Cutting fees won't save students money
As a former member of student government, I often heard about how we should eliminate funding for events on campus, athletics and even counseling from a wide variety of students.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of statepress.com - Arizona State Press's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
917 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
As a former member of student government, I often heard about how we should eliminate funding for events on campus, athletics and even counseling from a wide variety of students.
The word tele-abortion probably produces images of futuristic doctors' offices and odd electronic tools. To the untrained ear, it sounds a little silly. However, tele-abortions are likely to change the future of reproductive healthcare.
The semester is quickly coming to an end, which means that finals are right around the corner.
Associate Vice President and Director of ASU Health and Counseling Services Dr. Aaron Krasnow speaks to students at Morning After: How to Provide Support to Sexual Assault Survivors on Wednesday, April 19, 2017
Former Arizona State Rep. Celeste Plumlee was one of several guest speakers at "Morning After: How to Provide Support to Sexual Assault Survivors," a question and answer session hosted on the Tempe campus by Organizing for Action.
ASU’s anti-drug policies are aimed at protecting students, but criminalization not only pushes substance abuse underground — it actively harms attempts to protect students from overdose.
The U.S. State Department is America’s connection the outside world, an architect of diplomatic missions and initiatives that bridge our culture and values with that of the nearly 200 other sovereign states.
College students have increasingly been changing the rhetoric surrounding reproductive health and rights.
Privacy is quickly becoming a thing of the past.
Regulations make it hard for small businesses to operate and function with ease. They decentivize businesses from growing and competing. They may have good intentions, but they come with devastating costs.
Gwynne Gonzalez, an ASU Spanish instructor, was planning on sending her 3-year-old son Elton to the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College Preschool for two more years.
Executive ticket candidates for Tempe's Undergraduate Student Government stressed the importance of having a transparent and open government in Tuesday night's debate.
The chants of close to 100 ASU students echoed “This is a dress, not a yes,” on Hayden Lawn during the Survivor Walk, a Women’s HERstory Month event.
"What you're going through is normal." "It's a phase." "Get over it."
Out of all four of ASU's campuses, Undergraduate Student Government Downtown is the only student government group to hold and advertise an open forum where students can voice their concerns about tuition.
Body image issues and eating disorders are global problems. As long as we neglect talking about eating disorders, they will remain stigmatized and in the dark.
Since Trump announced his candidacy in 2015, he has thrived off the promise to “Make America Great Again,” and one of his favorite solutions to doing that was proposing a border wall. However, building a wall may have more consequences than Americans think, especially for Arizona.
Your heart begins to race, your hands are clammy and shaky, your head is spinning and your breathing is slow and inconsistent. You look over and see all the stacks of books and mounds of homework you need to complete, but you can’t bring yourself to do it. Instead, you go for a run, play some video games, you even clean your room. You do anything to avoid buckling down and starting your assignments.
With a multitude of resources readily available to students across campus, one ASU student’s Reddit post pointed out the absence of an important resource in the female community: feminine hygiene products.
As President Donald Trump signed the Mexico City Policy, an executive order that calls for the defunding of Planned Parenthood, ASU students weighed in.
This website uses cookies to make your experience better and easier. By using this website you consent to our use of cookies. For more information, please see our Cookie Policy.