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All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

BYU no match for the Horned Frogs

BYU no match for the Horned Frogs

Published Oct 14, 2010

The TCU football schedule starts to get tougher this weekend with a game against Brigham Young University. BYU has had a rough season so far, losing four straight games until it looked much better in a win against San Diego State University this past week. After that win, the Cougars will be fired up when they roll into Amon G. Carter Stadium on Saturday. Last week the Horned Frogs shut out Wyoming and the defense will look to continue dominating opponents. TCU is currently top-ranked in the nation in total defense.

When TCU is on offense:

2010 NCAA Football Challenge competition to visit campus

2010 NCAA Football Challenge competition to visit campus

Published Oct 14, 2010

A student could be on the road to becoming $10,000 richer when a football-fortress-on-wheels visits the university this weekend.

LG Electronics' football-fortress-on-wheels is a big rig lined with HDTVs and state of the art gaming stations and amenities. The vehicle, sponsored by LG and EA Sports, will stop by Fort Worth on its nationwide tour of some of college football's biggest rivalries. The tour is part of the EA Sports 2010 NCAA Football Challenge, which includes an NCAA Football 11 Tournament, according to a press release.

Week 7 of the Skiff's college Pick 'Em poll

Week 7 of the Skiff’s college Pick ‘Em poll

Published Oct 14, 2010

Every week, Chancellor Victor Boschini and several student leaders pick who they think will win top upcoming college football games in the Daily Skiff college football pick 'em challenge. TCU head twirler Skyler Mathis started in the poll two weeks late and her cumulative score is an average of all the rankings during those first two weeks. Last week, each participant missed the upset of Miami vs. Florida State. TCU News Now sports director Chris Blake and the Daily Skiff sports editor Madison Pelletier have the lead with the highest cumulative score at 23-7.

Cycling rally to promote air quality awareness Saturday

Published Oct 14, 2010

Cyclists will take off from Sundance Square on Saturday for the Clean Air Bike Rally, an 8.5 mile bike ride through downtown Fort Worth and Trinity Trails with the aim of raising awareness about the need for air quality improvement in Fort Worth.

This is the first year the route has included trails and streets. Hunter said event coordinators want to encourage biking for recreation and transportation and show cyclists that downtown streets are bicycle-friendly.

Injustice continues to plague North Korea

Published Oct 13, 2010

Martin Luther King Jr. once said injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. For more than 60 years, a great injustice has plagued the nation of North Korea, and the cries of its citizens have gone almost totally unheard abroad. Since the mid-1990s, an estimated two million people have died from malnutrition. The recent transfer of power from Kim Jong-il to his son, Kim Jong-un, should be a reminder of the atrocities committed by the North Korean government and a call to action against it.

Founder of Susan G. Komen for the Cure given a warm welcome

Published Oct 13, 2010

The founder and CEO of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, Nancy Brinker, showed the personal connection she shares with others in the fight against breast cancer as she signed copies of her new book "Promise Me" at the university bookstore Wednesday.

Brinker received gifts from Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief and musician and alumnus Tim Halperin and took part in the Frogs for the Cure tradition of planting a pink flag in front of Sadler Hall. Brinker said she began Komen for the Cure to keep a promise she made to her sister Susan G. Komen, the organization's namesake.

Campus memorial service to be held Thursday

Published Oct 13, 2010

A service of remembrance and celebration for Stephen Scherer is scheduled for 2 p.m. today in the John V. Roach Professional Development Center.

Scherer, who was a senior health and human sciences major, took his own life in his home Oct. 3.

The service is open for the campus community to join Scherer's family for an exchange of memories, encouragement and condolences to all that knew Scherer.

Rescue of Chilean miners a global effort

Published Oct 13, 2010

Major news outlets are currently featuring a story that is not only uplifting and emotionally gripping but has achieved the status as one of the most watched Web events, ever. The mesmerizing live footage of a camera-equipped capsule being lowered half a mile into the bowels of the earth to assist in the rescue of 33 Chilean miners was the product of current advancement in technology and an amicable Chilean government.

Mark Zuckerberg donates $100 million to moderate in-movie criticism

Published Oct 13, 2010

After seeing "The Social Network," all I could think of was why Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook, felt the need to announce a $100 million donation to Newark, N.J., public schools on "The Oprah Winfrey...

Fort Worth’s $4.5 million expenditure for Super Bowl justified

Published Oct 13, 2010

In times of financial belt-tightening, city and local governments have to trim budgets to avoid shortfalls and inability to function. Big spending projects fall under suspicion of being unnecessary to the goals of a city.

Such is the case with the City of Fort Worth's plan to spend $4.5 million on preparations for the upcoming Super Bowl XLV, to be held in February 2011 at Cowboys Stadium. However, there are significant reasons why the $4.5 million price tag for the city is both justified and necessary, and the Super Bowl will bring great returns on Fort Worth's investment.

Newly-installed ID card swipe will keep library exclusive to students

Newly-installed ID card swipe will keep library exclusive to students

Published Oct 13, 2010

A newly-installed ID card swipe outside of Mary Couts Burnett Library gives exclusive access to the library for students during the hours of midnight to 7 a.m., June Koelker, the dean of the library, said.

The new card swipe location is not for security purposes, but was implemented to enhance library use for students by keeping out non-students during the later hours, Koelker said.

Students entering will now have to swipe their TCU ID to get in the front door, then again at the turn-styles in the entryway.

Official: Amon G. Carter Stadium is a monument to TCU’s uniqueness

Published Oct 13, 2010

As Athletics Director Chris Del Conte kicked off his department's town hall meetings Tuesday night in the Brown-Lupton University Union Ballroom, he painted Amon G. Carter Stadium as a monument to the university's uniqueness and can-do spirit despite concerns over the planned renovations.

"In 1930, when that stadium was built, we were coming through the [Great] Depression," Del Conte said. "In the hardest times in our nation, they decided to build something special at TCU. We're going through pretty tough times right now, aren't we?"