Imagine your kitchen counters, your dining room table—every surface—covered with pink and blue bunnies, chic black-and-white zebras and googly eyed giraffes, with team-logo basketballs, princess tiaras, zany sunglasses, magic wands, even pixie dust.
By Deborah Hilcove
“I love helping other people, helping solve problems,” says Mary Contreras, a longtime Tempe resident and businesswoman, recently named “Woman of the Year” by the Women of Scottsdale.
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After 30 years in law enforcement—the past two as chief of the Chandler Police Department—Sean Duggan is taking on one of the potentially most influential roles of his career: chairman of Arizona’s quietly essential Criminal Justice Commission.
As some of you no doubt recall, our last issue contained an informal survey of sorts, asking that you share observations you might have about Wrangler News and inviting you to offer any ideas you’d like us to consider as we go forward.
Although no one is quite ready yet to predict whether it will reach its ultimate destination, Tempe’s proposed streetcar initiative seems finally to be headed down the track to reality.
Minority and economically disadvantaged high school students will be able to live on campus and experience what it’s like to attend one of the top business schools in the nation through a program being offered by the W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University.