Editorial: Spoken right
Freedom of speech is a concept our Founding Fathers learned from the U.K. Have they forgotten its importance? Unrestrained expression is a pillar of free society.
Freedom of speech is a concept our Founding Fathers learned from the U.K. Have they forgotten its importance? Unrestrained expression is a pillar of free society.
As the court proceedings draw closer and America awaits a verdict, we at The State Press hope the court fight doesn’t draw attention away from the real issue at hand: fixing our nation’s immigration system.
Like the president, we at The State Press would like to voice our support the DREAM Act, which will hopefully save some of our fellow students from deportation.
Bravo to the ASU baseball team and coach Tim Esmay. Boo to Arizona wildfires.
Graduation is coming, and, for a lot of us, it’s more like a walk to the gallows than a day of celebration.
While SB 1070 has sparked a heated debate about “racial profiling,” we find great comfort that Americans of all races can agree on one thing: Protecting the border is a must.
The State Press is dedicated to serving and informing the ASU community and that includes publishing the deaths of our fallen classmates.
As a reporter, I've learned that everybody has a story. No matter how mundane or ordinary they appear, everyone you encounter in a given day is passionate about something, or different for some reason.
This campus newspaper has been around longer than Old Main, the first building in Tempe to have electricity — in fact, we were here before Arizona became a state.
We’re not sure how it happened, but we’ve reached the end of the semester again. The final full week of school comes to a close tomorrow, and final exams and projects will likely absorb all of ASU students’ energies until mid-May.
NAU, our Lumberjack neighbor to the north, seems to be taking a page out of George Orwell’s “1984” with a new plan to keep track of student attendance.
If you’ve ever had the desire to be woefully misrepresented on one of cable’s sleaziest channels, you’re about to have that chance — MTV’s “The Real World” is coming to Tempe.
Not to be outdone by Eyjafjallajökull, the Icelandic volcano responsible for sending a giant cloud of ash to Europe, grounding flights and humorously forcing journalists to attempt to say its name, Arizona made headline news around the world on Friday when Gov. Jan Brewer signed a controversial immigration bill into law.
Yesterday, the most prestigious athletic program at ASU suffered penalties for infractions dating back to 2004. The ASU baseball team, currently ranked No. 1 in the nation, was sanctioned by the University as a result of an investigation that led to the forced resignation on legendary head coach Pat Murphy.
As one of the most controversial immigration bills sat on Gov. Jan Brewer’s desk Tuesday, nine students sat in a Maricopa County jail.
The tragedy that happened at Columbine High School on April 20, 1999 changed the way we grew up. It changed our parents. It changed the way we thought about guns, about security, about our society.
The temperature is hitting upwards of 90 degrees in April, and bikinis and swim trunks are making their way out of the closets and onto the “student body.” ASU just received the “Hottest Girls” honorable mention by Playboy magazine in addition to snagging one of the Top 10 spots on Playboy’s list of party schools.
Bravo to the Library of Congress for archiving Tweets.
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