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TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

Poet: Women need to make own decisions

Poet: Women need to make own decisions

Published Mar 9, 2006

It requires risk and danger for women to move on in life and strive for freedom to live better, a poet at the International Women's Day Luncheon said Wednesday."You are lucky if you have a lot of money and freedom, but that's not the case for women who don't have the access that we have here," said Camille Dungy, assistant professor of English at Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Virginia.

Referring to her poem, "Diana in the Box," which she recited at the luncheon, Dungy said, women have taken risks throughout history and are still doing so today.

Luau to promote spring break safety

Published Mar 9, 2006

Programming Council and Hyperfrogs will host a luau today to encourage students to have an exciting and safe spring break."The reason why we are having the luau is for students to have a good time responsibly and promote safety for the week ahead of them," said Hyperfrog member Jessica Tremillo, a freshman education major.

According to a 1998 survey of students on spring break in Panama City Beach, Fla., from the Journal of American College Health, the average male finished 18 alcoholic drinks a day while on break and the average female had 10.

Program continues to develop

Published Mar 9, 2006

More seniors will graduate in May with University Honors than ever before, something the director of the Honors Program said is another small but paramount sign the program is improving. Peggy Watson, director of the Honors Program, said recognizing these 46 seniors and supporting other honors students with more class offerings and programs is all part of an effort to eventually convert the Honors Program into an Honors College.

"I think it will take a number of years," Watson said, "but it is going to happen."

Suit to be dismissed, attorney says

Published Mar 9, 2006

A judge is ready to dismiss the case of a former TCU track athlete in his attempt to sue the university for a release to transfer to the University of Texas at Austin, the athlete's attorney said.Tom Phillips, an attorney for former TCU athlete Jacob Hernandez, who filed against the university for a release to transfer in May, said an order of dismissal in the case has been passed on to the judge but said he is not sure if the judge has signed it yet.

Phillips said he and J. Shelby Sharpe, another attorney for Hernandez, have exhausted all appeals on Hernandez's behalf.

Respect others' beliefs

Respect others’ beliefs

Published Mar 9, 2006

I never saw "Brokeback Mountain." My schedule was such that it left most theaters before I had the chance. In addition, I've never read "The Da Vinci Code," nor have I seen "The Book of Daniel." Frankly, I rarely see important movies or read controversial books, and the only TV show I watch is "Lost." That doesn't mean, however, that I haven't witnessed the fallout, especially from the Christian minority.In these days of media saturation and the free-for-all Internet, everyone has a microphone. At first glance, one would think this kind of interconnection would be a good thing.

Students should experience other cultures

Students should experience other cultures

Published Mar 8, 2006

I called a friend from my car to ask if he had already arrived at the birthday party of a Colombian TCU swimmer. "Yeah, but we are all in the back," he answered. "The Hispanics have taken over the front room."

My roommate and I walked in to see exactly that - a living room full of Latin students dancing to Spanish music and the non-Latino students huddled in the other room.

This is ridiculous, I thought. At the sound of "Rakata," I pulled my roommate in with me to shake our booties with people "oh so different" from us.

Group pushes coffee campaign further

Published Mar 8, 2006

Following advancements in bringing Fair Trade Certified coffee to TCU, Frogs for Fair Trade are trying to take their campaign to the next level. The student group succeeded in getting Starbucks locations on campus and Jazzman's Caf‚ in the Tucker Technology Center to offer the coffee but now wants Jazzman's to sell Fair Trade Certified coffee exclusively, said Seth Harris, co-coordinator of Frogs for Fair Trade.

SGA swears in chief justice, passes bills

Published Mar 8, 2006

A new chief justice was sworn in Tuesday at the House of Student Representatives meeting, filling a position that has been open since the end of last semester.Trevor Heaney, president of the Student Government Association, said after a month of reviewing applicants, Christina Ruffini, a senior news-editorial journalism and international communication major, was best to fill the position.

Tori Hutchens, elections and regulations chairwoman, said the committee "grilled her thoroughly and passed her through."

Staff Assembly aims to lower insurance costs for employees

Published Mar 8, 2006

After reviewing the results of a recent survey, the Staff Assembly brainstormed ideas Tuesday to lower the cost of health insurance for employees and the university.The survey, which was conducted by several Staff Assembly representatives and other employees, focused on 116 staff members working in housekeeping and grounds maintenance.

Tara Perez, a horticulture assistant who presented the survey results to the Staff Assembly, said the survey targeted these staff members because there are concerns that some of them are unable to afford health insurance.

APO sponsors bone marrow screening, blood drive

APO sponsors bone marrow screening, blood drive

Published Mar 8, 2006

Service fraternity Alpha Phi Omega is sponsoring a blood drive along with Carter BloodCare this week, giving students a chance to give blood and be screened for bone marrow donorship.APO member Mary Bauman, a junior English major, said APO is sponsoring the drive as one of the fraternity's service projects.

"We get people to donate blood," Bauman said, "because we figure college students are healthy and we have a large base of people to choose from."

Spring Reads

Published Mar 8, 2006

"The Kite Runner"By Khaled Hosseini

Everyone has done something he or she regrets - it's a part of life. Some of those things are minor, some are life-altering . but how often does fate offer a chance to atone for the sins of one's past?

In his first novel, "The Kite Runner," Afghan author Khaled Hosseini shows us that even the most painful of memories and the most unspeakable acts are not beyond redemption.

Clothing restrictive; society should accept nonsensual nudity

Clothing restrictive; society should accept nonsensual nudity

Published Mar 8, 2006

It is no accident that in the biblical creation story man was naked. After all, Adam and Eve represented nature.It is also no accident that when they sinned they took up clothing to hide their shame - in some ways, wearing clothing was their punishment for sin.

But Adam and Eve had it wrong. Before they felt that nudity was shameful, they thought nothing of it. It was natural. And God certainly had no problem with it. They were not obligated to clothe themselves.