From building a brand to evaluating the presidential debate and dealing with the current COVID-19 variant, TCU and its faculty and alumni are in the news.
From Pier 1 to TCU, Merianne Roth builds brands of iconic Fort Worth institutions 
June 27, 2024 
Fort Worth Report 
Merianne Kimmel Roth has built her marketing career by finding unique ways to share the big ideas of iconic
                              Fort Worth companies and institutions. TCU, JPS Health Network, RadioShack, Visit
                              Fort Worth, Pier 1 Imports and the Amon Carter Museum of American Art occupy lines
                              on her resume. Following a nationwide search, Roth, an associate vice chancellor at
                              TCU, was promoted to vice chancellor of marketing and communication in June.  “You
                              should not only have the skills but also the confidence and empathy to lead,” said
                              Roth, who earned a degree this year from the Executive MBA program at TCU. “I love
                              big, complex organizations. I like building systems that work to support purpose,”
                              said Roth, who sees marketing as a combination of storytelling, engagement and building
                              a shared mission.  
From TCC to Tarleton, academic programs in health care expand to meet workforce demands 
June 23, 2024 
Fort Worth Report 
Colleges and universities around Tarrant County are working on solutions to the shortage
                              of nurses. At TCU’s Pre-Health Professions Institute, enrollment has doubled over the past 10 years, and the university plans to introduce
                              a public health major.  
Meet the winners of this year’s NACUFS collegiate dining, nutrition and sustainability
                                    awards 
June 17, 2024 
FoodService Director 
The National Association of College and University Food Services recently unveiled
                              the gold, silver and bronze winners of its 2024 Loyal E. Horton Dining, Nutrition
                              and Sustainability Awards. For the Wellness and Nutrition Program of the Year award,
                              the gold winners included TCU. TCU also earned a silver award for Catering Special Event of the Year and a gold
                              in the Outreach and Education Program of the Year. 
2013 Cliburn Competition winner Vadym Kholodenko performs in PianoTexas festival 
June 17, 2024 
The Dallas Morning News 
It was as a very mature sounding artist that Kholodenko returned to Fort Worth for
                              a solo recital at this summer’s PianoTexas International Festival and Academy at TCU.
                              Founded and still directed by piano professor Tamás Ungár and now in its 44th year, the annual festival presents recitals by important pianists,
                              many of whom double as faculty for educational programs for young pianists up to age
                              28, piano teachers and amateur players. In addition to private and class sessions,
                              participants compete for chances to perform with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra.
                              Formerly held in TCU’s PepsiCo Recital Hall, this year’s recitals have moved to the
                              more spacious — sonically as well as physically — Van Cliburn Concert Hall at TCU.  
FACULTY
Dueling deficits: Biden, Trump blast the other’s national debt, but does it even matter? 
June 27, 2024 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump criticized each other’s handling
                              of the economy at the presidential debate, including mention of the national debt.
                              “It’s just not really a problem,” said economics professor John Harvey. “That’s come up as an issue that’s about to destroy our country ever since I can
                              remember.” He noted that the Biden administration’s economic stimulus payments to
                              help Americans power through the COVID-19 pandemic spurred the economy. “We just made
                              it up on a keyboard,” Harvey said. “And that’s what the government does, and people
                              find this terrifying, but it’s what the government does all the time.” 
‘We Need Papaw to Retire’ 
June 22, 2024 
Inside Political Science 
An age-old question (literally): do our representatives actually represent us? Keith Gaddie, a political science professor, discussed electoral age limits. “When you think about
                              it, there’s an experience problem, especially in the U.S. Senate,” Gaddie said. “It’s
                              something like 70% of U.S. senators were born before 1960, so the contemporary human
                              experience is very different. These Baby Boomers in particular have been in these
                              positions of power for a very long time, and I think there’s a real desire to kind
                              of nudge them out of the way and make room for the generation that comes after ours.” 
These 6 Health Risks Can Significantly Increase on Hot Days 
June 21, 204 
Healthline.com 
While heat and summer go hand in hand, research and experts indicate that rising temperatures
                              and health risks do, too. “It is easy in the summer to be distracted by lots of fun
                              outdoor activities, but heat can impact your health and make you very ill, especially
                              if you are not paying attention to signs from your body or are at extremes of age,”
                              said Dr. Jo Anna Leuck, associate dean of educational affairs at the Burnett School of Medicine at TCU.
                              “There are easy ways to prevent this impact, so it is important to understand the
                              dangers of heat and how to avoid them.”  
Caitlin Clark and the WNBA are getting a lot of attention. It’s about far more than basketball 
June 19, 2024 
AP News 
Some of the atmosphere in the public and media that has swirled around the professional
                              women’s league since the season started last month has been less fun time and more
                              culture war, with rookie Caitlin Clark as the unwilling eye of the storm. That a young
                              white woman is being put in the central role, with Black and brown women relegated
                              to supporting characters, is about as old and familiar a trope as exists in a country
                              with as troubled a racial history as the United States, said Frederick Gooding Jr., associate professor of African American studies. “It’s not so much about the visibility of Clark,” he said. “It also speaks to the
                              invisibility of Black females and how difficult it is for Black females to obtain
                              that same type” of attention. 
COVID Is Surging Right Now. Here’s What Alarms Doctors The Most. 
June 18, 2024 
Yahoo! News 
Recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that COVID test
                              positivity rates and emergency room visits are steadily rising, especially along both
                              coasts. The culprit: the FLiRT variants. According to Dr. Nikhil Bhayani, assistant professor in the department of internal medicine at the Burnett School
                              of Medicine at TCU, one variant in particular is gaining steam right now: KP.3. It’s
                              currently responsible for roughly 25% of cases.  
Giving Fully 
June 18, 2024 
360West Magazine 
How easy is it to give away $100,000? Not very, Ron Pitcock’s class, Nature of Giving, finds year after year. The dean of the John V. Roach Honors
                              College said the students’ struggle with where to donate the money epitomized what
                              he wanted them to understand: If raising money is difficult, what about giving it
                              away? “It’s incredibly difficult to do,” Pitcock tells the group. 
Prologis carves niche with its first battery storage unit in Texas 
June 18, 2024 
The Real Deal 
Prologis, one of the titans of industrial real estate and an active investor in Texas,
                              is pushing forward a type of renewable energy technology that could have long-term
                              implications on the industry. Tom Seng, assistant professor of professional practice in energy finance, noted that the state’s
                              battery storage capacity has doubled in the past year, from about 3,000 megawatts
                              to 6,500 megawatts. Batteries, which charge overnight, offer a ready supply of power
                              during peak times and can be economically beneficial, as stored energy can be sold
                              at higher prices during peak demand. 
Using Ozempic Could Reduce Your Risk of Developing Osteoarthritis 
June 18, 2024 
Verywell Health 
New research suggests people with obesity who take semaglutide, commonly known by
                              the brand names Ozempic and Wegovy, have a 16% lower rate of developing osteoarthritis.
                              “This gives the medical community another important piece of data to support the multi-organ
                              system positive effects that we’re seeing with these GLP-1 receptor agonists,” Dr. Mohanakrishnan Sathyamoorthy, chair of internal medicine at Burnett School of Medicine at TCU, said. “We already
                              know that this drug has potentially very positive and beneficial effects for cardiovascular
                              health. We know it has an impact on the underlying disease state of diabetes. But
                              now there’s another piece of evidence in a completely disparate, unrelated organ system,
                              showing that it has a benefit for joints too.”  
ALUMNI
Fort Worth artists transform dry cleaning facility into studio space, food pantry 
June 26, 2024 
Fort Worth Report 
When a group of artists couldn’t find affordable studio space after graduate school,
                              they decided to start one of their own. In addition to helping artists, the Fort Worth
                              nonprofit also addresses another need: food insecurity. Easyside, housed in a former
                              dry-cleaning facility on East Lancaster Avenue, offers studio space, a workshop equipped
                              with tools and a community pantry every other Friday. “When we were in grad school,
                              we didn’t talk about starting a nonprofit. We were just kind of looking at … models
                              that currently exist in the DFW area, and really, there aren’t very many artist-run
                              spaces,” Corrie Thompson ’22 MFA, one of four co-founders, said. Food distribution might not seem like an obvious
                              pairing with a gallery and studio space, but helping bring resources to the community
                              rather than extracting them away was important for the co-founders. 
Why Teachers of English Learners With Disabilities Need Specialized Training 
June 25, 2024  
Education Week 
English learners who are also identified as students with disabilities experience
                              unique needs in K-12 schools — and their teachers need specialized, interdisciplinary
                              training, experts say. At Education Week’s K-12 Essentials Forum focusing on innovative
                              approaches to special education, Lizdelia Piñón ’21 Ed.D., an emergent bilingual education associate for the Texas-based advocacy nonprofit
                              Intercultural Development Research Association, shared insights on what kind of teacher
                              training best serves dual-identified students. “It has to be this cohesive idea,”
                              Piñón said. “It’s an integrated training that equips our teachers with the skills
                              and the knowledge that they need to effectively support our dual-identified English
                              learners with disabilities.”  
Help PSUSD Foundation raise funds for 2,500 pairs of shoes 
June 14, 2024 
Desert Sun 
Want to put a smile on a child’s face as they head back to school in August? Consider
                              donating to Shoes for Students, an annual fundraising initiative by The Foundation
                              for PSUSD. Families with limited income often have to make hard choices about how
                              they spend their resources — and oftentimes footwear falls below other basic needs
                              like food. But according to an innovative study led by Dr. Sam Sayed M.D. ’24, a new pair of shoes can favorably impact a child’s self-confidence, academics and
                              social engagement. And for a kid, confidence and inclusion are everything. Sayed studied
                              the effect that receiving a new pair of athletic shoes had on underprivileged youth,
                              and after a few weeks, 100% of the children in the study said they felt more confident
                              and had stronger beliefs in their ability to overcome challenges.  
ATHLETICS
TCU AD Jeremiah Donati says school will participate in revenue sharing at ‘maximum
                              level’ 
June 30, 2024 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
In the near feature, revenue sharing with athletes will be a new reality in college
                              athletics. TCU just became one of the latest schools to announce it was committed
                              to the future model. Jeremiah Donati, director of intercollegiate athletics, provided an update on how the Horned Frogs plan to navigate the changing landscape
                              in the aftermath of the settlement of the House v. NCAA class action lawsuit. “We
                              are very excited to announce that we will fully participate at the maximum level in
                              this permissible revenue sharing plan with our student-athletes,” Donati said in a
                              letter posted on the university’s website. “Along with this, we will be prepared for
                              the challenges and opportunities it will bring. Many questions, however, do remain
                              and we will need time to work out many details. For example, how and when we distribute
                              that revenue remains unclear at the moment.”  
TCU AD says the private Big 12 school is all in on proposed revenue sharing with student-athletes 
June 28, 2024 
Associated Press 
Jeremiah Donati, director of intercollegiate athletics at TCU, said that the private Big 12 school
                              is all in on the maximum amount of revenue — expected to be more than $20 million
                              a year — that will be allowed to be shared with student-athletes under a $2.8 billion
                              antitrust settlement proposal agreed to earlier this year by the NCAA and the nation’s
                              biggest conferences. “All this will combine to provide a new collegiate athletics
                              model and industry reset that comes with a significant permissive expense projected
                              to be over $20 million annually,” Donati wrote. He then wrote that TCU would “fully
                              participate at the maximum level allowed” when revenue sharing with student-athletes
                              goes into effect, which will be no earlier than the fall of 2025.  
TCU Football shows off new uniforms ahead of 2024 season 
June 17, 2024 
NBCDFW 
When football head coach Sonny Dykes leads his Horned Frogs onto the field in August, they’ll be sporting a new look.
                              TCU Football released a video and several photos on its social media platforms Monday
                              morning showing three new uniforms and helmet combinations from Nike that’ll be used
                              on the field this season. The minimalist uniforms are not without at least one unique
                              element, a “Carter Boys” patch is stitched onto the back collar. It’s an apparent
                              homage to Amon G. Carter Stadium and the Carter Boys show on ESPN+. The white, purple
                              and black helmets match the uniforms, but the team will also use a chrome version.
                              All the helmets appear to use the traditional arched TCU logo on the sides.  
TCU puts two on ESPN list of most influential college football teams of all time  
June 16, 2024 
The Sporting News 
TCU’s football history was front and center on ESPN’s list of the 30 most influential
                              college football teams of all time. TCU didn’t just get one team on the list — it
                              got two — with its undefeated 2010 team coached by Gary Patterson coming in at No. 29 and its 1935 team that went 12-1 under Dutch Meyer coming in at No. 14.  TCU is only two seasons removed from a surprise run to the
                              College Football Playoff national championship game under current head coach Sonny Dykes.  
