The Rambler Vol.99 No.8

Page 1

WEDNESDAY Sept. 2, 2015 Vol. 99 • No. 8

www.therambler.org

Tennis returns to Wesleyan

NEWS

New policy affects international students A change in Wesleyan’s payment policy frightens some international students.

OPINION

Should guns be allowed on campus? The editorial staff decides whether or not Wesleyan should opt out of the SB11 bill.

CAMPUS 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010

18901900191019201930194019501960197019801990200020102015

125

1961: The last May Fete was held. 1964: Golf team won its first NAIA National Championship.

years of inspiring students

1968: Quadrangle Honor Society was founded.

1972: Sons of Sakkara became a colony of Sigma Phi Epsilon, becoming the first social club to go greek. 1973: Autiss Social Club becomes the Delta Epsilon colony of Gamma Phi Beta. Pictured are student representatives from greek life in 1974.

Oct. 1988: The Eunice and James L. West Library is dedicated. Jan. 1989: Texas Wesleyan College became Texas Wesleyan University. Pictured are students in a spirit organization, Ramrods, in a parade with the live mascot, Willie.

1990: The Quadrangle Honor Society became a chapter of Mortar Board. 1992: Former President Jimmy Carter delivered the keynote address as part of the Inauguration of Wesleyan president Jake B. Schrum.

2001: Dr. Harold G. Jeffcoat was inaugurated as president of Wesleyan.

Nov. 2010: The Jack and Jo Willa Morton Fitness Center was dedicated.

2006: The men’s basketball team won their NAIA Division I National Championship.

2012: Frederick G. Slabach was inaugurated.

Freshman Ashton Willis practices for this week’s tournament in Kansas. The team’s schedule continues through early October.

Michael Acosta

Pictured is the centennial convocation in Sept. 1990.

Wesleyan Singers in the 1950s.

Nov. 1890: The Northwest Texas Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South appoints a special committee to consider an institution of learning in Fort Worth. Dec. 1890: The committee on Fort Worth College “voted unanimously to accept” the proposition. Sept. 14, 1891: Polytechnic College opened for its first term. Early 1900s: Texas Methodists began discussing the idea of creating a new Methodist educational institution that would be in the same league as Vanderbilt University.

rmacosta@txwes.edu

Pictured is the crowning of the first May Fete Queen May 1915. Feb. 1910: Attempts to merge Polytechnic College and the old Fort Worth University failed.

Oct. 28, 1934: The Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees authorized to admit men as day students for the first time since 1914.

Feb. 1911: The commission opened up Southern Methodist University in Dallas. Fall 1914: Polytechnic College became Texas Woman’s College. Jan. 1, 1917: The first print edition of The Handout, the student newspaper of Texas Women’s College, was published.

Pictured is the Texas Woman’s College orchestra around the early 1920s. 1924: Texas Mu Chapter of Alpha Chi was established.

March 20, 1935: The Board of Trustees voted unanimously to change the name of Texas Woman’s College to Texas Wesleyan College. 1935: The Handout is renamed The Rambler.

1940: The Apollo Club, a music department club, was established. 1943: Entre Amis, a sorority, was founded. 1947: The Apollo Club becomes a chapter of the national music fraternity Phi Mu Alpha.

2015

Pictured are students from the 1950s lounging in the sub. 1955: The first spring musical production (a play), Finian’s Rainbow, was staged.

Texas Wesleyan is in the middle of the 2020 Vision, a plan to revitalize the campus through improving academic distinction, campus enhancements, student experience, financial vitality, and marketing and branding.

1958: Phil Beta Lambda (National organization for business majors)

1890 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950

The Rosedale Renaissance, a project that has improved Rosedale street and surrounding buildings by the campus, is being dedicated on Oct. 22, 2015. Photo by Jessica Liptak

Information by Louis Sherwood and txwes.edu Pictures provided by Louis Sherwood Timeline created by Valerie Spears

Celebrating 125 years of inspiring students A timeline of Texas Wesleyan’s campus changes and student life through out the years.

A&E

For the first time since 2002, Texas Wesleyan will have a women’s tennis team. Athletic director Steve Trachier said the women’s tennis team has been revived to create more opportunities for women to play sports. “We’ve been working hard here to bring proportionality to try to cre-

ate more opportunities for women in sports here,” Trachier said. “We started doing some research and it looked like tennis would be a good sport to start up for women.” Trachier also said that there are “more opportunities for competition in the area and in the NAIA,” and that bringing tennis back seems like a good move for Wesleyan. Head coach Angel Martinez, who brings 31 years of coaching experi-

ence at the high school level to Wesleyan, said he is extremely excited for the opportunity to start up the tennis program again. “It was kind of the perfect storm for me, I was eligible for retirement, and I had won a state championship at the high school level so there was nothing left for me to do,” said Martinez, who has coached at Grapevine and Cedar Hill. “The next challenge was this, this was absolutely perfect

for me because I didn’t want to coach at a Division I or Division II school.” Martinez, who had worked with Trachier before, also said if it hadn’t been for him, he wouldn’t have come. Several players share the same excitement as Martinez to get the program started again. “It was an opportunity for me to go back to school and get my degree,

Brianna Kessler

Veilleux wrote. “We, of course, hope that any impact is minimal, and we therefore informed students of the new policy early enough to provide for a reasonable time frame to prepare,” Veilleux wrote. Students that are deregistered this semester still have the opportunity to register for the spring semester, Veilleux wrote. Many American universities require international students to pay their debt in full upon the start of the semester. Wesleyan has traditionally been lenient in the past, said Joe Brown, dean of freshman success. Deregistered students will not be allowed to re-register for the fall, Brown said. “This also means that they would not be a student and no longer be on an F-1 student visa and either have

Incubus and Deftones concert review The bands put on an excellent performance and leave the audience cheering for more.

SPORTS

The men’s and women’s head soccer coaches answer a series of questions about the upcoming season.

ONLINE

Online story pick therambler.org/2015/08/24/9tips-for-freshmen/

 TENNIS. page 3

Internationals face new policy bnkessler@txwes.edu

Q&A with the head soccer coaches

Photo by Jessica Liptak

Photo illustration by Brianna Kessler Students wait to talk to the cashier in the Oneal-Sells Administration Building.

This semester the International Programs Office has adopted a new policy of “deregistration” for nonpayment of tuition and fees due to the high number of students who neither paid nor set up payment plans in the past, according to John Veilleux, vice president of marketing & communications. Students who are not on a payment plan or paid in full by Thursday will be deregistered, Veilleux wrote in an email. “We have had a significant number of students not paying tuition on time,” said Texas Wesleyan President Fred Slabach. “We have had to be more rigorous in our policy.” All international students were notified of the new deregistration policy through school and private email accounts four times this summer, on July 13, August 4, 13, and 19,

 POLICY. page 3

Residence halls approach capacity Gracie Weger gjweger@txwes.edu

Marianne Downing has just arrived to Texas from Northern Ireland, and she has already taken to residence hall life. “Out of the top three schools I had to choose from, I chose Wesleyan because of its hospitality,” said Downing, a business major. Downing is one of 460 Wesleyan students living in residence halls, up from 436 last semester, said Jon Bartlett, assistant dean of students of

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residence halls. This represents a five percent increase. It also means that Wesleyan is only

“One of our mottos is that we need to tell our stories and make sure it’s a good story to tell.” -Dennis Hall

Wesleyan’s residence halls are between 90 and 94 percent full, Bartlett said. “We are already ahead of schedule, which may lead to a revision (of the 2020 goal),” Hall said, “but there are no immediate plans to build.” Bartlett said the growth is partly because of the reclaimed beds from faulty offices being relocated to other buildings on campus. “Forty-seven beds were reclaimed from faculty office spaces,” Bartlett

40 students shy of one of the goals

 RESIDENCE HALLS. page 3

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for President Fred Slabach’s 2020 Vision, which is to have 500 students living on campus, said Dean of Stu-

dents Dennis Hall.

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