Featured Article
On his first day of school, new Temple president John Fry meets with public safety staff and gets an update on enrollment
By Susan Snyder
Midday Friday John A. Fry’s wife texted him: “How goes it, Owl?” “So far, so good!” Fry responded. It was the first day of school for Fry, who...
Lack of clear NCAA rules creates confusion around NIL
By Josh Moody
Thilo Kunkel, a professor and director of the Sport Industry Research Center at Temple University, said that one way schools can run afoul of the...
Crunch time for workplace vaccine mandates: U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in
By Bob Fernandez
The Supreme Court justices also will hear arguments on Jan. 7 on whether the federal government can impose mandates on health-care workers who are...
Village View: Remembering Archbishop Tutu’s visit to Temple University
By Bonnie Squires
You just knew you were in the presence of greatness, the second you were introduced to Bishop Tutu. It was not just the fact that he had been...
What opponents of free preschool don't understand about American education | Opinion
By Peshe Kuriloff
“With some encouragement, however, Americans will open their minds and hearts to preschool as we did to high school and kindergarten. Once early...
Keeping track of your pulmonary arterial hypertension
By Evan Starkman
If you have pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), it’s possible to lead an active, productive life. The key is to work closely with a specialist...
'Everyone is welcome': New Year's parade with checkered past of offensive costumes returns with an inclusive message
By Sahar Akbarzai
In recent years, some Mummers wore blackface even though it was banned in 1963 after the local branch of the NAACP and the Congress of Racial...
Shark Tank updates: Simply Good Jars moves into new HQ; Dino Don to launch dinosaur tour
By Ryan Mulligan
Simply Good Jars appeared on "Shark Tank" in March during the show's 12th season. Founded by Jared Cannon in 2017, a year after he graduated from...
Japan’s Uniqlo CEO Tadashi Yanai says won’t get sucked into US-China rivalry
By Julian Ryall
Hiromi Murakami, a professor of political science at the Tokyo campus of Temple University, agreed that Japanese people are becoming "more aware"...
How do you get dental care when you can’t afford it?
By Bobbi Dempsey
“Eligibility doesn’t necessarily mean access,” Amid Ismail, the dean of the Temple’s Kornberg School of Dentistry, said.
Racial reckoning turns focus to roadside historical markers
By Mark Scolforo
Historical markers educate the public and therefore can help fight systemic racism, said Diane Turner, curator of the Charles L. Blockson Afro-...
Joe Biden can’t save Roe v. Wade alone. But he can do this. | Opinion
By Rachel Rebouché, Greer Donley and David S. Cohen
“For nearly 50 years, anti-abortion politicians and activists have been taking audacious, legally murky and even blatantly unconstitutional...
Lost in the critical race theory debate: the enduring value of a free press | Opinion
By Linn Washington Jr.
“Overlooked in the onslaught against critical race theory is the danger this campaign holds for a constitutional right fundamental to democracy’s...
How China snuffed out threats across Asia in 2021
By Ralph Jennings
Pandemic diplomacy helped "burnish" China's image in much of the world, said Jeffrey Kingston, a history instructor at the Japan campus of Temple...
Temple University Hospital ranked among top teaching hospitals in the nation
By Jensen Toussaint
Temple University Hospital is being honored with a 2021 Leapfrog Top Hospital Award for Outstanding Quality and Safety. Each year, Leapfrog...
Looking back at higher ed's journey in 2021
By Autumn Arnett
After a lengthy court battle, athletes were awarded the right to profit off of their names, images and likenesses — many say that this decision...
"Society can fall apart:" the very real consequences of fake news
The spread of "fake news" in America has been aided and abetted by social media, and the consequences are dire. Min-Seok Pang, associate professor...
Pfizer antiviral pills may be risky with other medications
By Benjamin Ryan
Because the Paxlovid treatment is brief—30 pills, taken as three pills twice a day for five days—experts are hopeful that the risk of adverse...
Anger over mask mandates, other covid rules, spurs states to curb power of public health officials
By Amy Goldstein
The number of states that have passed laws similar to Ohio’s is proliferating fast, from eight identified in one study in May to more than double...
‘Time to shine’: Prince Moody and Temple athletes strive to bring diversity and equity to the forefront on North Broad
By Sam Cohn
Prince Moody sat in the back row of a Student-Athlete Advisory Committee meeting in Pearson McGonigle Hall, his second gathering as Temple’s new...
Israel to offer fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose in bid to outpace Omicron
Early lab work has shown that vaccines' ability to neutralize the virus wanes with time after the third dose, a professor of biology at Temple...
Temple University gene editing spinoff forms partnership with Japanese distributor
By John George
A gene editing company spun out of Temple University has formed a partnership with a Japanese distributor of scientific products.
Temple University Health System gets second bond rating upgrade this month
By John George
Temple University Health System, for the second time this month, has received an upgrade from a bond rating agency. The upgrade reflects the...
Purdue plan rejection sets stage for liability release clarity
By James Nani and Daniel Gill
Both McMahon and Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain, who signed off on Purdue Pharma’s plan, “really want the Second Circuit to provide guidance on...
The FDA’s telehealth safety net for abortion only stretches so far
By Rachel Rebouché, Greer Donley and David S. Cohen
“If the Supreme Court overrules Roe v. Wade in its Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ruling—as many commentators and legal scholars...
Family business deals help fuel Carvana’s explosive growth
By Margot Patrick, Kristin Broughton and Ben Foldy
Publicly traded companies often shun related-party transactions because they raise questions about whether shareholders, or the related parties,...