Housing market report reveals power of college students' housing decisions
A report released by the W. P. Carey School of Business last month reveals a changing housing market that partially reflects the decisions of college-age millennials.
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A report released by the W. P. Carey School of Business last month reveals a changing housing market that partially reflects the decisions of college-age millennials.
Ndume Olatushani was in prison for 28 years, 20 of which he served on death row.
Last year, Jasmine Anglen went to a seminar about sex trafficking by an ASU advocacy group called Unchained. Her life and her ambitions were forever changed, and she is now preparing her own presentation about sex trafficking for this year’s Clinton Global Initiative University meeting.
Tempe police reported the following incidents Friday:
Tempe Police reported the following incidents Thursday:
Although heated political arguments over the mass surveillance tactics of the National Security Agency have often seemed far away in Washington, recent actions by the Arizona Legislature and ASU student groups have brought the debate into the local spotlight.
Arizona’s three public universities, often known for their fierce rivalries in sports and academics, will more easily be able to work together through a new advanced research database called SciVal.
Architecture graduate student Guangyu “Sam” Cen poses with his group's designs of Mesa's new urban plaza. The group presented their designs with four other ASU teams to Mesa City Council members late last month. (Photo by Alexis Macklin)
In American culture, there are some things that seem to always go with the Super Bowl. Buffalo wings, sports jerseys, outlandish commercials and light beer are just a few of the items on that list, though an ASU research team is investigating a potentially new addition: sex trafficking.
To the cheer of the audience and the flashing of cameras, management of technology graduate student Juliet Martinez rolled to center stage. She expressed the gratitude and elegance commonly expected at a pageant, though this one was somewhat different.
Last year, a woman shopping at a Goodwill in Phoenix came across a pile of ragged reel-to-reel tape recordings. As a record collector, she was intrigued, and even though she had no method of playing these recordings herself, she picked one of them up at random.
After years of research and international collaboration, Provost Robert E. Page Jr. and his colleagues have solved a crucial genetics mystery: sex determination in bees. Although the issue seems small-scale, it has been left unsolved by geneticists for 200 years, and the results could lead to humans being able to breed honeybees for favorable qualities in the future.
After Gov. Jan Brewer released her proposed education budget Friday, heated debate soon ensued among education advocates, state politicians and university affiliates.
Traveling to a developing nation can make someone appreciate everything he or she has, especially enforced traffic laws, said Brittany Duong, a biomedical engineering senior who is also the president of ASU’s Engineers Without Borders club.
After beginning the project in August 2012, a team of students and a professor are finally close to completing the cyberbullying detection app BullyBlocker.
As ASU students gear up for Saturday's Pac-12 Championship game, students at the ASU Preparatory Academy get the opportunity to use the brand new Technology Center.
Annika Van Neck and parents Serge and Sharla Van Neck dress up in Doctor Who costumes, for the doctor who convention at the Squash Blossom in Phoenix. Many turned out to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who on Saturday Nov. 23. (Photo by Murphy Bannerman)
The transition from high school to college is often daunting, but ASU is there to help make the process more accessible for 11 Valley high schools.
Two of Arizona’s capstone industries, aerospace and defense, are facing new funding threats that could damage the state economy and future job market for graduating university students.
One in 10 ASU students report being emotionally abused in a relationship, and one in 100 ASU students report being sexually abused in a relationship, students from the School of Social Transformation said in a presentation Monday at the Tempe campus. Hard Candy Zine, an ASU feminist club and publication, and the School of Social Transformation partnered to host the Break The Silence, End the Violence panel discussion to educate students about these and similar statistics.
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