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TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

Orchestra to perform for sold-out crowd at Bass Hall

Published Apr 13, 2007

The university orchestra and choir will perform Verdi's "Requiem," which was written by Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi, for a sold-out crowd Monday at Bass Performance Hall.The choral and orchestral masterpiece will be performed by the 150-member Fort Worth-TCU Symphonic Choir and the 75-member TCU Symphony Orchestra, and conducted by Ronald Shirey. Shirey is the director of choir for the School of Music and the University Christian Church.

Although the show has been sold out since April 5, a waitlist has been set up on the music school's Web site.

Ways to increase tips unclear

Published Apr 13, 2007

Katie Little refills drinks and gets to know her tables in hopes that her service will influence her tip income. According to an article in the Journal of Socio-Economics, Little is right on.

Tips in the United States add up to $16 billion a year, according to a 2000 article by Michael Lynn.

Lynn, of Cornell University, wrote the article, "Gratitude and gratuity: a meta-analysis of research on the service-tipping relationship," to explain his study on the connection between server evaluations and tip size.

5th-grade sex scandal should inspire teachers to regain control

Published Apr 13, 2007

An ongoing sex scandal among fifth-graders gets school officials and media attention in Spearsville, La. The story presented by CBS 11 within the past week has undoubtedly startled parents all over the nation.

School officials need to regain control in many American schools. We cannot continue to let students do whatever they please just because we, as a nation, have begun to fear discipline in the classroom.

National Guard should stay home

Published Apr 13, 2007

National Guard troops are most likely going to face deployment to Iraq soon because U.S. forces need to be replaced, according to an April 6, NBC News article, "National Guard Likely to Head Back to Iraq." Changes have been made as to how long the National Guard can be deployed overseas, and although they are needed to relieve U.S. military troops overseas, the deployment could cause more problems than it would fix.

Bill risky; keep Bible at home

Published Apr 13, 2007

Our nation has traditionally been tied to Christianity. The United States has been and most likely will always be associated with the Christian religion. But that does not change the fact that the founding fathers of America gave our country freedom of religion in 1791 and, through that, the separation of church and state.

And the freedom of religion that defines America now must be upheld as more than 200 years after the founding of the Constitution, a bill is proposed to mandate a secular Bible study course to be offered as an elective in public high schools.

Choreographer to visit campus

Published Apr 13, 2007

The ballet world would be a lot different were it not for Ben Stevenson's impact.Stevenson, who won numerous dance awards and gold medals for his choreography work in England, the United States and China, has also made an impression on the dance faculty and students at TCU.

Stevenson is visiting campus today to speak as part of Conversations on Dance, a question-and-answer session held between professionals and dance students.

Everyone in the ballet world knows Ben Stevenson's name, said Elizabeth Gillaspy, an assistant professor of ballet.

Minor in child development to be offered

Published Apr 13, 2007

Students now have the option to minor in child development, a new addition to the curriculum that educates undergraduates on the well-being of children.The Institute of Child Development is a multidisciplinary...

MANNING WOMEN’S SPORTS

Published Apr 13, 2007

Every year, more females participate in college sports, yet one aspect of female athletics becomes more male-dominated every year: coaching.Out of the 10 women's teams at TCU, men coach seven of them.

TCU is actually part of a national trend.



THE RESEARCH

Female coaches represent 42.4 percent of the coaches of women's teams in the National Collegiate Athletic Association compared to 58 percent in 1978 and 90 percent in 1972, according to the latest edition of a longitudinal study by R. Vivian Acosta and Linda Jean Carpenter.

AddRan names Eastern Kentucky professor as dean

Published Apr 12, 2007

The AddRan College of Humanities and Social Sciences announced the selection of a new dean Thursday, ending a search that began last fall.Andrew Schoolmaster, the dean of the arts and sciences department at Eastern Kentucky State University, will succeed Mary Volcansek as the department's second dean since it was reorganized to include only humanities and social sciences. He will formally assume his duties as the new dean on July 16.

Student-performers go cruising in new tap dancing show

Published Apr 12, 2007

Anything goes for the students aboard a cruise ship portraying tap dancing angels, sailors, gangsters and nightclub evangelizers in the musical "Anything Goes" at the W.E. Scott Theatre today through Sunday."Anything Goes" is a musical comedy, set in the 1930s, about a man named Billy Crocker, played by sophomore musical theater and entrepreneurial management major Preston Swincher. Crocker pursues the love of his life,, aboard a cruise ship and gets caught up with the people on the ship's escapades.

Alumnus makes rap video to enter in YouTube contest

Published Apr 12, 2007

Graduate, get a job, start making rap videos. It may not be the future that every TCU student has in mind, but that's the way it has turned out for one 2006 graduate. On March 30, Chip Hanna, a TCU alumnus who works at an advertising agency in Fort Worth, submitted a rap video to YouTube and entered himself into a contest to win $25,000.

Hanna, who graduated with a degree in advertising and public relations, is one of 370 entrants in a contest sponsored by TurboTax, a tax preparation computer program.

Oh, When the Saints go marching in…

Published Apr 12, 2007

Saints can help people maintain relationships with their loved ones in the afterlife, said a professor from the Brite Divinity School.Carolyn Osiek, the professor of New Testament in the Brite Divinity School, discussed the "Communion of Saints," and how it merges society into a single community, Wednesday night in Sadler Hall.

Following the dinner conversation, Interfaith Council watched an episode from the television series "Charmed," and discussed issues in Paganism.