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San Angelo, Texas


FieldValue
nameSan Angelo
settlement_typeCity
image_skylineSan Angelo September 2019 03 (San Angelo City Hall).jpg
image_captionSan Angelo City Hall
image_sealSanangeloseal.png
image_mapTomGreen County SanAngelo.svg
mapsize250px
map_captionLocation in the state of Texas
pushpin_mapTexas#USA
pushpin_map_captionLocation in the state of Texas
pushpin_labelSan Angelo
pushpin_reliefyes
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Texas
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Tom Green
government_typeCouncil-manager
leader_titleCity Council
leader_nameMayor Tom Thompson
Tommy Hiebert (District 1)
Tom Thompson (District 2)
Harry Thomas (District 3)
Lucy Gonzales (District 4)
Karen Hessee Smith (District 5)
Larry Miller
leader_name1Daniel Valenzuela
area_total_km2160.38
area_land_km2154.46
area_water_km25.91
unit_prefImperial
area_total_sq_mi61.92
area_land_sq_mi59.64
area_water_sq_mi2.28
elevation_footnotes
elevation_ft1844
coordinates
population_blank1_titleDemonym
population_blank1San Angeloan
population_as_of2020
population_metro121,516
population_density_km2auto
timezoneCST
utc_offset−6
timezone_DSTCDT
utc_offset_DST−5
websiteThe City of San Angelo, Texas
postal_code_typeZIP codes
postal_code76901-09
area_code325
blank_nameFIPS code
blank_info48-64472
blank1_nameGNIS feature ID
blank1_info1375953
area_footnotes
population_density_sq_miauto

Tommy Hiebert (District 1) Tom Thompson (District 2) Harry Thomas (District 3) Lucy Gonzales (District 4) Karen Hessee Smith (District 5) Larry Miller (District 6)

San Angelo ( ) is a city in and the county seat of Tom Green County, Texas, United States. It is in the Concho Valley, a region of West Texas between the Permian Basin to the northwest, Chihuahuan Desert to the southwest, Osage Plains to the northeast, and Central Texas to the southeast. According to the 2020 United States Census, San Angelo had a population of 99,893. It is the principal city and center of the San Angelo metropolitan area, which had a population of 100,159.

San Angelo is home to Angelo State University, historic Fort Concho, and Goodfellow Air Force Base. It is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Angelo.

History

In 1632, a short-lived mission of Franciscans under Spanish auspices was founded in the area to serve native people. The mission was led by the friars Juan de Salas and Juan de Ortega, with Ortega remaining for six months. The area was visited by the Castillo-Martin expedition of 1650 and the Diego de Guadalajara expedition of 1654.

During the region's development, San Angelo was at the western edge of the area called Texas, successively claimed in the 1800s by Spain, Mexico, the Republic of Texas, and finally the United States in 1846.

The city of San Angelo was founded in 1867, when the United States built Fort Concho, one of a series of forts designed to protect the frontier. The fort was home to cavalry, infantry, and the famous Black Cavalry, also known as buffalo soldiers by American Indians.

The settler Bartholomew J. DeWitt founded the village of Santa Angela outside the fort at the junction of the North and South Concho Rivers. He named the village after his wife, Carolina Angela. The name was eventually changed to San Angela. It changed again to San Angelo in 1883 on the insistence of the United States Postal Service, as "San Angela" is ungrammatical in Spanish. The town became a trade center for farmers and settlers in the area, as well as a fairly lawless cowtown filled with brothels, saloons, and gambling houses.

After being designated as the county seat, the town grew quickly in the 1880s, aided by being on the route of newly constructed railroads. It became a central transportation hub for the region. The Santa Fe Railroad arrived in 1888 and the Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway in 1909. After a tuberculosis (TB) outbreak hit the U.S. in the early 1900s, many patients moved to San Angelo. At the time, doctors could only recommend rest in dry, warm climates. TB sufferers went to San Angelo for treatment, and a sanitarium was built in nearby Carlsbad.

In 1928, the city founded San Angelo College, one of the region's first institutes of higher education. The city had been passed over by the Texas State Legislature to be the home of what would become Texas Tech University. San Angelo College, one of the first municipal colleges, has grown to become Angelo State University. The military returned to San Angelo during World War II with the founding of Goodfellow Air Force Base, which was assigned to train pilots. San Angelo grew exponentially during the oil boom of the 1900s, when vast amounts of oil were found in the area, and the city became a regional hub of the oil and gas industry.

The San Angelo Independent School District is a public school district based in San Angelo, and was one of the first in Texas to integrate, doing so voluntarily in 1955.

San Angelo was famous for the Miss Wool of America Pageant, an annual event organized by the National Wool Growers Association (U.S.).

Geography

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has an area of 58.2 sq mi (150.9 km), of which 2.3 sq mi (6.1 km) (4.03%) are covered by water.

San Angelo is on the northwestern edge of the Edwards Plateau and the northeastern edge of the Chihuahuan Desert at the junction of the North and South Concho Rivers. The city has three lakes: Twin Buttes Reservoir, O.C. Fisher Reservoir, and Lake Nasworthy. The Middle Concho River joined the South Concho several miles upstream, but the confluence has been obscured by the Twin Buttes dam.

San Angelo is about 225 mi west of Austin.

Climate

San Angelo falls near the boundary between the subtropical semiarid scrubland (Köppen BSh) and midlatitude scrubland climates (Köppen BSk). It is in the region where Central Texas meets West Texas weather. Temperatures reach 100 °F about 30.1 days per year on average. In 2011, San Angelo recorded 100 days of 100 °F or higher. The typical year has 60.3 days with lows below freezing. Snow and sleet occur a few times a year. The city has an average annual precipitation of 20.94 in, with the wettest calendar year being 2016, with 35.72 in, and the driest 1956, with 7.41 in.

|Jan record high F = 91 |Feb record high F = 97 |Mar record high F = 98 |Apr record high F = 107 |May record high F = 110 |Jun record high F = 114 |Jul record high F = 111 |Aug record high F = 111 |Sep record high F = 107 |Oct record high F = 102 |Nov record high F = 93 |Dec record high F = 91

|Jan avg record high F = 80.3 |Feb avg record high F = 84.4 |Mar avg record high F = 89.6 |Apr avg record high F = 95.7 |May avg record high F = 101.2 |Jun avg record high F = 102.9 |Jul avg record high F = 104.2 |Aug avg record high F = 103.7 |Sep avg record high F = 99.1 |Oct avg record high F = 93.6 |Nov avg record high F = 84.5 |Dec avg record high F = 80.0 |year avg record high F = 106.4

|Jan avg record low F = 18.2 |Feb avg record low F = 21.0 |Mar avg record low F = 25.3 |Apr avg record low F = 33.6 |May avg record low F = 45.1 |Jun avg record low F = 59.6 |Jul avg record low F = 65.4 |Aug avg record low F = 63.1 |Sep avg record low F = 49.5 |Oct avg record low F = 35.2 |Nov avg record low F = 24.2 |Dec avg record low F = 19.7 |year avg record low F = 15.5

|Jan record low F = 1 |Feb record low F = -1 |Mar record low F = 8 |Apr record low F = 23 |May record low F = 35 |Jun record low F = 42 |Jul record low F = 54 |Aug record low F = 45 |Sep record low F = 35 |Oct record low F = 19 |Nov record low F = 12 |Dec record low F = -4

|access-date = July 3, 2023 |access-date = July 3, 2023

Demographics

2020 census

Race / Ethnicity (NH = Non-Hispanic)title=P004: Hispanic or Latino, and Not Hispanic or Latino by Race – 2000: DEC Summary File 1 – San Angelo city, Texasurl=https://data.census.gov/table?g=160XX00US4864472&tid=DECENNIALSF12000.P004publisher=United States Census Bureauaccess-date= }}title=P2: Hispanic or Latino, and Not Hispanic or Latino by Race – 2010: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – San Angelo city, Texasurl=https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?q=p2&g=160XX00US4864472&tid=DECENNIALPL2010.P2publisher=United States Census Bureauaccess-date= }}% 2000% 2010
White alone (NH)52,93450,66348,11459.85%
Black or African American alone (NH)4,0133,8873,8464.54%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH)3073502930.35%
Asian alone (NH)8129891,6390.92%
Pacific Islander alone (NH)50701350.06%
Some other race alone (NH)851163140.10%
Mixed race or multiracial (NH)9171,2633,2431.04%
Hispanic or Latino (any race)29,32135,86242,03933.15%
Total88,43993,20099,893100.00%

As of the 2020 United States census, 99,893 people, 36,843 households, and 23,026 families were residing in the city.

2010 census

As of the census of 2010, 93,200 people, 36,117 households, and 22,910 families resided in the city. The population density was 1,601 people/sq mi (618/km). The racial makeup of the city was about 83.0% White, 5.4% African American, 1.4% Native American, 1.7% Asian, 11.3% from other races, and 2.6% from two or more races. Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 38.5% of the population.

Of the 36,117 households, 27.6% had children under 18 living with them, 44.2% were married couples living together, 14.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 36.6% were not families. About 29.8% of all households were made up of individuals, and 11.2% had someone living alone who was 65 or older. The average household size was 2.45 and the average family size was 3.05.

In the city, the age distribution was 23.4% under 18 and 13.8% who were 65 or older. The median age was 32.8 years. The population was 48.7% male and 51.3% female.

The median income for a household in the city was $38,777, and for a family was $49,640. Males had a median income of $33,257 versus $26,750 for females. The per capita income for the city was $20,970. About 13.9% of families and 17.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 25.4% of those under age 18 and 10.5% of those age 65 or over.

Economy

San Angelo has consistently been ranked by many sources as one of the best small cities for business and employment. In 2013, it ranked fourth in the nation in Forbes magazine's "Best Small Cities For Jobs" rankings. In 2010, Kiplinger's Personal Finance named San Angelo one of the "Best Cities of the Next Decade". In 2009, CNN Money ranked San Angelo as one of the best cities in which to launch a small business.

San Angelo has a diverse economy for a city of its size. Although most oil fields lie to the west, many oil-field service companies based in the city employ a large number of residents. San Angelo's agricultural industry remains strong. Producer's Livestock Auction is the nation's largest for sheep and lambs, and is among the top five in the nation for cattle auctions. Though most agricultural work is done outside the city, thousands of employees work in the cattle and lamb meat-processing industries, and many more in agriculture supporting roles in the city. Two agricultural research centers are in San Angelo: the Angelo State University Management Instruction and Research Center and the Texas A&M Texas AgriLife Research and Extension Center at San Angelo.

The telecommunication industry is a major employer in San Angelo. Sitel has a call center there. Frontier Communications, Performant Recovery Inc. (formerly DCS), a debt recovery corporation, and Blue Cross all employ over 1,000 people each locally. San Angelo serves as the regional medical center for west-central Texas. Shannon Medical Center employs over 3,000 in San Angelo and provides services to a large region of west-central Texas. The manufacturing industry has seen hits since the 1990s, but many large employers still remain, including Ethicon, a division of Johnson & Johnson, Conner Steel, and Hirschfield Steel.

San Angelo's large institutional employers include Shannon Medical Center, Angelo State University, and Goodfellow Air Force Base. The last remains the largest employer in the region, employing or providing income for over 24,000 in San Angelo.

The Sunset Mall, the area's major shopping mall, opened in 1979.

Government

Arts and culture

San Angelo Museum of Fine Arts

San Angelo Museum of Art

The San Angelo Museum of Fine Arts opened in 1999 in downtown San Angelo on the banks of the Concho River, built with local limestone and end-grain Texas mesquite. It attracts over 85,000 visitors a year, and is home to the National Ceramic Competition.

San Angelo Performing Arts Center

The San Angelo Performing Arts Center (SAPAC) provides access to the highest level of performing arts by presenting local, national, and international touring shows at two historic venues: the 1,350-seat 1928 Murphey Auditorium and the Stephens Performing Arts Center (formerly a Coca-Cola factory), which contains the 300-seat Brooks and Bates Theater, a black-box theater, seven ballet studios, and administrative spaces. Since its inaugural 2017–18 season, SAPAC has hosted over 100 performances annually.

Art galleries

Downtown San Angelo is home to a few art galleries. Raw 1899 is a wine bar that frequently holds exhibitions. Art in Uncommon Places has an outdoor Pop Art Museum and maintains Paintbrush Alley. A free trolley service is available to the public.

San Angelo Symphony

The San Angelo Symphony, founded in 1949, presents five concerts a year. They take place on the first Saturdays of October, November, December, and February in the Murphey Performance Hall. The last concert of the season is at Angelo State's Junell Center on the last Saturday of March.

Angelo Civic Theatre

Angelo Civic Theatre is Texas's oldest community theater. It was founded on November 21, 1885, to raise resources for a town clock at the county courthouse. Wavering economic times and two world wars paused artistic efforts in the community, but theatrical productions continued. In 1950, Angelo Civic Theatre gained nonprofit status and a sustainable form of theater was established. In 1969‚ a fire demolished the school building in which the theater was housed. The theater performed at various locations for 13 years, until purchasing the 230-seat historic Parkway Theater in 1980. Angelo Civic Theatre continues to serve San Angelo, producing six in-house plays a year.

Ballet San Angelo

Ballet San Angelo was founded in 1983 for the purpose of presenting an annual production of The Nutcracker. It offers a full season of productions, including a choreography performance and a Children's Ballet. Ballet San Angelo also offers ballet training for students, a fitness program, a scholarship, and a community outreach program.

Plays at Angelo State University

Through "The Arts at ASU", Angelo State University puts on six plays a year open to the general public. These range from dinner theater and theater-in-the-round to conventional productions, using the nation's only active modular theater. The university also presents numerous concerts and recitals and has numerous displays in the Angelo State University Art Gallery.

Parks and recreation

Pedestrian bridge at a park running along the [[Concho River

City park system

The San Angelo City Park system was created in 1903. The city has 32 parks with over 375 acre of developed land. The department maintains a 33-acre municipal golf course (Santa Fe Park Golf Course) along the river, 25 playgrounds, and 25 sports practice fields.

The "crown jewels" of the parks system are the parks that make up the 10 mi of river frontage on the Concho River winding through downtown and beyond. The parks feature many plazas, public art displays, and numerous water features. The city is home to the International Water Lily Collection. The park contains over 300 varieties of water lilies, one of the largest collections in the world.

The city also provides several municipal parks on Lake Nasworthy, one of three lakes near the city; the others are Twin Buttes Reservoir and O.C. Fisher Reservoir.

San Angelo State Park

The 7677 acre San Angelo State Park, owned and maintained by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, is located on the shores of the O.C. Fisher Reservoir. Many activities are available within the park, including camping, picnicking, and swimming, as well as hiking, mountain biking, orienteering, and horseback riding on over 50 mi of developed trails. The park is home to the official State of Texas Longhorn herd.

San Angelo Nature Center

The San Angelo Nature Center closed permanently in 2022. It was located at Lake Nasworthy. It featured many native and exotic animals, including alligators, bobcats, prairie dogs, tortoises, and 85 different species of reptiles, including 22 different species of rattlesnakes. The center included the Spring Creek Wetland, which had 260 acre being developed by the Federal Bureau of Reclamation, including a 7 mi trail; its terrain varied from a semiarid environment to a freshwater marsh. It also maintained the one-mile (1.6-km) nature trail off Spillway Road.

Fort Concho

Historic Fort Concho, a National Historic Landmark maintained by the city of San Angelo, was founded in 1867 by the United States Army to protect settlers and maintain vital trade routes. The restored site is home to several museums, and is open to visitors Tuesday through Sunday. Fort Concho is one of nine forts along the Texas Forts Trail.

Fountains on the [[Concho River

San Angelo Stock Show and Rodeo

The San Angelo Stock Show and Rodeo is held annually. It began in 1932, making it one of the longest-running rodeos in the world. It is nationally renowned within the rodeo circuit, bringing in the top contestants and ranking as one of top-10 rodeos in the nation for monetary prizes awarded to contestants. It includes a parade, carnival, and concerts, and many other events in addition to the main stock show and rodeo.

Education

Higher education

Main entrance at [[Angelo State University

San Angelo is home to Angelo State University. Founded in 1928, it enrolls about 10,000 students, who come from almost every county in Texas, 40 states, and 24 countries. One of the nation's premier regional universities, it was featured in the Princeton Review Best 373. The only other two listed from the state were Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin.

Angelo State offers almost 100 different undergraduate programs and 23 graduate programs, including three doctoral programs. The university is divided into six colleges: Business, Education, Liberal and Fine Arts, Nursing and Allied Health, Sciences, and Graduate Studies. It has been a member of the Texas Tech University System since 2007.

San Angelo has a branch of Howard College, which is based in Big Spring, Texas. The two-year school prepares students academically for transfer to a four-year university, and concentrates in technical and occupational fields of study that lead to certificates and/or associate in applied science degrees.

A branch of Park University is on the Goodfellow Air Force Base. The Goodfellow Campus Center has been providing higher education to the Concho Valley area since 1989. Park University's main campus was established in 1875 in Parkville, Missouri.

San Angelo is also home to a branch of American Commercial College, a private for-profit career college. It offers seven career certificate programs.

Public primary and secondary education

Almost all of San Angelo is in the San Angelo Independent School District. Small parts are within the Wall Independent School District (southeast San Angelo), the Grape Creek Independent School District (northwest San Angelo), and the Veribest Independent School District. The two main high schools are Central and Lake View (of San Angelo ISD). Three middle schools and 15 elementary schools are within San Angelo city limits.

Private and alternative education

Eight private schools operate in the city, certified through the 12th grade, which include Ambleside School of San Angelo (a member of Ambleside Schools International), San Angelo Christian Academy, the Angelo Catholic School (only up to eighth grade), Cornerstone Christian School, Gateway Christian Academy, Trinity Lutheran School, Potter's Hand Christian School, Premier High School (a charter school), and Texas Leadership Charter Academy (a charter school).

Media

Newspapers

  • San Angelo Standard-Times (print)
  • GoSanAngelo (digital) --

Television

Channel
Call letters
Network
3KSANNBC
8KLSTCBS
19KIDYFOX
22KTXE-LDABC
41KEUS-LPUnivision

Radio

AM stations

Frequency
Call letters
Format
960KGKL (AM)News/Talk
1260KKSANews/Talk
1400KRUN (AM)Traditional Country

FM stations

Frequency
Call letters
Format
88.5KLRWChristian Contemporary
89.3KNARChristian Contemporary
90.1KNCHPublic Radio
90.5K213EWChristian Contemporary
90.9KLTPChristian Contemporary
91.5KPDEReligious
91.9KMEOReligious
92.9KDCDCountry
93.9KSAOChristian Contemporary
94.7KIXYTop 40
95.5KMLSClassic Rock
96.5KNRXActive Rock
97.1KCSA-LPVariety
97.5KGKL-FMCountry
98.7KELI-FMTop 40 CHR
99.5KQTCTejano
100.1KCLLClassic Hits
101.9KWFRClassic Rock
103.1KKCNTexas Country
104.5KPTJSpanish
106.1KMDXUrban
107.5KSJT-FMSpanish

Infrastructure

[[San Angelo Regional Airport

Transportation

San Angelo is served by the San Angelo Regional Airport, which offers daily flights through Envoy Air to the Dallas Fort Worth International Airport. Intrastate and interstate bus service is provided by Greyhound, with regularly scheduled service to major cities in Texas and nationwide. Intracity public transportation is provided by the Concho Valley Transit District, with five fixed bus routes and transfers provided at the Santa Fe station. The bus service runs from 6:30 am to 6:30 pm, Monday through Saturday. Taxi service is available throughout the city by Red Ball Taxi and Shuttle, Checker Cab, All American Cab, and Yellow Cab.

The Texas Pacifico provides freight service to the city along a TxDOT-owned rail line.

Notable people

  • Jane Ford Aebersold (born 1941), artist
  • Jay Presson Allen (1922–2006), screenwriter and playwright
  • Robert Nason Beck (1928–2008), pioneer researcher of uses of radioactive materials, such as technetium-99, for medical imaging using positron emission tomography, was born and has family in San Angelo
  • John Boles (1895–1969), American actor in silent movies through the 1950s, spent his retirement in San Angelo
  • Frank "Bring'em Back Alive" Buck (1884–1950), lived in San Angelo in 1940s and 1950s
  • Gary Lee Conner, former Screaming Trees guitarist, resides in San Angelo
  • Paula DeAnda (born 1989), singer, was born in San Angelo
  • Colby Donaldson (born 1974), Survivor contestant and actor, was born just outside San Angelo and lived in the city
  • Jeff Drost (born 1964), former NFL player, was born in San Angelo
  • Felicia Elizondo (1946–2021), LGBT activist and trans woman, was born in San Angelo
  • Joe Feagin (born 1938), Texas A&M University professor, was born in San Angelo
  • Sterlin Gilbert (born 1978), football coach
  • James Gill (born 1934), pop artist
  • Crawford Goldsby, also known as "Cherokee Bill" (1876–1896), was born in Fort Concho (across the Concho River from San Angelo)
  • Paul Roderick Gregory (born 1941), economist and specialist in the Kennedy assassination and Soviet planned administration
  • Dorsey B. Hardeman (1902–1992), mayor of San Angelo, 1936–1938, served 26 years in both houses of the Texas State Legislature; he was an advocate of water expansion in West Texas
  • Pierce Holt, College Football Hall of Fame member, attended Angelo State University; he played for the San Francisco 49ers and Atlanta Falcons in 1990s, and was a two-time Pro Bowl selection
  • David Hulse (born 1968), former Major Leaguer, attended Central High School; he played for the Texas Rangers and Milwaukee Brewers in the 1990s
  • Elmer Kelton (1926–2009), award-winning western writer, journalist, and novelist; lived in San Angelo
  • Steve Kemp (born 1954), former Major League Baseball outfielder, was born in San Angelo
  • Colleen R. LaRose, indicted in March 2010 after trying to recruit Islamic terrorists to wage jihad and murder a Swedish artist
  • Los Lonely Boys, Grammy-winning musical group from San Angelo
  • Greg Maddux (born 1966), four-time Cy Young Award-winning baseball pitcher and Hall of Fame inductee, was born in San Angelo
  • Cristina E. Martinez (born 1961), nationally recognized community activist, business owner and non-profit volunteer; born in San Angelo
  • Bill McGill (1939–2014), professional basketball player, and top pick of the 1962 NBA draft, was born in San Angelo
  • Marc Menchaca (born 1975), actor; born in San Angelo
  • John H. Miller (1925–2025), Marine Lieutenant general; born in San Angelo
  • Shea Morenz, graduate of San Angelo Central and former Texas Longhorns quarterback, was drafted by the New York Yankees
  • Fess Parker (1924–2010), actor; grew up on a ranch near San Angelo
  • August Pfluger (born December 28, 1978), US Representative for Texas's 11th congressional district and Air Force Reserve Lieutenant Colonel; graduated from San Angelo Central
  • Cliff Richey (born 1946), professional tennis player, won 45 career singles titles, is the 1970 World Grand Prix champion, a two-time Davis Cup champion, the number-one ranked U.S. player in 1970, and co-author of Acing Depression: A Tennis Champion's Toughest Match; he was born in San Angelo and resides there
  • Nancy Richey (born 1942), professional tennis player, won six Grand Slam titles, and was inducted into International Tennis Hall of Fame 2003; she was born in San Angelo and resides there
  • Lucy A. Snyder, Bram Stoker Award winner and novelist, grew up in San Angelo; she used a fictional version of the city as a setting in some of her work
  • Jack Teagarden (1905–1964), jazz trombonist and vocalist
  • Steve Trash, illusionist, was born in San Angelo
  • Ernest Tubb (1914–1984), musician and member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, worked for several years in San Angelo, and had a daily live music show on a local radio station prior to going to Nashville
  • Akash Vukoti (born 2009), Spelling prodigy and TV personality
  • Clayton Weishuhn (1959–2022), professional football player
  • Max Lucado (born 1955), best-selling Christian author
  • Joe Yonan, journalist, cookbook author and the Food and Dining Editor for The Washington Post

References

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  53. "Special Events". Sanangelorodeo.com.
  54. "Lone Star Blues Lyrics". [[Metrolyrics.com]].
  55. "Angelo State Adds New Doctorate in Clinical Social Work".
  56. "About Angelo State University". Angelo.edu.
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