Police Beat: April 18
Tempe Police reported the following incident Tuesday.
Tempe Police reported the following incident Tuesday.
Following a University decision to drop allegations of plagiarism against history professor Matthew Whitaker, Monica Green, another history professor, resigned from her post as chair of the History Promotions and Tenure Committee.
Alpha Drive, the former home of ASU fraternities, is one example of the changing face of Greek life.
Tempe Police reported the following incidents Monday.
Reported crime in Tempe, including homicide, rape and burglary, has decreased in the last decade, according to Tempe Police.
The annual ASUlympics took place at the SRC with participants taking part in athletic events that allowed them to intermingle with students from unfamiliar backgrounds.
A cello professor performed with an old mentor Sunday, ending the 2011-12 Sonoran Chamber Music Series at the Tempe Center for the Arts.
Two Arizona senators expressed their disappointment regarding Gov. Jan Brewer's nomination of former Republican Rep. Greg Patterson to the Arizona Board of Regents, while the ASU student regent supported the decision.
Whether taking the bus or light rail, the Arizona Public Interest Research Group found Generation Y is driving less by taking public transportation and living closer to campus.
ASU Police reported the following incidents Friday.
BooGood Bicycles, a student-run start-up company which uses bamboo to make bicycles and hand-cycles, is a semi-finalist in the 2012 Dell Social Innovation Challenge.
ASU Police reported the following incident Thursday.
Prospective medical marijuana vendors seeking licensing can begin turning in applications to the Arizona Department of Health Services on May 14.
Gov. Jan Brewer signed a bill that would prohibit expecting mothers from having an abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy.
Joseph Grossman, the incumbent Undergraduate Student Government Downtown president, earned 63.42 percent of downtown votes, beating Erika Green.
Former mayor and congressional representative Harry Mitchell spoke to a crown at the Tempe History Museum yesterday to address the rise of the Tempe area in modern America.
In his inaugural State of the City Address on Wednesday, Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton discussed the possibility of moving the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law to the Downtown campus.
Tempe’s annual Action Plan is finalizing a budget for housing rehabilitation with funds from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Tempe prepared for Earth Day by hosting the Green Business Expo on Wednesday afternoon at Sixth Street Park.
ASU’s chapter of the March of Dimes has raised more than $2,700 in preparation for Saturday’s annual March for Babies.
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