As “American Idol” starts singing again Tuesday, those connected with the Fox blockbuster acknowledge few limits when it comes to guest stars or ratings or product spinoffs. Or even rampant enthusiasm.
The boys’ deaths — scattered in the United States, in Yemen, in Turkey and elsewhere in seemingly isolated horror — had one thing in common: They hanged themselves after watching televised images of Saddam Hussein’s execution.
More and more teens are getting their fix from the corner pharmacy instead of the corner drug dealer, according to a major study released by the University.
“Seat-time credit,” a policy that allows failing students to earn points toward passing a class just by sitting in their seats is treated as an acceptable practice in city high schools two years after Mayor Bloomberg declared the end of social promotion i
It’s hard to write this without sounding like a prig. But it’s just as hard to erase the images that planted the idea for this essay, so here goes. The scene is a middle school auditorium, where girls in teams of three or four are bopping to pop songs
A MONTH before Super Bowl XLI, it remains unclear which teams will face off on Feb. 4 in Miami. In the other big game that night — the battle of the Super Bowl advertisers — the lineup is becoming clearer.
The evolution of the music business to a digital marketplace continued apace in 2006, bringing with it the customary mix of good and bad news from Nielsen SoundScan.
A new study shows that more than half of all American teens use online social networking sites. But the study also shows that those hormone-surging masses are using the sites in ways you might not expect.
Crouched in military fatigues, you peer through night-vision goggles and brandish a semiautomatic gun as you hunt down terrorists who’ve overtaken Las Vegas.