The crowd’s diversity, consisting of locals and college students, mixed well with various types of underground hip-hop acts. The acts included break dancers and graffiti artists who gathered at the “Naked Hip Hop…Stripped Down to
Americans have grown into paranoia fiends. Any problem, big or small, is another dilemma for us to obsessively fret over. Whether the hottest story is a mosquito carrying West Nile virus or bank employees being
Emily Catalano Staff Writer Property theft has been the most highly reported crime on campus this semester, according to campus police reports. By a large margin, thefts happen more often than robberies, assaults or harassments
With no hope in sight of acquiring badly needed funds from the state, the South Eastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) is now poised to make drastic cuts that are going to make life more difficult
In mid-November, President David Adamany announced that he would be creating an Office of Multicultural Affairs (OMCA) to enhance Temple’s already diverse community. Since then, however, not much progress has been made. Adamany expects to
As the recently-crowned Miss Pennsylvania National Teenager and a pacemaker recipient, Lindsay Siegle is a unique addition to Temple’s student body. Siegle, an Allentown, Pa., freshman who lives in 1300, is the youngest pacemaker recipient
Temple rolled out the red carpet for some of the campus’ premier models on Sunday night. The University Top Model Competition, coordinated by the student organization Déjà vu, decided just who Temple’s own top model
The Street administration typifies the term cognitive dissonance. When approached with conflicting, though equally viable ideas, Street and his surrogates seem to disregard them in favor of their own personal brainchildren. Two months ago, The
Ms. Elizabeth Vaughn’s [“Darwin stuck in 19th century” Friday, Nov. 12] piece is yet another instance of an attempt to inject religion into science. It relies heavily on advocates of so-called Intelligent Design, a religiously
On Friday, Nov. 26 a ship named the Athos I leaked what originally was thought to be 30,000 gallons of oil into the Delaware River. It has now become apparent that there are actually 473,500