angel3
Angel keeps a photo album that reminds her of the good times with her family.
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.
114 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Angel keeps a photo album that reminds her of the good times with her family.
She's smiling and wearing a wedding ring now, a symbol of her newfound happiness. But things weren't always so good for Angel, a northeast Phoenix resident. Early struggles with sexual abuse, which began when she was a young child, led her into destructive relationships and destructive habits. Her story on page 6.
Ayn Semmens, a hotel and restaurant management student at NAU, shops at Stinkweeds on Saturday. Stinkweeds is owned by Kimber Lanning, one of the founders of a local business network called Arizona Chain Reaction.
Angel laughs with her new husband Steve in their Phoenix home. The two were married on June 18.
Angel prepares dinner in her Phoenix home on Sunday.
Luis Nava, a recent business management graduate from ASU, avoided being deported to Mexico during a court hearing in Phoenix on Thursday. The judge threw out the case. Nava says he hopes to complete a second bachelor's degree in finance and eventually go on to get an MBA.
Brad Farrr, a senior business major, uses his laptop's wireless capability in a study room on the second floor of the Noble Library on Thusday.
Robert Merkley, an electrical engineering graduate student, studies inside Noble Library on Thursday. The building allows students to access the Internet from their own laptop computers using wireless and other connections.
Luis Nava, an ASU alumnus, roots for the U.S men's soccer team in his Phoenix home as they play Panama on Friday.
One portion of Hayden Ferry Lakeside already sits on the shore of Tempe Town Lake, near the Mill Avenue Bridge. Two more sections of the complex, which will provide residential and office space by the lake, are scheduled for completion in March and December 2006, respectively. The project is only one of several high-rise, mixed-use developments being constructed or planned in Tempe.
Austin Eilmeister, 23, and Andrew Beach, 25, both of Tempe, watch the crowd dancing at the Library on Friday night.
Ritas is no longer a business in the basement of the MU. The space will soon be occupied by the suncard office.
Students dance at The Library on Friday night. Bouncers check IDs at the door to make sure everyone in the club is at least 21 years old.
Barbara Hubbs, 24, of Mesa, signs in at the Mill Cue Club on Friday night. Doorman Alan Halter, a communications senior, said if he isn't 100 percent sure an ID is valid, a patron must sign in.
The Mill Avenue Cue Club uses a black light to check for the ultraviolet ink on valid IDs.
Alan Halter, a communication senior, checks the ID of biology and psychology student Candace Pedro on Friday night at Mill Avenue Cue Club. Security staff checks for ID features including holograms, ultraviolet ink, lamination and ridges.
Artist Mark Newport stands in front of the costume of "The Escapist" at the "Super Heros" reception on Friday.
Brian and friends hang out in the shade in Escalante Park. The group of friends pulled their resources together to celebrate Johnny's birthday.
The man affectionately known as "Grampa," is a lively character said to have been around "forever."
Johnny rests after celebrating his birthday in Escalante Park.
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.