ASU needs an 'Idol'
HE OR SHE won't get much fame. There's no fortune to be had, either.
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HE OR SHE won't get much fame. There's no fortune to be had, either.
NOTICE TO FRESHMEN: It is safe to go inside the library.
WITH THEIR CEREBRAL yet aggressive brand of hard rock, Pulse Ultra is out to prove that Celine Dion and Alanis Morisette aren't the only talented Canadian imports.
Michael Hitt has been teaching the principles of business for 28 years.
"La-piz." Language acquisition teacher Lou Stack pronounced the Spanish word slowly as she sat on the floor with five children at Pendergast Elementary School in west Phoenix.
With Tempe's music scene brimming with innovative hip-hop talent, it's about time Arizona represented.
The Tempe City Council voted 6-1 last night to convert the decrepit Tempe Center into a fully functioning and realized house of ill repute.
I became a vegetarian two years ago.
Maryellen Hooper has some stories to tell. A Long Island native who grew up mostly in Tampa, Fla., Maryellen had done everything from hairdressing to being a human billboard on Wall Street before breaking into comedy in 1985.
As a Tempe musician, I often dreamt of the day when my band, The Dying Time, would be interviewed for an article in a music or entertainment magazine. Unfortunately, that day will never come, as we played our last show in October.
David Rhodes sat in front of an ASU classroom Tuesday, his hands emerging from tailored shirt cuffs to briskly interpret the professor's words. Later that night, the same hands energetically teased an electric guitar for a crowd at the Yucca Taproom.
Admit it.
The white words on the glass door of the massage parlor read, "Quiet, please. You are entering a D-Stress Zone." Perfect. On a recent Saturday afternoon, with the weight of school and work on my chest, I know that I am in the right place. An hour and 15 minutes of pure unwinding is well worth $50 of my hard-earned student salary.
Meria Heller is worried about the weather.
On Elizabeth Miller's necklace, a silver vampire bat is poised and ready to strike, sharply contrasting her unpretentious blue sweater and gray slacks.
A few months ago, when we were planning the articles for the semester, we looked in our crystal ball and saw the future: an article about modern-day fortunetellers.
Christy Raslavsky, an ASU education graduate student, hopes that by Christmas time she'll be able to welcome more pregnant mothers to the Phoenix shelter where she lives and works.
How many times have you opened the State Press and wondered about all those ads offering women big bucks for their eggs?
"My mother gave me three pieces of advice for being in a band," said Jessica Jurgens, guitarist and vocalist for Tempe's The Billy No Mates. "First, she told me, I needed to learn how to play my guitar. Second, I had to look at the crowd when I played. And third, I need to give onlookers something she called 'The Sexy Eye.'"
Modified, a tiny little house with wooden floors and no air conditioning, has long been the place to go in Phoenix for indie acts both national and local.
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