Pusd High School Course Offering & Description Guide

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Pusd High School Course Offering & Description Guide PUSD HIGH SCHOOL COURSE OFFERING & DESCRIPTION GUIDE “Every student, every day, prepared to shape tomorrow.” 1 COURSE OFFERING AND DESCRIPTION GUIDE FOR CACTUS HIGH SCHOOL CENTENNIAL HIGH SCHOOL IRONWOOD HIGH SCHOOL LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL PEORIA HIGH SCHOOL PEORIA FLEX ACADEMY (P.F.A.) RAYMOND S. KELLIS HIGH SCHOOL SUNRISE MOUNTAIN HIGH SCHOOL K-12 Academic Services: Ali Bridgewater Robert Keagle Steve Savoy Linda Thompson Sunrise Mountain Raymond S. Kellis Cactus Ironwood High School High School High School High School Apache, Coyote Hills, Alta Loma, Cotton Boll, Canyon, Foothills, Copperwood, Desert Frontier Country Meadows, Sun Kachina, Oakwood, Palms, Valley Pioneer Desert Valley, Heritage, Marshall Ranch, Sahuaro Ranch Peoria Liberty Centennial High School High School High School Cheyenne, Peoria Elem, Lake Pleasant, Parkridge, Desert Harbor, Ira A. Santa Fe, Sky View Vistancia, Zuni Hills, Murphy, Oasis, Paseo Sunset Heights Verde, Sundance Peoria Flex Academy 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS GENERAL GUIDELINES ......................................................................................................................................... 5 NON-DISCRIMINATION ................................................................................................................................... 5 COMPULSORY ATTENDANCE ....................................................................................................................... 5 STUDENT FEE STRUCTURE ........................................................................................................................... 5 ELIGIBILITY FOR EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES – NO PASS/NO PLAY ........................................ 5 EDUCATIONAL PLANNING .................................................................................................................................. 6 EDUCATION AND CAREER ACTION PLAN (ECAP) ................................................................................... 6 CAREER DEVELOPMENT PLAN .................................................................................................................... 6 SPECIAL PLACEMENT COURSES .................................................................................................................. 6 COURSE CREDITS ............................................................................................................................................ 6 HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATION REQUIREMENT .......................................................................................... 8 ADMISSION TO COMMUNITY COLLEGES .................................................................................................. 8 ADMISSION TO STATE UNIVERSITIES ........................................................................................................ 8 NCAA REQUIREMENTS ................................................................................................................................. 11 EXPLANATION OF GRADING SYSTEM ............................................................................................................ 11 HIGH SCHOOL CORE COURSES .................................................................................................................. 12 COURSE CHANGE POLICY/AUDIT STATUS .............................................................................................. 13 CLASS RANK/WEIGHTED GRADING .......................................................................................................... 13 HONORS GUIDELINES ......................................................................................................................................... 14 ACADEMIC COURSE OFFERINGS ...................................................................................................................... 16 LANGUAGE ARTS........................................................................................................................................... 16 MATHEMATICS ............................................................................................................................................... 24 SCIENCE ........................................................................................................................................................... 30 SOCIAL STUDIES ............................................................................................................................................ 36 ELECTIVE COURSE OFFERINGS ........................................................................................................................ 41 ARTS EDUCATION ......................................................................................................................................... 41 PERFORMING ARTS ....................................................................................................................................... 42 VISUAL ARTS .................................................................................................................................................. 47 PHYSICAL EDUCATION ................................................................................................................................ 50 WORLD LANGUAGES .................................................................................................................................... 52 ACCOUNTING ................................................................................................................................................. 60 AFJROTC ........................................................................................................................................................... 60 AGRICULTURE BUSINESS MANAGEMENT - AGRISCIENCE ................................................................ 62 AUTO TECHNOLOGY..................................................................................................................................... 64 BUILDING TRADES ........................................................................................................................................ 64 BUSINESS MANAGEMENT & ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES ................................................................ 65 COMPUTER MAINTENANCE ........................................................................................................................ 66 CULINARY ARTS ............................................................................................................................................ 67 DESIGN & MERCHANDISING ....................................................................................................................... 68 EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION .............................................................................................................. 68 ENGINEERING ................................................................................................................................................. 69 FINANCIAL SERVICES................................................................................................................................... 70 FIRE SCIENCE .................................................................................................................................................. 71 FUTURE TEACHERS’ ACADEMY ................................................................................................................ 72 LAW ENFORCEMENT .................................................................................................................................... 72 MARKETING .................................................................................................................................................... 73 MEDIA ............................................................................................................................................................... 77 MEDICAL ASSISTING .................................................................................................................................... 78 NURSING SERVICES ...................................................................................................................................... 79 SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT ........................................................................................................................ 80 SPORTS MEDICINE & REHABILITATION SERVICES .............................................................................. 82 WELDING TECHNOLOGIES .......................................................................................................................... 83 3 MET MEDICAL STRAND ............................................................................................................................... 85 MET FOUNDATIONS OF MEDICINE............................................................................................................ 85 MET TECHNOLOGY STRAND ...................................................................................................................... 86 MET TECHNOLOGY ....................................................................................................................................... 86 MET ENGINEERING STRAND ...................................................................................................................... 87 MET ENGINEERING ....................................................................................................................................... 87 WestMEC.................................................................................................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • Elementary, Jr High and High School List Updated 6/2021
    Elementary, Jr High and High School List Updated 6/2021 A J Mitchell Elementary School Mabel Padgett Elementary School Abraham Lincoln Traditional School MacArthur Elementary School Acacia Elementary School Madison #1 Elementary School Adams Elementary School Madison Camelview Elementary Adult Madison Elementary School Agua Fria High School Madison Heights Elementary School Aguila Elementary School Madison Meadows School Aguilar School Madison Park School Aire Libre Elementary School Madison Richard Simis School Alfred F Garcia School Madison Rose Lane School Alhambra High School Madison Traditional Academy Alhambra Traditional School Madrid Neighborhood School Alma Elementary School Magma Ranch K8 School Alta E Butler School Magnet Traditional School Alta Loma School Maie Bartlett Heard School Alta Vista Elementary School Mammoth Elementary School Amberlea Elementary School Manuel Pena Jr. School Amy L. Houston Academy Manzanita Elementary School Anasazi Elementary Marc T. Atkinson Middle School Andalucia Middle School Marcos De Niza High School Anna Marie Jacobson Elementary School Maricopa Elementary School Anthem Elementary School - Florence Maricopa High School Anthem School Maricopa Institute of Technology Apache Elementary School (Douglas) Maricopa Wells Middle School Apache Elementary School (Peoria) Marionneaux Elementary School Apache Junction High School Marley Park Elementary Apollo High School Marshall Ranch Elementary School Arcadia High School Martin Luther King Early Childhood Center Arcadia Neighborhood Learning Center
    [Show full text]
  • Techniques for Improving the Performance of Software Transactional Memory
    Techniques for Improving the Performance of Software Transactional Memory Srdan Stipi´c Department of Computer Architecture Universitat Polit`ecnicade Catalunya A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Computer Architecture July, 2014 Advisor: Adri´anCristal Co-Advisor: Osman S. Unsal Tutor: Mateo Valero Curso académico: Acta de calificación de tesis doctoral Nombre y apellidos Programa de doctorado Unidad estructural responsable del programa Resolución del Tribunal Reunido el Tribunal designado a tal efecto, el doctorando / la doctoranda expone el tema de la su tesis doctoral titulada ____________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________. Acabada la lectura y después de dar respuesta a las cuestiones formuladas por los miembros titulares del tribunal, éste otorga la calificación: NO APTO APROBADO NOTABLE SOBRESALIENTE (Nombre, apellidos y firma) (Nombre, apellidos y firma) Presidente/a Secretario/a (Nombre, apellidos y firma) (Nombre, apellidos y firma) (Nombre, apellidos y firma) Vocal Vocal Vocal ______________________, _______ de __________________ de _______________ El resultado del escrutinio de los votos emitidos por los miembros titulares del tribunal, efectuado por la Escuela de Doctorado, a instancia de la Comisión de Doctorado de la UPC, otorga la MENCIÓN CUM LAUDE: SÍ NO (Nombre, apellidos y firma) (Nombre, apellidos y firma) Presidente de la Comisión Permanente de la Escuela de Secretaria de la Comisión Permanente de la Escuela de Doctorado Doctorado Barcelona a _______ de ____________________ de __________ To my parents. Acknowledgements I am thankful to a lot of people without whom I would not have been able to complete my PhD studies. While it is not possible to make an exhaustive list of names, I would like to mention a few.
    [Show full text]
  • Proceedings of the Linux Symposium
    Proceedings of the Linux Symposium Volume One June 27th–30th, 2007 Ottawa, Ontario Canada Contents The Price of Safety: Evaluating IOMMU Performance 9 Ben-Yehuda, Xenidis, Mostrows, Rister, Bruemmer, Van Doorn Linux on Cell Broadband Engine status update 21 Arnd Bergmann Linux Kernel Debugging on Google-sized clusters 29 M. Bligh, M. Desnoyers, & R. Schultz Ltrace Internals 41 Rodrigo Rubira Branco Evaluating effects of cache memory compression on embedded systems 53 Anderson Briglia, Allan Bezerra, Leonid Moiseichuk, & Nitin Gupta ACPI in Linux – Myths vs. Reality 65 Len Brown Cool Hand Linux – Handheld Thermal Extensions 75 Len Brown Asynchronous System Calls 81 Zach Brown Frysk 1, Kernel 0? 87 Andrew Cagney Keeping Kernel Performance from Regressions 93 T. Chen, L. Ananiev, and A. Tikhonov Breaking the Chains—Using LinuxBIOS to Liberate Embedded x86 Processors 103 J. Crouse, M. Jones, & R. Minnich GANESHA, a multi-usage with large cache NFSv4 server 113 P. Deniel, T. Leibovici, & J.-C. Lafoucrière Why Virtualization Fragmentation Sucks 125 Justin M. Forbes A New Network File System is Born: Comparison of SMB2, CIFS, and NFS 131 Steven French Supporting the Allocation of Large Contiguous Regions of Memory 141 Mel Gorman Kernel Scalability—Expanding the Horizon Beyond Fine Grain Locks 153 Corey Gough, Suresh Siddha, & Ken Chen Kdump: Smarter, Easier, Trustier 167 Vivek Goyal Using KVM to run Xen guests without Xen 179 R.A. Harper, A.N. Aliguori & M.D. Day Djprobe—Kernel probing with the smallest overhead 189 M. Hiramatsu and S. Oshima Desktop integration of Bluetooth 201 Marcel Holtmann How virtualization makes power management different 205 Yu Ke Ptrace, Utrace, Uprobes: Lightweight, Dynamic Tracing of User Apps 215 J.
    [Show full text]
  • There Are No Limits to Learning! Academic and High School
    Brick and Click Libraries An Academic Library Symposium Northwest Missouri State University Friday, November 5, 2010 Managing Editors: Frank Baudino Connie Jo Ury Sarah G. Park Co-Editor: Carolyn Johnson Vicki Wainscott Pat Wyatt Technical Editor: Kathy Ferguson Cover Design: Sean Callahan Northwest Missouri State University Maryville, Missouri Brick & Click Libraries Team Director of Libraries: Leslie Galbreath Co-Coordinators: Carolyn Johnson and Kathy Ferguson Executive Secretary & Check-in Assistant: Beverly Ruckman Proposal Reviewers: Frank Baudino, Sara Duff, Kathy Ferguson, Hong Gyu Han, Lisa Jennings, Carolyn Johnson, Sarah G. Park, Connie Jo Ury, Vicki Wainscott and Pat Wyatt Technology Coordinators: Sarah G. Park and Hong Gyu Han Union & Food Coordinator: Pat Wyatt Web Page Editors: Lori Mardis, Sarah G. Park and Vicki Wainscott Graphic Designer: Sean Callahan Table of Contents Quick & Dirty Library Promotions That Really Work! 1 Eric Jennings, Reference & Instruction Librarian Kathryn Tvaruzka, Education Reference Librarian University of Wisconsin Leveraging Technology, Improving Service: Streamlining Student Billing Procedures 2 Colleen S. Harris, Head of Access Services University of Tennessee – Chattanooga Powerful Partnerships & Great Opportunities: Promoting Archival Resources and Optimizing Outreach to Public and K12 Community 8 Lea Worcester, Public Services Librarian Evelyn Barker, Instruction & Information Literacy Librarian University of Texas at Arlington Mobile Patrons: Better Services on the Go 12 Vincci Kwong,
    [Show full text]
  • 2010 Arizona Football Arizona Football
    2010 Arizona Football The University of Arizona Tucson, Ariz. 85721 Arizona Football President: Dr. Robert Shelton - 520-621-5511 Athletics Director Greg Byrne - 520-621-4622 Football Office Phone: 520-621-4917 Mike Stoops (Iowa ’86) ...........Head Football Coach, 7th year (25-34) twitter.com/Greg_Byrne, facebook.com/GregByrneAD email.................................................................... [email protected] Senior Associate AD, SWA: Kathleen LaRose - 520-621-2473 Administrative Assistant:........................... Kelly Hooker (520-621-5355) Faculty Representative Jory Hancock - 520-626-8030 Bill Bedenbaugh................... Co-Offensive Coordinator/OL, 4th year Enrollment: 38,000 email................................................................ [email protected] Carnegie I, Land Grant, Association of American Universities Greg Brown...........................Co-Defensive Coordinator/DB, 1st year Athletic Ticket Office 520-621-2287; 800-452-2287 email........................................................... [email protected] Athletics Web Site arizonawildcats.com Tim Kish ................................ Co-Defensive Coordinator/LB, 7th year University Web Site arizona.edu email......................................................................... [email protected] Seth Littrell .....................Co-Offensive Coordinator/TE/RB, 2nd year email....................................................................... [email protected] This material was prepared to assist sportswriters and broadcasters
    [Show full text]
  • Executive Branch Third Quarterly Report
    OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT JONATHAN NEZ | PRESIDENT MYRON LIZER |VICE PRESIDENT EXECUTIVE BRANCH THIRD QUARTERLY REPORT SUMMER COUNCIL SESSION JULY 2021 NAVAJO NATION OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT SUMMER COUNCIL SESSION 2021 TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE NO. I. Department of Diné Education 2 II. Department of Human Resources 32 III. Diné Uranium Remediation Advisory Commission 39 IV. Division of Community Development 42 V. Division of Economic Development 58 VI. Division of General Services 78 VII. Division of Public Safety 82 VIII. NavaJo Department of Health 94 IX. NavaJo Division of Social Services 108 X. NavaJo Division of Transportation 116 XI. NavaJo Gaming Regulatory Office 120 XII. NavaJo Nation Department of Justice 125 XIII. NavaJo Nation Division of Natural Resources 130 XIV. NavaJo Nation Environmental Protection Agency 156 XV. NavaJo Nation Telecommunications Regulatory Commission 161 XVI. NavaJo Nation Veterans Administration 164 XVII. NavaJo Nation Washington Office 166 XVIII. NavaJo-Hopi Land Commission Office 173 XIX. Office of Hearing and Appeals 185 XX. Office of Management and Budget 187 XXI. Office of Miss NavaJo Nation 190 XXII. Office of NavaJo Public Defender 195 XXIII. Office of NavaJo Tax Commission 198 XXIV. Office of The Controller 201 1 Department of Diné Education SUMMER COUNCIL SESSION 2021 I. MAJOR ACCOMPLISHMENTS II. CHALLENGES III. OUTREACH AND COMMUNICATION 2 DODE hosted a live forum regarding the state of education on the Navajo Nation amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic with Navajo Nation school leaders and health experts the evening of June 17, 2021. The panel took questions and concerns from the audience as well as points brainstormed by DODE staff that parents may have about sending their children back to school for in-person instruction.
    [Show full text]
  • Grades FINAL.Xlsx
    School Name Letter Grade Round Valley Primary School * Cordova Primary School * Mesa Transitional Learning Center * Deer Valley Academy * Humanities and Sciences Academy Arizona * Peoria eCampus * Valle Del Encanto Learning Center * Buckeye Primary * Southwest Key Transitional Learning Center * Chandler Online Academy * ASU Preparatory Academy- Phoenix High School * ASU Preparatory Academy-Polytechnic Elementary * Coronado Elementary School A Benson Primary School A Charles W Sechrist Elementary School A Flagstaff High School A Flagstaff Arts And Leadership Academy A Mountain School A Northland Preparatory Academy A Payson High School A Triumphant Learning Center A Franklin Elementary School A Franklin West Elementary A Hale Elementary School A Pomeroy Elementary School A Johnson Elementary School A O'Connor Elementary School A Ishikawa Elementary School A Sousa Elementary School A Hermosa Vista Elementary School A Falcon Hill Elementary School A Bush Elementary A Las Sendas Elementary School A Franklin Northeast School A Poston Junior High School A Shepherd Junior High School A Mountain View High School A Red Mountain High School A Kachina Elementary School A Oakwood Elementary School A Marshall Ranch Elementary School A Santa Fe Elementary School A Paseo Verde Elementary School A Desert Harbor Elementary School A Sunrise Mountain High School A Patterson Elementary School A Neely Traditional Academy A Pioneer Elementary School A Burk Elementary School A Val Vista Lakes Elementary School A Playa del Rey Elementary School A Sonoma Ranch
    [Show full text]
  • Student Resume Book
    Class of 2019 STUDENT RESUME BOOK [email protected] CLASS OF 2019 PROFILE 46 48% WOMEN CLASS SIZE PRIOR COMPANIES Feldsted & Scolney 2 Amazon.com, Inc Fincare Small Finance Bank American Airlines Group General Electric Co AVERAGE YEARS American Family Insurance Mu Sigma, Inc PRIOR WORK Bank of New York, Qualtrics LLC EXPERIENCE Melloncorp Quantiphi Inc Brookhurst Insurance Skyline Technologies Services TechLoss Consulting & CEB Inc Restoration, Inc Cecil College ThoughtWorks, Inc Darwin Labs US Army Economists, Inc UCSD Guardian United Health Group, Inc PRIOR DEGREE Welch Consulting, Ltd CONCENTRATIONS ZS Associates Inc & BACKGROUND* MATH & STATISTICS 82.61% ENGINEERING 32.61% ECONOMICS 30.43% COMPUTER SCIENCE & IT 19.57% SOCIAL SCIENCES 13.04% HUMANITIES 10.87% BUSINESS 8.70% OTHER SCIENCES 8.70% *many students had multiple majors or OTHER 8.70% specializations; for example, of the 82.61% of students with a math and/or statistics DATA SCIENCE 2.17% background, most had an additional major or concentration and therefore are represented in additional categories. 0 20 40 60 80 100 Class of 2019 SAURABH ANNADATE ALICIA BURRIS ALEX BURZINSKI TED CARLSON IVAN CHEN ANGELA CHEN CARSON CHEN HARISH CHOCKALINGAM SABARISH CHOCKALINGAM TONY COLUCCI JD COOK SOPHIE DU JAMES FAN MICHAEL FEDELL JOYCE FENG NATHAN FRANKLIN TIAN FU ELLIOT GARDNER MAX HOLIBER NAOMI KADUWELA MATT KEHOE JOE KUPRESANIN MICHEL LEROY JONATHAN LEWYCKYJ Class of 2019 HENRY PARK KAREN QIAN FINN QIAO RACHEL ROSENBERG SHREYAS SABNIS SURABHI SETH TOVA SIMONSON MOLLY SROUR
    [Show full text]
  • 2009 Northern Arizona Soccer Guide
    NAU QUICK FACTS UNIVERSITY FACTS Institution ................Northern Arizona University Location..........................................Flagstaff, Ariz. Founded ...................................................... 1899 Enrollment (statewide) ............................22,500 Nickname ........................................ Lumberjacks Colors .................................. Blue, Gold and Sage Affiliation .................................. NCAA Division I Conference .............................................. Big Sky Athletics Director .................................. Jim Fallis President ....................................Dr. John Haeger Associate AD/SWA ........................Beth Vechinski Assistant AD/Compliance ................Lynn Newson Assistant AD/Academics......................Pam Lowie Academic Coordinator ......................Diana Ulrey Faculty Athletic Rep. ..............Dr. Wayne Sjoberg TEAM FACTS 2008 Overall Record ..................................12-7-3 2008 Conference Record/Finish ............4-1-2/1st 2007 Overall Record ....................................7-7-5 GENERAL INFORMATION 2008 SEASON REVIEW 2007 Conference Record/Finish ............2-4-1/7th Quick Facts ..................................................1 Match Results ......................................29 Home Facility ........................Max Spilsbury Field Media Information ......................................2 Overall/Conference Statistics................29 ............................at Lumberjack Stadium (3,000) Media Relations
    [Show full text]
  • REGULAR BOARD MEETING Peoria Unified School District No. 11 District Administration Center 6330 W
    REGULAR BOARD MEETING Peoria Unified School District No. 11 District Administration Center 6330 W. Thunderbird Road, Glendale, AZ 85306 October 14, 2014 Mr. Hal Borhauer, Board President, called the Regular Board Meeting to order at 5:31 Call to Order p.m. in the District Administration Center Board Room. Other Board members present were Mr. Matthew Bullock, Board Clerk; Mrs. Kathy Knecht, and Mr. James Kistner. Board Member Tracy Livingston was absent. Also present were Dr. Denton Santarelli, Superintendent; Dr. Heather Cruz, Deputy Superintendent; Mr. Kenneth Hicks, Chief Financial Officer; and Mrs. Dana McCarty, Secretary. There were approximately 50 people in the audience. Mr. Borhauer called for a moment of silence, which was followed by the pledge of Opening Exercises allegiance led by Miss Naomi Onaka, a 2009 graduate of Sunrise Mountain High School. There were no recommended changes to the order of the agenda. Agenda Reorder Each year the National Merit Scholarship Corporation honors the most academically Staff and Board talented students from high schools across the United States. This year two Peoria Recognitions Unified School District students have been identified as National Merit Semifinalists. Mrs. Erin Dunsey, Media Relations Specialist, introduced the two students, Jacky Hao of Liberty High School and Kenji Onaka of Sunrise Mountain High School. The students responded to questions and received congratulations from Board members and Dr. Santarelli. Family members of the students were also recognized. Other acknowledgements
    [Show full text]
  • Arizona Interscholastic Association, Inc
    MINUTES EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING December 5, 2016 In accordance with Article 6, Section 6.3, Paragraph 6.3.1 of the Arizona Interscholastic Association, Inc. (AIA) Constitution, a regular meeting of the Executive Board was held on Monday, December 5, 2016 at the AIA office located at 7007 North 18th Street in Phoenix, Arizona. President Dr. Anna Battle called the meeting to order at 8:30 a.m. Members in Attendance: Mark Goodman, 1A Conference (St. David Unified School District) Mark Showers, 2A Conference (Camp Verde High School) Jacob Holiday, 3A Conference (Monument Valley High School) Jeannine Brandel, 4A Conference (Flagstaff High School) Anna Battle, Ed.D, 5A Conference (Tempe Union High School District) Herman House, 6A Conference (Tucson Unified School District) Sr. Lynn Winsor, BVM, CMAA, Arizona Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association (Xavier College Preparatory) Camille Casteel, Ed.D, Arizona School Administrators (Chandler Unified School District) Travis Udall, AdvancED (Round Valley Unified Schools) Mike DeLaO, Arizona School Boards Association (Safford Unified School District) Harold Slemmer, Ed.D., AIA Executive Director AIA Staff Present: Mark Mignella, Legal Counsel David Hines, Assistant Executive Director Gary Whelchel, State Commissioner of Officials Denise Doser, Director of Finance Brian Bolitho, Director of Business Development Dean Visser, Tournament Coordinator Ron Halbach, Tournament Coordinator Tayler Coady, Executive Assistant Guests: Jose Garcia, AzPreps365.com Scott Bordow, AzCentral Jim Denton, Combs John Scrogham, Combs Adam Rasmussen, Gilbert Christian Executive Board Minutes December 5, 2016 LEGAL COUNSEL REPORT On a motion duly made, seconded and carried, Vice President Holiday, in accordance with Article 6, Section 6.3, Paragraph 6.3.3, Subparagraph 6.3.3.2 of the AIA Constitution, called for the following Executive Sessions to receive report from legal counsel: 9:30 am – 10:15 a.m.
    [Show full text]
  • October 2018
    www.InMaricopa.com October 2018 EDUCATION THINGS TO DO Deseg funds Trick-or-Eat prove divisive to debut GOVERNMENT Magic 100 days of new city Time manager Kaden Rogers creates his own world of wonder Election+ Guide GIVE YOUR TASTE BUDS SOME EYE CANDY. Breakfast spreads. Midnight snacks. Popping corks and cheers. The choices are endless, whether you’re grabbing a quick bite or sharing plates with friends. Sip, savor and forever run toward a bigger playground. Quality Service at a Fair Price SAVE (520) 213-5021 EVEN MORE WITH GROUP RATES! Call for more info! P Fast, Friendly Local Service P Affordable Service Repair and Replacement Take advantage of great end-of-Summer specials with a new American Standard A/C System FREE NEXIA THERMOSTAT With Installation of New American Standard Unit Nexia — Control Thermal imaging at your now available to Fingertips detect hot spots in your home 24/7 SERVICE Now providing American Standard Play For All lifetime maintenance service harrahsakchin.com Coupon must be presented before project completion. Expires 10/31/2018. Must be 21 or older to gamble. Know When To Stop Before You Start.® Licensed, Bonded and Insured Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-522-4700 or 1-800-NEXT STEP. ROC#294841 ©2018 Caesars License Company, LLC. Contents October 2018 LEADING OFF Editor’s Letter Page 4 Emily Panter teaches Contributors Page 4 Structured English Powered by Orbitel Communications Immersion at Maricopa High PEOPLE School in classes funded by desegregation money. History photo looks at African-American cowboy. Page 5 Welcome to the Ultimate TV Experience A photo gallery captures events around town.
    [Show full text]