We can’t wait to welcome you to the ASU Family in August. You’re invited to attend in-person and virtual events designed to help ensure a smooth transition to ASU for you and your Sun Devil. Through festive open houses and virtual welcome events, you’ll have an opportunity to connect with ASU Family staff, get resources and information, and meet other families.

We can’t wait to welcome you to the ASU Family in August. You’re invited to attend in-person and virtual events designed to help ensure a smooth transition to ASU for you and your Sun Devil. Through festive open houses and virtual welcome events, you’ll have an opportunity to connect with ASU Family staff, get resources and information, and meet other families.

The ASU Alumni Association, in partnership with Admissions Services and ASU Family invites you and your family to a Sun Devil Send-Off. This annual ASU tradition welcomes incoming ASU students and their families to the Sun Devil family and offers a great chance to meet other area students coming to ASU in the fall, ask questions of other students and ASU alumni, and most of all, have fun in a casual environment to celebrate your next step into your lifelong ASU experience.

Join a diverse group of intergenerational, mulitprofessional, and multicommunal individuals every Friday at the ASU Community Services Building to collect, organize and prepare donations of shoes, clothing and toiletries for Project Humanities Service Saturdays, where donations will be distributed at the Human Services Campus in downtown Phoenix. 

The ASU Alumni Association, in partnership with Admissions Services and ASU Family invites you and your family to a Sun Devil Send-Off. This annual ASU tradition welcomes incoming ASU students and their families to the Sun Devil family and offers a great chance to meet other area students coming to ASU in the fall, ask questions of other students and ASU alumni, and most of all, have fun in a casual environment to celebrate your next step into your lifelong ASU experience.

The ASU Alumni Association, in partnership with Admissions Services and ASU Family invites you and your family to a Sun Devil Send-Off. This annual ASU tradition welcomes incoming ASU students and their families to the Sun Devil family and offers a great chance to meet other area students coming to ASU in the fall, ask questions of other students and ASU alumni, and most of all, have fun in a casual environment to celebrate your next step into your lifelong ASU experience.

All rise for Academy Award® winner Aaron Sorkin’s adaptation of Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning masterwork. The New York Times Critic’s Pick TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD is “the most successful American play in Broadway history.” (60 Minutes). Rolling Stone gives it 5 stars, calling it “an emotionally shattering landmark production of an American classic,” and New York Magazine calls it “a real phenomenon.

Frankie Valli, who came to fame in 1962 as the lead singer of The Four Seasons, is hotter than ever. Thanks to the volcanic success of the Tony-winning musical Jersey Boys, which chronicles the life and times of Valli and his legendary group, such classic songs as “Big Girls Don’t Cry,” “Walk Like a Man,” “Rag Doll,” and “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You” are all the rage again. The widely acclaimed musical has touring companies around the world, including a successful nine-year engagement at Paris Las Vegas which concluded in 2016.

Now a singular presence in the ballet world, the Dance Theatre of Harlem Company presents a powerful vision for ballet in the 21st century. The 18-member, multi-ethnic company performs a forward-thinking repertoire that includes treasured classics, neoclassical works by George Balanchine and resident choreographer Robert Garland, as well as innovative contemporary works that use the language of ballet to celebrate Black culture.

Step Afrika! combines dance, song, storytelling and humor to create a heart-pounding experience and celebrates the African American tradition of stepping.

When Africans lost the right to use their drums, the beats found their way into the body of the people — the Drumfolk. New percussive art forms took root and made way for tap, beatboxing, and the African American tradition of stepping.

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