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New ASU water institute aims to challenge water and climate problems worldwide
Water — and the future of water supplies — continue to be critical issues both here in Arizona and across the world. A new entity at ASU will aim to help find solutions to those concerns. Upmanu Lall is a professor in ASU’s School of Complex Adaptive Systems...
Ariz. Assoc. Unveils its New Name During Well-Attended Conf.
Representatives from 300 to 350 RV parks and manufactured housing communities attended the annual conference of the Arizona Association of RV Parks and Campgrounds, which used the occasion to announce its name change to the Arizona Outdoor Hospitality Association (AzOHA). “We had 165 attendees representing 300 to 350 parks, both...
US Marshals Service locates 200 missing children with 49 from Arizona
The U.S. Marshals Service announced on Monday morning that it had recovered or safely located roughly 200 children — nearly a quarter of whom were from Arizona — as part of a national six-week operation dubbed "We Will Find You 2" which aimed to locate missing or abducted children across the country.
Missing Flagstaff woman's husband arrested; Arizona football coach dies l Morning News Brief
PHOENIX - The husband of a Flagstaff woman who never returned home has been arrested; a northern Arizona football coach passed away; and more – here's a look at some of the top stories on FOX10Phoenix.com for the morning of July 2. 1. Husband of missing woman arrested. Featured.
AZ officials caution public to skip setting off fireworks as wildfire risk is high
The Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management urged residents to put away the fireworks this Fourth of July as wildfire danger remains high. Fireworks have been known to start wildfires and with nearly 8,500 acres of Arizona desert still ablaze the week of July 4th officials will be on high alert.
Arizona State Is Monkeying Around For A Better Future
With a careful bit of monkey business, one group of hominids detached from the primate evolutionary chain and began to evolve at a breakneck pace. Nowadays, humans and apes are in entirely different classes, with one considering itself the ultimate form of life on planet Earth, and the other left to either waste away in a zoo, or survive in a world no longer built for them.
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