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The Rambler

The students’ voice since 1917

Fort Worth, Texas

October 3, 2007

NEWS BRIEFS Hear from hall-of-famer Bob Simpson, chief executive officer of XTO Energy, will speak at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 16 in Martin Hall. Simpson is named executive of the year for the Texas Wesleyan Business Hall of Fame.

Vol. 99, No. 5

Wesleyan gets down and dirty

News Briefs

Sigma Week TWU’s Phi Beta Sigma fraternity is hosting a slew of campus events including Monday Night Football from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Wesleyan Village clubhouse Oct. 8, barbecue cookout on the mall during free period Oct. 9, game night in Stella Russell Hall from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Oct. 10, interest meeting (mandatory for sigma wannabees) Oct. 11, party at Crystal’s Night Club in Arlington Oct. 12, Playstation 3 tournament in Wesleyan Village Club House at 1 p.m. Oct. 13 and church with the Sigmas Oct. 14. Contact president Kenneth Jackson at kennethjackson1914@yahoo.com. Gay-Straight Alliance In honor of National Coming Out Day, the gaystraight alliance will be holding various events during free period in the library Oct. 11 promoting tolerance, understanding and appreciation of the diversity in our culture. Regular Gay Straight Alliance meetings are every Friday at 12:15 in room B17 in the Eunice L. West Library basement. All students, faculty and staff that support human rights are encouraged and invited to attend. Hey Mr. DJ Come join Texas Wesleyan and 89.7 Power FM for The Road Less Traveled Concert Series at 7:14 p.m. Oct. 14 in Martin Hall. Tickets are $5 in advance ($7 for general seating, $15 for VIP seats) and can be purchased through the Texas Wesleyan bookstore or the chaplain’s office in PUMC. Featured acts include Slingshot 57, One Minute Halo and Eimi Hall. Willson Lecture Series Open your mind and take in a thought-provoking lecture by Dr. Stacey FloydThomas, associate professor of ethics and director of black church studies at Brite Divinity School. She will give her lecture “What’s Going On: The Permanence of Racism, the Erasure of Education, and the Relevance of Religion” at 7 p.m. Oct. 16 in Martin Hall. You really need a facial... A Coldwater Creek spa package is being raffled off Oct. 23 between games 2 and 3 of the volleyball match. The package is valued at more than $200. Tickets are $20, available from any volleyball player or coach.

Photo by Kevin Keathley

Kappa Alpha hosted the third annual mud volleyball tournament Sept. 29. It was open to the general public and other KA chapters from the area. “It was a great event and everyone had fun; $354 was raised for muscular dystrophy research,” said Michael Chaney, president of Kappa Alpha.

FWPD takes over local landmark SHAWN R. POLING EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

The neighborhood surrounding Texas Wesleyan University may have its challenges, but the Fort Worth Police Department is doing its part to bring life to Lancaster. Fort Worth now owns the historic red-brick Stripling & Cox building at 3616 E. Lancaster Avenue. The building will be the new home for the police department’s crime lab and evidence room operations. Stripling & Cox closed the Lancaster location in 2005 and is now in the process of closing its last location on Camp Bowie. “We were very disappointed to see it close a few years ago,” said Kathleen Hicks, Fort Worth council member. The city of Fort Worth has been very concerned with revitalizing the Lancaster area, which used to be a bustling business sector. “This is a very significant, very positive step. Millions will be spent to renovate a dilapidated building. Not only police, but scientists and professionals will be right Photos by Zainah Usman there in the neighborhood. This will also Wesleyan will soon have a new neighbor in the Fort Worth attract more business to the area,” said Police Department, which will relocate its crime lab and Hicks. evidence room operations to the former Stripling & Cox “Police presence has been a big concern, building on East Lancaster. and [the move] will bring a community focus and presence not there before.” The once classy department store has been boarded up for years. Foliage on the property is overgrown and the “Cox’s Center” parking lot sign is more than falling apart, with wires from the dilapidated electrical system spilling out from its support beams. According to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the building was purchased in 2005 by the Cox Lancaster Venture, who experienced great difficulty finding a tenant to lease the space. “One of the biggest problems we face on Lancaster Avenue is the perception of crime and vagrancy. The police presence will help with that,” Dan Borin, president of the East Fort Worth Business Association, told the Star-Telegram. The move from Weatherford Street in downtown Fort Worth will reportedly allow the police department to triple the space currently used for the crime lab and evidence room. An architect should be hired by the end of the year, a design should be completed by mid-2008 and the police department should be moved in by mid-2009, according to city officials.

State says high school grads not ready for college COLLEEN BURNIE ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR Think drafting a research paper is difficult? Try drafting a plan to make sure that Texas high school students are prepared to enter college. This year Texas Governor Rick Perry appointed the Commission for a College Ready Texas for just this task. They are currently gathering information on the way to make the journey from high school to college an easier one by preparing students. The Texas commission is one of the many in the nation trying to bridge the gap in college and high school expectations. According to the ACT Inc. president, only 34 percent of students have the skills to be successful in college. These numbers are worrying parents and educators across the nation. According to the Colorado Springs Gazette, 30 percent of its college freshmen need remedial courses, and the numbers jump to 56 percent in two year colleges and are up to 60 percent in California. According to The Commission for a College Ready Texas, about 50 percent of Texas students are lacking some essential skill needed for college classes. Who is to blame for these serious holes in American high school students’ education? Many people say it’s the high schools and parents who allow students to skate through their senior year. “Teachers are under pressure to pass students, parents are breathing down their necks, grades get inflated, and somewhere along the way students decide that they don’t have to do the work,” said Melody Bell Fowler, director of Developmental and New Student Programs at Wesleyan. “Letting students fly through their last year without any math, science or English classes is ridiculous.” Authorities say that high school students need to pay closer attention to the classes that

See Unprepared, page 2


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Rambler 10.3.07 by The Rambler - Issuu