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KYW News Radio - February 2, 2010

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KYW News Radio


A program called “Kids Write and Create” pairs Temple speech/language pathology students with students at the chronically low-performing Frederick Douglas School in North Philadelphia. Started by Rena Krakow, associate professor of communication sciences and disorders at Temple University, the goal is to enhance comfort with print for kids from low-income families. Scores on the Test of Early Childhood Reading Ability show a significant increase in skills for children involved in the program.

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Fox29 - February 2, 2010

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Fox29



With the John Edwards tell-all book hitting bookstore shelves, the age-old question arises: Why do famous cheating men think they will not get caught? "These people who rise to the top in many fields are risk takers," said Temple psychologist Frank Farley. "That's what helps get them there.Part of that risk taking flows over to the negative side and they take risks sexually."

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Baltimore Sun - February 3, 2010

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Baltimore Sun



Despite the risks of Salmonella and E. coli, raw cookie dough is still a comfort food for those going through an emotional time.The fact that eating raw dough is verboten may add to the appeal, said Frank Farley, a Temple psychologist who has studied thrill-seekers or "Type T" personalities. "My hunch would be that these T-types might well find it a turn-on and say, 'Ahhh, I'm not afraid,'" he said.

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Toronto Globe and Mail - February 3, 2010

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Toronto Globe and Mail



Small chains such as Vancouver-based Caffé Artigiano are winning customers in the high-end coffee market that Starbucks brought to the masses. Bryant Simon, a history professor at Temple and author of Everything but the Coffee, a book on American culture and Starbucks, says the pressure on the Seattle chain will intensify. "In the 1990s and early 2000s, Starbucks seeded the demand for upscale coffee…But when it's everywhere, there's no distinction any more."

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Bucks County Courier Times - February 3, 2010

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Bucks County Courier Times



On the surface, hospitals appear recession-proof — after all, people always need medical care. In reality, they're more often in a money pit that only gets deeper in bad economic times, experts say. Most financially distressed hospitals — such as Lower Bucks Hospital, which filed for Chapter 11 protection last month — are sold or closed, rather than endure the bankruptcy process. "Most of the time it's delaying the inevitable," said Tom Getzen, a professor at Temple’s Fox School of Business.

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Toronto Star - February 3, 2010

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Toronto Star



Assuming there are no last-minute buyers or 11th-hour changes of heart, the reins of the Canadian Football League's Toronto Argonauts will be handed over to David Braley, who also happens to own the B.C. Lions. The potential problems of dual ownership are boundless. "How could the two teams engineer a trade that the other teams wouldn't view as unfairly 'loading' one team?" asked Aubrey Kent, an Ontario native who's the director of the Sport Industry Research Center at Temple. "How can one person represent 25 percent of league ownership?"

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Wall Street Journal - February 3, 2010

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Wall Street Journal


Most of the roughly 110 companies that have paid for the right to put their names on sports stadiums say there's more upside than downside. But a 2003 paper in the Journal of Sports Economics that tracked the stocks of 54 companies for 20 days after the signings of such deals showed that only two showed a statistically significant difference — and in both cases, the stock price fell. "Naming rights is about one thing: boys with toys," says the study's co-author, Michael Leeds, an economics professor at Temple.

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WHYY-FM - February 4-5, 2010

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WHYY-FM

What is it about a forecast for a major snowfall that makes people have such strong reactions? Temple psychologist Frank Farley noted that in today's "extremely mobile society," a snow storm's "exceptional ability…to confine us" can have profound social effects. For many people, Farley said, snow storms present a welcome opportunity to spend time with loved ones.

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Reuters - February 5, 2010

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February 5, 2010


(There is no link to this report.)
Alanna Burke, webmaster at Temple's College of Engineering, was distressed by the increasing number of feral and stray cats she saw in North Philadelphia, so she decided to do something about it. So she started www.temple-cats.org. "Our ultimate goal is not just to find the cats, fix them and find them homes, but to educate the community," Burke said.

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