Showing posts with label Texas Christian University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas Christian University. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2007

Small Schools Hoping to Win Big in 2007

The Frat Boy News Daily Sports Page

College Football (compiled by SunHerald.com)

Those tricksters from Boise State struck a blow for all the teams relegated to second-class status by the Bowl Championship Series.

When the Broncos turned the Fiesta Bowl into a fairy tale with a hook-n-lateral, a Statue of Liberty and a postgame proposal, they pulled off one of the most wildly entertaining upsets in college football history and helped clear the way for the next upstart to break through the BCS glass ceiling.

In Honolulu and Hattiesburg, from Fort Worth, Texas, to Salt Lake City, Boise State's victory was celebrated as a landmark event in the battle for equality in big-time college football.

"It changed the way people think," said Hawaii coach June Jones, whose Warriors are a contender to be this season's BCS buster, if they can get past Boise State in the Western Athletic Conference.

Or is this the year TCU gets in after twice making a run at the BCS, only to fall short? Then again, Mountain West Conference rival Utah, the original BCS buster, could get in the way of the Horned Frogs.

Or maybe Conference USA finally gets a piece of the lucrative BCS pie, with a talented and experienced Southern Mississippi team emerging.

"I think it's certainly much more optimistic than maybe it was before (Boise State's win)," Southern Miss coach Jeff Bower said.

Though Boise State's 43-42 victory over Oklahoma created a buzz that hasn't subsided, this uprising in college football truly started in 2004 when Utah became the first team from a league without an automatic berth in the BCS to play in one of the big-dollar bowl games. And the Utes got in when it was even tougher to do so.

Friday, June 08, 2007

TCU Professor Charged for Threats; Said He Would Bring Gun to Campus

The Frat Boy News daily campus police report for Friday:

Texas Christian University
(compiled by Melody McDonald and Andrew Chavez of Star-Telegram.com)

The TCU psychology professor charged with making a terroristic threat sent harassing emails and made alarming statements -- including that he would bring a gun onto campus -- to various school officials, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.

"Is it possible a sexist could snap and bring an ouzi gun on the TCU campus?" professor Charles Frederick Bond Jr. wrote in an email to numerous TCU employees. "Might he target young women? Might others get in the way?"

Bond, 53, was jailed Friday after TCU police obtained a warrant for his arrest. He was subsequently charged with making a terroristic threat and remains in the Tarrant County Jail without bond pending a hearing on Tuesday.

According to the affidavit, on May 25, Provost Nowell Donovan advised Bond that he was not to make contact with anyone at TCU pending an investigation into his alarming behavior.

In the next two days, Bond sent electronic communications to a number of employees, calling Donovan a "sexist pig," the affidavit states. On May 27, Bond wrote in an email to Darron Turner, associate vice chancellor for student affairs, and Glory Robinson, associate dean of student affairs, that he "would bring a gun to the campus of Texas Christian University."

Bond went on to say that he would also "spit" in Dr. Mauricio Papini's face if he saw him and that it would be "worth spending a night in jail," according tot he affidavit. Papini is a psychology professor.

Several days later, TCU's assistant police chief, J.C. Williams, called Bond and requested that he meet with him and Provost Donovan to discuss his recent behavior and the threats he had made. After Bond refused, Williams told Bond he could not come back onto campus without permission and would face criminal charges if he did return to campus.

On June 1, the affidavit states, Bond sent emails to numerous TCU employees, including the one in which he referenced the Uzi, a submachine gun.

Later that day, Williams called Bond's residence and talked with his wife, who told him that she was not in fear but believed her husband needed professional help.

Williams then talked to Bond, who said the harassment would continue until something was done with Papini. Based on this information, TCU police obtained an arrest warrant and Bond was taken into custody without incident.

Turner, the associate vice chancellor, declined to comment, while messages to Papini and Robinson went unreturned. On Wednesday, Donovan declined to comment.

Bond -- a tenured psychology professor who is an expert in the field of lying and deception -- was scheduled to teach one upper-level class, "Contemporary Topics in Psychology: Psychology and Law," this summer. The status of that class is now in limbo, a university spokeswoman said Thursday.

"As of now the department is trying to determine if they will still offer the class," said Tracy Syler-Jones, a TCU spokeswoman. Bond is currently on administrative leave. He was evaluated by a psychologist Thursday.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Man Caught Masterbating at TCU

The Frat Boy News daily campus police report for Tuesday:

Texas Christian University
(compiled by The Daily Skiff)
TCU Police officers said they are searching for a man who exposed himself to a female student around 5 p.m. Sunday in front of Sherley Hall. The student said she observed the man walking between Colby and Sherley halls talking with female students.

Sgt. Kelly Ham said he did not know who those students were. Ham said the student reported that the suspect said a crude comment, exposed himself and began masturbating.

The suspect then walked away toward the Starpoint School. The student reported the incident around 11 p.m. Sunday night to TCU Police, Ham said.

Ham said he did not know why the student failed to report the incident immediately. The student described the suspect as a white male around 30 years old, clean shaven and wearing a grey hooded jacket or sweatshirt and jeans.

According to the police report, the student said she thought the suspect was homeless because of his disheveled appearance. As of Monday afternoon, there have been no similar cases reported, Ham said.

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