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Visitors walk around the Pyramid of the Sun at the northern end of the Avenue of the Dead, the main boulevard of this ancient city, in Teotihuacan, Mexico, on Aug. 4, 2017.
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Visitors walk around the Pyramid of the Sun at the northern end of the Avenue of the Dead, the main boulevard of this ancient city, in Teotihuacan, Mexico, on Aug. 4, 2017.
On Sept. 19, 2017, I was sitting at a table on the Tecnológico de Monterrey Ciudad de México campus reviewing a PowerPoint presentation I was supposed to give that evening. I was enjoying the sun and the low hum of conversations that flows through the halls and plazas of any college campus, which is surprisingly less distracting when it occurs in a language that’s not your own. And then, the world started to shake.
ASU works with local law enforcement agencies to ensure that convicted sex offenders who work or study on campus comply with sex offender registration and community notification policies as mandated by state law.
Editor’s note: Uber suspended self-driving operations on March 19, 2018, after a self-driving car struck and killed a Tempe pedestrian. Read more here.
Editor’s note: This story has been updated to reflect the number of open investigations into alleged sexual harassment under ACD 401.
Moderator addresses the audience at the beginning of a forum held for candidates for Tempe City Council on Monday, Jan. 22, 2018 in Tempe, Arizona.
Tempe City Council candidates talk to students and residents following a public forum in Tempe, Arizona on Monday, Jan. 22, 2018.
Tempe City Council candidates said their plans to support working families, encourage smart development and solve transportation issues can benefit students in a forum held Monday night in Tempe.
Tempe City Council discusses tax rebates at a meeting in Tempe, Arizona on Thursday, Jan. 11, 2018.
Growth around the ASU Tempe campus is likely to continue after the Tempe City Council’s approval of a $21 million dollar tax rebate for a luxury hotel company to build a hotel and conference center on university property last week.
Dr. Cornelia "Corri" Wells, director of Prison Education Programming at ASU, stands in her office in front of posters for past prison education conferences on Jan. 10, 2017.
For 40 or so ASU students and professors, going to prison is a regular occurrence. Lesson plans in hand, they make weekly drives to Florence, Arizona, where they pass through security checkpoints and spend a couple of hours in front of classrooms of incarcerated students.
You've seen them before: the double-decker buses that are a bright yellow color, which is obnoxiously un-gold, with bolded letters on the side that announce to the world just who's "#1 in innovation." But if you don't regularly commute between campuses, you probably simply ignore the intercampus shuttles, thinking to yourself how nice it is that everything you need is on one campus.
Students study outdoors on the ASU Tempe campus on Nov. 16, 2016.
As the semester winds down, it's easy to let yourself slip through the cracks.
Imagine that this week, you were confined to an eight-foot by 10-foot room. There are no windows, and your only contact with the world comes in the form of a small slot in the door through which you receive your food. You are in this room, alone, for at least 23 hours a day. When you are lucky, you are released for one hour to exercise. When you are not lucky, there isn’t anyone available to let you out at all.
An estimated 20 to 25 percent of female college students are victims of a completed or attempted rape over the course of their college careers. Clearly, there is absolutely no question that the sexual assault epidemic plaguing American universities needs to be addressed comprehensively.
The job of a sheriff is to uphold the law justly and equally. When a sheriff himself breaks the law, discriminates against broad cross-sections of people and governs through hate and fear, he fails the public he swore to protect.
Global climate change is an issue we simply can’t afford to ignore. The effects of climate change – spanning health, agriculture, water, weather, air and virtually all other aspects of human life – are already far-reaching, and they only threaten to get worse.
Internship stress — at some point, it’s inevitable. Campus is sprinkled with signs advertising internship fairs and resume workshops, and you’re stuck fielding questions from nosy friends and concerned family members alike: Where have you applied? Did you intern last summer? When will you have an interview?
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