Opinion: Elective classes offer a well-rounded education
For many students, academics is everything. Their major map, however, does not always encompass all the opportunities available to them.
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For many students, academics is everything. Their major map, however, does not always encompass all the opportunities available to them.
While all first-year students are encouraged to live on campus and are required to purchase some type of meal plan if they do so, not all students are satisfied with the dining options they are offered.
Ticket pre-sales, VIP packages, merchandise and Uber rides often add up for the overwhelmed concert-goer.
On Feb. 16, ASU’s Undergraduate Student Government approved a health bill to increase the health services fee by $15 per student per semester.
Juice cleansing, a fad diet that has found its way to ASU’s Tempe campus at the restaurant Freshii, is said to be a way to detox the body, reboot the metabolism and lose weight.
Between school work, extracurriculars, jobs and an otherwise busy life, many students rely on some form of planner which, lately, is often digital.
From the beginning of the semester to its bittersweet end, Blackboard is the best friend of many ASU students. It enables them to submit assignments online, keep track of due dates and, perhaps most appreciated, check their grades continually throughout the semester.
ASU has made a name for itself in the field of sustainability. Between founding one of the leading sustainability schools in the country and creating ambitious goals to reduce carbon emissions, the University is trying to be more environmentally conscious.
On Jan. 13, babe.net published an anonymous woman’s account of her date with actor and comedian Aziz Ansari, in which she said she felt sexually pressured despite giving both verbal and nonverbal cues of her disinterest.
In a college town like Tempe, ASU students have an easy avenue to diversify their shopping and get more involved in their local economy.
In a letter to the editor published in December 2017, Addie Fairley, a business law junior at ASU, said that “if you have made it into college without the use of study drugs, you are more than capable of sitting down and studying on your own … turning to amphetamines is a cop out way of getting the job done.”
Social media is hardly a stranger to the 21st century. Over the years, its scope has grown dramatically not only in number, with a 78 percent increase from 2005 to 2015, but also in purpose, with uses including professional networking, public image construction and even teaching in the classroom.
The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, the first of its kind capable of reentry into the Earth’s atmosphere, shot across Southwestern night skies on Dec. 22, 2017, leaving many people vexed.
’Tis the season to get riled up about coffee cups.
Instagram’s explore page has become the holy grail of mindless browsing, allowing people to scroll through a never-ending supply of memes, media and models.
Given the rise in the number of “deadliest shootings” that the U.S. has had, it is no surprise that gun control is once again a popular topic of debate.
Climate change should not be deniable, yet there is still debate about its existence. Even within communities that do accept climate change, people still argue about the extent of human involvement.
The average woman makes 79 cents for every dollar that the average man earns.
Ignoring a problem does not actually make it go away.
On Oct. 26, 2017, President Donald Trump declared the opioid crisis in the United States a public health emergency, calling it “worst drug crisis in American history.”
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