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TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

Employees leave the Tyson plant in Logansport, Indiana.

Tyson Fresh Meats plant leads to a spike in COVID-19 cases in one county

By Marissa Stacy
Published Jul 10, 2020
Cass County sits in Indiana's corn belt, where acres of black dirt house row upon row of corn and soybeans. But this year, spring planting was eclipsed by the novel coronavirus.
(AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

Nebraska meatpacking workers vulnerable to COVID-19

By Katherine Lester
Published Jul 10, 2020
Workers in the plants have been especially hard hit by COVID-19. While the numbers are declining, an examination of the state’s spring outbreak reveals a different story.  
Clark Brothers Statue (Heesoo Yang/Staff Photographer)

Faculty Senate chair demands change in open letter to administration

By Benton McDonald
Published Jul 10, 2020
Chair Sean Atkinson said the university's system of shared governance was "on the verge of collapse."
Scharbauer Hall

Former Honors College dean takes early retirement

By Marissa Stacy
Published Jul 9, 2020
The former John V. Roach Honors College dean announced she is taking early retirement.
Dr. Karen Steele, the new dean of Interdisciplinary Studies, answer emails on her computer (photo by Richard Edgemon)

Dean of School of Interdisciplinary Studies resigns

By Renee Umsted
Published Jul 8, 2020
Dr. Karen Steele, the first dean of the college, has resigned.
Tables and chairs remain empty outside the Mary Couts Burnett Library.

Faculty opt to move 54% of classes online in the fall

By Alexis King
Published Jul 7, 2020
Staff and faculty are continuing to voice their decisions on teaching class in-person or virtually.
Fall 2015 commencement.

Seniors talk about canceled commencement

By Alexis King
Published Jul 6, 2020
Chancellor Victor Boschini announced the changes in an email Monday.
Black, Latinx communities disproportionately affected by COVID-19

Black, Latinx communities disproportionately affected by COVID-19

By Cristian Arguetasoto
Published Jul 6, 2020
Black and Latinx communities in the U.S. are experiencing more cases, deaths, and fewer recoveries than affluent white communities.
An empty section of The D Casino in Downtown Las Vegas.

Las Vegas takes on COVID-19

By TCU 360
Published Jul 2, 2020
New York City has long been known as the city that never sleeps, but until COVID-19, Las Vegas wasn't very restful either.
Fans built a makeshift grandstand in order to watch the final round of the Charles Schwab Challenge from their own front yard.

A COVID-19 Charles Schwab Challenge

By Branson Nelson
Published Jul 2, 2020
Save a few distant cheers from onlookers peering through fences or clapping from make-shift grandstands at nearby homes, Colonial Country Club was eerily quiet during the Charles Schwab Challenge in June.
Food insecurity in Austin amid COVID-19

Food insecurity in Austin amid COVID-19

By Haeven Gibbons
Published Jul 1, 2020
The food insecurity rate in Travis County is growing as COVID-19 affects people’s financial well-being and, in turn, their food stability.
On May 25, 2020, Minneapolis resident George Floyd was killed by Minneapolis police officers after they were called by a store clerk on a forgery call. Floyd’s death was recorded and uploaded to social media where it went viral and caused nationwide outrage. Protests in over 2,000 cities in all 50 states were held against police brutality. (Cristian ArguetaSoto/Staff Photographer)

Civil rights protesters gather by the thousands despite an active pandemic

By Cristian Arguetasoto
Published Jun 30, 2020
Five days after the killing of Floyd, Dallas became one of the thousands of cities that held protests against police brutality and demanding justice for George Floyd and Fort Worth resident Atatiana Jefferson who was also killed by police in her home.