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(11/28/18 12:48am)
ASU’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership was founded, according to its mission statement, to address what it sees as a fundamental problem: that American universities “live in an atmosphere of a certain conformity of opinion and suffer from an obvious lack of debate.”
(10/21/18 7:15pm)
Lawrence Krauss, an ASU professor and internationally known physicist accused of sexual misconduct, will be retiring from ASU in May 2019 when he turns 65, according to a statement Krauss sent to The State Press and tweeted from his personal account.
(10/04/18 9:03pm)
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(10/02/18 4:07am)
There was a decrease in reported crime on ASU campuses in 2017 compared to years prior, according to annual crime statistics published by the University on Monday. The statistics are reflective of all reported on-campus offenses.
(10/05/18 2:33am)
More than seven months after a Buzzfeed report thrust ASU professor Lawrence Krauss into the national spotlight over allegations of sexual misconduct, his status as a tenured professor hangs in the balance while a lengthy administrative process unfolds.
(09/16/18 11:34pm)
In July, ASU announced the Charles Koch Foundation had awarded a $6.5 million grant to fund the newly minted Academy for Justice, a research coalition based out of the University’s Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law.
(09/11/18 3:59am)
Most ASU students could recite the ranking in their sleep: ASU is No. 1 in innovation. It’s a title that ASU just claimed for the fourth year in a row thanks to a U.S. News and World Report ranking released late Sunday.
(08/31/18 3:56am)
In the middle of the Tempe campus, students walk hurriedly past chain link fences that surround the above-ground section of the Hayden Library, headphones drowning out the construction noise. Signs with mock-ups of the project reading "Reinvention" dot the fences.
(04/26/18 5:07pm)
An Arizona judge has dismissed a lawsuit over tuition costs to attend Arizona’s public universities, which was filed by Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich against the Arizona Board of Regents last September.
(04/22/18 9:35pm)
Arizona’s public universities say they don’t get enough funding from the state legislature to cover the cost of instruction for in-state students. This funding gap has forced them to seek out other ways to help them fulfill their obligation to make in-state tuition “as nearly free as possible.”
(04/12/18 1:36am)
Students from the Tecnológico de Monterrey Ciudad de México campus pack donations in Mexico City, Mexico, to be distributed after the Sep. 19 earthquake, on Tuesday, Sept. 21, 2017.
(04/12/18 2:09am)
Students from Tecnológico de Monterrey Ciudad de México campus pack donations in Mexico City, Mexico, on Sunday, Sept. 24, 2017 after the Sept. 19 earthquake.
(04/12/18 2:09am)
Rubble after the Sep. 19 earthquake in the state of Morelos, Mexico, pictured on Monday, Sept. 25, 2017.
(04/12/18 12:54am)
Students pack donations to be distributed after the Sep. 19 earthquake in Mexico City, Mexico.
(04/05/18 1:51am)
A student takes notes during ASU School of Economic Thought and Leadership Founding Director Paul Carrese's "Statesmanship and American Grand Strategy" course on ASU's Tempe campus in Tempe, Arizona, on Tuesday, March 27, 2018.
(04/04/18 3:12am)
Tempe City Council discusses tax rebates at a meeting in Tempe, Arizona on Thursday, Jan. 11, 2018.
(04/05/18 3:08am)
It’s been an interesting first year for ASU’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership.
(03/21/18 3:23am)
During the 2017-18 school year, Undergraduate Student Government Tempe was responsible for appropriating $2,485,011, according to documents given to The State Press by USGT.
(03/29/18 3:09am)
An anonymous survey meant to bring attention to sexual harassment in academia has generated more than 2,400 responses, including some that refer to cases at ASU.
(03/16/18 12:44am)
Visitors climb a pyramid in Teotihuacan, Mexico on Aug. 4, 2017.