Climbmax Climbing Gym reopens its doors
Climbmax Climbing Gym in Tempe reopened Friday after closing for two days following lease negotiation complications.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of statepress.com - Arizona State Press's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
32 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Climbmax Climbing Gym in Tempe reopened Friday after closing for two days following lease negotiation complications.
The Valley’s rock climbing community was shocked Wednesday when Climbmax Climbing Gym in Tempe announced it was closing its doors after five years of operation.
ASU reached a record enrollment of 72,250 undergraduate and graduate students with nearly 9,300 first-time freshmen and 6,800 transfer students, according to preliminary numbers released by the University on Thursday.
Robert “Eli” Hallman, ASU art studies freshman and son of Tempe Mayor Hugh Hallman, suffered facial fractures, lacerations and head trauma following an alleged assault on “A” Mountain early Thursday morning, according to a Tempe Police press release.
I love movies made in the ‘80s. In particular, I really love “St. Elmo’s Fire.”
Andy Goldstein, creator of the Valley's Two Hippies restaurants, looks around an office that measures larger than his first restaurant. The room is plastered with psychedelic vintage posters, restaurant reviews, family portraits and upcoming plans for a restaurant that will become Two Hippies Life’s a Picnic this spring, opening near the ASU Downtown campus on the ground floor of the Luhrs Building at 11 W. Jefferson St.
Tucked into a Phoenix strip mall next to a Domino's Pizza is Cherryblossom Noodle Café, an unimposing restaurant whose storefront looks like a traditional Italian café, where you would expect to find a dinner prepared by Mama Corleone herself — until you crack open the menu, that is.
More than halfway through the semester, the cuisine of the dining halls has become a mundane and sad reminder of the good food we left over winter break. In the residential halls, it’s hard to even make Break-N-Bake cookies with the small kitchens provided to on-campus students. Let’s change this: Good food is for everyone, even college students. Using a Food Network recipe, a bag of pre-made salad, a small purchase from Safeway and a paring knife, class up your next dinner using a basic kitchen and enjoy home-cooked goodness without spending a fortune.
As college students, we live in a perpetual state of “tight on cash,” turning to shops like Goodwill and Buffalo Exchange to fulfill our material needs. But sometimes, Goodwill charges too much for the "goods" you’re paying for and the Buffalo-roaming hipsters have stripped the racks before you walk in the door.
As you’re about to embark on one of the craziest adventures you and your significant other will have, you’ll need a clear-cut strategy. That's where SPM comes in. Attempting to demystify long distance-relationships (LDRs), this writer speaks from experience — and reading enough copies of Cosmopolitan.
Each January, the untouched possibilities of what could be drive us to set new goals and aspirations for the new year. Yet, after two or three weeks, most resolutions are abandoned in favor of old habits incapable of rehabilitation. While it might be the toughest goal to keep, a New Year’s resolution is absolutely possible. So, it’s a new year and a new semester; is it time for a new you? Here are a few tips to help you keep those resolutions until next year:
A stark white building tucked away on the Encanto Blvd./Central Ave. light rail stop, the Heard Museum is known for its extensive collection of American Indian artwork and history — content that, on the surface, does not always mesh well with college students’ interests.
This website uses cookies to make your experience better and easier. By using this website you consent to our use of cookies. For more information, please see our Cookie Policy.