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Latest from Associated Press
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First Lady Touts Biden Cancer Initiative in Tucson Visit
Biden met with tribal health officials and leaders of the University of Arizona Cancer Center, who discussed their joint efforts to improve cancer screening and treatment for Native Americans.
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Teachers Reimagine US History Lessons With Eye on Diversity
Brandon Brown, a former history teacher and assistant elementary school principal, is now a Billboard-charting educational rapper who performs around the US.
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First Lady Touts Intel Training Program in Chandler Stop
She spoke after touring one of two Intel campuses in Chandler, where the semiconductor firm has promised a massive $20 billion expansion to ramp up and modernize its chipmaking business.
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High Profits: Arizona Colleges Get Windfall From Marijuana Sales
The state’s 10 community college districts got over $31 million from big spending during the first year of sales for recreational marijuana.
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Delivery Robots With Russian Ties Pulled From University of Arizona
Grubhub launched robot delivery at the University of Arizona last November. The company says it was doing 1,000 deliveries a day between the two campuses.
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GOP Lawsuit Looks to Throw Out Early Voting in Arizona
In 2020, 90% of Arizona voters used an absentee ballot, which can be returned by mail, an official drop box run by county election officials, or at a polling place.
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Arizona Senate Approves Bill Creating Low-Income Tax Credit
The Arizona Senate passed a Democratic proposal to create a new tax credit for working low-income Arizonans on Wednesday.
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Virginia Republicans Adopt Plan to End School Mask Requirements March 1
The legislature passed the bill on Monday; Youngkin then amended it to add an emergency clause so that it could take effect before the typical July 1 enactment date for new legislation.
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GOP Pushes Arizona Schools to Post All Class Materials Online
Educators don’t take issue with keeping parents informed, but they see a risk that the so-called curriculum-transparency requirements will invite censorship, professional burnout, and resignations.
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GOP Pushes Iowa Schools to Post All Class Materials Online
Educators don’t take issue with keeping parents informed, but they see a risk that the so-called curriculum-transparency requirements will invite censorship, professional burnout, and resignations.















