3641 N. 56th Street, Phoenix • 480-945-9537 • www.popphoenix.org Northeast corner of 56th St. and Indian School Road Lots of fun for your preschooler this summer! • Ages 2-5 • Flexible Scheduling • Indoor Gymnasium Preschool Summer Camp Preschool Fall Registration Registration may still be available on a limited basis. Call the office today at 480-947-5645 to schedule a tour! Vacation Bible School is On The Way! CAVE QUEST: Following Jesus the Light of the World! To register, call the church office or go online. June 6-10, from 9 a.m. – Noon Kids K-5th grade! $50/person Petting Zoo • Arizona Puppet Theater • Snow Day • Water Day Vacation Bible School • Ice Castles • Patriotic Parade • Snow Cones Music and Art Experiences • Science Experiments • Sports Join us for 8 weeks of Preschool Fun from June 6–July 15 Registration Forms for Camp available in the office or at www.poppreschool.com Experience • Integrity • Results Injured? Questions? Call me on my cell. 602-692-4636 www.LawinAZ.com | rbarry@azbar.org Robert E. Barry – Attorney at Law, PC Car - Motorcycle Accident - Injury and Wrongful Death 5646 N. Camelback Canyon Dr., Phoenix, AZ 85018 Car Accident Lawyer Serving Arcadia Since 2001 Page 54 May 2016 By Jenet Simmons Nostalgic as root beer f loats on a hot summer day is the feeling Hopi Elementary School parents have when discussing the volunteer art program, Art Masterpiece. Going strong into its 30th year, Art Masterpiece was instituted at Hopi Elementary through the Phoenix Art Museum. Art Masterpiece exposes students in kindergarten through fifth grade to multiple artists throughout the school year using reproductions of various artists’ works and mediums. Examples include classic style art like Van Gogh and Georgia O’Keefe, to the design and skill needed to create Navajo blankets. Art Masterpiece is run entirely by parent volunteers and is supported through Hopi’s PTA. “Without parental support, there’s no way we’d be able to do it,” said parent volunteer and leader of Hopi’s Art Masterpiece, Susanna Ning. In her sixth year of volunteering, Hopi mom Liz Ord remembers when Art Masterpiece started while she was in elementary school. “My mom was the Art Masterpiece teacher when I was a student at Hopi and I got to sit back and enjoy artwork for what it was and thought, ‘I want to do this for my kids.’ Here I am 25 years later doing it in all three of my children’s classrooms,” said Ord. Kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Susie Baldwin raved about the benefits Art Masterpiece bestows on her students. She talked about the importance of having community members teach in her class. “It benefits the students to see others, especially their own parents, come in with knowledge to impart. It creates the sense that there are many people we can learn from as young children.” “Students learn many of the art concepts in their regular art class and this is a great way to access prior knowledge and utilize it in other art work. The students only get one day a week of art, so this added day per month expands on the concepts from their regular art class.” Hopi hosted the annual Fine Arts Fair exhibition in April. The Fine Arts Fair was the culmination for Art Masterpiece’s program, when each student had one piece of original artwork displayed down the main corridor of the school for parents and students to walk through and admire. Art program going strong after 30 years Students of Mrs. Baldwin’s kindergarten class sharing their masterpieces.
Are you missing out on life because of back or neck pain? Here are four steps to get you back to life 1 Learn What Symptoms Mean A painful spasm can often be resolved with home remedies, while numbness or weakness requires immediate treatment to prevent the symptoms from becoming permanent. 2 Get Our Home Remedy Book About 80 percent of simple back and neck pain can resolve with home remedies. Spine Group Arizona offers a Home Remedy Book with symptom charts and pain-relieving stretches. 3 Learn All Your Options Some symptoms from back or neck problems can be relieved with non-surgical treatment options like a simple injection or customized stretches. Or you may qualify for minimally invasive surgery. 4 Get A Second Opinion If you’ve been told you need spine surgery, you may want to get a second opinion from a spine center that includes non-surgical treatment options. You may learn that you don’t need surgery after all. Appointments, referrals and second opinions: 480-882-5566 Spine encyclopedia at SpineGroupArizona.com Page 55 May 2016 By Chloe McAllaster On April 7 Arcadia High School hosted its annual Agora festival, providing the community with free entertainment showcasing the work of its fine arts students as well as the artistic talents of local elementary and middle school students. Agora has a long history at AHS, making it a staple event for not only the schools that participate, but also the broader community. “Agora has been taking place for 10 years plus. It’s an event that the Arcadia Visual Arts Department really enjoys putting together,” said Cira Riccio, AHS visual arts instructor and National Art Honor Society sponsor. In ancient Greek, the term agora means “gathering place,” a title that encompasses the festival’s goal of uniting the community through art while celebrating the hard work of its students. “The Arcadia Agora is the center of artistic, educational life of the school,” Riccio said. “We love having the opportunity to display what our art students have been working on – they work so hard and deserve to have it shown to the community. We do all of this for them.” The festival included a wide array of performances, exhibitions, interactive activities, and local food trucks for the entire community to enjoy. It also displayed artwork from Ingleside, Arcadia Neighborhood Learning Center, Hopi, and Tavan students. “This is my favorite part – being able to see what all the students have been working on at other schools and having this collaboration with the other art teachers in the area schools. I know it puts a smile on students’ faces when they see their work hanging up for all to see,” said Riccio. James Karabin, a student who helped organize and manage the event, said he loved many aspects of Agora, particularly the variety of student artwork featured. “It’s not only an opportunity for students of all levels to show their artwork, but it also allows students, parents and faculty to see the hard work people have put in throughout the year. The artwork was from Arcadia High School as well as several other schools, so it brings a ton of diversity,” said Karabin. Arcadia’s orchestra and jazz ensemble and the Teen Titans dance group performed, providing live entertainment to guests. Agora also included activities that required direct participation from attendees, such as face painting, henna tattoos, demonstrations of the photo transfer process and a potter’s wheel. National Art Honor Society students contributed to the festival by operating a student marketplace where handmade items were sold. All proceeds were donated to Free Arts of Arizona, which is “an organization that provides the opportunity [of] artistic expression to homeless and abused children,” said Karabin. “It’s an amazing event for a good cause.” Arcadia High School holds annual Agora festival Artwork from Ingleside, Arcadia Neighborhood Learning Center, Hopi and Tavan were all shown during the community gathering put on by AHS.


