82R4633 JNC-D
 
  By: Hilderbran H.C.R. No. 35
 
 
 
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
         WHEREAS, Distinguished representatives of the Texas Tech
  University System are gathering at the State Capitol on February 1,
  2011, to celebrate the system's vital role in the Lone Star State;
  and
         WHEREAS, The TTU System, governed by a nine-member board of
  regents and chancellor Kent Hance, consists of Texas Tech
  University, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, and
  Angelo State University; the system currently enrolls more than
  42,000 students, employs some 18,000 faculty and staff members, and
  counts over 250,000 alumni; and
         WHEREAS, Looking to the future, the system has developed five
  strategic priorities, including improving access to education and
  promoting learning, strengthening the academic excellence of
  member institutions, expanding knowledge through research, serving
  its communities, and effectively managing its resources; and
         WHEREAS, Each component of the system provides unique
  educational opportunities; Texas Tech University is a major
  comprehensive research university, led by Dr. Guy Bailey; enrolling
  more than 31,600 students in 12 colleges and schools, TTU offers
  more than 150 undergraduate programs, 100 master's programs, and 60
  doctoral programs, and it is among a select group of institutions to
  shelter a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa; and
         WHEREAS, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center is
  composed of the TTUHSC School of Medicine, the School of Allied
  Health Sciences, the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, the
  Anita Thigpen Perry School of Nursing, the School of Pharmacy, and
  the new Paul L. Foster School of Medicine in El Paso, which seated
  its first class in July 2009; overseen by Dr. Tedd L. Mitchell,
  TTUHSC enrolls nearly 3,700 students and boasts more than 11,000
  alumni; and
         WHEREAS, Founded in 1928, Angelo State University enrolls
  more than 6,800 students in six colleges and is directed by Dr.
  Joseph C. Rallo; ASU was the first university in the state to offer
  a degree in computer science and the institution's physics
  department has been designated by Physics Today as one of the top
  undergraduate programs in the nation; and
         WHEREAS, The Texas Tech University System has provided
  countless students with an outstanding education and a strong
  foundation for the future, and in so doing, it has contributed to
  the remarkable achievements of the state as a whole; now,
  therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas
  hereby recognize February 1, 2011, as Texas Tech University System
  Day at the State Capitol and extend a warm welcome to all those from
  the TTU System who are visiting here today.