With the first seed in the Atlantic Ten Conference Championship up for grabs, the men’s tennis team looked to take down a formidable foe in Xavier. Xavier and Temple came into the match atop the
Senior outfielder Lauren Evans expects big things from her softball teammates this season. Evans said this year’s team has the potential to make the Atlantic Ten Conference tournament, after missing out on the postseason tourney
To Corey Leader and the seniors on the lacrosse team, playing Princeton has always been a personal battle. Since the Owls senior attacker played her first collegiate game, Leader has wanted to notch a win
WOMEN’S TENNIS The Owls suffered a 6-1 loss against Atlantic Ten Conference rival Massachusetts over the weekend, falling to a 10-9 record on the season. Junior Yuri Kurashima earned the team’s only singles victory, winning
In the early years of the NBA, league games sometimes had to be canceled because of fog. No, the league did not schedule games on playgrounds. For the 1950s, the arenas were hardly state-of-the-art. Actually,
Add another accomplishment to Candice Dupree’s lengthy list. Dupree became the first Temple women’s basketball player ever to be selected in the WNBA Draft when the expansion Chicago Sky selected her sixth overall Wednesday afternoon.
It began in a crowded closet on the fifth floor of Hardwick Hall. In addition to housing a college student’s garments, the cramped wardrobe contained walls padded with comforters, wires, a flashlight, a microphone, and
Karanja Carroll, an adjunct professor in the Department of African American Studies, has set a high standard with his impassioned prologues in two classes he teaches: afrocentricity and psychology of the black experience. Carroll, who
Some nights, I lose sleep worrying about my mother. She’s spent 23 years guiding, shaping and molding my existence with her own experience and intuition. I think she did a pretty top-notch job (insert additional
Since Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels, satire has taken on increasingly darker tones. Whether a sign of our murky present times, or a meaningless cultural trend, satire’s gradual depression reaches its nadir in Kevin Brockmeier’s The