A physicist crystallized in time
ASU Professor Frank Wilczek’s “eureka” moment for his Nobel Prize-winning discovery of asymptotic freedom did not come when he had his breakthrough in the equation in 1973 — he simply went to bed after that.
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ASU Professor Frank Wilczek’s “eureka” moment for his Nobel Prize-winning discovery of asymptotic freedom did not come when he had his breakthrough in the equation in 1973 — he simply went to bed after that.
Fluorescent lights shine down on the football field. Stacked on bleachers and huddled on the turf, hundreds of faces stand staring at one end of a vast, grass circle.
Darrell Grissum described himself as a high-achieving student who found it difficult to communicate with anyone that he was struggling.
DIY-music venues allow fans to get up close and personal with underground artists and meet attendees with similar interests, but the dangers that come with attending local shows are often left unspoken.
Leading the Grace Lutheran Church in the heart of the desert, let alone being a pastor at all, was not a part of the plan for Pastor Sarah Stadler. However, God seemed to have another idea.
Self-care is …
For the past few months, debate has raged over whether there is a real or manufactured emergency on the U.S.-Mexico border. There is indeed a real emergency: it is a humanitarian and an ecological one, and it has been precipitated by the cruel policies of the U.S. Government and the destructive economic and social systems of capitalism and imperialism.
In Rob Jameson’s makerspace, a sunlit room adorned with journeyman’s tools and various materials meant for creating, Jameson reflected on the lifestyle he has become accustomed to living at Arcosanti. To say the least, he's satisfied.
Just two weeks into college, class of 2021 nursing-hopefuls slumped in chairs sank even lower when they were told by a nursing administrator to consider changing their majors because of the limited number of positions open for the school's clinical program.
When you hear "School of Rock," the popular mid-2000s movie featuring Jack Black might come to mind. The stars of this School of Rock story, an educational music school, go by a different name: Shane and Megan Baskerville, who own and operate three locations in Arizona, somehow finding the top talent along the way.
It was the third day of the Lost Lakes music festival. Bailey Goldstein, an ASU student, EDM fan and photographer, stood at the head of a crowd of thousands. Camera heavy in hand, Goldstein gazed up at the towering stage in front of him.
University students are often intimately involved in many of the most important social movements of our day, providing critical assistance to fights against injustice everywhere, such as the recent protests of the gag rule on reproductive health or the outrage over the killing of Antonio Arce by Tempe PD. However, students should do more to remedy injustices done against the students and employees of Arizona State University.
Unpaid and abused labor in the developing world makes it cheaper for universities to sell branded children’s apparel, but ASU recently suspended ties with one such unethical provider.
On Monday, Dec. 3, 2018 at 8:30 a.m., the Incarceration to Education Coalition of New York University took industrial action for a social cause. The group began a 155-hour strike at two locations in protest of NYU’s relationship with service provider Aramark.
“happy thanksgiving. i'm thankful for my eventual death,” parody Twitter account @Lonely_Dad tweeted this past November to an applauding 3.9 thousand retweets.
“I do a lot of things at ASU that aren't strictly teaching,” said Jon Kyl in a Jan. 8 report by azcentral, in regard to questions about his infamously high ASU salary. In fact, Kyl seems to be doing just about everything at ASU except teach.
$30,000. That’s how much it costs to build a race car — and that's only one part of the complexity faced by the ASU students who are doing just that.
Education reform, while occasionally discussed, looms largely in the background for federal lawmakers. In Arizona, however, the debate takes center stage.
Immersed in a chromatic haze, people stood scattered around the lawn. The color and noise of the band contrasted with whitewashed walls as hues of blue cascaded and collided with the crowd. Even in the midst of high saturation and the zig-zagging of stage lights, every set of eyes in the audience was intently focused on one central point.
Reports of former ASU student Matthew Green launching a $4.1 million suit against the University and ABOR for his expulsion over his alleged sexual assault of another student show that the administration's handling of sexual assault cases is a hotly disputed topic.
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