Office of the President

 

Leading LSU Forward

Since joining LSU, President Rousse has been hard at work—meeting with students, faculty, and staff, listening to the community, and building a strong foundation for the work ahead.

 

President Rousse shares personal stories with LSU staff before the South Quad Community groundbreaking ceremony. President Rousse receives a festive welcome during his visit to the LSUA campus. President Wade Rousse and Executive Vice President James Dalton visit the LSU Health Sciences Shreveport campus and meet with Interim Senior Vice Chancellor Lester Johnson. President Rousse speaks with LSU Student Government Association members at one of their meetings.

President Rousse with military personnel during the LSU Corps of Cadets Reactivation Ceremony in Tiger Stadium at halftime. President Rousse and his wife, Angela Rousse, greet and serve students during the Late Night Breakfast during finals week. President Rousse and his wife, Angela Rousse, cheer on the LSU Tigers as they march down Victory Hill before a football game. President Rousse converses with Dr Mette Gaarde during the Boyd Professors luncheon.

President Rousse congratulates the first recipients of the WBTTW Employee Recognition Program, Aaron Cherry and Natale Nappi from LSU Facility Services, during the on-field presentation during a football game. President Rousse and his wife, Angela Rousse, in a group photo with student fans before a men’s basketball game. President Rousse and Executive Vice President Dalton in a group photo with the LSU Board of Supervisors. President Rousse and Executive Vice President Dalton receive a standing ovation at the Board of Supervisors meeting after the announcement of their administrative positions was made.

We Build Teams that Win

LSU Health Shreveport is expanding its successful program across north Louisiana. Partnering with Franklin Medical Center and Ochsner LSU Health Monroe, the program will place its first residents in the small town of Winnsboro this summer.

While parishes have yet to be compared with each other and with rural counties in America, one of the key takeaways so far is this: Your health is strongly tied to your education level—and much more so than to your income or age.

Since its inception in 2017, the Rural Track Scholars Program at LSU Health New Orleans’ School of Dentistry has successfully placed 11 dental graduates in rural Louisiana communities. Once established in rural areas, dentists tend to stay. As many as three out of four dentists and dental healthcare professionals in Louisiana graduated from LSU.

In the heart of Cajun country, Allen Mclain farms about 3,000 acres of rice together with his wife, father, and two younger brothers. Much of their crop, all south of LA-14, is under threat. But Mclain is working with an LSU researcher, Naohiro Kato, on a solution: growing microalgae alongside rice.

LSU students are using spring break to build leadership skills and serve communities through SLICE programs in Campus Life. Initiatives like Geaux Big Baton Rouge and the Disney Leadership Experience help students gain real-world leadership and career readiness skills.

LSU is creating a new School of Construction. By expanding the pool of construction graduates and fueling research that leads to new companies, products, and jobs, the school will play a key role in the success of Louisiana infrastructure projects and economic development initiatives for decades to come.