Campus Lines
Announcements
of campus events, public meetings and other general campus information
should be brought to the TCU Daily Skiff office at Moudy Building
South, Room 291, mailed to TCU Box 298050 or e-mailed to (skiffletters@tcu.edu).
Deadline for receiving announcements is 2 p.m. the day before they
are to run. The Skiff reserves the right to edit submissions for
style, taste and space available.
The Charles
L. Rowan Lecture will present a speech on British art by Timothy
Barringer of Yale University at 7 p.m. today in the Moudy Building
North, Room 141. A reception will follow the speech at 4910 Crestline
Road.
The Fellowship
of Christian Athletes will meet for fellowship and games at 9 p.m.
today at the John Justin Athletic Center.
TCU London
Centre applications for the fall 2001 semester are due Friday. Applications
are available in the Office of International Education, Sadler Hall,
Room 16.
Neeley Associate
applications are available in the Neeley Student Resource Center,
Dan Rogers Hall, Room 130. You must have at least junior standing
and a 3.0 cumulative GPA. The application deadline is by 5 p.m.
Friday.
The Seventh
Annual Womens Symposium will be March 27 to 29. A Women and
Community Dinner will be at 6:30 March 27 in the Student Center
Ballroom. Candace OKeefe from the Womens Museum in Dallas
will be the keynote speaker and an art exhibit by Adriana Martinez
de Audriac will be on display. The cost is $12 for students and
$15 for everyone else. Holly Near, a partner in establishing the
Womens Music Movement in the 1970s, will have a concert at
8 p.m. March 28 in the PepsiCo Recital Hall. Tickets are $15 for
TCU students, faculty and staff and $18 for everyone else. A trip
to the Womens Museum in Dallas will be on March 29. Those
wanting to go can meet in front of the Student Center at 1:15 p.m.
Tickets are $8 for students and $10 for everyone else. For reservations
for any of the events or for more information call (817) 257-7855.Correction
In the March
9 issue of the Skiff, a quote by Michael Katovich, a sociology professor,
should have said that people should entertain the idea that drugs
have positive effects.
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