Fork Estate: Debating the cost of college
Is it possible for the U.S. to have free college?
Is it possible for the U.S. to have free college?
Ray Anderson has the ASU athletic department excelling on the field, in the classroom and in the community.
Laws are used to prosecute immigrants but not to protect them against human rights violations.
ASU students should support the Palestinian people against Israeli violence through the academic space.
Michael Crow has been an advocate for affordable tuition and been accepting of students from all backgrounds.
USG Tempe President Hanna Salem once again prioritized the political groups she personally supports, instead of treating all organizations equally.
Political clubs at ASU shouldn't use free speech to justify hate and discrimination.
As fake news becomes more pervasive with social media, students should fact-check politicians and listen to unbiased sources.
The NCAA needs to pass a resolution on the third paid assistant in baseball and softball. A decision will be made this month.
The Barrett fee increase passed earlier this year, but new honors students still need to know about the ongoing fight for college affordability.
Religious classes allow students to better understand new perspectives and themselves.
CRU promotes Islamophobia on campus by hosting a controversial speaker.
Students should never buy books unless they absolutely need it to do assignments or pass the class.
California lawmakers approved a bill that legalizes payment of college athletes. Instead of paying them, institutions need to focus on educating them.
Nichol Luoma argues that ASU has not abandoned their sustainability goals, but actually adapted them to be smarter.
The model minority myth that creates rifts between various minority groups must be tossed away before ASU's diversity harbors real meaning.
Major League Soccer is looking to expand to 30 franchises. Sun Devil Stadium should be the sight for franchise No. 30.
Protests and activism are essential for grassroots political change at ASU.
ASU must take a stronger approach toward decreasing sexual violence on its campuses by mandating trainings and publicizing resources available to students.
Students need to focus on policy and not the manipulative rhetoric of political campaigns when voting and forming opinions.
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