- Governor Signs Telemedicine Bill at UA College of Medicine-Phoenix The signing of Senate Bill 1353, also known as the Telemedicine Reimbursement Parity Act, took place in the T-Health Institute on the UA College of Medicine-Phoenix campus.
- Seed Funding Leads to Major UA Grants The Jim Himelic Foundation is working to apply ALS research in a clinical setting at the MDA/ALS Center at The University of Arizona Medical Center-South Campus.
- The New Face of Mining: Women Carving Out a Place in Surging Industry The department of mining and geological engineering is helping to fill the mining industry pipeline, and that includes ensuring female engineers continue to gain ground.
- UA Orientation Primes Wildcats for Life Hundreds of students will be visiting the University with their families to attend New Student Orientation, now under way on the UA campus.
- 'Helicopter Parents' Cause Long-Term Issues When it comes to parenting, can there be too much of a good thing - too much attention, guidance and problem solving? Yes, says UA communication professor Chris Segrin.
- Archaeologists Unearth New Information on Origins of Maya Civilization A new UA study in the journal Science challenges the two prevailing theories on how the ancient Maya civilization began. The findings are based on seven years of excavations.
- UA Researchers Solve Mystery of Lincoln's Funeral Train UA researchers have turned their attention to one of the last remaining mysteries about Abraham Lincoln's funeral - the color of the president's railcar.
- Good Days, Bad Days: When Should You Make Sacrifices in a Relationship? A new UA study suggests that while making sacrifices in a relationship is generally positive, doing so on days when you are feeling especially stressed may not be beneficial.
- UA-Led Asteroid Mission is a Go NASA has granted final approval of the OSIRIS-REx sample return mission led by the UA. Such samples are critical to understanding the origin of the solar system, Earth and life.
- World’s Longest-Running Plant Monitoring Program Now Digitized Researchers at the UA's Tumamoc Hill have digitized 106 years of growth data on individual plants, making the information available for study by people all over the world.





