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Newest regents will provide leadership to help TTUS continue mission
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Gov. Abbott appoints three new Texas Tech regents
Gov. Greg Abbott announced three new appointments to the Texas Tech Board of Regents on Tuesday.
The governor appointed Arcilia Acosta, Cody Campbell, and Pat Gordon to six-year terms set to expire on January 31, 2027. These appointments to the Texas Tech Board of Regents are subject to Senate confirmation.
The three new appointees will fill the vacant seats left by Mickey Long, Ron Hammonds and Christopher Huckabee, who all had terms that expired at the end of January.
“I’d like to congratulate our new regents on their appointments and welcome them to our System family,” Dr. Tedd L. Mitchell, chancellor of the TTU System, said Tuesday. “Each new board member brings a passion for our universities, and I look forward to collaborating with them as we continue to make the Texas Tech University System a dynamic university system.
Gov. Abbott appoints regents to Texas Tech University System Arcilia Acosta, Cody Campbell and Patrick Gordon will join the TTU System Board of Regents for a six-year term. (Source: KCBD) By KCBD Staff | April 14, 2021 at 10:33 AM CDT - Updated April 14 at 10:33 AM
LUBBOCK, Texas
(NEWS RELEASE) - Texas Gov. Greg Abbott appointed three new members to the Texas Tech University System Board of Regents for terms set to expire on Jan. 31, 2027, his office announced today (April 13).
The new appointees are Arcilia Acosta (Dallas), president and CEO of CARCON Industries and Construction and founder and CEO of Southwestern Testing Laboratories (STL) Engineers; Cody Campbell (Fort Worth), co-founder and co-CEO of Double Eagle Energy Holdings and Double Eagle Development; and Patrick Gordon (El Paso), president of Gordon Davis Johnson & Shane P.C.
Catalytic converter thefts concern Jonesboro area schools
Schools on Catalytic Converter Thefts By Monae Stevens | February 1, 2021 at 8:02 PM CST - Updated February 1 at 8:02 PM
JONESBORO, Ark. (KAIT) - Transportation directors at Jonesboro and Nettleton Public Schools are doing everything they can to prevent them from becoming victims of catalytic converter thefts.
When buses are not operating, they are kept at the schools’ bus shops.
The shops are enclosed by a barbed-wire fence and locked after hours with 24-hour surveillance cameras.
Transportation directors say that the buses’ catalytic converters are too heavy for a person to carry, so they are not too concerned about them.
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