Students share views, opinions about election
November 7, 2012ASU students express their concerns and observations about this year's election, and discuss who they voted for. Produced by Sean Logan
ASU students express their concerns and observations about this year's election, and discuss who they voted for. Produced by Sean Logan
Renaissance Phoenix Downtown Hotel opened it's doors as the polls closed at 7 PM. Arizona Democrats gathered at the hotel to watch the results of the 2012 Presidential Election unfold. Politicians, political activists, community members and families, came together to celebrate the latest election campaign. While the election between Obama and Romney was the biggest attraction, the watch party monitored the local elections as well.
Students explain why they voted for their presidential candidate.
The Devil's Chowda team celebrates halloween this year in style! Tune into this weeks episode to see the spooky surprises they have in store.
The 2012 recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, Award-winning sportscaster Bob Costas, spoke on the dangers of sports, the NHL lockout, and the quality of sports reporting.
Painkiller: Hell and Damnation, by The Farm 51 and Nordic Games, beckons back to shooters like Doom, and Duke Nukem with blazingly fast, challenging gameplay. It releases for PC on Oct. 31, and Xbox 360 and PS3 on Jan. 22, 2013.
A look inside local Arizona band, 1967 By Noemi Gonzalez and Noah Findling
ASU's West Campus hosted Sparky's Big Top Carnival to celebrate this year's Golden Homecoming. There was a large turn out for this family-friendly event that featured carnival booths, rides, bounce houses, treats, live entertainment, and fireworks. Several campus departments came out for the big night to host many activities and to promote themselves. Produced by Yihyun Jeong
This week the Devil's Chowda gang breaks down the NBA's new flopping rules, and one-way mirrors in sushi bars! Make sure to tune in next week when we send Dan to practice with the Arizona Cardinals!
ASU researchers developed a superhydrophobic knife which can split a water droplet cleanly in half. This has a direct application in biotechnology and diagnostics as part of a larger effort in microfluidics and nanofluidics. It also adds to the new idea of “DIY molecular bioengineering and biology”, as well as possibly allowing the bioanalysis of smaller amounts of materials.
State Press columnists Kharli Mandeville and Carlos Alfaro discuss the importance of civil liberties and the rise of tuition in this year's presidential election.
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