Texas
Texas Tech begins video board, sound system project – Texas Tech Red Raiders
LUBBOCK, Texas – Texas Tech announced Thursday two additional upgrades to Jones AT&T Stadium for the 2024 season as construction began this week on a state-of-the-art sound system and an expanded north end zone video board.
Both projects add to the construction in and around Jones AT&T Stadium as Texas Tech is in the midst of its largest athletic facility investment in its history with the $242 million south end zone and Womble Football Center. The cost of the two projects have been incorporated into the overall south end zone project, which is being funded through philanthropic giving and future revenue generated from premium ticket sales.
Texas Tech has contracted the services of Daktronics for not only its north end zone video board but also the two video displays atop the south end zone building and additional ribbon boards throughout the stadium. The new sound system will be installed by Clair Audio, a national leader in large venue audio production.
“We are pleased to continue our longstanding relationship with Daktronics to further enhance the gameday atmosphere inside Jones AT&T Stadium,” Director of Athletics Kirby Hocutt said. “The technology involved with these video displays will allow our gameday production team to further enhance our fan interaction and add to the gameday environment we have created here at Texas Tech.”
Daktronics will expand Texas Tech’s current video board screen on the north side of the stadium to 37.2 feet high by 139.4 feet wide in size, utilizing the same structure that was built in 2013. The south end zone video displays, located in opposite corners of the new structure, will measure 27 feet high by 48 feet wide, featuring similar content zoning abilities that are already a staple of the north end zone video board. These features allow for multiple zones of content, showcasing instant replays, graphics, animations, statistics and game information as well as sponsorship messages.
Texas Tech will also utilize Daktronics to replace each of its three current ribbon boards located directly behind the north goalpost as well as the northwest and northeast corners of the stadium. Daktronics will add multiple ribbon boards to the south end zone structure, one directly above the field level club for a low vantage point and another between the second and third floors that will stretch the entire end zone.
In addition, Daktronics will be responsible for the technology inside the new Double T scoreboard that will be constructed beginning this month. That technology feeds not only the iconic scoreboard with critical game information but also integrates with Texas Tech’s ribbon boards as well as with the television broadcast crew.
The work inside Jones AT&T Stadium follows a similar project for Texas Tech where Daktronics recently installed a new outfield video board at Dan Law Field at Rip Griffin Park. The new outfield display, measuring 25 feet high by 48 feet wide, was funded through a generous gift from the Barry Street family, who are longtime supporters of Texas Tech Athletics and leaders in the cotton ginning industry in West Texas.
“We can’t thank the Street family for their continued support of our athletics program,” Hocutt said. “Rip Griffin Park is without a doubt one of the best stadiums in the country to take in a college baseball game. That experience will, without question, be enhanced thanks to their longstanding generosity and support of our baseball program.”
Construction of the new video displays and ribbon boards is expected to be completed by late spring. Daktronics is also responsible for the video displays inside the Sports Performance Center and Rocky Johnson Field as well as the ribbon capabilities and table technology at United Supermarkets Arena.
Texas
Off-road volunteers help North Texas nurses make it to and from work
WEATHERFORD, Texas – Despite icy roads, healthcare workers still have to work. And there’s a group of people who help make it happen.
The Dedicated Nurses
Mikki Sells is a nurse in Weatherford. But lately getting to work has become a job of its own.
“You know, we‘re nurses. We have to be there to help people,” she said. “Without us, you know, they wouldn’t have anybody. So it’s what we have to do.”
To get to work, she and a group of nurses have to cross a very steep hill. And on Tuesday night, the ride home didn’t go as planned.
“Last night, we didn’t make it. We got to the very top, and we got stuck on the very top, started sliding backwards. It was so scary,” she said.
The truck stopped. Everyone got out. And they did the only thing they could think to do. They called Trendsetter Customs.
The Off-Road Volunteers
Kevin Barwell was on the other end of the call. He runs an off-road shop in Weatherford. And when the weather gets bad, he doesn’t stay home.
“Everybody needs help in a bad time. And this seems like a bad time,” he said. “Every time we get a bad storm or something like this, we try to make sure first responders get where they need to be.”
For Barwell, it’s really that simple. Since Friday, he and a group of volunteers has been busy.
“Saturday, my day started at 5 a.m. I had to start delivering nurses at the 6 a.m. shift change. And then in between that, I was pulling people out. And then the 2 p.m. shift change and then the 10 p.m. shift change,” he said.
That included Sells and her group of nurses.
“I had actually just gotten home from my last delivery, just was about to get in the shower, and got a phone call,” Barwell said. “And she’s like, ‘We’re stuck on the hill. Can you please rescue us?’”
Five minutes later, the nurses were on their way.
Gratitude and Recognition
Barwell said he doesn’t need recognition.
“I served 20 years in the military, so I know what it’s like to be in a bad situation,” he said.
But Sells has a message she hopes he hears.
“I’d love to give him a big old hug,” she said. “Thank you so much. I hope you get the recognition you deserve.”
The Source: FOX 4’s Vania Castillo gathered the information for this story by talking to Mikki Sells and Kevin Barwell.
Texas
Execution of Texas man convicted of 1998 double murder scheduled for Wednesday
Charles Thompson, who once briefly escaped custody after being sentenced to death, is scheduled to be executed Wednesday evening for the 1998 double murder of his former girlfriend and her friend.
Thompson had gotten into an altercation at his then-girlfriend Dennise Hayslip’s apartment in Houston with her and her friend, Darren Cain, before a police officer escorted Thompson off the property, according to court records. Early the next morning, Thompson returned to the apartment, killing Cain and shooting Hayslip in the mouth. Hayslip was life-flighted to a nearby hospital, where she died a week later.
Thompson was charged with capital murder for killing Cain and Hayslip and sentenced to death in 1999. In 2001, his death sentence was vacated by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals after judges ruled the Harris County District Attorney’s Office had unconstitutionally used an undercover investigator to obtain evidence for the trial. Thompson was given a new sentencing hearing, where a jury again sentenced him to death in 2005.
While Thompson does not dispute shooting Cain, he has said the man attacked him first and he acted defensively. Thompson has also asserted that Hayslip would have survived her wounds, which partially severed her tongue, had it not been for her receiving an improper intubation while at the hospital.
Days after his resentencing, Thompson escaped from the Harris County Jail by switching into the civilian clothes he had worn to resentencing hearings and posed as an employee with the state Attorney General’s Office. The escape led to a three-day manhunt that ended with Thompson being caught drunk in Louisiana.
Thompson filed a new appeal and a request for a stay of execution with the CCA on Jan. 21 that called into question the efficacy of his legal counsel during trial. It also asserted Thompson’s previous claim that the hospital’s alleged improper intubation of Hayslip ultimately killed her. Included in the new filing was an affidavit from a doctor who testified during Thompson’s trial about Hayslip’s cause of death, stating she would withdraw her trial testimony and instead assert medical complications were the cause of death.
The CCA has yet to rule on the stay request or the appeal. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a previous federal habeas corpus appeal from Thompson in 2021.
If executed, Thompson will be the first person put to death in the United States this year, and is one of four men in Texas with currently scheduled executions. Thompson will also be the 136th person Harris County has executed since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976. The county has executed more people than any other state, and in 2025 sentenced its 300th person to death.
Texas’ use of the death penalty has dwindled for years as new death sentences and executions per year have remained in the single digits for more than a decade.
Cedric Ricks is the next person scheduled for execution in Texas on March 11. Ricks was convicted of capital murder in 2014 for stabbing his common-law wife and her 8-year-old son to death in their Fort Worth apartment.
Texas
Major Fort Worth roads clear, but icy neighborhood streets persist
Roads across North Texas have been in poor condition since temperatures dropped Friday night, and while TXDOT and local crews have been working around the clock, many neighborhoods are still dealing with sheets of ice.
In Fort Worth, the difference between major highways and city streets is easy to see. I‑30 looked nearly clear after TXDOT began pretreating it last Wednesday, well before any ice or snow arrived. But nearby city‑maintained roads remained slick. Each city and county is responsible for its own streets, which means some neighborhoods are still waiting for crews to reach them.
Warmer temperatures Tuesday helped speed up the process.
Fort Worth and Tarrant County crews spent the day spreading salt and sand to give drivers traction. The city said it doesn’t have traditional snowplows like those used in northern states, but workers have been using skid steers to scrape away the thick layer of ice that’s been stuck to the pavement.
Road conditions improved significantly throughout the day, but officials urged drivers to stay cautious.
City urges drivers to slow down
“If you are needing to leave your home and get out on the neighborhood streets and on to roads to travel, please go very slowly,” said Lara Ingram, a spokesperson for Fort Worth’s Transportation & Public Works Department. “Some neighborhood roads may be 35 mph. Fifteen to 20 mph is fast enough.”
Crews focused Tuesday on hospitals, major thoroughfares and the area around Dickies Arena to keep the Stock Show & Rodeo accessible.
The city is asking residents to remain patient as workers continue moving through neighborhoods.
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