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Bob Jones University
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Bob Jones University
Bob Jones University (BJU) is a private, non-denominational Protestant Fundamentalist, liberal arts university located in Greenville, South Carolina. Founded in 1927 by Bob Jones, Sr. (1883-1968), an evangelist and younger contemporary of Billy Sunday, it is the largest private liberal arts university in South Carolina and has a reputation for being one of the most conservative of religious schools in the United States. Although not regionally accredited, the university is a member of, and candidate for accreditation by, the Transnational Association of Christian Colleges and Schools, an accrediting organization recognized by the Department of Education and the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.[link]

The current president of the University is Stephen Jones, the son of the previous president Bob Jones III. The university enrolls approximately 5,000 students representing every state and 43 foreign countries and employs a staff of 1,800. It offers degrees in 128 majors and also conducts precollege education from pre-kindergarten through high school.

Mission Statement

Within the cultural and academic soil of liberal arts education, Bob Jones University exists to grow Christlike character that is Scripturally disciplined; others-serving; God-loving; Christ-proclaiming; and focused Above.[link]

Creed

I believe in the inspiration of the Bible (both the Old and the New Testaments); the creation of man by the direct act of God; the incarnation and virgin birth of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ; His identification as the Son of God; His vicarious atonement for the sins of mankind by the shedding of His blood on the cross; the resurrection of His body from the tomb; His power to save men from sin; the new birth through the regeneration by the Holy Spirit; and the gift of eternal life by the grace of God.

Students and faculty recite the University Creed at chapel services four days a week and at the worship service on Sunday morning.

History

Established in 1927 near Panama City, on the Florida panhandle, Bob Jones College moved to Cleveland, Tennessee in 1933, and to its present campus in Greenville, South Carolina in 1947, where it became Bob Jones University. (The former Cleveland campus currently serves as the home of Lee University, an institution supported by the Church of God.)

From its inception, BJU has been located in the South "but has never had a predominantly southern constituency." In 2006, the state with the largest number of students enrolled was South Carolina, but many of these were married students who had moved from other parts of the country to attend the University. Other states with large representations in the student body are Michigan, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Ohio. Dalhouse, An Island in the Lake of Fire, 148-151

Academics

The University consists of six colleges and schools that offer more than 125 undergraduate majors, including fourteen associate degree programs in such fields as cosmetology, aircraft maintenance, residential construction, and culinary arts management.

Religion

The School of Religion trains approximately five hundred ministerial students per year. Although many of these men -- no women are permitted in the ministerial class -- go on to seminary after completing their undergraduate degree, many others take ministry positions straight from college, and rising juniors participate in a church internship program to prepare them for the pastoral ministry. Because BJU graduates often preach at smaller, less prestigious churches, the social and religious influence of BJU ministerial graduates is frequently underestimated.

The University encourages church planting in areas of the United States where few fundamentalist churches exist, and it has provided financial and logistical assistance to ministerial graduates in starting more than a hundred new works.[link] Bob Jones III has also encouraged non-ministerial students to put their career plans on hold for two or three years to provide lay leadership in small fundamentalist churches. Turner, Standing Without Apology, 270-71

Students of various majors voluntarily participate in Mission Prayer Band, an organization that prays for missionaries and attempts to stimulate campus interest in world evangelism. During summers and Christmas breaks, dozens of students also participate in teams that use their musical, langauge, trade, and aviation skills to promote Christian missions around the world.

Although formally a separate organization, Gospel Fellowship Association Missions is the mission board of BJU and is one of the largest fundamentalist mission boards in the country.[link] But because foreign nationals can often reach their own people more effectively than American missionaries, the University also sponsors the education of international students through its "Timothy Program" and "WORLD Fund."

Fine Arts

More faculty teach in the Division of Fine Arts than in any other school of the University. The University presents an opera in the spring and a Shakespearean play each semester. A Sunday afternoon service called “Vespers,” presented occasionally throughout the school year, combines music, speech, and drama and attracts visitors from the Greenville community because of its blending of the devotional and cultural.

Each fall, as a recruiting tool, the University sponsors a "High School Festival" in which students compete in music, art, and speech (including preaching) contests with their peers from around the country. In the spring, a similar competition sponsored by the American Association of Christian Schools, and hosted by BJU since 1977, brings thousands of national finalists to the University from around the country. In 2005, 120 of the finalists from previous years returned to BJU as freshmen.[link]

Science

BJU offers majors in biology, chemistry and physics. Nine of the fourteen members of BJU's doctoral faculty received undergraduate and/or graduate degrees from BJU, although all received their Ph.D.s from accredited and non-religious institutions of higher learning. The BJU biology department supports young-earth creationism. Bob Jones University offers courses in astronomy, archaeology, anthropology and geology but not majors or minors in those subjects. The nursing major is approved by the South Carolina State Board of Nursing, and a BJU graduate with a BSN is eligible to take the National Council Licensure Examination to become a registered nurse.

Library Collections

There are two main campus libraries: The Mack Library and the Music Library, the latter located in the Gustafson Fine Arts Center. The 90,000-square-foot Mack Library (named for John Sephus Mack) includes seating for 1200 as well as a computer lab and a computer classroom. The library houses more than three hundred thousand volumes—a modest collection for a school the size of BJU but strong in the area of religion. Mack Library also contains the “Jerusalem Chamber,” a replica of the room in Westminster Abbey in which work on the King James Version of the Bible was conducted, and a Memorabilia Room that treats the life of Bob Jones, Sr. and the history of the University.

Of greater importance to potential researchers is the Fundamentalist File and the University Archives. The Fundamentalist File, a library division created in 1978, collects non-book items--mostly periodical articles--on subjects of interest to Fundamentalists, and now has more than a hundred thousand articles listed under five thousand subject headings. The File also contains the papers of three notable twentieth-century fundamentalists: G. Archer Weniger (1915-1982), W. O. H. Garman (1899-1983), and Gilbert Stenholm (1915-1989).

The University Archives located in cramped quarters in the "attic” of Mack Library holds copies of all University publications, oral histories of faculty and staff members, surviving remnants of University correspondence, and pictures and artifacts related to the Jones family and the history of the University--including, for instance, decades of working scripts for University stage performances. Articles in the Fundamentalism File are computer searchable, and an increasing amount of material in the Archives is as well.

Extracurriculars

BJU abandoned intercollegiate sports in 1933. Turner, Standing Without Apology, 41 The University's intramural sports program includes competition in soccer, basketball, softball, track, volleyball, tennis, badminton, and table tennis.

The university competes in intercollegiate debate in the National Educational Debate Association and from time to time places very highly. For instance, on April 2, 2005, the school won the NEDA Debate Nationals Tournament, defeating Ball State University 2-1 in Varsity and 3-0 in Novice, and also taking the first place Varsity Speaker award. Recently, university teams have also placed highly in intercollegiate mock trial competitions.

The university requires all incoming freshman students to join one of 48 "literary societies" (such as Alpha Omega Delta). Societies meet weekly on Fridays for entertainment and fellowship, and they also hold a weeknight prayer meeting. Societies field sports, debate, and Scholastic Bowl teams. The latter compete in an annual single-elimination tournament that concludes with a clash between the top two teams before a University-wide audience on the Thursday before Commencement. Questions include a wide range of biblical and academic topics -- but none from popular culture.

Early in December, thousands of students, faculty, and visitors gather around the front campus fountain for an annual Christmas carol sing and lighting ceremony, culminating in the illumination of a hundred thousand Christmas lights. On December 3, 2004, the ceremony broke the Guinness World Record for Christmas caroling with 7,514 carolers.[link]

In place of a spring break, students and faculty are required to attend a six-day Bible Conference in late March. The Conference attracts fundamentalist preachers and laymen from around the country, and BJU class reunions are held at the end of the week.

Ancillary ministries

BJU Museum and Gallery

Bob Jones, Jr. was a connoisseur of European art and began collecting after World War II on a shoe-string budget--about $30,000 a year--authorized by the University Board of Directors. Jones first concentrated on the Italian Baroque, a style then out of favor and relatively inexpensive in the years immediately following the war. Fifty years after the opening of the gallery, the BJU collection included more than 400 European paintings from the 14th to through the 19th centuries (mostly pre-19th century), period furniture, a notable collection of Russian icons, and a hodge-podge of Holy Land antiquities.

Not surprisingly, the gallery is especially strong in Baroque paintings and includes notable works by Rubens, Tintoretto, Veronese, Cranach, Gerard David, Murillo, Mattia Preti, Ribera, van Dyck, and Doré. Included in the Museum and Gallery collection are seven very large canvases, part of a series by Benjamin West called "The Progress of Revealed Religion," which are displayed in the War Memorial Chapel.[link] (Baroque art was created during--and often for--the Counter-Reformation, and so ironically, BJU has been criticized by some other fundamentalists for promoting “false Catholic doctrine” through its art gallery.[link])

Each Easter season, the University and the Museum and Gallery present the Living Gallery, a series of tableaux vivants recreating noted works of religious art using live models disguised as part of two-dimensional paintings.[link]

Unusual Films

Both Bob Jones, Sr. and Bob Jones, Jr. believed that film could be an excellent medium for mass evangelism, and in 1950, the University established a film department within the School of Fine Arts. (Its odd name derives from a former promotional slogan of BJU, "The World's Most Unusual University.") Bob Jones, Jr. selected a speech teacher, Katherine Stenholm, as the first director. Although she had no experience in cinema, she took summer courses at the University of Southern California and received personal instruction from Hollywood specialists, such as Rudolph Sternad.Turner, Standing Without Apology, 196-99[link]

Unusual Films has produced six feature-length films: Wine of Morning, Red Runs the River, Flame in the Wind, Sheffey, Beyond the Night, and The Printing. Wine of Morning (1955) represented the United States at the Cannes Film Festival. The first four films are historical dramas set, respectively, in the time of Christ, the U.S. Civil War, sixteenth-century Spain, and the late nineteenth century South. Beyond the Night closely follows a twentieth-century missionary saga in Central Africa, and The Printing uses composite characters to portray the persecution of believers in the former Soviet Union. All the films have an evangelistic emphasis, and curiously, Bob Jones, Jr. plays villains in four of them. More recently, Unusual Films has emphasized children's films and video production.

Unusual Films maintains a student film production program. Freshmen shoot and edit a project shot on 16mm reversal black-and-white film. Sophomores are also required to write and direct such a project. Before graduation, seniors produce a sizable project on 16mm color negative film.

Bob Jones University Press

Although BJU published its first trade book, a history of fundamentalism, in 1973, Bob Jones University Press originated in the need for textbooks for the burgeoning Christian school movement. Its first text was George Mulfinger and Emmet Williams, Physical Science for Christian Schools (1974). Eventually BJU Press developed a full range of K-12 texts and materials, and today it is the largest book publisher in South Carolina. Its music division, SoundForth, produces Christian musical arrangements and recordings in more traditional styles than do most contemporary music sources.

As the home school movement began to grow in the 1980s, the Press decided to accommodate the logistical difficulties of selling small amounts of product to large numbers of people. This marketing strategy proved so successful that by 1988, the BJU Press was the largest textbook supplier to home school families in the nation. Its most significant rival is A Beka Books, which is affiliated with Pensacola Christian College. In June of even numbered years, BJU hosts a Homeschool Conference on campus.

BJU also offers elementary and high school classes through "LINC," an interactive satellite system that allows a teacher in Greenville to communicate with Christian school students across the country. "HomeSat" offers similar recorded programs for home school use. Turner, Standing Without Apology, 264-66

Controversies

Religious

Billy Graham

One of the earliest controversies to swirl around BJU was the break that occurred in the late 1950s between the University and evangelist Billy Graham. Graham had briefly attended Bob Jones College, and the University conferred an honorary degree on him in 1948. During the 1950s, however, Graham began distancing himself from the older fundamentalism, and in 1957, he sought broad ecumenical sponsorship for his New York Crusade.

Bob Jones, Sr. argued that if members of Graham’s campaign executive committee had rejected major tenets of orthodox Christianity, such as the virgin birth and the deity of Christ, then Graham had violated 2 John 9-11, which prohibits receiving in fellowship those who do “not abide in the teaching of Christ.” In the 1960s, Graham further irritated fundamentalists by gaining the endorsement of Richard Cardinal Cushing for his Boston campaign and accepting honorary degrees from two Roman Catholic colleges.

Graham tried to remain above the fray, but members of his staff openly accused Jones of jealousy because Jones’s evangelistic meetings had never been as large as Graham’s. Graham’s father-in-law, L. Nelson Bell, mailed a fiery ten-page letter to most members of the BJU faculty and student body (as well as to thousands of pastors across the country) accusing Jones of “hatred, distortions, jealousies, envying, malice, false witnessing, and untruthfulness.”

Then, in what seemed to the Joneses to be a deliberate affront, Graham held his only American campaign of 1966 in Greenville, South Carolina. The University forbade any BJU student from attending the Graham meetings.

The consequent negative publicity caused a decline in BJU enrollment of about 10 percent in the years 1956-59 before rebounding during the 1960s. Seven members of the University board (of about a hundred) also resigned in support of Graham--including Graham himself and two of his staff members.Turner, Standing Without Apology, 179-188

King James Bible

The University uses the King James Version (KJV) of the Bible in its services and classrooms, but it does not hold that the KJV is the only acceptable English translation or that it has the same authority as the original Hebrew and Greek manuscripts. The King-James-Only Movement--or more correctly, movements, since it has many variations--became a divisive force in fundamentalism only as conservative modern Bible translations, such as the New American Standard Bible (NASB) and the New International Version (NIV) began to appear in the 1970s.

BJU has taken the position that orthodox Christians of the late nineteenth century and early twentieth centuries (including fundamentalists) agreed that while the KJV was a substantially accurate translation, only the original manuscripts of the Bible written in Hebrew and Greek were infallible and inerrant. Bob Jones, Jr. called the KJV-only position a "heresy" and "in a very definite sense, a blasphemy."Jones, Cornbread and Caviar, 179

The University's stand has been condemned by some other fundamentalists, especially a number of small Bible schools and colleges who have made Bible translation a means of distinguishing themselves from what they also consider an error or heresy in mainstream fundamentalism. Notoriously, in 1998, Pensacola Christian College attacked BJU in a widely distributed videotape, arguing that this "leven of fundamentalism" was passed from the nineteenth-century Princeton theologian Benjamin B. Warfield (1851-1921) to Charles Brokenshire (1885-1954), who served BJU as Dean of the School of Religion, and then to current BJU faculty members and graduates. Ironically, Peter Ruckman, a BJU graduate, has argued the most extreme version of the KJV-position, that all translations of the Bible since the KJV have been of satanic origin. BJU's refusal to embrace the KJV-only position may have cost it a number of potential students, especially those preparing for the ministry.

Anti-Catholicism and Anti-Mormonism

The three Bob Joneses, especially the late Bob Jones, Jr., sharply criticized the Roman Catholic Church. For instance, Jones, Jr. once said that Catholicism was "not another Christian denomination. It is a satanic counterfeit, an ecclesiastic tyranny over the souls of men....It is the old harlot of the book of the Revelation -- 'the Mother of Harlots.'" All popes, Jones asserted, "are demon possessed." In 2000, then-president Bob Jones III referred, on the University's web page, to Mormons and Catholics as "cults which call themselves Christian."[link] Furthermore, in 1966, BJU awarded an honorary doctorate to the Rev. Ian Paisley, future Northern Irish MP, leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, and Moderator of the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster, who has referred to the Pope as a "Roman anti-Christ."

Bob Jones III has argued that the University is not so much anti-Catholic or anti-Mormon as it is opposed to the idea that all men, regardless of religious beliefs, will eventually get to heaven. “Our shame would be in telling people a lie, and thereby letting them go to hell without Christ because we loved their goodwill more than we loved them and their souls…. All religion, including Catholicism, which teaches that salvation is by religious works or church dogma is false. Religion that makes the words of its leader, be he Pope or other, equal with the Word of God is false. Sola Scriptura. From the time of the Reformation onward, it has been understood that there is no commonality between the Bible way, which is justification by faith in the shed blood of Jesus Christ, and salvation by works, which the faithful, practicing Catholic embraces.”[link][link]

Racial

Although it admitted Asians and other minorities from its inception, BJU refused to enroll black students until 1971, eight years after the University of South Carolina and Clemson University had been integrated by court order. From 1971 to 1975, BJU admitted only married blacks, although the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) had already determined in 1970 that "private schools with racially discriminatory admissions policies" were not entitled to federal tax exemption. Late in 1971, BJU filed suit to prevent the IRS from taking its tax exemption, but in 1974, in Bob Jones University v. Simon, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the University did not have standing to sue until the IRS actually assessed taxes. Four months later, on May 29, 1975, the University Board of Trustees authorized a change in policy to admit "students of any race," a move which occurred shortly before the announcement of the Supreme Court decision in Runyon v. McCrary (427 U.S. 160 [1976]), which prohibited racial exclusion in private schools.Turner, Standing Without Apology, 226-27

The university did not admit unmarried blacks until 1975. In a 2000 interview with Bob Jones III, the then-president said that interracial dating had been prohibited since 1950s and that the policy had originated in a complaint by parents of a male Asian student who believed that their son had "nearly married" a white girl.[link][link] In May 1975, as it prepared to allow unmarried blacks to enroll, BJU adopted more detailed rules prohibiting interracial dating and marriage--threatening expulsion for any student who dated or married interracially, who advocated interracial marriage, who was "affiliated with any group or organization which holds as one of its goals or advocates interracial marriage," or "who espouse, promote, or encourage others to violate the University's dating rules and regulations." Bob Jones University v. United States (461 U.S. 574, 581)

On January 19, 1976, the Internal Revenue Service notified the University that its tax exemption had been revoked retroactively to December 1, 1970. The school appealed the IRS decision all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing that the University met all other criteria for tax-exempt status and that the school's racial discrimination was based on sincerely held religious beliefs, that "God intended segregation of the races and that the Scriptures forbid interracial marriage." Bob Jones University v. United States (461 U.S. 574 @725) The University was not challenged about the origin of its interracial dating policy, and all courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court--perhaps as a convenient legal fiction--accepted without question the BJU argument that the rule was a sincerely held religious conviction. In December 1978, the federal district court ruled in the University's favor; two years later, that decision was overturned by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals.

On January 8, 1982, just before the case was to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court, President Ronald Reagan authorized his Treasury and Justice Departments to ask that the BJU case be dropped and that the previous court decisions be vacated. Political pressure quickly brought the Reagan administration to reverse itself and to ask the Court to reinstate the case. Then, in a virtually unprecedented move, the Court invited William T. Coleman, Jr. to argue the government's position in an amicus curiae brief, thus insuring that the prosecution's position would be the one the Court wished to hear. The case was heard on October 12, 1982, and on May 24, 1983, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against Bob Jones University in Bob Jones University v. United States (461 U.S. 574). The University refused to reverse its interracial dating policy and (with difficulty) paid a million dollars in back taxes. Also, in the year following the Court decision, contributions to the University declined by 13 percent.

In 2000, following a national uproar prompted by the visit of presidential candidate George W. Bush to the University, Bob Jones III abruptly dropped the interracial dating rule, announcing the change on CNN's "Larry King Live". Five years later when asked by Newsweek for his view of the rule change, the current president, Stephen Jones, replied, "I've never been more proud of my dad...the night he lifted that policy."[link]

Despite its history on racial issues, BJU today has a student body that includes many international and minority students and a number of interracial couples, including a few members of the faculty and staff. The University has also established two 501(c)(3) charitable organizations to provide scholarship assistance solely for minority students.

Political

All three Bob Joneses had political instincts — although of a sort that often lose elections. As a twelve-year-old, Bob Jones, Sr. made a twenty-minute speech in defense of the Populist Party. Jones was a friend and admirer of William Jennings Bryan but also campaigned throughout the South for Herbert Hoover (and against Al Smith) during the 1928 presidential election. Even the authorized history of BJU notes that both Bob Jones, Sr. and Bob Jones, Jr. “played political hardball” when dealing with the three municipalities in which the school was successively located. For instance, in 1962, Bob Jones, Sr. warned the Greenville City Council that he had “four hundred votes in his pocket and in any election he would have control over who would be elected.” [Turner, Standing Without Apology, 3, 10, 78, 246, 428]

Almost from the inception of Bob Jones College, a majority of students and faculty were northerners, and therefore many were already Republicans living in the "Solid South." After South Carolina Senator Strom Thurmond switched his allegiance to the Republican Party in 1964, BJU faculty members became increasingly influential in the new state Republican party, and BJU alumni were elected to local political and party offices. From the 1980s on, most Republican candidates for local and statewide offices sought the endorsement of Bob Jones III and greeted faculty/staff voters at the University Dining Common.

National Republicans soon followed. Ronald Reagan spoke at the school in 1980, although the Joneses supported his opponent, John Connally, in the South Carolina primary. (Later, Bob Jones III denounced Reagan as "a traitor to God's people" for choosing George H.W. Bush -- whom Jones called a "devil" -- as his vice-president. Even later, Jones III shook Bush's hand and thanked him for being a good president.)[link] In the 1990s, Reagan was followed by Dan Quayle, Pat Buchanan, Phil Gramm, Bob Dole, and Alan Keyes. (Democrats were rarely invited to speak at the University, in part because they took political and social positions opposed by the Religious Right.) Turner, Standing Without Apology, 246, 248

2000 Election

On February 2, 2000, George W. Bush, as candidate for President, spoke during school's chapel hour. [link] Bush gave a standard stump speech making no specific reference to the University. His political opponents quickly noted his non-mention of the University's ban on interracial dating. During the Michigan primary, Bush was also criticized for not stating his opposition to the University's anti-Catholicism. (The John McCain campaign targeted Catholics with a "Catholic Voter Alert," phone calls reminding voters of Bush's visit to BJU.)[link] Bush denied that he either knew of or approved what he regarded as BJU's intolerant policies.

On February 26, Bush issued a formal letter of apology to Cardinal John O'Connor of New York for failing to denounce Bob Jones University's history of anti-Catholic statements. At a news conference following the letter's release, Bush said, "I make no excuses. I had an opportunity and I missed it. I regret that....I wish I had gotten up then and seized the moment to set a tone, a tone that I had set in Texas, a positive and inclusive tone."[link]

Also during the 2000 Republican primary campaign in South Carolina, Richard Hand, a BJU professor, spread a false e-mail rumor that John McCain had fathered an illegitimate child. (The McCains have an adopted daughter from Bangladesh, and later push polling also implied that the child was biracial.)[link][link]

2004 Election

Shortly after George W. Bush won re-election in 2004, Bob Jones III sent him a congratulatory letter asserting that that new President had "been given a mandate" and urging him to put his "agenda on the front burner and let it boil. You owe the liberals nothing. They despise you because they despise your Christ."[link]

Current University Administration

There may be less political controversy at BJU during the current administration. When asked by Newsweek if he wished to play a political role, Stephen Jones replied, "It would not be my choice." Further, when asked if he felt ideologically closer to his father's engagement with politics or to other evangelicals who have tried to avoid civic involvement, he answered, "The gospel is for individuals. The main message we have is to individuals. We’re not here to save the culture."[link] In a 2005 Washington Post interview, Jones dodged political questions and even admitted that he was embarrassed by "some of the more vitriolic comments" made by his predecessors. "I don't want to get specific," he said, "But there were things said back then that I wouldn't say today."[link]

Student rules

Strict rules govern student life at BJU. [link][link][link] Some of these are based directly on the University's interpretation of the Bible. For instance, the 2005-06 Day Student Handbook states, "Loyalty to Christ results in separated living. Dishonesty, lewdness, sensual behavior, adultery, homosexuality, sexual perversion of any kind, pornography, illegal use of drugs, and drunkenness--all are clearly condemned by God's word and prohibited here." (13) Grounds for immediate dismissal include stealing, immorality (including sexual relations between unmarried students), possession of hard-core pornography, use of alcohol or drugs, and participating in a public demonstration for a cause the University opposes.BJU Student Handbook, '05-'06, 29 Similar moral failures are grounds for terminating the employment of faculty and staff. In 1998, a homosexual alumnus was threatened with arrest if he visited the campus. [link])

But the University frankly declares that many campus rules are biblically based only in general principle. For instance, "[T]here is no specific Bible command that says, 'Thou shalt not be late to class,' but a student who wishes to esteem others more highly than himself will not come in late to the distraction of the teacher and other students."BJU Student Handbook, '05-'06, 7

General rules

Male dress code

Female dress code

General and classroom dress for women is a dress or a top and skirt. Loose-fitting pants may be worn between female residence halls, to athletic events, to local area residences, and when participating in activities such ice-skating, white-water rafting and skiing. Women may never wear shorts outside the residence halls and the fitness center. Hose must be worn for all professional activities, including class, church, and recitals. Underwear should not be exposed in public, and colored underwear should not be visible through outer clothing.

All clothing should fit correctly without clinging, and there should be at least a 3/4-inch fold of fabric on both sides of the hips and bust. This "ease" may be measured by standing straight and pinching the loose fabric on both sides of the hips and bust line.

The University will not allow articles displaying the logos of Abercrombie & Fitch and its subsidiary Hollister to be "worn, carried, or displayed" on campus even if the logos are covered because these companies have "shown an unusual degree of antagonism to the name of Christ and an unusual display of wickedness in their promotions."BJU Day Student Handbook, '05-'06, 51

People associated with BJU

Notable graduates

Notable faculty and staff

Notable former students

Notable honorary degree recipients

Notable benefactors

Mentions in popular culture

External links

Official links

News stories

Commentary

References

 


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