The Owlery

The features blog of The Temple News

Living Archive

Tuesday

17

March 2015

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COMMENTS

Temple welcomes Ari Kelman

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Living

The Center for the Study of Force and Diplomacy will welcome author Ari Kelman on Wednesday from 3-5 p.m. in Weigley Room 914 of Gladfelter Hall. Kelman is the McCabe Greer Professor of History at Penn State.  He is also the 2014 Bancroft Prize-winning author of “A Misplaced Massacre: Struggling Over the Memory of Sand Creek.”

Kelman will discuss the meaning and impact of the events of the 1864 Sand Creek massacre in Colorado that has affected struggles over history and memory in the American West. This discussion is free and open to all.

Tuesday

17

March 2015

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Tickets go on sale for Philly Spring Jam Concert

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Living

Tickets go on sale on Wednesday at noon for the Philly Spring Jam Concert at the Liacouras Center on March 29. The concert will feature performances from Keith Sweat, Ginuwine, 112, Whodini and Rob Base.

Rapper Doug E. Fresh will be hosting the event. Philly Connections tickets are $10 with TUid at the Reel Box Office. Only two tickets can be purchased per ID. The box office is located in the Student Center South. The concert is open to all.

Tuesday

17

March 2015

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Discussion to highlight climate change

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Living

The Department of Geography and Urban Studies has partnered with the Office of Sustainability to present “Philadelphia on the Frontline of Climate Change.”

The discussion will highlight how Temple and different organizations in Philadelphia are addressing the problem of climate change. Panelists will include Adam Garber, the field director at PennEnvironment, and Kathleen Grady, the director of sustainability at Temple. Christina Rosan, the director of environmental studies, will moderate the discussion. This event is open to all on Tuesday from 5-6:30 p.m. in Room 208 of Anderson Hall.

Tuesday

15

April 2014

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COMMENTS

Avitae to Main Campus

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Living

Over the next few weeks, students will begin to see a new brand of energy drinks in dining halls and vending machines around Main Campus.

This new drink, called Avitae, looks and tastes just like water but has added caffeine.

Norm Snyder, a representative for Avitae, said that while the company is not trying to replace any morning cups of coffee, he believes their energy drinks offer a healthy alternative.

“A lot of people load up their coffee with cream and sugar, and they turn a low calorie beverage into an extremely high calorie beverage,” Snyder said. “So instead of having that second or third cup, or fourth cup, go to the ninety milligram, or you could drink the 125. There is something for everyone.”

The drink comes in three different levels of caffeine, a 45 milligram which is equivalent to half of a cup of coffee, a 90 milligram, at a full cup of coffee, and a 125 milligram, which is about a cup and a half. None have calories and are free of carbohydrates.

While Avitae was started in the Midwest, Snyder said the company has begun to move through Philadelphia and is now sold in places like Whole Foods, Wegmans and Walgreens around the city.

“Now with the help of Sodexo, we are now going to go to places like Temple, Villanova, St. Joes and Drexel, and go through the ‘Big Five,’” Snyder said. “And have some fun with it, it’s a brand you can have fun with.”

Sunday

6

April 2014

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COMMENTS

Talib Kweli on Main Campus this Tuesday

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Events, Living

Main Campus Program Board will host a night of music with Talib Kweli, a Brooklyn-based rapper who’s collaborated with Kanye West, Melanie Fiona and Miguel among other artists, on Tuesday beginning at 7 p.m.

The event will take place in the Temple Performing Arts Center and students may enter free of charge by presenting a student ID card. The doors for the event will open at 6 p.m.

Kweli, a known activist along with his career as a recording artist, will also take questions from the audience as part of an interactive dialog aspect of the appearance. The hip hop musician is well-known for his political expressions and opinionated stance on social issues in America.

Thursday

3

April 2014

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SEAL Gala

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Events, Living

The Society of Emerging African Leaders, a student-run organization created in 2009, will host their second annual award gala on Friday at 8 p.m. in Room 200C of the Student Center. The theme of the gala will be “Africa Rising,” celebrating entrepreneurial efforts of African immigrants in America. Two African business founders will be honored for their achievements along with one current student, Chima Onukwuru.

The keynote speaker of the gala will be Yetunde Odugbesan, the founder of Yetunde Global Consulting LLC, a management consulting firm and the founder and executive director of Young Woman’s Guide. Ventures Magazine Africa recognized Odugbesan as an entrepreneur to watch in 2013.

The two professional awardees are Farai Gundan and Semhar Araia. Gundan is the co-founder and CEO of FaraiMedia LLC, a networking agency for companies that strive to reach African audiences. Araia is the founder and executive director of Diaspora African Women’s Network and won the White House Champion of Change award in 2012.

Onukwuru will be featured to showcase his own work in the community of African entrepreneurs, the creation of his website “Africans Can Gossip.” The site acts as a networking tool for African students, created for the sole purpose of advertising and promoting the events hosted by African organizations at universities. When school is not in session, the website aims to keep users updated on current events, providing information on the latest in entertainment.

The event will be hosted by Ebun Olaloye, an alumnus who created the organization Live Breathe Futbol. The event will provide dinner and refreshments and is free to students.

Wednesday

26

March 2014

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Philadelphia artists honor bicycling

Written by , Posted in Art, People, Tyler School of Art

In honor of the growing community of bicyclists in Philadelphia, the city’s Arts, Culture and Creative Economy Department will be holding an art reception on Wednesday, April 9.

The reception is being held to highlight the work of winners from last summers competition, which was held by the department. The competition challenged artists all over the world to create intricate and creative bike racks.

After the winners were selected, artists from the greater Philadelphia area were also encouraged to submit their own pieces to help represent the bike culture of the city and sustainability.

Two of the artists chosen from Philadelphia include Donnell Powell and Eric Mozes, 2012 graduates of Temple University, whose mixed media sculpture entitled, “Boundaries Therefore We Brake”, will be on display on the second floor of City Hall for the next four months.

The reception on April 9 will take place from 5 – 7 p.m. on the first and second floors, as part of the Art Gallery at City Hall.

Doors will officially open to the public starting at 6 p.m. but guests who arrive early may sign in at the northeast corner of the building, near the office of the Mayor.

Thursday

27

February 2014

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TUTV to air live Q&A with space station crew

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Living

Today, Feb. 27, the student broadcasters at TUTV will air a Q&A session with astronauts in the International Space Station beginning at 11:50 a.m. The event, broadcasted on Temple University’s television station, will last until 12:15, during which crew members will answer any questions.

The session will be led by Karina Cheung, a junior media studies and production major and TUTV’s Rudman Intern and Nick Lucier, a senior media studies and production major. School of Media and Communications students will be accompanied by College of Engineering students in order to ask educated questions about the future of science and technology. Those participating engineering students are part of Associate Professor John Helferty’s NASA-funded program, Student Space Exploration and Environmental Systems Laboratory.

The program will be viewable on local Comcast channel 50 and Verizon channel 45, as well as online at templetv.net.

Tuesday

25

February 2014

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COMMENTS

Temple law students recognize Death Penalty Week

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Living

Temple University Law and Pre-law students are coming together this week to celebrate the National Lawyers Guild’s Death Penalty Week. On Feb. 25 from 12-1 p.m. in Klein Hall room A2K, students can gather to hear from practitioners and advocates who have worked with defendants facing capital charges or who are on death row. Though the NLG’s official week is March 3-7, during Temple University’s scheduled Spring Recess, the students decided to host events and planning actions to raise awareness of unjust capital punishment system in the U.S. this week, Feb. 24-28.

Tuesday

25

February 2014

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COMMENTS

Temple’s Best Mexican experiences paperwork issue

Written by , Posted in Around Campus, Living

Temple’s Best Mexican food truck, located at 13th and Norris Streets, was visited by a city inspector on Feb. 24. Owners must have permits and licenses, inspections done before a business is opened and every so often while in operation.

The Office of Food Protection requires truck owners to fill out a Mobile Food Vending Unit Plan that requires descriptions of physical materials, water supply and food preparation, among others. After this is approved, the owner must get their Food Safety Certification. After all of the paperwork is in order, the truck is inspected. If it passes, the owner is allowed to pursue more licenses, such as the required “Food Establishment, Retail Non-Permanent Location” license, which allows the owner to operate a retail food business that is not permanent.

Mike Milsted, a senior accounting major, visited Temple’s Best for lunch on Monday and said he saw the city inspector ask one of the truck’s workers to see their business license. The worker gave the inspector two papers, both of which were refused by the inspector because they were not the correct documents. When asked if the truck had a health inspection, the worker said that the truck had been previously taken in for inspection, but there was no paperwork provided.

Temple’s Best owner Herbert Mena was not at the truck during the inspector’s visit, but he assures that the truck has its business license and that it had undergone a health inspection.

“We took it in for the inspection, but the inspector hasn’t come out here to the truck yet to do their inspection,” Mena said. “They still have to give us the paperwork we need for that, and we do have a business license inside the truck.”

Milsted said he was pleased with his meal and didn’t find the inspector’s visit troubling.