Capturing Reactions
Push, shove, trip. React.
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Push, shove, trip. React.
This past Sunday at the early (too early) hour of six a.m., I left for a three-hour car ride with my assistant editor, multimedia editor and her friend to Tuba City. That situation alone sounds crazy, but it had been a while since I’ve traveled up to Northern Arizona, so I was eager to go along with them to capture pictures for an article in the coming issue. I’ll admit I slept most of the drive up, but the few times I would stir and glance out the window I was greeted with breathtaking views of rolling hills and a horizon that went on for miles.
Coffee Conversations With A Smile from The State Press on Vimeo.
If you've ever walked the north side of Palm Walk, you've definitely seen this little house. Peculiarly placed in the middle of three very large science buildings, sits a little cottage with rocking chairs on it's porch. There are two very cozy little gardens on either side boasting pretty flowers and a babbling little fountain. One would say that on days when the campus is quiet, it would be the best place to write. So did the Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust Organization.
Walking through the Phoenix Art Museum as I usually do on free admission days, something caught the corner of my eye -
What do you think when you hear phrases like Manifest Destiny, Oregon Trail, the West? Do you picture gunfights, cowboys, and rugged individualists?
I want to address the elephant in the room.
Denise Fleisch from The State Press on Vimeo.
I watched "OCD" a second time and really listened to what he was saying and, just as significantly, how he said them. I've seen slams where poems are recited with great passion and conviction, for laughs, even performed out of desperation. Hilborn's performance definitely had the essence of desperation, but I also sensed resolution. Resolution to rejection. And to me, that was the most profound part of the entire performance.
After finally finishing my pixel art DIY project, I was admittedly exhausted. However, I still managed to make my way to my 7 pm Spanish class and get their 15 minutes early. Classroom door locked, I began showing off the finished product to some of my classmates, telling them about the art blog I’m writing for the State Press.
need:
Can you imagine going to Arizona State University in 106 degree weather and not wearing shorts? I mean really, think about not
This past summer I experienced a transition in my reading preferences that was actually quite significant but went unrecognized. In high school I got used to reading "classics" and more worldly books, like "Cry," "The Beloved Country" and "The Grapes of Wrath." So for the last few years, most of my favorites have been Steinbeck novels like East of Eden and the entirety of Shakespeare's repertoire. Retrospectively this was one of those classic "I like these books... but I also like that they make me look smart too" situations. Come on, tell me I'm not the only one who's felt like that before.
When you have a real passion for something, it only makes sense to do everything in your power to continuously grow with that passion. That’s what photography senior Rachael Koscica has been doing with her photography for over six years.
Junky Trunk Boutique from The State Press on Vimeo.
A word of caution: this may end up being one of those nostalgic stories that earns a few eye-rolls.
My Name is Tishni Weerasinghe. I am 20 years old and a 3rd year student at ASU.I am a Political Science major and I am interested in double majoring in Criminal Justice. If you can't tell already, I really want to use these two majors to become an attorney. Law School has been my goal ever since I was eight years old, I can’t wait to defend those who need justice…even if it is controversial at times. If you look at me walking around campus, I look like any other student: tired, sipping something cold and probably dying of the heat. But what you wouldn't know is that I wasn't born here, I actually just became an United States citizen just a few months ago. I spent the first four years of my life in a small little country called Sri Lanka. But just because I left doesn't mean that I could escape the reality of being South Asian.
Step one: Don't have kids. There is no second step. It's that easy.
In a cramped 300-square foot dorm room, Brianna Procopio and Colleen Murphy lay on their blue, green and red carpet. Both twin beds were made. Photos of smiling teenaged girls and boys and a blanked with brightly colored fish swimming in the ocean looked down on the beds.
Bon voyage, adios, and goodbye SPM readers. Between fashion weeks, lookbooks, DIY projects and street style photographs The Campus Closet has been quite the journey for the last nine months, but just as the old saying goes “everything good must to come to an end.” Like I said in my first post, fashion blogging has always been a passion of mine because it allows me to inspire and be inspired, so hopefully in the last two semesters I have done just that.
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