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In the wake of a mass slaying at Virginia Tech on Monday morning, administrators said TCU crisis management policies were re-evaluated and will remain the same
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Charitable alumni beware: scammers posing as TCU students are reportedly targeting alumni to make some fast cash. Tracy Syler-Jones, vice chancellor for marketing and communication, said she has received about five phone calls from concerned alumni indicating that individuals had contacted them, saying they were TCU students selling magazine subscriptions to raise money for a trip to London... (0) comments
TCU News Now students met with Chancellor Victor Boschini on Monday to discuss the future of the three-year-old student-led news station threatened by next semester's low enrollment. News Now volunteers Christina Durano and Hilary Whittier have begun a movement to try to improve student participation and funding for the news station that will have to be scaled down from its current weekly show because of low student enrollment for the upcoming fall semester... (1) comment
The mass shooting attack at Virginia Tech on Monday is the latest reminder that college campuses might not be the safe educational cocoon they are presented as being, a expert on terrorism and university officials said. While the reality that at least 32 people were slain on a college campus starts to set in on institutions nationwide, college administrators have begun to examine the overall safety of the university... (1) comment
It seems Latin Americans are putting their money to work; it's just taking a little trip first. The Inter-American Development Bank, a bank set up primarily to monitor and aid Latin American economies, reports that Latin American immigrants sent $62 billion from the United States to their native countries last year... (0) comments