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  • TEMPE - Nov. 12, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Karasaç - Fulbright foreign language teaching assistant Berrin Karasaç teaches breakfast foods to her elementary Turkish class in Coor Hall on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015. Karasaç is from central Turkey and is teaching at ASU on a one-year fellowship through the Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program. When she completes the program, she’ll return to Turkey where she teaches English to university students. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151113BerrinKarasaç_03.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 12, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Karasaç - Fulbright foreign language teaching assistant Berrin Karasaç challenges her students to spell the word for tomatoes - domates - to her elementary Turkish class in Coor Hall on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015. Karasaç is from central Turkey and is teaching at ASU on a one-year fellowship through the Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program. When she completes the program, she’ll return to Turkey where she teaches English to university students. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151113BerrinKarasaç_02.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 12, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Karasaç - Fulbright foreign language teaching assistant Berrin Karasaç teaches the word for a sweet pretzel-like pastry with sesame seeds - simit - to her elementary Turkish class in Coor Hall on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015. Karasaç is from central Turkey and is teaching at ASU on a one-year fellowship through the Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program. When she completes the program, she’ll return to Turkey where she teaches English to university students. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151113BerrinKarasaç_05.JPG
  • Photo Archive/2014/10-September/Fulbright Welcome Reception<br />
<br />
The Annual International Fulbright reception for visiting and American Fulbrighters was held at ASU at the Alumni Lounge in the MU.
    20140926FulbrightWelcome_27.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 12, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Karasaç - Fulbright foreign language teaching assistant Berrin Karasaç teaches the word for a sweet pretzel-like pastry with sesame seeds - simit - to her elementary Turkish class in Coor Hall on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015. Karasaç is from central Turkey and is teaching at ASU on a one-year fellowship through the Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program. When she completes the program, she’ll return to Turkey where she teaches English to university students. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151113BerrinKarasaç_04.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 12, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Karasaç - Fulbright foreign language teaching assistant Berrin Karasaç teaches the word for tomatoes - domates - to her elementary Turkish class in Coor Hall on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015. Karasaç is from central Turkey and is teaching at ASU on a one-year fellowship through the Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program. When she completes the program, she’ll return to Turkey where she teaches English to university students. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151113BerrinKarasaç_01.JPG
  • Photo Archive/2014/10-September/Fulbright Welcome Reception<br />
<br />
The Annual International Fulbright reception for visiting and American Fulbrighters was held at ASU at the Alumni Lounge in the MU.
    20140926FulbrightWelcome_07.JPG
  • Photo Archive/2014/10-September/Fulbright Welcome Reception<br />
<br />
The Annual International Fulbright reception for visiting and American Fulbrighters was held at ASU at the Alumni Lounge in the MU.
    20140926FulbrightWelcome_25.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 12, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Karasaç - Fulbright foreign language teaching assistant Berrin Karasaç listens as Amro Shaar, left, tells what he ate for breakfast during to her elementary Turkish class in Coor Hall on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015. Shaar is a sophomore in aerospace engineering. Other students include Sarah Kleppe, left, a senior in design management, and Elahe Yazdani, right, a sophomore in biological sciences. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151113BerrinKarasaç_06.JPG
  • Photo Archive/2014/10-September/Fulbright Welcome Reception<br />
<br />
The Annual International Fulbright reception for visiting and American Fulbrighters was held at ASU at the Alumni Lounge in the MU.
    20140926FulbrightWelcome_16.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 5, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Caldas - Valeria Caldas watches at the wheel of fortune spin, as she takes care of the table for the Brazilian Day at ASU celebration outside the Memorial Union, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015. Caldas, who is a native of Brazil, is a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant, and teaches Portuguese. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151105ValeriaCaldas_04.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 5, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Caldas - Valeria Caldas sets up the wheel of fortune table, and a large variety of prizes, for the Brazilian Day at ASU celebration outside the Memorial Union, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015. Caldas, who is a native of Brazil, is a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant, and teaches Portuguese. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151105ValeriaCaldas_01.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 5, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Caldas - Valeria Caldas talks with visitors as she volunteers at the wheel of fortune table for the Brazilian Day at ASU celebration outside the Memorial Union, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015. Caldas, who is a native of Brazil, is a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant, and teaches Portuguese. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151105ValeriaCaldas_02.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 5, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Caldas - Valeria Caldas talks with visitors about Brazilian life and culture as she volunteers at the wheel of fortune table for the Brazilian Day at ASU celebration outside the Memorial Union, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015. Caldas, who is a native of Brazil, is a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant, and teaches Portuguese. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151105ValeriaCaldas_03.JPG
  • TEMPE - Nov. 5, 2015 - ASU Now - Fulbright - Caldas - Valeria Caldas enjoys educating people about Brazil and its culture as she volunteers at the wheel of fortune table for the Brazilian Day at ASU celebration outside the Memorial Union, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015. Caldas, who is a native of Brazil, is a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant, and teaches Portuguese. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20151105ValeriaCaldas_05.JPG
  • TEMPE - August 5th, 2015 - ASU News - COMEXUS scholar Sara Cortez Perez, 26, of Oaxaca, presents on student engagement during an ESL methods class in the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College on Tempe Campus of Arizona State University Wednesday morning. The COMEXUS program is a short-term Fulbright grants that allow for scholars to study from two to six weeks at U.S. universities. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASUNews
    20150805COMEXUS_33.JPG
  • TEMPE - Aug. 24, 2018 - ASU Now - Michele Clark - ASU doctoral student Michele Clark talks, on Friday, August 24, 2018, about her year-long Fulbright research work in Nepal, on the Mile-A-Minute weed invasive vine. The environmental life sciences scholar studied the social impact of the non-native plant on villagers who need to go into the forest to gather natural grasses and wood. In addition to the vines killing off the native plants, it creates barriers to escape protected endangered animals such as the one-horned rhinoceros and the Bengal tiger. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20180824MicheleClark_02.JPG
  • TEMPE - August 5th, 2015 - ASU News - COMEXUS scholar Blanca Nieves, 47, of Mexico City applauds after a group lesson during an ESL methods class in the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College on Tempe Campus of Arizona State University Wednesday morning. The COMEXUS program is a short-term Fulbright grants that allow for scholars to study from two to six weeks at U.S. universities. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASUNews
    20150805COMEXUS_37.JPG
  • TEMPE - August 5th, 2015 - ASU News - COMEXUS scholars pay attention during a course on online organization and tools at the Lattie Coor Hall on the Temp Campus of Arizona State University Wednesday morning. The COMEXUS program is a short-term Fulbright grants that allow for scholars to study from two to six weeks at U.S. universities. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASUNews
    20150805COMEXUS_08.JPG
  • TEMPE - August 5th, 2015 - ASU News - COMEXUS scholar Carlos Mendez, 31, of Chihuahua before the start of a course on online organization and tools at the Lattie Coor Hall on the Temp Campus of Arizona State University Wednesday morning. The COMEXUS program is a short-term Fulbright grants that allow for scholars to study from two to six weeks at U.S. universities. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASUNews
    20150805COMEXUS_03.JPG
  • TEMPE - August 5th, 2015 - ASU News - (Back to front) COMEXUS scholars Lazaro Romero Vazquez, Maria Angelica Leyva Acevedo and Sara Cortez Perez write ideas for lesson plans on the board before  their presentation on ESL methods in the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College on Tempe Campus of Arizona State University Wednesday morning. The COMEXUS program is a short-term Fulbright grants that allow for scholars to study from two to six weeks at U.S. universities. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASUNews
    20150805COMEXUS_16.JPG
  • TEMPE - Aug. 24, 2018 - ASU Now - Michele Clark - ASU doctoral student Michele Clark talks, on Friday, August 24, 2018, about her year-long Fulbright research work in Nepal, on the Mile-A-Minute weed invasive vine. The environmental life sciences scholar studied the social impact of the non-native plant on villagers who need to go into the forest to gather natural grasses and wood. In addition to the vines killing off the native plants, it creates barriers to escape protected endangered animals such as the one-horned rhinoceros and the Bengal tiger. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20180824MicheleClark_03.JPG
  • TEMPE - Aug. 24, 2018 - ASU Now - Michele Clark - ASU doctoral student Michele Clark talks, on Friday, August 24, 2018, about her year-long Fulbright research work in Nepal, on the Mile-A-Minute weed invasive vine. The environmental life sciences scholar studied the social impact of the non-native plant on villagers who need to go into the forest to gather natural grasses and wood. In addition to the vines killing off the native plants, it creates barriers to escape protected endangered animals such as the one-horned rhinoceros and the Bengal tiger. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20180824MicheleClark_01.JPG
  • TEMPE - Aug. 24, 2018 - ASU Now - Michele Clark - ASU doctoral student Michele Clark talks, on Friday, August 24, 2018, about her year-long Fulbright research work in Nepal, on the Mile-A-Minute weed invasive vine. The environmental life sciences scholar studied the social impact of the non-native plant on villagers who need to go into the forest to gather natural grasses and wood. In addition to the vines killing off the native plants, it creates barriers to escape protected endangered animals such as the one-horned rhinoceros and the Bengal tiger. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20180824MicheleClark_05.JPG
  • TEMPE - Aug. 24, 2018 - ASU Now - Michele Clark - ASU doctoral student Michele Clark talks, on Friday, August 24, 2018, about her year-long Fulbright research work in Nepal, on the Mile-A-Minute weed invasive vine. The environmental life sciences scholar studied the social impact of the non-native plant on villagers who need to go into the forest to gather natural grasses and wood. In addition to the vines killing off the native plants, it creates barriers to escape protected endangered animals such as the one-horned rhinoceros and the Bengal tiger. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20180824MicheleClark_04.JPG
  • TEMPE - Aug. 24, 2018 - ASU Now - Michele Clark - ASU doctoral student Michele Clark talks, on Friday, August 24, 2018, about her year-long Fulbright research work in Nepal, on the Mile-A-Minute weed invasive vine. The environmental life sciences scholar studied the social impact of the non-native plant on villagers who need to go into the forest to gather natural grasses and wood. In addition to the vines killing off the native plants, it creates barriers to escape protected endangered animals such as the one-horned rhinoceros and the Bengal tiger. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20180824MicheleClark_06.JPG
  • TEMPE - August 5th, 2015 - ASU News - COMEXUS scholar Lazaro Romero Vazquez, 49, of Chiapas presents on some possible engagement points for students during an ESL methods class in the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College on Tempe Campus of Arizona State University Wednesday morning. The COMEXUS program is a short-term Fulbright grants that allow for scholars to study from two to six weeks at U.S. universities. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASUNews
    20150805COMEXUS_24.JPG
  • ASU Now - Maggie Walter - Friday September 7th, 2018 - Tempe campus<br />
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Professor Maggie Walter, sociologist and Pro Vice-Chancellor of Aboriginal Research and Leadership at the University of Tasmania, poses for a portrait outside the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing on Tempe campus on Friday September 7th, 2018. Walter <br />
Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now
    20180907MaggieWalter_06.JPG
  • ASU Now - Maggie Walter - Friday September 7th, 2018 - Tempe campus<br />
<br />
Professor Maggie Walter, sociologist and Pro Vice-Chancellor of Aboriginal Research and Leadership at the University of Tasmania, poses for a portrait outside the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing on Tempe campus on Friday September 7th, 2018. Walter <br />
Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now
    20180907MaggieWalter_03.JPG
  • ASU Now - Maggie Walter - Friday September 7th, 2018 - Tempe campus<br />
<br />
Professor Maggie Walter, sociologist and Pro Vice-Chancellor of Aboriginal Research and Leadership at the University of Tasmania, poses for a portrait outside the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing on Tempe campus on Friday September 7th, 2018. Walter <br />
Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now
    20180907MaggieWalter_07.JPG
  • ASU Now - Maggie Walter - Friday September 7th, 2018 - Tempe campus<br />
<br />
Professor Maggie Walter, sociologist and Pro Vice-Chancellor of Aboriginal Research and Leadership at the University of Tasmania, poses for a portrait outside the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing on Tempe campus on Friday September 7th, 2018. Walter <br />
Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now
    20180907MaggieWalter_04.JPG
  • ASU Now - Maggie Walter - Friday September 7th, 2018 - Tempe campus<br />
<br />
Professor Maggie Walter, sociologist and Pro Vice-Chancellor of Aboriginal Research and Leadership at the University of Tasmania, poses for a portrait outside the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing on Tempe campus on Friday September 7th, 2018. Walter <br />
Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now
    20180907MaggieWalter_01.JPG
  • ASU Now - Maggie Walter - Friday September 7th, 2018 - Tempe campus<br />
<br />
Professor Maggie Walter, sociologist and Pro Vice-Chancellor of Aboriginal Research and Leadership at the University of Tasmania, poses for a portrait outside the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing on Tempe campus on Friday September 7th, 2018. Walter <br />
Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now
    20180907MaggieWalter_05.JPG
  • ASU Now - Maggie Walter - Friday September 7th, 2018 - Tempe campus<br />
<br />
Professor Maggie Walter, sociologist and Pro Vice-Chancellor of Aboriginal Research and Leadership at the University of Tasmania, poses for a portrait outside the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing on Tempe campus on Friday September 7th, 2018. Walter <br />
Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now
    20180907MaggieWalter_02.JPG
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Barrett associate dean Kyle Mox, liaison for the Fulbright Program, talks with nearly 60 ASU faculty members, Friday, September 20, 2019, about their upcoming interviews with applicants for Fulbright scholarships to either study or teach abroad. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-6.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Barrett associate dean Kyle Mox, liaison for the Fulbright Program, talks with nearly 60 ASU faculty members, Friday, September 20, 2019, about their upcoming interviews with applicants for Fulbright scholarships to either study or teach abroad. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-5.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Barrett associate dean Kyle Mox, liaison for the Fulbright Program, talks with nearly 60 ASU faculty members, Friday, September 20, 2019, about their upcoming interviews with applicants for Fulbright scholarships to either study or teach abroad. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-4.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Barrett associate dean Kyle Mox, liaison for the Fulbright Program, talks with nearly 60 ASU faculty members, Friday, September 20, 2019, about their upcoming interviews with applicants for Fulbright scholarships to either study or teach abroad. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-3.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Barrett associate dean Kyle Mox, liaison for the Fulbright Program, talks with nearly 60 ASU faculty members, Friday, September 20, 2019, about their upcoming interviews with applicants for Fulbright scholarships to either study or teach abroad. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-2.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Barrett associate dean Kyle Mox, liaison for the Fulbright Program, talks with nearly 60 ASU faculty members, Friday, September 20, 2019, about their upcoming interviews with applicants for Fulbright scholarships to either study or teach abroad. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-1.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Barrett associate dean Kyle Mox, liaison for the Fulbright Program, talks with nearly 60 ASU faculty members, Friday, September 20, 2019, about their upcoming interviews with applicants for Fulbright scholarships to either study or teach abroad. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-7.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Herberger School of Film, Dance and Theatre clinical professor Eileen Standley, right, and Barrett Honor faculty member Sakena Young-Scaggs, join others in preparation to interview prospective Fulbright candidates to work in Australia and Canada, Friday, September 20, 2019. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-9.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Nearly 60 ASU faculty members receive guidance for interviewing prospective Fulbright applicants to either study or teach abroad, Friday, September 20, 2019. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-8.jpg
  • TEMPE - September 20, 2019 - ASU Now - Fulbright Applicants - Herberger School of Film, Dance and Theatre clinical professor Eileen Standley, right, and Barrett Honor faculty member Sakena Young-Scaggs, join others in preparation to interview prospective Fulbright candidates to work in Australia and Canada, Friday, September 20, 2019. ASU is trying to increase the number of the scholarship applicants, with one method being to hold all faculty/applicant interviews on one day. There are around 75 applicants who will interview for specific grants in specific countries. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
    20190920 Fulbright Applicants-10.jpg
  • Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_09.JPG
  • Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_04.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_18.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_14.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_13.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_12.JPG
  • Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_07.JPG
  • Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_06.JPG
  • Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz is a PhD Graduate student from Mexico studying Geological Sciences in the School of Earth and Space Exploration.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_03.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_20.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_19.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_16.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_15.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_10.JPG
  • Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_05.JPG
  • Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz is a PhD Graduate student from Mexico studying Geological Sciences in the School of Earth and Space Exploration.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_01.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_21.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_17.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_11.JPG
  • ASU Now - Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz. Santa Rita Experimental Range, Southern Arizona.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_08.JPG
  • Fulbright Scholar, Eli Rafael Perez Ruiz is a PhD Graduate student from Mexico studying Geological Sciences in the School of Earth and Space Exploration.
    20180315EliRafaelPerezRuiz_02.JPG
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
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Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
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Poet and essayist Rita Dove hugs her daughter, ASU Assistant Professor Aviva Dove-Viebahn, following her introduction and before reading samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 295.jpg
  • 20211124 - Zoha Tunio - Phoenix<br />
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Released:<br />
Image fully released. Model release on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
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Investigative journalism graduate student Zoha Tunio is a Fulbright Scholar from Karachi, Pakistan. She will soon graduate from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Tunio will head home to be a Roy W. Howard Fellow at Inside Climate News, where she will report on environmental justice issues in the region.  Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20211124 Zoha Tunio 276.jpg
  • TEMPE - April 20th, 2017 - Tempe Campus - ASUNOW  <br />
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Outstanding graduate and biological sciences senior Cassie Roose poses for a portrait on Old Main lawn Thursday afternoon on April 19th, 2017. Rose will be heading to Belgium on a Fulbright fellowship and hopes to attend medical school following her fellowship. Photo by Deanna Dent
    20170420RooseCassie_06.JPG
  • Photo Archive/2014/03-March/KenWald-Lecture<br />
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Kenneth D. Wald is Distinguished Professor of Political Science  and the Samuel R. "Bud" Shorstein Professor of American Jewish Culture and Society at the University of Florida. He has written about the relationship of religion and politics in the United States, Great Britain, and Israel. His most recent books include Religion and Politics in the United States (Rowman & Littlefield, 2010, 6th ed.), The Politics of Cultural Differences: Social Change and Voter Mobilization Strategies in the Post-New Deal Period (Princeton University Press, 2002, co-authored), and The Politics of Gay Rights (University of Chicago Press, 2000, coedited with Craig Rimmerman and Clyde Wilcox).<br />
 <br />
He has been a Fulbright Professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a visiting scholar at the University of Strathyclyde (Glasgow), Haifa University (Israel), Harvard University, the University of Michigan, and the Centennial Center for Political Science & Public Affairs in Washington, DC. He has lectured widely at academic institutions in the United States and abroad and given talks in such disparate locales as the Chautauqua Institution in upstate New York, throughout China for the U.S. Information Agency, and at two House Democratic Message Retreats in Congress.<br />
 <br />
Together with David C. Leege, he coedits the Cambridge Studies in Social Theory, Religion and Politics for Cambridge University Press.  He has edited a special issue of the International Political Science Review and served on the editorial board of Political Behavior and the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. He current serves on the editorial board of Politics and Religion.<br />
 <br />
At the University of Florida, he served as Chair (1989-1994) and Graduate Coordinator (1987-1989) of the Department of Political Science. From 1999 through 2004, he served as director of the Center for Jewish Studies. In 2011, he received the University's highest faculty award, Teacher/Scholar of t
    20140305WaldKenLecture_02.JPG
  • TEMPE - Oct. 6, 2017 - ASU Now - Sun Devil Global Connection - Rozita Smith, left, and Dmitrii Zabelin, a Russian Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant, talk at the weekly coffee and conversation hour sponsored by Sun Devil Global Connection. Smith is from Malaysia and now works for the International Students and Scholars Center as the assistant director of sponsored services. Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
    20171006GlobalConnection_06.JPG
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
<br />
Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
<br />
Poet and essayist Rita Dove reads samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 324.jpg
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
<br />
Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
<br />
Poet and essayist Rita Dove reads samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 308.jpg
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
<br />
Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
<br />
Poet and essayist Rita Dove reads samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 304.jpg
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
<br />
Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
<br />
Poet and essayist Rita Dove listens to her introduction by her daughter, ASU Assistant Professor Aviva Dove-Viebahn, before reading samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 287.jpg
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
<br />
Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
<br />
Poet and essayist Rita Dove chats with Professor Alberto Rios, Arizona's Inaugural Poet Laureate, before she reads samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 268.jpg
  • 20211124 - Zoha Tunio - Phoenix<br />
<br />
Released:<br />
Image fully released. Model release on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Investigative journalism graduate student Zoha Tunio is a Fulbright Scholar from Karachi, Pakistan. She will soon graduate from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Tunio will head home to be a Roy W. Howard Fellow at Inside Climate News, where she will report on environmental justice issues in the region.  Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20211124 Zoha Tunio 258.jpg
  • 20211124 - Zoha Tunio - Phoenix<br />
<br />
Released:<br />
Image fully released. Model release on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Investigative journalism graduate student Zoha Tunio is a Fulbright Scholar from Karachi, Pakistan. She will soon graduate from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Tunio will head home to be a Roy W. Howard Fellow at Inside Climate News, where she will report on environmental justice issues in the region.  Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20211124 Zoha Tunio 250.jpg
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_1...CR2
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_0...JPG
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_0...CR2
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_0...CR2
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_0...CR2
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_0...JPG
  • TEMPE - April 20th, 2017 - Tempe Campus - ASUNOW  <br />
<br />
Outstanding graduate and biological sciences senior Cassie Roose poses for a portrait on Old Main lawn Thursday afternoon on April 19th, 2017. Rose will be heading to Belgium on a Fulbright fellowship and hopes to attend medical school following her fellowship. Photo by Deanna Dent
    20170420RooseCassie_03.JPG
  • TEMPE - April 20th, 2017 - Tempe Campus - ASUNOW  <br />
<br />
Outstanding graduate and biological sciences senior Cassie Roose poses for a portrait on Old Main lawn Thursday afternoon on April 19th, 2017. Rose will be heading to Belgium on a Fulbright fellowship and hopes to attend medical school following her fellowship. Photo by Deanna Dent
    20170420RooseCassie_01.JPG
  • Photo Archive/2014/10-September/Fulbright Welcome Reception<br />
<br />
Another page in Arizona’s history books was written at a historic school in downtown Phoenix tonight as the Arizona Super Bowl Host Committee, NFL Foundation and the Arizona Cardinals dedicated a newly refurbished football field and much-needed scoreboard to the students, staff and fans of ASU Preparatory Academy during their packed homecoming game.
    20140926ASUPrepDowntownFieldDedicati...JPG
  • Photo Archive/2014/10-September/Fulbright Welcome Reception<br />
<br />
Another page in Arizona’s history books was written at a historic school in downtown Phoenix tonight as the Arizona Super Bowl Host Committee, NFL Foundation and the Arizona Cardinals dedicated a newly refurbished football field and much-needed scoreboard to the students, staff and fans of ASU Preparatory Academy during their packed homecoming game.
    20140926ASUPrepDowntownFieldDedicati...JPG
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
<br />
Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
<br />
Poet and essayist Rita Dove reads samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 330.jpg
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
<br />
Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
<br />
Poet and essayist Rita Dove reads samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 318.jpg
  • 20221018 - Rita Dove - Tempe<br />
<br />
Image not released: news/editorial use only.<br />
<br />
Poet and essayist Rita Dove poses for a snapshot with Professor Alberto Rios, Arizona's Inaugural Poet Laureate, before she reads samples of her work at the Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Distinguished Lecture Tuesday, October 18, 2022, in Armstrong Hall. From 1993 to 1995, she served as the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. She was the first African American to have been appointed since an act of Congress created the position in 1986. Dove’s numerous honors include Lifetime Achievement Medals from the Library of Virginia and the Fulbright Association, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, the 2014 Carole Weinstein Poetry Prize, the 2019 Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets and the 2021 Gold Medal for Poetry from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as the sixteenth (and third female and first African American) poet in the Medal’s 110-year history. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20221018 Rita Dove 278.jpg
  • 20211124 - Zoha Tunio - Phoenix<br />
<br />
Released:<br />
Image fully released. Model release on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Investigative journalism graduate student Zoha Tunio is a Fulbright Scholar from Karachi, Pakistan. She will soon graduate from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Tunio will head home to be a Roy W. Howard Fellow at Inside Climate News, where she will report on environmental justice issues in the region.  Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20211124 Zoha Tunio 286.jpg
  • 20211124 - Zoha Tunio - Phoenix<br />
<br />
Released:<br />
Image fully released. Model release on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Investigative journalism graduate student Zoha Tunio is a Fulbright Scholar from Karachi, Pakistan. She will soon graduate from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Tunio will head home to be a Roy W. Howard Fellow at Inside Climate News, where she will report on environmental justice issues in the region.  Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20211124 Zoha Tunio 282.jpg
  • 20211124 - Zoha Tunio - Phoenix<br />
<br />
Released:<br />
Image fully released. Model release on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Investigative journalism graduate student Zoha Tunio is a Fulbright Scholar from Karachi, Pakistan. She will soon graduate from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Tunio will head home to be a Roy W. Howard Fellow at Inside Climate News, where she will report on environmental justice issues in the region.  Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20211124 Zoha Tunio 278.jpg
  • 20211124 - Zoha Tunio - Phoenix<br />
<br />
Released:<br />
Image fully released. Model release on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Investigative journalism graduate student Zoha Tunio is a Fulbright Scholar from Karachi, Pakistan. She will soon graduate from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Tunio will head home to be a Roy W. Howard Fellow at Inside Climate News, where she will report on environmental justice issues in the region.  Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20211124 Zoha Tunio 270.jpg
  • 20211124 - Zoha Tunio - Phoenix<br />
<br />
Released:<br />
Image fully released. Model release on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Investigative journalism graduate student Zoha Tunio is a Fulbright Scholar from Karachi, Pakistan. She will soon graduate from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Tunio will head home to be a Roy W. Howard Fellow at Inside Climate News, where she will report on environmental justice issues in the region.  Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20211124 Zoha Tunio 262.jpg
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_1...JPG
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_1...JPG
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_0...CR2
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_0...CR2
  • Freedom to Read vs. Obligation to Protect: New Technologies and 21st Century Policies<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 11:40 a.m.<br />
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies: History<br />
Coor Hall 174, Tempe campus<br />
This lecture is co-sponsored by the Barry M. Goldwater Chair of American Institutions and by the ASU Public History and Scholarly Publishing Programs.<br />
<br />
Irving Louis Horowitz is the Hannah Arendt Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development—now in its 40th year. He is also chairman of Transaction-Aldine Publishers. From 1962 to1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, Queen’s University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India.<br />
<br />
In 1990 Horowitz won the National Jewish Book Award for Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem Childhood.
    20110202IrvingLouisHorowitzLecture_0...JPG
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