Wing women fly home after Red Bull Challenge
What does it take to cross five countries in seven days? According to three ASU students, just a whole lot of Red Bull.
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What does it take to cross five countries in seven days? According to three ASU students, just a whole lot of Red Bull.
Rather than sprint toward another bus to get to work on time, students can save their breath and ride the 72 bus route on Rural Road within the next 10 minutes.
When ASU and the city of Mesa announced in February that a new campus would be developed in the downtown Mesa community, it delivered a message: ASU is trying to spread even further across the Phoenix metropolitan area.
Professor Sethuraman Panchanathan poses for a portrait in his office in the Fulton Center on Friday, March 25, 2016.
ASU professor Sethuraman Panchanathan doesn’t have a desk in his office — and that’s just the way he likes it.
With the Undergraduate Student Government Downtown 2016 elections less than a week away, USGD held an election forum so that students could get to know the candidates and better understand policies and plans that potential candidates have.
The USG Downtown candidates meet on Wednesday, March 23, 2016, for an election forum to inform students before the coming election.
With the end goal of monitoring space threats like meteors and solar flares, ASU students from the School of Earth and Space Exploration program are partnering with the U.S. Air Force to design a satellite.
A recently proposed house bill may affect the future of landscape architecture in Arizona and the Arizona State students studying this.
ASU’s various marketplaces give students access to myriad cold medicines, hair-care products, razors and other necessities. But one item is silently missing from marketplace shelves: condoms.
At first glance, it sounds like the start of a sci-fi horror flick: using genetically modified mosquitoes to cure Zika virus. ASU’s Andrew Maynard, director of the Risk Innovation Lab, assesses the effects of this research.
Could a spoon full of clay help the medicine go down? This January, a team of ASU researchers discovered the long-unknown mystery of the medicinal qualities found in certain types of clay.
After being selected to research with NASA’S new Wild Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST), ASU astrophysics professor, James Rhoads said he looks forward to a frontier of science.
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