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INSTITUTIONAL   

 
Sept. 28, 2023 
Nurse.org 
Nurse anesthetists are advanced practice registered nurses who administer anesthesia and other medications. According to a recent list, Texas offers some of the best in the country. No. 2 on the list is TCU’s Harris College of Nursing & Health Sciences. The DNAP at TCU is a 36-month program that has three phases, including clinical rotations. TCU’s first-time pass rate was 96% for the 2022 graduating class, well above the national average.  

 
Sept. 27, 2023 
The Wall Street Journal 
A survey of over 60,000 students and recent graduates on several topics, including their satisfaction with the university’s party scene, found TCU at No. 2. “I think TCU has been a really happy and enjoyable place to be at over this past year, just because there has been so much to celebrate,” said junior Eleana Wright. Student morale was high last year following TCU’s 150th anniversary and the football team’s advancement to the national championship game in January. Kathy Cavins-Tull, vice chancellor for student affairs, emphasized students’ dedication to their academics, adding that athletics and social connections are an important part of campus life at the university. 

 
Sept. 25, 2023 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
North Texas business schools are rising in the ranks. Bloomberg Businessweek published new ratings this week for the best business schools in the country. At 42nd place, the TCU Neeley School of Business increased by 11 points from 53rd place last year. TCU’s graduate program also ranked second in the state for the entrepreneurship category. Hettie Richardson, interim dean, said the graduate program has an outsized return on investment through its focus on student resources and industry connections across North Texas and beyond. “Our students have access to real-world experience and an individualized, personal journey to accelerate and amplify their knowledge and skills,” Richardson said. “Neeley graduates are innovative thinkers, who are prepared for the future of business and ready to lead the way.” 

 
Sept. 25, 2023 
Fort Worth Magazine 
Over the past year, TCU has honored several of its leaders/alumni with a series of murals that adorned buildings in such cities as New York City, Los Angeles, Nashville and Chicago. The latest and last mural in Fort Worth was created by graduate and former ArtOrg President Natalie Neale ’23. This art piece encourages Horned Frogs and visitors to participate by posing in front of the physical mural or using a digital filter to “muralize” themselves, wherever they may live. “Inviting community participation will uncover stories that illustrate how we are leading on together for the greater good,” said Tracy Syler-Jones, vice chancellor for Marketing & Communication.   

 
Sept. 25, 2023 
Dallas Express 
TCU recently broke ground on its newest residential complex, which is slated to open in 2025. “Given our continued growth, it is time for us to add housing that further supports our connection culture and high student retention rates,” Kathy Cavins-Tull, vice chancellor for Student Affairs, said previously, per Newsbreak. “With each new building, we have the exciting opportunity to consider location, design, and common spaces that support student connectivity, health and wellness.”  

 
Sept. 22, 2023 
Fort Worth Magazine  
The book's contribution is significant for three key reasons, according to one of the authors, including chronicling how the Black presence at TCU has grown in significance and size. A History to Remember: TCU in Purple, White, and Black is by TCU professors Frederick W. Gooding Jr., Sylviane Ngandu-Kalenga Grensword and doctoral student Marcellis R. Perkins. “The book’s contribution is significant for three key reasons — it establishes how the Black presence at TCU has steadily grown in significance and size; it chronicles the Black experience at the university and provides an opportunity to measure the fulfillment of its Vision in Action strategic plan; and it charts TCU’s progression in diversity, which has local, regional and national implications due to its overall growth and position as one of the top 100 universities in the nation,” said Gooding. 

 
Sept. 22, 2023 
Dallas Innovates 
TCU unveiled a new mural in Fort Worth, capping off a nationwide public art project celebrating the school's 150th anniversary. The mural was designed by Natalie Neale ’23 and envisions the university's impact over the next 150 years. Today’s unveiling completes the university’s yearlong public art campaign, which included murals in New York, Los Angeles, Nashville and Chicago. The murals highlighted leaders who found their inspiration and sharpened their abilities at TCU. “There are so many amazing leadership stories in our community, it would have been difficult, if not impossible, to choose one person to highlight for this particular mural,” said Tracy Syler-Jones, vice chancellor for Marketing & Communication. 

 
Sept. 20, 2023 
Fort Worth Report 
Two and a half years ago, tennis player Luke Swan never could have imagined the opportunities open to him today. A kid from London, he came to TCU not expecting to play on the tennis team — and certainly not expecting to earn sponsorships as a result. Now, a new partnership between TCU Athletics, the TCU Neeley School of Business and Robinhood Marketplace will benefit TCU student-athletes by teaching them financial literacy. “This partnership will only enhance the financial education provided to student-athletes and other interested TCU students,” President Daniel Pullin said. “This is the day that so many of us have looked forward to for some period of time as we usher in another instance of innovation at TCU.” 

 
Sept. 18, 2023 
KXAS-TV (Fort Worth, TX) 
TCU did something good to celebrate diversity and inclusion, by hosting their first ever Black Excellence Gala. The sold-out event celebrated the accomplishments of the black community at TCU. Black students, staff and alumni who have been instrumental to TCU's success, such as pro football Hall of Famer LaDainian Tomlinson, were recognized and honored. 

 
Sept. 14, 2023 
Fort Worth Business Press 
In honor of TCU’s 150th anniversary, coach Sonny Dykes will reign as Grand Marshal of the 2023 GM Financial Parade of Lights. “The Parade of Lights is such a great tradition and important part of Fort Worth. It is a true honor to be Grand Marshal and represent TCU,” Dykes said. “My family and I are most appreciative of this opportunity.” 

 
Sept. 14, 2023 
The Dallas Morning News 
WWE, now a part of TKO Group Holdings, announced the return of “WWE Campus Rush,” which will be headed to North Texas this fall. Campus Rush is a multi-campus college athlete recruitment tour as WWE continues its search for future stars in sports entertainment. The company already paid the University of Texas a visit last week, but on Nov. 14, WWE is headed to TCU.  

FACULTY    

 
Sept. 25, 2023 
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The outdated model of top salespeople simply making the most calls is now obsolete. In response, consulting firms and academic centers, like the TCU Sales Center, offer sales training programs that blend technological prowess with relational skills to enhance rapport building and solutions-oriented engagement. Ken Corbit, the center’s instructional lead, points out: “While AI can offer incredible data analytics capabilities, the human ability to build personal connections and provide tailored solutions remains paramount. Human salespeople can perceive subtleties in mood, understand complex needs through a simple conversation, and make customers feel valued and appreciated in a way that technology can't yet mimic, often due to non-verbal cues and engagement.” 

 
Sept. 28, 2023 
The Dickinsonian 
Hormonal birth control was a long-awaited, vital medication that allowed women, for the first time in history, to plan their futures. However, in the words of Professor Sarah E. Hill, “There is no such thing as a free lunch.” Hormonal birth control, despite being socially, politically and medically revolutionary, can have negative side effects. Hill, who was on and off hormonal birth control for about 13 years, said that finally quitting the pill felt like waking up from a “nap [she] didn’t know [she] was taking.”  

 
Sept. 28, 2023 
Fort Worth Report 
GameStop finds itself in the spotlight again as a new movie, “Dumb Money,” tells the story of how the company became a “meme stock.” Paul Irvine, professor and Kleinheinz Endowed Chair in International Finance and Investments, said the GameStop episode was unique. “It was the first time that anyone found a way to coordinate what I call ‘noise’ traders and convinced them to all do the same thing,” he said. “I think a lot of these 20-somethings who invested probably grew up in GameStop stores, playing games there, and they had a lot of fondness for it. That’s not quite the case with a lot of other stocks. GameStop turned out to be technically a perfect stock to try something like this on.” 

 
Sept. 27, 2023 
yale.edu 
Below are the winning research papers accepted to the fifth annual National Freedom of Information Coalition FOI research competition. In second place is “Opening the Floodgates: Assessing and Implementing Affirmative Disclosure,” co-authored by Daxton “Chip” Stewart. 

 
Sept. 26, 2023 
KUER-FM (Salt Lake City, UT)  
Drag shows have become a common target of state governments from Florida to Tennessee to Montana in recent months. Deseret News pointed to state data showing that there have been more hate crimes directed at the LGBTQ+ community in Utah this year — 63 reported so far —- than the past four years combined. “It's not a new phenomenon,” said Nino Testa, an associate professor of women and gender studies. “It's part of a very American tradition of demonizing queer people.” 

 
Sept. 25, 2023 
Fort Worth Report  
In Judaism, the High Holy Days are a 10-day period of prayer and atonement that begins with Rosh Hashana, the Jewish new year, and ends with Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement. The decision to use the term “High Holy Days” or “High Holidays” varies from one Jewish person to another, said Ariel Feldman, Rosalyn and Manny Rosenthal Professor of Jewish Studies and director of the Jewish studies program at Brite Divinity School. “When you work in a field such as Jewish studies, which encompasses 3,000 more years of history and development, I think no one knows everything,” Feldman said. “If you think about what the Old Testament or the Hebrew Bible has to say, the term ‘High Holidays’ doesn’t appear there. But it does talk about several festivals, which would require particularly the male Israelites to go to Jerusalem, for celebration.”  

 
Sept. 22, 2023  
Fort Worth Report  
Workers at a General Motors parts distribution center are going on strike, United Auto Workers union president Shawn Fain said Friday morning. The workers are joining about 12,700 colleagues at three assembly plants in Missouri, Ohio and Michigan in an expansion of a strike initiated more than a week ago. Experts such as Cliff Defee, associate professor of supply chain management, said consumers trying to buy a car won’t see effects of the strike immediately.  “When you’d look at those inventory numbers, though, what you’re not really seeing is what the inventory situation is by model, because certainly some models are in higher demand than others,” Defee said.  

 
Sept. 22, 2023  
Texas Tribune  
The Republican-led Texas Legislature passed a new law that went into effect this month that allows prosecutors to be removed from office if they choose not to go after certain crimes. The goal: to rein in “rogue” district attorneys in Texas’ large, left-leaning counties. “What we're seeing is, more broadly speaking, the politicization of removal processes,” said James Riddlesperger, political science professor.  

 
Sept. 16, 2023  
Fort Worth Report  
More than 100 people gathered for a 15-minute blessing ceremony, as a Fort Worth building is soon to become The Fred Rouse Center for Arts and Community Healing, a reparative justice project by Transform 1012 N. Main Street. Protestant, Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Buddhist, Jewish and Islamic religious leaders circled together to pray for the building. Native American spiritual and cultural leaders also performed a Blessing Song. Blessings are a way that communities come together for a cause, said Jan Quesada, senior instructor of religion. “Blessings are these kinds of pauses to acknowledge and speak words into moments that hold significance,” Quesada said. “You can get pretty technical about all the different modes of prayer across different traditions. There’s a whole menu of blessings.” 

ALUMNI  

 
Sept. 28, 2023 
FW Inc.  
The ideal of a university shaping one’s destiny — if destiny would permit such a thing — is not just some timeworn, hackneyed phrase for Michael and Karen Ryan ’01. They met as part of a team working on a group project in the radio/TV and film department, then later married, and then later joined forces to open a marketing company Four 3rds Creative, which specializes in video-based storytelling. Four 3rds Creative, in collaboration with Wheelhouse Innovations, built and installed an eight-foot interactive augmented reality experience — which doubles as a piece of art — that was met by very inquisitive visitors to the College of Science & Engineering building for the university’s Family Weekend. “When we were first contacted about this challenge, we weren’t exactly sure what we were going to do, but we were all in,” said Michael. “After talking it through, we determined that we needed two things: an installation that was totally unique to draw people’s curiosity and a captivating experience with the capacity to engage everyone simultaneously.” 

 
Sept. 27, 2023 
Fort Worth Report 
Waking up late likely saved the life of Marshall K. Harris ’79. In NYC to set up a trade show exhibition, he had breakfast reservations the following day at Windows on the World. But on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, Harris woke up late and missed being at the World Trade Center. He instead went straight to the trade show and started working before being evacuated. “When I walked out of the front of the Javits Center, there was a woman standing next to me … just shellshocked. And I looked up and there’s smoke billowing out of this tower,” he recalled. “I said, ‘Where’s the other tower?’ She said, ‘It just fell down.’” More than 20 years earlier, Harris graduated from TCU, where he also played on the football team for five seasons. For one of his art classes, Harris designed a logo known as the “Flying T,” which would represent the school and adorn jerseys across its athletics programs through the early ’90s.  

 
Sept. 19, 2023 
The ACLU of Texas is excited to announce the recent election of three new members to its Board of Directors, including Leon Reed Jr. ’03. While at TCU, Leon was involved in numerous student organizations and employed his leadership skills while presiding over many of them. Leon earned a Bachelor of Science in political science from TCU, and his passion for TCU is surpassed only by a few. 

 
Sept. 18, 2023 
Dallas Style and Design 
Avery Kelly ’11 creates portraits of animals, working with oils and acrylics and in printmaking and focusing on the quirkiness of animals, bringing a sense of lightness and fun to what can otherwise be a stodgy genre. “Instead of trying to show something exactly as it is, I’m trying to create an expression,” Kelly explains. When she was growing up, there were birds, dogs and cats in the house, and during her family’s trips to Colorado, Kelly was entranced by the wildlife and landscapes.  

 
Sept. 15, 2023  
gov.texas.gov 
Goveronor Greg Abbott has appointed Angelique De Luca to the Governor's Commission for Women. She is the founder and CEO of Four Falling Stars Productions. She is vice chair of the Lone Star Film Festival, member of the Screen Actors Guild of America, Women Steering Business and former member of Chancellor’s Advisory Council at TCU. She is an advisor for the TCU film school and volunteers for the Fort Worth Country Day School and Colonial Kids for a Cause. Additionally, she is a former board member of KinderFrogs at TCU and Baby2Baby. 

 
Sept. 15, 2023 
ѳܲǷ  
Country artist Clayton Mullen ’23, has signed an exclusive worldwide publishing agreement with Concord Music Publishing that includes his full catalog and all future work. Originally from the Northeast, Mullen’s interest in writing and performing developed during his time at TCU.  

ATHLETICS   

 
Sept. 27, 2023 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
հ䱫 Aٳپ will induct nine new members into the Hall of Fame for its class of 2023. This group of members is extremely deserving and will be a great addition to the TCU Hall of Fame. Make sure to look out for them at the football game this Saturday. 

 
Sept. 22, 2023 
Texas Monthly 
Rivalry games between TCU and SMU once mattered in a way that may be difficult for some of today’s fans to understand. Now they’re a reminder of college football’s transformation from a sport built around geographical rivalries to a competition for television ratings. TCU announced this summer that it will pause the rivalry after the 2025 game. Coach Sonny Dykes, asked about the series, said it was important to add another home game, regardless of the opponent. “If we want to be big time, we gotta act big time and schedule big time,” he told reporters. “All that stuff goes together.” 

 
Sept. 20, 2023  
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
Transfer Willis Patrick is still in the midst of living out his lifelong dream of playing for TCU. Since the moment he stepped on campus, Patrick has approached making the most of his dream opportunity with an intensity on the field and easy to get along with personality off it, which has already helped him become a key cog for TCU’s offense. “I always knew I had the talent to do it,” Patrick said. “The circumstances didn’t land me there out of high school and I put it on myself honestly. It was never an issue of talent with me, I just made the best of my opportunities. I didn’t look at it as ‘Woe, is me.’ I looked at it as ‘how can I be the best player here (at Angelo State)’ and I did that and accomplished great things.” 

 
Sept. 20, 2023  
The Dallas Morning News 
A boom in Name, Image and Likeness deals is happening without appropriate guardrails, and Congress must step in to guide colleges and protect student athletes from unscrupulous people, Jeremiah Donati, director of intercollegiate athletics, told lawmakers. “We now find ourselves in a wild, wild west environment across college athletics with little accountability,” he testified. Donati and other witnesses at a House Small Business Committee hearing called for Congress to impose some order on the free-for-all that followed the 2021 Supreme Court decision allowing college players to profit from their own name, image and likeness. More than half of TCU’s student athletes have reported NIL deals, Donati said, and many are using that money to support their families. But the lack of national rules has created unsustainable confusion, he said. 

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