars to more than $600 million

    • (May 18) Today's Top Headlines - North Korea fires short-range missiles

    • Teacher charged with sexual misconduct with a student was investigated in March

    • Marana resident charged with second degree murder

  • BUSINESS
    • LOCAL BUSINESS NEWS
    • STOCK MARKET
    • SUBMIT RELEASE

    Top Story

    • The Parish has relaxed atmosphere with southern food and drinks

      One of only a couple gastropubs on the Northwest side of Tucson, The Parish, has made its mark by serving a variety of southern dishes, beers …

      • Updated: May 15
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Tanner Custom Leather makes hand-tooled western products

    • The Joint works to offer affordable chiropractic care

    • Hilton Tucson El Conquistador announces its summer program

    • May is Small Business Month: Do You Have What it Takes to Start Your Own Business?

  • SPORTS
    • PREP SPORTS
    • UA WILDCATS
    • TUCSON PADRES

    Top Story

    • Padres lose to Iowa 1-0

      Tucson Padres Game Summary

      • posted: May 17
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • IRHS goes to state

    • Sports Perspective: A heated affair

    • Macdonald wins big in track championships

    • Ironwood Ridge softball heads to state championships

  • FEATURES
    • NORTHWEST CHATTER
    • AGING WELL
    • REAL ESTATE
    • POLICE & CRIME

    Top Story

    • Marana resident charged with second degree murder

      On May 16, 2013 at 11:14 p.m., officers from the Marana Police Department responded to a residence located in the 8900 block of N. Palm Brook …

      • Updated: Yesterday
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Great Things to do with Dad on Father’s Day

    • Police Beat -- Week of May 13

    • Upgrading Your Home’s Outdoor Spaces Can Lower Energy Bills

    • Make Your Next Family Vacation Truly Meaningful

  • THINGS TO DO
    • CALENDAR OF EVENTS
    • MOVIE REVIEWS
    • RESTAURANT REVIEWS
    • SUBMIT A REVIEW

    Top Story

    • Saturday Puzzles 5-18-13

      • posted: May 18
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Authors from across the U.S. coming to Pima Writers' Workshop

    • Winery to host free wine tasting at Fry's in Oro Valley on Friday

    • Book Nook: ‘Flicker’ is a great read for both adults or teens

    • Characters take a backseat in the overblown release ‘The Great Gatsby’

  • OPINION
    • COLUMNS
    • LETTERS TO EDITOR
    • SUBMIT A LETTER

    Top Story

    • Respect your servers

      Several months back, I wrote an editorial on bad customer service, and the trials and tribulations we go through with automated services, a la…

      • posted: May 15
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Guest Column: Be realistic in crediting schools like BASIS

    • Oro Valley Town Talk: The Oro Valley Aquatic Center: Another success story

    • What can we really do (Part 2)

    • Guest Column: Eric Holder’s problematic reasoning

  • MARKETPLACE
    • CLASSIFIEDS
    • SHOP CATALINA
    • SHOP ORO VALLEY
    • SHOP MARANA

    Most Recent

    • Third cash mob planned

      The third Oro Valley Cash Mob is scheduled for this week, as residents are encouraged to join the town in shopping at a destination that will …

      • Updated: May 15
      • Comments (0)
    • Koko FitClub offers summer camp for teens

    • Kyger Orthodontics: Invisalign Teen

    • Catalina Community Services: Improving lives. Inspiring futures.

    • Mother's Day at Sunny Side Up Cafe

  • BLOGS
    • THE DOCTOR IS IN
    • GADGET MAGNET
    • WHAT'S UP UA
    • MUSIC LANDSCAPE
    • PET NEWS
    • PRIME TIME REVIEW
    • SUCH THE SPOT

    Most Recent

    • Pet News - Adore-a-Bull Adoption Party

      Thanks to a generous grant from PetSmart Charities, we’ll be having loads of pit bull-focused fun at our Adore-a-Bull Adoption Party! All bull…

      • posted: May 17
      • Comments (0)
    • Gadget Magnet - Data Doctors: Can I legally copy my DVDs to use on other devices?

    • Such the Spot - A Mother's Day Surprise

    • Pet News - An open letter from Pima Animal Care Center about saving animals

    • Such the Spot - 5 family-friendly activities in Tucson

  • VIDEO
    • BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT

    Most Recent

    • Country Thunder, Day 3: Brice and Keith steal the show

      Toby Keith and Lee Brice will be a tough act to follow today, the final day of Country Thunder in Florence.

      • Updated: May 02
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Country Thunder: Day 2 wrap-up: Eric Church shines

    • Country Thunder starts out with a bang

    • Cadets attend academy

    • Pilates instructor helps her clients improve strength

  • SPECIAL SECTIONS
    • KIDS CAMP
    • CATALINA STATE PARK
    • HEALTH & WELLNESS
    • BEST OF THE NW
    • ACTIVE LIVING
    • HOME & GARDEN
    • AUTOMOTIVE
    • WOMEN IN BUSINESS
    • SUMMER GETAWAYS
    • DISCOVER THE NW

    Most Recent

    • Catalina State Park: Still a community treasure after 30 years

      Its been 30 years since Catalina State Parks opened in the Coronado National Forest north of Oro Valley.

      • Updated: April 17
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Sonoran Glass School offers warm and flame workshops

    • Connect with your children outdoors this summer

    • Championship Sports offers fun

    • El Conquistador serves up tennis camp

  • JOBS
  • Home
Search
Advanced Search Options
Date Options
Sort Options
Extended Filters








Displaying results 1 - 25 of 271 for green fields. Subscribe to this search

  1. article A Better Diet Can Improve Your Looks

    Tuesday, May 14, 2013 10:00 pm

    (StatePoint) There may be some credence to the old saying that “beauty comes from within.” Scientific research shows that the appearance of your largest, most visible organ -- your skin -- can be directly affected by the vitamins, nutrients and minerals you feed your body.

    1 image

  2. article Warm-weather entertaining made easy with expert tips and recipes

    Wednesday, May 1, 2013 10:00 pm

    (BPT) - Warmer temperatures often mean a busier social calendar. So whether you’re planning a meal to enjoy al fresco, or whipping up a sweet treat for a neighborhood block party, it’s a great time of year to experiment in the kitchen.

    1 image

  3. pdf Saturday Crossword 4-20-13

    Saturday, April 20, 2013 12:00 am

  4. article Baby boomers and driving vision - maintaining safety and independence

    Thursday, April 4, 2013 10:00 pm

    (BPT) - Baby boomers, those born between 1946 and 1964, are aging differently than any generation in U.S. history. Today, older Americans remain more active later in life, working longer and engaging in hobbies and recreational activities.

    1 image

  5. article Top Five Tips To Save Your Vision: EyeCare America Encourages Prevention And Early Detection

    Thursday, April 4, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—Many people take their vision for granted, but what if you started to lose your peripheral vision, developed a black spot in the center of your visual field, or even went blind altogether? For almost 4 million American seniors living with serious vision loss or blindness, these and other vision challenges can make it difficult to enjoy life’s simple pleasures such as reading, playing cards or watching grandchildren grow. Vision loss can also make it difficult to live independently, work or drive.

    1 image

  6. article The evolution of accounting: new careers in the language of business

    Tuesday, March 26, 2013 10:00 pm

    (BPT) - Numbers span all languages and cultures, creating what is known as the language of business: accounting. The earliest accounting records date back thousands of years to the use of an abacus, a rudimentary counting tool. As the workplace has progressed, so has the role of the accounting professional. This has been particularly evident in recent years; the integration of technology in accounting has created many specializations and job opportunities within the field – from forensic accounting to health care IT auditors.

    1 image

  7. article What's Up UA? - A Telescope at the Bottom of the World

    Saturday, March 16, 2013 10:35 am

    The brilliantly colored, sweeping nebulae featured on magazine covers and posters lining museum exhibits are the birthplaces and cradles of the stars in our galaxy.

    Out of the blackness of space and swirling gasses and debris, these nebulae take form, coalescing into columns and structures that remind us of Earthly shapes: here a horsehead, there a dragon.

    But how do so-called star-forming nebulae themselves form? It's is a question little understood and much debated by astronomers, and it's the topic of resaerch by the University of Arizona's Craig Kulesa and Chris Walker.

    Their quest takes them to one of the most remote and coldest locations on Earth: a barren snow-covered plateau 600 miles from the nearest human settlement, where a little telescope on a tabletop in an Antarctic ice field on the Southern end of the Earth may give them the answer.

    "We see all these clouds of dust and gas, but no one's ever seen one form. They're just there. Where did they come from? And what happens to them?" Kulesa asked. "Every star in the sky, including our sun, was formed in these clouds."

    Stars spend their lives fusing light elements such as hydrogen into heavier elements such as helium, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen – elements needed for life. At the end of their lives, stars return much of that enriched material back into interstellar space, where it eventually becomes new clouds and fuels the next generation of stars.

    Star-forming nebulae such as Orion and Horsehead contain mostly molecular hydrogen, which is very difficult to observe in cold interstellar clouds.

    "We want to actually see the clouds in the process of being formed. We want to see their building blocks," Kulesa said. "So instead of looking at carbon in molecular form, we're going to build radio receivers that will show us carbon in its atomic and ionized forms."

    Carbon atoms and ions that have not yet bound to any other atoms to form molecules, such as carbon monoxide, likely represent the early stages before formation of a dark nebular cloud, Kulesa said.

    "In order to look at atomic and ionized carbon, we have to build radio receivers that work at very, very high frequencies, terahertz frequencies," Kulesa said. "This light is basically 1,000 times higher frequency than your mobile phone, but 1,000 times lower frequency than the light you see with your eyes."

    Kulesa's tiny telescope is the first ever with radio receivers tuned to such a high frequency that they are able to detect atomic and ionized carbon in space, sited at a unique place on Earth where these observations can be done routinely.

    "No one could see this until now," Kulesa said. "It turns out that even a telescope the size of a table can do stuff no one's ever done before."

    With a touch of irony, Kulesa and his teammates dubbed their telescope, which functions at -40 degrees Fahrenheit and colder, HEAT: the High-Elevation-Antarctic-Terahertz telescope. The tabletop scope sits on a platform, shielded from the elements by a large blue cover that looks rather like a mailbox.

    "The telescope looks like the farthest outreach of the U.S. postal service," Kulesa joked, gazing fondly upon a photo of the observatory setup. "We visit it once a year. We're out in the deep field for a week getting it ready to go for another year, and when we wave goodbye, no human will see it again until the next year. It has to run all by itself."

    This is a much easier problem to address, thanks to an international collaboration with researchers Michael Ashley and John Storey at the University of New South Wales in Australia, who designed and constructed the Plateau Observatory, or PLATO, which provides HEAT with power and communications.

    "It's a very green experiment," Kulesa said. "Right now, we're operating totally off of solar power." The entire HEAT telescope, including a cryocooler that chills the terahertz detectors to a scant 50 degrees above absolute zero, sips only 160 watts of power.

    With batteries charged by solar panels in summer, diesel generators in winter, and using satellite modems for communications controlled by a computer using the same type of processor as an iPhone, the telescope must operate in frozen solitude for an entire year, despite winter temperatures that will fall below -100 degrees Fahrenheit.

    "Choosing embedded mobile phone technology for computers turned out to be the right thing because it takes less power; it's a lot simpler, smaller and lighter," Kulesa said. "It's exactly what you need to be able to run an experiment like this."

    Kulesa and his team communicate with the telescope remotely via satellite, sending it new orders and instructions throughout the year, and downloading new data. They also keep a watchful eye on their experiment through a webcam, which sends image updates from roughly 9,000 miles away roughly every hour.

    Why Antarctica, though?

    Even the smallest amount of water vapor in Earth's atmosphere absorbs terahertz-frequency light from space before it reaches a telescope on Earth. 

    "If you take all the water molecules above your head and distill them into a liquid ocean, how deep would that ocean be?" Kulesa asked. From Tucson, Kulesa said, it's about 5-10 millimeters deep in winter and up to 40 millimeters deep during monsoon season in summer. At the telescope site in Antarctica, a place called Ridge A, atmospheric water vapor is frequently one-tenth of a millimeter or less.

    "The summit of the Antarctic plateau is essentially a desert like Arizona, but much colder, higher and drier. The exceptional dryness allows us to perform difficult observations routinely that can't be done anywhere else on Earth."

    Once a year, the team visits the telescope to replace parts and make adjustments or repairs. Working in -40 degree Fahrenheit summer weather at a pressure altitude of 15,000 feet is not exactly a walk in the park, Kulesa said.

    "No matter how you try to avoid it, sometimes you have to work on something that has small parts, but at the same time, you're also wearing giant insulated gloves," Kulesa said. "So you have to alternate working on something for about 15 seconds with gloves off, then put the gloves back on and try to warm up," he said. At Ridge A, a laptop computer typically stops working within 10 minutes of being exposed to the elements.

    Despite the difficulties of experimental setup, Kulesa said: "The Ridge A site was selected from satellite measurements that said it would be essentially the best place to put an astronomical observatory on the entire planet. And it appears to be holding true: It's the driest, coldest and one of the highest and calmest places on Earth. It's about as close to space-like conditions as you can get and still have your feet on the ground."

    Close to space is what you need if you're trying to understand the origins of the interstellar machinery that makes the elements of the universe.

    "This life cycle of matter in our galaxy is really our own story," Kulesa said. Stars make all the elements we are made out of, he said: "This cycle sculpts every star, every galaxy in the universe, and we owe our human existence to it. So it's worth trying to figure out how it works."

     

    1 image

  8. pdf Saturday Crossword 3-2-13

    Saturday, March 2, 2013 12:00 am

  9. article The Guide

    Wednesday, February 6, 2013 4:00 am

    MOVIES

  10. article What's Up UA? - UA Institute to Explore Link Between Physical Environment, Health

    Saturday, February 2, 2013 1:20 pm

    A new interdisciplinary institute in development at the University of Arizona will explore the connection between human health and well-being and the physical environment.

    The Institute for Place and Wellbeing – a joint venture of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine in the UA College of Medicine; the UA College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture; and the UA Institute of the Environment – will engage in research to measure the effects of the built and green environment on human health, emotions and spirituality, while training professionals in the health-care and architecture fields to consider the place and well-being connection in their work.

    The institute will be led by Dr. Esther Sternberg, who joined the UA in the fall as director of research for the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine, and Eve Edelstein, a neuroscientist and architect who has joined the UA College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture as an associate professor.

    Edelstein is teaching a new course at the UA this semester, "Neuro-Architecture: Brains, Bodies and the Biosphere," designed to introduce students from all majors and professional backgrounds to the type of work the institute will do.

    Quantifying human responses to environment

    Ample evidence exists to suggest that one's physical environment can impact his or her health and well-being. The connection has been studied seriously for more than 20 years, since landmark research in 1984 found that patients recovering from gall bladder surgery healed on average one day sooner when their hospital rooms had a view of a grove of trees as opposed to a view of a brick wall.

    Studies have since examined how physical space and building design elements – like windows, lighting and navigability – can impact people's stress levels and health.

    Most of the data is qualitative, based on feelings reported by individuals, and much of the work has focused on hospital settings, where health of the building's residents is the primary concern.

    The Institute for Place and Wellbeing will focus on getting more quantitative measures of human responses to environment – collecting data using tools like heart rate monitors, EEG, biosensors and virtual reality models – and applying that data in a variety of design settings, such as offices, schools and residential buildings, in addition to hospitals.

    The institute's research plan grows out of Sternberg's previously published quantitative research on the effects of office space on the brain's stress response.

    "The concept is to develop a toolbox of noninvasive, sensitive, quantitative methods to measure people's emotional, physiological, immune behavioral and health responses to the physical environment, whether it’s the green environment or the built environment," said Sternberg, who is world-renowned for her discoveries in the science of mind-body interaction. "In order to understand how the physical environment affects health, you also have to understand how the physical environment affects emotions, which in turn affect health."

    Sternberg, whose work has resulted in several publications, including the book "Healing Spaces: The Science of Place and Wellbeing," and a PBS special, "The Science of Healing: Understanding the Mind Body Connection," hopes to see her research taken to the next level at the UA.

    "We need the evidence. We need the ammunition to show that, in fact, changes in the built environment do reduce stress and improve health and healing and emotional well-being as well," she said.

    "This is a natural next step for the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine," said Dr. Victoria Maizes, executive director of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine. "We have long taught that environment matters to health. This ranges from the invisible environmental chemicals we are exposed to from building materials to the beautiful vistas of the mountains we glimpse from our windows. We are delighted to collaborate with the College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture to create this new institute in which we will explore the mechanisms by which health is impacted."

    Advancing the design professions

    Research by the Institute for Place and Wellbeing has the potential to transform the fields of architecture, landscape architecture and urban planning, said Jan Cervelli, dean of the UA College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture, or CAPLA.

    The one-credit neuro-architecture course offered by CAPLA this semester is just the tip of the iceberg of the college’s planned curriculum around place and well-being, which is expected to eventually include a certificate, master's degree and even a doctoral program, Cervelli said.

    "One of the objectives of the certificate program will be to recruit not just design professionals, but health professionals," she said. "If we can transform the thinking of CEOs of hospital corporations and presidents of hospitals and show them that this is important for their operations and success, it can serve both fields."

    Designing spaces with human responses in mind is not only a healthy decision, but a financially sound one, Cervelli said. Anecdotal evidence suggests, for example, that employees who work in offices with ample windows and natural light are more productive and take fewer sick days, thus saving the company money.

    The institute’s research will make it easier to quantify return on investment, Cervelli said.

    "It's transformational to the professions. In today's world of built environment, being able to have value added to your professions and being able to bring something that’s this transformative to the environment is huge," she said.

    Edelstein, who has for years worked with Sternberg through the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture, said that as design students learn about the connection between place and well-being, they eventually will be able to test their own design concepts in the UA's AZ-LIVE virtual reality lab, where they can isolate distinct design elements and human responses to them.

    "Using technology, we can start to pull apart the elements of the built environment and correlate them with elements of human responses, and we've not been able to do that before," she said. "With AZ-LIVE, we can mock up and model different environments before the first brick is laid."

    Edelstein and Sternberg said the goal is for the Institute for Place and Wellbeing to serve as a resource for researchers and design practitioners across campus, across institutions and across the globe.

    "This is unique, to create an institute with the goal to educate, inform, develop curricula on place and well-being and at the same time to do research and gather the data that’s needed to implement these principles into practice," Sternberg said. "It's unique, and it’s very exciting."

     

    1 image

  11. article Kino Stadium to Host Arizona Diamondbacks vs. San Diego Padres on March 17

    Thursday, January 31, 2013 9:27 am

    The Tucson Padres and the Pima County Sports & Tourism Authority have announced the Arizona Diamondbacks and San Diego Padres will play a split-squad Spring Training game at Kino Stadium on Sunday, March 17 at 1:05 pm. The game pairs the Tucson Padres Major League affiliate against the Major League team closest to Tucson. Both teams have a second Spring Training game that day in the Phoenix area.

  12. article Third Age - Let’s face it - we’re lookin’ good!

    Friday, January 25, 2013 2:29 pm

    I hit the gym at the crack of dawn Saturday. I cranked up the bike trainer to get my heart rate up. And there to expedite that on the TV screen was, Cindy Crawford having her chin held high by some handsome guy named Jean-Louis Sebagh. Turns out he’s a “cosmetic chemist.” Who knew there was such a thing. There was no sound, but I’m a quick study and after several Crawford poses titled “Cindy Crawford 45” and shots of this Sebagh guy harvesting a special melon, then holding up a test tube with melon liquid that Cindy smears on her face, I’m convinced that this is the only way to age properly.

    1 image

  13. article Dodgers to take on Cubs at Kino Stadium March 21

    Monday, January 21, 2013 11:11 am

    The Los Angeles Dodgers will return to Kino Stadium on March 21 to play the Chicago Cubs in a spring training game to benefit the Christina-Taylor Green Memorial Foundation.

    1 image

  14. article Arizona Distance Classic partners with Christina-Taylor Green Foundation

    Wednesday, January 16, 2013 4:00 am

    The Arizona Distance Classic, planned in Oro Valley this March, is aiming to do more than just get people fit. With the announcement of a new partnership, the Arizona Distance Classic has teamed up with a local elementary school to raise funds for the Christina-Taylor Green Memorial Foundation.

    2 images

  15. article Sports Perspective: NFL- And then there were four

    Tuesday, January 15, 2013 5:46 pm

    Only four teams remain. After an action packed divisional round, the Baltimore Ravens, San Francisco 49ers, Atlanta Falcons, and New England Patriots are the only teams who still have a chance at winning the Super Bowl. From a double-overtime win to nearly blowing a 20-point lead, each of these teams were able to find a way to win with their backs against the wall. 

    1 image

  16. article The guide

    Wednesday, January 9, 2013 4:00 am

    MOVIES

  17. article 4th Annual Griffin Gallop 5K road race and One Mile Fun Run

    Tuesday, January 8, 2013 2:05 pm

    Green Fields Country Day School is proud to announce the 4th annual Griffin Gallop 5K Road Race and One Mile Fun Run. The annual event will take place starting at the Green Fields Country Day School, 6000 Camino de la Tierra, on Sunday, January 27, 2013.

  18. article Lego time - Young robotics' team works well with support from local seniors

    Saturday, January 5, 2013 4:00 am

    With some hard work and determination, one local fourth grader along with his friends and some of the residents at a local retirement community, formed a LEGO Robotics team.

    1 image

  19. article Sports Perspective: NFL Playoffs: A look back and ahead

    Wednesday, January 2, 2013 4:00 am

    As the final whistle was blown in Washington D.C Sunday night, the NFL regular-season concluded and the post-season began. After 17 grueling weeks of football, 12 teams prevailed and gave themselves a chance to win the Super Bowl. 

    1 image

  20. article The Guide

    Wednesday, January 2, 2013 4:00 am

    MOVIES

  21. article NFL Playoff Picture

    Wednesday, December 12, 2012 4:00 am

    As Week 14 of the NFL season concludes and with the crucial final three games of the regular season ahead of us, the playoff picture is becoming clearer by the day. 

    1 image

  22. article Making Wedding Memories Where History Was Made

    Monday, November 26, 2012 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—As more and more young (and old) couples seek novel wedding sites, there’s been a significant increase in making wedding memories where America’s history was made. And one such special place is Valley Forge, in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania…Philadelphia’s biggest and most affluent bedroom.

    1 image

  23. article Score big with these game day entertaining tips

    Sunday, November 18, 2012 11:00 pm

    (BPT) - With football and basketball season in full swing, it’s the perfect time to invite family and friends over to root on the home team. Hosting a crowd-pleasing party can be simple with a little preparation. Score big with these simple game day entertaining tips.

    1 image

  24. article Actors turn in strong performances, but point missed in “Lombardi”

    Wednesday, October 31, 2012 4:00 am

    It is tough to come away from a play thinking the acting was fantastic, but the direction and script were somewhat of a mystery. The mystery being the point of the play in general.

    1 image

  25. article Sports Perspective: NFL refs are back

    Wednesday, October 3, 2012 4:00 am

    After three grueling weeks of replacement official football, the NFL is back on track as they have come to terms with the regular officials.

    1 image

Next »

Watch Now

youtube

youtube NdNLqb9I0yw

Sunshine School in Oro Valley read more

Sunshine School 9000 N. Oracle Road Tucson, AZ 85704, Suite 204 (520)742-6874 www.sunshineschooltucson.org/

Sunshine School in Oro Valley

Sunshine School 9000 N. Oracle Road Tucson, AZ 85704, Suite 204 (520)742-6874 www.sunshineschoolt...

Northwest Chatter

  • Oro Valley Town Talk: The Oro Valley Aquatic Center: Another success story

    Greg Caton Special to The Explorer

    • icon Updated: May 15
  • Guest Column: Be realistic in crediting schools like BASIS

    Dave Safier Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: May 15
  • Respect your servers

    Thelma Grimes, The Explorer

    • icon posted: May 15
  • Sports Perspective: A heated affair

    Harrison Avigdor Explorer intern

    • icon posted: May 15

Featured Videos

youtube

youtube DNRpGy2Miaw

Baby in stroller Falls Into Train Tracks Mom Jumps In Before Train Barrels In Caught On Camera read more

Baby in stroller Falls Into Train Tracks Mom Jumps In Before Train Barrels In Caught On Camera. A stroller carrying a 14-month-old girl rolled off a slanted train station platform and fell onto the tracks Wednesday, but the girl's mother leaped onto the tracks to rescue her with the help other passengers, transit officials said."What it looks like to us is that the mother became distracted by something, didn't apply the brake on the stroller and the stroller was able to move off the platform and onto the tracks," said Scott Sauer, director of system safety for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority. The accident happened Wednesday afternoon at the 56th Street station of the Market-Frankford Line in west Philadelphia. The platform at the station is slanted slightly for drainage purposes, Sauer said.Surveillance video shows a woman on the eastbound platform with the girl in a jogging stroller, which slowly rolls forward and topples over onto the tracks about 5 feet below. What initially appears to be the girl flying out of the stroller apparently was just a towel or a bag. The stroller comes to rest on the outer rail, which carries no charge. The woman is seen jumping down and lifting the girl to a man waiting on the platform. Other passengers ran to help, and one used an emergency call box to alert SEPTA police, who held an incoming train at the preceding stop.The infant was taken to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for treatment of a cut on her forehead. Sauer said during a news conference that watching the video was "gut-wrenching.""With the stroller moving at such a slow rate of speed, you know, you want to call out to someone, `Hey, the stroller's moving! Somebody grab the stroller,'" Sauer said. He said the line is one of SEPTA's busiest, with trains running every six to 10 minutes. SEPTA police said no charges will be filed but the accident serves as a reminder for other riders to lock stroller brakes when waiting on platforms.

Baby in stroller Falls Into Train Tracks Mom Jumps In Before Train Barrels In Caught On Camera

Baby in stroller Falls Into Train Tracks Mom Jumps In Before Train Barrels In Caught On Camera. A...

Raw:Singing Whitney Houston Fan Kicked Off Flight American Airlines

An American Airlines flight was forced to make an emergency landing after a woman refused to stop...

More Featured Videos

This week's e-Edition

Follow us on Facebook

Sections

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Things to Do
  • Opinion
  • Marketplace
  • Blogs
  • Videos
  • Special Sections
  • E-Edition
  • Online Features
  • Weather

Services

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Subscription Services
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Career Opportunities
  • Submission Forms
  • Site Index
  • Add Search Toolbar

Contact us

explorernews.com

Explorer News
Phone number: 520-797-4384
E-mail: editor@explorernews.com
Address: 7225 N. Mona Lisa Road, #125
Tucson, AZ 85741

Search









© Copyright 2013, The Explorer, Tucson, AZ. Powered by BLOX Content Management System from TownNews.com. [Terms of Use | Privacy Policy]

Forgot?
Now I remember!

Or, use your linked account:

Need an account? Create one now.