| Tipoffs for Tucson, Arizona (City) Newsletter for Friday November 17, 2023 ( 4 items ) |
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League of Conservation Voters: 2023 Election Results Show Real Climate Success
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 -- The League of Conservation Voters issued the following news release:
One week after election day, full results show that voters across the country showed up for environmental candidates and rejected big oil's cynical attacks. Together, the League of Conservation Voters and our state affiliates invested $7 million into the most important state and local races that were critical to building a clean energy future.
Our state league partners invested in over 220 races around
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University of Arizona-Native Nations Institute: Genetic Research With Indigenous Peoples - Perspectives on Governance and Oversight in the US
TUCSON, Arizona, Nov. 17 (TNSres) -- The University of Arizona's Native Nations Institute issued the following news release:
Indigenous Peoples are increasingly exerting governance and oversight over genomic research with citizens of their nations, raising questions about how best to enforce research regulation between American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian peoples and researchers.
Using a community-engaged research approach, we conducted 42 semi-structured interviews with Tribal
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University of Arizona: Blinking on a Quiz Show Offers Clues to Human Response Under Stress
TUCSON, Arizona, Nov. 17 (TNSres) -- The University of Arizona issued the following news release:
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Footage from the British TV show "Mastermind" gave University of Arizona psychologists a chance to examine human physiology under conditions of stress that would be impossible to reproduce in the lab.
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Quiz shows, where contestants answer rapid-fire questions in a high-stress, high-stakes environment, are an integral part of TV programming - and now they are demonstrating that they ha
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University of Arizona: Tracking an Errant Space Rocket to a Mysterious Crater on the Moon
TUCSON, Arizona, Nov. 17 (TNSres) -- The University of Arizona issued the following news release:
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A new study shows how a team at the University of Arizona's Space4 Center tracked down a contested piece of space junk that crashed onto the moon and provides an explanation for why it left not one but two craters.
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In March 2022, a defunct part of a space rocket hurled toward the moon's surface and impacted near the Hertzsprung Crater, an enormous impact feature on the far side of th
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