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Arriving at an opportune moment, many people were camped out in front of the Amscot Financial Stage at Kiley Gardens to catch Sarasota’s Have Gun Will Travel. The band has received acclaim from local and national media; theirl hit “Blessing and a Curse” was recently placed in a Chevrolet commercial.
After traveling across the country, Matthew Burke and the other members of acclaimed local folk band Have Gun Will Travel came back to Tampa for their CD release party for Mergers and Acquisitions. They played at Skipper’s Smokehouse, a hidden gem of the independent Tampa scene.
Recorded and mixed by their guitarist, Scott “Fats” Anderson, the album has received rave reviews from local publications, and is their first release on Suburban Home Records.
I had the chance to talk with Matthew Burke before the release party at Skipper’s Smokehouse. He seemed calm, having just finished sound check and grabbing a drink before the show. Very down to earth, he was wearing an old T shirt with flannel and a beat up baseball cap.
Emily Turner, a sophomore accounting and economics dual major, is not a stranger to cancer. Her grandfather just passed away from cancer in November 2012, her grandmother died of cancer in 2010 and her aunt is a breast cancer survivor. This is why Turner is so passionate about her Relay for Life team, the Bulls Business Community. As the advertising chair on the Business Living Learning Community’s community service committee, Turner and her team have raised $2,014.35 so far, putting the team in fourth place among all 87 USF Relay for Life teams. The team’s total fundraising goal is…
A new program in the College of Education, brought to USF by doctorate student Amanda Loyden and professor Gladis Kersaint, will focus on training students to become effective middle school-age teachers in science and mathematics, concentrating on students in grades 5 to 9. In an informational session held in the College of Education Building TECO conference room, Loyden led students through the stages of the program, which revolve around the “STEM” (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) model of education.
Student activists across campus began protesting April 8 and will until April 12 in an “Empty Holster” demonstration, lobbying for the right of those with concealed weapons permits to carry their weapons on campus, or “concealed-carry.” Students involved in an “empty holster” protest typically wear an empty gun holster on their person to symbolize a weapon they would otherwise not have to defend themselves. They are also invited to hand out fliers and literature to interested students and speak with them about the issue. Student protester Eric Blake stood next to the movement’s display table at the April 10 Bull Market, along…
Students waited in line for as long as five hours inside and outside the Marshall Student Center on April 9. Most sat on the ground, some brought food and others stood for hours. They were waiting for “A Night with John Legend,” a University Lecture Series event part of USF Week. When the doors finally opened and Legend took the stage, he focused 30 minutes of his presentation on education inequality and how to fix it. “Many of you overcame significant obstacles to get here today,” he said. “I think you know why you’re here: because you know it’s going…