Help the prisoners, help the pups
The U.S. accounts for 5 percent of the world’s population, but incarcerates 25 percent of the world’s prisoners. As of 2014, the U.S. has 2.4 million people being held in prisons and jails across the country.
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The U.S. accounts for 5 percent of the world’s population, but incarcerates 25 percent of the world’s prisoners. As of 2014, the U.S. has 2.4 million people being held in prisons and jails across the country.
College students always talk about having mental breakdowns or being on the verge of having one, and with good reason. Juggling classes, internships and sometimes a job, students nowadays are asked to do so much that it sometimes becomes overwhelming and eventually a troubling reality.
The four candidates for president of Tempe Undergraduate Student Government and their respective vice presidents of policy and services appeared Wednesday night to debate some of the most pressing issues the University faces.
In a place as large as ASU, the next great artist could be walking past you on Palm Walk or sitting next to you in class at any given moment. Come fall 2017, Herberger Institute School of Art's fashion degree program will finally give budding fashionistas the opportunity to specifically harness their inner Coco Chanel.
As primary results are tallied and election season heats up, some religious ASU students are turning to faith to help them choose which presidential candidate to support.
ASU’s various marketplaces give students access to myriad cold medicines, hair-care products, razors and other necessities. But one item is silently missing from marketplace shelves: condoms.
The saying "it's funny because it's true" has never been truer than with ASU alumna and comedian Maysoon Zayid, who discusses issues such as disability, gender and race with her comedy.
As ASU becomes a statistically more diverse school, some minority student groups and organizations feel the campus is an alienating environment — one with the intent of making everyone feel welcome, but that hasn't fully delivered on its promise.
The four friends that make up the band The Unrelated aren’t afraid to wear their inspirations on their sleeves — not only that, but their camaraderie is apparent within minutes of talking to them.
In August of 2013, Andrew Brigida graduated from ASU's air traffic management program, a few months after having passed the AT-SAT, an aptitude test meant to predict the success of a future air traffic controllers, with a score of 100 percent.
Donning purple glow stick bracelets and placing flowers and candles on the steps of Old Main, dozens gathered to remember Jelissa Ruiz, who died Tuesday, at a candlelight vigil held Wednesday night.
An ASU student was found deceased by members of ASU Police Monday.
ASU’s peer-to-peer outreach program for sexual assault survivors, the Sun Devil Support Network, seeks to connect with people of all backgrounds as it expands in its second semester on campus.
Tempe is home to a multitude of residents that focus not only on the success of themselves, but the success and care of the community of Tempe. The residents and the people who work with her say that one of Tempe’s most valuable assets is Kristen Scharlau.
The entrance to the ASU Counseling Services office is pictured on Nov. 12, 2015.
Gender studies senior Emma-Li Thompson poses for a portrait on Friday, Nov. 20, 2015, outside the Memorial Union on the Tempe campus.. Thompson said her only experience with counseling services was "generally unhelpful."
The entrance to ASU's Counseling Services office is pictured on Monday, Nov. 23, 2015, at the Student Center at the Post Office on the Downtown campus.
You’re given some slack if you’re in a fit of coughing, or nursing a high fever. When you’re fumbling around on crutches, people open up a door for you to give out their assistance. However, if you wake up and can’t find the willpower to get out of bed and face the day, or if your day-to-day life feels meaningless, it can feel like there isn’t a helping hand to be found.
In the global consciousness, mental health is like a door that is never more than slightly open. Even when a celebrity’s candidness about their mental illness or a widespread tragedy opens it up a bit, a negative stigma can easily force it shut for those who need help.
ASU Health Services takes a variety of insurances, but the Counseling Services takes only one — its own. ASU is contracted with Aetna, and that is the only health insurance a student can directly use to pay for counseling services here.
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