TCU
Daily Skiff
Centennial Edition
Editors
note: The Skiff staff viewed nearly every copy of this
newspaper in its 100 year history. The following is
a list of some of the biggest stories the paper has
covered.
May 7, 1948
TCU Student Body Constitution Illegal; Brothers Declares
Existing Emergency Pres. Sadler will appoint same officers
After a thorough investigation by members of the Student
Council and the Skiff, it has been discovered that the
student body government has been operating under an
illegal constitution. In fact, the students of T.C.U.
have been operating under an illegal constitution for
at least 16 years.
The investigation was done when the present constitution
was being checked to establish the procedure for the
coming elections of the yell leader and editors. It
was found that this present constitution had not been
legally ratified in accordance with the previous constitution.
Feb. 25, 1949
Repeal of Student Constitution Called for in Current
Petition
Document has 100 signatures; would abolish Congress,
set up new government
A petition now circulating on campus calls for the Student
Congress to hold and election to repeal the present
constitution.
When the required 10 per cent (sic) of the student body
signs, the petition will be present to congress, it
is reported by ... (a) spokesman for the group behind
the petition.
... In a statement to The Skiff, they said.
The present constitution, if we may flatter the
document by calling it such, is too complicated and
legally involved to meet the simple needs of our student
body.
March 11, 1949
Court Stops Unpublicized Election
Injunction Prohibits Vote on Petition Thursday
The Student Court is deferring decision on this
case until further arguments are heard and some of the
issues clarified, said Chief Justice Ben Hearn
yesterday after the hearing of the student petition
requesting repeal of the constitution was resumed. ...
An injunction restraining the Student Congress from
holding an unpublicized election was ordered by Chief
Justice Ben Hearn at a special session of the Student
Association Court Tuesday.
The court action followed Monday nights heated
Congress meeting at which seeking repeal of the associations
constitution was presented.
March
13, 1963
Students Picker Theaters
20 Protest Segregated Movie House Facilities
There
was a double feature at the Worth Theatre
last Friday night, but the manager of the theatre hadnt
planned for one of the shows.
Inside, an all-white audience was watching Gregory Peck
in To Kill a Mockingbird, a movie about
racial prejudice in the South.
Outside, five TCU students and a Negro girl were parading
up and down the street, carrying picket signs asking
for integration in the Fort Worth theaters.
The situation was the same at three other theatres,
all members of the large Interstate Theatres Inc. chain
the Palace, the Ridglea and the 7th Street. The
picketers at each were TCU students and local Negroes.
Nov.
26, 1963
President Kennedy assassinated
University Solemn After Tragic News
When
the campus learned of the death of President Kennedy
Friday, it wore a long face.
The air was filled with the sound of a single church
bell, tolling the tragic news. Its steady beat was almost
in time with the steps of many students entering campus
churches.
Professors dismissed classes. Some locked their doors
and went home for the day.
The flag, flying high on its staff in front of Reed
Hall, was taken in half-mast, its proud colors waving
in a heavy wind.
The Student Center was filled with people listening
to the voice of a news commentator, telling of the Presidents
death in Dallas.
Dec. 6, 1963
Ease Race Barriers, TCU Congress Asks
Academic Restriction Target of Resolution
By
an overwhelming majority unanimous except for
three abstentions Student Congress Tuesday called
on the administration to open the TCU academic program
to Negroes.
The sole test for qualification, Congress argued, should
be scholastic qualification.
The resolution, which asks the Universitys Board
of Trustees to remove any racial restriction from
admission requirements to any part of our academic program
and that this be done by the end of the academic year
if possible, is to be forwarded to Chancellor
M. E. Sadler.
Sept. 21, 1985
Skiff Special
Dust Settles on Dismissals
As the dust begins to settle on Thursdays
announcement that six football players have been accepting
cash payments from an alumnus, the strange sequence
of events has become a little bit clearer.
The first official word of the dismissal came in a prepared
statement read by TCU athletic director Frank Windegger
shortly before midnight.
Windegger said that six players recruited prior to Wackers
arrival at TCU had been illegally recruited and had
received cash payments until recently.
Sept. 16, 1999
8 killed in local church shooting
Gunman opens fire on youth, kills self at Wedgwood Baptist
Eight people were killed at a southwest Fort Worth
church after a gunman entered an area-wide youth rally
and opened fire. Six people were gunned down during
the attack before the gunman fatally shot himself. One
person later died at a local hospital.
Shortly after 7 p.m., members of Wedgwood Baptist Church,
located at 5522 Whitman Ave., heard a loud bang. Witnesses
said the gunman walked into the large prayer group and
began shooting. One body was found in the entryway,
one was found in the foyer and the other bodies were
found in the sanctuary. Seven other people were wounded
in the attack.
The gunman was described as a slender, white male in
his mid-30s wearing a black jacket, white shirt and
blue jeans and smoking a cigarette, said Lt. David Ellis
of the Fort Worth Police Department.
When police officers located his body on the last pew
in the sanctuary, the gunman was armed with a 9mm handgun
and had several rounds of ammunition in his pocket.
March 28, 2000
Twister rips downtown, misses campus
Students forced to take shelter during storms
A tornado that caused extensive damage in downtown
Fort Worth Tuesday evening forced students on campus
into basements and lower-level floors of residence halls
and buildings.
Amateur radio spotters detected the tornado at 6:22
p.m. on West Seventh Street and again at 6:45 p.m. east
of downtown Fort Worth, according to the National Weather
Service. TCU Police reported that the powerful winds
caused no damage on campus.
During the storm, police officers evacuated students
and staff to the lowest level of each building, said
Jon Carter, a TCU police officer.
We sent all of the kids down to the basement of
the (residence halls) and in all the buildings,
Carter said. We just got word of the possibility
of severe weather and went into action.
Sept. 12, 2001
Students react with multitude of emotions
Terrorist attacks lead to shock, fear, disbelief among
students
Students gathered from all over campus Tuesday and
stared in shock at the Student Center Lounge television
as events that will change the world unfolded in New
York City and Washington, D.C.
At least half of the more than 100 students in the lounge
had tears in their eyes as they watched hijacked planes
destroy the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in possible
terrorist attacks that caused numerous American fatalities.
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