Adventures In Stereo Monomania (Bobsled) Adventures In Stereo is the brainchild of ex-Primal Screamer Jim Beattie, lover of pop legends in the Brian Wilson/Phil Spector mold. AIS began as an oldies-inspired home recording project with
Travis, purveyors of the fourth U.K invasion (or is it the fifth? nah, wait, it’s the third), took the stage to a packed Electric Factory crowd on Sept. 8, and went on to deliver a
You know the drill. E-mail your questions and concerns to our in-house robot from the future and your problems will be solved. Seriously. None of the current Temple News staff even has to work anymore.
A gimp bouncing around stage dressed in a tuxedo is just one part of the insanity that occurs at a Less Than Jake show. Early last week, Less Than Jake paid Philadelphia a visit at
www.LazyStudents.com College students put your worries away. LazyStudents.com will save the day. No more long hours in the library preparing for a research paper. You can forget about cramming for a big test reading a
Okay. Everyone wants to stay healthy and look good, but making poor decisions about eating can affect your overall health and physique. Granted, Temple’s cafeteria doesn’t exactly make healthy eating easy, with French fries, pizza
Aries (March 21-April 19). You’re lookin’ good on Monday, but don’t get cocky. An overlooked detail could cause an awesome mess at work. Curtail travel plans on Tuesday and get what you want from a
Through a stroke of luck, Temple University now has the opportunity to better serve its students who are interested in studying abroad. This past summer, the Philadelphia Passport Agency set up a satellite office in
Downloading the e-mail you have just received? Think twice. Using your computer as your own personal checkbook? Be careful. Selling your PC? Take precautions. According to Temple electrical and computer engineering professor, Dennis Silage, even
While the Republican National Convention may have caused disturbances for some people because of traffic congestion and the influx of conventioneers and protesters, many Temple students saw the event as an opportunity. With 15,000 members