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Ouachita Baptist University was founded as Ouachita Baptist College on September 6, 1886, [3] and has operated continually since that date. It was originally located on the campus of Ouachita Baptist High School. [citation needed] Its current location is on the former campus of the Arkansas School for the Blind, which relocated to Little Rock.
The Ouachita Baptist Tigers are composed of 16 teams representing Ouachita Baptist University in intercollegiate athletics, including men and women's basketball, golf, soccer, swimming, and tennis. Men's sports include baseball, football, and wrestling.
The Ouachita Baptist Tigers compete in the Battle of the Ravine every year. This tradition started in 1895 when Ouachita Baptist played Arkadelphia Methodist College (currently known as Henderson State University), and won 8–0. This historical event was not played from 1951 to 1963 because of the excessive rivalry between the two schools.
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (B.Div. 1889) Henry Simms Hartzog (July 17, 1866 – December 15, 1953) was an American academic and school administrator who served as the president of Clemson University , the University of Arkansas , and Ouachita Baptist University .
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Doak S. Campbell (non-degreed) – president of Florida State College for Women (1941–1947) and then Florida State University (1947–1957) Leon Green (1908) – legal scholar, dean of Northwestern University School of Law, and professor at Yale Law School; Nell I. Mondy (1943) – biochemist and professor at Cornell University for fifty years
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The first issue was printed in March 1890, making the publication the oldest university student journalistic effort in the state of Arkansas. The Signal began as a combination newspaper/literary magazine known as the Ouachita Ripples, published monthly. On Sept. 22, 1917, the publication changed its name to Ouachita Baptist College Signal-Ripples.