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(07/19/21 5:47pm)
Jarrett Lowe spent a lot of time to himself when the coronavirus pandemic hit the U.S. in March 2020, often browsing TikTok and Twitch. But that time wasn’t spent watching viral dance videos.
(03/25/21 11:01pm)
Elizabeth Baer wanted to become a wind musician in an orchestra, her family thought she might attend fashion school and for a long time, she wanted to be an anesthesiologist. But at 17, she joined the military and learned to build bombs.
(03/05/21 2:44am)
The great Greek philosopher Aristotle attempted to explain how to live a virtuous life through balancing 12 extremes of temperament. The idea of “virtue through moderation” was also present in the Pythagorean cup I took home as a souvenir from a trip I took to Greece as a gangly 11-year-old.
(11/07/19 1:47am)
Editor’s note: This article contains offensive language.
(10/22/19 4:19am)
Malawi is a country wedged between Mozambique and Zambia in southeastern Africa. The cerulean water of Lake Malawi sits in the east of the country, and in the south and west mountains ascend into the sky from valleys across the lush green landscape.
(09/13/19 3:09am)
In the fall of 2018, the political pulse of ASU’s Tempe campus was about to rise. A few protests peppered the start of the semester but would pale in comparison to the impending fallout.
(08/16/19 9:46am)
The ASU Biodesign Institute is leading a project to create a field device that can detect traces of material in human DNA associated with weapons of mass destruction.
(07/22/19 8:17pm)
Hawaiians from across Arizona gathered at the base of "A" mountain in Tempe on Saturday to protest the construction of the fourteenth and largest telescope on a sacred mountain in Hawaii known as Mauna Kea.
(07/13/19 5:37am)
The Origins project, while under former ASU professor Lawrence Krauss, received about $250,000 from a foundation belonging to Jeffrey Epstein, the “science philanthropist” and registered sex offender who was recently indicted on charges of child sex trafficking, according to a new report from BuzzFeed News.
(07/03/19 6:42am)
Many of the claims in Attorney General Mark Brnovich's lawsuit against the Arizona Board of Regents over ASU's practice of leasing tax-exempt public land to private businesses were dismissed by the Arizona Superior Court Tuesday.
(07/03/19 12:13am)
ASU has been named one of nine recipients of the first “Seal of Excelencia” by the national Latino advocacy group Excelencia in Education.
(07/08/19 5:46am)
After receiving numerous 911 calls, Officer Becky Garcia arrived to see an ASU student “making threats” on campus in a “manic state,” she said. Four officers surrounded the student, then Garcia recognized him and called out his name.
(04/18/19 3:00am)
ASU Professor Frank Wilczek’s “eureka” moment for his Nobel Prize-winning discovery of asymptotic freedom did not come when he had his breakthrough in the equation in 1973 — he simply went to bed after that.
(04/09/19 3:45am)
Just two weeks into college, class of 2021 nursing-hopefuls slumped in chairs sank even lower when they were told by a nursing administrator to consider changing their majors because of the limited number of positions open for the school's clinical program.
(01/29/19 2:05am)
“happy thanksgiving. i'm thankful for my eventual death,” parody Twitter account @Lonely_Dad tweeted this past November to an applauding 3.9 thousand retweets.
(11/16/18 3:33am)
The sunniest state in the nation rejected a historically progressive measure toward renewable energy which would have amended Arizona’s constitution to mandate that the state gets 50 percent of its energy from renewable sources by 2030.
(12/17/17 12:53am)
Congress Republicans dropped part of the original tax bill Friday that would tax graduate student tuition waivers as income, relieving graduates across the country and more than 3,900 at ASU.
(12/02/17 8:26am)
The Senate narrowly passed the Republican-backed tax reform bill early Saturday morning, creating uncertainty about how sweeping tax reform might impact college and graduate students.
(11/27/17 9:28pm)
ASU Provost and Executive Vice President Mark Searle sent an email to graduate students on Nov. 27 assuring them that the University is seeking changes to elements of the GOP tax plan that would count waivers and course reductions as taxable income.
(11/21/17 3:19am)
On Nov. 16 the U.S. House of Representatives voted 227-205 to pass H.R. 1, known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, a tax reform bill that could take away many of the waivers and course reductions that graduate students rely on to help pay for their education.