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Engineering, lessons on the elements of art in design and digital electronics could all lead to future careers for Mesa students.
Christopher Brock and his nine students in the "honors biotechnology 2" career and technical education class at Williams Field High School in Gilbert this school year have achieved a feat normally associated with professional researchers and scientists.
Williams Field High School senior Celina Ramos works with a solution to break down the genetic material of the Palo Verde plant. Ramos is among nine honors students who worked on the gene sequencing project for her high school biotechnology class. (Submitted)
Need those back to school shots?
Chandler Regional and Mercy Gilbert medical centers’ Community Outreach Immunization Program, in collaboration with Arizona’s Vaccine for Children Program, will sponsor free immunization clinics for children, as well as low-cost immunizations for adults, several times in the next few weeks.
A brew and a bro — it’s the classic pairing, right? Not necessarily.
A study of chicken byproducts co-authored by an Arizona State University researcher found trace amounts of antibiotics banned from poultry production in 2005.
As the recession began to take hold, the red-hot real estate market around the Chandler Airport went into such a free-fall that the city’s economic development team did the unthinkable.
The way students study DNA strands has met its match with a new genome test kit produced by a Tempe company.
Drug companies Johnson and Johnson and Amgen battled each other so bitterly in a market share war that they pushed drugs and dosages jeopardizing patients' lives, said the author of a book about Johnson and Johnson whistle-blowers.
You probably don't know the director Lone Scherfig. Her name wasn't even in the credits of her first box-office success in the United States. Her second big hit here was nominated for Best Picture, Best Actress and Best Screenplay, but she wasn't nominated.
There is one week left before late registration for fall semester starts at Chandler-Gilbert Community College.
A study under way in Mesa — and around the country — may reveal that a person’s own stem cells can be used to save dying limbs.
Summer and fall 2011 class registration begins on March 21 at Chandler-Gilbert Community College. The college's first summer session begins May 31; the second summer session begins July 5; and the fall semester begins August 20.
Based on the trailers and commercials, Unknown has you thinking the whole time that the outcome is predictable; however, as the movie carries on you realize how unpredictable it actually is when you discover an important and unexpected twist.
Based on the trailers and commercials, Unknown has you thinking the whole time that the outcome is predictable; however, as the movie carries on you realize how unpredictable it actually is when you discover an important and unexpected twist.
Statistics show that science is a subject that students can struggle the most with in standardized testing. But a Desert Vista teacher knows that kids can not only succeed in science, but enjoy it as well.
One hand holding a chromatography column (think chemistry tube), one holding a pencil-size UV light, Gilbert student Alya Perez squealed Thursday as a green glow appeared at the bottom of the glass container.
Bianca Amin,17, left, and Blake Francis do an experiment with DNA gel fingerprinting while attending a workshop called Biotechnology Forensics and DNA part of the Prime the Pipeline Project held on the ASU Polytechnic campus in Mesa, Thursday, May 17, 2010.
There's a collective sign of the times going on in East Valley school districts.
Hamilton High School junior Shaina Hasan of Chandler won an honorable mention award Tuesday at the BIO International Convention in Chicago. Shaina was one of 14 finalists at the competition representing the U.S., Canada and Western Australia.
Hamilton High School junior Shaina Hasan of Chandler will compete Tuesday in the final round of the BIO International Convention in Chicago. Shaina was one of two finalists who won the southwest regional competition in May.
Before Apple and Google became iconic American businesses, their founders developed the start-ups in the humble garage.
Guest Commentary by Michael Carroll
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
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