Student working with Phoenix Police homicide unit
Not many students embrace polygraph tests and background checks, but one ASU undergraduate was thrilled when she was asked to do them for the second time in less than six months.
Not many students embrace polygraph tests and background checks, but one ASU undergraduate was thrilled when she was asked to do them for the second time in less than six months.
ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesday:
The public will have an opportunity to voice its opinion about cutbacks proposed by Valley Metro at a first round of meetings on Feb. 23 and March 1.
The Tempe campus is still surrounded by the eerie quiet of night as President Michael Crow walks toward the already-lit Fulton Center, an inky black sky behind him.
The Tempe campus is still surrounded by the eerie quiet of night as President Michael Crow walks toward the already-lit Fulton Center, an inky black sky behind him.
A new study abroad program will send ASU students on a three-week trek across Cyprus, Greece and Turkey to study conflict resolution this June.
Starting next week, Valley residents 50 and older will have the chance to take classes and seminars from a number of prominent ASU professors and well-known scholars from across the country.
Students and parents can take advantage of a new tax break available this year to expand the amount of money spent on tuition they can write off on their taxes.
ASU is emerging as a leader in biomimicry, a field that focuses on learning from nature to solve human problems, as a new member in an international program.
ASU Police reported the following incidents Thursday:
More than two weeks after the earthquake in Haiti, some ASU students are still working to organize relief efforts within the ASU community.
In an effort to boost ridership of public transportation, the city of Tempe is reaching out to young residents through its youth transit program.
ASU Police reported the following incidents Tuesday:
Students from 203 universities across the nation fixed their eyes on the ASU Polytechnic auditorium Tuesday night to learn about success and how to achieve it.
The employment rate for graduates of the W. P. Carey School of Business was 78 percent for the May 2009 class, a decrease from the 92-to-95-percent average for previous years.
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