What began as a Temple TV show about queer people, for queer people, became a movement under the care of Point Foundation Fellowship Scholar Andreas Copes, Class of 2022.
For Jenny Kowalski, experimental design for the screen—and, perhaps more importantly, accessibility for the screen—has long been both a key interest and an important
On April 16, a group of 64 Temple University faculty and staff crowded into a Zoom room for a virtual meeting. Their goal was to discuss how the Asian and Pacific
Jennifer Pollitt is an assistant professor and assistant director of the Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies Program. In addition to teaching, she lectures and
Empowered by his eagerness to embrace any experience and his willingness to break some unwritten rules, Jacob Dockery, DEN '21, refused to let his graduation from the
Chanel Holland, BYR '12, has been instinctively defying gravity with the graceful body movements of ballet since she was 11 years old. Growing up in the West Oak Lane
Hoa Vo, Class of 2024, rides his skateboard down a sidewalk. He has the right of way, but an impatient driver still honks at him. A few blocks away, Zenan Shen, Class of
Nicole Jordan, BYR '10, speaks three languages and is picking up two more. She knows the range of multiple musical instruments, what they can play and what they can't.
Images of police brutality, death and protests flashed across the television screen in Catresa Meyers's home. As an associate professor of instruction in the Department
This spring, as Temple responded to the coronavirus pandemic and national conversations on race, the university also launched two brand campaigns that celebrated the
June is Pride Month, chosen to commemorate the 1969 Stonewall Riots—a series of demonstrations by members of the LGBTQIA+ community in response to police brutality in New
Understanding Juneteenth with the Blockson CollectionPhotos by Ryan S. Brandenburg, Betsy Manning and Joseph LabolitoWords by Hannah Church Read the story