USG West plans for safety escort service, cooler pavement
The West campus undergraduate student government is planning a safety escort service and a re-pavement project to keep the campus cooler.
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The West campus undergraduate student government is planning a safety escort service and a re-pavement project to keep the campus cooler.
The Downtown campus’ undergraduate student government approved eight new senators and two new executive board members at its meeting on Friday.
Middle school students huddled around their Mac laptops, intensely discussing the calibration of their Lego robots Friday morning at the Gary K. Herberger Young Scholars Academy on the West campus.
Student attendance at campus job fairs declined at the Tempe and West campuses while attendance at the Downtown and Polytechnic campuses remained unchanged, ASU career service officials from multiple campuses said.
While in school, Steve Wozniak never considered a career in computers. Rather, the co-founder of Apple considered his love for computers as the “most fun game” of his life.
The price of parking rates at the Polytechnic and West campuses will go up next fall.
Student body presidents at ASU are preparing to decide if the student program fee will increase next year from $25 to $75.
Candidates for student government presidents at the West, Downtown and Polytechnic campuses have started their campaigns, attempting to promote their platforms before the April 5 and 6 elections.
Lack of participation in student government elections is noticeable on each campus this year, but the Downtown government is struggling most to boost student involvement.
West campus undergraduates are uncovering secrets of addiction, cancer and many other subjects with the help of newly established research scholarships from the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences.
Music, local theater, art and coffee will come together near the Tempe campus when Venue 104 opens in early summer at Rural Road and University Drive.
Nicollette Lewis and Priya Nathan couldn’t stand by when they found out many of the 10,000 foster children in Arizona are unprepared for college.
Powering cell phones in Africa with leftover charcoal from a fire sounds like a piece of science fiction. But it was just one of 16 creative grant proposals announced at ASU’s Innovation Challenge Wednesday.
A student-run show choir inspired by the hit TV show “Glee” is starting its second semester with refreshed focus and direction.
“This is the way we walk like a duck,” kindergartners at Kyrene de la Colina Elementary sang as they waddled across the floor.
Local violinist and elementary education junior Barry Hazen strolled out into an exuberant crowd, sawing out a melody on his violin at the first music event of the only all-ages music and coffee venue on Mill Avenue Saturday.
“Say it with me now, doo wah-wah,” professional trumpet player Terrell Stafford told his blushing teenage audience.
ASU’s engineering school launched the first-ever professional science master’s degree in solar energy in Arizona this semester.
Recycled water could bring new life to the Polytechnic campus as plans for a sustainable fountain compete internationally for funding.
Long, narrow vessels and their passengers glided across Tempe Town Lake Saturday, creating light waves in their wake.
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