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May 18, 2013
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Displaying results 1 - 25 of 2567 for world. Subscribe to this search

  1. article On their odyssey to worlds

    Tuesday, May 4, 2010 11:00 pm

    For the past 17 years, an Odyssey of the Mind Team from Coronado K-8 School has not qualified for world finals.

    2 images

  2. On their odyssey to worlds

    Randy Metcalf/The Explorer, From left, Coronado students Abigail Pye, Chloe Telles, Ryan Hornby, Chris Porteous and Alexander Pye will be traveling to Michigan later this month for the Odyssey of the Mind world competition. Their eight-minute skit is a mixture of comedy and music.

  3. On their odyssey to worlds

    Randy Metcalf/The Explorer, Chloe Telles, Chris Porteous, Abigail Pye, Alexander Pye and Ryan Hornby run through a portion of their Odyssey of the Mind skit where they discover King Tut's burial mask on an archeological dig.

  4. article On the world stage

    Thursday, May 1, 2008 11:00 pm

    As an Olympic trainer and coach for the University of Arizona’s cross-country and track squads, James Li nurtures world-champion distance runners and walk-ons alike.

    1 image

  5. On the world stage

    Randy Metcalf/The Explorer Oro Valley’s James Li returns to China this summer as head manager of the US men’s Olympic track team, 23 years after continuing his coaching education and career in the United States. Li, who coaches the University of Arizona’s cross-country and track squads, finds the surrounding attention rather amusing.

  6. World Trade Tower

  7. article The World's Best Safaris

    Thursday, April 11, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—Let’s face it, you can have a truly great safari experience no matter where in Africa you go. But in many ways, who you go with is more important than where you go. For me, whether it’s Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa, Botswana, side trips to Zanzibar or Victoria Falls, or gorilla tracking excursions to Rwanda, my choice of tour operator is always the same—Micato Safaris.

    1 image

  8. The World's Best Safaris

    Whether you’re enjoying a quiet drink at sunset in the bush... ...or luxuriating in the many amenities of a luxury camp at the end of the day, there are few things as delightful as an African safari. (NAPS)

  9. article Color Your World Wonderful

    Thursday, March 7, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—Here’s a bright idea: You can easily enhance your home with a few simple, colorful, practical and decorative elements—without having to spend a lot of the green stuff. These hints on how from home expert Ginny Bean may help:

    1 image

  10. Color Your World Wonderful

    Brighten up your kitchen with beautiful new shades of island blue and pink grapefruit. Hop to it in the bedroom as well with bright blue and yellow shams and comforters. (NAPS)

  11. article Parents, Students And The Digital World

    Friday, December 7, 2012 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—When it comes to navigating the digital world, many parents admit that their children are a step or two ahead of them. Today’s world is not the same as it was just yesterday. Embracing this, Sylvan Learning introduced SylvanSync™, a digital instructional system that uses the best of technology to provide students with an engaging, personal learning experience.

    1 image

  12. Parents, Students And The Digital World

    Parents should encourage children to use technology to reinforce what they learn in the real world. (NAPS)

  13. article The world is passing me by

    Wednesday, February 29, 2012 4:00 am

    I was raised in a much simpler time, the 40s and 50s. My father worked and my mother stayed home and cared for her children. Life was also safer then. As very young kids we went everywhere on our bicycles, never worrying about the problems we face today. There was right and there was wrong. It was very clear. No nuance. There was very little gray area. On those occasions when we broke the rules, there was sure and certain punishment. Perhaps some of the problems of today existed then, but we never knew about them.

  14. article Golf world comes to Marana

    Wednesday, February 16, 2011 6:00 am

    See The Explorer’s special section on Match Play.

    1 image

  15. article Big world, little things

    Tuesday, September 1, 2009 11:00 pm

    You're first struck by those beautiful wood doors, 18 feet tall, with a giant handle far too high to reach.

    5 images

  16. Big world, little things

    Randy Metcalf/The Explorer, Mickie Weinert, right, and executive director Nina Daldrup stand above a glass-covered miniature winter cityscape at the Mini-Time Machine Museum of Miniatures.

  17. Big world, little things

    Randy Metcalf/The Explorer, President and curator Pat Arnell stands in front of the Forget-Us-Not Fairy Castle at the Mini-Time Machine Museum of Miniatures. The museum is located at 4455 E. Camp Lowell.

  18. Big world, little things

    Randy Metcalf/The Explorer, Visitors pass through a section of an 18-foot tall door.

  19. Big world, little things

    Randy Metcalf/The Explorer, The Mini-Time Machine Museum of Miniatures is 15,560 square feet filled with more than 150 miniature-sized houses.

  20. Big world, little things

    Randy Metcalf/The Explorer, One of the miniatures depicts a butcher shop with meticulous details down to the rust on the sink.

  21. article Whats Up UA? - Keepers of Prometheus: The World’s Oldest Tree

    Thursday, January 24, 2013 10:36 am

    On a craggy, windswept peak in a lonely Nevada wilderness stands a grove of old-growth trees. Gnarled and twisted, shaped by the weather and whirling winds into erratic growth forms, their roots have clung to the pebble-strewn mountainside for literally millennia.

    On the far side of the Earth, the great pyramids were erected in Egypt and Homer wrote his epic tales, the ancient Roman Empire rose and fell, and humans built the North American cities, roads and railways of today – all in the lifespan of these trees.

    This is not just any old-growth grove. These are members of the species Pinus longaeva, or Bristlecone pine, the world’s longest-living individual trees.

    “There is an argument that unless there’s an extremely stressful period of time or they’re struck by lightning or killed by fire, there’s not a physiological reason for these trees to die,” said Rex Adams, senior research specialist at the University of Arizona’s Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research.

    The lab houses pieces of the oldest Bristlecone pine ever known to have lived, a tree called Prometheus after the Titan of Greek mythology. But how the pieces came there is a tragic tale.

    In the summers of 1963 and 1964, Donald Currey, a graduate student at the University of North Carolina, climbed Wheeler Peak in Nevada’s Snake Range to where the Bristlecone pines stand in the cold mountain wind.

    Currey, a student in geography, wanted to find a minimum date for the formation of the local glacial features. He decided to determine the age of the trees, reasoning that the earliest they could have become established on the mountainside would have coincided with the recession of the glaciers.

    As a tree ages, it grows outward, forming a new ring around its trunk each year. Its age can be determined by counting the annual growth rings from the living layer just below the bark all the way to the pith, the center of the tree from which the rings emanate.

    Dendrochronologists, who study tree rings, can sample most trees with skill and patience and a tool called a Swedish increment borer that harmlessly removes a slender core from the trunk, which shows the rings of the tree but does no lasting damage.

    Since the living part of the tree is the outer layer just below the bark, and all the wood inside is dead, the injury done by an increment borer to a living tree is very small, about equivalent to the skin prick of a human flu shot.

    Currey extracted cores from the Bristlecone trees, but found counting the sometimes paper-thin rings of the twisted and gnarly wood an impossible task. He decided only a complete cross-section would give him an accurate ring count. With permission from the U.S. Forest Service, Currey selected an especially old tree, dubbed WPN 114 for his study, and he cut it down.

    Only later in his hotel room, counting the rings on the cross-sections of wood that his chainsaw had rendered, did Currey realize that the tree he had felled was more than 4,800 years old – older than any known living tree.

    “The tragedy of Prometheus is that it would have been possible with one or two cores to establish the age of the tree with great accuracy – much greater than was possible for Currey by having it cut down and trying to count its rings,” said Chris Baisan, a dendrochronologist at the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research.

    Amidst public outcry in the wake of the event, Wes Ferguson, then a graduate student at the tree-ring laboratory, was tasked with returning to Wheeler Peak to see if he could find a living tree older than the one chopped down by Currey. He didn’t.

    And the purloined tree was left to lie on the mountainside for the scientists who followed, seeking the knowledge of centuries past contained in its rings. Ferguson collected some of the wood, and brought it back to the UA.

    The age of the ancient one

    Wander down the concrete stairs to the basement on the northwest corner of the Math East building on the UA campus to a shut door bearing the somewhat ominous sign: “Please keep this door closed. The Fire Marshall requires that we do this!”

    Past the door you will find the cause of the fire marshall’s concern: Boxes full of wood, circular cross sections of tree trunks, whole logs and branches, boards and remnants of dead wood fill up rows of shelves  – and oftentimes the aisles – from the sawdust-strewn floor to the dusty ceiling.

    On one wall, a 7-foot slab of wood is mounted with care: A cross section of the radius of the tree known as Prometheus.

    A second collection of wood from Prometheus came to the UA only a few years ago, after Currey’s passing. Among this collection was a piece containing the pith, the center of the tree. For the first time, a tree-ring scientist was able to date the wood to establish Prometheus’ age.

    By overlapping the rings on the pith piece with a chronology of measured ring-widths from trees in the region provided to him by fellow UA dendrochronologist Matt Salzer and UA Regents' Professor Malcolm Hughes, Baisan established the age of the tree with great accuracy.

    “I had never seen a piece with the pith and was curious to see where it dated,” Baisan said. “The match was really unequivocal from the first test. A reasonable age estimate is right at 5,000 years – an estimate because of the time to grow to about 7 feet, the height from which the piece with the pith came, is subject only to a reasonable guess."

    Prometheus is not alone in its great age. Many of the other trees in the grove on Wheeler Peak also are estimated at near 5,000 years old, although none have been found that are as old as Prometheus.

    “The odds of by chance selecting the oldest individual of a species of hundreds of thousands, or millions, of individuals spread across the rugged and remote Great Basin terrain are simply not credible,” Baisan said.

    “I cannot believe that Prometheus was ever ‘the oldest’ Bristlecone pine. As for finding an older individual,” he added, “this would be a difficult and thankless task for which there is no real research incentive.”

    Now the oldest publicly known individual, named Methuselah after the oldest person mentioned in the Bible, and known to be more than 4,700 years old, abides upon a slope of the White Mountains of eastern California. Its exact location is not advertised in an effort to protect the tree from a plight of tourists and plunderers.

    And Currey? “His career was OK,” Adams said. “To most people, he was just professor Currey. Nothing bad happened to him, except he died relatively young, and that’s the mysterious part.”

    The curse of the old trees

    “There’s this urban myth that goes with the Bristlecone,” Adams explained. “That handling the wood, you’re going to be cursed by the old trees.”

    From Edmund Schulman, the dendrochronologist who first established the great age of the Bristlecone pines and died himself at 49, to Currey, Ferguson and other Bristlecone pine researchers, many have died at an alarmingly young age. In one incident, a 32-year-old Forest Service employee who returned with Currey and others to remove the chopped-up pieces of Prometheus from the mountainside suffered a fatal heart attack on the way down.

    As improbable as the myth may seem, its portents are dark enough to prevent some from ever touching the wood of the Bristlecones, especially that of Prometheus.

    But the myth hasn’t kept all contemporary dendrochronologists away from the old trees. “There are some folks now who are fiddling with the wood,” Adams said. “Some researchers here are working on climatic effects on Bristlecone.”

    And then there’s Adams himself. “I’ve handled a lot of old wood, and I’m sitting here now holding a piece that really is supposed to be the cursed piece.” He cradled the pith piece of Prometheus in one arm. “But then I am showing my age these days,” he added and laughed. “So maybe I shouldn’t be touching this.”

    He leaned over and gently lay down on the table the remnant of a tree that once weathered the storms of millennia atop lonely Wheeler Peak.

    1 image

  22. article Stroke around the world: the shocking truth

    Monday, March 11, 2013 10:00 pm

    If there’s one thing people of different nationalities, cultures and backgrounds have in common, it’s health. Many health threats on the minds of Americans are also issues for people in nations across the world. The silent killer known as stroke not only ends an American life every four minutes, it kills 6 million people around the globe every year.

  23. article Clever Ways To Color Your World

    Friday, December 7, 2012 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—Feeling happier at home may hinge on something as simple as repainting the walls. Different colors affect your mood, your energy and your efficiency in different ways. Changing the shade of paint in your bedroom, kitchen or home office can be a big improvement. Here are some ideas from color expert Erika Woelfel, director of color marketing for Behr Paints.

    1 image

  24. Clever Ways To Color Your World

    Cool hues like light blue are calming and meditative, contributing to rest, so theyre good for a bedroom. (NAPS)

  25. article CDO becomes part of world school

    Wednesday, April 11, 2012 4:00 am

    Canyon Del Oro High School recently has been authorized by the International Baccalaureate Organization to be one of its world schools, beginning next year.

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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
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    Dave Safier Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: May 15
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    Thelma Grimes, The Explorer

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

    Harrison Avigdor Explorer intern

    • icon posted: May 15

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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.

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