‘Paying to be unpaid’: The cost of unpaid internships
This summer, no one saw Lauren Bly. At least, no one saw the Lauren Bly they knew before.
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This summer, no one saw Lauren Bly. At least, no one saw the Lauren Bly they knew before.
Charlie Kirk, the president and founder of right-wing student group Turning Point USA, was greeted at a table outside the Memorial Union on the Tempe campus with a chorus of cheers from a crowd of student volunteers from the group's ASU chapter Wednesday afternoon.
With classes set to begin on August 17, thousands of students are flocking to ASU from around the world and moving into their on and off campus living quarters. The following is everything you need to know about the move-in process in on-campus housing and some off-campus housing. If you do not see your living situation here, reach out to editor.statepress@gmail.com.
Before artificial intelligence made the jump into the hands of the public, students had to cheat on writing assignments the old-fashioned way: by discreetly wiring money to ghostwriters and copying and pasting.
If there’s anything that I’ve learned from my parents, it’s that survival makes you do funny things.
As stewards of a university renowned for its ever-expanding online enrollment numbers, ASU’s administrators pride themselves on their — and by extension, the University’s — role in building what they view as the future of higher education in the digital age: a mix of online and in-person learning.
To any passing observer, Alex* may have seemed like just another ASU student slipping out of their dorm to hook up with an online stranger in the dead of night. Except this wasn’t a mere hookup. Alex was going to meet their first client, and they had a knife hidden in their left sock — just in case things went south.
Growing up, Arizona Native Leila Ruterman bled maroon and gold. The daughter of proud ASU alumni, Ruterman spent her childhood gradually falling in love with the University’s culture through countless tailgates and raucous football games at Tempe’s Sun Devil Stadium, where the cheers of over 50,000 spectators rattled through her bones. To Ruterman, attending ASU was a rite of passage, a badge that would cement her as a permanent part of the community she came to love.
Devlin Sarratt has never lived without pain. But when he takes a long drag from a joint, he’s the closest to knowing how it feels.
Foto cortesía de Remi Koebel
Header artwork courtesy of Remi Koebel
Walking across ASU’s Tempe campus in the scorching heat is by far the worst part of my Tuesdays — the day my lab in the Walton Center on the east side of campus requires me to trek nearly a mile in grueling triple-digit heat.
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