Close
Welcome!
Login|Signup
Login|My Dashboard|Register
Logout|My Dashboard
June 19, 2013
Contact | About | Subscribe | Advertise | Work for The Explorer | E-Edition | Newsletter Signup
Clear
94°
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

    • Beloved Safeway manager says farewell

      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.

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • With new budget in place, state session ends

    • Foothills Optimist Club donates money for underserved youth

    • Summer heat brings a wave of pool activities in Oro Valley

    • Splendido resident displays Arizona landscape photography

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

    Top Story

    • Summit Hut expands into the Northwest

      Originally opened by two teenagers back in 1967, Summit Hut has kept its customers happy by providing quality outdoor products and services. T…

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • AZ Massage Center focuses on reflexology for total foot relief

    • Karate 4 Kids Martial Arts to Relocate to Plaza Del Oro Shopping Center

    • Epazote Kitchen & Cocktails working to draw in local diners

    • Beat the heat at Epazote Kitchen & Cocktails

  • SPORTS
    • PREP SPORTS
    • UA WILDCATS
    • TUCSON PADRES

    Top Story

    • Former Dorados return to help with football camp

      Nearly three dozen soon-to-be high school students had a chance to learn from some of Tucson’s best football players while participating in Ca…

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Sports Perspective: Beating the Heat

    • Padres beat Las Vegas 5-2

    • Padres beat Reno 5-1

    • Padres lose to Reno 18-7

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

    Top Story

    • Police Reports -- Week of June 16

      Marana

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • 2011 drive-by shooting suspect arrested

    • Connect with Your Grandchildren Outdoors

    • How to Protect Your Family’s Skin from Summer’s Scrapes, Bites and Burns

    • Introducing the new Arizona Living Collection

  • LIVEN UP
    • CALENDAR OF EVENTS
    • SCREENING
    • NOURISHMENT
    • SCENE 1
    • VENTURE OUT
    • LISTEN
    • WRITTEN
    • SUBMIT A REVIEW

    Top Story

    • Readers will laugh, cry and remember a deep love for reading in the book

      I am a little late coming to the party with the “Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society”. It was a sensation when it was released in Ju…

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • ‘Man of Steel’ is an exciting reboot

    • Prime Time Review: Electronic Entertainment Expo reveals the next generation of home entertainment

    • Happenings -- Week of June 16

    • Friday Night Live coming June 21

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

    Top Story

    • Sharp’s reporting structure

      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…

      • Updated: 9:20 am
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Oro Valley Town Talk: What is and why is a General Plan?

    • Guest Column: A message on the privacy debate

    • My two favorite dads

    • Guest Column: The outing of Common Core Standards (Part 1)

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

    Most Recent

    • Opportunity knocks at Koko FitClub

      Many Oro Valley residents are dealing with the frustration of their gym simply closing its doors.  Here today, gone tomorrow. Others are deali…

      • posted: June 19
      • Comments (0)
    • Kyger Orthodontics: Phase I Orthodontic Treatment

    • Tips for small business owners to face today’s new challenges

    • Catalina Marina

    • Catalina Community Services

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

    Most Recent

    • Gadget Magnet - Data Doctors on dealing with dead pixels

      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

      • posted: June 15
      • Comments (0)
    • Pet News - Philanthropy with Phlavor

    • Such the Spot - Please don't feed the children

    • Pet News - YOGA for HOPE

    • Primetime Review: Christopher Nolan’s artistic vision

  • 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 28
      • 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
    • GO! EXPLORE
    • KIDS CAMP
    • CATALINA STATE PARK
    • HEALTH & WELLNESS
    • BEST OF THE NW
    • ACTIVE LIVING
    • HOME & GARDEN
    • AUTOMOTIVE
    • WOMEN IN BUSINESS
    • DISCOVER THE NW

    Most Recent

    • Connect with Your Grandchildren Outdoors

      Do you have treasured childhood memories of spending time outdoors with your parents or grandparents? Take the time to share this experience w…

      • posted: June 16
      • Comments (0)
    rss

    More headlines

    • Three top tips for summer travel

    • Disneyland is just a short ride away from Tucson

    • Westin La Paloma makes summer plans

    • Summer heat wears down the automobile

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








Displaying results 1 - 25 of 460 for superintendent. Subscribe to this search

  1. article OVPD School Resource Officer program chosen as a model agency

    Friday, May 24, 2013 10:52 am

    The Oro Valley Police Department is pleased to announce that the School Resource Officers (SRO) Unit was chosen as a model SRO agency by the Arizona School Resource Officers Association (ASROA). OVPD Police Chief Daniel G. Sharp will be attending a conference on June 18, 2013 in Scottsdale to receive this recognition.

    1 image

  2. article Teacher charged with sexual misconduct with a student was investigated in March

    Friday, May 17, 2013 4:02 pm

    After allegations surfaced in March about an Ironwood Ridge High School marketing teacher having sex with a student, the Amphitheater School District placed him on administrative leave for five days.

    1 image

  3. pdf NRA National School Shield plan

    Tuesday, April 2, 2013 1:04 pm

  4. article Providing Teachers With The Tools They Need

    Thursday, March 21, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—America’s classrooms are changing, and so are its students. That means America’s teachers have to be prepared to change as well.

    1 image

  5. article What's Up UA? - Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research to Debut New Home to Community

    Wednesday, February 27, 2013 3:59 pm

    After 75 years in "temporary quarters" under the west side of the University of Arizona's football stadium, the world's first laboratory dedicated to tree-ring research now has a new home.

    To celebrate, the UA Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research is hosting a 75th anniversary celebration and public open house at its new building on March 2 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

    The Bryant Bannister Tree-Ring Building provides 17,300 square feet of usable space – about 7,000 square feet more than the space the UA Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research was using in the stadium. The building, completed in December 2012, is named for the laboratory's director emeritus.

    "Our open house this coming Saturday is our first opportunity to share the new building with the public," said Thomas W. Swetnam, laboratory director and Regents' Professor of Dendrochronology. "One of the most exciting aspects of the beautiful new building is that it is designed, in part, to share our past discoveries and current scientific work with the public.

    "Tree rings are a terrific way to learn about time, history and our world. From tree rings we learn about great natural and cultural events, such as droughts, forest fires, volcanic eruptions and the rise and fall of civilizations. You can actually see and touch centuries and millennia of history, all exactly ordered in the sequences of rings."

    The study of the annual rings of trees, known as dendrochronology, was invented by Andrew E. Douglass more than a century ago. Douglass, who came to the UA in 1906, pioneered the use of tree rings to date the ancient ruins of cliff dwellings, including those at Chaco Culture National Historical Park and Mesa Verde National Park.

    On the ground level, the building's exhibit hall showcases the 2-ton, 10-foot-diameter cross-section of a giant sequoia given to laboratory founder Douglass in the 1930s by the superintendent of Sequoia National Park. The ground floor also has public exhibit space and a multipurpose room that serves as an auditorium and as a teaching lab.

    The building's upper floors are wider than the floor beneath, thus giving the idea of a tree canopy that provides shade to the ground below. The open arrangement of the laboratory and office spaces on those floors encourages interaction and collaboration among the lab's faculty and students.

    The open house from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on March 2 will feature guided tours of the new building, exhibits about tree-ring science and hands-on activities for children.

    In addition to the giant sequoia slab, the open house exhibits will include a specimen of the world's oldest known tree and artifacts from ancient southwest archaeology sites.

    Researchers will give tours of their labs, discuss the variety of events recorded in tree rings and show visitors how dendrochronologists extract that information from trees.

    Scientists will demonstrate how to core a tree to study the timeline captured by the tree's annual rings. Taking such a core does not hurt the tree. Visitors will be able to try their hands at taking a core and will be able to take that core home with them.

    "We expect our new exhibit hall will host thousands of visitors each year, and we plan to develop a regular program of tours through parts of our new laboratory spaces, and eventually the archives of our collections as well," Swetnam said.

    "To do this we need help, so we are organizing a volunteer docent program."

    Docents will lead tours of the building, share the lab's rich history with the public and provide short demonstrations. The training sessions, limited to 30 people, are free. The first one is April 6, from 10 a.m. to noon. People who wish to become docents must register in advance by contacting Pamela Pelletier at 520-248-9933 or by email at pamela@email.arizona.edu.

    In the next phase of construction, a modern, climate-controlled archive will be built in the Mathematics East building to house the lab's extensive collection of wood samples, which range from pencil-thin cores of trees to 7-foot-diameter cross-sections of giant sequoias. The irreplaceable samples, the work of scores of scientists starting with Douglass, are still used by researchers as they continue to explore the wealth of information recorded in tree rings.

    The collection is estimated to contain more than 2 million individual pieces of wood. Once complete, the new archive will allow the lab to double the amount of wood samples in the collection.

    The lab received a $425,000 grant from the National Park Service and National Endowment for the Humanities' Save America's Treasures Program and a $484,000 grant from the National Science Foundation’s Collections in Support of Biological Research Program to purchase mechanical-compact shelving units to store the collection and to develop a digital database of the collections.

    The Bryant Bannister Tree-Ring Building plus the renovation of the Mathematics East basement is primarily funded by private donation from Agnese Nelms Haury.

    The UA Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research is recognized worldwide as a preeminent center for the advancement of tree-ring techniques and the broad application of dendrochronology in the social and environmental sciences.

     

    1 image

  6. article Common Core preparations continue

    Wednesday, February 27, 2013 4:00 am

    Beginning in the 2013-2014 school year, teachers across Arizona will begin adhering to the Arizona Common Core Standards (ACCS), a new set of mandated academic standards in English language arts and mathematics.

  7. article Assistant superintendent selected in Marana

    Wednesday, February 20, 2013 4:00 am

    The Marana Unified School District announced the selection of Pamela Beine as assistant superintendent for the district.   

    1 image

  8. Pamela Beine

    Pamela Beine is the newly appointed assistant superintendent for the Marana Unified School District.

  9. Assistant superintendentPamBeine

  10. article The Guide: Week of Feb. 11

    Wednesday, February 13, 2013 10:47 am

    THEATER

  11. article The focus should be on quality teaching (part 4)

    Wednesday, February 13, 2013 4:00 am

    The Times of London rated seven of the top 10 universities in the world as American; eighteen of the top twenty-five world universities are American; and fifty-three of the top one hundred world universities are American. Higher education in America is considered the best in the world. 

    1 image

  12. article What's Up UA? - Mentoring a Better Future

    Sunday, February 10, 2013 2:14 pm

    Paul Blowers, PhD, originally took on the profession of chemical engineer as a personal challenge. Growing up in his home town in northern Michigan, he saw others bested by the field – and that only drove him harder.

    1 image

  13. article Traditional public education works where expectations are high (part 1)

    Wednesday, February 6, 2013 4:00 am

    Last week (Jan. 27 – Feb. 2) was National School Choice Week, so I thought it appropriate to respond to a column printed in the Explorer – “The focus should be on quality teaching.” 

    1 image

  14. article PCC chancellor finalist withdraws name amid reports of overbilling

    Friday, February 1, 2013 2:12 pm

    The Pima Community College search for a new chancellor has been put on hold after one of the two finalists withdrew her name Friday.

    1 image

  15. article Jeff Grant, of Amphi School Board, dies

    Wednesday, January 30, 2013 4:00 am

    Former Amphitheater School District Governing Board Member Jeff Grant died Sunday after a long battle with cancer.

    1 image

  16. article Amphi teacher's assistant accused of having sex with students

    Thursday, January 24, 2013 11:05 am

    A 22-year-old teacher's aide from Amphitheater High School was terminated on Tuesday after allegations of sexual misconduct with students was reported to the Tucson Police Department.

  17. article Amphitheater Governing Board Member resigns

    Wednesday, January 23, 2013 8:45 am

    Amphitheater Governing Board Member Jeff Grant resigned.

  18. article Implementing Common Core Standards

    Tuesday, January 22, 2013 4:16 pm

    As Arizona works to become one of the 47 states to implement Common Core Standards, the Marana School District to set procedures to have teachers ready to teach it in the 2013-2014 school year.

  19. article PCC board members to be sworn in Jan. 9

    Wednesday, January 9, 2013 10:31 am

    Sylvia M. Lee, Ph.D. and Marty Cortez will be sworn in as  Pima Community College Governing Board members during the Board’s Annual Meeting at 5 p.m. Jan. 9 in the Community Board Room of PCC’s District Office, 4905 E. Broadway.

  20. article Arizona Adult Education ranks near the top in national polls

    Thursday, January 3, 2013 11:26 am

     Superintendent John Huppenthal today released the semi-annual Adult Education report outlining Arizona’s continuing success at helping high school dropouts to attain a high school education. For the second consecutive year, the Arizona Adult Education System was ranked 4th nationally for educational gains, producing over two grade level increases at an annual cost of less than $1,250 per student.

  21. article The focus should be on quality teaching (Part 2)

    Wednesday, January 2, 2013 4:00 am

    This op-ed focuses on the topic of quality teachers by first declaring educational heresy: there is no correlation between teacher certification and quality teachers.  John E. Chubb, Distinguished Visiting Fellow and member of the K-12 Education Task Force, Hoover Institute, wrote in his book The Best Teachers in the World – Why we don’t have them and how we could:

    1 image

  22. article Horne’s plan lacks true thought

    Wednesday, January 2, 2013 4:00 am

    Over the years I have always been surprised to see a man like Tom Horne get reelected over and over again to different offices. Horne, who is under investigation by the FBI, has served as our superintendent of public instruction, and is now the state’s attorney general.

    1 image

  23. article Local schools receive national recognition

    Wednesday, December 26, 2012 4:00 am

    Earlier this month, two schools within the Marana Unified School District and one within the Amphitheater School District were recognized by the National Center for Educational Achievement (NCEA) as 2012 NCEA Arizona higher Performing Schools.

  24. article Local response to shootings turns to schools looking at own safety measures

    Wednesday, December 26, 2012 4:00 am

    In the wake of the Newtown Conn. elementary school shootings that claimed the lives of 26, including 20 children, local school administrators said they immediately began looking at their own safety procedures and policies.

    1 image 1 poll 1 article

  25. article Sun City Vistoso donates to Canyon Del Oro High

    Wednesday, December 5, 2012 4:00 am

    The students in Canyon Del Oro High School’s International Baccalaureate (IB) program are used to giving their all when it comes to education, but last Tuesday, they got something back, and it had a larger-than-expected dollar amount attached to it. 

    4 images

Next »

Watch Now

youtube

youtube DZ3MN3nxCxo

AZ Massage Center read more

AZ Massage Center

AZ Massage Center

AZ Massage Center

Northwest Chatter

  • Oro Valley Town Talk: What is and why is a General Plan?

    Joe Hornat/Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: June 19
  • Guest Column: A message on the privacy debate

    Dave Safier, Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: June 19
  • Sports Perspective: Beating the Heat

    Evan Hoffmann,Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: June 19
  • Sharp’s reporting structure

    Thelma Grimes, The Explorer

    • icon Updated: 9:20 am

Featured Videos

youtube

youtube KiOELMlZ808

Authorities identify suspicious package at NW fire station read more

Earlier today, the Pima Regional Bomb Squad responded to the Northwest Fire District's station at the corner of Ina and Shannon roads in response to a report of a suspicious package in a car. The package turned out to be a laptop. Read the Story Here: http://bit.ly/1bttmJW

Authorities identify suspicious package at NW fire station

Earlier today, the Pima Regional Bomb Squad responded to the Northwest Fire District's station at...

TODAY Rogue elephants, humans, in deadly battle

In Northeast India, rogue elephants are killing 100 people a year, as elephants who have lost the...

More Featured Videos

This week's e-Edition

Follow us on Facebook

Sections

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Liven Up
  • 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.