Impending snowstorm halts campus activities

TUr Door and Owl Loop bus services will be canceled Saturday, and two basketball games were rescheduled as an impending snowstorm approaches Philadelphia this weekend.

“Conditions permitting, TUr Door and the Owl Loop will resume service as soon as possible Sunday,” the university wrote in an alert sent to the Temple community.

The men’s basketball game against Southern Methodist University was rescheduled to Sunday, Jan. 24, at 12 p.m. The women’s game against the University of Houston, which was scheduled for Saturday at 2 p.m., will now be played Friday, Feb. 12. The time has not yet been determined.

Early Friday forecasts predicted 12 to 18 inches of snow that could arrive in full force as early as 4 p.m. in the city. Some forecasters had upped predictions to 20 inches by 3:30 p.m. Friday.

The impending snow also canceled Free Food Fun Friday in the Student Center.

More information is available at: http://www.temple.edu/about/alert

–Joe Brandt

Police investigating stabbing northwest of Main Campus

A man is in stable condition at Temple University Hospital after he was stabbed near the corner of 18th Street and Susquehanna Avenue, police said.

Executive Director of Campus Safety Services Charlie Leone told The Temple News that a male, about 55 years old, stabbed another male in the lower abdomen near that corner Thursday evening.

Temple Police is pursuing the suspect and believe the incident was directed at the victim and not a random robbery, Leone said in an email. A TU Alert sent out around 8:15 p.m. called the incident an attempted robbery.

“This may be more of an argument gone in a different direction,” Leone added.

The alert also detailed a “possible known offender,” but the incident is separate from the string of robberies near Main Campus in recent weeks, on which Philadelphia Police recently released a video. The suspects in those incidents are teens or in their early 20s.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Shooting near North Park Avenue party injures two

Shooting during a house party on the 2300 block of North Park Avenue sent two men, ages 18 and 23, to Temple University Hospital around 1:30 a.m Friday, police and residents said.

The 23-year-old is in critical condition and was shot multiple times. The 18-year-old was shot once and is in stable condition.

A resident who lives on the block said he heard shots and looked out his window to see a man chasing a few others down the street with a gun and shooting. The official police report states that the shooting occurred in the 2200 block of Watts Street, closer to Broad Street.

Another resident said his roommate saw and heard the first shots fired on the porch of the house hosting the party.

The weapon has been recovered from the scene, but no arrests have been made, police said. No TU Alert was sent out, but some Temple Police were at the scene with Philadelphia police, residents said.

The Temple News will follow up on this story throughout the day as more information becomes available. Follow us @TheTempleNews on Twitter for updates.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

 

Gov. Wolf proposes restoration of state funding to higher education

In his budget address Tuesday, Gov. Tom Wolf said he would restore 50 percent of the state funding cut from higher education institutions in the past few years, with the expectation of a tuition freeze at the affected schools.

“In return for these increases, today I am calling on our institutions of higher education to freeze tuition, and I expect them to answer that call,” Wolf said.

For Temple, this amounts to an increase of more than $15 million after being flat-funded at just under $140 million since 2011.

The proposal must be approved by the state’s General Assembly – meaning the House of Representatives and the Senate, which are both currently controlled by Republicans.

Following the announcement, President Theobald said that he appreciated Gov. Wolf’s commitment to funding higher education throughout Pennsylvania.

“We are grateful for the governor’s investment in public higher education in Pennsylvania,” Theobald said in a university press release. “The restored funds in the governor’s proposal—if approved by the General Assembly—will go directly to helping us hold down tuition and recruit the best faculty.”

For Temple, the next step in the state funding process will be public hearings before the House and Senate appropriation committees, which are scheduled for March 24.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Suspect arrested for murder of student

A Camden man sought in connection with the Jan. 24 murder of a Temple student turned himself in to police Friday, according to a press release.

Leonaldo Rivera, 25, of the 200 block of Erie Street in Camden, New Jersey, is charged with murder, attempted murder and unlawful possession of a firearm in the shooting of Alejandro Rojas-Garcia in the Feltonville neighborhood of Philadelphia.

Rojas-Garcia, 34, was driving down the 4200 block of Macalester Street in his Chevrolet Trailblazer when a suspect fired at his car, killing him and wounding a passenger, police said.

Two weeks after the shooting, Rojas-Garcia’s family held a vigil on that block, where they discussed peaceful methods of resolving conflict and the life of the advertising major and father of two who was also called “Alex” and “Luchi.”

Alex’s mother, Aleida Garcia, said she had been calm at the funeral but the vigil changed her mood.

“I am committed to finding justice for my son, for that person who pulled a gun on my son,” Garcia said. “I give you my word here today, standing in front of the place that my son died, that I am committed to justice. And I want you all to be with me.”

Rivera was arraigned Friday when he turned himself in, and has a preliminary hearing scheduled for March 18.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Suspect named in January shooting of student

Leonaldo Rivera | Courtesy Philadelphia Police

Leonaldo Rivera | Courtesy Philadelphia Police

Philadelphia police announced Friday that they have identified a suspect wanted for the murder of 34-year-old Temple advertising major Alejandro Rojas-Garcia, who was shot in his car Jan. 24 on the 4200 block of Macalester Street in the Feltonville neighborhood.

Leonaldo Rivera, 25, has an address listed on the 200 block of Erie Street in Camden, New Jersey, police said in a press release. He has also been known to frequent the 300 block of East Williams Street in Camden.

Rojas-Garcia’s family mourned him in a Feb. 6 vigil at the site of his shooting, where they expressed anti-gun and anti-violence sentiments and were joined by Nelson Diaz, a Temple trustee and mayoral candidate.

Rojas-Garcia’s father, Wilfredo Rojas, an NAACP official in Gloucester County, New Jersey, said that day that he usually organized vigils for victims of violent crime.

“I never thought that I would be at a vigil for my own son,” he said. He promised further action.

“In the Rojas family, we don’t get angry, we get even,” Rojas said. “We get even by educating their kids, the criminals’ kids, and we get even by praying for them. And we get even by assuring that there will be justice.”

Rivera should be considered armed and dangerous, according to the release. Anyone with information on Rivera is advised to contact the Homicide Fugitive Squad at 215-686-3038, 215-686-3334 or call 911.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

 

News in brief: 2.10 issue

ENDOWED CHAIR NAMED FOR DIAZ

A $450,000 donation was made to Temple’s Beasley School of Law, the university announced in a press release on Thursday.

Exelon, a local energy company, gave the gift under the name of Nelson Diaz, who graduated from Temple in 1972 and is on the corporation’s board of directors.

Diaz, who also is a member of Temple’s Board of Trustees, said in an interview with The Temple News that he has raised an additional $250,000, bringing the total amount donated to $700,000. The money is being raised to help create an endowed chair in civil rights that would be named after Diaz, the release said.

The chair would also seek to help Latino students at Temple, Diaz said.

“Essentially, it’s trying to bring to bear the contributions of many in the civil rights movement, including a lot of Latinos who have contributed to that and bring professors around the country on a semester basis and also to provide some assistance and scholarships for Latino students,” he told The Temple News.

Temple trustee Daniel H. Polett will help Diaz in raising the remaining money for the chair, which would be named the “Judge Nelson A. Diaz Chair for Civil Rights,” according to the release. $550,000 is still needed in order to establish the chair.

“My life has been dedicated to making a difference,” Diaz said in the release. “I want this gift to continue in that long tradition, and I thank Exelon for being a part of that commitment.”

-Steve Bohnel and Christian Matozzo

GROWTH RATE DECREASE FOR PART-TIME INSTRUCTORS

Due to an increasing amount of full-time non-tenure track professors, the growth rate of the number of part-time instructors in universities and colleges has decreased, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education.

New synthesis of federal data obtained by the Chronicle shows that doctoral institutions are the only universities where growth in the number of part-time instructors has remained constant, along with an increase in full-time professors not on a tenure track.

According to the study, which spanned from 2005-13, “our largest and most prestigious universities are the ones that are most culpable in the employment trends that are upending the tenure system and spreading low-wage labor as a routine means of educating undergraduates.”

Steven J. Shulman, a professor of economics at Colorado State University at Fort Collins and research director at its Center for the Study of Academic Labor, conducted a study in response to the federal data, which stated that “the tenure system … seems likely to continue to weaken faculty and graduate student employment at U.S. colleges and universities.”

Kiernan R. Mathews, a director of the Collaborative on Academic Careers in Higher Education, at Harvard University, said a change in how the government counts full-time and part-time instructors – which occurred in 2011 – might have skewed the new federal data.

But Mathews added that there has been “an interest in consolidating teaching into more full-time, non-tenure-track positions,” because it provides stability to students and faculty and increases the amount of faculty who can contribute to non-instructional duties, like those linked to public service and shared governance at institutions.

-Steve Bohnel

CLA appoints interim dean

A new dean and associate dean were named to lead the College of Liberal Arts, the university announced in a press release today.

William Stull, the former chair of the Economics department who served for 18 years, will serve as interim dean. The former chair of the Political Science department, Richard Deeg, will become senior associate dean for operations.

Teresa Soufas, who had served as CLA dean for seven years, resigned Jan. 7 due to health reasons, according to a memo to faculty sent by Provost Hai-Lung Dai.

Stull had previously served as a senior associate dean in the Fox School of Business.

A national search will be conducted for the new dean during the 2015-16 academic year, and an appointment will be announced by 2016, the release read.
Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Cawley recalled from Board of Trustees

On Jan. 21, only his second day in office, Gov. Tom Wolf recalled more than two dozen of former Gov. Tom Corbett’s eleventh-hour appointments, including Jim Cawley, the former lieutenant governor who served on Temple’s Board of Trustees as an ex-officio member during Corbett’s term.

“Prior to being sworn-in as governor, my predecessor put forth several eleventh hour executive nominations,” Wolf said in a statement provided by his Press Secretary Jeff Sheridan. “These moves were murky and the process was anything but open and transparent.”

“We must work to make sure every Pennsylvanian has good reason to trust the government that serves them, and these are the types of actions that make people legitimately distrust their government,” Wolf added in the statement.

The move has already upset Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman.

“The honeymoon is over,” Corman told the Inquirer. “[Wolf] is not off to a flying start, for someone who said he was going to do things differently.”

Temple offered a short statement on the appointment: “The process for the appointment of Commonwealth trustees to Temple’s board is handled by the Governor and the General Assembly,” a spokesman said in an email.

Cawley, a Bucks County native who received Temple degrees in political science and law, now serves as head of United Way of Greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey. Temple trustee Lon Greenberg serves as chair of the regional United Way’s Board of Directors, and trustee J. William Mills, formerly a regional president of PNC Bank, serves as a regular member of the board.

Cawley could not be reached after multiple requests for comment on the Temple appointment. He told the Inquirer that his “whole career has been about public service and has been about improving the quality of life for the people who were in whatever community that I was part of. I see this role as continuing that.”

Greenberg told the Inquirer that Cawley’s experience in state government could be beneficial for the charity.

“As Lieutenant Governor, he also has a unique understanding of how United Way’s impact areas connect, and how strategic improvements in education, income, and health can lift the entire region,” Greenberg said.

Cawley served on the board twice as a governor’s non-voting representative – once under Mark Schweiker and again under Corbett. He told The Temple News in an interview before the 2014 elections that he would appreciate a future at the university.

“I am happy and honored to to serve Temple University in any way that I can,” Cawley said. “If there’s an opportunity [in the long-term] future … I would jump at the chance at any time.”

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Steve Bohnel contributed reporting.

2.3 issue: News in brief

OLD TUCC BOOKSTORE TO CLOSE

The bookstore located on the third floor of Temple’s Center City Campus on 15th and Market streets will permanently close at 4 p.m. on Feb. 6 in anticipation of the opening of a new bookstore.

William Parshall, executive director of Temple’s Ambler and Center City campuses, wrote in an email that a new café and Barnes and Noble bookstore is expected to open on the ground floor on March 2.

Parshall added that the three-week transition period is needed for moving inventory, products and security and computer systems from the third floor to the ground level.

Students who need to purchase books during the transition period should contact the Main Campus bookstore at 215-204-5578 or by email at sm693@bncollege.com. Books can be ordered and picked up at the Main Campus location or shipped to a home address at a standard shipping speed for free. Orders can also be placed online and picked up at the new TUCC bookstore location once it opens.

Parshall wrote that students looking to buy school supplies should shop at the Staples located on 15th and Chestnut streets, and that snacks and beverages are still available in vending machines located on the second, third, fourth and fifth floors in the Center City building.

The Inquirer reported in December that Accesso Partners LLC, a real estate firm located in Florida, bought the property that includes TUCC for $85 million. The previous owner of the 502,000 sq. ft. building was Winthrop Realty Trust, a real estate investment trust based in New York and Boston.

-Steve Bohnel

NONPROFIT TRAINING OFFERED

Two international Temple campuses have joined efforts to start a nonprofit training program.

Temple’s Harrisburg and Japan campuses started offering the International Nonprofit  Training and Leadership Program on Jan. 30, according to a university press release.

According to the program’s website, six courses are taught by instructors who have experience working in the nonprofit sector in not just the United States, but also worldwide. The classes are offered on a completely online platform via WebEx, a web conferencing site.

Two of the six courses are in collaboration with Temple University Japan, while the remaining are created for audiences from the United States.

Eugenia Medrano, director of continuing education at Temple University Japan, said in the press release that the program should be effective for students looking to break into the nonprofit sector.

“Students will gain exposure to diverse concepts and ideas and will have a tool kit to immediately apply what they have learned at their places of employment,” Medrano said. “The scope of the nonprofit sector continues to grow internationally – more and more nonprofit organizations and businesses are working together locally, nationally and globally to provide the best possible service to their clients.”

The program is scheduled to run through December 2015.

-Steve Bohnel

NEW SCHOLARSHIP FOR ‘FLY IN 4’

A member of the Board of Trustees recently created a scholarship fund in collaboration with the university’s ‘Fly in 4’ Program.

According to a university press release, Alan M. Cohen, executive vice president and global head of compliance at Goldman Sachs, created The Alan and Deborah Cohen Goldman Sachs Scholarship Fund because of a recommendation by Goldman Sachs Gives, a donor-advised fund where current senior employees can suggest grants to qualified non-profit organizations.

The scholarship, named after Cohen and his wife, Deborah Cohen, is worth $350,000. Both contributed funding, and Deborah said in the release that she and her husband wanted to give back because they were fortunate enough to attend college themselves.

“Both of us were in the first generation of our families to attend college, and that was largely because Temple was so affordable,” Cohen said. “We feel like we were given a huge gift to get a high-quality education and pursue our dreams, so this is our way of giving back.”

The first two recipients of the award are freshmen Melanie Tucci and Brianna Seay, who are both from Philadelphia. Tucci and Seay are majoring in international business and psychology, respectively.

Alan Cohen was elected to the Board of Trustees in May 2014, The Temple News reported. His term started May 13 and is scheduled to end Oct. 10, 2017.

-Steve Bohnel

RECORD YEAR IN ATHLETIC GIFTS

Last year, donations to major college athletic programs totaled $1.26 billion dollars, the third time in the last four years that institutions have eclipsed the billion-dollar mark, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported.

The figure was calculated through a “Voluntary Support of Education” survey from the Council for Aid to Education, which is the first organization to offer statistics on private individuals donating to higher education, according to its website.

Almost 400 colleges provided information about athletic donations for the survey, and last year was the highest mark the donation total has reached in the survey during the past decade.

 Leading the way in athletic donations was Texas A&M University, whose $93.6 million total almost doubled any other college that was included in the survey. The University of Michigan was in second, tallying $54.6 million.

Greg Byrne, vice president for athletics at the University of Arizona, said that donations will be needed more in the future due to decreasing funding from state budgets.

“A lot of the facilities we compete in were built with state dollars, and that will rarely happen anymore,” Byrne told the Chronicle. “Many of us have had to look ourselves in the mirror as our infrastructure has needed replacing, and realize that philanthropic gifts are going to be the only way to solve that issue.”

The record year represents a huge increase in athletic donations – according to figures the Council for Aid to Education provided to the Chronicle, athletic departments brought in approximately twice as much money from them last year than in 2004.

-Steve Bohnel