Opinion: Sinclair’s non-transparent coverage is not in touch with Cronkite ethics
David Marino is a senior at The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication.
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David Marino is a senior at The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication.
This series features curated State Press columns with different points of view surrounding a similar topic. Its purpose is to promote healthy debate about alternative ways to think about certain discussions. Every voice matters and contributes to a more diverse and representative dialogue.
It’s 2 a.m. on Saint Patrick’s Day Saturday. Many in Tempe are already deep in slumber, snoozing off potential hangovers from nights of Baileys Irish Cream, green-tinted cocktails and regret chased with a tall glass of euphoria.
This series features curated State Press columns with different points of view surrounding a similar topic. Its purpose is to promote healthy debate about alternative ways to think about certain discussions. Every voice matters and contributes to a more diverse and representative dialogue.
Aristotle is purported to have once said that those who are educated differ from the uneducated as much as the living from the dead. However, what happens when the perception of what a valuable education is falls along party lines?
Religion can be a difficult subject to bring up in everyday conversation on campus with the popular perception that it is a subject best left avoided.
The inside of Canterbury Cathedral in Canterbury, Kent. Photo taken Nov. 2017.
The coast of the Isle of Wight where the Isle of Wight music festival takes place every summer. Photo taken Nov. 2017.
I saw a meme on a Facebook page recently that said, “It’s not where you travel, but who you travel with.”
I was trying to enjoy London, but I had a lot on my mind.
I’m told in high and low places alike what I should think about Brexit: that it was a momentous mistake on the U.K.’s part, that those who voted for it were primarily motivated by a racist fear of immigrants, and most importantly, it was a lot like the election of President Donald Trump.
As I walked up the stairs of the London Underground station, a throng of Londoners scurried downhill, their long day at work seemingly not confining their desire to get home. Their determination nearly dislodged the newspaper I had tucked into my left hand.
Well, I made it . After several months of preparation, on September 5 I flew across the Atlantic to London, an eminent global city, and the capital of the United Kingdom.
The creation and use of chemical weapons are an undeniable scourge on humanity, from their use by Germany in the European battlefields of World War I, to the chemical attack in Khan Sheikhoun in Syria on April 4 that is believed to have killed more than 80 people.
The U.S. State Department is America’s connection the outside world, an architect of diplomatic missions and initiatives that bridge our culture and values with that of the nearly 200 other sovereign states.
Meatless Mondays may soon be every day for many Americans.
Do you care about political or social issues or need some songs to blast on Spotify as you head to class? Here are some great songs about some of the most important political and social issues of our time.
Where do you stand on the political aisle? If you are reading this, you most likely know.
Ever since I was a young child growing up in the Boston suburbs, my parents have told me there are two things you never bring up: religion and politics.
On November 8th, what many saw as unthinkable happened: Donald Trump won the presidency over Hillary Clinton.
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