Honors college class tours Oklahoma City bombing site
Six students from Barrett, the Honors College spent two and a half days learning about terrorism in the U.S. by taking a class trip to Oklahoma City to visit the site of the famous 1995 bombing.
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Six students from Barrett, the Honors College spent two and a half days learning about terrorism in the U.S. by taking a class trip to Oklahoma City to visit the site of the famous 1995 bombing.
Emotions ran high outside Old Main on the Tempe campus Thursday afternoon as more than 50 people awaited the results of the Undergraduate Student Government and Graduate and Professional Student Association elections.
A NASA space shuttle launched Tuesday morning carrying a one-of-a-kind experiment that may help ASU researchers find new ways to treat infectious diseases.
As it nears the end of its first year, ASU’s President Barack Obama Scholars Program is currently looking for upperclassmen to act as mentors for incoming freshmen next fall.
Elections for student government across ASU’s four campuses are approaching, and The State Press conducted a survey of the presidential candidates on each campus.
After a struggle to revive ASU’s chapter of Health Occupational Students of America last semester, a small group of students is preparing to compete in the national organization’s state competition later this month.
New data released by the Higher Education Research Institute at the University of California at Los Angeles shows increasing support among college students for same-sex marriage.
ASU’s Young Democrats hosted a forum on Friday for the Undergraduate Student Government presidential candidates to present and defend their platforms in preparation for the April 6 and 7 elections.
Campaigning for Undergraduate Student Government elections on the Tempe campus started Monday, but signs around campus can only provide so much information about the candidates.
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People president and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous traveled to ASU’s Tempe campus, stressing the importance of commitment in a society pressed by political, economic and social issues.
As many economic analysts compare the current recession to the Great Depression, a new book club sponsored by ASU’s Morrison Institute for Public Policy is encouraging the community to examine this comparison and policy related to it more closely.
ASU students and staff will soon be able to take home the sounds of the University’s symphonic carillon, which can currently be heard playing from the Memorial Union on the Tempe campus every afternoon.ASU’s Carillon Society is working with the instrument’s manufacturer to produce its first CD — which will be sold to raise funds for the Society, co-chair Judith Smith said.
In partnership with two Ghanaian students, ASU faculty and students are working to bring the production and widespread use of an alternative form of clean cooking fuel to rural African villages.
Flight instructors in training on ASU’s Polytechnic campus are working with a new device this semester that allows them to practice flight techniques on one of the most realistic simulators the campus has seen to date.
Large quantities of improperly disposed-of cigarette butts have led ASU Polytechnic to create designated smoking areas throughout the campus.
Attending a University with a population of nearly 70,000 students, ASU astrophysics graduate student Cody Raskin is used to a little competition.
ASU police reported the following incidents Monday:
Tempe Police reported the following incidents Sunday:
To combat low civic engagement among Arizona’s youth, ASU’s Center for Civic Engagement and Leadership will begin a new summer camp to get kids involved in the community.
The Arizona Students’ Association hosted its 23rd annual Lobby Day Wednesday, giving students an opportunity to meet with state lawmakers to discuss Arizona legislation pertinent to higher education.
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