The Temple ice hockey club kicked off its season with the 2004 Liberty Bell Invitational at the Class of 1923 Ice Rink at the University of Pennsylvania. The tournament featured four area colleges, with opening
It would be easy to look at the results of the women’s tennis team at the Cissie Leary Memorial Tennis Invitational this past weekend and wonder if it was the same team as two weekends
Do you feel a draft? I do. Every day I read the news, and there are more troubles to report. United States casualties in September are already higher than they were for August, and I
Anne Kim Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service That’s a phrase college students everywhere have uttered in a whining or worried tone at least once since entering the luminous halls of the ivory tower. This phrase, however,
School has started and the summer is behind us with memories of vacations, beaches, and sunshine. You are back in the concrete jungle of Philadelphia once again, enjoying homework, and the monotony of classes. Before
MTV and politics don’t mix. At the very least, those divergent interests probably occupy very different segments of your day. So maybe you’ve noticed with curiosity the way November’s election, via MTV candidate appearances and
The latest, greatest conjoining of man and machine is Kerry Conran’s debut film, Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow. Creating an entire pixilated world with the use of CGI technology, like the effects seen
A quickie follow-up to the 2002 surprise hit based on a series of video games, Resident Evil: Apocalypse is silly, disposable and if given an excessive amount of thought, does not really make a lot
Perhaps, it was the constant turmoil in Cole Porter’s life that allowed him to write such soulful, romantic and eloquent songs. His music is still with us today and will be for many years to
Until very recently, Senator Kerry has kept secret that his immigrant grandfather was a Czech Jew – one may speculate as to why. (John’s brother, Cameron, alive & well, is an orthodox Jew.) Being an