Transformation is at the heart of a liberal arts education. Studies show, and employers agree, that this well-rounded approach enhances analytical aptitude and adaptability. You’ll find that to be true at LaGrange College, where you’ll gain a broader, deeper knowledge of many subject areas, along with practical skills – providing flexibility in your career choices.
Since our founding in 1831, LaGrange College has offered a beautiful, intimate setting. Here, you’ll be part of a close-knit, supportive community as you begin your journey toward self-discovery. With a student/professor ratio of 11-to-1 and intentionally small class sizes, you’ll receive the personal attention you need to excel academically, socially, physically and spiritually.
The ‘most divided’ Supreme Court ever may have been in 1941, when seven of the nine justices were New Deal supporters appointed by the same president, Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Michigan’s attorney general has charged 16 people in a fake electors plot to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Here’s how the Electoral College works.
Sen. Raphael Warnock’s win over GOP challenger Herschel Walker had implications beyond Georgia – and offers a lesson in how far the state has come from its racist past.
Georgians appreciate the national attention from the runoff election, but the cost and tendency for a drop in turnout may lead to reform of the state’s ballot contests.
Rev. Warnock became the first African American to defeat an incumbent senator and the first African American to win a US Senate seat without prior electoral experience.
How Georgia found its way past write-in votes cast by dead voters, spiked drinks served to lawmakers, changed locks on the executive office and a gun-toting man claiming to be the governor.