There was no shortage of changes for the nation and Arizona State University in 2017. In a year that celebrated the 15th anniversary of the New American University, the faculty, staff and students have made advancements in many fields of research, formed new partnerships and found innovative ways to help the communities they serve.
Related: Photos of the year from Charlie Leight and Deanna Dent and top 2017 video stories from Ken Fagan .
Here are some of the top stories of 2017:
Discoveries ASU researchers and scientists were busy this year, with new findings in many fields, including tuberculosis testing, the effects of divorce and autism treatment. Not to mention a thumbs-up on a NASA mission.
To start the year, ASU's Psyche Mission was selected for flight, marking the first time the school will lead a deep-space NASA mission and the first time scientists will be able to see what is believed to be a planetary core.
A team led by ASU researchers took a novel approach in the search for effective autism treatments by focusing on improving the gut microbiome through fecal microbial transplants — and early results were promising.
Some psychologists worried that if children frequently spend the night at their father’s home, it might disturb the relationship with their mother. ASU research showed that children of divorce benefit from having time with each parent.
A group of maverick scientists from Arizona, Texas and Washington, D.C., teamed up to develop the first rapid blood test to diagnose and quantitate the severity of active tuberculosis cases.
ASU research showed that among well-educated moms, when employment status is aligned with her preference, well-being soars.
A ban on personal-care products containing prominent antimicrobials that went into effect in September was a direct result of Rolf Halden's research.
In an effort to understand the gluten-free phenomenon, ASU Now spoke with three ASU professors about its nutritional value, the food industry's take and the psychology behind its popularity.
Solutions From the 15th anniversary of the New American University to a startup idea for easier parking around campus, the faculty, staff and students at ASU sought out ways to better their world.
Pancreatic cancer kills 80 percent of those diagnosed within a year, but according to a 2017 study an ASU researcher has devised an early detection technique that could help improve those odds.
ASU’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership launched in March, and director Paul Carrese hopes it will help restore the ancient notion that strong leaders and civil discourse are necessary in public affairs.
Lisa Gunter, a doctoral candidate studying behavioral neuroscience, found that shelter dogs benefit from sleepover programs like the one offered at at Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in Kanab, Utah.
Why can’t some planes fly when it’s scorching? ASU Now talked to Marc O’Brien, chair of Arizona State University’s aviation program, after more than 40 flights out of Phoenix were canceled in June.
The Mayo Clinic School of Medicine welcomed 50 students in Scottsdale in July. The curriculum will include a focus on the science of health care delivery jointly developed by experts at both Mayo Clinic and ASU.
With many major universities nationwide charging $500 or more a year for parking, two students at ASU created a company to alleviate stress associated with finding affordable parking options near campus.
Fifteen years ago, Michael M. Crow brought his idea of the New American University to ASU. Neither naysayers nor the Great Recession could derail his vision, and he has no plans to slow down anytime soon. Here's a look at how he got here.
Creativity The creative juices were flowing for ASU in 2017: 3-D printing classes, a film production employing students on the Tempe campus and a movie star's ceramics show are just a sampling.
Fans attending shows on U2’s Joshua Tree Tour 2017 got a little taste of Arizona: ASU Regents’ Professor Alberto Rios’ poem “The Border: A Double Sonnet” was projected on giant video screens during pre-show segments.
A new exhibition by actor James Franco and his brother, sculptor Tom Franco, debuted in June at the ASU Art Museum Ceramics Research Center. “Pipe Brothers: Tom and James Franco” consisted of nine carved and painted ceramic sewer pipes.
Bring eight people together for a month in an almost-abandoned hamlet in the middle of the Mojave desert, restrict them to four gallons of water per day each, and see what happens. That was the project, a hybrid science-art experiment with ASU students.
AZLoop — a team made up of students from ASU, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and NAU — finished in the top eight out of 35 teams in August at the second hyperloop competition sponsored by SpaceX.
What practices and strategies help people overcome adversity? The ASU community explored that question in a variety of ways in 2017.
Additive manufacturing is becoming a hot job market, and ASU courses are answering the call. “We are at the start of something exciting,” said Associate Professor Dhruv Bhate.
"Rhea," a futuristic sci-fi production from Arizona filmmaker Robert Conway, marked the first outside film production to involve the participation of ASU students in key production roles.
Entrepreneurship ASU's entrepreneurial spirit got a shot in the arm in 2017 from some big-name campus visitors, high-profile appearances for Arizona-based inventors and a heck of a lot of patents.
Founded by ASU alums Robert Yao and Neel Mehta, EpiFinder uses machine learning and artificial intelligence algorithms to help ensure more accurate diagnoses and treatments.
The Apple co-founder and PC pioneer visited the Tempe campus in February and shared secrets of success — among them: “Motivation is more important than knowledge.”
ASU gained in the rankings of U.S. patents granted to universities worldwide, moving up to 30th from 38th, according to news released in June. Sixty-two patents helped ASU outpace universities including Duke and Yale.
ASU's reputation of supporting entrepreneurial endeavors extended to budding health-care professionals in September with the soft launch of HEALab on ASU’s Downtown Phoenix campus.
Cuban visited ASU in October and talked about how learning about business in college gave him a leg up, and he encouraged students to make as much of an impact as possible.
From a poet coder to a culture conductor, ASU alumni shared what it takes to get to startup mecca and how to flourish there.
Maria Luna and Hector Rodriguez, who invented a payment and tipping app called Bravo and whose business is based at ASU, scored a $150,000 investment on a November episode of TV show “Shark Tank."
Global Engagement Partnerships with China, work in developing countries and a slew of international scholars — both home and abroad — led ASU's contributions to the world stage in 2017.
ASU ranked among the top for prestigious Fulbright award winners, with six faculty members and 15 students abroad in 2017. The Fulbright is the U.S. government’s flagship international educational exchange program.
Laura Hosman's solar-powered digital library brings educational opportunities to remote, off-grid communities. Her innovative device was awarded one of the inaugural PLuS Alliance Prizes in September.
Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke at the Barrett Distinguished Global Leader Series in October, sharing her advice and encouraging students to find their passion and act on it.
ASU has a Marshall, Rhodes and, for the first time, Churchill Scholar — and is one of only four schools to achieve that distinction for 2017. The others are Harvard, Stanford and the University of Chicago.
For the third year in a row, ASU hosted more international students than any other public university in the country, according to a report released in November by an international education nonprofit.
An entrepreneurial "boot camp," a tourism college in Hainan and a master's degree program in three countries are among the newest initiatives that ASU has forged with Chinese institutions.
Arizona Impact Students, faculty and administrators were deeply entrenched in Arizona-centric projects this year, including launching a program to shore up numbers of Arizona K-12 teachers, designing a shadier bus stop shelter for Valley Metro and optimizing the use of the Salt River bed.
The ASU Prep Digital High School will integrate the Cambridge International Curriculum in an innovative program that can accelerate the path to a high school degree; click here to read about one rural Arizona school's experience.
Herberger, one of Arizona State University’s most generous supporters, died Feb. 28. He was 79. Herberger was an architect as well as a businessman and philanthropist whose family donated more than $40 million to ASU.
Two of ASU's largest graduate programs showed big improvement in U.S. News & World Report rankings in March: the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College and the W. P. Carey School of Business full-time MBA program.
ASU President Michael M. Crow told a group of Valley faith leaders there are many lessons that can be taken from the tragedy of Charlottesville and displays of hate and racism — mostly that positive action can change history.
U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and ASU gave a preview in August of a new effort to transform the entire Salt River bottom into an urban and environmental amenity, aiming to engage the creativity of the university community.
ASU is offering a scholarship to boost the number of teachers in Arizona’s K-12 classrooms as a response to Gov. Doug Ducey’s call for the state’s public universities to help ease the critical teacher shortage.
Phoenix will install 400 bus stops using the design of seniors Ethan Fancher, Dan Duquette, Derek Smoker and sophomore Erlend Meling — all industrial design majors in the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts.
Sun Devil Life It was an eventful 2017 for past and present Sun Devils alike: an innovative new residence hall opened its doors, a magazine for Native American students launched and ASU football mourned one legend and enshrined another.
In March, more than 50 students from ASU’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication covered games, created content for social media channels and assisted with Final Four-related show operations.
At May's Undergraduate Commencement, members of ASU’s Class of 2017 were encouraged by the Starbucks executive to go beyond what they learned in the classroom to create the future that they want.
Frank Kush, Arizona State University and College Football Hall of Fame inductee and the winningest coach in Sun Devil football history, died June 22 at age 88.
Everything about Tooker House, a brand-new 1,600-student community that opened in August, is designed to enhance and extend what engineering students learn in classrooms and labs.
A gleaming bronze statue of Pat Tillman — who played football at ASU before sacrificing his life as an Army Ranger — was unveiled in August in a ceremony at Sun Devil Stadium attended by the Tillman family, ASU leaders and football players.
Tony Award-winning actor Leslie Odom Jr. spoke at ASU’s West campus in October about the creation of "Hamilton" and his observations of the process. His talk was part of the annual Summer Community Read.
A first-of-its-kind magazine geared specifically for Native American students and written by an all-indigenous staff found its way into the hands of ASU’s Native student population in November.
ASU News ASU was in the headlines this year for some grade-A excitement: a record number of incoming Arizona freshmen, a global partnership with adidas, another school making its way downtown, and a threepeat in innovation rankings.
Arizona State University announced in January it is embarking on Campaign ASU 2020, a strategic effort that will focus the entire university’s development energies on one goal — to permanently raise the long-term fundraising capacity of the university.
The strategic partnership is aimed at shaping the future of sport and amplifying sport’s positive impact on society. It will bring together education, athletics, research and innovation to explore various topics through the lens of sport.
For the fifth year in a row, ASU is enrolling more freshmen from Arizona than the year prior, the fruit of the university’s continued commitment to help educate the state it serves.
U.S. News and World Report selected ASU as the nation's most innovative school for the third year in a row. The selection is based on a survey of college presidents, provosts and admissions deans around the country.
ASU's brand-new Student Pavilion is located at the center of student activity and student traffic, and plans are for it to host a variety of shows, productions and guest lecturers, in addition to providing classroom and office space.
Elizabeth Capaldi Phillips, the energetic, purpose-driven and passionate educator who served as ASU's provost and executive vice president during a time of explosive growth for the university, died Sept. 23 , Florida. She was 72.
The Gary K. Herberger Young Scholars Academy opened in November on the ASU West campus. The state-of-the-art educational facility provides a sustainable, open and inviting space for Herberger Academy students.
ASU announced in December the relocation of the iconic Thunderbird School of Global Management's graduate programs and the Thunderbird Executive Education program to the Downtown Phoenix campus.