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(12/03/14 11:36pm)
Dr. Carol Johnston (left) and Dr. Karen Sweazea pose for a portrait in the Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Monday, Dec. 1, 2014 in downtown Phoenix. Dr. Johnston and Dr. Sweazea work in a lab to produce testing materials for their research on type 2 diabetes. (Photo by Tynin Fries)
(12/02/14 10:55pm)
Using information gathered from small pieces of rock called chondrules, taken from the Semarkona meteorite that fell to Earth in central India during the 1940s, an international team of planetary scientists has taken steps toward solving the mysteries of how the solar system formed.
(11/23/14 10:07pm)
For people living in Votua, a coastal village in southern Fiji, basic medical supplies are far from abundant.
(11/20/14 1:51am)
(11/17/14 9:00pm)
Rosalind Sadleir, assistant professor at the School of Biological and Health Systems Engineering, poses for a portrait at the Interdisciplinary Studies building on the Tempe campus on Nov. 17, 2014. Dr. Sadleir has worked with students and faculty on research for over 10 years to develop a new way to see electrical activity as it occurs in the brain. (Photo by Andrew Ybanez)
(11/14/14 12:00am)
(Left to right) Don Fowler, Betsy Rice, Glen Rice and Catherine Fowler pose after Glen Rice receives the Don D. and Catherine S. Fowler Prize for his upcoming book at the Great Basin Anthropological Conference. (Photo by Reba Rauch/Courtesy of Glen Rice)
(11/09/14 10:33pm)
The high school dropout rate for Hispanics in the U.S. has decreased by 9 percent drastically since 1990, according to the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics.
(11/05/14 11:08pm)
ASU researchers Dan Buttry (right) and coworkers Helme Castro (left) and Poonam Singh work in the lab.(Photo Courtesy of ASU News/Photo by Mary Zhu)
(10/29/14 10:49pm)
(Back row from left to right) Graduate biomedical engineering students Haiqing Wang and chemical engineering student Tyson Tsutsumi, Professor Vikram Kodibagkar, and undergraduate biomedical engineering student Carlos Renteria, (front row from left to right) biomedical doctoral students Shubhangi Agarwal, Vimala N. Bharadwaj, and Rohini Vidya Shankar, are part of a research team supported by the National Science Foundation. Exploring new imaging techniques, they aim to discern the correlation between aggressive tumors and oxygen deficiency in cells. (Photo by Mario Mendez)
(10/26/14 9:09pm)
Fernando Ponce with ASU professor David Cherns and Nobel Laureate Hiroshi Amano in front of Gammage Auditorium. (Photo Courtesy of Fernando Ponce)
(10/20/14 10:00pm)
New research conducted by a group of ASU scientists suggests that the volcanic activity on the surface of the moon ended recently, not 1 billion years ago as commonly believed. (Photo by Ben Moffat)
(10/19/14 7:30pm)
ASU’s immersive virtual field trips, commonly referred to as iVFTs, are improving the accessibility of a more engaging, comprehensive educational experience for University students enrolled in iCourses, as well as the general public through an online library.
(10/17/14 4:25pm)
UPDATE: The stabbing occurred at the Vista del Sol Garage Maintenance Office and was the result of a personal argument between the two men, Keeler said in an email.
(10/15/14 10:54pm)
ASU hired Scott Parazynski, a former NASA space walker who also climbed Mt. Everest, as its first University Explorer.
(10/09/14 9:30pm)
The GlobeMed club at ASU is working to improve water and sanitation infrastructure in east Africa, proving that positive impact made by undergraduates can be as far-reaching as it is heartfelt.
(10/05/14 8:09pm)
Summers are hotter in Phoenix than they are in any other city in the U.S., according to a 2013 USA Today report, but new data suggests that steps taken by Phoenix to combat this problem have been successful.
(10/02/14 11:54pm)
A team of nine professors at ASU’s School of Human Evolution and Social Change will be taking a collaborative, multi-project approach to solving the mystery of exactly how humans became human after receiving a $4.9 million dollar grant from the John Templeton Foundation.
(09/28/14 8:42pm)
A team of researchers at ASU received a $65,000 grant from the Mayo Clinic earlier in September in order to continue their work on a tear-based glucose meter that could forever change the lives of diabetics.
(09/28/14 8:38pm)
Tempe Police reported the following incidents Sunday:
(09/25/14 9:59pm)
Tempe Police reported the following incident Thursday:
A 29-year-old Mesa man was arrested Sept. 20 at South Mill Avenue and East Fiesta Lane on suspicion of aggravated DUI, according to a police report.
According to the report, the man’s blood alcohol level was measured by a Breathalyzer test after he was contacted by police and recorded as 0.239 percent, nearly triple the legal limit.
Officers reported he was initially contacted for swerving across lanes multiple times, police reported. Upon contacting the man, officers said the man had difficulty speaking, bloodshot eyes and slow reaction time, according to the report.
A background check revealed that the man had a history of several other DUI arrests and related license revocations, police reported.
Police reported that the man was driving on a suspended license at the time of his arrest, according to the report.
The man was taken to Tempe City Jail, where he was booked and held to see a judge, according to the report.
Reports compiled by Megann Phillips
Reach the reporter at megann.phillips@asu.edu or follow her on Twitter @megannphillips