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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Seven
vie for superintendent job Seven "semi-finalist"
candidates will vie for the job of Sisters' school superintendent.
The Sisters School Board decided
Monday night to interview all seven candidates Friday and Saturday, March
14 and 15.
The board also adopted a calendar
that will start the 2003-04 school year on September 15, late enough for
the new high school to receive students.
The seven superintendent candidates
received the highest ratings from a search committee that spent much of
last week going over the 24 applications the position has attracted. The
committee, led by School Board Chairman Jeff Smith, includes the five
board members and 11 other citizens.
The board will conduct the
interviews, with other members of the search committee invited to attend
but not to ask questions. This step is expected to winnow the field to
two or three finalists, who will then be invited for a round of open,
public appearances.
The search is being conducted
to find a replacement for Superintendent Steve Swisher, who is retiring
in April but will continue to work for a couple of months to help with
the transition.
The semi-finalists are: Jack
Adams, superintendent of Colville schools in Colville, Washington; Tim
Comfort, principal of Sisters Elementary School; Yvonne Curtis, principal
of Terrebonne Elementary School; Judy Delahut, director of the Initial
Administrator Licensure Program at the University of Oregon; Charles Hellman,
superintendent of Rogue River schools; Doug Jantzi, curriculum and assessment
director for Central Point schools, and Wayne Kostur, superintendent of
Rainier schools.
In approving a calendar for
the coming year, the board was heartened by reports that mild winter weather
has put construction of the new high school so far ahead of schedule that
it should be possible to occupy the building in mid-September. Board members
agreed that it would be better to occupy the school at the beginning of
the year rather than moving in after classes have begun.
The adopted schedule will
open school later than usual, on September 15, but make up for the lost
time by cutting spring vacation to a single week. Christmas vacation would
remain two weeks long. |
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