"Bearing our banners far and wide" is getting a whole new meaning at Texas Tech University this week. In the spirit of those words in Tech's "Matador Song," one of Texas Tech's professors is bearing the institution's banners into space through a NASA project aimed at understanding how heat flows on the Moon,
Texas Tech University has significantly increased its graduation rates, with a six-year rate of 69% and a four-year rate of 51%, thanks to investments in student support programs like the Raider Success Hub and dedicated specialists.
Texas’ Huff and Texas Tech’s Harrell will be a part of the College Football Hall of Fame’s Class of 2025, joining legendary coaches Nick Saban and Urban Meyer.
As Texas lawmakers head to Austin for this session, Texas Tech is requesting funding for key initiatives related to national security and enrollment.
Graham Harrell has been selected as the seventh Texas Tech football player to be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.
Despite seven consecutive wins and a top-12 national ranking, the Arizona Wildcats are not expected to beat Texas Tech on Saturday. The latest betting odds for
The City of Cisco has announced the selection of Sarah Adams as its new City Manager.Adams has been a resident of Cisco since 2008.She graduated from Texas A&M,
College basketball is in the thick of conference play ahead of the 2025 NCAA tournament. Here's where teams stand in March Madness bracketology:
The Detroit Lions host the Washington Commanders in the divisional round of the NFL playoffs roughly a year since a few coaching decisions shaped the future of each organization.
Kevin Thompson, founder and CEO of 9i Capital Group, told Newsweek many layoffs in California are due to tech companies reducing their pandemic-era workforce bloat. In August, Intel Corp. revealed plans to cut roughly 15,000 jobs due to disappointing earnings, and Cisco Systems cut approximately 7 percent of its workforce (5,900 jobs) in September.
Division II football will no longer be the only NCAA-sponsored postseason format without automatic qualification.
Climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe talks to Bob McDonald about the polarization of science and why she thinks scientists should stop pretending to be neutral when it's our planet at risk.