Texas Southern University














































































Texas Southern University
Texas Southern University seal.svg
Motto "Excellence in Achievement"
Type
State university, HBCU
Established March 7, 1927
Endowment $48.7 million[1]
President Austin Lane
Provost Dr. Kendall Harris
Administrative staff
500
Students 10,237 (Fall 2017)
Location
Houston
,
Texas
,
U.S.


29°43′20″N 95°21′40″W / 29.72222°N 95.36111°W / 29.72222; -95.36111Coordinates: 29°43′20″N 95°21′40″W / 29.72222°N 95.36111°W / 29.72222; -95.36111
Campus
Urban, 150-acre (0.61 km2)
Newspaper The TSU Herald
Colors Maroon and gray[2]
         
Athletics
NCAA Division I FCS – SWAC
Nickname Tigers
Mascot Tiger
Website www.tsu.edu
Texas Southern University wordmark.svg

Texas Southern University (shortened to Texas Southern or simply TSU) is a public historically black university (HBCU) in Houston, Texas. The university was established in 1927 as the Houston Colored Junior College. It developed through its private college phase as the four-year Houston Colored College. On March 3, 1947, the state declared this to be the first state university in Houston; it was renamed Texas State University for Negroes. In 1951, the name changed to Texas Southern University.


Texas Southern University is one of the largest and most comprehensive HBCUs in the nation. The university has over 10,000 students enrolled and offers 100+ academic programs and 80+ student organizations.[3] TSU is one of only four independent public universities in Texas (those not affiliated with any of Texas' six public university systems) and the only HBCU in Texas recognized as one of "America's Top Colleges" by Forbes magazine.[4] TSU is a leading producer of college degrees to African Americans and Hispanics in Texas and ranks fourth in the United States in doctoral and professional degrees conferred to African Americans.[5] The university is a member school of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund and it is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.[6]


Dr. Waldivia Ardlaw of Cite: The Architecture + Design Review of Houston wrote that the university serves as "the cultural and community center of" the Third Ward area where it is located, in addition to being its university.[7] Also, the university serves as a notable economic resource for Greater Houston, contributing over $500 million to the region's gross sales and being directly and indirectly responsible for over 3,000 jobs.[8]


Texas Southern University intercollegiate sports teams, collectively known as the Tigers, compete in NCAA Division I and the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). The university recruits nationwide for its Ocean of Soul marching band.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Campus


  • 3 Notable buildings


    • 3.1 University Museum


    • 3.2 Leonard H.O. Spearman Technology


    • 3.3 Jesse H. Jones School of Business


    • 3.4 College of Education


    • 3.5 Barbara Jordan–Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs


      • 3.5.1 TSU Justice Center




    • 3.6 TSU Science Center


    • 3.7 Spurgeon N. Gray Hall (COPHS)


    • 3.8 Thurgood Marshall School of Law


    • 3.9 Sterling Student Life Center


    • 3.10 Granville M. Sawyer Auditorium


    • 3.11 Newman Center


    • 3.12 Tiger Walk


    • 3.13 Residential life


    • 3.14 Athletic facilities


    • 3.15 Transportation




  • 4 Academics


    • 4.1 Admissions


    • 4.2 Libraries




  • 5 Demographics


  • 6 Student life


    • 6.1 Traditions


    • 6.2 Debate team


    • 6.3 Ocean of Soul


    • 6.4 Athletics


      • 6.4.1 Tiger and Lady Tiger basketball


      • 6.4.2 Tiger football


      • 6.4.3 Tiger baseball


      • 6.4.4 Tiger Volleyball


      • 6.4.5 Tiger Softball




    • 6.5 KTSU 90.9 FM




  • 7 Notable TSU alumni


  • 8 Notable faculty


  • 9 See also


  • 10 References


    • 10.1 Sources




  • 11 External links





History


On March 7, 1927, the Houston Independent School District board resolved to establish junior colleges for each race, as the state was racially segregated in all public facilities. The resolution created Houston Junior College, which later became the University of Houston, and Houston Colored Junior College, which first held classes at Jack Yates High School during the evenings. The school's name was later changed to Houston College for Negroes in 1934.


In February 1946, Heman Marion Sweatt, an African American man, applied to the University of Texas School of Law. He was denied admission because of race, and subsequently filed suit in Sweatt v. Painter (1950). The state had no law school for African Americans. In an attempt to not integrate University of Texas Law School, the state of Texas made several offers to Heman Marion Sweatt to keep him from going to court. They offered to establish the Texas State University of Negroes which would include a law school. Some black leaders welcomed the idea of having another state supported university in Texas, while many others felt as though the university was created to solely avoid the integration of the University of Texas, as well as other white institutions. In the end, they did not grant Sweatt a writ of mandamus to attend the University of Texas, the trial court granted a continuance for six months to allow the state time to create a law school for blacks.


As a result, the Fiftieth Texas Legislature passed Texas Senate Bill 140 on March 3, 1947, authorizing and funding the creation of Texas State University for Negroes as the first state university to be located in Houston.[9] The school was established to serve African Americans in Texas and offer them fields of study comparable to those available to white Texans. The state took over the Houston Independent School District (HISD)-run Houston College for Negroes as a basis for the new university. Houston College moved to the present site (adjacent to the University of Houston), which was donated by Hugh Roy Cullen. It had one permanent building and an existing faculty and students. The new university was charged with teaching "pharmacy, dentistry, arts and sciences, journalism, education, literature, law, medicine and other professional courses." The legislature stipulated that "these courses shall be equivalent to those offered at other institutions of this type supported by the State of Texas."


Given the differences in facilities and intangibles, such as the distance of the new school from Austin, the University of Texas School of Law, and other law students, the United States Supreme Court ruled the new facility did not satisfy "separate but equal" provisions. It ruled that African Americans must also be admitted to the University of Texas Law School at Austin. See Sweatt v. Painter (1950).[9]


In March 1960, Texas Southern University students organized Houston's first sit-in at the Weingarten's lunch counter located at 4110 Almeda. The success of their efforts inspired more sit-ins throughout the city, which, within months, led to the desegregation of many of Houston's public establishments.[10] Today, a historical marker commissioned by the Texas Historical Commission stands on the property of the first sit-in to commemorate the courageous acts of those TSU students. That property is now a U.S. Post Office. TSU journalism professor Serbino Sandifer-Walker worked for nearly two years with the Texas Historical Commission, the original students who led the march, and many other stakeholders, to have the historic marker designated on March 4, 2010, the fiftieth anniversary of that sit-in.[11]


On May 17, 1967, it was reported that students at TSU rioted on campus. When officers responded thousands of shots were fired and there were injuries on both sides including a death of a police officer. Over 500 students were arrested.[12] Although media sources reported this as a riot, there were no reports of looting, destruction of property, or resistance of any arrest. Furthermore, the reports failed to mention the prior invasion of police officers on campus, or the reports of students getting roughed up on campus. The police raid caused over $10,000 of damage and it was reported over 3,0000 shots were fired into the Lanier dormitory. There was little coverage that, the five students whom were charged with conspiracy and incitement of riot were all exonerated due to lack of evidence, or that the police officer died not from student fire, but the ricochet of Houston Police Department bullets.
[13]



Campus




Granville M. Sawyer Auditorium


The university has more than 45 buildings on a 150-acre (0.61 km2) urban gated campus centrally located in Houston. The campus is three miles southeast of Downtown Houston and six miles east of Uptown Houston. TSU is recognized as a Tree Campus USA school for its commitment to preserving and increasing campus trees.[14]


The school's first structure was the Thornton B. Fairchild Building, built 1947–1948 and housing administration and classroom space. Temporary buildings served as faculty housing during that time.[7] The Mack H. Hannah hall, designed by Lamar Q. Cato and opened in 1950, was the second building. In the late 1950s many more buildings opened, including classroom, dormitory, and student union facilities.[15]



Notable buildings



University Museum


Completed in 2000, the 11,000-square-foot (1,000 m2) exhibition space displays a variety of historical and contemporary art. The museum is the permanent home of the Web of Life, a twenty-six-foot mural masterpiece by world-renowned artist Dr. John T. Biggers,[16] founding chairman of the TSU art department.[17]



Leonard H.O. Spearman Technology




Leonard H.O. Spearman building


In 2014, TSU unveiled a $31 million, 108,000-square-foot, four-story structure named after the school's fifth president. In addition to having 35 labs, the facility is home to a Tier 1 University Transportation Center, the Center for Transportation Training and Research, and the National Science Foundation Center for Research on Complex Networks. The departments of Engineering, Transportation Studies, Computer Science, Industrial Technology, Physics, and Aviation Science and Technology academic programs are housed in the building.[18] TSU is the only four-year state supported university in Texas to offer a Pilot Ground School course and the first HBCU to implement a Maritime Transportation degree program.[19][20]



Jesse H. Jones School of Business


Jesse H. Jones (JHJ) School of Business is located in a three-story, 76,000-square-foot building completed in 1998 and accommodates 1,600 students in undergraduate and graduate studies. The Jesse H. Jones School of Business is the first business school at a HBCU to be accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB)[21][22] and been named one of the "Best Business Schools" by the Princeton Review.[23] JHJ School of Business is consistently one of the highest ranked business schools from a public HBCU in the U.S. News & World Report rankings.[24]



College of Education


The College of Education building consists of the Department of Counseling, the Department of Curriculum and Instruction, the Department of Educational Administration & Foundations, and the Department of Health and Kinesiology. The college has an enrollment of approximately 1,000 in undergraduate and graduate studies.[25] In 2014, the National Council on Teacher Quality ranked TSU's College of Education 56th in the nation for best secondary education programs and gave the college a "top-ranked" distinction.[26]



Barbara Jordan–Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs


An extensive set of curricular offerings is provided through the Barbara Jordan - Mickey Leland School Of Public Affairs, which offers courses in Administration of Justice (AJ), Political Science (POLS), Public Affairs (PA), Military Science (MSCI), and Urban Planning & Environmental Policy (UPEP) on the undergraduate, graduate, or doctoral level. The school sits in an 82,000-square-foot facility completed in 2008.



TSU Justice Center


On January 22, 2018, the university published a new establishment Center for Justice Research (CJR) in the Barbara Jordan-Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs. The center is intended to create innovative solutions to criminal justice alteration and address challenges in America's criminal justice system. The award is granted by Charles Koch Foundation and Koch Industries, the two institutions that allow students and scholars to discover diversity ideas and perceptions with more than 300 colleges and universities nationwide.[27]



TSU Science Center




TSU Science Center


The TSU Science Center building is home to several scholastic programs, such as the Houston Louis Stokes Alliance Minority Program (H-LSAMP) and the Thomas Freeman Honors College. It also houses several research programs, such as the NASA University Research Center for Bio-Nanotechnology and Environmental Research (NASA URC C-BER), Maritime Transportation Studies and Research, as well as the STEM research program.TSU's NASA University Research Center (C-BER) addresses human health concerns related to manned exploration of space. Programs such as TSU's NASA University Research Center (C-BER) and participation in The Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Preparation Program (LSAMP) support undergraduate, graduate and faculty development while helping to increase the number of US citizens receiving degrees in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) fields.[28] The science center also houses the only doctoral degree program in environmental toxicology in Southeast Texas.



Spurgeon N. Gray Hall (COPHS)


The College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences (COPHS) is housed in the Spurgeon N. Gray Hall. COPHS has approximately 800 students. The 2016 pharmacy graduates had a 90% first-attempt pass rate on the NAPLEX which was above the national average (85%), third highest in Texas, and highest among HBCUs.[29] TSU is one of only two public HBCUs in the United States with an accredited and comprehensive pharmacy program.[30] COPHS is the first and only in Houston to offer a Masters of Science in Health Care Administration degree.[31]



Thurgood Marshall School of Law


The Thurgood Marshall School of Law (TMSL) is one of six public law schools in Texas and ranks as one of the most diverse law schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report.[32] TMSL is accredited by the American Bar Association (ABA) and a member-school of The Association of American Law Schools (AALS).[33] Enrollment is at approximately 600 students.




Sterling Student Center


The Texas College for Negroes was initially housed in Austin, Texas, but was eventually transferred to Texas Southern University's campus. The creation of the Law School did not have the support of Thurgood Marshall or the NAACP. However, in 1976 now U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, agreed to name formally the "Law School of Texas Southern University," the "Thurgood Marshall School of Law."[34]



Sterling Student Life Center


The Ernest S. Sterling Student Life Center (SSLC) provides cultural, social, recreational, educational and religious programs and services for students, faculty, staff, alumni and guests. The center is home to the TSU Bookstore, TSU cheerleaders, bowling alley, game room, Student Government Association, University Program Council, Herald newspaper, Tiger yearbook, cafeteria, Office of Campus Organizations, Student Activities, administrative offices and Office of Events.[35]



Granville M. Sawyer Auditorium


Renovated in 2014,[36] the Sawyer Auditorium is Texas Southern University's historical landmark. Sawyer Auditorium features split-level seating for up to 1,800 guests for hosting university-sponsored events. It also has an adjacent drama playhouse.[37]



Newman Center


Constructed in 1969, the Newman Center is a welcoming faith community that serves all students, faculty, staff, and alumni of Texas Southern University. As a welcoming faith community, it offers spiritual guidance, fellowship, and a clean and functional facility where students may interact with peers, study, and pray.



Tiger Walk


The Tiger Walk is the maroon and gray paved central street on campus where most of TSU outdoor social activities are held and a popular destination for students to relax or socialize. Tiger Walk North extension was completed in 2012 along the closed Tierwester Street in front of the School of Public Affairs building.[38]




University Towers



Residential life


The school has traditional and apartment-style residence halls on campus.[39]



  • Lanier East Hall, traditional style residence hall for men only

  • Lanier West Hall, traditional style residence hall for women only

  • Tierwester Oaks, apartment-style residence hall for both genders

  • The Urban Academic Village (UAV), apartment-style residence hall for both genders

  • University Towers, traditional style residence hall for both genders



Athletic facilities




  • BBVA Compass Stadium – The $95 million 22,000-seat stadium in nearby East Downtown is the permanent home of Tiger Football.


  • Health and Physical Education Arena (H&PE Arena) – An 8,100-seat multi-purpose arena (largest arena in the SWAC). Built in 1989, it is home to the annual graduation ceremonies, Tiger basketball, Lady Tiger basketball and volleyball.

  • Alexander Durley Stadium – The 5,500 seat stadium is the home of TSU soccer games and the annual TSU Relays.

  • TSU Recreation and Wellness Center – Opened in 2005, the TSU Recreation and Wellness Center has served the students of TSU and the Third Ward community. The facility is open to all TSU students, community members and alumni. Serving approximately 5,000 students yearly and community members, amenities included are a full basketball court, indoor track, weight room, dance studio, study/lounge area, swimming pool, and a women's resource center.[40]



Transportation


Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County (METRO) operates public transportation services, including buses and the METRORail tram service, which serve the university. The METRORail Purple Line station serving the university is Robertson Stadium/UH/TSU station.



Academics


















University rankings
National

Forbes[41]
649

U.S. News & World Report[42]
230-301

Washington Monthly[43]
201

Texas Southern University offers over 100 bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees. The university is classified by the Carnegie Foundation as a "doctoral university with higher research activity"[44] and currently comprises 11 schools and colleges along with several scholastic and research programs.




  • The Thomas F. Freeman Honors College[45] (formerly the Frederick Douglass Honors Program)


  • The Barbara Jordan-Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs:[46] Mickey Leland Center, Barbara Jordan Institute, Emergency Management Program, Center for Justice Research[47]


  • The College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences: RCMI Institute for Biomedical and Health Disparities Research, Center for Cardiovascular Diseases, Center for Human Performance and Material Science, Center of Excellence in Health Disparities Research: Cardiovascular Disease and Stroke


  • The Thurgood Marshall School of Law: Earl Carl Institute for Legal and Social Justice, Center for Legal Pedagogy, Institute for International and Immigration Law (IIIL), Center for Government


  • The College of Education: TSU Charter Laboratory School


  • The College of Science, Engineering, and Technology: National Transportation Security Center of Excellence for Petro-Chemical Transportation (NTSCOE-P), Center for Transportation Training and Research (CTTR), TSU NASA University Research Center for Bionanotechnology and Environmental Research (TSU NASA C-BER), Innovative Transportation Research Institute (ITRI), Houston National Summer Transportation Institute (HNSTI), Research Center in Minority Institution (RCMI) Computational Core: Advanced Computational Simulation Center, Research Center in Minority Institution (RCMI) Computational Core: Data Analysis and Visualization Center, NASA C-BER Fellows Program, NASA C-BER Scholars Program, Houston Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation (H-LSAMP) Program, Science & Engineering Summer Program, Science Technology and Enhancement Program (STEP), Maritime Transportation Management and Security Program, Beyond Traffic Innovation Center and Aviation Science Management which is fully accredited by the Association of Technology, Management, and Applied Engineering (ATMAE), Federal Aviation Administration Part 141approved ground school certificate


  • The Jesse H. Jones School of Business (AACSB accredited): Economic Development Center, Gerald B. Smith Center for Entrepreneurship and Executive Development, JPMorgan Chase Center for Financial Education, Kase Lawal Center for Global Trade

  • The Graduate School


  • The School of Communication: The Center for the Radio, Television and Print Media Professional Studies


  • The College of Liberal Arts and Behavioral Sciences (COLAB): The Thomas F. Freeman Center for Forensic Excellence, The Confucius Institute (education partnership with China)


  • The College of Continuing Education: Attorney Ricky Anderson Entertainment Law Institute, Mathew Knowles Institute



Admissions


Texas Southern University annually receives over 10,000 undergraduate applications and offers admissions to approximately 50% of applicants. You can handle all admissions through the bell building and online at Texas Southern website. The acceptance rate is 51%, and the graduation rate is 19%.



Libraries


Texas Southern University's main library is the Robert J. Terry (RJT) Library. The RJT library is home to an African Art Gallery, The Heartman Collection, and many types of valuable archives.[48]


In 2017, TSU announced plans to construct a $43 million brand new main library to replace its existing one. The new library will be a six-story, 137,000-square-foot building that is expected to be completed in summer 2019.[49][50][51]


The Thurgood Marshall School of Law building also houses an extensive library.



Demographics


As of 2015[update], the student body is 76% African American, 9% Hispanic, 7% International, 3% White, and 5% other. Approximately 86% of the student body is from Texas; the top three counties of origin for in-state students are Harris County, Fort Bend County, and Dallas County. The top three state origins for out-of-state students are California, Louisiana, and Georgia, and the top three country origins of international students are Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, and China. The student body is 42% male and 58% female. The student-to-faculty ratio is 19 to 1.[52][53]



Student life


Some of TSU's campus organizations include the Debate Team, Psi Chi Honor Society, all nine organizations of the National Panhellenic Council, Living Testimony Gospel Ministry, TSU Dance Company, HER TSU,Women of GOLD,CSL (Caribbean Student Organization), Boys to Men, Campus PALS, Collegiate 100, Hispanic Student Association, African Student Association, California Club, Midwest Club, Louisiana Club, Political Science Club, National Society of Black Engineers, Pre-Law Society, Pre-Alumni Association, University Program Council (UPC), and Student Government Association (SGA).[54]



Traditions


There are several traditions established on the campus of Texas Southern University. Some of the most well-known ones are electing a Mister and Miss TSU and Royal Court, Labor Day Classic festivities, Tiger Day/Tigre Dia, TSU founding day celebration, Springfest week, the TSU Shuffle (line dance), and homecoming week.



Debate team


The debate team was founded by professor emeritus and coach Thomas Freeman in 1949. Freeman has led the team for over 60 years and is credited for training notable leaders such as former U.S. Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, and civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr. while serving as a visiting professor at Morehouse College.[55][56]



Ocean of Soul



Texas Southern's marching band the Ocean of Soul has won numerous awards and performed at Super Bowls,[57] The Stellar Awards,[58] various parades, NBA and Houston Texans games. The 200-plus-member band alumni include Grammy award-winning jazz saxophonist Kirk Whalum. The Ocean of Soul is complemented by The Motion of The Ocean, a female dance team that has been featured on America's Best Dance Crew.



Athletics





H&PE Arena



Texas Southern sports teams participate in NCAA Division I (Championship Subdivision for football) in the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). Texas Southern is part of the Western Division in SWAC divisional sports.


Men's varsity sports include baseball, basketball, football, golf, and track and field. Women's varsity sports include basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, dance (TSU Tiger Sensations), Cheer, track and field, and volleyball. [59]


Texas Southern's most well-known rivals are Prairie View A&M, Southern, Grambling State, and Jackson State.[citation needed]




Tiger and Lady Tiger basketball




Tiger football




Tiger baseball


The Texas Southern Baseball team competes in the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) and plays home games at MacGregor Park. Texas Southern Baseball program fro a long time has dominated the SWAC. The Tigers have been back-to-back conference champions (2016-2017 and 2017-2018). In the past the tigers have also won in 2004, 2008, and 2015. Micheal Robertson is currently the head coach for the baseball program. Last year was the first time the Tigers have one the western division.



Tiger Volleyball


Texas Southern Volleyball competes at the HP&E Arena. Texas Southern University Volleyball won their first SWAC ring in 1989 against Southern University (3-0). Then in 1990 they returned with another ring against Prairie View (3-0). The last SWAC championship Lady Tiger Volleyball received was in 1994 against Prairie View (3-0).



Tiger Softball


Texas Southern Softball team competes at Memorial Park in Houston,Tx. The lady tigers softball team won their first and second SWAC conference championship back to back years in 2014 & 2015. The lady tigers then went on to win their third SWAC championship in 2017. The lady tigers have also won the western divison championship of the conference nine consecutive years. The lady tigers are coached by Worley Barker and assisted by Jasmin Hutchinson



KTSU 90.9 FM



In addition to serving as a training unit for TSU students, the station was established to serve the university at the program level as well as the community by presenting various types of TSU athletics, educational, cultural and social programs to a primarily listening area within a 10-mile (16 km) radius of the university. A 1973 survey indicated that radio was generally the preferred source of information of African-Americans, particularly those with less than a high school education. By the late 1970s, the station had secured an ample audience and programming increased in scope. At the same time, the station increased its power range from 10 watts to 18,500 watts. According to the Arbitron Rating Service (ARS), KTSU has an audience of 244,700 listeners and is number one overall of Houston and Galveston stations for its Sunday format and its Friday format of Golden Oldies.[60]



Notable TSU alumni

































































































































































































































































































Name
Class year
Notability
References

Michael Strahan
1993
Former NFL defensive end for the New York Giants, Super Bowl Champion, Pro Football Hall of Fame and Black College Football Hall of Fame inductee. Currently a football analyst on Fox NFL Sunday, actor, author, entrepreneur, and co-host of Strahan and Sara.
[61]

Yolanda Adams
1983
American Grammy, Dove award-winning Gospel music singer, radio show host, author, actress, judge on BET's Sunday Best and former elementary-school teacher. She has sold over 8 million albums since 1991 according to Soundscan
[62]

Kenneth M. Hoyt
1969 and 1972
Nominated by President Ronald Reagan to a seat on the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas. He was the second African-American to serve as federal judge in Texas. He took senior status in 2013.


Ernie Holmes
1971
Former NFL defensive tackle for the Pittsburgh Steelers, original member of the famed Steel Curtain defensive line, two-time Super Bowl Champion


Belvin Perry
1977
Chief judge in the Florida's Ninth Judicial Circuit, presiding judge for the high-profile Casey Anthony murder trial.


Jennifer Holliday


Tony, American Grammy Award-winning entertainer and well-known cast member of Dreamgirls

Hon. Barbara Charline Jordan
1956
Congresswoman in the United States House of Representatives from Texas from 1973 to 1979
[63]

Mickey Leland
1970
Anti-poverty activist and later a congressman from the Texas 18th District and chair of the Congressional Black Caucus
.[64]

Tray Walker
2015
Former Baltimore Ravens cornerback


Roberto R. Alonzo
1984
Texas State Representative from District 104 (Dallas)
[65]

Barbara Mallory Caraway
1978
Former Member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 110 (Dallas)

James Douglas
1966 and 1970
Elected ninth president of Texas Southern University (1995 - 1999)
[66]

Ruth McClendon

African-American Democrat member of the Texas House of Representatives from San Antonio since 1996; former member of the San Antonio City Council and Mayor Pro Tem from 1993 to 1996; former juvenile probation officer
[67]

Gilbert Pena
1996
2015 Hispanic Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 144 in Pasadena; graduated in Political Science at the age of forty-seven
[68]

Morris Overstreet
1975
First African-American to be elected to statewide office in Texas. He served on the state's highest appellate court from 1990 to 1998


Leslie D. King
1973

Mississippi Supreme Court Justice


Kirk Whalum

Grammy Award-winning jazz saxophonist


Kase Lukman Lawal
1976
Chairman and CEO of CAMAC International Corporation and chairman of Allied Energy Corporation in Houston, Texas, Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, CAMAC HOLDINGS;[1] vice chairman, Port of Houston Authority Commission


Rodney Ellis
1975
Harris County Commissioner Precinct 1 (2017-present); Former member of the Texas Senate, District 13 1990-2016 and the Houston City Council District D (1983-1990) (Houston)


Sylvia Garcia
1978
Member of the Texas Senate, District 6 (Houston)


Harry E. Johnson

Current President of the Washington, D.C. Martin Luther King, Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation, Inc
[69]

Jarvis Johnson

Member of the Texas House of Representatives, District 139 (Houston) since January 2017; Former member of the Houston City Council from the B District 2005-11


Tony Wyllie
1993
Senior Vice President for the Washington Redskins. He has previously worked as an Assistant Director of Public Relations for the St. Louis Rams, the Director of Public Relations for the Tennessee Titans, and Vice President of Communications for the Houston Texans


Ron Reynolds

Member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 27 since 2011; lawyer in Missouri City
[70]

Senfronia Thompson

Member of the Texas House of Representatives from the 141st district (Houston)


Lloyd C. A. Wells

Sports photographer and civil rights activist on the behalf of black athletes


Robert Taylor

Winner of gold medal in 4x100 m relay at the 1972 Summer Olympics


Greg Briggs
1991
Former NFL defensive back


Ken Burrough
1970
Former NFL wide receiver


Joseph Anderson
2011
Current NFL wide receiver


Brett Maxie
1985
Former NFL defensive back and current NFL assistant coach


Lloyd Mumphord
1969
Former NFL defensive back


Warren Wells
1969
Former NFL wide receiver


Julius Adams
1971
Former NFL defensive lineman
ju

Arthur Cox

Former NFL tight end


Donald Narcisse

Former Canadian Football League wide receiver. Canadian Football Hall of Fame inductee, 2010


Markus Howell

Former CFL wide receiver and current CFL Assistant Coach


Cortez Hankton
2002
Former NFL wide receiver and current assistant football coach at Dartmouth College
[71]

Oliver Celestin
2002
Former NFL defensive back
[72]

Warren Bone

Former NFL player
[73]

Wilton Felder

Saxophonist and bass player (a founding member of The Crusaders)
[74]

Conrad Murray




Belvin Perry
1977
Chief Judge of the Ninth Judicial Circuit in Orlando, Florida and was involved in the Casey Anthony trial.
[75]

Ronald C. Green
1996
Current City Controller of Houston and a former member of the Houston City Council
[76]

Jim Hines
1968
2 Gold medals at 1968 Olympics, First sprinter to officially break the 10-second barrier in the 100 meters, and former NFL player
[77]

Allen Lyday
1970
Former NFL defensive back





Notable faculty





















Name
Department
Notability
Reference

Mathew Knowles
Communications

Beyoncé Knowles-Carter and Solange Knowles father, founder of Music World Entertainment, former manager for the members of Destiny's Child and Solange, and adjunct instructor in the School of Communication and Jesse H. Jones School of Business.
[78]

Robert D. Bullard
Sociology
Well-noted scholar of environmental justice



See also



  • Third Ward

  • Emancipation Park (Houston)

  • Riverside Terrace

  • History of the African Americans in Houston



References





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Sources


  • TSU Introduces New Center for Justice Research. Web, 22 Jan. 2018.


External links







  • Official website

  • Texas Southern Athletics website


  • Texas Southern University from the Handbook of Texas Online











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