Come and get it. Summer is over, for better or worse, but Dirt still brings the heat. No time to waste. The success story of last spring, this summer and the foreseeable future is Mariah
This is a story about Karma. It was a lovely late April day at Temple. The birds were chirping, the buds on trees were blossoming and students plodded around like zombies with circles the size
Parents are always eager to offer advice to their college bound students, but one of the most common is: make sure you eat, but not only pizza, Lucky Charms and ice cream. Nobody wants to
An internal university audit of the Office of Student Activities concluded its director gave relatives no-bid contracts worth thousands of dollars and did not adhere to the university’s conflict of interest policy when working with
The former John Wanamaker junior high school, at 1111 Cecil B. Moore Ave., will be the first converted shelter in Philadelphia’s “Project Brotherly Love,” aimed at housing former Gulf Coast residents who were left homeless
Temple will offer matriculated students from the Gulf Coast area the opportunity to attend classes for credit while the devastated area rebuilds after Hurricane Katrina. Patrick Day, the associate vice president for Student Affairs, said
Starting this semester, the Independence Blue Cross Student Recreation Center and the Student Pavilion will extend its hours on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. The IBC will be open until 11 p.m. on Thursdays, midnight
Raysean Hogan is not from Philadelphia. He’s not even from Pennsylvania. Yet the Pasadena, Calif., native is making his mark on the university as the president of Main Campus Program Board, the campus organization responsible
Images of Hurricane Katrina’s aftermath have inspired students nationwide to volunteer their support to the Gulf Coast. Some Temple students, angered by what they said is the federal government’s slow response to the disaster, have