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This summer marked 10 years of graduating residents from Onvida Health's residency program. Program Director Kristina Diaz talks program success.
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Today we sit down with San Luis Police and Fire Chiefs to hear about some of the challenges and successes in their departments as they serve a community that is growing faster than 92 percent of similar U.S. cities over the last quarter century.
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A state lawmaker and congressional candidate said Tuesday it is because of Christianity that other religions have been allowed into the United States.
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Marines train in hand-to-hand fighting techniques and get some encouragement from a former MMA fighter at MCAS-YUMA.
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The stop gap for migrant releases in Yuma County is the Regional Center for Border Health in Somerton, AZ. A look inside the agency's processing facility.
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Rebuffed by a trial judge, state schools chief Tom Horne is pursuing a new shot at overturning the policies of some schools that use dual-language instruction to teach English.
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Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoed the "Starter Homes Act'' Monday, saying the bipartisan bill promoted as making housing more affordable is "a step too far.''
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The very wet and extended winter is going to cause fire havoc in much of Arizona's grasslands, the state's chief fire management officer said Monday.
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Ignoring pleas from Democrats that victims could be caught up in harsh sentencing, Republican lawmakers on Monday sent a measure to the November ballot that if passed by voters in November would require those convicted of sex trafficking minors to spend life in prison with no chance of ever being released.
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Fifth expo highlights student work to share their stories about growing up in an environment speaking two or more languages.
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In the 1930s Elzada Clover and Lois Jotter wanted to gather and catalogue plants in the Grand Canyon, and while the details of their journey are amazing – how they became scientists, faced sexism and danger, and changed the field of botany is equally as engaging.