Student government approves edited universal constitution for student vote

The Downtown student government Senate unanimously voted Friday to send a newly-edited universal constitution to a student vote, which, upon approval from all campuses,...

Washington Post political editor discusses presidential election, modern political reporting

Washington Post national political editor Steven Ginsberg talked the publications digital future and the Republican primary's momentum and made bold predictions about the upcoming presidential election as the speaker for the sixth Paul J. Schatt Memorial Lecture.

Buzznbeez food truck serves up soul food with an international twist

A sales-manager-turned-chef is "Buzz" and his wife, Beatrice, is "Bee" – together they own and run the food truck Buzznbeez. The on-the-go eatery serves up soul food and international cuisine and does business by the golden rule that head chef "Buzz" picked up from his grandmother, the owner of a prominent Phoenix diner.

Famed criminology writer touts social crime-prevention theory at ASU

Esteemed criminology writer Michael R. Gottfredson believes he and other scholars know what motivates people to commit a crime – or rather, what prevents them. “Most people don’t commit crime, because it never occurred to them,” he said to a packed classroom at ASU's nursing school. “They’d disappoint too many people and lose affection of those close to them.” Gottfredson, a criminology professor and author on the subject discussed the difference between two theories to describe why people don't commit cimes, and why he believes one outweighs the other.

Former rock ‘n’ roll assistant discusses addiction, relationships with rock stars

Chris O'Dell, who worked in the rock 'n' roll industry for many years, shared stories of her relationships with rock stars and her struggles with addiction in a lecture titled "Music, Truth and Substance Abuse."