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[[Happy 25th, KZUU!|'''Happy 25th, KZUU!''']]<br> It was a rock ’n’ roll idea in a Bee Gees world. A story about the student-run radio station KZUU. | [[Happy 25th, KZUU!|'''Happy 25th, KZUU!''']]<br> It was a rock ’n’ roll idea in a Bee Gees world. A story about the student-run radio station KZUU. | ||
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[[Image:Stevens Hall winter twilight.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Stevens Hall in snowy twilight. Photo by Shelly Hanks.]] <br> | [[Image:Stevens Hall winter twilight.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Stevens Hall in snowy twilight. Photo by Shelly Hanks.]] <br> | ||
− | [[Image:Blackwell family.jpg|thumb|left|250px|James E. Blackwell, fourth from left, was photographed with friends and family following the 1959 Washington State University commencement on Rogers Field. From left are Joe Perry ('61 Ph.D. Soc.), retired sociologist at Bowling Green University, M. Jay Crowe ('59 M.S. Soc.), Evelyn MacDougall ('59 M.S. Soc.), Blackwell, Jean Conyers, wife of James Conyers ('62 Ph.D. Soc.), retired Indiana State University professor, who took the photo, and Blackwell's sister, Mary Louise Henderson, now deceased. A nurse in Los Angeles, she came to Pullman to attend the graduation. Photograph courtesy of James E. Blackwell.]] | + | <br> |
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+ | [[Image:Blackwell family.jpg|thumb|left|250px|James E. Blackwell, fourth from left, was photographed with friends and family following the 1959 Washington State University commencement on Rogers Field. From left are Joe Perry ('61 Ph.D. Soc.), retired sociologist at Bowling Green University, M. Jay Crowe ('59 M.S. Soc.), Evelyn MacDougall ('59 M.S. Soc.), Blackwell, Jean Conyers, wife of James Conyers ('62 Ph.D. Soc.), retired Indiana State University professor, who took the photo, and Blackwell's sister, Mary Louise Henderson, now deceased. A nurse in Los Angeles, she came to Pullman to attend the graduation. Photograph courtesy of James E. Blackwell.]] [[Image:WSC-illustration-circa1915.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Washington State College ca. 1915]]<br> | ||
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Featured storyThe Victory Team of 1926W.S.C. football surprises the conference In 1926, the Washington State College football team was expected to be at the bottom of the conference. The team beat expectations under new coach "Babe" Hollingbery and freshman quarterback "Butch" Meeker. |
Welcome to Our Story, a place for you to share your personal memory of WSU. How does it work? Sign up, then follow the quick start guide below to post your story. Please contact us with questions, or if you would like us to post your stories.
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More storiesBryan Rocks More WSU ghost stories: The Legend of the Black Cat My Story at WSU - Robert Berney '54, '60 Wazzu Guys' Trips My WSU Story - Mary Skidmore Johnson '40 Cougar Country '67 Adventures in Chemistry Notes of WSC 1940 Unstoppable Rueben Mayes How Cougar Gold made the world a better place Happy 25th, KZUU! |
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The Paper TrailOriginal documents, photos, and videos from WSU's past. Vanished places: Silver Lake and the Tanglewood WSU Highlights by Decade This is WSC - narrated by Edward R. Murrow Contact Our StoryWashington State Magazine PO Box 641227 Pullman, WA 99164-1227 |
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