More coffee, Maxine
Dennis Franchione could use a hand, inheriting a program that went bust under Pat Sullivan. Sportswriter Dan Jenkins ’53 — armed with a cup of joe and a mindful of memories — recalls how great the Frogs used to be. And could be again.
Features |
Atomic rage
The recent Indian and Pakistani Nuclear tests were sober reminders that amid the euphoria surrounding the end of the Cold War, we still live in the shadow of awesome weapons of mass destruction. We have the capacity to destroy the entire human civilization. Indeed, after the Indian and Pakistani respective nuclear tests in May, the scientific community moved the doomsday clock to 11:51, twelve being the ground zero hour. If there is a silver lining in recent nuclear tests by India and Pakistan, it is bringing the issue of nuclear proliferation to the center stage of public debate and discourse once again.
Features |
Cultivating an identity
Tucked among the columbines and brick walks of the popular English garden paintings, one can find the British heart, says art history Assistant Prof. Anne Helmreich — that is, if one knows the history.
Institutional gift
Addison and Randolph Clark. Mary Couts Burnett. Pete Wright. TCU immortals, all. And now, Fort Worth businessman F. Howard Walsh ’33.
Personal Essay | Topics: Neeley School of Business
Rock around the clock
KTCU — thanks in part to a handful of student DJs — is no longer just another sleepy campus radio station.
On their toes
For a group of Taiwanese dance instructors on campus for a year, a leg-up in the Far East dance world calls for a master’s — and a lot of fancy footwork — on this side of the globe.
Composing a symphony
A sharp conductor, John Giordano ’60 (MM ’63) over the past quarter-century has transformed a minor hometown orchestra into a major symphony with an international reputation.
Alumni |
Two-minute warning
The SWC died. The WAC split. Now, some say a leaner, meaner Division I-A could form as early as 2000 — possibly leaving the Purple on the sidelines. Uh, TCU begs to differ.
Features |
The law waaaaay east of the Pecos
Philip Kimbrough ’77 grew up on a dairy farm in Mansfield and now heads up an international law firm in Paris.
Alumni |
Learning, learning, learning
TCU senior discovers a passion for learning for the sake of finding things out on her own.
Alumni |