ASU police ask community to rate performance
ASU and Tempe police want students to tell them how well they think the departments are doing their jobs.
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ASU and Tempe police want students to tell them how well they think the departments are doing their jobs.
In front of the Hard Rock Café in Phoenix, adoring fans flock toward Tony, Paul, Bret, Donnie and Erik.
The Beastie Boys once said, "You've got to fight for your right to party!"
President Michael Crow held an open forum to hear concerns, answer questions and "check in" with faculty and administrators at ASU East on Thursday.
About 300 people showed up Saturday morning to volunteer for "Building Community," a community service cleanup event at ASU East.
As humans continue to strip-mine the world's resources, the need for more energy-efficient technologies continues to grow. Many scientists are turning away from industry in efforts to mimic the tried-and-true methods of nature. Their quest is known as biomimicry and has the potential to power our lifestyles without destroying our waters, allow us to synthesize materials without chemical waste and let us store our data on smaller and smaller devices through nanotechnology.
A 20-year-old ASU student, missing since Saturday, was found dead inside a sleeping bag in the bed of a pickup truck Sunday afternoon.
On Friday, The State Press reported that complaints had been filed regarding graffiti in the bathroom of the College of Education that insulted homosexuals and offended many students.
Tempe police reported the following incidents Thursday:
Because we go to ASU - each classroom a pageant of well-proportioned faces and accessorized outfits, each day as sunny and cloudless as the next - we tend to take beauty for granted. Though we've heard a thousand times that we're "not Harvard," perhaps we can take a little comfort in the fact that part of not being Harvard means New Year's Eve barbecues, sunbathing in February and hot professors.
As if newspapers, the Internet and the gossip from our cell phones don't supply us with enough information to think about on the way to class, campus vendors find shoving pamphlets in our face a good way to advertise their product.
Two ASU football players have been charged with aggravated assault and criminal trespass after they reportedly beat an ASU student and damaged items in his apartment.
The excitement has begun. Homecoming is only two weeks away, and this year's "Fall FestDevil" is bigger, better and different.
The Tempe City Council will hear public reaction tonight on a proposed change to the city's loud party ordinance.
Illegal immigrants should be held accountable for their actions and contributions in this country. And one way to start this process is by giving them driver's licenses.
The Arizona Board of Regents has approved the first state-of-the-art interdisciplinary research facility for ASU East, which will be finished by the end of 2005, according to the 2004 Capital Development Plan.
Cameras are one of the most popular cell phone accessories, but the photo-snapping gadgets are being banned from sporting venues and guarded against at local gyms.
During my last visit to the optometrist, my eye doctor said to me, "Think about it this way: It's safer to be in Iraq right now than it is to drive down the street in Arizona."
I've had the talking duck toy since the days when I still took baths instead of showers. He shut up about six months after I got him; battery-operated toys and bath water don't really mix. But on Saturday - thanks to spirited ASU football fans - my duck was famous.
In the ninth grade, when the O.J. Simpson trial was finishing up, my biology teacher stopped class to let us listen to the verdict being announced on the radio - as if it were some landmark case that was going to pertain to our lives. Looking back, I see how ridiculous that interruption was.
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