First human rights film festival held over weekend
About 120 students, faculty and community members gathered Friday to kick off the first night of ASU’s inaugural Human Rights Film Festival with the movie “The Economics of Happiness.”
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About 120 students, faculty and community members gathered Friday to kick off the first night of ASU’s inaugural Human Rights Film Festival with the movie “The Economics of Happiness.”
A new club is bringing students together to contemplate human existence, life, consciousness, culture and the universe.
The FDA and a local health food storeowner are advising against buying potassium iodide in response to nearly nonexistent radiation from Japan.
Asian languages senior Chase Brown clutched the doorframe of his Tokyo apartment as the building shook harder and harder. Even though the epicenter was more than 200 miles away, Brown could feel the force of Japan’s 9.0 magnitude earthquake.
Artists, musicians, technology gurus and entrepreneurs are about to join forces.
The charity work of former ASU football player Samson Szakacsy inspired a local private school athletic director to organize a school-wide donation drive for students on an Arizona Indian reservation.
A nonprofit ASU organization hopes to connect the Tempe community to fresh, locally grown food that leaves no carbon footprint by creating a soil-free hydroponic farm.
An honors professor held a “teach-in” Monday night to provide ASU students with background information about the recent uprising in Egypt.
Construction work at the Polytechnic campus has frustrated some commuters, but community members are addressing the needs of the construction victims without a voice — cacti.
Creative writing junior Tom Leveen presented his first published book to hundreds of young adults at Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe Saturday.
Next month, the Arizona Board of Regents will vote on whether to permanently raise the out-of-state student population cap to 40 percent at all three state universities.
Students, faculty and friends gathered to honor the life of associate computer science professor Donald Miller at a remembrance service in downtown Tempe on Friday.
A man and a woman stand on a platform, palms raised. Slowly, rhythmically, they raise their feet and step into each other.
Instead of logging onto Blackboard to complete homework this spring, students in one class will enter the “World of Warcraft” and “Second Life” to study the culture of online virtual environments.
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