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TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

Love not fair for all, favors some more than others

Published Feb 14, 2007

Ah, Valentine's Day. The sun is shining, the birds are chirping, and sweethearts walk hand-in-hand down the sidewalk whispering sweet nothings into each other's ears. Flowers, candies, dates and greeting cards. Love is in the air.However, for the single people (myself included), Valentine's Day arouses a much different, less euphoric set of emotions.

Loneliness. Despair. Jealousy. Sound familiar? Maybe these feelings rise as the couple at the table across share a romantic kiss. I know, I despise them as well.

The Dating Game

The Dating Game

Published Feb 14, 2007

Going out on Valentine's Day with a complete stranger and not having to pay for the meal? Four couples will be experiencing a very different Valentine's Day this year. The Programming Council held its first event of the semester Tuesday night called The Dating Game. In honor of Valentine's Day, PC was looking for a way to put a different twist on the most romantic day of the year.

Jodi Settle, director of the event, said the purpose of the game was to get students involved in a fun activity on campus.

Trick play leads to Horned Frogs' home victory

Trick play leads to Horned Frogs’ home victory

Published Feb 14, 2007

Baseball is often described as a game of inches, and the home opener for the Horned Frogs baseball team was no exception.After two ejections, one home run and an unlikely hero to cap off the evening, TCU pulled out a thrilling 6-5 victory against the Dallas Baptist University Patriots in a 12-inning marathon.

The Frogs (3-1) started out the evening with sloppy fielding after committing four errors in the first four innings, as the team found its way on the wrong end of a 5-0 deficit and digging into its bullpen.

Horned Frogs continue losing; forwards' play shows promise

Horned Frogs continue losing; forwards’ play shows promise

Published Feb 13, 2007

Good luck, bad luck or no luck at all; no matter what the logic, the men's basketball team is in the midst of a nine-game losing streak.Saturday night had the Frogs going head to head with the Mountain West Conference leading BYU Cougars. The results for the evening were two players setting career highs in points and a third reaching double digits, all for the valiant effort of a loss.

No. 35 Frogs beat by No. 68 foe

No. 35 Frogs beat by No. 68 foe

Published Feb 13, 2007

The men's tennis team was unable to get a victory this weekend. The loss put the Frogs below the .500 mark with two weeks to prepare for their road match against the No. 21 LSU Tigers.The Horned Frogs (1-2), were defeated Sunday afternoon by the Texas A&M Corpus-Christi Islanders (1-2) at the Bayard H. Friedman Tennis Center.

"We had great chemistry in the doubles matches," head coach Dave Borelli said. "Corpus Christi is a good team and much better than its ranking."

School should tap into gas revenues

Published Feb 13, 2007

The university is sitting on a gold mine.Administrators are involved in negotiations with local companies to tap into a pocket of natural gas sitting below campus.

The same situation is occurring across Fort Worth as companies hurry to tap into the Barnett Shale, a natural gas resource that stretches through several Texas counties.

Companies hope to not only purchase mineral rights from the university, they hope to utilize unused space on campus as drilling sites.

Students present original pieces during lunchtime recital

Published Feb 13, 2007

Students and faculty were able to eat their lunches while watching dancers perform in a student choreography showcase Monday.Brown Bag Dance is sponsored by the dance honor society, Chi Tau Epsilon, and is produced entirely by students.

The informal dance recital is open to all dance majors and happens once every semester. The hour-long performance is open to all students and faculty.

Dance faculty members were not required to attend but many lined the first two rows to show their support, said Allie Stevens, a modern dance major and choreographer for the show.

Sister university under year-long warning for accreditation

Published Feb 13, 2007

The Universidad de las Americas, which has come under scrutiny for the closure and subsequent reopening of its newspaper, is garnering more unwanted attention. TCU's sister university has been placed under a yearlong warning by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, the agency that accredits both UDLA and TCU.

SACS, an American agency that accredits universities in 11 U.S. states and Latin America, gave the university its warning when UDLA filed a follow-up report after a 2005 affirmation of its accreditation.

Sorority sponsors book drive for Katrina victims

Published Feb 13, 2007

Monday started a weeklong book drive for Hurricane Katrina and violence-stricken John McDonogh Senior High School in New Orleans. The TCU five-member chapter of Chi Upsilon Sigma National Sorority, Inc. is sponsoring the book drive that will end Friday, Feb. 16.

Senior Narcely Ruiz, cultural events coordinator for CUS, said her sorority was inspired to hold a book drive after a member at the University of Delaware wrote a letter describing her experience of volunteering at the predominately black high school. The letter was e-mailed to all chapters across the country.

Faculty Senate to review code

Published Feb 13, 2007

Pending approval from the Faculty Senate, the Student Government Association may soon launch an honor code system, which has been in the works for two years. The SGA Honor Code Task Force, which has met...

Get it Wright

Get it Wright

Published Feb 13, 2007

He sits in his office, fiddling with a metallic coaster bearing the congressional seal. A painting of a rural Parker County church surrounded by bluebonnets on a rainy day hangs above his giant, cluttered...

Invisible Children campaign returns, screens documentary

Published Feb 13, 2007

Countless frail bodies lie stacked together on the concrete surface of a Ugandan bus park - a pile that, if it weren't for the occasional arm twitch, looks more like a field of corpses than a group of frightened children.Before the sun rises, the group wakes, folds its ragged blankets and traipses out of Gulu, Uganda back to their homes. Because with daylight, the children say, comes a shred of safety; it's only in the darkness that they seek refuge from the threat of being kidnapped.