Alum debuts fantasy novel
Awarded a biological sciences degree and faced with a less-than-sunny job market, ASU alumna Margeaux Laurent took the time to feed her creative soul.
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Awarded a biological sciences degree and faced with a less-than-sunny job market, ASU alumna Margeaux Laurent took the time to feed her creative soul.
For most female ASU students, engineering is not a popular choice of study.
When you think of organic baby products, you may wrinkle your nose at the thought of drab, recyclable accessories.
Some say to know your future, you must know your past.
We all come from different communities, but we are rooted in lived experiences, said Professor Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy to a crowd of students in the Canon Leadership Program: Scholar Series at ASU at ASU’s Tempe campus on Monday.
Spring break wasn’t all about partying and traveling this year. For some students, it was a good opportunity to lend a helping hand.
Megan McGuire, a 2000 ASU alumna, has had health issues her entire life, but in 2007, she was forced to take drastic measures like selling her house, car and stocks to pay for medical expenses.
Imagine being part of a minority orientation that you couldn’t help or change despite persecution. You constantly feel pressure to fit into a world that doesn’t seem to accept the way you act. You were thinking of being left-handed, right?
When escaping a country because of war, poverty and political strife, refugees don’t get to bring much. But their stories will always travel with them to their new destination.
Night falls as the students crowd into the atrium of the Farmer Educating Building at the Tempe campus, eagerly waiting to chow down on a dinner of fresh, locally grown salad, hummus, falafel and baklava. They’ve spent the day discussing sustainability, community gardens, poverty, economic policies and fair trade. These activist soul mates connected for the first time, becoming empowered to stand up and achieve a more sustainable future.
A former model shared her experience with the modeling industry and the dangerous messages the media sends to young girls and women about their bodies through a documentary during ASU’s Body Pride Week.
In a time when unity is called for, many southern Sudanese in Arizona rejoice with the news of secession.
Social work sophomore Elizabeth Vaughn remembers moving into Downtown’s Taylor Place last spring and not being able to reach her mailbox.
Around 400 volunteers, including students, staff, alumni and other community members, gathered Monday morning at the University Public School Phoenix near the Downtown campus to perform service in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
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