Editorial: Fantasy broomball
757 broom-clutching Muggles competed in the most intense magic-turned-Muggle sport around. That’s right, Quidditch. Nay, it gets better, The Quidditch World Cup.
757 broom-clutching Muggles competed in the most intense magic-turned-Muggle sport around. That’s right, Quidditch. Nay, it gets better, The Quidditch World Cup.
Bravo to veterans and resisting daylight saving time. Boo to the Centerpoint Towers and athlete arrests.
If the recent buzz rings true, our legislators may be finding the political will to consider cuts to the state’s prison system
CityScape is finally brining the downtown life that Phoenix needs
Boo to the Phoenix New Times and the Arizona Senate. Bravo to campaign entertainment and ASU students going national
If you give a mouse a cookie, he’s going to want a glass of milk. So goes the story with ASU tuition.
The door is open for cooperation. The worst thing that can happen is nothing.
The Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear takes a break from blame shifting and name-calling to focus on honing our discretion between social and political consumption
Love him or hate him, it’s hard to deny President Barack Obama’s ability to captivate an audience.
There’s nothing wrong with requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote.
Say what you want about the French, but that country knows how to set a trend.
Earlier in the year, we were skeptical but confident that ASU football could turn things around. But as has become too common at ASU, we were let down.
Bravo to the 70s (the weather, that is). Not only does it feel great to not see the mercury maxing out on our thermometers, but it also makes everyone just a little less on-edge.
Usually at this point so close to Election Day, it’s hard to go anywhere without seeing the names and faces of important candidates. But our governor is noticeably absent from the public scene.
Textbooks are one of the many Catch-22 facets of college life.
We need to realize that this is the real world and we’re not invincible, nor are we always “safe” when we’re on or near campus. We don’t run the town we go to school in, and we certainly don’t live in a bubble.
The Foundation for Blind Children has realized the often hidden opportunity of these tough times and turned it into something more than it would have been before.
What The State Press approves and disapproves of this week.
After spending just more than two months in a collapsed mine shaft in northern Chile, 33 miners were rescued. In 69 days the true value of life surfaced before these men ever did.
The only people at ASU who like midterms week are probably the managers of the campus Starbucks. So as an open gesture of appreciation, thank you, baristas for serving up the fall fuel, even if sleep-deprived students aren’t the best tippers.
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