The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 93, No. 9, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 31, 2010 Page: 3 of 6
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The Rambier 1 www.therambler.org
Campus
March 31, 2010
Needed Snack
Sack Items:
• Pop-top canned fruit
•Pop-top canned
Vienna sausages
•Individual cereal
boxes
•Individual microwave
mac-and-cheese
•Pudding cups
• 100 percent fruit
snacks or Fruit Roll-Ups
• Breakfast or granola
bars
• Individual packs of
cheese or peanut but-
ter crackers
SNACKS continued from page 1 GLICK HOUSE continued from page 1
shelves and deliver items. The
group also simply need sdo-
nations. A list of the needed
items is available through
SAS or at career services.
"The church is really spe-
cific about the items they re-
ceive," Phillips said. "For ex-
ample, the fruit cups have to
be the hard cans, not the soft
plastic, because those will
smoosh in the backpack and
explode everywhere."
Also, program leaders are
very conscientious about
providing nutritious snacks.
Cash donations are also ac-
cepted.
Snack Sacks is growing,
but there are still jobs to
do. While Arborlawn is still
serving schools, its role has
grown to one of training oth-
ers.
"That's what we're really
focusing on now is training
and equipping other groups
to serve the schools in their
neighborhood," Evers said.
The church would also
like to serve more children.
Evers said they will some-
times send extra sacks home
for the other children in the
house, but some would like
to see that occur more often.
"We'd love to get to a point
where, with the school that
we've adopted, we can pro-
vide snacks for the entire
school, including siblings at
home," Phillips said.
Evers said once every Fort
Worth elementary school
is being served, they might
branch out to upper grades.
But so far, so good.
"We have never had a time
where we've been short,"
Evers said. "People really
and truly embrace this mis-
sion, and they love to fund
it and help it and know that
the food is going to kids in
need. There's just been such
an incredible response. We
are very blessed that so many
people are so interested in it,
and they keep us running,
and they allow us to even
consider expanding. It's a
blessing in its simplicity and
in its effectiveness."
For information on do-
nating to Snack Sacks, see
Robyn Fisk in career services
or contact Kelley Phillips at
vteal@socialaddictssociety.
org.
are supervised by the clinical director, J.
Scot Methvin and other graduate faculty.
Methvin said the program goals are to
train graduate counseling students with
actual counseling experiences and pro-
vide affordable services to the commu-
nity.
Sessions at Click House last one hour,
and the number of sessions is determined
by the individual needs of the student,
said Dr. Michael Ellison, licensed profes-
sional counselor and supervisor at Click
House. Glick House counseling sessions
can be set up around the clients schedule
and are available on Saturdays.
Methvin said personal counseling at
Glick House is free to all Texas Wesleyan
students, faculty and staff and their fam-
ily members.
"Glick House is a community resource
and a student resource," Ellison said.
Prices for services to the community
are based on a sliding price scale. The
Glick House does not currently accept
REGISTER continued from page 1
insurance. Community referrals
are received from schools, so-
cial service agencies, physicians,
clergy, law enforcement agen-
cies, local businesses and other
sources.
Glick House counselors are
seeing 26 students this semester,
Methvin said.
"We are very proud of Glick
House and how our services
have progressed through the
community," Methvin said.
"Our graduate counseling staff
and faculty are a wonder to work
with. Our graduate students are
tops. Each year we look toward
a better one."
The Glick House is located
at 3001 Ave. D across from the
Nenetta Burton Carter Build-
ing. For information, visit www.
txwesleyan.edu/counselingser-
vices or call 817-531-4859.
Rebecca Moore I Rambler Staff
Dora Venezuela works in the Glick House.
distribute the funds," she said.
"Even if you wait, you still get
it, but it's more of an inconve-
nience."
While mass e-mails sent
through RamMail are cred-
ited with an increase in early
registration, many students
continue to register using the
card-and-pen method.
"Last spring was the first
time we saw students coming
in [to be advised] sooner," Van
Toorn said. "One of our big-
gest problems is getting stu-
dents to register online. Some
students just like coming in."
Priority registration for se-
niors is April 5-6, juniors is
April 7-8 and sophomores
is April 9-12. The freshman
scoop, an advising and reg-
istering event, which serves
Marble Slab ice cream free of
charge, was March 30 in the
Academic Success Center.
Freshman advising will con-
tinue April 5-15. All fresh-
man registration cards will be
turned in April 16.
All non-freshmen students
can register online once their
advisers have taken the hold
off their account. For registra-
tion and advising questions,
contact 817-531-4414.
APARTMENTS continued from page 1
In Brief...
Talent Show
Final auditions for
"Wesleyan's Got Talent"
are Wednesday at 7
p.m. March 31 in Martin
Hall. The show debuts
April 16 at 7 p.m. in
Martin Hail. For more in-
formation contact Mindy
Pospichal at mindy08@
sbcglobal.net.
Elections
All SGA positions, as
well as Mr. and Mrs.
Wesleyan, are open for
election. Petitions are due
by April 16. Fifty sig-
natures are required for
executive positions and
Mr. and Mrs. Wesleyan.
Twenty-five signatures are
required for a representa-
tive position.
lights and road-calming ele-
ments, Bleibdrey said.
The North Texas Council
of Governments has already
approved three-quarters of
the funding in federal money
for the street renovation plan.
Additionally, Tarrant County
Commissioner Roy Brooks
committed to raising the final
$375,000 needed to complete
the project, Bleibdrey said.
"The catch is—it can only
be done if there is new verti-
cal construction on the street
somewhere," he said.
The apartment project qual-
ifies as new vertical construc-
tion and would allow for the
Rosedale Street renovation to
begin.
Texas Wesleyan currently
owns the property and is con-
cerned with its long-term fate.
"The significant thing that
[Wesleyan's board of trustees]
needs to determine at this
point is how and if they want
that property used," Bleibdrey
said. "The fact that it's tied
with Rosedale Street improve-
ments makes it a somewhat
easier decision."
If the plan goes through,
the apartments would re-
semble two-story townhouses
and brownstones, said Phillip
Poole, managing partner for
TownSite.
"They will be attractive to
the doctorate of nurse anes-
thesia students and other folks
who are a little older," he said.
"We really want to reach out
to the students and ask them
what they would like to see in
a housing project."
Modeled after the The Hill-
side Apartments immedi-
ately east of downtown Fort
Worth, the apartments would
have carports in the rear, and
a number of them would "be
exceedingly affordable," Poole
said.
For some students, the ad-
vantages of living in an apart-
ment over a dorm are numer-
ous.
Joy Millard, junior Eng-
lish and theater major, said
apartment living offers more
freedom for students who are
older than 21 and is more in-
expensive.
"I crunched the numbers,"
she said. "If you can get a
roommate, it's honestly cheap-
er to live off campus than on."
Millard said meal plans can
raise students' living expenses
to more than $3,000 for a se-
mester, although the little re-
wards can matter more.
"If you have an instrument,
you can play it at 3 in the
morning in an apartment,"
she said. "1 have intentions of
living in apartments over the
summer because [Wesleyan]
Village doesn't have a stove or
an oven, and I like to cook."
Bleibdrey said the school
will make an official decision
by the end of April.
8:45-9:20
Ann Waggoner
Annex Lawn
9:25-10:30
Martin Hall
10:50-11:10
AMB102
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Baker BufWing
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Carter Conference
Orientation Room
11:20-11:40
AMB 102/
11:30 a.m. -12:05 p.m.
Poster Session Presentation
Flf senters will be available to answer questions
and discuss their projects
Posters will remain In the library
from 4/12/10 to 4/16/10
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STC114
Baker Building
Carter Conference
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11:50-12:10
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Baker Building
Carter Conference
Orientation Room
2:00-2:20
AMB 102
STC114
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President's Reception
Refreshments will be served
Welcome and Keynote Address Martin Hall
Deep Secrets: A Look at How Trauma
Memory is Affected by Lying and Repression
Creating a Hero: Jessica Lynch and the
Iraq War, 2003
From Secretary to Mancretary:
Transgender Issues and the Workplace
Combat Trauma Fluid Resuscitation
Creating a Viral Video for YauTube
Spies and Little White Lies: George
Washington and the Revolution
The Deification of George Washington
George Washington and his Soldiers
Science is the Next Best Thing to Recess
From Secretary to Mancretary:
Transgender Issues and the Workplace
Combat Trauma Fluid Resuscitation
How Women and Sex are Exploited by Pop
Culture: Why You Should Care
Spies and Little White Lies: George
Washington and the Revolution
George Washington and his Soldiers.
The Deification of George Washington
Building Bridges: Bilingual and Gifted
Education
Cosmetic or Necessary: Sexual Reassign-
ment Surgery and Insurance
Students' Knowledge fo I.O.U.S.A,
an Inquiry
How Women and Sex are Exploited by Pop
Culture: Why You Should Care
Entry-Level Employees and Mental Health
Substituted Cyclopropanes as Therapeutic
Agents
May it Please the Court
Sex, Gender, and Greed: Social Perspectives
in Victorian Literature
Creating a Detective: Two Hawks, the Caddo
The Effects of Technology in Pre-
Kindergarten and Kindergarten Classes
2:30-2:50
STC114
Baker Building
Carter Conference
Orientation Room
3:00-3:20
AMB 102
Baker Building
Orientation Room
3:30-3:50
AMB 102
Baker Building
Orientation Room
4:00-4:20
AMB 102
STC114
Baker Building
4:30 - 5:10
STC114
Baker Building
AMB102
5:00 - 5:20
AMB102
AMB126
AMB105A
5:30-6:00
AMB125
6:10-6:50
AMB102
AMB105A
*
AMB126
AMB213
Creating Games through Computer Graphics
May it Please the Court
Sex, Gender, and Greed: Social Perspectives
in Victorian Literature
The Indian Woman very Bad ...: Sacagawea's
Illness
Spiritual Sex and the Fourth Force
Connection
Guilty Until Proven Innocent: Factors in
Wrongful Conviction
Nuts, Sluts and Perverts, Part II [ends at 3:50]
Sexuality and Social Change: A Cross-
Generational and Cross-Cultural Study
Guilty Until Proven Innocent: Factors in
Wrongful Conviction
Nuts, Sluts and Perverts, Part II
Sexuality and Social Change: A Cross-
Generational and Cross-Cultural Study
Bill and the Yoga Girl: The Role of Movement
in Academic Success
Guilty Until Proven Innocent: Factors in
Wrongful Conviction
Bill and the Yoga Girl: The Role of Movement
in Academic Success
Mediation - A Passion for Peacemaking
Math Universe is Not Universal
Educator as Entertainer: The Effectiveness of
Teaching Styles,
Cell Phones in School: Everything You
Always Wanted to Know,
Public Education: Differences in Croatia and
the U S, Carolyn Ikens
University College Day Graduate Reception
Bringing Passion into the Classroom: First
Year Students
What is the Philosophy behind Professional
Development in Schools Today?
Eagle Time: Student Self-Accountability
Controversy in the Classroom: A Closer Look
at Emerging Issues
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Resendez, Jonathan. The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 93, No. 9, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 31, 2010, newspaper, March 31, 2010; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth253462/m1/3/: accessed May 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.