Recent News About Texas State University
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Lowery appointed U.S. Attorney.
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The Opening marks firm’s fifth office in the state of Texas.
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Not all experiments will be successful, especially if the premises are unsound
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Businesses owned by women in Texas are growing at more than twice the rate of all firms nationwide.
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A defendant in a wrongful termination suit has appealed a ruling that granted Lamar University’s plea to the jurisdiction.
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A plea to the jurisdiction has been granted in a wrongful termination suit against Lamar University.
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A motion for temporary stay has been granted in a wrongful termination suit against Lamar University.
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The former associate vice president of finance for Lamar State University, who authored a highly publicized report criticizing the college’s spending, claims she lost her job due to her connection with the report.
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Truncale Beaumont attorney Michael Truncale, who recently announced his Republican candidacy for U.S. Congress, said he will push for Texas-style tort reforms on a national level if elected.
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A Beaumont woman has filed suit against the driver who she claims backed into her vehicle, allegedly causing her to sustain cervical neck pain, lumbar back pain, left shoulder pain and headaches.
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On the dusty roads of West Texas in the 1920s, an unlikely figure traveled from town to town in her Model T, signing up roughnecks and cowboys for custom boot orders and continuing her late father's bootmaking legacy.
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Siringi A year after receiving an 18-month sentence to federal prison for sending threatening communications to Lamar University and its staff, former doctoral candidate Daniel Siringi is suing the school in an effort to obtain his diploma.
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Recent civil suits filed in Jefferson County District Courts, Aug. 10-17, 2009
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A Port Arthur woman says she suffered extensive injuries after she fell while dropping her granddaughter off at a child care center.
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A Lamar University professor has filed a discrimination suit against the college, alleging he was denied tenure because he is a man.
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The votes are in: Lamar students want the Cardinal football program returned to the university and are willing to pay for it.
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Michael Truncale Beaumont attorney Michael Truncale has been named to the board of regents of his alma mater.
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An Allco site Summit Electric Supply Co. says it supplied nearly $100,000 worth of materials to an Allco Construction, Ltd. subcontractor so it could renovate the McDonald Recreational Sports Facility at Lamar University, but has still not received a payment for its services.
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Criminal District Court Judge John Stevens Jr. will be one of three featured speakers at the Lamar University event set to celebrate the U.S. Constitution.
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When David Beck arrived at Lamar for registration, a government professor noticed his academic record and suggested that he study law.