Lessons from Washington
If public opinion is the voice of the people, Jonathan Alter is a megaphone-wielding yodeler.
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If public opinion is the voice of the people, Jonathan Alter is a megaphone-wielding yodeler.
Ask anybody for places unique to Tempe, and the Mill Avenue District will invariably hit high on the list.
Every generation develops a counterculture, a group of people seeking to expand diversity and oppose the status quo. However, our plugged-in, hyper-cultured generation seems to have taken the concept to a new, philosophically confusing extreme.
At times, the pressures and parties of college can make students forget the end game: getting a job.
Phoenix public transportation used to provide a good metaphor for life: You got on the line you thought you wanted, but it never quite reached your destination when or how you expected.
Tempe police reported the following incidents Sunday:
Growing up in Croatia, 5-year-old Sime Kosta and his family were caught in the tumultuous wars of the early 1990s.
Before the sun even cracked over the horizon Tuesday morning, members of four Greek-letter organizations assembled at the Tempe campus to put on an appreciatory breakfast for ASU's facilities management staff.
The Memorial Union was evacuated Tuesday night as emergency services responded to a small electrical fire caused by a speaker in the basement bowling alley, officials said.
Late Halloween night, the Arizona Community Media Foundation launched a streaming Internet radio station called Radio Phoenix, the latest step in its plan to bring community radio to the Phoenix airwaves.
In the cool November air, Community Action Officer Scott Melander leans against the side of a patrol car and surveys the line of First Fridays vendors stretching down East Garfield Street in downtown Phoenix.
For a local independent business to compete against corporate chains takes courage, ingenuity and plenty of community support.
For local performers and songwriters, the struggle to find a good performance venue can be tough. But after years in the scene, one man is using his experience and connections to coordinate the local open mic community.
In the cool Sunday air, the smell of fry bread and carne asada tacos mixed with a different kind of atmosphere at the Tempe Community Complex: political activism.
In January 2010, Polaroid plans to discontinue their iconic, instant-developing photo cameras, so the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art decided to use the endangered camera as part of their latest project.
Talking during a performance is normally considered a faux pas, but it could become positive in the concert of the future.
Even the most meticulous college preparation could hold disadvantages when compared internationally.
The Flagstaff alternative rock band Telescope will come to Modified Arts in Phoenix April 25 and The Loft in Tempe April 26 to hand out free CDs and satisfy a growing following in the local music scene.
Students and Tempe residents will have the opportunity to hear insight from a real-life global-warming awareness advocate Tuesday night at Changing Hands Bookstore.
Brimming with wit and dramatic flare, British author Lynne Reid Banks, writer of the classic children's book "The Indian in the Cupboard," toured Tempe with her new book "Tiger, Tiger."
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