Horse #2
Horse #2 by Deborah Butterfield, a piece at the New Animist exhibit at the ASU Art Museum.
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Horse #2 by Deborah Butterfield, a piece at the New Animist exhibit at the ASU Art Museum.
ASU's latest art exhibit, the New Animist, sits just below the scalding concrete surface of Mill Avenue in a well-ventilated gallery in the university's climate-controlled art museum — a fitting time and place for an exhibit about climate change.
The ground beneath Intel is starting to give. The once solid foundation of PC sales, which supported the chip maker for the last several decades, is beginning to show cracks and Intel can't afford to fill them with upgraded processors. The fact is that PC market saturation occurred about five years ago, and Intel is only beginning to see the effects. Much like the other Goliath of the aging PC industry (aka Microsoft), Intel is going to need to broaden its horizons. This means 12,000 layoffs in the short term, which caused quite the uproar in Arizona, but what does the new strategy really mean for its future in Arizona?
Bruce Arians just shoved his foot pretty far in his mouth. During a clinic for high school football on April 8, the Cardinals head coach basically embodied the football-trainer stereotype to a tee, complete with sexism and a gung-ho attitude. After acknowledging that athletes are beginning to question involvement with football for health reasons, Arians claimed, "We have to make sure that moms get the message because that’s who’s afraid of our game right now. It’s not dads, it’s moms. Our job is to make sure the game is safe, at all levels," according to 12 News.
It looks like ASU is going to start taking a more active role in local legislation. As of late March, a group of undergraduate students published a brand new website which is doing something pretty innovative. The website, named azleglive.info, works based on a platform called Tableau, compiling information "obtained by scraping the data from the state's existing website about the legislature" into a series of convenient and easily-interpreted charts. If the internet continues to offer innovative political analysis like this, we might see a new demographic take over politics.
State Bill 1516 doesn't make for a gripping read. Line upon line of dry technical text serve to refine Arizona's campaign funding procedure. It’s got a bit of everything, including limits on donation quantity and fund transfers, nearly indistinguishable from the rest of the quotidian scraps of paper that slide across the senate's faux wood desks. The bill was first drafted in February (Febru-any for you Subway fans) of this year, and just finally glimpsed the light of day on March 8. During that time the bill underwent significant amendments, the nature of which is generating tension across the aisle.
It's easy to imagine. It's springtime. Your eyes are red, and you look like death. The cop smells weed and claims you’re high, you ineffectively counter, yada-yada. Surely a test would prove your innocence, right?
Picture Yahoo as a runaway train headed straight for a thousand foot deep gully. The tracks lead off the edge into a swirling abyss of digital irrelevancy. Now, picture Marissa Mayer, Yahoo’s CEO for the past four turbulent years, as the conductor, moving about hurriedly, sweating madly. Her hands practically fly across the levers and knobs, doing everything in her power to stop the train from careening over the cliff. Gears grind, sparks fly, but the train fares much better than it would at the bottom of the cliff.
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