A Once Great University Needs Revitalizing!
Thursday,
July 3rd, 2013
Baton
Rouge, Louisiana
A NEW PRESIDENT’S CHALLENGE:
DEALING WITH THE RISE AND FALL OF LSU
Louisiana State University,
located in my hometown of Baton Rouge, takes on a new president this week. And
to say that he has a big job ahead of him is an understatement. Educationally,
the state’s largest university is a mixed bag of quality and mediocrity,
typical of many public universities. And there’s nothing like being in Tiger Stadium
on a football Saturday night. But when
it comes to national rankings, and raising money for its endowment, LSU
continues to be at the low-end, even among schools in the Southeast Conference.
Dr. F. King Alexander, the new
president comes from California State University in Long Beach, where he was
popular, proactive, and controversial. When it came to funding for Long Beach,
he made no bones about taking on the California legislature, and he did so with
great success. However, he will quickly
find that politicians in California are a piece of cake compared to the
shenanigans he will have to deal with at the state capital in Baton Rouge. He will also discover that LSU, once the
centerpiece of higher education throughout the South, is now fighting for
relevant academic survival.
Huey Long was the best friend
and supporter LSU ever had. The Virginia
Quarterly Review called him the father of the modern LSU and said, “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.” The Kingfish made no secret of his long-term
goals for the state’s flagship university. “LSU’s going to be the Harvard of the
South,” he said.
LSU’s 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 place for major
literary figures. The Southern Historical Association began publishing its Journal
of Southern History as well as the highly 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 praise for Louisiana
nationwide. But that was then. What happened
in recent years that caused Louisiana State University to drop its mantel of
excellence, not just nationally, but right here in the Deep South?
In the 60s, education became the
key to survival for other southern states that did not have the huge reservoirs
of oil and gas that was bountiful 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 education became less
relevant. And that’s when politics came
into the mix.
With the economy running on autopilot
in Louisiana, and unemployment running way behind other southern states, the
cry for keeping the flagship university strong fell on deaf ears. Rural legislators were more concerned about
beefing up local colleges to LSU status, and even building unneeded new
colleges and trade schools. And LSU
became its own worst enemy by not aggressively making its case as to how
critical a flagship university is to the economic well being and future of a
state.
The leadership of LSU made three
key mistakes that allowed it 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 of all colleges in
the state. I was around the state
capitol as an elected official in various capacities through the ’70s, ’80s and
’90s. LSU was just one of the many
education interests lobbying the legislature and the Governor. The University’s leadership did not consider
LSU in a unique category. They simply did not make their case as key
universities in other states have done. So they were not given any special
attention or funding as the flagship, and by default, they got lost in the
crowd.
The second mistake made by the
LSU leadership was the failure to develop a solid endowment plan. LSU could
well have the lowest endowment of any major college of its size in the country.
Endowments are important. 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 $30 billion. A number of state
universities have endowments that are significantly above $1 billion. The
University of North Carolina 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? Texas A&M is way ahead at $7 billion. Vanderbilt
is solid at $3 billion. The University of Florida comes in strongly at almost
$1.3 billion. The University of Alabama has an endowment approaching $1
billion. The University of Tennessee system is now at $954 million. Our
football rivals up in Arkansas have an $800 million endowment. Any number of smaller southern schools are
above this level. So where’s LSU? Just topping $650 million, and barely edging
out Cooper Union and Macalester College.
(I’ve never have heard of either one.)
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 17, Florida was 44,
Tulane was 51, Georgia-58, Alabama-77, Auburn-89, Tennessee-104, South Carolina-115,
Kentucky-125, And finally, further down the list ranked at 134, tied with the
University of Arkansas, was LSU.
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.”
What the new LSU president will
quickly find is that Louisiana is at a crossroads. If the state’s leadership does not work to promote
and protect a high degree of excellence at LSU, the best and the brightest
students will leave the state for greener pastures, or settle for a less
challenging education that will limit their opportunities in the future. Dr. Alexander certainly has his work cut out
for him. Geaux new Tiger.
*******
“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 syndicated column
appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites
worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates
at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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