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Article Written on: Thursday-June-4-2009 BuzzBoards Calendar Contact Advertise About
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A Louisiana Problem: The Rise And Fall Of LSU


Written by: Jim Brown


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Huey Long was the best friend and supporter LSU ever had.  He was called the father of the modern LSU by the Virginia Quarterly Review in commenting that “Huey stroked LSU as if he had been coddling a newborn pet elephant.  During fiscal stringency in all other American states, Huey force-fed LSU with increasing appropriations.“  Huey Long force-fed LSU with increasing aproprationas. The Kingfish made no bones about his long term goals for the state’s flagship university.  “LSU’s going to be the Harvard of the South.”  But that was then.  What happened in recent years that caused Louisiana State University to be an also ran, not just nationally, but right here in the Deep South?

LSU’s significant relevance as an educational pillar in the South continued into the 1950s.  Prominent writers like Cleanth Brooks and Robert Penn Warren made the Baton Rouge campus a gathering point for major literary figures. The Southern Historical Association began publishing its Journal of Southern History as well as the long respected Southern Review, all from LSU.  And the LSU Press became the publishing beacon for serious fiction and non-fiction rivaled only by the University of North Carolina Press. 

  Outstanding young academicians in a variety of fields were attracted to Baton Rouge, and the music department produced grand opera accompanied by its own symphony orchestra under directors of international acclaim.   The efflorescence of so much creative and academic talent drew encomiums for Louisiana nationwide.

But then came the 60s and other southern states did not have the huge reservoirs of oil and gas. Education became a key to their survival.  But in Louisiana, who cared about having a college degree when an oil field worker with a tenth grade education could make as much or more than many professionals with graduate degrees?  A college degree became less relevant.  And that’s when politics came into the mix.

With the economy running on auto pilot in Louisiana and unemployment running way behind other southern states, the cry for “keeping the flagship university strong” fell on deaf legislative ears.  Rural legislators were more concerned about beefing local colleges up to LSU status, and even building unneeded new colleges and trade schools. And LSU became its own worst enemy by not aggressively making their case of why a flagship university was, and is today, critical to the economic well being and future of the state.

The leadership of LSU made three key mistakes that allowed them to fall into the fiscal abyss the university finds itself in today.  First, it did not aggressively defend and promote its status as the flagship.  As THE leading focus for higher education.  I was around the state capitol as an elected official in various capacities trough the 70s, 80s and 90s.  LSU was just one of the many education interests lobbying the legislature and the Governor.  They did not consider themselves in any unique category, and so were not given any special deference as the flagship. They simply did not make their case as key universities in other states did.

In North Carolina, there is one board for higher education.  The centergy is around the flagship, my alma mater, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  When the Louisiana’s constitutional convention was held in 1973, LSU was nowhere to be found, as it should have been, to lobby for a single college board.  So now we have every college in the current four board system pushing to be a little LSU.

The second mistake made by the LSU leadership was the major failure to develop a solid endowment plan.  LSU could well have the lowest endowment of any major college of its size in the country. As much as 15 percent of the total amounts spent by major universities to cover costs can often come from its endowment. Income is built up over a number of years by actively encouraging alumni to make regular contributions to a university fund. Successful college endowments grow through investments and are a significant income source for any major university in the country. Not so at LSU.

As you would expect, the nation’s top-rated universities also have the highest endowments. Harvard leads the country with an endowment approaching $26 billion. A number of state universities have endowments that are significantly above $1 billion. My alma mater, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has topped the $2.3 billion level gaining some 13 percent in one year on investments of new funds into the endowment.

How about the Southeast Conference? The University of Florida comes in strongly at almost $1.2 billion. The University of Alabama has an endowment approaching $1 billion. The University of Tennessee system is now at $954 million. How about our backwards friends up in Arkansas to the north? $810 million endowment. The University of Kentucky- $957 million. Any number of smaller southern schools are above this level. So where’s LSU? Just topping $650 million, one of the lowest percentage increases in the country. LSU barely edged out Berry College in Georgia

US News and World Report recently released its annual university rankings.  How did LSU do, not nationally, but just right here in the Southeast Conference?   Vanderbilt was ranked 18, Florida was 49, Tulane was 58, Georgia-58, Alabama-83, Auburn-96, South Carolina-108, Tennessee tied at 108, Kentucky-116, Arkansas 125 (What! Arkansas?) And finally, dead last in the rankings of 130, LSU tied with Sanford.  No, not Stanford in California, but Sanford, a small college in Birmingham.

James Carville dismissed many of the state’s problems by saying that Louisiana is not just a way of life; “It’s a culture all its own.”  But every state has its own special ambiance, or way of life that is unique.  Maybe they don’t throw mardi gras beads and use Tabasco sauce.  Saying Louisiana is “special in its own way” is a cop out if its leadership has not made the commitment to accentuate its best and brightest.

Dr. Robert Berdahl, Chancellor of the University of California, raises concerns about the dangers to any state’s flagship university.  “Once built, a state’s top university can easily be destroyed by political intrusion or financial neglect.  But a strong, well financed flagship with solid leadership is vital to every state’s future.”

Louisiana is at a cross roads.  If the state’s leadership does not work to protect and promote a high degree of excellent achievement at LSU, the best and the brightest students will leave the state or settle for a less challenging education offering them few opportunities in the future.  And all of us will suffer from such a loss.

                                                                                       *******

“Half the crowd in Tiger Stadium on a Saturday night can’t even spell LSU.”

                                                         James Carville

Peace and Justice.

Jim Brown

 

Jim Brown’s weekly column is syndicated in numerous newspapers and websites throughout the South.  You can read his previous columns going back to 2002 at www.jimbrownla.com.



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Comments from BayouBuzz readers

What was the third mistake?
Written by   on 6/14/2009
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Oh, and CL, you ask; "Why would anyone with a choice want to come here?"... I came here for the commercial diving industry/offshore subsurface completions.... The bold freedoms I saw when I hit this swamp gave me quite the manly hard on for this proximity..... The opportunities..... They abounded... It occured to me immediately that if a person wanted to work hard there was nothing a person couldn't do... I had a logging company at the age of 24, supplied cypress to Masonite Corp. Even had a helecopter flying my timber out of the swamps... I have been at the helm of 240 foot offshore supply boats navigating the oil field, I have worked pushboats, had a salvage company, a construction company, tonged oysters, run trot lines, crabbed, crawfished, pulled anchors as big as houses, moved platforms as big as skyscrapers, driven trucks, operated cranes, bull dozers, done technology research for various defense programs, done agriculture, raised chickens, quails, ducks, geese, had every kind of boat from airboats to bateauxs,frogged, trapped alligators, and on and on and on and on... I have done things here in Louisiana in my 2 or 3 decades that folks other places couldn't do in 20, 30 or 40 lifetimes..... Louisiana is opportunity, it is supposed to be freedom, but the taxes, the laws, the finiglings, the thisis and the thatsis that are comming down the pike are eroding that essence....... I am getting sort of worse with the crippling effects I have suffered as a result of I don't know how many injuries, but I am still kicking..... Hell, no high school diplomea, no money, no nothing and here in Louisiana I was still able to see something, write my own patent, do my own drawings and get a patent for a technology that is superior to many other current technologies out there... That is Louisiana, pioneering spirit...... Dealing with the forces of nature, fighting the good fight, putting up with the misery and hoping to emerge into a better day down the road, it is people if they are your friends, it is the environment, it is down here down south in the deep swamp that opportunity abounds......... But the politics? Oh yi - yi??? Oui it is getting to be a festering flustering infected hemerhoid of a problem......... That's why someone would want to come here, to find theirselve, and to meet opportunity and to thrive, not just survive... You put the thrive in the equation and you got something there......
Written by   on 6/6/2009
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Good Gawd folks, get off your pity wagon.... It's the heat, damn it's hot!! Hot like the surface of the sun!!! It's the humidity, it is the sinus conditions, it is the mosquitos, it is the mud, mud, mud, mud, it is a lot of things... Louisiana is not for everyone, simple as that, just like many Louisianans wouldn't want to live in Boston, or New York City, or San Francisco.... It depends on where your heart is.... I love Louisiana, but I sure as hell do love getting away from it too, as does our little Miss Mary, I am surprised she didn't come back and want us to start wearing little wooden clogs for foot wear, sheesh..... Anything is a pleasant distraction from the day to day misery we go through.... We like to drink, sing, dance, enjoy as best we can..... Yes we need good jobs, yes folks need to be able to afford a decent home.... You get those things in line and the rest will follow... Within 600 years it may be great around here.....
Written by   on 6/6/2009
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Good article, Jim. I have lived in several large cities in the country and I can tell you that, among those former Louisianians with college degrees that I knew in those cities, I met very, very few who wanted to come back to Louisiana. We have sold ourselves on that myth. We are a state with a dismal past and without a promising future and it is small wonder that, as soon as our young men and women get their degrees, they head for more progressive parts of the country. If we think that being "quaint" or "unique" or "historic" will ever bring us economic development, we need to wake up and smell the coffee. The entire nation sees us as a backward state, and, while folks love to visit New Orleans, no one wants to move here except, perhaps, to retire. Drastic cuts in higher education funding, pushing for guns on campus, teaching Creationism in our schools (oh, excuse me, Intelligent Design), turning down funds to help the unemployed, crazy-quilt tax policies, the second lowest rate of high school completion, one of the lowest literacy rates in the nation, etc., etc., etc. Why would anyone with a choice come here?
Written by CL on 6/5/2009
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Did LSU raise the academic athletic minimum GPA to 1?
Written by Noladude on 6/5/2009
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My company has trouble bring people to New Orleans - even with attractive monetary incentives (bonus for moving here, extra pay for working here, etc). The two reasons most often cited are the crime and the school systems. It seems we're doing something wrong. I guess we simply do not want to change as - just as with the flood protection in the Netherlands - we have more successful examples we could emulate to better our schools and lower crime.
Written by kpf on 6/5/2009
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Oh gag me with a spoon there RW.................
Written by   on 6/5/2009
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Jim, dear, universities are not just a bunch of buildings. It is what those buildings contain. Unfortunately, the best have for many years gone elsewhere other than LSU. What is even worse is that the best want to come back to Louisiana but they can't because of the ignorance that has created an educational system of little value. As the city of New Orleans is said to be sinking into the Gulf of Mexico, the state of Louisiana is sinking into the Ocean of Oblivion and eventually it will become the jungle that once existed centuries ago. Even then, the natives had some knowledge and ability other than politics. Voters have risen from their graves to vote in too many elections and the best leaders have been sent into oblivion. Well, one can only hope and pray.
Written by RhettsWife on 6/5/2009
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The higher education mafia that has been exposed in this budget process is the biggest culprit.
Written by steveo on 6/5/2009
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It isn't a big fall for LSU, it just needs to downsize and realize its place amongst the other institutions of higher learning that are scattered around the United States.... They don't have to be a McDonald's franchise, being a Danny's Fried Chicken outlet is probably good enough and would probably serve Louisiana well.... Oh o.k., so they don't feel offended, how about a Popeye's fried chicken outlet.......... sheesh, touchy, touchy, touchy....
Written by   on 6/4/2009
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