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TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

Students of all majors welcome

Published Sep 8, 2005

Smith Entrepreneurs Hall offers students more than just a meal from Sub Connection.The Collegiate Entrepreneurs Organization, a club for any student interested in entrepreneurship, welcomes underclassmen and non-business majors, CEO president Leslie Martin said.

David Minor, director of the Neely Entrepreneurship Program said that once a month, members of CEO are able to have dinners with successful entrepreneurs and members also have the opportunity to work with a mentor.

Comedy group returns for its fifth season

Published Sep 8, 2005

Senseless Acts of Comedy will kick off the new year with a show at 9 p.m. Thursday in Moudy Building North, Room 141.The student improvisational comedy group now has six members with four returning from last year's cast.

"We are really excited for this upcoming year and we have two new members who are freshman that are really great," said Austin Hines, a senior radio-TV-film major and the president of Senseless Acts of Comedy.

The comedy troupe is beginning it's fourth year at TCU and is expecting to have a full house Thursday night.

House of Representatives lacks officers

Published Sep 8, 2005

Results are in for the House of Representatives elections, but not everyone is fully represented.Two colleges have one seat vacant. The College of Communications has five out of six seats filled, while the College of Science and Engineering has seven out of eight.

The vacancies have left students wondering how it will impact them.

Christa Owen, a sophomore early childhood education major, doesn't think the vacancy will hurt students.

"Because (the representatives) are committed, one seat vacancy shouldn't make a difference," Owen said.

Album Review

Published Sep 8, 2005

Casting Crowns frontman and songwriter Mark Hall continues to write with an endearing honesty that leaves him vulnerable and challenges listeners to do the same with the band's sophomore release, "Lifesong."Hall, a youth pastor from Atlanta, said he writes with the intention of reaching the 400 children he sees every Sunday. The band started with this purpose and they want to ensure it remains their highest priority.

Act looks to build fan base

Act looks to build fan base

Published Sep 8, 2005

Alt-country performer Austin Collins is looking to make the most of an opportunity many musicians never have. "It's been a whirlwind," Collins said about the months since his debut album, "Something Better," was released. "Things have been going well and are better than I could have expected."

Since receiving critical and commercial acclaim, Collins said he and his band have been playing several live shows and building up their fan base.

Getting Personal

Getting Personal

Published Sep 8, 2005

Year at TCU: Senior
Sport: Football
Major: Finance
When did you start playing football?
Fifth grade


Who is your role model?
Jesus Christ


What's your idea of a perfect day?
Christmas


When you were younger, what did you want to be when you grew up?
A pilot. (Father is a pilot)


What do you want to do when you leave TCU?
Wants to do investment banking


Do you plan on continuing your football career after TCU?
No, is pretty much done.

Art competition to arrive at TCU

Published Sep 8, 2005

The 23rd Annual Art in the Metroplex competition will open in the University Art Gallery in Moudy Building North on Saturday in conjunction with Fall Gallery Night.There were 479 pieces entered in the competition. Of those, 44 pieces by 26 artists were selected, said Ron Watson, chairman of the department of art and art history.

Watson has been there since the beginning, starting the competition along with Beth Lea Clardy, said Karen Weinman, joint coordinator for the event. Clardy died this past year, but her sister, Nancy Vance, remains a joint coordinator of the event.

A cheaper way to travel

Published Sep 8, 2005

Efforts made to avoid rising gas pricesGas prices are absurd.

For most vehicles, it can take upwards of $50 to get a full tank.

And costs don't show any signs of dropping in the near future. Hurricane Katrina's destruction caused the most recent spike, and prices had already been steadily increasing for months.

Since gas is becoming so expensive, it only makes sense to start looking for other transportation options.

Campus food needs to be competitively priced

Campus food needs to be competitively priced

Published Sep 8, 2005

Let's play "The Price is Right." What is the cost of a 17-stick pack of gum? What about an eight-pack of batteries? The cost of pens? Or a travel-sized tube of toothpaste?At Wal-Mart the gum costs 78 cents; the batteries $4.87; the pens 88 cents; and the toothpaste 78 cents.

At the TCU bookstore, however, that same pack of gum will cost $1.25; a four-pack of batteries costs $5.68; the pens cost $1.98; and the travel-sized toothpaste costs $1.99.

Open letter to students and the TCU community

Published Sep 8, 2005

I'm sure you have all been following the disaster news from New Orleans. I have watched and read everything I could and have come away in despair, confusion, comparing it to Sept. 9/11, sensing the differences and the similarities, struggling with the enormity of the losses, angry at times, and looking for signs of hope and recovery. Of course, my sociological brain also constantly processes the issues of race, class, politics and family dynamics. My husband Charles and I rolled up our sleeves on Saturday and went to work buying and hauling supplies to local shelters.

Receiver juggles MBA, Frog football season

Published Sep 8, 2005

When it comes to football, senior wide receiver Ryan Pearson is all business.The same can be said of him off the field.

Pearson, in his fifth season on the Horned Frog football team, graduated with a degree in finance in May, and is now pursuing his MBA.

Pearson said he plays golf to relax in what little spare time he has, but his roommate and teammate, wide receiver Matt Grimmett, said Pearson finds it hard to take it easy.

Grimmett said Pearson approaches golf just like he approaches everything: with intensity.

Former team members address current sanctions

Published Sep 8, 2005

TCU's track and field legacy could be in jeopardy because of an NCAA investigation and self-imposed sanctions now in place, said former TCU sprinter and alumnus David Spencer on Wednesday.Spencer was a member of the 2001 NCAA champion 4x100 meters relay team.

The TCU track team has been under investigation since September 2004 from the NCAA for alleged improprieties by former head coach Monte Stratton and his coaching staff.

TCU also has self-imposed sanctions, banning them from postseason competition.