The MIS department publication ranks No. 1 in the world. In late January, the Association for Information Systems ranked the Fox School of Business’ Management Information Systems department No. 1 in the world for research
Starting Aug. 1, the GRE will be asking harder and more complex questions. Three years of course work in English has prepared Temple student Mark Inchoco for his much anticipated ascent to graduate school. Now,
Evening classes offered at Temple, after decreasing in 2009, have increased over the last year. Temple has historically offered its students the opportunity to take evening courses since its founding as a night school in
The new residence hall currently being built is set to be complete in Fall 2012. As a college student, Facilities Director of Planning and Design Tom McCreesh said he lived in a “cinderblock room with
A fire in a construction trailer next to the 1300 Residence Hall led Campus Safety Services to evacuate the building. The university released a TU advisory via e-mail at 2 p.m. to notify the student
On Feb. 7, Temple Student Government met for its first senate meeting of the Spring 2011 semester, during which its members made suggestions to improve Campus Safety Services initiatives and community relations policies. In the
After a pipe burst in J&H, students were forced out of the building for two hours. Students in the Johnson and Hardwick Halls were evacuated Jan. 24 at 11 p.m. after a frozen sprinkler pipe
Dr. Joseph Kubacki was indicted with 72 accounts of health-care fraud. A former chairperson for the opthalmology department at the School of Medicine was indicted on Jan. 25 for 72 accounts of health care fraud
Campus Safety Services is in the process of improving security with local police. Following a string of highlighted criminal events in the past few months, the university has amped-up security on and surrounding Main Campus.
New programs aim to restructure the inner workings of academic advising. Across the board at Temple, the retention rate for freshmen is approximately 85 percent, which means 15 percent of first-year students will drop out