Letter: Educate, not legislate on transgender issues
In response to the proposed Arizona Senate Bill 1432:
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In response to the proposed Arizona Senate Bill 1432:
In response to the unveiling of the newly redesigned Sparky:
In response to Sean McCauley's Feb. 28 column, "Gay marriage: The national illusion":
In response to the Feb. 13 story, "Massive Open Online Courses provide new possibilities for education":
In response to Andie Flores' Feb. 13 column, "Who is surviving in America?":
In response to Haley Mills' Jan. 31 column, "My 'yellow brick road': Republicanism" and Peter Northfelt's Feb. 4 column, "Somewhere over the rainbow":
In response to the Jan. 22 editorial, “Gun owners should be able to pass competency tests”:
In response to the Jan. 27 letter to the editor, "Leaders need to attract Arizona's best students":
In response to the Jan. 22 editorial, "Gun owners should be able to pass competency tests:"
A vibrant economy is critical to Arizona's future. This topic was addressed in Lattie Coor's "The Arizona We Want 2.0: The Case for Action" — an article that ran in The Arizona Republic on Sunday.
In response to Joseph Bisaccia's Jan. 16 column, "Baseball HOF should induct juicers:"
My husband and I are both ASU online students. I'm 34, he's 38, we're both overweight, he's disabled. My almost 15-year-old son is also disabled. We have gone to the different campuses for various reasons.
It is an outrage that the $9.7 billion relief bill took two months to pass in Congress after the devastation of Hurricane Sandy. This is yet another symptom of a gridlocked Congress, putting principles ahead of the people of this great nation.
In response to Christine Truong's Jan. 7 column, "How to read Whitman and understand life."
I am writing to express my extreme anger and frustration at our president, cabinet members and Congress members for continuing to dwell on the four Americans that were killed at the embassy in Benghazi. First, these so-called representatives and lawmakers of our U.S. government made this tragedy a political stumping ground during the presidential campaign, even after the ambassador’s father told the press that he knew his son would not appreciate this.
In response to Dagan Sassarini’s Nov. 29 letter to the editor, “Sun Devils for Israel misguided in search for peace.”
In response to Dulce Paloma Baltazar Pedraza’s Nov. 26 article, “Pro-Israel, Pro-Palestine Student Groups Share Goal of Peace.”
In response to Colton Gavin’s Nov. 26 column, “What is the War on Christmas?”
In response to Savannah Thomas’s Nov. 22 column, “Limiting filibuster a remedy for stymied Congress.”
If you’re familiar with the local political scene, you may know that voters in Arizona, along with Tempe residents, recently voted against a 1 percent tax hike. In the grand scheme of things, 1 percent may not seem significant, but as economists and accountants can attest, 1 percent can make a big difference.
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