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Michelle Di Muria, president of Engaging Minds, donned a purple ribbon to honor victims at the Domestic Violence Awareness Dinner on ASU's West campus on Thursday, Oct. 12, 2017.
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Michelle Di Muria, president of Engaging Minds, donned a purple ribbon to honor victims at the Domestic Violence Awareness Dinner on ASU's West campus on Thursday, Oct. 12, 2017.
Michelle Di Muria, president of Engaging Minds, donned a purple ribbon to honor victims at the Domestic Violence Awareness Dinner on ASU's West campus on Oct. 12.
Melissa Martin picked at her dinner of lasagna, breadsticks and salad. She thumbed through a pamphlet on the warning signs about domestic violence and noted the ones that applied to her former relationship.
Residents of the Mitchell Park neighborhood of Tempe are fighting to hold on to the character of their community. Pressure from real estate developers, increasing population and gentrification are pushing at the edges of the neighborhood, trying to find their way in.
The man who has made his name in Washington, D.C. by being a maverick in his party is thwarting President Donald Trump again.
Jamila Rahim, a W.P. Carey public service and public policy sophomore, attends Monday's event as a first-generation American in the Coor Hall on the Tempe campus.
On Monday evening, students sat in a classroom in Coor Hall eating pizza, drinking soda and writing letters to Arizona senators urging them to support the DREAM Act and take action to support DACA recipients.
On July 26, President Donald Trump announced a new military policy, but he didn’t do it in a press conference or an official statement. In true Trump fashion, he did it on Twitter.
At a rally in downtown Phoenix last week, President Donald Trump stood behind a lectern and spoke to thousands of Arizonans about job creation, the proposed border wall and his personal distaste for Arizona senators.
ASU students react to President Trump's rally in downtown Phoenix from The State Press on Vimeo.
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