Police Beat: Oct. 31
Tempe Police reported the following incidents on Friday.
Tempe Police reported the following incidents on Friday.
The W.P Carey School of Business welcomed three successful alumni into its Hall of Fame.
The device to be built on the Tempe campus will take samples from an asteroid that will be transported back to Earth.
Humanitarian Carl Wilkens speaks about how Rwanda has risen from the carnage of its horrifying history.
At the northwest edge of the ASU West campus, two portable toilets were engulfed in flames after an event.
While most people associate graffiti with vandalism, many businesses have allowed graffiti artists to showcase their work on businesses’ walls in support of the urban art form.
Tempe Police reported the following incident Thursday.
The redevelopment of a Tempe thrift store into low-income housing — a plan that has caused unrest among local residents — is one step closer to being realized.
Tempe Police made 507 arrests at the start of the semester during the Back to School initiative, a three-week enforcement operation to combat the seasonal increase of alcohol-related activity.
Inspired by a trip to Haiti one year after the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake, two ASU professors examine the role art can play in recovery.
Letter to the editor in response to Leandra Huffer’s Oct. 25 article, “Students hold Occupy demonstration on Tempe campus.”
Tempe’s Community Development Department presented a plan to help owners revitalize their business’ appearances along the Apache Boulevard redevelopment area.
Tempe Police reported the following incidents Wednesday.
Phoenix Mayoral candidates, Wes Gullett and Greg Stanton debate their stance on sustainability issues in their second to last debate before Election Day.
ASU’s Farmers Market was the site of a Medicine Take Back event where students could go to get rid of expired prescription drugs.
Tempe Police reported the following incidents Tuesday.
Students tend to eat anything that is cheap, fast and convenient. But one student group is trying to change that, petitioning Aramark to offer more organic, local food on campus.
ASU's Hip Hop Coalition is a student run organization that promotes the positive aspects of the Hip-Hop culture and dance.
Shift the Way You Shop is a campaign formulated by Local First Arizona to promote shopping at local businesses.
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