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Don't worry if you've yet to find something special for loved ones this Valentine's Day. You can easily and inexpensively add extra heart to gifts by making them at home.
Most of us have to be suffering from a pretty mind-blowing caffeine withdrawal migraine before we'll reach for instant coffee. That doesn't mean you shouldn't buy some, because while instant coffee makes a generally lousy cup of java, it can do astounding things for your cooking.
In this image taken on Feb. 6, 2012, bourbon java steak tips are shown in Concord, N.H. (AP Photo/Matthew Mead)
Adding coffee to coffeecake is a simple way to take something great and make it even better.
Expressing concerns about the City of Tempe is no longer limited to city council or committee meetings. Tempe City Council Member Joel Navarro is starting a new conversation series, “Java with Joel,” where residents can spend an hour on Saturday morning drinking coffee and discussing city issues. Having been chair of the neighborhood Quality of Life and Revitalization Committee and recently appointed to the new Neighborhoods and Education City Council Committee, Navarro has made neighborhoods the topic of his first 8:30 a.m. community discussion on Oct. 27 at Xtreme Bean Coffee Company, 1707 E. Southern Ave. A schedule of future sessions is currently unavailable, but Navarro said he intends to make to make the community discussions a regular event.
Adding coffee to coffeecake is a simple way to take something great and make it even better.
More than 300 Valley Youth Theatre supporters helped raise nearly $120,000 to fund education and outreach programs and six mainstage productions at The Most VYTal Event of the Season, the company’s 14th annual fundraiser.
Chelsea Kozak has always been interested in technology. Through the use of various devices and with age, that curiosity turned into a desire for more knowledge.
Tempe and some of its high-tech employers are holding a job fair Thursday, Feb. 16 but don't fret about rushing the interview suit to the cleaners by then.
Based on macro trends seen today, the career categories listed below should be in relatively high demand throughout the next 10 years.
By now, the majority of New Year's resolutions have fallen by the wayside and if remembered at all, they are recalled in sentences like, "What was I thinking? Every time I organize my office, I cannot find anything for weeks!" So how about a few things that are easy to do and will make a difference in your computer life?
If the sight of their Airstream trailer doesn't immediately take you back to a simpler time, the taste of their coffee certainly will.
Java lovers who commute to Phoenix or Scottsdale for work, may want to make a stop at a local coffee shop next week to help raise funds for Phoenix Children's Hospital.
There are kids who like to do more than just play their video games. Some like to create their own.
There are kids who like to do more than just play their video games. Some like to create their own.
When the recession hit, pharmacist Joelle Blasig made a trade-off. She would cut back on eating out but wouldn't give up her $65 hair treatments at the Progressions Salon at the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn.
For Dorrell Edwards, the best part of waking up is being a semi-finalist in the Folger’s jingle contest.
Chandler-Gilbert Community College, in partnership with the Southeast Valley .NET User Group and Chandler, will host “Desert Code Camp” 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. April 2 on the Pecos campus, 2626 E. Pecos Road, Chandler.
Comic books often begin with an extraordinary substance that turns ordinary people into superheroes.
A close friend and I were ensconced in the armchairs next to the pick-up counter at the local coffee boutique, as is our wont on a weekend morning (at best, we view this once-weekly chat as cheap therapy; at worst, we're just hiding from our kids).
A close friend and I were ensconced in the armchairs next to the pick-up counter at the local coffee boutique, as is our wont on a weekend morning (at best, we view this once-weekly chat as cheap therapy; at worst, we're just hiding from our kids).
PRESCOTT — Not until Ronny Herman de Jong looked down at the seal signifying Japan's surrender in World War II did the magnitude of her early childhood experience dawn on her.
In this Aug. 18, 2010 photo, shows Ronny Herman de Jong in Prescott, Ariz. Ronny Herman de Jong, now nearly 72, prefers to remember rather than the years she, her mother and sister spent in a Japanese concentration camp during the war when that country occupied Surabaia on the island of Java, now a part of Indonesia. Her mother, Jeannette Herman-Louwerse , 100, who lives today in the Netherlands, carefully chronicled their ordeal in a journal that de Jong translated from Dutch to English years later and compiled into a book, "In the Shadow of the Sun." (AP Photo/The Daily Courier, Brett Soldwedel)
What exactly is clickjacking, and how do I protect myself from it? — Joan
Give ‘Em Hell Harry! coming to CGCC
Guest Commentary by Michael Carroll
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
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