You know those people who think they know everything about everything? Why one writer thinks we’re all kind of becoming those people. And, a road trip that celebrates the best and worst of American excess.
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Arizona farmers in areas of the state with groundwater restrictions have an opportunity to sell some of their land to developers eager to use it to boost Arizona’s housing supply. The concept is known as “ag-to-urban.” It’s a pathway to convert farmland to residential use, a process that is currently restricted.
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Arizona’s bioscience industry continues to grow, and in some cases, that growth is happening at a faster rate than the rest of the country.
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What does it mean to be an expert on something? And who gets to say they are an authority on a particular subject — how much does someone need to know to reasonably say they are, in fact, an expert?
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Kevin DeMenna, a longtime lobbyist with DeMenna Public Affairs, worries about what lawmaker turnover means for the Arizona institution’s future.
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Sarah Kendzior, Ph.D., a journalist and an anthropologist, has reported on authoritarianism, organized crime, technology, the environment. But her latest work is a more personal story.
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If you’re a comedy fan, you probably know the name Andy Kaufman. Maybe you know him from bizarre sketches in the early days of SNL, or maybe you remember him as the zany mechanic named Latka in "Taxi."