“WITH AND WITHIN A BASIN” is a solo MFA exhibition by Rebecca Pipkin.
“WITH AND WITHIN A BASIN” is a solo MFA exhibition by Rebecca Pipkin.
Bring the family and awake your inner foodies with the College of Health Solutions at ASU’s Downtown Phoenix campus. Enjoy fun, food-focused science experiments and reap the delicious rewards. Experiments include making boba, nitro coffee, nitro chocolate milk, flavored marshmallows and more. There will also be a taste test with fruit-flavored beverages.
Activities will take place in the Instructional Kitchen on the first floor of the Health South building on the eastern end of the Downtown Phoenix campus. See you there!
Arizona State University’s College of Health Solutions, Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions and W. P. Carey School of Business invites you to join us for our event to explore how ASU puts you in the middle of the action!
Of the Body features the work of Claire A. Warden whose project Mimesis explores issues of identity, the other and the psychology of knowledge and power and Wendel White who depicts material culture as evidence of the American construct and representation of race through his project Manifest. Selections from the Northlight and Solari Foundation Collections include works by Eugene Atget, Debbie Flemming Caffery, Larry Clark, Jess Dugan, James Hajicek, Andre Kertezs, Marie Navarre, Garry Winogrand and Weegee.
Join the University Sustainability Practices team to learn how to plan events sustainably. At this training session, you will learn how to incorporate sustainable practices into all aspects of event planning, from marketing and catering, to proper waste disposal and more. You will become a certified Sustainable Event Planner at ASU and earn credit for the Sustainable Event Planner Training in CareerEDGE. Sustainable refreshments from the Decidedly Green Menu will be provided.
The Patent Trial & Appeal Board (PTAB) and Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB) will send a total of nine sitting judges to campus to hear 3 actual oral arguments. The morning session includes one trademark trial and the afternoon session includes two patent trials.
The event is free and open to the public. Breakfast, lunch and an evening reception with the judges and Director Vidal included.
This event qualifies for CLE Credit.
Proponents of originalism argue that judges must adhere faithfully to the meaning of constitutional texts as those texts would have been understood at the time of their adoption. In the case of the 14th Amendment, such an approach would limit clauses like “equal protection of the laws” to nineteenth century understandings of equality. Since women were not equal to men under the law in 1868 and since the framers of the 14th Amendment did not advance gender equality as one of its purposes, originalism poses a quandary for women’s rights in the 21stcentury.
Are Americans "losing their appetite for candid and constructive dialogue?" Robert Post, Yale Law professor, argues that we have misdiagnosed America's social malady as a free speech problem, when the challenges to free speech in America are more a symptom than a cause of the problems we are experiencing in the public sphere. The decline in the nature and quality of our public discourse is not a problem that more free speech will not necessarily resolve.
Mexican democracy is at a crossroads. In the center stage of the current dynamic and challenging times lies the Mexican Constitution, one of the oldest and most amended in the world. Enacted in 1917, it was the product of a social revolution. During its long life, the Mexican Constitution was functional for the long period of authoritarian hegemonic-party regime, but it was also key in the protracted transition to democracy.