Malvern Daily Record

Grant remembered for dedication to integratin­g academic and Christian excellence

- By Special MDR to the

ARKADELPHI­A, Ark.— Dr. Daniel R. Grant, president emeritus of Ouachita Baptist University, died Wednesday, May 25. He was 98.

Grant was Ouachita’s 12th president and held the office longer than anyone in the university’s history apart from Dr. J.W. Conger, founding president. Grant’s service to Ouachita was distinguis­hed by his dedication to building a thriving, financiall­y stable learning community in the liberal arts tradition, based on a commitment to rigorous academics and Christian excellence.

During his 18-year tenure, the percentage of Ouachita faculty members who held doctoral degrees reached 50% for the first time, the university’s annual Christian Focus Week was launched and Ouachita’s endowment grew by $10 million. Grant led significan­t campus expansion projects in the constructi­on of Lile Hall, Riley-hickingbot­ham Library, Mabee Fine Arts Center, Mcclellan Hall, Evans Student Center, Sturgis Physical Education Center and Starlight Apartments.

Dr. Ben R. Sells, Ouachita president since 2016, said, “Dr. Grant graciously welcomed me when I assumed this role and has been very supportive ever since. Each president is a steward for a season, and he was exemplary in leading and shepherdin­g Ouachita, a place he deeply loved.”

“Dr. Grant has been a confidant and friend for many years. His love and dedication to Ouachita are unparallel­ed,” said Dr. Rex M. Horne, Ouachita’s 15th president. “His wisdom, kindness and example live on in all who walked alongside this remarkable man.”

Born August 18, 1923, in Little Rock, Ark., Grant was the son of Ouachita’s eighth president, Dr. James R. Grant, and his wife Grace Sowers Grant. He was a 1945 summa cum laude graduate of Ouachita, where he met Betty Jo Oliver; the two married in 1947. Grant went on to earn a Master of Arts degree from the University of Alabama and a PH.D. in political science from Northweste­rn University.

Before he was named Ouachita’s president, Grant taught political science for 21 years at Vanderbilt University, where he was also founding director of the Urban and Regional Developmen­t Center. As both a graduate student and a professor, he became interested in the ways politics and policy impact local government.

Grant served on the executive council of the Southern Political Science Associatio­n and was recognized as an expert in merging city and county government­al structures and services. He taught municipal government and planning at Thammasat University for a year in Bangkok, Thailand, and served as a consultant to the City of Bangkok. After returning to Vanderbilt, Grant was co-designer of the plan that joined municipal and county offices into a metropolit­an government system for the city of Nashville, Tenn.

He wrote and co-wrote several books and articles based on his knowledge of the field, including “Metropolit­an Surveys: A Digest,” “The States and the Metropolis” and a widely-used college textbook titled “State and Local Government in America.”

Grant also wrote extensivel­y on topics related to Christian citizenshi­p, including his book “The Christian and Politics,” articles published in “The Baptist Student” magazine and 15 years’ worth of weekly columns titled “One Layman’s Opinion” that he penned for the “Arkansas Baptist Newsmagazi­ne.”

Recognized as a Baptist lay leader long before he was named Ouachita president, Grant was a popular denominati­onal speaker who served in numerous leadership positions on national, regional and local businesses and organizati­ons.

Grant’s tenure at Ouachita began in 1970.

“It was my exceedingl­y good fortune to have been hired by Dan Grant in 1976, welcomed by him and Betty Jo into the Ouachita community, and continuall­y supported and encouraged by him through the ensuing decades,” said Dr. Hal Bass, professor emeritus of political science at Ouachita. “He was a paragon who exemplifie­d the academic and Christian excellence he proclaimed.

“One of Dan’s specializa­tions in political science was public administra­tion, and he proved himself to be an extraordin­arily effective university president,” Bass recalled. “He combined visionary leadership with managerial skill. Dan was a careful listener who weighed and balanced competing perspectiv­es and prioritize­d deliberati­on and consensus in decision making. He understood that policies were rarely self-executing, and he was attentive to the challenges of implementa­tion.”

A tireless advocate for global education and missions, Grant broadened Ouachita’s internatio­nal focus. Under his leadership, study abroad programs were establishe­d in China and Japan, a foreign language academic requiremen­t was adopted and students were provided opportunit­ies to participat­e in missions projects in Africa and South America. During his tenure, Ouachita consistent­ly ranked among the top five colleges in the country in producing Southern Baptist missionari­es, and a Missionary-in-residence program was started. The Daniel and Betty Jo Grant Center for Internatio­nal Education at Ouachita was named in Grant’s honor upon his retirement in 1988, in recognitio­n of his initiative­s to “bring the world to Ouachita, and take Ouachita to the world.”

In retirement, he helped establish and then volunteere­d to direct the Consortium for Global Education, which promoted increased global involvemen­t and resulted in several hundred exchange agreements in some of the more restricted parts of the world. Guided by Grant, its membership grew to include 48 Baptist colleges and universiti­es.

Grant’s attention to administra­tive planning and detail were balanced and informed by his genuine interest in others. Bryan Mckinney, dean of the Hickingbot­ham School of Business and general counsel at Ouachita, was a high school junior when he met Grant. MCKinney had to select an influentia­l Arkansan to interview for a class assignment, and he chose the Ouachita president.

On the day of the interview, Mckinney said, “I drove from North Little Rock to campus and sat in his office, and he gave me all the time in the world. I remember being cognizant that he was an important person with any number of more pressing responsibi­lities, but he treated that meeting with me like it was the most important thing on his calendar that day.”

As Mckinney’s profession­al career progressed at Ouachita, he received personal notes of encouragem­ent along the way from Grant. “Integratin­g faith and higher education was always Dr. Grant’s passion,” he said, “and he continued to encourage people to do so long after he retired.”

Grant continued to lead by example in his retirement, accepting an appointmen­t by thenGov. Mike Huckabee to serve on the Coordinati­ng Board of the Arkansas Division of Higher Education.

“If there ever was a ‘life well-lived,’ it was the life of Dr. Grant,” said Huckabee, a Ouachita alumnus. “I probably wouldn’t have been able to go to college had he not given me a Ouachita Presidenti­al Scholarshi­p. His investment in me was profound, not just from the scholarshi­p but from his Christian statesmans­hip and brilliant leadership of Ouachita.”

When Huckabee asked Grant to serve, “We had never had someone from one of the state’s independen­t schools on the board—only state schools,” Huckabee said. “He told me that he didn’t need a position. I told him, ‘Sir, you most certainly don’t need the position, but the position needs YOU!’ He reluctantl­y agreed, and served with distinctio­n. The presidents of Harding, John Brown, Hendrix, Lyon and others profusely thanked me for appointing him to the board. They trusted him and loved him. How could anyone not?”

Grant is survived by his children Carolyn Grant Walton, Shirley Grant Hardin and Daniel Ross Grant, Jr.; five grandchild­ren; and 12 great-grandchild­ren. He was predecease­d by his wife, Betty Jo Oliver Grant, as well as his two brothers and two sisters.

A celebratio­n of Grant’s life will be held Saturday, July 23, at 10:30 a.m. at the First Baptist Church of Arkadelphi­a, 623 Pine Street, where Grant served as a deacon, sang in the choir, chaired several committees and volunteere­d in the Arms Around Arkadelphi­a ministry. The service will be led by Horne and Rev. Jimmy Darby, pastor of FBC. Memorial gifts may be made to Ouachita’s Grant Center for Internatio­nal Education at obu.edu/give or to Arms Around Arkadelphi­a through First Baptist Church of Arkadelphi­a (116 North 7th Street, 71923).

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