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Melissa DeLoach/SENIOR
REPORTER
John Billingsley, a sophomore accounting major, shops Tuesday in
the TCU Bookstore for a Valentines Day card to send to his
mother.
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Melissa DeLoach/SENIOR REPORTER
Judy Prater, an employee at TCU Florist,
adds filler to a Valentines Day flower arrangement.
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News |
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Music school lacks room, students
say
No plans for change set
By Melissa Christensen
Staff Reporter
TCU music students and instructors said practice
space is inadequate and the only major solution is long-term planning
and construction.
Only nine practice rooms are available in Ed Landreth Hall for the
169 undergraduate music majors and the several hundred students
in large ensembles who are not music majors. Eight practice rooms
are available in the Walsh Center for Performing Arts, but they
are exclusive to piano students.TCU music faculty members said the
ratio of students to practice rooms is embarrassingly low.
(full
story)
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Art to art
NEO-TEN exhibit teaches class
to present work
By Bethany McCormack
Staff Reporter
A group of 10 studio art majors got first-hand experience
in the world of art Tuesday night at the opening of the art exhibit
NEO-TEN.
The exhibit, planned and produced by the students, featured sculpture,
photography and paintings from the students portfolios.
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story)
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Teachers work toward tenure
Assistant professors balance
research, service to obtain goal
By Jillanne Johnson
Staff Reporter
Students arent the only people on campus who
must focus on classes, research, committee meetings and workshops
to build a résumé that will earn them top jobs.
Assistant professors spend their first years on campus learning
to balance the demands of their appointment in order to fill a résumé
that will gain them tenure and promotion to associate professor.
The process can be tough, said Ed Kolesar, chairman of the Faculty
Senate Tenure, Promotions and Grievance committee.
(full
story)
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Toy Story
Retro toys make comeback
By Julie Ann Matonis
Staff Reporter
Katie Rainey and her brother threw the critter around
the room when they were children. They rolled it into a ball and
used its long white tail as a slingshot.
It was not their pet cat or dog they were tossing. It was not even
a real animal, just a furry stuffed creature called a Popple.
(full
story)
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Sororities philanthropy
hours improve
By LaNasha Houze
Staff Reporter
According to Service Census 2000, volunteer services
among sororities in the Panhellenic Council improved last year,
but many non-Greek students on campus are still unaware of sororities
community contributions.
According to the census, sororities raised $77,557 last year through
philanthropic donations and performed 15,417 hours of community
service.
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story)
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Editorial |
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Music in the air
Practice rooms desperately
needed
Theres music in the air, but its only
because TCUs music majors are practicing outside in front
of Ed Landreth Hall.
Its been said that practice makes perfect, and for music majors,
practice is everything. And time to practice is precious. Music
majors are being forced to choose spend hours looking for
an appropriate space to practice, or settle for practicing in their
dorm rooms with the window open, hoping not to frustrate everyone
else who lives in the hall.
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story)
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Scholarships need to grow with
tuition
Graduating students deserve
monetary compensation along with diplomas
Inflation is a natural and essential part of the
American economy. Its inevitable that prices will slowly rise
as the value of the dollar gradually dwindles. In the past couple
of decades inflation has run particularly rampant among universities,
especially private schools.
However, it seems to me that certain aspects of the education system
fail to follow inflation trends.
(full
story)
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Bushs tax cut only for
the rich
National debt may never be
paid off under new proposal
To members of Congress, all I have to say is this:
Dont do it.
I know it is tempting. This isnt 1981 again, you tell yourself.
We have surpluses as far as the eye can see. Surely those Reagan-era
budget deficits wont happen again, you say.
Control yourself.
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story)
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Letter
to the editor
Methodist
student finds error in statement of abortion positions
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Sports |
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TCUs
Top Teams
Mens and womens
golf, Mens track and field, and Mens tennis
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story) |
2001 Football Schedule
Big 12 Conference teams like
Texas, Nebraska and 2000 National Champions Oklahoma are renowned
for having some of the hardest schedules in collegiate football.
But TCU head football coach Gary Patterson said he believes the
Frogs 2001 schedule is not to be overlooked.
(full
story)
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Golfer takes top ESPY awards
By Chris Gibson
Senior Reporter
Winning awards in the sports arena may not be that
out of the ordinary for golfers like Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus,
but for the first time, golf took center stage on one of the biggest
nights in sports.
Monday night, Woods took home the ESPY for pro golfer of the year.
He also won for championship performance of the year, come-from-behind
performance of the year and Male athlete of the year.
(full
story)
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Valentines Day |
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How It All Began
Ten thousand roses of all colors
will be delivered by TCU Florist on Valentines Day, said Melissa
Ward, an employee at the University Drive flower shop.
Ward said February is the florists busiest time of the year,
followed by Mothers Day. According to Hallmarks holiday
statistics, Valentines Day is the second largest holiday for
sending greeting cards.
But this holiday of romance when a dozen roses from the TCU
Florist cost $79.95 holds no historical significance other
than coincidence.
(full
story)
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Love at first sight
Jan was a shy freshman and Mick was the senior class
president who won awards and was also a trumpet player in the marching
band.
But they would each catch the others attention and begin a
relationship thats as strong as ever more than 40 years later.
Jan and Mick are better known in this community as Chancellor and
Mrs. Ferrari, yet few people know about the love story behind their
marriage.
Jan Ferrari said her future husband stood out on the campus of the
high school they both attended in Monongahela, Pa.
He was everything in high school, she said. Everyone
knew of Mickey in high school, and he was pretty cute, I have to
admit.
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story)
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Love In Any Language
Around the world, Valentines
Day is celebrated in different ways
Overpriced flowers, booked restaurants and dozens
of limos on the streets. Just another typical Valentines Day
in Jamaica, Peru or any number of nations around the world.
The flights of fancy and rampant consumerism that surround the romantic
holiday are not as native to the United States as it seems. In countries
all over the world, the holiday is recognized or ignored in its
own special way.
Jamaica celebrates Valentines Day much the same way that the
United States does, said Kerine Miller, a freshman broadcast journalism
major.
Valentines Day is celebrated pretty much like up here,
Miller said. Everybody wears red and white if theyre
really mushy. I think the culture is becoming more couple oriented
now.
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story)
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Do us all a favor:
Wipe out Valentines Day
Lets get one thing straight from the get-go:
Theres nothing quite as pointless as Valentines Day,
except maybe toilet paper with designs.
Thats right. This holiday, brought to you by Hallmark and
the people who gave us decorated paper to wipe our asses with, is
nothing more than a commercialized day of making out.
People who have make-out partners revel the fact that theyre
gettin some, while the rest of the single population
say things like, Valentines Day is stupid, and
Lets have girls night and rent movies.
(full
story)
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