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Jumat, 23 Maret 2018

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Louisiana State University Shreveport (LSU Shreveport or LSUS) is a branch institution of the Louisiana State University System located in Shreveport, Louisiana, and is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. The school's athletic programs, nicknamed the Pilots, are members of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and the Red River Athletic Conference. Initially, a two-year college, LSUS has expanded into an internationally recognized institution with 21 undergraduate degree programs, a dozen master's degree programs, and more recently a Doctorate of Education (Ed.D.) in Leadership Studies. LSUS offers more than 70 extra-curricular organizations and it operates Red River Radio, a public radio network based in Shreveport.


Video Louisiana State University Shreveport



History

In September 1967, Louisiana State University Shreveport opened its doors as a two-year commuter college with an enrollment of 807 students under the direction of Dean Donald Shipp. The campaign to establish a branch of Louisiana State University (LSU) in Shreveport began in 1936 when the Caddo Parish Police Jury passed a resolution for the school with the support of Frank Fulco and several civic organizations including the Queensborough Civic Club. Unfortunately, however, when Louisiana State Senator Roscoe Cranor presented the formal request to Governor Richard Leche in 1937, he rejected the proposal.

Another nineteen years would past before State Representative Frank Fulco introduce a bill to the Louisiana House in 1956 to, yet again, establish a branch of LSU in Shreveport. It failed in committee, forcing Representative Fulco to introduce a resolution calling for a feasibility study by the State Department of Education to determine the need for a state college in Shreveport. This time, the resolution passes; the study took two years to complete. It revealed that not only was a public college needed in Shreveport but that the citizens of the area desired it, invigorating debate among various Louisiana state legislators, governors, universities, civic clubs, and, of course, private citizens over its necessity and fiscality. Fortunately, the debate concluded in 1964 with the introduction of House Bill 87. 

Co-authored by Representative Algie Brown [Caddo]; Frank Fulco [Caddo]; J. Bennett Johnston [Caddo]; Ford Stinson [Bossier]; and Joe Cooper [DeSoto], House Bill 87 set to create a two-year branch of LSU in Shreveport. It passed in both the House and Senate and signed into law by Governor John J. McKeithen on June 27, 1967, under Act No 41.  By 1965, the LSU Board of Supervisors formally had established LSUS as an integral division of Louisiana State University and appoints Dr. Donald Shipp as the first Dean of LSUS.

Dr. Shipp quickly establishes a base of operations at the old Line Avenue School with Dr. A.J. Howell as the business manager and Mrs. Fabia Thomas as the Registrar and hires the original core faculty.

The Line Avenue School remained the center location for the students, faculty, and staff until the completed construction of the three-story Science Building and a two-story Library on the new campus grounds located off Hwy 1 in Southeast Shreveport in 1967.

Soon after classes began that September in 1967, a push for a four-year status for LSUS ensues by the Student Government Association and Circle K Club of LSUS along with other prominent members of Shreveport. Louisiana State Senator Don Williamson of Caddo Parish heard their calls and became the lead author of Senate Bill No. 16 for a four-year degree granting status for LSUS supported by State Senators Jackson B. Davis [Caddo] and C. Kay Carter [Caddo] and an onslaught of State Representatives. William "Bill" Bronson, publisher of the Shreveport Times and Vice Chairman of the Coordinating Council for Higher Education, uses his powers of persuasion and both The Times and The Monroe Morning World to endorse the four-year bill for LSUS.

However, surrounding colleges, fearing the loss of student enrollment to a state four-year degree-granting university, staunchly opposed LSUS becoming a four-year school. In fact, the opposition sought to kill the bill by securing the opinion of the Attorney General, stating approval of the proposal would require a two-thirds vote rather than a simple majority. Additionally, an amendment attached to the bill prohibited the construction of dormitories on the Shreveport campus. However, the supporters of the bill agreed to the change, and Governor Edwin Edwards signed the bill into law June 22, 1972, under Act No. 66. Shortly afterward, the Louisiana Council for Higher Education authorized four major academic divisions and 39 degree programs for LSUS. By the fall of 1973, Dean Shipp is promoted to Chancellor, and LSUS institutes its third academic year and its senior year in the fall of 1974.

On May 15, 1975, LSUS held its first commencement at the Municipal Auditorium in Shreveport conferring degrees on 223 students almost 40 years after the initial effort of Frank Fulco to establish a branch of LSU in Shreveport.

On May 5, 1978, the Academic Affairs Committee of the Board of Regents for the State of Louisiana unanimously adopted the motion for LSUS to offer graduate studies for the Master of Education in Secondary Education catapulting LSUS and the Shreveport area into the graduate consortium. Just a year later, the same committee approved the graduate studies for the Master of Business Administration at LSUS, and by 2016, LSUS would have an additional ten graduate programs.

After approximately 13 years of attempting to bring a doctoral program to LSUS, the approval by the Board of Regents for the State of Louisiana on May 22, 2013, the Doctor of Education (Ed.D) in Leadership Studies became a reality. "This degree will give area educators and other organizational leaders an opportunity to obtain an advanced practice degree that can equip them to develop and sustain best practices while building the capacity of others," said Dr. Ruth Ray Jackson, Chair of the Department of Education. However, one more step remained in order to offer the doctoral degree, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) Level V institution accreditation. In June 2014, SACS Board of Trustees voted in favor of the change after the school received "no recommendations to make" by the SACS visiting team in April of that same year.


Maps Louisiana State University Shreveport



Academics

LSUS offers 21 undergraduate programs, 12 Master's degrees, and one Doctoral degree. All of LSUS' business degrees are accredited by AACSB-International. LSUS offers several night courses, catering to its non-traditional student population, and it offers online courses, including four 100% online master's degrees (Master of Nonprofit Organizations, Master of Business Administration, Master of Education in Curriculum and Instruction, and Master of Health Administration).

The University has a student-teacher ratio of 24:1 and 81% of the professors have terminal degrees, the highest degree awarded in a given field. Many of LSUS' professors have been published and nationally recognized and sit on nationally recognized boards related to their disciplines.


Louisiana State University - Shreveport (StudentsReview) - LSUS ...
src: cdn.studentsreview.com


Student Life

The University Center (UC) at LSUS serves as the campus hub for student, faculty, and staff activities and is a centerpiece of the LSUS campus. The UC staff maintains up-to-date information on each registered student organization such as its officers or authorized representatives, its purpose, and its adviser. Each year, the UC publishes a list of current clubs with the names of the groups according to the nine categories of student organizations. 

Organizations

LSUS has over 70 student organizations that include Academic/Professional, Governing, Greek, Honorary, Religious, Service, Special Interest, and Sports. 

Media

The Almagest, Greek for "great book," is the university's student newspaper in both print and broadcasting and has kept the community at LSUS informed since 1967. It is the brainchild of Mrs. Evelyn Herring, an assistant professor of English at LSUS, along with four other students. The paper is published six to twelve times each fall and spring semester. In 2015, the paper went 100% online.

Spectra, called Narcissus initially, is a student literary magazine that has been in production since 1969 that consists of student and faculty poetry and pose as well as visual artwork. It is published once a year and submissions for the magazine are taken throughout the fall and spring semesters. 

The Toilet Paper is a promotional paper that is published and emailed weekly that advertises student and faculty events for the upcoming week or month.

Greek

Social fraternal or sorority organizations make up the Greek Life at LSUS with its membership driven by invitation only. However, recruitment is open to all students both in the fall and spring semesters. Additionally, both fraternal and sorority encourage academic achievement, leadership, and community.  The Greek Council oversees and plans the annual Greek Week, Meet the Greeks, and a Greek step show, to promote a sense of community among the Greek members and the students of LSUS.  

  • Fraternities at LSUS: Alpha Phi Alpha, Kappa Alpha Psi, Kappa Sigma, and Tau Kappa Epsilon
  • Sororities at LSUS: Alpha Kappa Alpha, Phi Mu, Sigma Phi Iota, and Zeta Phi Beta.

File:Revised photo of LSU-Shreveport sign IMG 4946.JPG - Wikimedia ...
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Libraries 

The Noel Memorial Library

The Noel Memorial Library collects materials sufficient to support the University's curricula, then organizes the elements, and makes them readily available to the patrons of the library. Supplies readily available consist of 250, 000 books, access to 100,000 electronic books, and 60,000 electronic journals. Additionally, the library houses The Northwest Louisiana Archives and Special Collections and the James Smith Noel Collection of rare books, which is under permanent loan to LSUS. Also, the library is a select depository for United States Government Documents and Louisiana State documents. 

Northwest Louisiana Archives

The Northwest Louisiana Archives accumulates individual collections relating to the Shreveport area, northwest Louisiana, and the lower Red River region such as vital historical records and manuscripts from the area known as the Ark-La-Tex. Within the Archives, you will find over 1.5 million photographs and negatives documenting the history and culture of the Ark-La-Tex, 800 maps, over 200 oral histories, and 23,000 linear feet of records and manuscripts that are available for researchers to discover the rich and colorful heritage of the region. 

The Noel Collection

The Noel Collection houses the most extensive private collection of antiquarian books in the United States with an approximate 250,000 volumes that range from religion, philosophy, natural history, curiosities, travel literature, cartography, and much more, and is the life's work of Mr. James Smith Noel. Within the collection, pre-1850 European and American literature and history are most prevalent.

Paul Jones Library

The Paul Jones Library opened on Nov. 1, 2015, in Room 421 of Bronson Hall. It is a closed-stack collection containing over 2500 books donated by Mr. Jones and faculty members of LSUS. It covers all aspects of history but has a particular focus on the US Civil War and WWII; it also has a great many books on antiquity.


Admissions
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Museums

The Museum of Life Sciences 

The Museum of Life Sciences has the following cataloged collections:

  • 9,148 specimens of Amphibians and Reptiles
  • 2,032 specimens of Mammals 
  • 2,118 specimens of Birds
  • 1,430 specimens of Fish
  • 35,700 specimens of Mollusk
  • 2,000 specimens of Insects
  • 2,650 specimens of Spiders
  • 107 specimens of Crawfish
  • 10,678 specimens of Vascular Plants

Pioneer Heritage Center

In 1977, the Junior League of Shreveport and LSUS established the Pioneer Heritage Center on the grounds of the LSUS campus as an educational program that provides interpretive tours through the seven plantation structures at the Center.

Buildings at the Center include:

  • The Caspiana House (the big house from the Caspiana Plantation)
  • The Thrasher House (a log dogtrot)
  • A detached Kitchen 
  • A log single pen blacksmith shop
  • A doctor's office
  • A commissary
  • A riverfront mission

Academics
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Athletics

LSU Shreveport (LSUS) teams are known as the Pilots. The university is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), competing in their second stint as a member of the Red River Athletic Conference (RRAC). The Pilots formerly competed in the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference (GCAC) from 2003-2010. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, soccer, cross country, and bass fishing; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, soccer, tennis, and bass fishing. The LSUS Athletic program has produced many championship teams collecting nine regular season conference titles, 16 conference tournament championships, and competed in 31 NAIA National Tournaments.

Baseball

The LSU Shreveport Pilot baseball team has become a NAIA National power holding the nation's no. 1 ranking during their record year with a 54-6 record in 2012. The Pilots have been to the Avista-NAIA World series three times under former Head Coach Rocke Musgraves (2000-2013). Musgraves led the Pilots to a fourth-place finish (2011) and a pair of third-place finishes (2003 & 2012). The program has had many players sign professional contracts and drafted in the Major League Baseball Draft, including three taken in the 2010 MLB Draft.

  • Conference Regular Season Titles: 2005, 2011, 2012, 2014
  • Conference Tournament Titles: 1997, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017
  • NAIA Opening Round Appearances (Regional Tournaments): 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
  • NAIA Opening Round Titles: 2011, 2012
  • Avista-NAIA World Series Appearances: 2003, 2011, 2012

Basketball

Men's

The Louisiana State University Shreveport Pilots basketball program has become one the top teams in the NAIA since the program was re-instated back in 2003. The Pilots have won four regular season titles, seven of the last eight conference tournaments and an even more impressive nine consecutive trips to the NAIA National Tournament in Kansas City. The Pilots have been to the elite eight twice and the Fab Four once.

  • Conference Regular Season Titles: 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2014
  • Conference Tournament Titles: 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
  • NAIA National Tournament Appearances: 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
  • NAIA Fab Four Appearances: 2013
  • NAIA Elite Eight Appearances: 2012, 2013

Women's

Curtis Lloyd led the women's basketball team to their first RRAC Tournament Championship in his only season at the helm. National Championship Coach, Matt Cross, took over following Lloyd's departure for the 2017-18 season.

  • Conference Tournament Titles: 2017
  • Conference Tournament Appearances : 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
  • NAIA National Tournament Appearances: 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017

Bass Fishing

Bass fishing at LSUS started in 2008, and it competes in the Collegiate Bass Fishing Association with its first competition at Lake Lewisville in Texas. 

  • 2nd Place in the 2011 National Guard FLW College Fishing National Championships
  • 2nd place in the 2016 Association of Collegiate Anglers Nationals 
  • 2nd place in the 2016 Carhartt Bassmaster Wildcard Collegiate Tournament
  • 5th place in the 2016 Bass Collegiate National Championship
  • 1st place in the 2017 Yeti College Tournament 

Cross Country

The LSUS men's and women's cross country teams compete in the NAIA.

Soccer

Soccer at LSUS kicked off in 1992 with Norm Dolch as the head coach for the men's team. By 2005, women's soccer came on board under the direction of Coach Jed Jones. In 2013, the program was cut due to budget constraints enacted by the state. However, in 2017, it was brought back, both the men's and women's teams. 

Men's

Men's Soccer: Head Coach Phillip Bohn

  • Conference Tournament Appearances: 2009, 2010, 2012

Women's

Women's Soccer: Head Coach Ashley Holland 

  • Conference Regular Season Championship: 2006
  • Regional Tournament Qualifiers: 2005, 2007

Tennis

The LSUS women's tennis team competes in the NAIA as an Independent.

Weightlifting

The weightlifting team at LSUS uses the USA Weightlifting Center for High Performance and Development, commissioned by the U.S. Olympic Committee on February 4th, 1998, located in the Health and Physical Education building under the direction of Dr. Kyle Pierce, an associate professor of kinesiology at LSUS. 

Notable team members are:

  • Dawn List - set three Women's National Collegiate records for her weight class in 1991.
  • Derrick Johnson - recipient of three junior national weightlifting records in 2004.
  • Kendrick Farris - represented the U.S. in 2008, 2012, and 2016 at the Summer Olympics. 

Athletic facilities

Health and Physical Education Building
The Health and Physical Education Building on the campus of LSUS includes The Dock, a 1,000-seat gymnasium and home to the LSUS men's and women's basketball teams. The gymnasium is also used for high school basketball games, gymnastics meets and weightlifting competitions. The Health and Physical Education Building also includes the USA Weightlifting High Performance and Development Center which is home to the LSUS weightlifting team, the LSUS Natatorium that houses a six lane lap pool, five racquetball courts and an indoor track. Located adjacent to the building and part of the complex are eight tennis courts.

Pilot Field
Pilot Field is a baseball stadium located on the campus of LSUS. It is home to the LSUS baseball team. It opened on February 17, 1994 and includes an indoor hitting facility, locker room, meeting room and coaches offices.

The Swamp
The Swamp located on the campus of LSUS is the home of the men's and women's soccer teams. The facility includes a locker room for the teams.


LSUS Fall Commencement 2016 - YouTube
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Traditions

School Colors

LSUS official colors are LSUS Purple and LSUS Gold

Mascot

From 1967 to 1975, LSUS borrowed the image of the LSU tiger as its symbol. However, once LSUS became a four-year institution in 1975, Donald Alexander, an assistant professor of fine arts at LSUS, developed the graphic logo of riverboat pilots (a pilot's wheel) for LSUS to help set the school apart from LSU. In 1983, Carolyn Cornelison, Intramural Sports Director at LSUS, and Al Bohl, a fine arts graduate at LSUS, introduced Rah-Rah as the unofficial mascot for the LSUS intramural department. In 1990, the LSUS Athletic Council appointed Meredith Rambin as the first director of the athletics program, and he quickly brought a variety of sports to the LSUS community. However, it would take fifteen years before a real mascot would be introduced to support the athletic teams. 

After years of debate and discussions, LSUS adopted a mascot for the Pilots, a pelican named Pete. The idea behind the pelican was to connect it to Louisiana. In addition, Pete wore a captain's hat to relate it to the Red River, which is adjacent to the school, and a riverboat captain. Pete the Pelican remained the official mascot of LSUS until 2013. After a four-year hiatus, LSUS introduced a new mascot to the students and the community during a 50th-anniversary event called Soccer Back in Play, the River Monster.

Working closely with the student-athletes at LSUS, the Student Government Association (SGA) collectively voted to have the River Monster as the official mascot for the school. To help connect the River Monster to the campus, the SGA created a story arc centered on the history of the region and the LSUS Anderson Watershed Research Station located at Bickham Dickson Park that is connected to the Red River.

Alma Mater

The "LSUS Alma Mater" was originally written in 1993 by an unknown author and was updated in 2007 by Dr. Laura McLemore, Associate Curator and Archivist of the Noel Memorial Library.


Admissions
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Notable people

Alumni

  • Brandon Friedman, former Deputy Assistant Secretary, United States Department of Housing and Urban Development; author of The War I Always Wanted
  • Royal Alexander, attorney in Shreveport
  • Hazel Beard, former mayor of Shreveport
  • Sherri Smith Buffington, former state senator from Caddo and DeSoto parishes
  • Jeff Cox, Division C judge of the 26th Judicial District Court since 2005
  • Michael Craig, Division A judge of the 26th Judicial District Court since 2009
  • Mary Johnson Harris, District 4 member of the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education
  • Mike Nerren, Division E judge of the 26th Judicial District Court since 2012
  • Barbara Norton (Legal course), state representative for District 3 in Caddo Parish since 2008
  • Ollie Tyler, Mayor of Shreveport, did graduate study at LSUS

Faculty

  • Hubert D. Humphreys, a charter member of the LSUS faculty, was a specialist in oral history.
  • Harold R. King, Jr. (1945-2010), American novelist from Shreveport who taught writing at LSUS.
  • Lloyd E. Lenard (1922-2008), a Shreveport businessman, Caddo Parish commissioner, and author, taught finance and insurance at LSUS on an adjunct basis.
  • Jeffrey D. Sadow, an LSUS political science professor and widely known political blogger, journalist, and satirist.
  • Charles R. Scott, state court judge in Shreveport from 1982 to 2007 and the Caddo Parish district attorney from 2009 until his death in office on April 22, 2015, was an adjunct professor in the paralegal program at LSUS.
  • Alexander Mikaberidze, a Georgian lawyer, author and historian who specializes in Napoleonic studies, Russian history and Georgian history. He is a professor of history and social sciences.

Louisiana State University Shreveport - Howling Pixel
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References


Louisiana State University - Shreveport (StudentsReview) - LSUS ...
src: cdn.studentsreview.com


External links

  • Official website
  • Official Athletics website

Source of article : Wikipedia