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From April Fool’s and tulips to natural gas and climate change, TCU and its faculty, alumni and students are in the news.  

INSTITUTIONAL 

 
April 4, 2024 
AACSB International announced today that 26 institutions have extended their business accreditation and six have extended their accounting accreditation. TCU extended both its business accreditation and accounting accreditation. Achieving this milestone ensures greater access to high-quality business education for learners around the world and businesses seeking top talent. “AACSB congratulates each institution on achieving AACSB accreditation,” said Stephanie Bryant, executive vice president and global chief accreditation officer at AACSB. “The commitment to earning accreditation is a true reflection of each school’s dedication—not only to its students, alumni network and greater business community—but to society as a whole.” 

 
April 3, 2024 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram  
TCU announced its plans to work with the city to update the traffic signal and improve the crosswalks between West Berry Street and West Cantey Street. Currently there are four crosswalks pedestrians can use to traverse South University Drive. Only one of them is protected by a traffic signal. The other three have signs indicating cars should stop for pedestrians, but vehicles regularly speed through, leaving students and others to either wait or try their luck dodging traffic. “While we may experience some inconveniences along the way, the final result of this much-needed project will improve safety for both vehicles and pedestrians through campus and also provide additional beautification,” said facilities project manager Morgan McGlothlin in the university blog post. 

 
April 2, 2024 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram  
Almost all of the oldest universities in the United States are private colleges. Harvard and St. John’s College, for example, were founded before the 18th century and boast alumni and founders, respectively, who signed the Declaration of Independence. Stacker compiled a list of the best private colleges in Ƶ, using data from Niche released in 2024. Niche ranks schools based on a variety of factors, including academics, value for money, professors, campus and diversity. No. 4 on the list is TCU, with an acceptance rate of 54%, net price of $42,574 and SAT range of 1130-1350. TCU's Niche grade is an A. 

 
April 2, 2024 
The Dallas Express  
The hundreds of tulips that dot TCU’scampus are not a natural phenomenon but the result of a single person’s desire to beautify the school. Mary Beasley, a former member of the school’s board of trustees, is the reason tulips saturate the campus each spring. She is responsible for creating the $800,000 Mary Evans Beasley Endowment Fund for Campus Beautification. Thanks to the $800,000 in support, TCU has the necessary funding to maintain its tulip program for 36 years. While Beasley died in 2005 at the age of 102, her legacy will live on for decades. 

 
April 2, 2024 
Fort Worth Business Press  
The Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra will present a special series of concerts this summer as the symphony pauses its Concerts in the Garden while the Fort Worth Botanic Garden constructs an outdoor amphitheater as part of its master plan. The Mercedes T. Bass Sounds of the Summer Series, offered in collaboration with local businesses and arts organizations, will feature intimate live performances, new partnerships and community engagements. Other concerts in the series will include the 2024 Piano Ƶ International Festival at TCU this June at Van Cliburn Concert Hall. 

 
April 1, 2024 
Fort Worth Magazine  
Chancellor Victor J. Boschini, Jr. took to social media today to make a major announcement concerning the school’s next 150 years. Goodbye, Horned Frogs. Hello, Squirrels. “Starting today, I’m excited to announce that we are transitioning from the TCU Horned Frogs to an animal seen daily and abundantly across our beautiful campus, the TCU Squirrels,” Boschini says on a video posted to X. That video has more than 1.2 million views — and counting — according to a TCU spokesperson.  

 
April 1, 2024 
KDAF-TV (Dallas, TX)  
TCU posted on its Instagram a huge announcement that sent shockwaves through the campus community. The once-beloved Horned Frog mascot will now be… A Squirrel? TCU posted a cheeky announcement about the “change” in mascots after over 150 years. However, after watching the video for a while you realize this is nothing more than another April Fools’ joke!  

 
March 31, 2024 
KXAS-TV (Fort Worth, TX)  
Happy April Fools’ Day! Businesses, brands, corporations and even government organizations are pranking people on social media. Did any of them fool you? In a serious-sounding video, with a sad music track, Chancellor Victor J. Boschini, Jr. shared that TCU would be abandoning its beloved Horned Frog mascot and instead become the Squirrels. At the end of the video, they revealed it was a joke. 

 
March 30, 2024 
KXAS-TV (Fort Worth, TX)  
Have you seen the hundreds of tulips that cover the campus every spring? This is only possible because of one girl’s wish to beautify the campus. Mary Beasley, a former member of the Board of Trustees, was passionate about the beautification of TCU’s campus. Instead of donating funds to the general upkeep of the university, Beasley created the Mary Evans Beasley Endowment Fund for Campus Beautification. Around $50,000 of the fund each year goes specifically to the tulips. According to Erik Trevino, director of Landscaping and Grounds at TCU, flowers only last one season so his team has to change out the flower beds multiple times a year. “It costs a lot of money to do that,” said Trevino. “So, it was her investment years ago that keeps our campus beautiful.” 

FACULTY   

 
April 10, 2024 
www.psu.edu 
Filmmaker and TCU dance professor Suki John will visit Penn State Hazleton on April 18 to present her film detailing the experiences of her family before, during and after the Holocaust. A narrative dance film developed by John over the course of 30 years, “Sh’ma: A Story of Survival,” is based primarily on the life of John’s mother. It follows her from a young age to her deportation to a concentration camp, her time as a refugee and her eventual life as a U.S. citizen. John created the film as part of “The Sh’ma Project: Move Against Hate,” an initiative aimed at educating audiences about the Holocaust.  

 
April 10, 2024 
Fort Worth Magazine  
Judy Bernas, senior associate dean and chief communication and strategy officer for the Anne Burnett Marion School of Medicine, has been appointed chair of the Fiesta Bowl, a two-year term beginning in the 2024-2025 season. “This is such an exciting time for the Fiesta Bowl Organization and we truly have the best board, staff and volunteers in all of college sports. I’m eager to support our returning and incredibly impressive new board members and work closely with our Yellow Jacket Committee, ambassadors and volunteers,” Bernas said. 

 
April 5, 2024 
KXAS-TV (Fort Worth, TX)  
On Friday, President Joe Biden is traveling to Baltimore to visit the site of the deadly Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse, which left six presumed dead and is expected to have a major impact on the port’s economy. TCU’s Center for Supply Chain Innovation has been keeping a close eye on the situation. The port is also the top domestic port for autos because it’s the closest port to the Midwest auto industry so having that out of commission could mean some degree of disruption with cars. “A lot of auto dealerships now have pretty good inventories again. So [this is] probably going to be some smaller companies that feel it the most. Companies that couldn’t afford to have a lot of extra inventory or couldn't afford to reroute their goods to other ports, which is going to take more time and money to do that,” said Tyson Browning, an operations management professor. 

 
April 4, 2024 
KTBC-TV (Austin, TX)  
Sixteen states, including Ƶ, have filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration’s decision to pause new exports of liquefied natural gas, or LNG. The lawsuit argues that the ruling requiring the U.S. to study how LNG exports affect climate change and national security is illegal. Tom Seng of the Ralph Lowe Energy Institute said, “The Federal Regulatory Commission has to go through the process of approving the actual export facilities. That includes an environmental impact statement, so the Biden administration is sort of changing the rules in the middle of the game, to say be evaluated based on impact on climate change and national security. That’s not what the situation has been up until now.”  

 
March 30, 2024 
Fort Worth Report  
As the chair of the environmental and sustainability sciences department, Michael Slattery is often asked whether he believes in global warming. Depending on his answer, Slattery said he expects to be put into one of two pigeon holes that he cannot crawl out of. “I either say, ‘Yes, of course, I believe in global warming,’ — then I must be a Hillary voter and an Al Gore lover and off I go. Or if I say, ‘No, I don’t believe in global warming,’ then I must be on the other side of the fence,” Slattery said. Slattery was one of three panelists who tackled the complex challenges and politics related to discussions of climate change during an event hosted by the journalism department and the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.  

STUDENTS 

 
April 11, 2024 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram  
Immigration and border security are top issues for many North Ƶ candidates, but when you look at what residents care about most, other issues are often front of mind. Residents interviewed by the Star-Telegram pointed to policies and concerns related to the economy, taxes, health care, education and affordable housing when asked about their concerns. For Brody Grasher, a TCU sophomore, the economy — particularly lowering taxes and keeping a free market — and the Ƶ-Mexico border are top priorities. “Those two probably affect me the most,” Grasher said. 

 
April 10, 2024 
KXAS-TV (Fort Worth, TX) 
A medical student in Fort Worth who wanted to do something good to support Black men is seeing his efforts pay off. Antonio Igbokidi, a fourth-year medical student at Burnett School of Medicine, started the Barbershop Talk Therapy Project back in 2021. Igbokidi had a big Barbershop Talk Therapy event in New Orleans last month alongside the 60th Student National Medical Association Conference. SNMA is the oldest Black medical student organization in America, and Igbokidi served as president this past year. He partnered with 100 Black Men in America to pack Dennis Barbershop in New Orleans with residents and Black medical students from all over America for a discussion on mental health. 

ALUMNI 

 
April 10, 2024 
Fort Worth Magazine  
Evan Michael Woods’19 is a theatrical renaissance man. Whether he’s writing, photographing or starring in a show, he consistently proves his ability to thrive in any role, onstage or off. When Woods stumbled into his first theater class at his small-town Mississippi middle school, he immediately fell in love with the art form’s amalgamation of creative disciplines. He later set his sights on attending a premier college theatre program, and despite navigating the audition process without a coach or mentor, earned a full ride to study acting at TCU.  

 
April 8, 2024 
COWGIRL Magazine  
Fort Worth cowgirl Conner West ’18 captured a beautiful series of photos of the solar eclipse phenomenon as she was in the path of totality. West said, “I have been riding since I was 6 years old and started competing with Arabians 19 years ago. I was on the TCU Equestrian team from 2014-2018 and have continued competing as an alum after! ... My passion for photography started back when I was in high school. It has definitely been focused mainly around my love for horses but I always like to take the opportunity to try something new when it comes along. What better time to do that than the eclipse?!” 

 
April 2, 2024 
Fort Worth Report  
If there’s a favorite among the 20-plus beers on tap at Maple Branch Craft, it’s probably Raspberry Fields. But co-owner and brewer Stuart Maples ’15&Բ; has a hard time deciding. He likes them all. So, apparently, do other brewers. In February, Maple Branch took home the Ƶ Brewery of the Year honors from the Ƶ Craft Brewers Guild for brewers making 600 barrels or fewer at this year’s Ƶ Craft Brewery Cup in Austin. Maples has loved brewing beer since his days at TCU’s Neeley School of Business, where the finance major began experimenting with the beer-making process. After graduation, Maples and his wife, marketing major Allyssa Maples, began making plans to open a brewery, saving money and thinking about how they would set up the business.   

ATHLETICS

 
April 14, 2024 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram  
Chase Elliott wins the AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Ƶ Motor Speedway on Sunday. It was Elliott’s first win this season and his first in his last 42 races. Elliott, a Chevrolet driver, was sixth in the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings coming into the race. TCU head football coach Sonny Dykes got the day started as the race’s grand marshal alongside his family. 

 
April 4, 2024 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram  
Jamie Dixon and TCU have finalized a contract extension that will keep Dixon leading the men’s basketball program for the foreseeable future. After leading the Horned Frogs to a third straight NCAA Tournament for the first time in program history, Dixon had spoken at length throughout this season about what he wanted to build in Fort Worth. Since Dixon took over the program in 2016, the Horned Frogs have experienced their best stretch of basketball in program history with four tournament appearances and a NIT championship in Dixon’s first season. “It was my dream for TCU to be respected nationally and for people to see TCU on TV,” Dixon said during the regular season. “I love to see them talk about TCU basketball.” 

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