Photo: Melissa Phillip, Houston Chronicle
By Lindsay Ellis
October 28, 2016 Updated: October 30, 2016 4:19pm
Fans of the Texas Southern University Tigers were tailgating before the Oct. 22 homecoming football game when the university's new president joined the revelry. He held up his wife's phone, turned his back to the crowd and snapped a selfie.
That day, Austin Lane passed the first big test of his presidency: hosting a homecoming week that students and alumni enjoyed.
In his first four months at the helm, Lane has made progress to reengage alumni and students at TSU, an historically black university struggling with low graduation rates, meager state funding and sharp enrollment declines over the past several years.
Lane, formerly executive vice chancellor at Lone Star College System in Montgomery County, said he thinks improving the overall college experience for students will lead to more of them earning a bachelor's degree and a higher enrollment rate. In turn, graduates who leave with a stronger connection to the university will be more apt as alumni to donate money and time to the college.
"I want to be an advocate for students" because I was one of them, said Lane, who attended Langston University, the only historically black university in Oklahoma. "I know how tough it is to get through school. Their lived experience, I lived it."
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