THE TEMPLE NEWS TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 2022 NEWS, Page 3 Temple Student Government hosts a town hall on campus safety. ALL IN GOOD FUN, Page 19 Our crossword puzzle and word search is back! THE TEMPLE NEWS More on Page 21 VOL 101 ISSUE 1 temple-news.com | @thetemplenews EXCESS TRASH OFF CAMPUS News, Page 8 The Temple News’ Opinion Editor argues Temple University should strengthen efforts to reduce waste from students living off campus






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/ THE TEMPLE NEWS Lawrence Ukenye Editor-in-Chief Julia Merola Print Managing Editor Fallon Roth Digital Managing Editor Megan Phillips Chief Print Copy Editor Kayla Maguire Chief Digital Copy Editor Maddie Sterner News Editor Jocelyn Hockaday Assistant News Editor Devon Russell Assistant News Editor Sarah Fresca Opinion Editor Molly Fiske Assistant Opinion Editor Laura Miller Features Editor Mariyum Rizwan Features Editor Nick Gangewere Sports Editor Javon Edmonds Assistant Sports Editor Samuel O’Neal Assistant Sports Editor Chris Duong Sports Social Media Manager Maggie Fitzgerald Director of Audience Engagement Emily Lewis Public Engagement Coordinator Taylor Hargraves Audience Engagement Editor Sara Wexler Audience Engagement Editor Erika Monn Photography Editor Earl Kufen Photography Editor Nicole Aquino Multimedia Editor Nate Pullano Multimedia Editor Joelle Pacheco Print Design Editor Allyson Tharp Graphic Design Editor Isabella Medina Web Editor Rachel Townsend Data Editor Olivia Hall Podcast Editor Rose Mastrangelo Advertising Manager Mattew Eaton Advertising Manager Kurt Nolasco Business Manager
EARL KUFEN
is an editorially independent weekly publication serving the Temple University community. Unsigned editorial content represents the opinion of The Temple News. Adjacent commentary is reflective of their authors, not The Temple News. The Editorial Board is made up of The Temple News’ Editor-inChief, Managing Editor, Digital Managing Editor, Chief Copy Editor, Assignments Editor, News Editor and Opinion Editor. The views expressed in editorials only reflect those of the Board, and not of the entire Temple News staff.
Temple Student Government held their first in-person town hall on Monday with Jennifer Griffin, the newly-ap pointed vice president for public safety, to discuss various campus safety initia tives.The town hall, held in the Student Center, was meant to serve as a forum for Student Body President Gianni Quattrocchi and Griffin to answer stu dent questions, discuss campus safety, upcoming events and to debut Griffin’s role, which was adapted from former Campus Safety Services director Charles Leone.Griffin also talked about the uni versity’s programs for landlords in cluding the off-campus residence safety program, which verifies landlords as a safe location to rent if they meet cer tain safety standards like lighting, cam eras and locks. Landlords can also apply for a grant program where Temple will give them $2,500 to provide security im provements.“We’reasking landlords to become good partners with us and if they have all of these kinds of safety checklists, the university will then have a list to say ‘Okay, these are the five locations’ or ‘These are however many locations that have good lighting, they have locks, they have cameras, they follow best practices for our students, we feel confident they are providing good residence for you,’” GriffinGriffinsaid. also sits on the universi ty’s Task Force on Violence Reduction, comprised of students, parents, faculty and staff, which will be releasing recom mendations to better engage the Temple community.“There’s a whole list of recommen dations that they’ll be coming back with to talk about ways that public safety can do better and then also how we can en gage students, faculty and staff,” Griffin said.Griffin will also hold further discus sions with parents about campus safety. On April 6 and April 29 parents met with university officials to discuss cam pus safety updates, including increased police patrols and the new RAVE guard ian app.Additionally, 21CP Solutions, a group of professionals evaluating cam pus safety, will be surveying Temple stu dents about their view on campus safety. “We need you to be a partner with us, we need to hear your input, we need to know how you’re feeling on campus because we see it from a total ly different perspective,” Griffin said.
PAGE 3The Temple News NEWS TSG holds town hall with new VP of public safety TSG The town hall covered the restructuring of TSG and campus safetyBYupdates.MADDIE STERNER
EARL KUFEN/ THE TEMPLE NEWS
@maddiesternermadeline.sterner@temple.edu News Editor
Gianni Quattrochi and Jennifer Griffin stand next to each other.

PAGE 4 The Temple NewsNEWS
@maddiesternermadeline.sterner@temple.edu
Temple students and faculty share their responses to Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan.
The rates for undergraduate and graduate students are on a fixed interest rate of 4.99 percent and 7.54 percent, ac cording to Federal Student Aid. Additionally, canceled loans will not count as taxable income for federal taxes. In Pennsylvania, student loan forgive ness may become taxable. “Reliving that debt is significant in terms of increasing the barrier to finan cial health of the borrowers,” Williams said.
ISSAC SCHIEN FOR THE TEMPLE NEWS
After President Joe Biden announced at a press conference on Aug. 24 that his administration would be forgiving fed eral student loans disbursed before June 30, Temple University, professors and students discuss shared how Biden’s plan will impact Temple’s student body.
Biden’s proposal will forgive $10,000 of loan debt for individuals making $125,000 or less and households mak ing $250,000 or less and an additional $10,000 for students who qualify for the Pell “WithGrant. more than 30% of Temple’s Class of 2026 receiving a Pell Grant, that mission continues to ring true today, and President Biden’s announcement of a student loan debt relief plan will play an important role for eligible students and alumni in higher education afford ability,” wrote Stephen Orbanek, a uni versity spokesperson, in an email to The TempleTempleNews.currently has 7,600 stu dents, during the 2021-22 year, who have received the Pell Grant as a part of their financial aid, WHYY reported. “Removing $10,000 of debt from those borrowers is going to drop their monthly payment by over $100 over the next ten years,” said Wayne Williams, an accounting professor. “It will also im prove their debt-to-income ratio.” Angelina Makhoul supports Biden’s proposal, which aims to help up to 43 million“It’sborrowers.anawesome plan because col lege is a lot of money and I feel like they prey on the students in any way that they can,” said Makhoul, a senior neurosci enceThemajor.Board of Trustees increased tu ition by 3.9 percent for the 2022-23 aca demic year after increasing it by 2.5 per cent in the 2021-22 academic year. The two years prior to that Temple froze tui tion during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.Thisyear, Temple invested more than $110 million in financial aid for students. The Fly-in-Four program, which incentivizes students to graduate on time, reduced Temple student debt’s by $2.4 million between 2013 and 2016. Additionally, Temple offers webinars on student financial aid. Temple students graduate with a median federal loan of $24,437. Nation ally, student loan borrowers owe an av erage of $36,510 to the federal govern ment, according to the Education Data Initiative, a group that collects data on the United States education system “$10,000 is a lot of money, but most people have loans that are much larger than that and I don’t think that neces sarily covers an enough amount,” said Reeya Shah, a sophomore undeclared major.Biden also extended the federal moratorium on student loan repayments until January 2023, marking the fourth time he extended the pause. “This will be the seventh time, since the Trump Administration started it in 2020, that student borrowers will not have to pay back their student loans as a result of the pandemic,” Williams added. However, Williams wants students to remember that interest rates on their loans will resume after the moratorium has ended and that forgiven loans may have an impact on their taxes.
BY MADDIE STERNER News Editor
Currently the interest rates for un dergraduate students are 4.99 percent and can increase to 7.54 percent for graduate students, Williams said.
President Biden accounted on Friday that the department of education will forgive student loans debt for borrowers who make under $125,000 year.
Temple community speaks on Biden’s debt plans

“Hopefully as we move towards more in-person events, I think that will be a really great way to kind of buildup on these collab orations,” said Zoe Karukas, the Chief of Staff for Temple United. Only 183 students voted in last year’s election, which Quattrocchi owes to a lack of executive campaigns, a trend seen in the three most recent Temple Student Government presidentialHowever,elections.tocombat the lack of participa tion, Quattrocchi and Ag will promote, adver tise and market the upcoming executive team election to increase voter turnout. They also plan on having contested elections by pro moting the election on social media.
TSG also lacked participation in their legislative body considering only four reso lutions were passed during the 2021-22 aca demicTheyyear.created a Legislative Advisory Com mittee in place of Parliament for the 2022-23 academic year. This committee will research if a legislative body is possible for the 2023-24 academicFollowingyear.
BEAT
ENGAGEMENT
@maddiesternermadeline.sterner@temple.edu
ADVOCACY TSG will be hosting a Sexual Assault Awareness Week during October and will be partnering with the Wellness Resource Cen ter. It is also Quattrocchi’s goal to renew the “It’s On Us” initiative at Temple University, which advocates for sexual assault prevention programs across college campuses.
PAGE 5The Temple News NEWS
Quattrocchi would like to see TSG be come more interconnected within student life and among organizations, to assist with stu dent“Thatengagement.starts with increased communi cation between students and TSG, increased engagement between TSG and university administration and offices so we can commu nicate that back to the students and ensuring that students know of all the opportunities and venues to participate,” Quattrocchi said. TSG has also been collaborating with Temple Athletics to promote the upcoming schedules for teams throughout the athletic department and to increase student interest in sporting events. They hope to bring student engagement back to a pre-pandemic level. “We want to be a much more integrated part of the student experience that we have ever been,” Quattrocchi said.
“The biggest reason that people haven’t voted in not just this past election but, also in Brad Smutek’s election and Quinn Litsinger’s election is because they were the only peo ple running and there’s no point in voting if there’s only one candidate,” Quattrocchi said.
TSG plans to host more in-person events and engage students through social media.
TSG shares goals for fall Temple Student Government’s top goal is increasing student engagement across organizations BY MADDIE STERNER News Editor
After winning an uncontested election last year Student Body President Gianni Quat trocchi and Vice President Akshitha Ag will be focusing on increasing student engage ment, hosting programming during Sexual Assault Awareness Week among other objec tives for the Fall 2022 semester.
“A few years ago, it lapsed, in terms of, there are a few requirements that need to be met,” Quattrocchi said. “It is my goal by the time I leave office we will have renewed our pledge for It’s On Us.”
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the dissolution of parliament last spring, former TSG president Bradley Smutek and his executive team drafted a pro visional constitution for the 2022-23 academ ic year, which includes changes to the elec tion committee and making their Allocations Committee a separate department. The allocations committee, which is the committee that approves or denies organiza tions’ requests for funds, was previously un der the student body president’s oversight. In the provisional constitution the allocations committee is now an independent branch withinTSGTSG.plans to write a more permanent constitution and give it to the executive team for the 2023-24 academic year.
GOVERNANCE

PAGE 6The Temple ADVERTISEMENTNews

“Sometimes faculty thinks, ‘Oh, well, it’s just this class,’ or they don’t realize how big of an issue it is.” If students don’t know they are failing a course, they may not know to reach out for help or improve their study habits. By accu rately updating grades, students will feel more respected and less stressed
EDUCATION A student argues that professors must update grades instead of leaving students calculate them.
Temple adopted Canvas, a learning management system, as its primary grading system in 2017, but many professors still do not input grades on this platform because they find it too confusing to workAlthoughwith. the platform has a 64 percent overall rating on eLearning Industry, a content platform that caters towards online educators, many professors left poor reviews, claiming it’s too confusing to use or link with external programs.Students are frustrated about cross-check ing Canvas with other LMSs to access their grades because it takes too long and can be inaccurate as some grades sync to Canvas and othersNowdon’t.that the Fall 2022 semester is here, professors must input updated grades into Canvas that accurately represent a student’s current grade instead of neglecting the site and forcing them to calculate it themselves. Often, grade inconsistencies take away from students feeling in control of their academic standing. Other LMSs are helpful in learning and managing classes, but the grades don’t appear the same in Canvas, especially if a student re takes an assignment. For example, if a student can retake an assignment for an unlimited amount of times, McGraw Hill Connect often keeps the first attempt as the final grade, while Canvas accepts the new attempt hours later. The discrepancies between Canvas and other LMSs force some students to resort to calculating their grades via Excel, an unneces sary extra Typically,task.different assignments carry dif ferent weights for the final grade. If a student doesn’t accurately enter their grades or consid er weight scales on Excel, they could make an error, skewing what their actual grade is. This can cause stress, as a student will remain un certain of their final grade until it’s published in TUPortal.In2017, Canvas received an overwhelm ing number of positive responses, and it made tracking grades easier throughout the semes ter because students could visually see them. However, professors do not always use Canvas properly.“Itbecomes really confusing because now we have to look at three different things for our grades and then calculate everything for the class and it’s too much,” said Saaty Raj, a ju nior international business major. “More than half of our class didn’t know if we were passing or failing.”Professors and students should be more aware of the issue and its importance, said Elizabeth Gordon, an accounting professor.
Last Wednesday, the White House announced its plan to can cel up to $20,000 in federal student loans. Individuals earning less than $125,000, or $250,000 for married couples, will be eligible to apply for relief because the plan is targeted toward people with lower or middle incomes.
Make college affordable
PAGE 7 The Temple NewsOPINION
“It’s really important for students to know where they are in the course,” Gordon said.
Professorsacademically.must realize the consequences of not updating grades in Canvas because stu dents may not understand that they have an unsatisfactory score until it is too late. Main taining an accurate reflection of grades helps students stay in control over their academics and feel more respected by their professors.
The Editorial Board com mends the Biden administration for beginning to follow through with its campaign promise, even though Biden’s presidential cam paign promised full student loan debt forgiveness for those earning less than $125,000. We acknowl edge that this is only the first step toward college accessibility in a country where tuition rates are in creasing and college enrollment is decreasing.Forgiveness is only applica ble to loans taken out before June 30, so any loan dispersed past that date will not be eligible for relief. While the White House is also planning to cut monthly under graduate loan payments in half and mend the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program, current and future students will need student loan relief, too, if college is not made more affordable.
“Financial management professors don’t post anything on the Canvas page, and we have to keep track of everything on platforms like McGraw Hill or Pearson,” said Arina Fak tor, a junior international business major. Taking time to update the grades in a timely manner can help keep students on track by constantly reminding them of where they stand
The Editorial Board urges both the federal and Pennsylvania state government to increase state funding for public colleges to in crease accessibility to higher edu cation for everyone. Since 1980, the cost of fouryear colleges has nearly tripled, but federal loan support has re mained stagnant, making college increasingly less affordable to lowand middle-income people and contributing to a drop in enroll ment, according to a 2021 report by College Board. Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in the spring 2020, nationwide undergraduate enrollment decreased by 9.4 per cent. Additionally, Temple pro jected undergraduate enrollment will decrease by 1,500 students in 2022-23 fiscal year. The univer sity partly attributes the recent 3.9 percent tuition hike to the de crease in enrollment, as Temple’s revenue is expected to decrease by $11.2However,million. funding from the Pennsylvania state government has remained the same since the 2019-2020 fiscal year at $158.2 million.Temple University President Jason Wingard urged the govern ment to make college more afford able with more funding for college to remain a relevant part of young Americans’Althoughlives.the new student loan forgiveness plan is a good first step, increased funding is nec essary to allow everyone to receive higher education.
BY MOLLY FISKE Assistant Opinion Editor
Professors, update grades on Canvas
EDITORIAL
molly.fiske@temple.edu
PAGE 8 The Temple NewsOPINION
“The idea that you come into a Black and Brown neighborhood, and you think that somehow trash is okay or being a bad citizen is okay really is about environmental justice and respect for people,” Rosan Askingsaid.students to participate in at least one Office of Sustainability event, like Stories of Sustainability, ev ery semester as a graduation requirement would educate more students about their off-campus impact.
BY SARAH FRESCA Opinion Editor
Temple will be implementing a program to urge landlords to help with their resident’s trash disposal later in the Fall semester, Kaiser said. For landlords to receive certain designations, they must provide trash receptacles and be responsible for their resident’s waste.
ALLYSON THARP / THE TEMPLE NEWS
Move-out dumpsters won’t help reduce litter
The university should expand its trash trucks off-campus to pick up trash left by students living in the neigh borhood, Robinson said. “It needs to be a comprehen sive sanitation program,” Robinson said. “The whole city is a filthy mess, so the students come here, see how nasty the city is and how we allow them to do things and they just get on along with it until someone tells them.”
“A lot of students just think it’s not really their problem,” said Caroline Merrill, a senior environmental engi neering major. “When we’re moving into a community that wasn’t even de signed for students to be here in the first place, it’s our responsibility to keep it clean for people who still do live here.”
Temple’s temporary solutions for waste management off-campus will allow excess litter to persist until con tinuous conversations and community collaboration are emphasized in the uni versity’s efforts. By developing a strate gic “action plan,” as Robinson suggested, Temple can become a better neighbor. niae noraciorat.
For at least three years, Tem ple University has placed special event move-out dumpsters on streets where students heavily populate areas off cam pus to prevent trash pileups from those moving out of off-campus housing. Although the dumpsters help reduce move-out waste, they’re not a sustainable solution for litter near Main Campus because they’re only available for short periods over the summer. For years, local residents have experienced environmental injustices from students leaving waste in their neighborhood. While campus waste manage ment includes a comprehensive sys tem for maintaining Temple’s grounds, off-campus cleaning is left to the Phila delphia Sanitation Department, which isn’t equipped to manage excessive waste from students.Theuniversity has a responsi bility to keep North Philadelphia clean because many students live in the area temporarily, yet leave a trail of waste and disrespect for long-term residents. Temple must coordinate universi ty-wide sustainable waste management with neighborhood residents to assess and implement clean-up initiatives and continuously require students learn and practice proper waste management. “I’ve been cleaning for 20 years, and it’s like it’s getting worse,” said Ju dith Robinson, a neighborhood resident, chairperson for the 32nd Democratic Ward Registered Community Organiza tion and director of Susquehanna Clean Up/Pick Up, BeyondInc. the move-out dump sters, Temple’s off-campus waste man agement efforts include student and employee volunteer efforts and a part nership with One Day At a Time, a community-based organization. Temple has also collaborated with Philadelphia to send additional trash trucks during move-out week, said Ken Kaiser, Tem ple’s senior vice president and chief op erating officer.Temple’s Office of Sustainabili ty runs many programs to combat litter, like Eco Reps, an educational program encouraging sustainable action on cam pus, but they are not required through out the university.Temple’s off-campus waste management efforts may be effective short term, but the trash will persist on neighborhood blocks until long-term, sustainable practices are adopted. Tem porary solutions are not an option, and the university can only build a trusting relationship with the community if it holds continuous conversations between local residents and students about waste management.“There’s so many ways that universities can really be agents of pos itive change, but it really requires stra tegic thinking, working with schools and community groups,” said Christina Rosan, a geography and urban studies professor. “There’s a lot of efforts to im prove at Temple, but there’s a lot of re building trust that has to happen.” Community members are the most affected by the trash and an in crease in bugs and rodents, so they de serve to have a primary voice in how to improve waste management and Temple must collaborate with them.
@sarahhfrascasarah.frasca@temple.edu
Students moving to North Phil adelphia and littering is an example of environmental racism, because they are adding to pollution in a neighborhood of color.
BEAT A student argues that Temple must develop a sustainable plan to combat waste off-campus.

PAGE 9The Temple News OPINION
Reclaiming my individuality with long-distance
I didn’t want to get into a serious relationship before college, assuming it would be doomed by distance, but love doesn’t wait for convenience. I started dating my boyfriend Nick in June 2020, and after spending nearly every day to gether for over a year, we transitioned to a long-distance relationship at the start of last school year. As sophomores finally able to expe rience college while global lockdown re strictions loosened, he left for Penn State University Park, and I moved a couple of blocks off Temple’s Main Campus. We had to settle with seeing each other less than once a month. Any excitement I had for college was overshadowed by the looming dread of our separation. At that point, I was overly depen dent on Nick. I associated my happiness with the time we spent together and confused my own identity with my role as a girlfriend. I was constantly worried about what he was doing when we spent some time apart, forgetting we should live two different lives. I spent the summer leading up to our college move-in crying in his arms instead of appreciating our time togeth er. I was too scared to live without him beside me, worried I couldn’t do it. After roughly a week of endless tears and nausea, I worked enough emotion out of my system and was finally able to calm down. As loneliness naturally fad ed into normalcy, I focused more on my grades, spent more time with my friends and eased the spam of texts I sent Nick every day. I slowly noticed I was making more time to put myself together and grab a coffee before class. I was keeping my room cleaner and making dinner at night. Ultimately, I was finding motiva tion in the independence of college. Then, a couple of months into the Fall 2021 semester, I was hit with a sud den realization — I was totally fine. I maintained a 4.0 GPA, my social life and college finances. I still spent some days feeling alone, but I was genu inely doing well. My dependency was obvious to me throughout our relationship, but I refused to accept it, as I didn’t want to change anything. After spending time alone, I reflected on our summer and fi nally recognized I was risking our rela tionship’s health by adding stress to both of us.We found new ways to pursue a healthier relationship. We connected with each other every day with at least a few texts and put less pressure on each other to be perfect partners because we were both dealing with the stress of dis tance dating, which isn’t easy for either of us.I began rebuilding my sense of iden tity through doing things I loved and exploring my passions, slowing down to spend time with myself and learning to love the little things unique to me.
ALLYSON THARP / THE TEMPLE NEWS
THE ESSAYIST A student describes how her long-distance relationship helped nurture her individualism.
@sarahhfrascasarah.frasca@temple.edu
On my own, I am a passionate, dra matic and empathetic woman. I center my lifestyle around loving animals, the planet and people. I know how to stand up for myself and hate admitting when I’m wrong. I’m a cat person with a type A personality. I feel the need to do ev erything myself, with a false notion of needing to prove myself. I love breathing in fresh air surrounded by woods, swim ming in the ocean and hugging the peo ple most important to me. Good or bad, I can recognize the pieces of myself that uniquely connect to build my individual personhood.Beingin a relationship doesn’t take away from my individuality. We’re two very different people soulfully bound together. He respects and loves my ec centricities, as I do his. He’s a dog per son, fascinated by ancient relics and is incredibly musically inclined. In fact, our individualism continuously inspires us to strengthen our relationship.
BY SARAH FRASCA Opinion Editor
I feel content with myself, and we still maintain and grow our love. I was able to reclaim my identity and strength en my relationship with the same dis tance I feared would destroy both. I found my worth within myself, and it allowed me to embrace my healthiest, happiest self and relationship.

For The Temple News In 2017, I moved from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Raleigh, North Caroli na. My mom described the move as an “opportunity for a fresh start.” While I initially welcomed this fresh start, moving away separated me from seeing my city grow into a safe place full of opportunities for my family. I read the book “The Hate You Give” by Angie Thomas around this time. The main character’s father, Maverick, empowered me because he wanted to help change his dangerous community, which was something I wanted to do in Philadelphia. His determination to see a better environment became a source of inspiration for me to pursue my dream of helping my city through journalism.
THE ESSAYIST A student describes how a char acter from “The Hate You Give” inspired him to write for his city.
Like Maverick, I grew up in a poor household and became numb to the sound of gunfire. He inspired me to use my own perspective to add to the con versation that would support change.
ALYSON THARP / THE TEMPLE NEWS
In “The Hate You Give,” Maverick understands this reality. When gang members shot at Maverick’s home be cause he was protecting two people they were looking for, his family took cover and he fired back, reminding me of un predictable environments in Philadel phia.Despite Philadelphia’s issues, my love for its culture grew. Philadelphians share a family-like bond that reminds me I shouldn’t give up. But even with this adoration, the longer I lived in Raleigh, the more my dream of changing Philadelphia seemed to become a distant fairy tale because my new home brought different experiences and Philadelphiaopportunities.was beginning to fade from memory, but when I began pre paring for college, I realized I wanted to spend the next four years in my home city and serve my community. Maverick served his community through his store, where he offered jobs to those who needed them. However, his wife and brother were concerned by his decision to stay in the neighborhood be cause they believed remaining in an area filled with gang violence limited his fam ily’s safety and overall quality of life. I see his decision as a strength. I re flect Maverick’s character in my stub bornness, admiration for my roots and persistence in improving my city. He symbolizes hope and inspires me to raise awareness of Philadelphia’s shortcom ings and history.
Since I was a child, I understood a tragic reality: my city is great, but it’s held down by the effects of redlining. This discriminatory practice, which de nies services to low-income neighbor hoods of color, plays a role in the current wealth gap, contributing to impover ishedI’vecommunities.seenpoverty through the end less hours my mom worked as an emer gency dispatcher. I always woke up too late or went to sleep too early to see her, and sometimes went five full days with out speaking to her. The shootings during the day and the sirens at night taught me about Phil adelphia’s violence, reminding me that the worst can happen at anytime. This reality is why my brother carried “pro tection” and why I was constantly para noid of every bystander.
PAGE 10 The Temple NewsOPINION
I want my dream to become a reality through journalism. Using my experi ences, I write about the true Philadel phian experience: the decaying neigh borhoods I pass through during car rides, the sleepless nights I’ve faced due to shootings and police sirens and the paranoia I face in each hour of the day, I want to grab my community’s attention by telling stories they can empathize with and producing solu tions-based journalism that investigates not only the role of redlining but other factors that contribute to the city’s envi ronment.Iwant people to see my stories like how my mom saw moving: an “oppor tunity” for our city to have a “fresh start” with neighborhoods whose fates aren’t decided by redlining, and Philadelphians who are able to live rather than just sur vive.Maverick inspired me to work for my dream — a Philadelphia where “the city of brotherly love” isn’t a form of irony.
Making change in Philadelphia with journalism
BY CHRIS FRAZIER
c.frazier@temple.edu

“Having needs is not being needy, it’s not being selfish — it’s having needs,” HutmanGracesaid.Yanaitis makes time for selfcare through taking breaks, engaging in physical activity and time management.
Stepping away from a stress-induc ing situation is a method of self-care that helps the brain refresh and have more energy, productivity and ability to focus, according to Cornell University.
Temple University students started their Fall 2022 semester on Aug. 22, and for some students, moving away from home and taking on new responsibili ties, like classes, internships and financ es, can entail a plethora of stress. College students’ mental health has consistently declined in recent years. More than 60 percent of college students meet criteria for one or more mental health problems, up nearly 50 percent from 2013, according to a March 2022 study in the Journal of Affective Disor ders.In addition, more than half of stu dents have higher stress levels this year than they did in 2021, according to the National Society of Leadership and Suc cess.Students should set aside time in their schedules for self-care to help nur ture their mental, physical and emotion al well-being to help fight against stress. Self-care efforts help reduce stress and mental unwellness that contribute to students’ poor academic performance, social withdrawal and overall decrease in motivation and energy. Stress affects all systems of the body, but self-care can help to combat symp toms according to the American Psycho logicalMakingAssociation.timefor self-care can be dif ficult for students with busy schedules, but it can be both a fun and productive experience.Self-care is anything that promotes a student’s wellness, and even small efforts of those activities, like taking a 15-min ute walk, journaling or meditating, can mitigate stress and improve mental and physicalWhenwell-being.students ignore their mental, physical and emotional health, they en ter survival mode, which doesn’t allow them to fully thrive in life, said Heidi Hutman, a psychological studies in edu cation“Studentsprofessor.tend to put self-care last,” Hutman said. “When you’re a student, you want to build practices that are go ing to let you have a happy life.”
“I step away, go for a walk around my apartment or go get a glass of wa ter,” said Yanaitis, a sophomore fine arts major. “I just get away from the environ ment for a little bit.”
Stress can feel like a never-ending cycle, but it’s much easier to manage when using healthy coping mechanisms like watching comfort shows, creating a schedule to follow for time management or taking a walk at the end of the day in a self-careSelf-careroutine.is not a selfish act and taking care of oneself is one of the best things to do for all aspects of health. There is science supporting self-care, but it shouldn’t take science to know that self-care is necessary.
Find time for self-care in your schedule this Fall
alexis.bray@temple.edu
LIFE
PAGE 11The Temple News OPINION
STUDENT A student argues that students should prioritize self-care when dealing with stress.
BY ALEXIS BRAY For The Temple News
ALLYSON THARP / THE TEMPLE NEWS
There is a misconception that selfcare is an elaborate process, which can deter students from prioritizing it, but it doesn’t have to be a weekend at a spa or dropping hundreds on shopping, Hut manSomesaid. students may neglect making time for self-care because they are busy with college commitments, but when they do practice it, they can free more time in their schedules in the long run, according to Southern New Hampshire University. Caring for yourself gives their bodies and minds the chance to re set and recharge, boosting their produc tivity when they work, allowing them to get their responsibilities done faster and make more time for themselves.
The best way for Sophie Chen, a sophomore computer science major, to manage her mental health is by being physically active and using time man agement in the library on campus to prevent culminative stress around her schoolwork.“IfIdon’t take care of my mental health, I can’t really get anything else done,” Chen said.

Every time Sherri Hope Cul ver records her podcast, “Kids Talk Media,”she feels enlight ened and reinvigorated by conversations with her sources about how media im pacts their lives. Sources who have gap py teeth and can’t sit still, because they’re no more than 13 years old.
natliekerrnatalie.kerr@temple.edu
Temple University Professor Sherri Hope Culver becomes a Fullbright Global Scholar with research involving children’s media in foreign countries. EARL KUFEN
Culver, a media studies and produc tion professor researching children’s me dia and media literacy became a 2022-23 Fulbright Global Scholar – a distinction only awarded to 16 professors – which will allow her to expand her research overseas. Culver will spend a month each in Australia, Brazil and the United Kingdom speaking to children’s media industry professionals and developing a certificate in children’s media for under graduate students at the Klein College of Media and “HavingCommunication.theopportunity to bring it back into a classroom sort of brings it full circle, instead of me just going and doing something for me,” Culver said. “I really love the idea that I’m going to come back and share this with folks.” Culver submitted her 40-page appli cation for the Fulbright Global Scholar program in September 2021 because she felt that although children’s media is a huge market, communication schools don’t teach enough about how children’s interests influence decisions in the me dia industry and drive revenue, she said. “This really seemed like this is the exact right proposal,” Culver said. “I real ly felt strongly that it would be great for Temple, it would be great for students, it would be great for me, it would be great for Fulbright, it would really just be a wonderful project.” Culver will conduct her research in Fall 2022 and Summer 2023 and hopes to publish journal articles while abroad on topics related to being a leader in children’s media development, including best practices for creating media tailored to children.Teaching children and parents to critically assess the media their children consume is important for identifying content that is age-appropriate and serv ing children’s best interests, said Jessica Castonguay, an advertising and public relationsResearchprofessor.likeCulver’s helps illumi nate how industry professionals are cre ating children’s media, especially as kids begin to use new platforms and technol ogy, Castonguay said. “With [Culver], it’s really nice to be able to work with her, because she has that insight into the industry,” CastonguayWhensaid.Culver originally began working in media, she wasn’t focused on children’s media because she wasn’t aware that any careers in the field were available. But during her time as a gen eral manager for WYBE-TV in Phila delphia, she began to see more oppor tunities to create content for kids and families.Culver attended the University of Pennsylvania and earned her master’s in public culture around children’s me dia in 2006. Soon after, she was offered a teaching job at Temple and became a consultant on developing children’s pro gramming for Universal Kids, a Public Broadcasting Service program. “A lot of these pieces started to co alesce into something where I started to be asked to do more consulting, I had an opportunity to talk about it, and much more in many more of my classes,” Cul ver said. “Slowly but surely, the industry was Adinachanging.”Munin, a senior media stud ies and production major, was impressed but not surprised to hear that Culver had earned the Fulbright, she said. Munin took Culver’s Media & Children class in the Spring 2022 semester and attended a study-away program in Los Angeles with Culver during the summer.
Professor named Global Fulbright Scholar RESEARCH Sherri Hope Culver will conduct research on children’s media as a Global Fulbright Scholar.
BY NATALIE KERR For The Temple News
“She really just always kind of struck me as the kind of person that would nev er stop trying to continue to research and just continue to work in the field and to learn more,” Munin said. “It didn’t sur prise me that she was working very hard for this. She received it and she’s gonna go on to do great things.” Kimberly Williams, chair of the De partment of Anthropology and director of the Center for the Humanities, earned a Fulbright U.S. Scholar Award in 2015 and is now a Fulbright scholar alumni ambassador at Temple. Culver’s Glob al Fulbright Scholar award is especially important as it will allow her to build strong relationships in the countries she visits and to refine her research goals, Williams said. “You have multiple trips and there’s a lot of responsibility for coordinating cohesiveness across what you’re doing for each of the trips and it’s more diffi cult to explain potentially what your re search will be – it’s more complicated,” Williams said. “It’s an opportunity for an even richer research experience” Culver is excited to share her find ings from her research locations and relay the information to her colleagues back in the United States. “I want to share whatever it is that I learned, I’m eager to share with my colleagues at Temple and beyond that,” Culver said.
PAGE 12 The Temple NewsFEATURES
| THE TEMPLE NEWS /

Philip Dames recieved funding from the National Science Foun dation for robotics research
“Toward the end of the project, once we have some new research strate gies, we would like to do some hardware testing with actual robots,” Dames said.
Another component of Dames’ re search uses statistical methods inspired by advanced sports analytics to calculate what characteristics or skills individual robots will add toward their team’s abil ities.Pujie Xin, a third-year mechanical engineering Ph.D. student, is helping Dames with the research on multi-robot systems by helping co-develop comput er simulations and conducting literature review by studying and summarizing ex isting“Forresearch.anew Ph.D. student here, I’m able to get in touch with the frontier topics, which is listed by Dr. Dames, and then I’m able to select one of the most in teresting topics and select one.” Xin said Due to the challenges researchers face with having robots outside of a con trolled lab setting, Dames has not seen multi-robot coordination implemented in real-world situations, he said. “When you’re outside in the real world, like there’s new stuff, there’s weird stuff, there’s weather, there’s dif ferent lighting conditions involved, all sorts of stuff that make it hard, and the robots have to understand what’s going
PAGE 13The Temple News FEATURES
The first part of Dames’ research will occur in the Temple Robotics and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, where they will create computer simulations to study hypothetical scenarios and con ducting literature review, Dames said.
Philip Dames applied for the Na tional Science Foundation’s annual Fac ulty Early Career Development Program for the third time last July – an award that has an individual lifetime restriction of three applications.
After applying for the National Sci ence Foundation’s Faculty Early Career Development Program twice before, Philip Dames used the feedback he re ceived to write his 15-page written re search proposal for his third and final application. He had to wait nine months to learn if his research ideas were deemed fundable by robotics experts, a wait that felt especially long since it would be his last opportunity to apply. In April 2022, Dames, an assis tant mechanical engineering professor, was notified that he won a more than $550,000 monetary prize through the CAREER program to fund his research on robotic coordination. The CAREER award is open to newly-established-d professors who also incorporate re search into their teaching.
Dames’ proposal was voted on by a panel of robotic experts who believed his proposal for the main two criteria of the award, including high intellectual merit and societal “Gettingimpact.oneof these awards often can mean the research community that you are a part of believes that you have good ideas, and they want to fund you for five years to do work,” Dames said.
BY LAURA MILLER Features Editor TEMPLE on and how that might affect them,” DamesOversaid.the course of the research, Dames wants to create mathematical and software tools to see robotic coordi nation happen outside a lab, he said. “Hopefully during the course of working on this project, I’ll find ten more things that are really interesting, different directions I could go in, in the future,” Dames said. “That’s some of the fun and exciting things about research.”
RESEARCH
John Helferty, associate professor of electrical and computer engineer ing, and Dames’ co-advisor of Temple Robotics, believes this award validates Dames’ work, knowledge and expertise and is happy to see him pursuing this area of research, he said. “This area of autonomous coordina tion of multiple robotic platforms is re ally pushing the edge and I’m very hap py to see that he’s right there,” Helferty said. “Temple’s very fortunate to have him for this area.” Dames hopes that he can test his research outside and with actual robots but will have to see how the computer simulation research goes first, he said.
NEWS
FILE / THE
@Miller18Lauralaura.miller0007@temple.edu
Professor’s robotics research funded by the NSF

LIVE Phillyin
NUDISTS RIDING TO MAKE A CHANGE
Civilians gathered at Lemon Hill Philadelphia to ride bikes naked for a cause.
People gathered together in Lemon Hill to ride their bikes naked in order to ex press their beliefs, regarding body posi tivity and environmental sustainability.
The Philly Naked Bike Ride is an event that emphasizes accepting and celebrating all different types of bodies and promoting cycling in an effort to be more environmentally sustainable. While riding their bikes naked, partici pants feel as though they can openly be themselves. The bike riders also hope to make others feel more comfortable within their own bodies by showing them what the natural naked body looks like. “The whole point of the World Naked Bike Ride is to desexualize nudi ty,” said Maria Lily an organizer of the event. “There are many naturists and nudists present so we come together to promote the normalcy of human bodies and what they actually should look like.”
In addition, The Philly Naked Bike Ride promotes environmental sus tainability by encouraging people to ride their bikes as a main source of transpor tation. “We promote cycling infra structure, not using as much fossil fuel for transportation, mass transit, and pedestrian safety, these are all causes that I am very vocal about,” said Wesley Noonan-Sessa an organizer of the event. This event has given people the chance to make connections with like minded individuals, and has become a yearly tradition for some of the attend ees. their resident’s trash disposal later in the Fall semester, Kaiser said. For land lords to receive certain designations, they must provide trash receptacles and be responsible for their resident’s waste. Temple’s temporary solutions for waste management off-campus will allow excess litter to persist until con tinuous conversations and community collaboration are emphasized in the uni versity’s efforts. By developing a strate gic “action plan,” as Robinson suggested, Temple can become a better neighbor. niae noraciorat.
BY ERIKA MONN Photo Editor




Judith Litvin starts work at 5 a.m. and sometimes does not come home un til 7 p.m. after teaching all day. She understands her medical stu dents face similar schedules, so she start ed a cooking YouTube channel to share quick and easy recipes for students with long days like her.
Litvin’s process is done solely by her and her husband; while Litvin prepares the recipes, her husband films, edits and uploads her content.
PERSEPHONE’S KITCHEN / YOUTUBE
since I teach in the med ical school, the stress level is very high, and students have a tendency of allow ing their health to kind of get put on the side burner,” Litvin said. “So this would be one way that they can not only pay attention to what they’re eating, eat nu tritious food, stay healthy — nutritious food can be tasty — but they can also use that time to de-stress.”
Having her videos posted on You Tube means that viewers can watch Lit vin’s videos whenever they please and for the reason most convenient to them.
PAGE 16 The Temple News FEATURES
“I come home late sometimes and in 20 minutes I can cook a meal, so why not share that with the students so that they can do it as opposed to eating out a lot and, you know, just buying prepared foods from the supermarket or whatev er,” Litvin, a biomedical and data science professor, said. Litvin launched her YouTube chan nel, “Persephone’s Kitchen” in March 2022, where she posts videos of her cooking quick and healthy recipes from her home kitchen for a target audience of busy people like her students. She seeks to give them opportunities to still eat a well-balanced meal that can be prepared in a short amount of time, even after a long day of studying or working.
The goal of Litvin’s videos is to teach students the importance of eating healthily through the quick and easy rec ipes she “Especiallybrings.
Cohen began watching Litvin’s cooking videos after she was recom mended by Litvin to try a salmon and rice “Yourecipe.can tell she’s very passionate about what she does,” said Cohen. “She knows the ingredients as a food scientist, as a professional and as a food lover. She knows about nutrients and what it does to yourLitvinbody.”incorporates science, like chemistry, into her cooking, but tries to keep the videos lighthearted, she said.
capabilities of doing,” Kohut, a fourthyear medical student, said. “I appreciated it because especially with how busy clinic can get, it can be hard to make, I guess, like wholesome meals outside of just fro zen foods.”Kohut has cooked two meals from Litvin’s YouTube, including her “Quick & Delicious Smashburgers” and “Quick and Delicious Banana Fritters” recipes, she said.“Ireally think that Dr. Litvin’s chan nel is a beautiful example of the Temple family,” Kohut said. “You can’t get more personal, I think, than helping someone prepare a meal or preparing a meal with someone.”Litvin plans to continue posting videos throughout the school year, and hopes her videos allow students to learn how to regulate their nutritional intake and become more familiar with cooking meals in the kitchen, she said. “My goal is to make them more comfortable to be independent in a kitchen,” Litvin said. “Some people, you know, have never been in the kitch en, especially students who have just left home or those who take out a lot.”
“Sometimes I do impart this kind of information to students if I think they’re interested, but not always,” Litvin said. “In cooking, it’s supposed to be fun.” Ivana Kohut does not consider her self to be culinarily-skilled but enjoys Litvin’s videos because they offer her ac cess to meals she can make quickly.
Professor creates cooking tutorials for students
@mariyumrainamariyum.rizwan@temple.edu
Chloe Cohen, a first- year dental student, was drawn to Litvin because of their shared interest in food science.
“The videos were actually something that was very much, I guess, within my
BY MARIYUM RIZWAN Features Editor
FOOD Judith Litvin creates cooking videos for busy medical students on her YouTube channel.

Check out our podcasts on Spotify! RePrint A biweekly roundup of some of the stories featured in print. The Playbook A rundown of some of the top stories from your favorite teams in Temple Athletics.


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4 10 PAGE 19The Temple News ALL IN GOOD FUN HOMEWORK SYLLABUS FINALS ATTENDANCE PROFESSOR GRADING MIDTERM PROJECT ABSENSE CANVAS




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With conferences realigning, the regional structure of college football is disappearing. Name, Image and Likeness deals are taking the country by storm and the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) could potentially separate from the NCAA in the coming years.
Drayton’s has emphasized Temple’s classic “Temple TUFF” mantra since be ing hired, which factored heavily into which players were awarded single-digit jerseys.“Turn on the film and Temple TUFF shows up in your actions,” Drayton said in his introductory presser in December. “We’ll try to impose our will through the run game and an attacking style of de fense. Temple TUFF shows up in your execution of getting degrees.” Since the 2009 season, Temple has awarded single-digit jerseys awarded by both players and coaches in a fashion similar to how team captains are selected around the country. However, in Dray ton’s first season as head coach, he left the decision solely to his coaching staff as they believed the team had forgotten what the honor meant.
After 28 years, Stan Drayton is set to make his head coaching debut Fri day Sept. 2 at Duke in Durham.
Temple’s future is certain to include McMurray, a freshman single-digit player that is now expected to be one of Temple’s top performers and leaders for the Owls for years to come.
Temple will need Drayton’s expe riences from coaching at Power 5 pro grams and in the NFL to help Temple compete in the future. They can make long-term progress by recruiting under rated high school players and transfers to Temple based on the idea that they can help players “[Temple]improve.hastobe the fit for them,” Drayton said. “There’s a certain type of makeup of a person that’s going to sur vive this culture.” So far, Drayton and his staff have awarded the 2022 single-digit jerseys to six players: graduate offensive linemen Adam Klein and Isaac Moore, redshirt senior wide receiver and Georgia Tech transfer Adonicas Sanders, redshirt sophomore linebacker Jordan Magee, sophomore defensive end Darian Var ner and redshirt freshman cornerback JalenKleinMcMurray.andMoore, four-time letter winners, have been mainstays on Tem ple’s offensive line and are the only re maining players from the staff of former head coach Geoff Collins. As the prod ucts of three different coaching staffs, the two offer a unique perspective on the Drayton era thus far. “It’s been a rollercoaster,” Moore said. “When we got here in 2018, there was already a solid background and backbone of toughness, then we saw a drop-off.”Moore attributed the decline to the 2018 departure of Ed Foley, former spe cial teams coordinator, tight ends coach, and associate head coach who spent 11 years at Temple. Now, with Drayton at the helm, Moore is excited for the fu ture of Temple’s program.
Drayton has said he can’t accom plish everything he wants to in 2022, but he believes the season must set a foundation for the future of his pro gram. One that will be without the Kleins and Moores of the locker room and led by the McMurrays. With camaraderie growing be tween players and coaches alike, a united Temple football program is on the horizon, beginning a culture that Drayton expects to lead to wins.
“They give a safe spot where I feel comfortable opening up,” McMurray said. “They trusted me to do my job as well as I trusted them to do their jobs.”
“When we talk in terms of single digits, we’re talking about the best of the best,” Drayton said. “We’re talking about guys who are doing the right things on and off the football field.”
When Temple travels to play Duke University on Sept. 2 for its 2022 sea son opener, it’ll be the start of the Stan Drayton era. Last December, Drayton left his post as running backs coach and asso ciate head coach at the University of Texas to serve as Temple’s head football coach. Athletic director Arthur Johnson felt the need to replace former coach Rod Carey, who led the Owls to a 12-20 record in three seasons at Temple.
PAGE 22 The Temple NewsSPORTS
BY JAVON EDMONDS Assistant Sports Editor
Temple University Football coach Stan Drayton discusses the upcoming season with the press at a press conference on August 22nd at Edberg OlsonHall.
McMurray was named the top cor nerback on the depth chart on Monday, proving he has been single-digit wor thy during training camp. McMurray earned this distinction through vocal leadership in the locker room, a quality which senior cornerbacks and corner backs coach Jules Monitar helped him develop, McMurray said.
Stan Drayton is ready to help the Owls improve
javonedmonds45javon.edmonds@temple.edu
If Temple plans to recover and compete for conference championships again, the program will need Drayton’s experience from coaching at Power 5 and NFL programs to help the program improve.

Owls’ new transfers bring much needed depth Temple football is hoping to re ceive strong contributions from new transfers on both sides of the ball.
BY SAM O’NEAL Assistant Sports Editor
PAGE 23The Temple News SPORTS
Sanders, a redshirt-senior wide re ceiver, spent three seasons at Georgia Tech before joining the Owls on April 22. After his first fall camp with the team, Sanders was awarded a single digit number, given to players that demon strate great ability as a player and leader. During the 2020 season, Sanders racked up 223 receiving yards on 17 re ceptions in 11 games. In 2021, he reg istered a career-best 362 yards on 29 receptions in 12 games for the Yellow Jackets.After Sanders, the wide receiver depth chart remains undecided for the Owls. Sanders will serve as Temple’s clear cut top receiver, giving the Owls a much-needed reliable target out wide.
During his tenure with the Fighting Illini, Norwood appeared in 19 games and rushed for 244 rushing yards, aver aging five yards per carry. In 2021, Nor wood had his best season, accumulating 120 yards on 27 attempts, playing in nine games.Norwood will compete with red shirt-sophomore Edward Saydee and fellow transfer Darvon Hubbard for time at running back to start the season. It’s possible that Temple maintains a run ning back by committee in the backfield, but Langsdorf has said if one player sepa rates himself from the rest, the team will not be afraid to use a feature back. “We love the type of player [Nor wood] is,” Drayton said. “He brings a lot of versatility by catching the ball out of the backfield, he’s tough on contact and he has that fifth gear.”
Last season, the Owls’ bench lacked depth in multiple positions on both of fense and defense. This year, they ad dressed the problem through their new transfers, said head coach Stan Drayton. Temple University football added multiple transfers this offseason, includ ing players from larger conferences like the Pac-12, Atlantic Coast Conference, Big Ten and Southeastern Conference. Here are four players to keep an eye on that could make an immediate impact for Temple this season.
Hill joins a cornerback room that includes redshirt-senior Keyshawn Paul and graduate student Cameron Ruiz, who were both regular starters for the Owls last season. Hill could see time as a slot corner, but cornerbacks coach Jules Montinar believes the Owls have multi ple players who could rotate in and out.
“We are very pleased with what we have seen from [Hill],” Montinar said. “He’s come in and really meshed well with our guys, brings a great attitude with him every day, he runs well so we are really excited to see what he can do this season.”
Temple University Football has an impressive class of transfer students, coaches plan to improve skills. TEMPLE NEWS / EARL KUFEN
“Anything they are looking for, I can do it,” Sanders said. “Whether it is speed, route running, blocking or anything, I am a receiver that can get anything done so whatever [Drayton] has in store for me, I’ll be ready for it.”
DARVON HUBBARD Hubbard, a redshirt-sophomore running back, joined the Owls on Jan. 26 after spending the previous two seasons at Texas A&M University. Hubbard is a physical back who specializes in picking up yards after contact. In his senior year of high school, Hubbard rushed for more than 1,000 yards from scrimmage on 118 touches with 11 touchdowns. Hubbard enrolled at Texas A&M as a recruit, but only had three carries during his two seasons. Both Hubbard and Norwood will have the chance to take control of the running back room, but together they will allow the Owls to expand their play book, Langsdorf said. “The guys that we added are all a lit tle different,” Langsdorf added. “When it comes to their shape and size, they are different types of players, but it is a good thing for us to have some variety back there.”
THE
JAKARI NORWOOD Norwood, a redshirt-junior running back, spent the last four seasons at the University of Illinois before transferring to Temple on May 1. Despite joining the Owls after spring camp, Norwood has impressed offensive coordinator Dan ny Langsdorf and will be in the mix for touches right away.
samueloneal43samuel.oneal@temple.edusamueloneal43
DOMINICK HILL Hill, a sophomore cornerback, spent his freshman season at the University of South Carolina before transferring to Temple on Jan. 28. At six feet and 200 pounds, Hill is one of the bigger corners on the Owls’ roster, recording two solo tackles and four assisted tackles in 2021.
ADONICAS SANDERS

PAGE 24 The Temple NewsSPORTS STAFF PICKS KEY WIN: Nick Gangewere Head Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor Samuel O’Neal Javon Edmonds Sports Editor Chris Duong Sports Social Media Manager VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS VS KEY WIN: VS KEY LOSS: VS VS VS VS VS KEY LOSS: KEY WIN: KEY LOSS: VS VS VS KEY WIN: VS KEY LOSS: VS














































































































TEMPLE OFFENSIVE UPGRADES
Temple hired head football coach Stan Drayton on Dec. 15, 2021, with the intent of implementing a new culture, centered around imposing his team’s will on both sides of the ball.
What you need to know for Temple vs. Duke Temple University football opens their season at Duke on Sept. 2 in a battle of new coach ing staffs.
“Defensively we know they are an aggressive style of play,” Drayton said. “They play hard, they swarm to the foot ball, and we got to be on point.” Both staffs have entirely new top coordinators with Duke offensive co ordinator Kevin Johns coming from the University of Memphis, and Temple’s Langsdorf hailing from the University of Colorado.Drayton, meanwhile, specializes on the offensive side of the ball, most spe cifically the running back position. With Preston Brown, Temple’s for mer director of player personnel, mov ing to running backs coach, the ground game should see a rejuvenated approach, relying on many different looks to attack opponents. WHAT TO EXPECT FROM DUKE Duke football finished last in FBS football in total defense, placing 130th out of 130 teams without a single win in the ACC last season. Yet this year, with four starters re turning on the offensive line, and red shirt-junior defensive tackle DeWayne Carter Jr. returning on the defensive line, a stronger presence up front could prove to be vital for the Blue Devils.
Sophomore quarterback Riley Leonard will be under center having passed for 381 yards and rushed for an other 173 last season. He loses main tar get redshirt-senior Jake Bobo to UCLA, but senior Jalon Calhoun returns having caught 56 balls for 718 yards last season. “He’s cool under pressure, he deliv ers an accurate football,” Drayton said about Leonard. “They got a read offense at times, he’s not afraid to run the foot ball.”On defense, the secondary pro duction should increase with graduate student Iowa State transfer Datrone Young plugging the hole as a starting cornerback. The linebackers in the 4-2-5 should be decent as well with returners in Shaka Heyward and Dorian Mausi. nicholas.gangewere@temple.edu@nick_gang16
FIRST-TIME HEAD COACHES Drayton and Duke football head coach Mike Elko are serving as head coaches for the first time in their careers. Elko became Duke’s 22nd head coach five days prior to Drayton’s hire in De cember.“There’s not a lot of information out there about either side,” said Elko at a press conference. “Everybody is trying to get as much information as they can behind the scenes to try to be as ready as possible.”Elko is known for coaching topranked defenses around the country, whether it be at Notre Dame, Wake For est or Bowling Green. He is taking over a Duke team that only won three games last season, the same amount as Temple.
Seven months into his leadership of the program, Drayton has begun to create a new identity to Temple foot ball through practice rituals and the staff hires he has made.
PAGE 25The Temple News SPORTS
Let’s get into everything readers should know entering Temple’s season opener against Duke on Sept. 2.
Last season, Temple finished last in the American Athletic Conference in both points scored and rushing yards. Through key hires like offensive coor dinator Danny Langsdorf, though, Tem ple’s offense could see players utilized in unique“We’reways.trying to fit some things to our personnel that we have discovered might be a playmaker,” Langsdorf said. “We have a plan as to what we want to accomplish.”Threenotable offensive transfers for the Owls were redshirt-senior wide receiver Adonicas Sanders from Geor gia Tech, running backs redshirt-soph omore Darvon Hubbard from Texas A&M and redshirt-junior Jakari Nor wood from TransferIllinois.players alone won’t be the difference, but the gadget plays and schemes in which they are utilized. A standard approach from Temple may not work with their current roster, so a unique offense could lead to more scor ing opportunities Redshirt-sophomoreoverall. quarterback D’Wan Mathis’ running ability could also be an asset but in ways different from the 2021 season. Mathis scrambled for positive yards last year only when the pocket collapsed, but with designed runs and an impactful RPO game, he can be an even greater piece to the offensive puzzle.
BY NICK GANGEWERE Sports Editor ALLYSON THARP/ THE TEMPLE NEWS

BY RHYMIR VAUGHN
For The Temple News
BY SEAN MCMENAMIN For The Temple News D’Wan Mathis and Quincy Patterson practiving together. THE TEMPLE NEWS/ FILE
Patterson has the potential to have a positive impact on Temple. His phys ical skills, relationships, work ethic and leadership are the qualities that coaches search for in starting quarterbacks, es pecially first-year coaches like Drayton that are looking to get off to a good start.
PAGE 26 The Temple News
Patterson also has some familiarity with the coaching staff as he spent two seasons with Temple’s pass game coor dinator and wide receivers coach Jafar Williams at Virginia Tech University prior to his stint at North Dakota State University. While with the Hokies, Pat terson amassed 692 total yards and sev en touchdowns.Pattersonhas been praised for his work ethic and leadership in the past with Miller tweeting that Patterson’s work ethic “rubs off on everyone,” and Drayton calling him a “natural leader.”
Mathis, Temple’s starter in 2021, is a lock to fend off Patterson and remain the starting quarterback by season’s end. Mathis started all seven games that he played in 2021 and, as evidenced by Drayton’s announcement on Thursday, Patterson hasn’t done enough to remove Mathis from that post. It’s like the old combat sports adage to be the champ, you have to beat the champ. With Drayton now in charge of the offense, Mathis will have more freedom to use his legs and not have to adapt to broken plays as often as last season. Mathis was sacked 16 times in seven games due to constant pressure being sent against the run, preventing play ac tion.Mathis was recruited to play for the University of Georgia, an SEC power house, but during his one year at the program he only played in three games due to the talented quarterback room that featured players like Jake Fromm and Stetson Bennett. The current redshirt-sophomore threw for 1,223 yards and six touch downs while posting a 118.2 passer rat ing inWith2021.a renewed emphasis on the running game and the return of offen sive line coach Chris Wiesehan, Mathis will be under less pressure to win games with his arm. Temple will be able to run the ball more and set up play action pass es and RPOs for Mathis, allowing the quarterback to use both his arm strength and legs against sleeping defenses. Since he redshirted his true fresh man season and in 2020, the NCAA granted athletes an extra year of eligi bility due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Mathis has four seasons of eligibility left. He will be in the building for a while, so there’s no reason for Drayton to hand the keys to anyone until they definitive ly dethrone Mathis.
First-year head coach Stan Drayton has named redshirt-sophomore D’Wan Mathis as Temple’s starting quarterback, but will Mathis keep the job?
Who will start at QB by the end of the season?
First-year Temple football head coach Stan Drayton named red shirt-sophomore D’Wan Mathis as the starting quarterback to begin the 2022 season on Aug. 25. However, by season’s end, redshirt-junior transfer Quincy Patterson will be the starting quarter back for the Temple Owls. Before spraining the AC joint in his right shoulder, Patterson was 7-0 as North Dakota State University starter during the 2021 season. Then-sopho more Cam Miller stepped in for Patter son and led the Bison to an FCS Nation al Championship victory, prompting Patterson’sPattersontransfer.isphysically gifted, listed as 6 feet 3 inches tall and 235 pounds. Last season’s starting Temple quarter back D’Wan Mathis is listed at 6’6’’ and 210 pounds. At NDSU Patterson’s team mates called him “Baby DK Metcalf,” after the Seahawks’ 6’4” 235-pound Pro Bowl wide receiver. Both quarterbacks possess above-average arm strength, but Patterson’s weight allows him to pro vide more power than finesse in the run game.Given his size, Patterson can be an asset as a dual-threat quarterback in new offensive coordinator Danny Langs dorf’s system. Throughout his career, Patterson has displayed the ability to use his legs, rushing for 660 yards and seven touchdowns in just seven games at NDSU. Patterson’s arm strength and running abilities should provide Temple multiple options offensively with quar terback runs, quick passing concepts, lots of play action and run-pass options.

Oliver’s double scull finished 12th overall out of over 20 teams at the event, a feat he was proud of, but not entirely satisfied with, Oliver said.Oliver took little time to rest during this offseason, transitioning straight from the Temple rowing sea son to training with the Great Britain national team. During the season Oliver had to put in extra work to receive a position on his country’s 83-person squad. In order for him to participate in the tryouts, Oliver did three dif ferent timed tests in America that were all sent to the Great Britain national team coach Anna Lid dell. After the Intercollegiate Rowing Association Championships, where Oliver’s boat placed second, he flew directly back to Great“WeBritain.went through a process of selection to see who is faster, and I came out just making it in sculling,” said Oliver. “It was a dream come true.” Oliver was not named a captain for the 2022-2023 season af ter a team vote, but still has the most important role on the boat, PerkinsWithsaid.the skill to row at the fourth and sixth positions and the power to pull from the eighth position, Oliver is an asset from anywhere in the boat. And when he speaks up, his teammates lis ten, Perkins said. “We all dial into what he is saying,” said sophomore rower Rares Nechita. “He knows how winning boats should feel. He just leads by Americanexample.”rowingis focused on a team-based approach in which eight men all work togeth er to move the boat as quickly as possible, making the adjustment difficult for Oliver. Oliver had to adapt to the trust component, learning how to synchronize his stroke with teammates, work ing together as a unit and not as individuals. Yet as time went on, the trust in his teammates evolved into true bonds. “I knew literally no one when I came in, but everyone was so welcoming,” Oliver said. “The team became my new family,”
As for the future, Oliver is an Anthropology major that re mains without a true sense of what he wants to do. Yet one thing is for sure, with the 2024 Paris Olympics looming, Oliver has what it takes to make a fu ture out of the sport. The row er could turn his passion into a career, a thought that perplexes Oliver to this day.
@nick_gang16nicholas.gangewere@temple.edusaid.
PAGE 27The Temple News Temple University senior rower Adam Oliver has his eyes set on
Temple’s Oliver found his path through the water
Temple university crew rower Adam Oliver represented Great Britain at the Crew World Championships. | COURTESY / TEMPLE ATHELTICS
When he’s back rowing in Great Britain, Oliver is focused solely on his own stroke, allow ing him to become the best allaround rower on Temple’s team, Perkins said.
“I have to see where life takes me, see where I’m at that time,” Oliver
from LVS Ascot in England, Oliver found a true love of the sport early on in primary school. And when his coaches saw how much talent he possessed, he eventually moved on to become a member of the Tideway Scullers, a group he is still a part of Olivertoday.recently rowed at the U23 Crew World Championships, representing his home country of Great Britain. The World Championships took place in Varese, Italy this year, and Oliver rowed as a debutant dou ble scull alongside Joseph Adamson.
When Temple rowing head coach Brian Perkins headed to Great Britain for the Henley Royal Regatta in 2018, he was expecting to meet a quiet high school junior who had little knowledge as to what he wanted to do in life. Oliver was presumably a young rower who simply loved the sport but had little sense of direction, according to the coaches Perkins had reached out to. Perkins had spoken with Temple senior rower Adam Oliver and his parents in the weeks prior, but it was not until he reached Europe that the coach could really see the potential in Oliver. “We made a really good connec tion with Adam and his father,” Per kinsHailingsaid.
BY NICK GANGEWERE Sports Editor

Nick Gangewere Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor Samuel O’Neal Javon Edmonds Assistant Sports Editor Chris Duong Sports Social Media Manager Nate Pullano Multimedia Editor @javonedmonds45 @nick_gang16 @samueloneal43 @Duongest Follow The TTN Sports team on Twitter





