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Office of the President

Office of the President
Hello! Welcome to the LeTourneau University Web site. Spend some time here, and imagine yourself as part of the unique LeTourneau experience.
Want a comprehensive university? We offer more than 85 academic programs for both graduate and undergraduate students in a variety of fields.
Want something more than just sitting in class and taking notes? At LeTourneau University, it is our vision for every student to impact the world for Christ in every workplace and every nation. Our programs provide students with real life, problem-solving opportunities through internships, co-ops and design projects. Our students travel the world each year on mission projects that are life changing.
Want programs that fit your busy life? Are you an adult going back to college? We offer online and on-ground degree completion programs so you can finish your degree in a format that works for you.
It is our desire to glorify and honor God by integrating faith, learning and living that sets LeTourneau University apart.
I look forward to meeting you!

Dale A. Lunsford, PhD
In God We Trust
Posted by LeTourneau University
Learning Beyond the Lab
Posted by LeTourneau University
Creating the Future
The gavel was passed to me as the new chair of the Longview Chamber of Commerce Tuesday night by 2011 chair Anne Hugman at the annual Longview Chamber of Commerce banquet at the Maude Cobb Convention Center.During my remarks, I spoke about the bright future ahead for Longview. We have avoided the terrible economic downturn that many cities now face. Our employment rates are much better than the state and national averages. Our housing market has remained strong. Our Longview Chamber of Commerce was recognized this year as one of the best in the nation -- in fact, we were runner-up for "Chamber of the Year" honors.
Our goals are to build opportunity for businesses to grow and prosper. Everyone wins when our business community can do what it does best -- create jobs. One of our goals is educating small businesses on best practices to help ensure their success. We want to encourage in even the smallest businesses a commitment to continuous improvement. I hope to also work with the Longview Economic Development Corporation this coming year to stimulate entrepreneurship and new business start-ups.
Another goal is to organize a group of city leaders to travel on a visioning trip to another city -- to see first-hand how others have created economic development and improved the quality of life.
Peter Drucker, the late renowned management expert, said the best way to predict the future is to create it. I hope Longview will seize that grand idea in the same way we are seizing it here at the university. We are balancing budgets in today's challenging economy while also making investments for future growth -- looking past today and toward tomorrow with a vision for what is possible.

Posted by LeTourneau University
Spiritual Development: A Community Endeavor
Posted by LeTourneau University
Graduates of Global Influence

Posted by LeTourneau University
Celebrating the Season
At the party, Dr. Bill Graff and I compared our festive Christmas ties (at right). Many of you know he is renowned for his extensive collection of ties. It was a pleasure to take some time Friday to celebrate together.
Posted by LeTourneau University
Teaching to Learn
In most of my 25 years in higher education, I've taught both undergraduate and graduate courses including the teaching of Marketing Research many times. However, this will be my first time to teach marketing at LeTourneau and so I am excited. It will be a new venue to interact with our students and I'm sure it will be beneficial for all those who serve on the President's Cabinet.
In thinking about how this course would be different at LETU than at other universities where I've taught, I came upon a lecture given recently at Baylor University by University of Virginia economics professor Kenneth Elzinga. In considering the differences between Christian and secular higher education, he said,
"I would expect Christian higher education to be characterized by professors who mentor students; not just teach them chemistry and accounting, not just teach them biology and Spanish, but model out for them how to walk with Jesus. Not because these faculty members have mastered how to do this, but simply because they've been pilgrims longer, because they have more experience with the consequences of sin and redemption."
Well said! This is a real distinctive of LETU: a faculty who take an active role in mentoring their students. Disciple-making happens simultaneously with higher learning. In fact, the lessons on following Christ may linger long after the learning objectives of the syllabus have been forgotten. It's an important reminder for me: answering Christ's Great Commission to make disciples should be my most important objective in teaching next semester.
Posted by LeTourneau University
Founder's Day
This week we commemorated the 123rd anniversary of the birth of our founder, Mr. R.G. LeTourneau. It was a treat to hear longtime LETU instructor Roger Carr speak in chapel about the legacy of "Mom and Pop" LeTourneau. Roger mentioned in chapel that one of those legacies is Mr. LeTourneau's 299 patents, second only to Thomas Edison. To mark this anniversary, I would like to share these words written by R.G. LeTourneau in 1968:
"I've always said when people ask me about the inventions I've come up with, that anything I've been able to do I credit to God who gave me my mind. Man's mind is marvelous in its accomplishments, but the human mind falls way short when we try to imagine or understand the goodness of God, His love for us, or His plans for our future. 1 Corinthians 2:9 says, 'Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love Him.' Man can't comprehend such wonders with his natural mind - can't imagine it - but the next verse says, 'But God hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit.' So if you want to enter into the wonders of God, don't try to do it with man's natural mind, but accept God's Son as your Savior and let the Holy Spirit show you the wonders of a life in God, both for now and for eternity."
Posted by LeTourneau University
Give Thanks
Give thanks to the Holy One.
Give thanks because He's given
Jesus Christ, His Son.
And now let the weak say I am strong.
Let the poor say I am rich
Because of what the Lord has done for us.
Give thanks.
Those words penned by Christian singer/songwriter Don Moen always come to my mind during this Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday season as I reflect on the many reasons I have to give thanks and be grateful. As Christians, we are called to be a grateful people, and we have much for which we should daily give thanks.
A story on gratitude I found this past week in Christianity Today caught my eye. It was titled "The Blessings of Gratitude: Why Jesus commands us to be thankful." The writer Stan Guthrie reports that with unemployment numbers high, he would have expected people who had jobs would be grateful for their jobs at Thanksgiving. But he notes that a Gallup poll indicated that 75 percent of the workforce was, as he put it, "phoning it in" and 55 percent were emotionally detached or "disengaged" from their work. How sad.
Bill Peel, our executive director for LETU's new Center for Faith and Work, and his wife, Kathy, recently joined us in Longview where Bill spoke to our President's Advisory Council about the initiatives of this new center. If you haven't taken the time to look at the new website for the CFW, I invite you to see it here now.
During Bill's presentation he shared a fun and creative video about Work as Worship that reminds us that when we do our jobs with integrity, excellence and diligence, using the skills that God has given us, then our work is an act of worship. I hope you enjoy it. You can see it here.
On another note, a task force chaired by the Provost's office recently began meeting to discuss LETU's Emergency Response (including notification) and Evacuation Procedures on campus in the event of any crisis. Representatives of the Abbott Center and GAPS are included to address their special concerns. If you have a specific concern you would like addressed, I invite you to share it at letournews@letu.edu.
Posted by LeTourneau University
Impacting Our Local Community
She sent her congratulations for our university's participation in this year's United Way campaign, saying:
"What an outstanding United Way campaign you guys had! Thank you so much for your efforts. Your campaign increased by 46% from $5,368 last year to $7,835 this year. Please let the staff and faculty know how much I appreciate their gifts. . . . Again, thanks so much for the excellent participation."
The United Way benefits nonprofits that improve the lives of people right here in Gregg County. One of the agencies that the United Way donations fund is the Boys & Girls Club of Gregg County, a private, nonprofit agency dedicated to youth development for children ages 6 through 18. Most of the youth live in single-parent homes in low-income neighborhoods.
By providing these children with a sense of belonging, understanding, influence and competence, the Boys & Girls Club of Gregg County inspires and enables them to realize their full potential as productive, responsible and caring citizens.
The LETU volleyball team has been volunteering there each week since mid-September. About 10 student-athletes tutor the children on their homework and listen to them read. Our students provide one-to-one or small group interaction that many of the children don't get at home.
There are about 150 children at the Boys & Girls Club of Gregg County on any given day in need of tutoring and mentoring. Our students have said they love working with them, seeing it as an exciting opportunity to serve others. Some of the students go more often than the weekly schedule so they can spend extra time with the children.
Our student-athletes are not the only ones helping at the Boys & Girls Club. Other students from around campus also are volunteering, and our Director of Student Support Services Carlton Mitchell has begun a "Passport to Manhood" series with about a dozen 11- to 14-year-old boys on Thursday nights.
Our students, faculty and staff are investing in the lives of these children, helping them to learn, develop character and leadership, and to build relationships. In the process, they are receiving a blessing in return.
Even as I celebrate our participation in making Longview a better community, my heart is broken for our own university community and the losses we are mourning. We have all been in prayer with Wayne and Karen Jacobs and with Yoni Adonyi and his daughter. It is in these difficult moments that God's love is most evident at LeTourneau University.
Ann Marie Adonyi's funeral is at 1 p.m. tomorrow (Friday, Nov. 11) at St. Michael's Episcopal Church, 909 Reel Road in Longview. The burial is at White's Cemetery. No visitation is planned. Engineering Dean Dr. Ron DeLap has authorized the cancellation of classes tomorrow afternoon for those engineering faculty members who wish to attend.
Posted by LeTourneau University
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