Responsible citizenship: Active citizenship
The path you pave towards positive change will be impacted by your past, your passions, and your skill-set.
Features | Topics: Responsible Citizenship
Painter of distinction: Jim Woodson ’65
After retiring from 39 years in the TCU School of Art, Jim Woodson ’65 is tabbed by the Texas Legislature as one of the state’s official visual artists.
Honey of an idea . . . Chris Leiss ’82 and Ted Brack ’84
Chris Leiss ’82 and former roommate Ted Brack ’84 had an idea for purple honey. Today, it’s Horned Frog Honey.
Audience of many . . . musician Keegan McInroe ’05
Musician Keegan McInroe ’05 is playing his way through Europe on a self-booked tour.
Worthy investment . . . TCU MBA students help startup companies
MBA students help investor group Cowtown Angels perform due diligence on start-up companies.
Campus News: Alma Matters | Topics: Neeley School of Business
Where Are They Now … swimmer Walter Soza ’96
Former Horned Frog swimmer and Olympian Walter Soza ’96 (second from left) is still in the water these days, raising money to fight cancer through Swim Across America. Soza organizes and leads Team TCU in his spare time along with fellow Frog swimmer Layton Shaffner ’97 (far right). This summer, Team TCU raised nearly
Alumni, Sports: Riff Ram | Topics: Alumni,Athletics
History of TCU Pre-Health Professions
1911: TCU takes over operations of the Fort Worth School of Medicine in downtown. 1912: The American Medical Association issues new requirements forcing medical schools to have hefty endowments. By 1917, the university is warned it is not in compliance and the board of trustees closes TCU’s medical school. 1913: Story in the Horned Frog notes
Features | Topics: College of Science & Engineering
First Person … Jason Verrett
First-team All-America cornerback Jason Verrett is a standout for the Horned Frogs again this season. Lessons from a nightmare sophomore debut are in the past but still drive him.
Sports: Riff Ram | Topics: Athletics
When TCU first loved football
A dangerous, new game imported from back East eventually helped a tiny university grow. But it almost never caught on.
Two alums named top profs
Diane Hawley ’81 of nursing and Harry Parker ’80 of theatre earn kudos for mentoring, teaching.
Campus News: Alma Matters | Topics: Campus News