Louisiana College
Louisiana College is a private Baptist college in Pineville, Louisiana. Approximately 1,300 students are enrolled. Although the college is affiliated with a group of Southern Baptist churches, which make up the membership of the Louisiana Baptist Convention, students need not be a member of that denomination to attend.
The school colors are orange and blue, and the athletic teams are known as the Wildcats and Lady Wildcats.
History
Louisiana College was founded on October 3, 1906, in Pineville, across the Red River from the larger city of Alexandria. The college began in tents with four professors and nineteen students. Since 2006, LC has reported an enrollment growth of 50 percent.Baptist clergyman and educator Edwin O. Ware, Sr., is considered to have been the principal founder of the institution. He was from 1906 to 1907 the LC financial agent, and its first president from 1908 to 1909. LC is the successor to two earlier Louisiana Baptist schools, Mount Lebanon College, sometimes called Mount Lebanon University, and Keatchie Female College. The first, a men's school founded in 1852 by the North Louisiana Baptist Convention, was located in the community of Mount Lebanon in Bienville Parish. The women's college, founded in 1857 by the Grand Cane Association of Baptist Churches, was located in the community of Keatchie in De Soto Parish south of Shreveport.
After a history beset with financial difficulties, both schools came under the control of the Louisiana Baptist Convention in 1899. An Education Commission was selected by the state convention to administer the schools, with the understanding that both would be succeeded by a more centrally located institution as soon as a suitable campus could be selected. When Louisiana College was opened in 1906, Mount Lebanon College closed, followed by Keatchie a few years later. Since the first class of nineteen students in 1906, more than ten thousand students have graduated from the institution.
Until 1921, Louisiana College was administered by the Education Commission. The new charter established a board of trustees. The first administrative head of Louisiana College was W. F. Taylor, whose title was chairman of the faculty. Since its opening under President Edwin Ware, LC has had these seven other presidents:
- Dr. W. C. Friley, in 1909, also the first president of Hardin–Simmons University in Abilene, Texas
- Dr. Claybrook Cottingham, in 1910
- Dr. Edgar Godbold, in 1942
- Dr. G. Earl Guinn, in 1951
- Dr. Robert L. Lynn, in 1975
- Dr. Rory Lee, in 1997
- Dr. Joe W. Aguillard, in 2005
- Dr. Argile Smith, in 2014
- Dr. Rick Brewer, in 2015.
Like Godbold, Weathersby had graduated from Mississippi College in Clinton, Mississippi, and the University of Chicago. The Weathersby Fine Arts Building, completed in 1961, is named in his honor.
In 1958, the Louisiana Historical Association was reorganized in a statewide gathering on the LC campus. Edwin Adams Davis, head of the history department at LSU and author of a popular Louisiana history textbook, became the first president of the revised association.
Among the benefactors of Louisiana College has been the family of Simon W. Tudor of Pineville, who founded Tudor Construction Company in 1946. Tudor coached basketball, football, and baseball at the college in the 1910s. The men's dormitory Tudor Hall is named for him. Tudor was also chairman of the board of trustees from 1943 to 1953.
In 2012, the Louisiana Baptist Convention granted approval to Louisiana College to seek $12 million in donations from member churches within the state as part of the institution's $50 million capital improvements program. The $12 million had been intended to be used for improvements to on-campus housing. Although the campaign has since been abandoned, many residence halls were renovated shortly after the inauguration of Rick Brewer as a part of his "Campus Beautification" campaign. LC ended its fiscal year on July 31, 2012, with a deficit of $1.3 million deficit; the institution spent $30.5 million during that time but collected only $29.2 million in revenues.
In December 2013, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools reaffirmed LC's regional accreditation after two years of warning status. Less than three months later, SACS announced that it would investigate LC after college officials were accused of having submitted documents that contain forged signatures and other inconsistencies in its official reports to the agency.
Three months later, SACS placed the university on probation because of an "'integrity issue,' as well as its failure to comply with the accreditor's standards regarding 'external influence,' personnel appointments, administrative staff evaluations, control of finances, and its administration of federal student aid funds."
Some students called for a strike against Aguillard on March 24, 2014 at LC's Guinn Auditorium. An anonymous student spokesman said, "Our terms are resignation of the president or dismissal by the board." Aguillard at a forum on March 20 described LC as "an open book regarding our future and our strength and reminding one another it's not about us, it's all about Jesus." He directed a reporter to leave, saying that the newspaper had "printed false information" in recent articles about LC and its evaluation by SACS.
Few students participated in the strike, although they were joined by some alumni. LC officials had warned students that a strike would constitute a possible violation of college policies that could result in severe sanctions, such as suspension, denial of a degree, or expulsion on the first violation of the code. The media was asked to leave the campus at the time of the gathering.
On March 27, 2014, it was reported that the LC trustees had asked Aguillard to resign. The opposition grew after David Hankins, the executive director of the Louisiana Baptist Convention, reportedly dropped his support of Aguillard. A fellow trustee Arlene Capps also supported the resignation of Aguillard and wished to run herself to join the board of trustees. The president had been recorded as having said that Hankins might be the individual promoting Calvinism at LC.
On March 28 ten LC trustees released a public letter critical of Aguillard's leadership:
It has been about the abuse of power and authoritarian control. We are concerned with truth and transparency and we believe the Convention should be concerned about the same.... we encourage the entire board to be unified in charting a new direction for the college.
The ten dissidents, including Tony Perkins, executive director of the Family Research Council, said that the trustees would have called for Aguillard's termination in 2013 had not convention executive director Hankins exerted "undue influence" in defense of Aguillard. Several trustees stressed that Aguillard, not Hankins, is the focus of their concern. It was reported on April 2, 2014, that Aguillard would not resign but has "new evidence" to present to the trustees at the forthcoming meeting.
On April 15, 2014, the trustees removed Aguillard as president and named Argile Smith, the associate dean of Christian ministry of the Caskey School of Divinity, as the interim leader. They would conduct a search for a permanent successor. Aguillard will assist Smith during this transition and additionally, will become in 2015–2016 a tenured professor in the Graduate Teacher Education program at LC. He began a one-year paid sabbatical on June 1 at his full 2013–2014 presidential base salary of $202,007. If he returns to LC as a tenured professor in 2015–2016, he will receive 50 percent of his current base pay, or $101,003.50. For each subsequent year as an LC senior professor, beginning with the 2016–2017 academic year, he was to have received 30 percent of the current base salary, or $60,602.10.
Campus
Louisiana College is situated on an campus in Pineville. The school has twenty-five academic and residential buildings, which include:- Alexandria Hall, constructed in 1920, houses most of the LC administrative offices, and the departments of history, business, human behavior, teacher education, English, and foreign languages. Within Alexandria Hall is the Ruth O'Quinn Center for Liberal Arts and Professional Studies. Designed to upgrade technology resources, the center is named for Ruth Margaret Granger O'Quinn, a 1960 LC alumnus, retired classroom teacher, and a former member of the Rapides Parish School Board. She is the widow of Hansel B. O'Quinn. In 2013, O'Quinn was named an LC "Distinguished Alumnus".
- Cavanaugh Hall of Science, built in 1969, contains offices, classrooms and laboratory facilities for the departments of biology, chemistry, mathematics, and nursing. The building was named in 1975 to honor Charles J. Cavanaugh, an LC professor of biology from 1945 to 1977.
- Weathersby Fine Arts Building, completed in 1961 and completely renovated in 1993, contains the departments of art and music. The building features an exhibition gallery with adjacent storeroom and a 151-seat recital hall.
- Guinn Auditorium and Religious Education Center, built in 1973 in an earlier capital improvements program, is home to the religious studies department and contains the 300-seat Frances Bolton Chapel and the 1,800-seat Guinn Auditorium. The auditorium is home to the Gladys Tatum West pipe organ, a 185-rank, five manual Moeller organ, one of the largest such instruments in the American South. The building is named in honor of past president G. Earl Guinn.
- Martin Performing Arts Center, built in 1992, houses the media communications, journalism, and theatre departments, a 400-seat black-box theatre, a television studio, and Radio KZLC, 95.5 MHz FM.
- H. O. West Physical Education Building, which contains a 4,800-seat gymnasium, a heated swimming pool, and the department of health and physical education, is named for the late retailer H.O. West of Minden, the husband of Gladys Tatum West.
- Norton Library, which contains more than 130,000 volumes, 174,000 government documents, 75,000 items in microfilm and subscribes to over 500 periodicals. The building was built in 1955.
- Tudor Hall, a men's residence hall that has a capacity of 168 men. The building was constructed in 1957. The hall is currently undergoing renovation to all of the dormitories, which is expected to be completed by late 2020.
- English Village, a men's apartment complex open to upperclassmen, houses ninety-two students and is noted for its Lincoln Log style design.
- Church Hall, a former Methodist church, renovated into a men's residence hall, is open to upperclassmen and also houses the football fieldhouse and the security and information technology offices.
- Cottingham Hall, a women's residence hall, is named in honor of Claybrook Cottingham, a native of Virginia, who was the LC president from 1910 until 1941, when he became the president of Louisiana Tech University in Ruston. Built in 1940, Cottingham Hall houses three hundred women. It is the largest residential building on the campus.
- College Drive Apartments, the newest building on the Louisiana College campus, being completed in 2001. This apartment building is open to upperclass women and can house forty-five.
- Hixson Student Center and Granberry Conference Center, remodeled in 1997, is the hub of student activities. It houses the post office, a commons area, a game room, various student life offices, a short-order restaurant, and the campus bookstore.
Academics
- Division of Allied Health
- Division of Business
- Division of Christian Studies
- Division of Education
- Division of History and Political Science
- Division of Human Behavior
- Division of Humanities
- Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
- * Department of Biology
- * Department of Chemistry
- * Department of Mathematics and Computer Science
- Division of Nursing
- Division of Visual and Performing Arts
- * Department of Art
- * Department of Mass Communication and Theatre
- * Department of Music
Law school in Shreveport
LC expects to place the law school in the former federal building named for the late U.S. Representative Joe Waggonner Currently there is no law school within two hundred miles of the planned location. Johnson said that the school will "pursue academic excellence by use of a curriculum that directly acknowledges and embraces our Judeo-Christian heritage and the moral foundations of the American legal system. We want our students to learn and to study the history and philosophy of the law, but all of that will be grounded in what we call 'The Unchanging Foundation.' That is the motto of Louisiana College, and it will be for the law school as well."
Johnson said that the curriculum will be grounded on the ideas of the Declaration of Independence: a Creator God with inalienable rights. The American Founding Fathers, said Johnson, "believed if we moved away from those truths, and the Natural law philosophy, we would be in trouble... So their admonition to us was to... interpret the Constitution very carefully and according to its original intent because if we fail to do that, we would drift away from the moorings. It is a perilous position, and that is where we find outselves today."
A board of reference has been named to advise regarding the establishment of the law school, including the two area former U.S. Representatives John C. Fleming and Rodney Alexander. Others on the board include Alveda C. King, founder of King for America, Inc.; Tim LaHaye of Tim LaHaye Ministries, Beverly LaHaye of Concerned Women for America, psychologist James C. Dobson, David Barton of the group Wallbuilders, former U.S. Attorney General Ed Meese, Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council, Associate Justice Jeffrey P. Victory of the Louisiana Supreme Court, and Richard Land, the former president of the SBC Liberty Commission.
Despite the preliminary work, the law school has yet to open or to admit any students.
Dispute over divinity school
On December 14, 2010, the LC trustees received a $1 million contribution from an anonymous foundation to launch a divinity school on the Pineville campus. The school was named the Caskey School of Divinity, after a Southern Baptist minister who "tirelessly worked and evangelized in Louisiana". The founding dean for the school was Dr. Charles Quarles. Louisiana College was able to grant up to the master's degree under Level 3 status of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. The school began classes in Fall 2011. The school planned to initially accept up to one hundred students with free tuition, something unprecedented. Dr. Quarles explained the goals of the Caskey School of Divinity:Meanwhile, funding of the divinity school came into question. The Cason Foundation, which donated $5 million to LC to fund the divinity school, announced that it will no longer financially support the college because of "actions of President Aguillard which we believe to be unethical and potentially illegal." Edgar Cason and his wife, Flora Jean Caskey Cason, who established the foundation in honor of her father, informed LC trustees by letter on April 15 that it would end its ties to LC. A probe into the matter by a law firm in New Orleans claims that Aguillard had improperly diverted some $60,000 in divinity school donations to LC projects in Tanzania, Africa. Five LC board members, however, have defended Aguillard and maintain that he did not act improperly regarding the funds. Cason further questioned why the LC trustees did not permit him to address the board at its March meeting.
A special committee of the trustees voted 4–3 to clear Aguillard of wrongdoing in regard to the diverted funds. One of the dissenting votes was cast by Tony Perkins, a former member of the Louisiana House of Representatives and the president of the Family Research Council. Perkins subsequently questioned in an email to the Reverend Kris Chenier, chairman of the special panel and the pastor of the Trinity Heights Baptist Church in Shreveport, why the committee had implied that the vote to clear Aguillard had been unanimous, rather than by the one-vote margin. On April 30, the trustees called a special meeting to consider the dispute over the divinity school. Trustees voted for the time being to retain Aguillard as president and laid spiritual hands over him. It was not disclosed how many of the thirty-four trustees were present for the special meeting or the breakdown of the vote, but the trustees declared the matter closed for further consideration.
Student life
One of the things which set LC apart from other schools is its commitment to promoting a Christian atmosphere. Because LC is a small school it fosters a small community environment where most students are familiar with each other. Overall development amongst the student body is new and growing as the college grows larger and evolves. LC is still in a state of growth and expansion and has been experiencing record setting enrollment within the past few years. In addition to promoting a Christian atmosphere, students at LC have a strong involvement with athletic/intramural events.Traditions at LC
Louisiana College have several treasured traditions carried out by its students. While LC lacks a large variety of student organizations, traditions are handed down mostly through word of mouth. One of the first traditions learned about at LC is the marriage swing located in front of Cottingham Hall. Legend holds that if a couple sits on the swing at the same time they are destined to be married. This of course leads to apprehension to sit on the swing, although many take their chances. Several have even proposed at the marriage swing. However, unknown to most LC students, the original marriage swing was broken in the spring semester of the 2010–2011 school year and replaced by a replica. Even had this tragedy not occurred, the purported mystical effects of the marriage swing would have been rendered null in the spring of 2015 when the student government paid to have every swing on campus replaced. Another tradition held is the annual rolling of Cottingham Forest during Mom's Weekend. Every year LC holds a Mom's Weekend event when girls and their moms share time together on campus. On the first night of this weekend the male students of LC collect toilet paper and use it to TP the trees immediately in front of Cottingham Hall. In the morning the girls awake to a white wintery wonderland. It is widely rumored that current LC president Rick Brewer disapproves of this much-beloved tradition. Another tradition is the fabled Moses statue in front of the Weathersby Fine Arts Building. Legend says that it holds the power of good luck. This power is conferred upon an individual when he/she rubs the top of his head. This phenomenon has been investigated by many, but few are able to offer sufficient explanations for it. Throughout the school year Louisiana College holds several annual events. Homecoming Honey is an event held during homecoming week; male students compete for the hotly contested title of "homecoming honey" by showing off their talents and personalities. The winner is then selected by a panel of judges. Christmas Gala is a treasured tradition at Louisiana College. This is LC's equivalent of prom without a dance. Students bring a date to a formal dinner and enjoy well prepared meals. After the meal students file into an auditorium for a Christmas presentation put on by professors and students. During this presentation the Gala Court is announced and presented to the student body. Cochon De Lait is another event put on by LC's Union Board. Cochon is a campus-wide crawfish boil with all you can eat crawfish. This event is much anticipated and students' families often participate. There are often inflatable games and live music.Athletics
Louisiana College teams participate as a member of the NCAA Division III. The Wildcats and Lady Wildcats are members of the American Southwest Conference ; and formerly competed in the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics.Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, soccer, tennis, and track and field; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, tennis, track and field, and volleyball.
Notable people
Faculty
- Sarah Frances Anders, Monroe native and LC sociology professor, 1962 to 1993; worked to add criminal justice, family life studies, and social work to the LC curriculum; held graduate degrees from Florida State University, interred in West Monroe; former chairman of the board of the Renaissance Home for Youth in Alexandria.
- Charles J. Cavanaugh, Professor of Biology, taught for about 40 years and retired in 1976. Built strong pre-med program.
- Maurice J. Davis, Alabama native, education professor and director of student teaching, on the faculty from 1964 to 1989.
- Helen Derr, journalism professor, formerly religion editor of Alexandria Daily Town Talk.
- George E. Hearn, psychology professor, 1965–2000.
- Thomas Robert Howell, historian and chair of the LC Division of History and Political Science. Moved to William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri, after the change of LC presidents in 2005. He was on the LC faculty for forty years. In 2015, he won the prestigious Carl F. Willard Award as Distinguished Teacher at William Jewell.
- F. Jay Taylor, historian and later president of Louisiana Tech University.
- Simon W. Tudor, athletic coach
Alumni
Politics
- Chris Broadwater, current District 86 state representative from Tangipahoa Parish
- Jake W. Cameron, mayor of Bossier City from 1957 to 1961
- Hyram Copeland, former mayor of Vidalia, Louisiana, since 1992
- Jackson B. Davis, former state senator; attended LC from 1933 to 1934
- Jimmie Davis, popular singer and Louisiana governor
- Albert Martin Bolton, weather reporter in Shreveport at KSLA-TV from 1954 to 1991 and KRMD radio from 1991 to 2001
- C. H. "Sammy" Downs, member of both houses of the Louisiana state legislature from Rapides Parish and advisor to Governors Earl Kemp Long and John McKeithen
- Francis Dugas, state representative from Lafourche Parish from 1956 to 1960; candidate for lieutenant governor in 1963 on Robert F. Kennon intraparty ticket
- B.G. Dyess, Baptist minister, former state senator and former Rapides Parish registrar of voters
- Rufus D. Hayes, first Louisiana insurance commissioner, 1957–1964
- Guy E. Humphries, Jr., state court judge and co-founder of the Renaissance Home for Youth
- Claude Kirkpatrick, member of Louisiana House of Representatives from Jefferson Davis Parish, director of Louisiana Department of Public Works, candidate for governor in 1963, instigator of Toledo Bend Reservoir, president of Baton Rouge General Hospital, and builder of three shopping centers
- Edith Killgore Kirkpatrick, member of Louisiana Board of Regents; state Baptist official; wife of Claude Kirkpatrick
- Richard Land, member of Board of Reference for establishment of Judge Paul Pressler School of Law in Shreveport
- George S. Long, U.S. representative from the defunct Eighth Congressional District
- Lance Harris, Republican majority leader of the Louisiana House of Representatives for Rapides Parish since 2012; attended LC, dates unavailable
- Ed Ware, District attorney for Rapides Parish, 1967–1984
Media
- Winston De Ville, noted Louisiana genealogist and publisher
- Baylus Benjamin McKinney, singer, songwriter, and music editor; composed "The Nail Scarred Hand", "I Am Satisfied with Jesus", and "Wherever He Leads I'll Go".
- Tinka Milinović, singer, model, actress, dancer and television host
Sports
- Jeremy Vujnovich, offensive tackle for the Indianapolis Colts
- Ben McLaughlin, 2015 Louisiana College Hall of Fame inductee; 2010 Melberger Award winner; 2010 Gagliardi Trophy recipient;
Education
- G. Earl Guinn, first LC graduate to be president of the college
- Garnie W. McGinty, Louisiana historian began his studies at LC but graduated from Northwestern State University in Natchitoches
- Simon W. Tudor, educator and Pineville construction company owner
Religion
- Wilmer Clemont Fields , Southern Baptist minister and SBC executive.