The Collegian (Hurst, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 5, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 5, 2005 Page: 4 of 12
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News
The Collegian
page 4 • October 5, 2005
Cancer awareness
Events
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Fashion on satellite
COLLEGE SURVIVAL TIP
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ASKING THE
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Face to Face Ministries
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wamu.com
Deposits are FDIC Insured
I Washington Mutual
Oct 10 NE Campus counseling will present Subtract Fear—Multiply Con-
fidence in NTAB 2203C, 12:30-1:50 p.m. The session will provide tech-
niques for learning math and teach ways to overcome math anxiety.
Oct 10 WIN-R will sponsor an artist reception for its ninth annual art show.
Women in Culture features artwork from WIN-R students. The reception is
6-7:15 p.m. in the Carillon Gallery in the Joe B. Rushing Center for the Per-
forming Arts. The work is on display through Oct. 27.
Oct 11 Sandra Johnson, counselor, will present a Student Success Seminar,
Stress: Coping With The Pressures of School, Work and Family, on South
Campus in the SSTU Texas Room 12:30-1:30 p.m.
Today Joyce Fisher, SE Campus counselor, presents Goal Setting and Time
Management in the North Ballroom of SE Campus from noon to 12:45 p.m.
Today NE Campus will have a Learning Lunch presenting Breast Health
and Mammogram Information in the Student Center Galley from noon to 1
p.m. Call 817-515-6688 to sign up for the session and free lunch.
Oct 6 Hank Sheible will present Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder on NE
Campus in the NSTU Center Comer 1-4 p.m. He will address the impact of
Hurricane Katrina, as well as how stress develops disease.
Oct 11 Altheria Gaston, English instructor, will present What Every First
Generation College Student Should Know about College, a Student Success
Seminar, on South Campus in SACD 1406 from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Today Evelyn Wilson, associate professor of English, will sponsor Bob Ray
Sanders, local columnist and radio/television personality, on South Campus
in the Rotunda (SRTA 1102) from 11 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. Sanders will dis-
cuss reasons he chose to be a writer and techniques of good writing.
Oct 8 Tina Jenkins, a licensed professional counselor, will present Can You
Walk a Mile in Empathy’s Shoes? at Billy Miner’s Group Room in Sun-
dance Square 12:30-2 p.m. Attire is dressy casual. Attendance is free.
Pamela Prince, president of SE Campus Melodic Alliance Music Club, is
accepting tax-deductible donations for music students to sing at Carnegie
Hall. For information, call Prince at 972-291-8737 or 214-437-3988.
Today NE Campus presents Career Decision-Making, a Student Success
workshop, in College Hall (NCAB 1111) from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m.
FREE CHECKING WITH NO MONTHLY FEE
NO MATTER WHAT YOUR BALANCE
THEY WANT TO GIVE.
YOU JUST HAVE TO HELP THEM REALIZE IT.
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Oct 12 Dr. Curtis Hill, SE campus counseling director, will present Help! I
Need a Tutor: How to Utilize Tutoring Services More Effectively, which will
provide tips for students to maximize the benefits of tutors. The presentation
will be in the North Ballroom on SE Campus from noon to 12:45 p.m.
Oct 13 The NE Campus English department will hold a reception to honor
students whose works appear in the 2005 edition of Under the Clock Tower,
the department’s literary journal, 7 p.m. in College Hall (NCAB 1111). Stu-
dents will read selections and art work will be on display. Copies are $5.
Oct 12 NE Campus health services will sponsor the Harris Methodist
Mammogram Bus, for free mammograms. For scheduling appointments,
call 1-888-4-HARRIS. Screening will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Oct 18 Robert Criner presents Mr. Enthusiasm, which will provide a moti-
vational message on developing leadership skills and staying motivated, in
the SE Campus North Ballroom 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Oct 11 Phi Theta Kappa will sponsor a satellite seminar, Fashion Culture:
The Changing Role of Dress in Society, 6:30-7:30 p.m. on all four campus-
es. Screenings will be in the Center Comer (NSTU 1615A) on NE Campus,
in the WACB Optimum Room on NW Campus, in the Forum Room
(SSTU-2207) on South Campus and in the North Ballroom on SE Campus.
Oct 11-12 Sandra Walker and Vicki McCleery of NE career and employ-
ment services will offer free resume critiques 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. in
NSTU 1625A. Critiques are by appointment only. Call 817-515-6692.
Oct 12 Phi Theta Kappa on NE Campus will sponsor a second showing of
the satellite seminar Fashion Culture: The Changing Role of Dress in Soci-
ety, 12:30-1:30 p.m. in the NSTU Center Comer.
Oct. 12 NE Campus will present Time Management in College Hall
(NCAB 1111) from 12:30 p.m. to 1:20 p.m. The seminar will provide strate-
gies for effective time management.
Oct 13 Monica Bettie, South Campus career center coordinator, will pre-
sent How To Choose Your Career Occupation on South Campus in the
SSTU Forum Room from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Oct 13 Dr. Don Redford, professor at Pennsylvania State University, pre-
sents One god or many? The true nature and consequences of monotheism
on NE Campus in the NSTU Center Comer from 11 a.m. to 12:20 p.m.
Mid-Semester
TCC mid-semester is Oct. 15-22
when many teachers hold exams.
Join us for Praise/Worship
Music presented by
The Face to Face Band
Food, Fun and Fellowship
under the big top tent
You could win FREE
T-shirts, water bottles
and frisbees!
bavis Memorial
5301 bavis Blvd.
North Richland Hills
(817) 281-0411
www. f acetof acenr h. com
Outdoor Concert
October 21, 7-10 p.m.
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Oct.12 Alex Del Carmen, associate professor of criminal justice at the Uni-
versity of Texas at Arlington, will present Latinos in the Community on
South Campus in the SSTU Forum Room. His area of expertise lies in racial
profiling and terrorism. The seminar is from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Marion Nesvadba, associate professor of music, is selling students for a
good cause: raising money to send the SE choir to sing at Carnegie Hall in
March. Ensembles are available to rent for entertainment at parties or other
events. Contact Nesvadba at 817-515-3718 for rental information.
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planned for TCC
To bring attention to the problem of breast cancer, October has been
named National Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
TCC will participate in the awareness beginning with Pat Marling,
NE campus nurse, who will offer a learning lunch Wednesday, Oct. 5,
noon-1 p.m. in the Student Center Galley.
“I want to encourage students to attend. Many young women aren’t
aware they could be at risk,” she said.
The NE health center will have a mammogram bus on campus
Wednesday, Oct. 12, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. The bus accepts most insurance and
offers free mammograms to those who qualify, she said.
“When gas is close to $3 a gallon, this is great because the bus
comes to you. The bus has all the latest diagnostic equipment,” Marling
said.
To make an appointment for a mammogram, call 1-888-4-HARRIS;
limited appointments are available. The bus will be in NE parking lot D.
The American Cancer Society recommends yearly mammograms be-
ginning at 40 and clinical breast exams every three years for those
women in their 20s and 30s and every year for women 40 and older.
For more information, call Marling at 817-515-6688.
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Phi Theta Kappa will host a fashion satellite seminar Tuesday, Oct. 11,
6:30-7:30 p.m. on all TCC campuses.
Dr. Valerie Steele, a director and chief curator of the museum at the Fash-
ion Institute of Technology in New York City, will present Fashion Culture:
The Changing Role of Dress in Society.
Students will learn about the changing role of fashion in culture from
1945 to present. Steele will explain what one can learn by examining style?.
In addition, Steele will discuss whether American fashion reflects or in-
fluences fashion trends around the globe. Students also will learn what im-
ages they give off by wearing a certain brand.
Steele has appeared on Good Morning America, The Oprah Winfrey ■
Show and The Today Show. She is the author of Women of Fashion: Twentieth'1' ®
Century Style; Fifty Years of Fashion and many more. She was described in
The Washington Post as one of “fashion’s brainiest women.”
Students can view the seminar in the NSTU Center Comer on NE Cam-
pus, the WACB Optimum Room on NW Campus, the Forum Room (SSTU
2207) on South Campus and the North Ballroom on SE Campus.
Talk to focus on stress
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Always a delicate conversation, it’s usually best to hit them up before
grades come out. Requests are best preceded by observations like “It’s so cold in here
I can see my breath” and “Wow, I’m just wasting away from hunger.”
Next to good relations with the parental units, Free Checking from Washington Mutual
is your best bet. Swing by your local Washington Mutual Financial Center or
call 1-800-788-7000 to start living the high fife this semester.
And here’s another strategy for making a little extra scratch: Free Checking from
Washington Mutual. There’s no minimum balance required to avoid a monthly service charge and
its free to sign up for a Visa* Check Card. Plus there’s free online bill pay available at wamu.com.
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Physical, spiritual and environmental stress is the focus of Sandra
Johnson’s success seminar, Coping with the Pressures of School, Work,
and Family. «
The presentation is 12:30-1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 11 in the Texas ■
Room on South Campus. It will include slides as well as handouts.
Johnson said that experiencing stress is natural and the speech ad-
dresses commonplace issues that could benefit anyone.
“Stress is astronomical and steadily escalating on our campuses,”
she said.
Johnson has been a counselor at Tarrant County College for 20
years, and she conducts one seminar every semester.
She said she also is willing to do presentations by request.
4709 Colleyville Blvd. Suite 500
CoUeyville, TX 76034
817-581-7923
Inside Ambiance Accents ♦ www.articlesa-z.com
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The Collegian (Hurst, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 5, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 5, 2005, newspaper, October 5, 2005; Hurst, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315595/m1/4/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Tarrant County College NE, Heritage Room.