TEMPE, Ariz. – Join Sun Devil Football for the team's annual Maroon & Gold Spring Game on Friday, April 26 at 6 p.m., presented by Mountain America Credit Union.

Pregame activities are slated to begin at 5 p.m., featuring a Fan Zone with food options from Chick-Fil-A, Venezia's, Kona Ice and Farmacy AZ, plus inflatables and games in the North Parking lot of the stadium. 

Join us for the 35th Annual Pow Wow at ASU!

The Pow Wow at ASU highlights American Indian culture, traditions, and ways of life that are foundational to scholars from indigenous communities that contribute to the strength and vibrancy of Arizona State University.

Hi Barbie! Mountain America Stadium is turning into Barbie's Dreamhouse on April 20 for Movies on the Field, presented by Mountain America Credit Union. Grab your fellow Barbies and Kens and your best pink-inspired outfit, and get your Kenergy ready for an unforgettable evening.

🗓 Saturday, Mar. 20, 2024

⏰ Doors open at 6 p.m. / Showtime at 7:30 p.m.

📍 Mountain America Stadium, Home of the ASU Sun Devils

The ASU Institute of Human Origins (IHO) presents Donald Johanson for the second annual Bill Kimbel Distinguished Lecture. In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the discovery of “Lucy,” IHO Founding Director Donald Johanson will enthrall the audience with the story of "Lucy's" discovery, the controversies of naming a new species, and how this small but complicated ancient human ancestor changed the way we think about humans developed on Earth.

What can it mean to love the things we love (books, records, people) in a time of disaster, an era of ends? How do our icons speak to us—what news can they deliver—during planet-sized calamity? Taking a cue from the death of Prince, the much-mourned saint of Minneapolis, this lecture considers the icon as a herald of possibilities lying just beyond the secular perimeter of the knowable and known. All manner of things find us through our icons. This talk wonders over the fate of our devotion to them in this time of crisis and collapse—an age of Last Things.

Many Americans who witnessed the events of January 6, 2021 voiced a reaction that quickly took hold across a political spectrum: “This is not who we are.” But such a view ignores the long history of racist vigilante violence that has shaped America since its founding. Historian Kathleen Belew examines January 6 in the context of the organized white power movement that began percolating into mainstream American politics well before the 2016 election of Donald J. Trump. Knowing and understanding our history, Belew contends, is the only path to a more democratic future.

The Center for the Study of Race and Democracy (CSRD) at Arizona State University is welcoming Charlayne Hunter-Gault, distinguished award-winning journalist and courageous civil rights champion, as it launches its second decade of Delivering Democracy programming. The dialogue is scheduled for April 13th at 3:00 PM. It will take place in person at Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church in Phoenix and will also be available via livestream.

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