It would be easy for Tarleton State University rodeo fans to take for granted that there’ll always be someone to cheer on at the College National Finals Rodeo.
arleton State University saddle bronc rider Brody Cress captured six first-place finishes during the 2017-18 rodeo season to earn his third trip to the June 8-16 College National Finals Rodeo in Casper, Wyo.
Dr. Thomas J. Faulkenberry, assistant professor of psychological sciences at Tarleton State University, has been appointed to a three-year term on the newly established review committee for the international Psychonomic Society.
Tarleton State University’s Bass Club completed their 2018 tournament appearance campaign among the Top 20 collegiate fishing teams in the nation, earning the No. 15 spot on the annual Cabela’s School of the Year rankings and finishing as the second-highest team in Texas.
Milestones are plentiful for Tarleton State University senior and rodeo team member Rylee Jo Dick. She graduated with a degree in kinesiology in May and qualified for the June 8-16 College National Finals Rodeo for the third time.
An information session for students interested in the Tarleton Model for Accelerated Teacher Education (TMATE) program is scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday, June 11, at the university’s Fort Worth location, 6777 Camp Bowie Blvd.
Ky Bray admits he’s not your stereotypical cowboy. He’s a team roping header, and he’s an English major at Tarleton State University. He plans on staying in Stephenville long enough to get a master’s degree, and he hopes to one day earn a doctorate in psychology.
Wyatt Williams is a go-getter, so it should come as no surprise the Tarleton State University tie-down roper qualified for the 2018 College National Finals Rodeo in Casper, Wyo.
A trio of local artists are featured in “Color Gone Wild,” an exhibit at the A.P. Gordon House Gallery in Granbury, part of Tarleton State University’s Dora Lee Langdon Cultural and Educational Center.