Nov 21, 2024  
2011-2012 Graduate Catalog 
    
2011-2012 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Physical Facilities


 

The University Library and Conference Center

The University Library’s purpose is to support the mission of the University of Louisiana at Monroe in its academic endeavors, research via technology applications, collection building, and the provision of e-literacy instruction to students, faculty, and staff. The University Library also serves non-University users such as businesses, individuals, non-profit organizations, and government entities, particularly in the areas of northeast Louisiana history and the Library’s special collections and archives.

The Library is a member of OCLC, the largest resource-sharing network of world libraries, enabling cataloging and bibliographic verification and interlibrary loan via computers connected online to the system headquarters. The Library’s electronic catalog is a part of LOUIS, the state-wide library network, which provides access to bibliographic and abstracting sources. As a part of LOUIS, the Library has access to EBSCOhost, providing ULM users access to over 50,000 full text electronic journals. The University Library also provides access to more than 50,000 electronic books via Netlibrary.

All are welcome to use the resources of the University Library. To borrow library materials one must have a valid ID card; be enrolled in a cooperative program offered by other institutions; become a member of Friends of the ULM Library; or acquire a ULM Alumni Honorary Card.

Director: Don Smith, Dean of the ULM Library
Contact: (318) 342-1050
Web site: www.ulm.edu/library

Centers, Institutes, and Clinics

Center for Business and Economic Research

The Center for Business and Economic Research functions to stimulate research activities of the faculty and to serve the business and industrial populace of northeast Louisiana in solving business and economic problems of the area. The center gathers, analyzes, interprets, and disseminates statistical information resulting from investigations of potential economic significance to the Northeast area.

Director: Dr. Robert C. Eisenstadt
Web site: cba.ulm.edu/cber
Physical Location: Hemphill Hall, 1st Floor

Communication Resource Center

The Communication Resource Center serves the Department of Communication by providing a space for the Speech and Debate Forum to hold forensic labs, Department Meetings, Graduate Comprehensive Exams, and a Library. Located in Stubbs Hall, Room 117, the Communication Resource Center is also used for instructional purposes, interviewing prospective candidates and reserved by other departments when other meeting places are unavailable.

Department Head: Dr. Carl L. Thameling
Satellite Secretary for Stubbs Hall: Mrs. Linda Davis
Contact: (318) 342-3184; (318) 342-1551
Physical Location: Stubbs Hall, Room 117

Digital Media Studio

The Digital Medial Studio is a highly specialized multimedia studio in the College of Education and Human Development. It houses 20 I-Mac computers, scanners, digital still cameras, digital voice recorders, video cameras, and presentation equipment. The studio, staffed by student workers from the university, enables students to create and develop digital portfolios and multimedia presentations. The studio also assists students with the college’s electronic assessment system, Taskstream.

Director: Dr. Thilla Sivakumaran
Contact: (318) 342-1242
Web site: www.ulm.edu/ci/dms
Physical Location: Strauss Hall, Room 265

Doctoral Research Center

The Doctoral Research Center provides a technology-rich environment for group and individual research, video conferencing, and mediabased presentations. The center is also used for seminar and doctoral level committee meetings and consultations.

Contact: (318) 342-1288
Physical Location: Strauss Hall, Room 154-B

Human Performance Laboratory

This laboratory serves as an integral part of the science core curriculum for undergraduate and graduate students in the Department of Kinesiology. Practical experience related to career choices is provided to students in the areas of teaching, physiological assessment, wellness, cardiac rehabilitation, and other sports medicine fields.

Students and faculty use the facilities for research and the laboratory provides a comprehensive fitness testing program to the university and the community.

Director: Dr. Wilson Campbell, Department Head
Contact: (318) 342-1306
Physical Location: Fant-Ewing Coliseum, Room 50-C

Institute of Corrections and Juvenile Justice

The Institute of Corrections and Juvenile Justice is charged with providing continuing education and training, beyond basic jailer training, to corrections personnel in public and private corrections agencies. It also has the responsibility to initiate, coordinate, and conduct special programmatic activities related to juvenile and adult correctional populations. The jurisdiction includes Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi, although personnel from other areas are invited to attend training sessions.

Director: Dr. Robert Hanser, Department Head
Contact: (318) 342-1443
Physical Location: Stubbs Hall, Room 208

Institute of Gerontology

The Institute of Gerontology conducts research and provides in-service training for those in the fields of health and social sciences and maintains community service programs to meet the specialized needs of older persons.

The institute further offers academic courses through a multidisciplinary spectrum to develop students for work with older adults. The unit encourages research related to the aging process.

Director: Dr. Kevin Unter, Department Head
Contact: (318) 342-1465
Physical Location: Stubbs Hall, Room 103

Institute of Law Enforcement

The Institute of Law Enforcement is charged with the responsibility of providing continuing education and training, beyond basic certification and re-certification training, for law enforcement personnel. Its jurisdiction includes Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Personnel from other areas may also attend training sessions. The unit determines training needs and schedules and conducts training sessions utilizing qualified instructors.

Director: Dr. Robert Hanser, Department Head
Contact: (318) 342-1443
Physical Location: Stubbs Hall, Room 208

Kitty Degree Speech and Hearing Center

The Kitty DeGree Speech and Hearing Center provides quality speech, language, and hearing services to children and adults throughout northeast Louisiana. It allows students to conduct applied clinical research and complements academic instruction which prepares students to enter practice in diagnosis and management as speech-language pathologists. The students’ clinical experience is supervised by ASHA certified personnel. Interested individuals may contact the clinic for additional information.

Director: Ms. Sarah Hayes
Contact: (318) 342-1395
Web site: www.ulm.edu/slp/clinic.html
Physical Address: Sugar Hall, Room 152

Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic

The Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic provides therapy services to both ULM faculty, staff, and students and to the general public. Therapy services are provided in the areas of child and adolescents problems, marital conflicts, infidelity, divorce and custody issues, spousal abuse, substance abuse, mental illness, depression, grief; and other individual and family issues. Services are available to individuals, couples, and families for a nominal fee each session. Fees are negotiable. Services are free to ULM faculty, staff, and students.

Director: Dr. Bethany Simmons, Director of Clinical Services
Contact: (318) 342-9797 or (318) 342-1281
Web site: www.ulm.edu/mft
Physical Location: Strauss Hall

Mass Communications Labs

Digital Audio Lab

Mass Communication houses its digital audio lab in Stubbs 152. The lab consists of two iMac computers and x 2 high-end Blue Yeti Mics. This area is solely used for voice-overs, audio editing, podcast production, and voice dictation practice. Garage Band, Audacity, and other audio editing software is installed and maintained on the computers.

The lab is maintained by Assistant Professor John Rodriguez and knowledgeable student workers. The audio lab serves as a hub for students and faculty who wish to create real podcast productions or record and edit voice-overs for video projects.

Digital Mac Lab

Mass Communication houses an extensive and state of the art Mac Lab. The Mac lab consists of 21 x 27” iMacs which are fully loaded with the latest hardware as well as software, such as: Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, Dreamweaver, InDesign, Acrobat Pro, and Final Cut Express. The MCOM Mac Lab also maintains 10 x flatbed scanners, 10 x Wacom Tablets, 6 x Olympus E-510 Digital SLRs, 2 x Nikon D30s, and makes use of a HD projector for teaching and presentations.

Instruction is provided by professors, Dr. Bette Kauffman, Dr. Chris Mapp, Dr. Peggy Bowers, and John Rodriguez, MFA of the MCOM program and the student workers, who maintain the equipment. Our lab is used to develop campaign ideas, create communication design projects, edit video, develop websites, and deliver curriculum instruction.

Digital Production Lab

Mass Communication houses a state-of-the-art digital video production lab. This lab is used for post-production editing and special effects creation. The lab maintains 7 high-end dual core Xeon Mac Pros; each Mac Pro makes use of dual 24” Mac Studio monitors. The production lab also has 1 video ingestion device for quick capture of recorded footage.

Each Mac Pro has Adobe Photoshop, Flash, Premiere Pro, Sound Booth, After Effects, Illustrator, Encore, Final Cut Pro, Sound Edit, DVD Studio Pro, and Motion. Students are able to create fully interactive DVDs, edit video and audio, and produce high quality digital cinema.

Students and faculty are also able to check out 3 x Sony 1000U shoulder-mounted HD camcorders, 2 x Sony HD camcorders (with XLR inputs), and 5 x standard definition Sony Handycams. Tripods and remote mic packs are also available for mobile digital cinema production.

The lab is maintained by Assistant Professor John Rodriguez and knowledgeable student workers. The goal of this lab is to provide MCOM students with a simulated real-world post production and special effects creation scenario but also to serve as a digital video hub for the entire ULM campus.

Digital Video Lab

Mass Communication houses and maintains a state-of-the-art digital video lab. The digital video lab consists of x 3 full-time, in-studio Sony Camcorders which connect to a digital video switcher. The video switcher feeds all video signals to a state-of-the-art Tricaster system. Audio is also channeled in through a digital audio mixer into the Tricaster system to create a complete video / audio stream. As video and audio are mixed down, students are able to save video broadcasts (which can either be streamed live on the web or archived for post-production). The Tricaster is connected to a video file server; this enables students to store their files and access them from the post-production lab (located in Stubbs 154).

The digital video lab also makes use of green screens, Cool Lux professional lighting kits, and virtual set technology. The lab is maintained by Assistant Professor John Rodriguez and knowledgeable student workers. The goal of this lab is to provide MCOM students with a simulated realworld video production scenario but also to serve as a digital video hub for the entire ULM campus.

Department Head: Dr. Carl L. Thameling
Satellite Secretary for Stubbs Hall: Mrs. Linda Davis
Contact: (318) 342-3184; (318) 342-1551

North Delta Regional Training Academy

The unit was established to provide basic training for peace officers. It schedules and conducts classes to meet needs as mandated by the Police Officer Standards and Training Council (POST). The academy coordinates with the directors of the Institute of Corrections and Juvenile Justice and the Institute of Law Enforcement and assists them in matters of mutual concern. Designated staff of the academy also conduct appraisal and evaluation services of personnel and program performance in outlying agencies throughout the region.

Director: Capt. Donald P. Stewart (Retired)
Contact: (318) 362-5558
Physical Location: 420 Wheelis Street, West Monroe, LA 71291

Northeast/Central Louisiana Regional Tumor Registry

The Northeast/Central Louisiana Regional Tumor Registry is responsible for abstracting every newly diagnosed cancer in the 12 parishes in northeast Louisiana and the eight parishes in central Louisiana. The registry participates in cancer research with the state organization, and is a clinical site for medical information students from Louisiana Tech University.

Director: Ms. Mary Melanie Byargeon
Contact: (318) 342-1840
Physical Location: Chemistry and Natural Sciences Building, Room 221

Pharmaceutical Research & Technical Services Center

The Pharmaceutical Research and Technical Services Center helps identify expertise in the College of Pharmacy to assist various agencies in acquiring information and services that can be provided by the college. It assists research in the college with funding agencies and the university, identifies and informs the faculty of research opportunities and funding sources, and assists the faculty in preparing, submitting, and administering grants and contracts.

Director: Dr. Paul Sylvester
Contact: (318) 342-1958
Physical Location: Bienville, Room 342

Small Business Centers

Small Business Entrepreneurship Studies Center

The Entrepreneurship Studies Center has the mission of encouraging and supporting entrepreneurship and small business in northeast Louisiana. This is accomplished through academic curricula for ULM students, research and development opportunities of ULM faculty, and outreach programs for potential and existing businesses in Louisiana.

Academic: The Entrepreneurship Studies Center sponsors undergraduate and graduate coursework in entrepreneurship and small business administration. Graduate students have the opportunity to take entrepreneurship courses as a part of their graduate studies.

Research: The Entrepreneurship Studies Center encourages and supports faculty development and research and publication in the area of entrepreneurship and small business.

Outreach: The Entrepreneurship Studies Center sponsors two major outreach programs, the ULM Small Business Development Center and the ULM Small Business Institute.

Small Business Development Center

The Small Business Development Center provides management and technical assistance to entrepreneurs and owners of existing businesses in northeast Louisiana through continuing education, one-on-one counseling, and technical assistance. Additionally, the center serves as an information resource center.

Workshops and seminars keep small businesses informed on current events and changing trends in the business world. The center houses business publications, statistical data, census figures, and start-up manuals. A computerized information base with a national networking capacity is also maintained.

Small Business Institute

The Small Business Institute provides small business owners with volunteer consulting services from ULM graduate students and seniors under the direction of qualified ULM staff and faculty. The primary objectives are to provide high quality management and technical assistance as well as provide to students an opportunity to apply knowledge gained in the classroom. Consultants are available in the ares of financial strategy development, advertising strategy development, valuing going concerns, marketing research, marketing strategy development, production management, bookkeeping systems, and logo development.

Director: Dr. Paul Dunn
Contact: (318) 342-1224
Web Site: http://esc.ulm.edu
Physical Location: Administration Building, Room 2-123

Social Science Research Lab

ULM created the Social Science Research Laboratory to reinforce and expand inter-disciplinary research efforts. Faculty representing social psychology and political science respectively, have identified individuals from various disciplines who are interested in interdisciplinary research collaboration and guiding undergraduate and graduate students in applied research and development projects with the potential to positively impact our community.

The laboratory has research fellows at ULM and elsewhere representing psychology, political science, sociology, social work, finance, and educational technology.

The laboratory continues to actively cultivate relationships with the faculty at Louisiana Tech University, Grambling State University, and other regional universities, in an attempt to create the foundation for a research and development corridor in northern Louisiana.

Director: Dr. Joseph McGahan and Dr. John Sutherlin
Contact: (318) 342-3135
Web site: www.ulm.edu/ssrl/
Physical Location: Strauss Hall, Room 359

Soil-Plant Analysis Laboratory

The Soil-Plant Analysis Laboratory provides soil, plant, and water analysis. Tests can be run for pesticide and herbicide residues, soil fertility, nutrients in plant tissue samples, seed germination and vigor, lime content, and fertilizer analysis. The laboratory also performs grain and forage analysis, microbiological testing, and wastewater testing.

Environmental analysis includes work done for the oil and gas industry, including work on field pit closures, leaks in underground gasoline storage tanks, and Environmental Protection Agency Priority Pollutants Testing.

The unit serves the industrial and agricultural communities in northeast Louisiana and is the only soil and plant analysis lab located on a university campus in north Louisiana to offer a full range of such services.

Director: Kristopher Kelley
Contact: (318) 342-1948
Web site: www.ulm.edu/spal
Physical Location: Chemistry and Natural Science Building, Room 117

Student Publications

Student Publications serves as a fully functioning newsroom and media design production facility under the auspices of the Department of Communication. Located in Stubbs Hall Room 131, Student Publications is home to the Hawkeye student newspaper, the Chacahoula yearbook and the Helicon, a literary magazine put out once a year in conjunction with the Department of English. The newsroom/studio features multiple I-Mac computers, scanners, digital cameras, video cameras, voice recorders, and the latest Adobe Creative Suite desktop publishing and video/photography software. The newsroom/studio also features a 42-inch wall-mounted flat screen television and two smaller flat screen televisions used for watching newscasts.

Director: Christopher Mapp
Assistant Director: Kelsea McCrary
Contact: (318) 342-5454
Physical Location: Stubbs Hall, Room 131

Weather Research Center

The Weather Research Center provides weather forecasting and climate information, archives weather information for northeast Louisiana, produces a monthly climactic study, and collects national weather and climate information. It is recognized as a cooperative weather observation station for the National Weather Service and is a Class A Agricultural Weather Reporting Station.

Information such as local temperatures, humidity, rainfall, solar radiation, wind direction, speed, and barometric pressure are measured and recorded.

A telephone information service is available 24 hours a day at (318) 342-1880. Public tours of the center can be arranged by calling (318) 342-1878.

Director: Department of Atmospheric Science, Earth Science and Physics
Contact: (318) 342-1886
Web site: www.geos.ulm.edu
Physical Location: Hanna Hall, Room 323

The Write Place

The Write Place is an informal, comfortable, and technologically-cutting edge space where writers at any level or point in the writing process can talk about their writing concerns with tutors who are willing to listen, share, and respond. The goal of these tutorial writing conversations is not necessarily to perfect a given paper so much as it is to help writers investigate their own thinking and writing processes as they work through writing assigned in their classes.

Director: Dr. Bridgette Copeland
Contact: (318) 342-1512
Web site: www.ulm.edu/english/writespace/facilities.html
Physical Location: Administration Building, Room 3-87

Activity Center

The ULM Activity Center serves as one of the finest recreational/fitness facilities in the south. The $5 million student-funded facility opened on March 1, 1993. The 88,000 square foot complex houses the Recreational, Intramural, and Wellness programs.

The facility includes five multi-purpose courts (basketball, volleyball, and badminton), six glass wall racquetball/wallyball courts, a 2300 square foot group exercise room, a 4200 square foot weight room with machines and free weights, a cardiovascular/fitness area with stationary bikes, stairmasters, elliptical trainers, rowing machines, treadmills and stretching area, an elevated cushioned jogging track (6.5 laps/mile) with pace clocks, men’s and women’s locker rooms equipped with sauna and steam room, a lounge area with big screen TV and refreshment center, and a service center for equipment checkout, towel rental, and locker rental.

Open: Daily, flexible seasonal hours
Closed: Major holidays
Admission: $20 student fee included in tuition

Director: Ms. Treina Landrum
Contact: (318) 342-5305
Web site: http://www.ulm.edu/recserv/
Physical Location: On Warhawk Way, next to Malone Stadium

Residence Halls/Residential Life

ULM has a total of six residence halls and “the Village” apartment complex.

“Bayou Village” Apartments are 4 bedroom / 2 baths; 2 bedroom / 2 baths; and 1 bedroom / 1 bath units. These apartments are for students who have completed at least 24 semester hours of college credit work with a 2.3 cumulative grade point average (GPA). All units are fully furnished and pricing includes utilities, phone, high speed internet, cable TV with HBO and washer and dryer in each unit.

Bayou Suites/University Commons I and II are 2 bedroom / 1 bath suites and 1 bedroom / 1 bath shared suites. The building is co-ed, but the individual rooms are single sex. They are inside corridor buildings. Each room has high-speed Internet access, extended cable with HBO, local phone service, ceiling fans in each bedroom, and the suite has individually controlled heat and A/C. There is a laundry facility on each floor and the building has controlled access.

Madison Hall (male) and Ouachita Hall (female) are newly renovated residence halls with suite style rooms, high speed internet, individually controlled heating and cooling untis, and connecting baths.

Masur Hall (Co-ed within the building, but same sex within a suite or by floor.) Large suite-style rooms with connecting baths, cable with HBO and telephone connections.

Director: Ms. Tresa Buckhaults
Contact: (318) 342-5240
Web site: http:/www.ulm.edu/reslife/

Student Union Building and Student Center

Constructed in 1938 and renovated with a large addition in 1962, the Student Union Building (or SUB, as it is sometimes called) is considered the gathering place for students, faculty and staff members, alumni, and friends of the university. The SUB and the Student Center had major renovations during 2006 with funding raised by self assessed fees from the students of ULM.

The renovated facilities include a ballroom, meeting rooms, SGA and Campus Activities Board offices, computer lab, Student Copy Center, social areas, and the University Food Court.

The University Bookstore

The ULM student’s one-stop resource for textbooks, stationery, and everything needed for success in the classroom such as backpacks, notebooks, pens, and binders. The University Bookstore also offers a large variety of apparel adorned with the school logo, including hats, caps, t-shirts, shorts, and sweats in sizes from infants to XXXL.

Open: Mon-Thurs, 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Fri, 7:30 a.m. - noon
Closed: Weekends

Contact: (318) 342-1982
Web site: http://www.ulmbookstore.com
Physical Location: Sandel Hall

Bry Art Gallery

Art exhibits change monthly and feature all types of student media including paints, drawings, prints, sculpture, photography, and ceramics. Exhibits are primarily by professional artists with some students shows throughout the year. The Bry Art Gallery features an art show by area children each May.

Open: Mon-Th, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m./Fri, 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Closed: Weekends and holidays
Admission: Free

Director: Mr. Cliff Tresner
Contact: (318) 342-1375
Web site: www.ulm.edu/art/bry.html
Physical Location: Bry Hall, First Floor

Museum of Natural History

The Museum of Natural History houses extensive research collections in the biological sciences and geological and archaeological exhibits. It comprises three divisions, Botany, Geosciences, and Zoology.

The Botany Division features an herbarium of more than 470,000 dried plant specimens. The herbarium is the largest in the state and one of the fastest growing in the nation. Primarily for a historical record, the herbarium offers research and teaching functions and free identification of local plant specimens.

The Geosciences Division houses Native American artifacts, material from the south Pacific, and geological and fossil specimens from many areas, especially Louisiana.

The Zoology Division houses a nationally ranked collection of fishes. With more than 12 million specimens, it rivals research collections at Cornell, the University of Michigan, Harvard, and Tulane. It also features large collections of reptiles and amphibians, primarily from the southern United States and Mexico.

Admission: Free

Director: Dr. Tom Sasek, Dr. Gary Stringer, and Dr. John Carr
Contact: (318) 342-1868
Web site: www.ulm.edu/mnh
Physical Location: Sandel Hall, Third Floor

Wesley Art Gallery

The Wesley Art Gallery is the second oldest art gallery in Monroe. Each month it features a different one-person art exhibit, usually by ULM student artists. Exhibited are all types of studio media such as paints, drawings, prints, sculpture, photography, ceramics, and weaving. In 1965, the gallery began building a permanent collection which features at least one art work from each year since. The permanent collection provides a history of ULM in the various art forms.

Open: Daily (including holidays), 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Admission: Free

Physical Location: 112 Delano Drive (next to Strauss Hall)

ULM Dental Hygiene Clinic

The dental hygiene clinic is open to the public including ULM students and faculty. Treatments provided are: x-rays, deposit removal and polishing, sealants, flouride, nutritional assessment and oral cancer screenings. The clinic is located in Caldwell Hall and appointments can be made by calling (318) 342-1616. A minimum fee is charged. A dentist is available in each clinic in the event a referral is needed for further dental treatment.

Director: Ms. Sharon Chaney, Clinical Coordinator
Contact: (318) 342-1270
Web site: www.ulm.edu/dentalhygiene/facilities.html
Physical Location: Caldwell Hall, Room 124

ULM Child Development Center

The ULM Child Development Center is a five-star rated laboratory setting providing quality care and education for young children. It is operated by the College of Education and Human Development department of Curriculum and Instruction. This laboratory is an on-site child care facility with children ranging in age from six weeks - four years. Children of ULM faculty, staff, students, alumni and community members are enrolled at the ULM Child Development Center.

The center provides experiences for children that focus on physical,cognitive, language, social and emotional development of each child. The centers primary goal is to provide practical experiences in best practices for university students to prepare them for a variety of professions in which they will work with young children.

Open: Mon-Fri, 7:15 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Closed: In corellation with ULM semester breaks and holidays

Director: Ms. Emily Williamson
Contact: (318) 342-1913
Web site: http://www.ulm.edu/cdc/Newsite/index.html

Clarke M. Williams Student Success Center

Opened in 2007, the Clarke M. Williams Student Success Center houses a computer lab, rooms for group study and tutoring, and multi-media rooms. A full-time advising staff provides academic support services for all students, including assisting students with planning course loads and exploring career options.

In addition to its academic counseling services, the Student Success Center has a modern computer lab with extended hours of operation available to all students. Included in this is Technological Support.

Open: Mon-Thurs, 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.; Fri 7:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.
Closed: Sat-Sun (Academic Advisors); Sun (Computer Lab)
Admission: Free to students

Director: Ms. Barbara Michaelides
Contact: (318) 342-5550
Web site: http://www.ulm.edu/studentsuccess/
Physical Location: On Northeast Drive, next to University Library

ULM Community Counseling Center

The ULM Community Counseling Center is designed to provide counseling and substance abuse counseling services to the general public. The services are provided by advanced graduate students under the supervision of a faculty member.

Walk-ins are welcomed, but appointments are recommended. Services are available to the public at a maximum fee of $25. ULM students who have paid their activity fees may use the center at no additional cost.

Open: Mon. - Thurs., 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Closed: Weekends
Fees: Up to $25 for the public; free for ULM students

Director: Dr. Yolanda Dupre
Contact: (318) 342-1263
Web site: www.ulm.edu/cehd/community/counseling_center.html
Physical Location: Strauss Hall, Room 306

Campus Housing and Dining Facilities

ULM has a total of three residence halls. Also, there is Bayou Village Apartments and the Bayou Suites, which are fully furnished. Ouachita Hall for female students is located on the west side of Bayou DeSiard. Madison Hall for male students is also located on the west side of Bayou DeSiard. Masur Hall, a co-ed residence hall, is located on the east side of Bayou DeSiard.

Two dining facilities are located on campus. Schulze Cafeteria is located on the east side of Bayou DeSiard. The Food Court, located in the Student Union Building, is across from the library on the west side of the bayou.