Tempe expects tough year with state funding changes
After a year of tough economic challenges, possible changes to the way cities get money from the state could leave Tempe facing new problems in the next year.
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After a year of tough economic challenges, possible changes to the way cities get money from the state could leave Tempe facing new problems in the next year.
A Quidditch game begins when the referee calls, “Brooms down. Eyes closed. The snitch is loose.” As the referee calls, “Brooms up,” the players rush into action.
In an effort to magnify school spirit, college calendar company Tempe12 is teaming up with ASU’s athletic department to bring back a sense of Sun Devil tradition.
While living in a box isn’t typically desirable, a Tempe company sees a future in the concept.
Acquisition of the vacant Centerpoint Towers in Tempe is up in the air once more, as bankruptcy and litigation problems have put a $30 million sale on hold.
It’s date season on the Polytechnic campus, but don’t expect to come home with a new beau.
Home football games will still finish with a bang this season, but students will not have the right to hold their own celebratory light shows.
After more than a decade of discussion within Tempe’s deaf community, a residence specifically tailored toward the hearing impaired is well underway.
In an effort to increase visibility of uniformed fare inspectors and reinforce the importance of paying valid fares on the Metro light rail, more fare inspections will take place over the next four weeks.
After losing a boating company and then the water for the boats, Tempe residents will again have a way to float on Town Lake after it reopens.
A stack of papers and binders litters the desk of Tempe’s Community Development Director Chris Anaradian.
From crunching numbers to hammering nails, students took a break from the business side of housing to lend a hand to Habitat for Humanity.
Since 1897, more than 11,000 people have been buried in Tempe’s Double Butte Cemetery, but this year, the small time capsule of land has faced economic hardship.
Three thousand American flags flanked Tempe Beach Park Saturday morning as community members met to honor and remember those who lost their lives nine years ago on Sept. 11, 2001.
Tempe residents can find fresh, locally grown food this September when Mill Avenue’s Thursday Night Market reopens at the Urban Garden.
Students at the Tempe campus stopped in their tracks Tuesday afternoon as world-class trial bike athlete Thomas Oehler performed an impromptu demo, jumping off brick walls and over sorority women.
Demolition began early Thursday morning to tear down a vacant hotel and make way for possible expansion of ASU’s Downtown campus.
A new vintage rock ‘n’ roll nightclub, complete with a mechanical motorcycle, will roll out onto Mill Avenue this September.
Flying a giant stork off of a 30-foot pier might seem like a scene from a slapstick comedy, but for a team of ASU students, it’s a two-month coordinated project that can only be described as a leap of faith.
Students can strike a chord in the professional world with new internship opportunities through Phoenix’s Musical Instrument Museum.
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