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THURSDAY, SEPT. 2, 2021 VOLUME 96 ■ ISSUE 3

LA VIDA

SPORTS

Read how the student regents incorporates her student life into her roles of being the student representation in the system.

Texas Tech will face the University of Houston on Saturday in Houston. Read about what you need to know about the game.

C h a n c e l l o r Te d d M i t c h e l l submitted a guest column welcoming MSU into the system.

OPINIONS

ONLINE See all the slide shows our multimedia staff have put on our website showcasing the varying facets of campus life.

PG 3

PG 5

PG 4

ONLINE

INDEX LA VIDA SPORTS OPINIONS CROSSWORD CLASSIFIEDS SUDOKU

3 5 4 3 5 2

SYSTEM

Midwestern State joins Tech system

By MATEO ROSILES Editor-in-Chief

WICHITA FALLS — Almost 20 months after receiving a formal invitation by the Board of Regents of the Texas Tech University System to join the system, Midwestern State University joined on Sept. 1, becoming the fifth institution. Formal Welcome The Board of Regents convened at 9 a.m. to start the day of festivities hosted at MSU. The regents formally welcomed MSU into the system. “It truly is wonderful to be joined by all of you today on the beautiful campus of MSU Texas in Wichita Falls as we welcome the Mustang family into the Texas Tech University system on this truly historic day,” Michael Lewis, chairman of the Board of Regents, said. C h a n c e l l o r Te d d M i t c h e l l brought a Resolution of the Board to be approved commemorating the day. He also thanked those who helped create the partnership between the system and MSU. Chairman Lewis thanked those who made this day possible and read the founding mission of Tech written by President Paul

Horn, first president of Tech, and the Board of Directors for Texas Technological College, the former governing body of Tech prior to becoming an accredited university. “‘Any system of educational philosophy or administration is faulty and places the welfare of the school above that of the individual student.’ This sentiment is infused in the with a sense of service and mutual benefits which wills down and reforms the values and culture of Texas Tech University System,” Lewis said. It was with Horn’s and the Board of Directors’ vision of Texas Technological College that Lewis welcomed MSU as the system’s fifth institution. Lewis then to showed a video message of Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas congratulating MSU in joining the system. “This partnership will help ensure that both Midwestern State and Texas Tech System will continue to flourish and build on their legacy of excellence,” Abbott said in the video. “Working together, we will continue to establish Texas as a leader in higher education.” The MSU Culture Located in Wichita Falls, near the Texas-Oklahoma border, MSU

has a small community feel but with the added bonus of city life, Alexis Thomas said. “Everybody knows everybody,” she said. “So it’s very comfortable and like, homey.” As a third-year early childhood education major at MSU, Thomas said she is excited for MSU to be joining the system. Giving the over 5800-student university some publicity is an advantage she said she hopes to see. Smaller classes are a part of the MSU campus culture, Tyler Seelman, a third-year psychology and sociology major at MSU, said. “I have two classes and max, 30 people in both,” he said. Activities are constantly happening on MSU’s campus, Seelman said, almost daily. However, MSU has something on campus that no other institution within the system has — a lake. Thomas said it’s a cool place to sit and relax. “Sometimes, like at night, when like the sun (is) setting, we go walk around to like clear our heads,” Thomas said. “It’s a nice place to go and get away.” MSU also has a can-do mentality when it comes to problem solving, Chancellor Mitchell said,

REGENT

Student regent incorporates her student life into her role By TEA MCGILVRAY L a Vida Editor

Fourth-year health science student at Angelo State University, Keaghan Holt was appointed as the 16th Student Regent on June 1. In addition to being selected for Student Regent, Holt has received several national championship awards for ASU cheer and has achieved Dean’s list honors in three semesters. ASU President Ronnie D. Hawkins Jr. said Holt is active in virtually every facet of student life, according to a news release from the system. As a Student Regent, Holt said that her job acts as a bridge between the students within the Texas Tech University system and the Board of Regents. Holt will serve as a non-voting member for her term, however she keeps up with all of the campuses so she can accurately present on behalf of the student body and represent over 57,000 students. “It has been so much fun. It is definitely a different side of the system and the university, which has been very eye opening and educating,” Holt said. Campus visit specialist and RAMbassador advisor, Hannah Hoelscher, said RAMbassadors work under the office of admis-

KATIE PERKINS/The Daily Toreador

Keaghan Holt at the Sept. 1 Board of Regents meeting where the regents welcomed Midwestern State University into the system in Wichita Falls. Holt, a student at Angelo State University was appointed on June 1 to be the new student regent of the Texas Tech University System by Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas and will serve a one-year term on the Board of Regents. sions to give campus tours and hosts a variety of events for ASU that encourage students to get involved. Holt is famous on the ASU campus because she is so outgoing and involved, she said. “Keaghan is one of the friendliest people I have ever met. She always wants to make sure everybody is taken care of, and everyone is having a good time,” Hoeschler said. Her friend and co-worker, Haley Russell said the two met

their first year during move in and that as long as she’s known her, Holt has always been the friendly and outgoing type. Holt is always waving to people and saying hello and talking to every student on campus that she can. As the Tech system transitions back into normalcy she said she hopes that students go out, open up and get involved in campus.

SEE REGENT, PG. 3

KATIE PERKINS /The Daily Toreador

TOP: The eastern entrance of Midwestern State University with the Seal of the Texas Tech University System flying in front of it on Sept. 1. The system welcomed MSU officially into the system at the Sept.1 Board of Regents meeting in Wichita Falls. BOTTOM: (left) Chancellor Tedd Mitchell, Vice Chairman Mark Griffin and Chairman Michael Lewis presenting the Resolution of the Board to former vice chairwoman of MSU’s Board of Regents Nancy Marks and Interim President James Johnston of MSU, formally welcoming MSU as the fifth institution in the system which is integrated into MSU’s academics and student life on campus. From this mentality an independent culture forms, Mitchell

said, which helps foster skills such as critical thinking and problem solving.

SEE SYSTEM, PG. 2

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Signs of recovery amid daunting destruction after hurricane Ida Lights came back on for a fortunate few, some corner stores opened their doors and crews cleared fallen trees and debris from a growing number of roadways Wednesday — small signs of progress amid the monumental task of repairing the damage inflicted by Hurricane Ida. Still, suffering remained widespread three days after Ida battered Louisiana and parts of Mississippi as the fifth-most-powerful hurricane to strike the U.S. Some low-lying communities remained largely underwater. Roughly a million homes and businesses still had no electricity, and health officials said more than 600,000 people lacked running water. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said he was pleased that power had returned for some people, saying it was "critically important to show progress” after the storm. But he also acknowledged that much more work lay ahead. “I’m very mindful that it’s a start, and only a start,” he told a news conference. The death toll rose to at least six after a coroner confirmed a 65-year-old woman had drowned in her Louisiana home and police in Maryland said a 19-year-old man was found dead in an apartment complex flooded by heavy rain from Ida's remnants. And the staggering scope of the disaster began to come into focus, with a private firm estimating total dam-

age from Ida could exceed $50 billion. Edwards said Louisiana was blessed to have only two deaths from Ida so far, given the magnitude of the hurricane's devastation. In southern Louisiana's Plaquemines Parish, Gayle Lawrence lost two cars, refrigerators and almost everything in her garage to floodwaters. Her garage was filled with marsh grass and dead fish. Scores of other homes in the neighborhood were also flooded. “The house is solid. It didn’t even move. But when the water came up, it destroyed everything,” she said. In Jefferson Parish, hospital staff, food bank employees and other critical workers were hampered by a gas shortage, said parish president Cynthia Lee Sheng. The parish neighbors New Orleans and saw widespread destruction from Ida. Authorities were still waiting for floodwaters to recede enough for trucks carrying food, water and repair supplies to begin moving into Lafitte and other lowlying communities. “Today we’re a broken community. It won’t always be that way,” Sheng said after meeting with Edwards. Emergency officials in nearby Terrebonne Parish took to Twitter to caution evacuees considering returning home that “there are no shelters, no electricity, very limited resources for food, gasoline and supplies and absolutely no medical services.”


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