A meteor strike tens of thousands of years ago in northern Arizona formed what is now called Meteor Crater. New research suggests that impact may have been felt elsewhere, too. Plus, the cultural forces that draw Filipinos into nursing in Arizona and around the country.
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There is a lot of technology around the U.S.–Mexico border. But it turns out there’s even more tech in that area than many people know about — because it’s out of sight.
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Librarians could end up in prison under a new Republican proposal being debated at the state Capitol.
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More than 50,000 years ago, a meteor hit Earth and formed what we now call Meteor Crater in northern Arizona. But new research finds that impact may have gone beyond that one site.
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D. Graham Burnett is a history professor at Princeton — and he thinks we’re at a pivotal moment in history. A moment he likes to compare to the birth of environmental activism, or the labor movement.
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Gayle Tomimbang is a filmmaker and interdisciplinary media artist, and she got a city of Phoenix Artists to Work Grant to make the film, called "Duty Free Care."
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The Chicago Cubs plan a new hotel and housing near their facility in Mesa, on the site of a former county animal shelter.