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WSU Highlights by Decade

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WSU Highlights by Decade

1890-1899

1890

State Land-Grant College established by the State Legislature, March 28.

1891

First meeting of Board of Regents, April 22.

1891

George Lilley appointed first president, April 25.

1891

Contract awarded May 22 for the campus's first building named the "CRIB" - the

cradle of an infant college. Cost estimate = $1500.

1892

Washington Agricultural College and School of Science, as WSU was first known,

opened its doors to 29 students and 63 preparatory students, faculty of 5, on

January 13. Instruction began in agriculture, mechanic arts and engineering,

and sciences and arts.

1892

Construction started on Ferry Hall, first, February.

1892

College Hall contract awarded May 15.

1892

John W. Heston, principal of Seattle High School, appointed president, December

13.

1893

appointed president July 22. The former president of Vincennes

University in Indiana, he had graduate degrees from Harvard and Columbia.

1894

Agriculture research started in Puyallup in Western Washington.

1894

Rogers intramural field construction started.

1894

First varsity game: WSC beat Idaho, 10-0, November 10.

1895

Instruction began in Veterinary Science.

1895

First issue of Evergreen student newspaper published.

1896

First Glee Club organized.

1897

First graduating class of seven men and women.

1898

Alumni Association organized June 23. Edward Kimmel (Class of 1897) is the

first president.

1899

First Chinook student yearbook published.

1899

First intercollegiate debates.

1900-1909

1900

First Summer School session.

1901

team won Northwest Championship.

1902

First master's degree conferred - William Harford Lawrence, M.S. in Botany.

1905

College name changed to State College of Washington.

1905

Instruction in Home Economics and Pharmacy launched.

1905-6

Enrollment reached 1,079.

1907

went to Europe to recuperate from attack of typhoid fever.

1907

Instruction in Education began in November.

1909

Professor Osmar L. Waller named vice president of the college.

1910-1919

1910-19

Decade of the "Carlisle Connection." Three State College head coaches

arrived from the famous Carlisle Indian college in Pennsylvania: Frank Shivley,

William "Lone Star" Dietz and Gus Welch.

1910

First issue of Alumni publication POWWOW printed.

1911

First "Founder's Day" celebration

1911

Miss Rhoda White named first Dean of Women.

1912

Crimson Circle senior men's honorary established.

1913

President's House completed at cost of $25,000.

1913

First Homecoming held.

1913

College natural history museum named for former regent, Charles R. Conner.

1914

Student Book Store established.

1915

President Bryan retires. Runs unsuccessfully for U.S. Senate.

1915

appointed president. He has a Ph.D. from Indiana University

and was superintendent of schools at Louisville, KY.

1915

Agriculture research started at Lind in Eastern Washington.

1916

State College team defeated Brown 14-0 in first annual Rose Bowl in

Pasadena, California.

1916

Auditorium and Library named "E.A. Bryan Hall."

1916-17

Enrollment reached 2,130.

1917

College department system reorganized into five colleges and four schools with

deans as administrative heads.

1917

Graduate School created.

1917-19

World War I impacted State College, with units of soldiers training on campus.

41 soldiers died of influenza epidemic.

1919

Professor Harry Chambers named first part-time Alumni Secretary.

1919

State law passed requiring every able-bodied State College student to take at

least three years of physical education.

1919

The Cougar is officially adopted as the State College mascot.

1920-1929

1921

First Women's Day held.

1922

College radio station KFAE went on the air. It is now KWSU.

1923

President Emeritus returned to campus as research professor of

Economics and Economic History. He will teach a civics class until 1938.

1923

Henry Heald graduated in Civil Engineering. He became president of Illinois

Tech, New York University and Ford Foundation.

1923

Mortar Board charter received.

1924-25

Enrollment reached 3,129.

1925

Library volumes totalled to 104,000, up from 17,000 in 1909.

1925

Earl Foster named first full-time Graduate Manager (student activities and

athletic supervisor).

1925-28

Graduate Manager Earl Foster hired an Athletic staff who created the famous

Golden Era of Cougar Athletics - Hollingbery, Bailey, Friel, Deeter,

Schlademan, Bohm.

1926

Butch Meeker, 5-foot-5, 145-pound halfback, led the team to a

successful 6 win-1 loss season. The Cougar mascot was named "Butch" in his

honor.

1927

First live Cougar mascot presented by State of Washington Governor Hartley.

1927

Phi Beta Kappa chapter established - first for a separate land-grant

institution.

1929

First Ph.D. degree conferred - LaVerne Almon Barnes, Ph.D. in Bacteriology.

1930-1939

1930-39

Football Coach Babe Hollingbery recognized as one of the nation's top coaches.

Continued as head coach of West team in annual East-West All-Star game. His

Cougars did not lose a home game at Rogers Field from 1926-1935.

1930

Edward R. Murrow, ASSCW President, graduated.

1930

Cougar team won FCC Championship with impressive victories over Cal,

USC and Washington.

1931

Cougars outscored by Alabama 24-0 in Rose Bowl.

1931

Cougar center Mel Hein and tackle Turk Edwards named first team football

All-Americans.

1931-33

The Great Depression severely impacts WSU, with faculty and staff taking an

average 25 percent cut in salary during two-year period.

1933

Philip Abelson graduated in Chemistry. Later recognized as "Father of Atomic

Submarine." Editor of Science magazine; president of Carnegie Institution.

1935

Famous national debate scheduled between Claudius O. Johnson, chair of the WSU

Political Science Department, and famous American humorist Will Rogers. Rogers

canceled it to fly to Alaska with Wiley Post. Rogers and Post died in a plane

crash in Alaska.

1935

West Coast radio broadcast sponsored by Alumni Association highlighted 45th

Founder's Day.

1935

N.J. Aiken, head of vocational school, started first career placement service.

During the Depression. N.J. was referred to as "No Job."

1936

Enrollment reached 4,702.

1936

Marshall Neill graduated in Political Science. Served as Federal District

Judge, State Supreme Court Judge, State Senator and Representative, WSU legal

counsel.

1936

General student strike protesting social regulations. Agreement signed by

students and President Holland on May 8, 1936.

1936

New stadium constructed.

1936

Construction started on Women's Gym and on Davis and Wilmer residence halls.

1937

Herbert Kimbrough served as Acting President while Dr. Holland takes leave in

Europe.

1937

Roy Petragallo and Ed McKinnon won NCAA Boxing Championship. Cougars won

national title - WSC's first national athletic championship.

1938

Weldon B. "Hoot" Gibson graduated in Economics and headed for Stanford.

1938

Alumni Association celebrated 40th anniversary.

1938

School of Social Work established.

1939

Board of Regents established first retirement system.

1940-1949

1940

Enrollment reached 5,114.

1940

WSC library collection reached 400,000 volumes.

1940

School of Business Administration created, separating from College of Sciences

and Arts.

1941

Coach Jack Friel's men's basketball team was runner-up for NCAA title, losing

in the championship game to Wisconsin 39-34, in Kansas City.

1941

Federal government recruited faculty members for U.S. Defense service.

1941

Plans approved for Engineering Lab Building, and Veterinary Medicine Classroom

and Laboratory Building.

1941

Land purchased by ASSCW for Student Union Building.

1941

President Emeritus Bryan and Dean Emeritus H.V. Carpenter died.

1942

First contract with government for training enlisted men in aviation, Japanese

language, signal corps, radio and gunnery.

1942

Department of Nursing Education established.

1943

Cougarsuspended for duration of World War II.

1944

Research led to the development of "Cougar Gold Cheese," produced by.

1944

WSC rated "first" in Northwest States for training service.

1944

Butch the cougar was official mascot for battleship U.S.S. Washington

during World War II.

1944

announced his retirement.

1944

Dean Drucker donated the Minnie Barstow Drucker Collection to WSC valued at

$50,000.

1945

Establishment of Institutes of Technology and Agriculture.

1945

program resumed under Coach Phil Sarboe, a 1932 WSC graduate.

1946

(Ph.D. from Princeton University, Vice President and Manager of

American Forest Products Industries, Inc.) assumed WSC presidency on January 1.

1946

Temporary housing brought in for faculty and students to accommodate G.I.

bulge. Influx of military veterans after World War II.

1947

Plans completed for hospital addition to serve WSC and community.

1948

Contract award to build Todd Hall.

1949

Contract award to build Holland Library

1948

Regents approved new athletic code separating student activities and

intercollegiate athletics.

1948

Title of graduate manager abolished. Student Activities and Athletics separated

under two administrators.

1949

Enrollment reached 7,836.

1950-1959

1950

Helen Compton, wife of, coordinated purchase of several lake

front lots on Priest Lake for WSC faculty members.

1950

Camp Easter Seal established on Lake Coeur d'Alene by Professor Roger Larson.

1950

President Emeritus Holland left estate of $72,000, library and art collection

to WSC.

1951

WSC Foundation planned.

1951

WSC plant pathologist Frederick Heald donated personal library to WSC,

including 300 volumes and 10,000 reprints in plant pathology.

1951

J. W. Kalkus, superintendent of the WSC Puyallup Research Center, reported that

"one new berry plant developed at the station has added $15,000,000 to the

state's wealth during the last 10 years."

1951

Weldon B. "Hoot" Gibson selected as "WSC Alum of the Month."

1951

resigned. William Pearl named acting president.

1952

(Ph.D. from University of Pennsylvania, Dean of Faculty at

Texas A & M) assumes presidency on April 1.

1952

Eugene "Pat" Patterson named Director of Alumni Relations.

1952

Compton Union Building dedicated.

1953

Philip Phibbs graduated as top scholastic student.

1954

Keith Jackson graduated, president of Crimson Circle, outstanding senior, chief

announcer of KWSU.

1955

WSC tied San Jose, 13-13, in a game played in sub-zero temperature in

Pullman. One reserved ticket sold at the game.

1955

Poultry scientists Leo Jensen and Igor Kosin developed hatch process which will

return a $9,000,000 annual savings to turkey producers.

1956

WSC grad Pete Radamacher won Olympic heavyweight boxing title by knocking out

the Russian finalist in the first round in Melbourne, Australia.

1956

Of 64 U.S. students awarded Rhodes Scholarships, only two were from land grant

colleges, both from WSC.

1957

Frances Penrose Owen named to Board of Regents. She would serve 18 years. Owen

Science Library named for her in 1979.

1958

Pacific Coast Athletic Conference dissolved membership.

1958

NSF grant of $300,000 assured the building of a nuclear reactor on campus.

1958

Herbert Wood, professor of History, gave the first "Invited Address" by a WSC

faculty member.

1958

Jack Friel retired as basketball coach after 30 years and 495 victories.

1959

George Marra, WSU wood technologist, developed high speed laminatory process

capable of producing a weatherproof beam in seven minutes.

1959

Washington State College becomes Washington State University as designated by

the State Legislature.

1960-1969

1960

Honors program established under direction of Sidney Hacker, Professor of

Mathematics.

1960

Dr. J. Fred Bohler died. He served as a coach, athletic director, and physical

education administrator at WSU for 42 years.

1961

Jack Cole named a regent.

1961

Keith Lincoln graduated after setting Cougar rushing and punting

records. His post season honors included playing in the All-American, College

All-Star, Hula Bowl, and East- West Shrine games.

1962

KWSU-TV goes on the air for first time under direction of Cal Watson.

1962

Compulsory ROTC program changed to voluntary.

1962

Regents Distinguished Alumnus Award names first three recipients: Phillip H.

Abelson, Henry T. Heald, and Edward R. Murrow.

1962

and Regent Tom Gose visited WSU program in Pakistan, one of

the first international programs helping developing countries with land

grant-type assistance.

1962

WSU joined Athletic Association of Western Universities, which later became the

Pacific-8, then the Pacific-l0 Conference.

1963

Hugh Campbell, WSU record-breaking football pass receiver, voted MVP of the

East-West shrine game after setting a new record by catching 10 passes.

1963

Radiocarbon dating laboratory established in College of Engineering.

1963

J. Clifford Folger and C. Glenn King selected for 4th and 5th Regents

Distinguished Alumnus Awards.

1963

Miss Ivy Lewellen, 83, died. She served as executive secretary for 37 years to

three presidents: Bryan, Holland and Compton.

1964

President Emeritus Holland's estate of $410,000 left to WSU. The John I. &

Orpha Preissner estate of S300,000 willed to WSU.

1964

Famed "Agony Hall" torn down to make way for new Kimbrough Music Building.

1964

Cougar baseball coaching legend A.B. "Buck" Bailey killed in auto accident in

New Mexico.

1965

WSU and UW establish State of Washington Water Research Center on Pullman

campus.

1965

Edward R. Murrow dies of cancer.

1965

Howard B. Bowen, president of the University of Iowa, delivers commencement

address and receives the 6th Regents Distinguished Alumnus Award.

1965

WSU Animal Science Reproduction Research featured in Life magazine. S.E.

Hafez primary researcher in Planet Colonization.

1966

retires. Academic Vice President

named acting president.

1966

Karl Sax, internationally acclaimed scientist, awarded 7th Regents

Distinguished Alumnus Award.

1966

Enrollment exceeded 10,000.

1966

Veterinarian Keith Farrell developed freeze-branding technique for animals,

reducing pain and injury to animals.

1967

named 7th WSU president. He holds a Ph.D. from the University

of Iowa and is Dean of Faculties, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle.

1967

R.A. Nilan, geneticist, develops new barley strain with chemical mutagent.

1967

President Emeritus dies in Ohio.

1968

Matsuyo Yamamoto, noted home economist, presented with Regents 8th

Distinguished Alumnus Award.

1968

New French Administration Building dedicated to President.

1968

Marmes excavation near Washtucna in Adams County revealed the remains of oldest

human beings in Western Hemisphere, approximately 12,000 years old.

Internationally known as "Marmes Man." WSU Geologist Roald Fryxell was chief

investigator.

1969

Gerry Lindgren, WSU track All-American, won 11 NCAA titles. He never lost an

NCAA event he entered during his four university years.

1969

Anti-Vietnam War protests and student unrest result in sit-ins in Placement

Bureau and French Administration Building.

1970-1979

1970

South grandstands of wooden football stadium at Rogers Field burned by

arsonist.

1970

Alumni Achievement Award created by Alumni Association.

1970

Racism Workshop held on campus during student unrest period.

1971

$1,000,000 raised in three months to rebuild football stadium.

1971

50,000th student graduated from WSU.

1971

Geologist Roald Fryxell chosen to examine lunar rocks in Houston.

1972

WAMI medical education program started.

1972

Clarence D. Martin Football Stadium dedicated for former governor.

1973

Performing Arts Coliseum opened with first event - 1973 graduation.

1973

Edward R. Murrow Communications Center dedicated.

1974

Football coach Orin E. "Babe" Hollingbery died.

1974

WSU has major exhibit, Waterworld, at Spokane's World Fair - EXPO ‘74.

1974

WOI (Washington, Oregon, Idaho) regional Veterinary Medicine program started,

led by WSU Veterinary College.

1975

100th anniversary of Land-Grant Research Centers.

1975

Ferry Hall torn down; cupola saved and installed as a memorial along what is

now Glenn Terrell Friendship Mall.

1975

WSU signs pact with Jordan for providing educational services.

1976

Old Administration Building (Thompson Hall) designated by National Park Service

for inclusion in National Register of Historic Places.

1976

Regent Michael Dederer elected as Board of Regents President for third time.

1976

$1,000,000 grant from Kellogg Foundation created Partnership for Rural

Improvement.

1976

President Ford presented Orville Vogel, WSU and USDA researcher, with National

Medal of Science.

1977

Orville Vogel, developer of the world's most productive wheat strains, received

Regents 9th Distinguished Alumnus Award.

1977

Kate Webster and Edith William became second and third women appointed to Board

of Regents.

1977

WSU won the National Indoor Track Meet.

1977

Steve Puidokas sets Cougar all-time basketball scoring record.

1978

Butch VI, the last live Cougar to serve as mascot, died at age 15.

1978

College of Home Economics celebrated 75th birthday.

1978

Athletic Hall of Fame created at WSU.

1978

ABC television sportscaster Keith Jackson awarded 10th Regents Distinguished

Alumnus Award.

1978

Henry Rono set four world track records in distance events.

1979

Jack Thompson's jersey (14) retired, recognizing 7,818 yards gained passing.

One of only two football jerseys ever retired by WSU. Mel Hein was the other.

1979

Weldon B. "Hoot" Gibson, Charles Schroeder and Marshall Neill presented 11th,

12th, and 13th Regents Distinguished Alumnus Awards.

1980-1989

1980

Record enrollment of 17,468 achieved.

1980

WSU celebrated its 90th birthday on March 28.

1980

Alumni Foundation Leadership Awards started under (Alumni Association)

President Richard Gustafson.

1980

William Bugge, Washington director of highways, and Laurence Peter, co-author

of the Peter Principle, receive 14th and 15th Regents Distinguished Alumnus

Awards.

1980

Mount St. Helens erupted leaving one-half inch of volcanic ash on campus.

1980

Cooper Publications Building is the first named to honor a classified staff

member, Caroline Cooper, Director of Duplicating and Mailing for 39 years.

1980

Warren G. Magnuson Nursing Education Building, home to Intercollegiate Center

for Nursing Education, dedicated in Spokane. Named for State of Washington's

U.S. Senator.

1981

New track and field facility completed baseball field completed.

1981

Robert Redford Institute for Resource Management started at WSU and Idaho,

named for actor.

1981

Football coach Jim Walden led the Cougars to the Holiday Bowl in San Diego,

where WSU lost to BYU 38-36.

1982

Jeanne Eggart broke career basketball scoring record for men and women with

1,967 points.

1982

Institutional advancement functions consolidated under new vice president,

Stanton Schmid.

1982

Performing Arts Coliseum named for Executive Vice President Emeritus.

1983

Mel Hein, Robert Stevenson and Jacob Bigeleisen given Regents 16th, 17th, and

18th Distinguished Alumnus Awards.

1983

100,000th graduate received degree from WSU.

1983

1962 graduate Col. John Fabian became first Cougar astronaut to fly in space as

a mission specialist on Challenger II space shuttle. Later he received the 19th

Regent Distinguished Alumnus Award.

1984

Regents approved plans to convert 59-year-old Animal Science barn to new Alumni

Center.

1984

Dan Lynch, WSU offensive lineman, named to Associated Press All-America First

Team.

1984

WSU athletes won three gold medals and a silver medal in 1984 Olympic Games in

Los Angeles.

1984

Rueben Mayes, Cougar running back, broke NCAA single-game football rushing

record with 357 yards, against Oregon in Eugene.

1985

, 7th president of WSU, retired after 18 years.

1985

Samuel H. Smith, dean of the College of Agriculture at Penn State (Ph.D. from

University of California at Berkeley) named 8th president of WSU.

1985

Agricultural Sciences Building named for former Regent and 50-year advocate of

state agriculture and WSU, James H. Hulbert.

1985

Jack and Ann Lewis pledged $1 million toward the new alumni facility, to be

named Lewis Alumni Centre. Prominent restaurateur, Ivan Haglund, left half of

his multi-million dollar estate to College of Business and Economics.

1985

WSU celebrated its 95th anniversary of its founding on Charter Day, March 28,

1890.

1985

WSU Board of Regents membership increased from seven to nine persons by

legislative act.

1985

Washington Higher Education Telecommunication System, or WHETS, started

transmitting live, interactive courses from the Pullman campus to Vancouver and

other locations.

1986

WSU biochemist, Clarence A. "Bud" Ryan, selected for membership in prestigious

National Academy of Sciences; first WSU professor to be honored.

1986

First commencement with college ceremonies held on Saturday, May 11. Following

the main ceremony, students participated in college graduations held around

campus.

1986

WSU Research and Technology Park construction begun and first tenant lease

signed.

1987

The State Higher Education Coordinating Board assigned WSU the full

responsibility for upper division undergraduate and graduate education in

Tri-Cities and Vancouver and gives WSU responsibility in Spokane for research

programs and doctoral education, as well as undergraduate and master's programs

in WSU's official lines of responsibility, including engineering and

agriculture.

1987

WSU offered its first three undergraduate courses the university will offer in

Vancouver, beginning Aug. 24.

1987

Private giving to the university through WSU Foundation surpassed $9 million.

Major gifts included Distinguished Professorships from the Kennedy family of

Seattle and from five high-tech companies; $1 million from the Boeing Company

and $1 million in computer equipment from AT&T.

1987

Washington Mutual Bank donated former Union Pacific Train depot in Pullman to

WSU. As the Cougar Depot, it has the athletic ticket office, visitor center,

and community meeting facility.

1987

First 170 Glenn Terrell Presidential Scholars chosen.

1987

New leadership selected for key athletic posts - Jim Livengood, athletic

director; Dennis Erickson, football coach; Kelvin Sampson, men's basketball

coach.

1987

Ground was broken for nearly $50 million in construction, which included the

Lewis Alumni Centre, Chemistry Building, and Food and Human Nutrition Building.

1987

Leo K. Bustad, Dean Emeritus of College of Veterinary Medicine and

internationally recognized speaker, humanist, and founder ofPeople & Pet

Therapyprograms, awarded 20th Regents Distinguished Alumnus Award.

1987

First pre-registration for classes held during spring semester of fall 1987

classes.

1988

WSU Cougars defeat the University of Houston Cougars in the Eagle Aloha Bowl in

Honolulu by a score of 24-22. ABC-TV nationally televised game played on

Christmas Day.

1988

First year of the Summer Orientation Program (for new students and parents).

1988

Vibration-free laser laboratory constructed under Fulmer Hall.

1988

Former WSU president, C. Clement French, died in Lacey, Wash.

1988

Baseball monument constructed along the walkway at entrance to Bailey Field.

1988

Mary Turner DeGarmo, renowned for her work in transcribing musical compositions

into Braille, and William Julius Wilson, sociologist, received Regents 21st and

22nd Distinguished Alumnus Awards.

1988

Peter Koech (Class of 1986) won silver medal in 3,000-meter steeplechase at

Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea.

1989

During the state of Washington Centennial celebration in 1989, 100 individuals,

including the following with WSU connections, were chosen for the Washington

Centennial Hall of Honor in the Washington State Historical Society: Philip

Abelson(Class of 1933), "Father of the Atomic Submarine;" Enoch

Bryan, WSC president (1893-1916); Gary Larson(Class of 1972),

acclaimed Far Side cartoonist; Edward R. Murrow (Class of 1930),

preeminent broadcast journalist; Archie Van Doren (Class of 1937), father

of controlled atmosphere storage for apples, conducted research for WSU at its

Wenatchee Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center; Orville Vogel (Class

of 1939), agronomist who revolutionized wheat breeding, made possible the

Green Revolution. He worked for USDA at WSU in Pullman.

1989

McEachern Hall dedicated in honor of former WSU Regent Robert and his wife

Margaret McEachern.

1989

Alumni Centre opened and named for benefactor Jack Lewis. The Alumni

Association Conference was the first event held in the building.

1989

Food and Human Nutrition Building completed.

1989

Six-story addition to Fulmer Hall constructed.

1989

WSU's Hotel and Restaurant Administration Program ranked 4th nationally among

hospitality programs.

1989

WSU signed agreement with Far Eastern State University in Vladivostok, Russia,

to begin an exchange program.

1989

Branch campuses in Spokane, Tri-Cities and Vancouver officially began on July 1

by legislature act.

1989

Former WSU track star Peter Koech broke the world record in steeplechase with a

time of 8 minutes, 5.35 seconds.

1989

AT&T donated $1.8 million in computer-aided design and analysis network

equipment for molecular science.

1989

Neva Martin Abelson received Regents 23rd Distinguished Alumnus Award. She is

co-founder of the global test for Rh. It has saved millions of babies' lives.

1988

National Institutes of Health granted WSU $473,000 to train graduate students

in the science and applications of protein chemistry.

1989

Michael Utley, former student and 1989 All American offensive guard, was

paralyzed by spinal cord injuries during Detroit Lions football game. NFL

established a scholarship at WSU in Utley's name for students studying sports

medicine.

1989

Jason Hanson, field goal kicker, named first team academic athletic

All-American. Only Cougar to achieve the feat. He was later signed by the

Detroit Lions.

1989-90

WSU celebrated its Centennial.

1990-1999

1990

$36.5 million expansion approved for Holland Library.

1990

Frances Penrose Owen, a WSU regent from 1957-1975, received the Medal of Merit,

the state's highest award.

1990

$2.9 million appropriation to expand WSU's telecommunications system approved

by the state Legislature.

1990

Gary Larson, syndicated cartoonist and creator of the Far Side, received

the Regents 24th Distinguished Alumnus Award and was the Centennial

Commencement Speaker.

1990

Tony Li took first in the 55-meter hurdles at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field

Championship.

1990

Edward R. Murrow School of Communication dedicated.

1990

Allen C. Wilson received Regents 25th Distinguished Alumnus Award for his work

in molecular evolutionism.

1990

Regents approved $28.6 million architectural plans for Veterinary Teaching

Hospital.

1990

WSU pitcher Aaron Sele selected to play on the USA baseball team at the

Goodwill Games.

1990

Groundbreaking for Holland Library addition.

1990

Regents approved plans for SIRTI, the Spokane Intercollegiate Research and

Technology Institute plans.

1990

Money magazine ranked WSU among "America's Best College Buys."

1990

"The Caring Call" veterinary medicine sculpture, located by Grimes Way, built

and dedicated.

1990

Chuck "Bobo" Brayton won 1,000th game as Cougar baseball head coach.

1990

Howard Nemerov, Poet Laureate of U.S., given WSU honorary doctoral degree at

commencement.

1991

Cross country runners Samuel Kibiri and E.J. Guo named to All-American team.

Both finished in the top 25 at the NCAA Championship in Knoxville, Tennessee.

1991

Neill Hall, a former residence hall, renovated for $4 million and became home

of the Math Department.

1991

Carolyn Kizer, Pulitzer Prize winning poet, presented WSU honorary doctoral

degree at Commencement.

1991

KWSU-Northwest Public Radio "Bob and Bill" classical music show goes national.

1991

348 acres chosen at Salmon Creek in Clark County for WSU Vancouver branch

campus.

1991

Lewis Alumni Centre library dedicated in honor of Phillip M. and June B.

Lighty, Past President's Room in memory of Henry W. and Anna Magnuson Reaugh,

and the Reception Gallery named for Weldon B. "Hoot" Gibson.

1991

WSU West moves to the Westin Building in downtown Seattle.

1991

Vishnu Bhatia, director of the Honors Program and former director of WSU's

Office of International Education, appointed a Knight of the Dannebrog Order by

Queen Magrethe II of Denmark.

1991

Harold Rhodes, the women's basketball coach, and Kelvin Sampson, men's

basketball coach, both named Pacific-l0 Coaches of the Year.

1991

Women's basketball team makes first-ever appearance in NCAA Tournament.

1991

Dedication of WSU Tri-Cities new $12.7 million teaching facility in Richland.

1991

WSU men win Pacific-l0 in track and field title and place 2nd in NCAA Track and

Field Championships.

1991

WSU ranked 34th nationally in corporate financial support.

1991

Barry Serafin, national correspondent for ABC News, receives 26th Regents

Distinguished Alumnus Award.

1991

Ground broken for $30 million Veterinary Teaching Hospital.

1992

Football team wins Copper Bowl, 31-28, over the University of Utah in Tucson,

Ariz.

1992

Former WSU quarterback Mark Rypien chosen as MVP of Super Bowl XXVI in the

Washington Redskins' 37-24 win over the Buffalo Bills.

1992

WSU research moose, Morty, becomes a TV star in the opening credits of the

popular CBS show "Northern Exposure."

1992

Mike Lowry (Class of 1962) elected governor of Washington, first from WSU.

1992

Patty L. Murray (Class of 1972) elected to U.S. Senate. She was the first

Cougar and first woman to be elected to the post from Washington.

1992

Sallie Giffen named vice president for Business Affairs. WSU's first woman vice

president.

1992

Todd Hall addition, home of the Hotel and Restaurant Administration Department

completed, at cost of $5.6 million.

1992

Women's volleyball team invited to NCAA Women's Volleyball Championship.

1992

Remodeled Carpenter Hall reopened as home for the School of Architecture. Cost

of renovation was $9 million.

1992

Conner Museum, home of the largest collection of birds and mammals in the

intermountain Pacific Northwest, reopened in Science Hall after being closed

since 1986.

1992

WSU West headquarters insert dedicated in honor of former WSU Regent Michael

Dederer.

1992

Doctor of Pharmacy program approved for WSU Spokane.

1992

Men's basketball team receives first-ever NIT (National Invitational

Tournament) bid. Lost in second round to University of New Mexico.

1992

Josephat Kapkory claimed 3,000-meter title at NCAA Indoor Track and Field

championship.

1992

U.S. Air Force General (ret.) Robert D. Russ receives 27th Regents

Distinguished Alumnus Award for his service as Commander of Air Force aviation

during the Gulf War.

1992

Donors contribute a record-setting $33.5 million in private gifts, grants, and

pledges to WSU.

1992

The space shuttle Columbia carried an experiment by WSU physicist Philip

Marston.

1993

Women's volleyball team won National Invitational Tournament by beating Bowling

Green University in straight sets. The team did not lose a single game

throughout the tournament.

1993

R. James Cook, USDA plant pathologist and WSU adjunct professor, selected for

National Academy of Sciences.

1993

ICNE celebrated 25th anniversary.

1993

Heather Metcalf became sixth woman to be ASWSU president.

1993

WSU quarterback Drew Bledsoe first pick in the NFL draft by the New England

Patriots

1993

Former WSU baseball star John Olerud of the Toronto Blue Jays won American

League professional baseball batting title with .363 average.

1993

History professor Leroy Ashby selected as CASE Outstanding College Professor in

the state for second time.

1993

Plans for new Cougar Plaza in downtown Pullman approved.

1993

The Boeing Company donated $7 million to WSU - the largest private gift to

date.

1993

Regents approved reorganization of College of Sciences and Arts into two

separate academic units, the College of Sciences and the College of Liberal

Arts.

1993

New Multicultural Center opened doors in renovated former Chemical Engineering

Building.

1993

WSU researchers sent a plant experiment up with the space shuttle Discovery.

1993

John Gorham, internationally renowned veterinarian and WSU faculty member,

selected as 28th Regents Distinguished Alumnus Award.

1994

Alumnus Edward R. Murrow (Class of 1930) depicted on 1994 U.S. postage stamp.

1994

New Holland Library addition completed at cost of $36 million.

1994

Floyd Smith and Mariel Fulmer Doty, WSU's oldest known alumni, both died at age

103.

1994

Regent Kate Webster, retired after 18 years and eight months service. She

served the longest term in the past 50 years. Physical Sciences Building named

for her.

1994

Legendary WSU baseball coach, Bobo Brayton, retired after 33 years and more

than 1,150 victories.

1994

The men's basketball team received invitation to play in NCAA Championship

Tournament. Lost in first round to Boston College, 67-64.

1994

Josephat Kapkory captured 10,000 meter title at NCAA Cross Country

Championships.

1994

WSU's Army ROTC unit marched away with #1 national ranking.

1994

Lewis Alumni Centre completed 5th year of operation. Host to 150,000 visitors

and 1,500 meetings.

1994

WSU Veterans Memorial dedicated and a special tribute made to the 300 alumni,

faculty and staff who died during WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam and the Persian

Gulf conflict.

1994

Morty, the WSU research moose and CBS-TV "Northern Exposure" star, died of an

illness linked to a mineral deficiency.

1994

WSU broke ground for Vancouver campus.

1994

Necia Bennett Huntley (Class of 1935) and husband Elmer C. Huntley left a

890-acre wheat ranch at Thornton to WSU, ultimately to fund scholarships.

1994

Campaign WSU kicks off with goal to raise $200 million.

1994

Museum of Art celebrates 20th Anniversary.

1994

New Student Services building, named for benefactors Phil and June Lighty,

under construction at cost of $17 million.

1994

African American Alumni Alliance conducted its first meeting at WSU.

1994

Albert Wilder Thompson, dean of the College of Sciences and Arts at WSU from

1953-64, dies at 95. Thompson Hall is named for him.

1994

Cougar fans celebrated a 23-6 Apple Cup victory against University of

Washington, in the snow at Martin Stadium.

1994

WSU shuts down Baylor University 10-3 at the Alamo Bowl in Texas.

1995

Cougar pride went on the road. WSU Cougar logo license plates support student

scholarships.

1995

HillTopics alumni newspaper celebrated 25 years. Its only editor has been

Patrick Caraher (Class of 1962.)

1995

Stevens Hall, listed on the National Register for Historic Places, celebrated

its centennial.

1995

The second woman to be honored with WSU's highest award Regent's Distinguished

Alumnus Mary E. Turner DeGarmo, dies at 91.

1995

Coach Kevin Eastman took WSU men's basketball to NIT Tournament.

1995

WSU captured the Pacific-l0 North baseball title under first-year coach Steve

Farrington.

1995

Butch the Cougar and Mickey Mouse spent the day together at Disneyland at a

pregame rally for the WSU vs. USC football game.

1995

Money magazine ranked WSU among the top eight of the 436 Honors programs at

American public universities.

1995

Golden Grads of 1945 gave as a class gift a grand piano which was dedicated

during a concert in the Rotunda of the Holland Library addition.

1995

The WSU women's junior varsity eight crew team captured the crown at the

National Collegiate Rowing Championship Regatta on Lake Harsha, Ohio.

1995

Coach Lisa Gozley and the WSU soccer team made their first NCAA Tournament

appearance, ranking them 19th by "Soccer America."

1995

WSU's student enrollment, including branch campuses, reached another record

high at 19,598.

1995

WSU opened a new 130-unit Yakama Village apartment complex for families and

graduate students.

1995

President Emeritus Terrell returned to WSU for dedication of the Glenn Terrell

Friendship Mall. He led WSU from 1967-1985.

1995

Cougar women's volleyball team ranked, 5th nationally.

1995

Nobel Peace Prize Recipient Norman Borlang received WSU's honorary doctoral

degree at commencement.

1995

Campaign WSU passed $200 million mark eight months before its scheduled end.

1995

U.S. Army Gen. John Shaliashvili, chair of the U.S. Dept. of Defense Joint

Chiefs of Staff, spoke at commencement. His son was one of the graduates.

1995

Thomas "Les" Purce, former President of Evergreen State College, selected vice

president for Extended University Affairs at WSU.

1995

Jack Friel, coach of the Cougar men's basketball team for 30 years and 495

victories, died at 97.

1995

An acrylic-on-canvas painting depicting a commitment to diversity is dedicated

in the Compton Union Building. WSU colleges and administrative units donated

the nearly $10,000 for the three-piece mural.

1995

Volleyball Coach Cindy Fredrick concludes her seventh season at WSU by being

named Pacific-10 Conference Coach of the Year. The team finished 22-7 overall

and third in the Pac-l0, led by All-American Sara Silvernail.

1996

WSU President Samuel Smith received Boy Scouts of America's Distinguished Eagle

Scout Award.

1996

Thrifty Payless contributed more than $100,000 for computer equipment, software

and student scholarships for the College of Pharmacy.

1996

WSU officials and community partners announce plans to develop six pilot

Learning Centers in the state to expand educational opportunities. The centers

are located in Port Townsend, Wenatchee, Colville, Longview/Kelso, Tacoma and

Yakima.

1996

WSU President Samuel Smith begins service on the 25-member Kellogg Commission

on the future of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges.

1996

Construction starts on a 45,000-square foot weightroom addition to Bohler Gym.

1996

Arthur McCartan, who served as a WSU administrator for 38 years before retiring

in 1985, as Dean of Students and Dean of Men, dies in Olympia.

1996

Time magazine named WSU graduate William Julius Wilson, noted sociologist,

one of America's most influential people.

1996

WSU Vancouver's new Salmon Creek 384-acre campus dedicated. It is WSU's first

all new campus in more than a century.

1996

The $16 million Lighty Student Services Building, which adjoins French

Administration Building, opened. It is named for WSU graduate Phil Lighty and

his wife, June. The Lightys established one of WSU's largest scholarship

endowments for students with demonstrated leadership potential.

1995

At the first anniversary of the state of Washington collegiate motor vehicle

program, more than 5,119 plates featuring the WSU Cougar logo have been sold -

more than all the other public schools in the state combined.

1996

The $3.1 million Phi Kappa Theta fraternity opened. High-tech in every respect,

it reflects the "wired world" commitment of WSU alumnus and fraternity member

Paul Allen, Microsoft cofounder. He funded the building and equipped each of

the other Greek houses at WSU with internet connections.

1996

Money magazine ranks WSU among the top 15 best for value four-year

undergraduate universities and colleges in the Western U.S.

1996

Mrs. George Randolph Hearst, Sr., widow of the oldest son of late newspaper

giant William Randolph Hearst, became an Adopted Cougar.

1996

Dedication of WSU's Thomas S. Foley Institute for Public Policy and Public

Service. It is named for the former U.S. Speaker of the House and State of

Washington member of Congress.

1996

WSU's $38 million Veterinary Teaching Hospital opened. On Sept. 9 the hospital

made history when an 80-year-old woman became the first human patient to use

the hospital's magnetic resonance imaging unit. Under a cooperative agreement,

the vet hospital provides imaging services for human patients.

1997

Gretchen Bataille named provost and vice president for academic affairs,

effective July 1. She had been provost of the College of Letters and Science at

the University of California at Santa Barbara.

1997

The seven-year Campaign WSU, the university's first comprehensive fund-raising

effort, concluded with a final total of $275.4million, surpassing its original

$250 million goal. Supporting WSU's vision to be one of the top public

universities in the nation, the monies raised benefit scholarships, teaching

and research programs, student programs and learning initiatives s statewide.

1997

WSU President Samuel Smith chaired the NCAA Presidents Commission, the major

governing body for college intercollegiate athletics.

1997

The Consolidated Information Center at WSU Tri-Cities opened. Funds for the

$18.6 million literary and teaching center came from the state of Washington

and the U.S. Department of Energy.

1997

WSU biochemists Rod Croteau and Linda Randall were elected to the National

Academy of Sciences. They joined four other WSU researchers in the academy,

C.A. "Bud" Ryan, a biochemist; Jim Cook, a USDA plant pathologist at WSU, John

Hirth, a materials scientist, and Dieter H. von Wettstein, a plant geneticist.

1997

Debbie Pipher, senior member of the WSU coaching staff, resigns after 20 years

as coach of the women's swimming team.

1997

Dave Cooper retired as manager of the Student Book Corporation, after 27 years

leading the "Bookie."

1997

WSU received $10 million, five-year grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to

create an Institute for Shock Physics. The institute is directed by WSU physics

Professor Yogi Gupta.

1997

Picked to finish 7th in the Pac-l0, the 1997 WSU Cougar football team finished

first, earning the right to play the Rose Bowl game (Jan. 1, 1998) for the

first time in 67 years.

1998

January 1, the WSU Cougar football team played in the Rose Bowl football game

in Pasadena, Calif., pushing national champion and no. 1 ranked Michigan to the

last play of the game before losing, 21-16. Some 101,219 fans and a world-wide

television audience saw the game. In February, football coach Mike Price signed

an eight-year contract extension through Dec. 31, 2005.

1998

An alcohol-induced student riot along a Colorado Street adjacent to the WSU

campus takes place in early May. According to the Pullman Police Department,

several hundred students engaged directly with police officers, some throwing

bottles, cans and rocks. Estimates put some 1,000 onlookers on the street

during the five-hour disruption that left 23 law enforcement officers and four

students injured, according to a story in the June 1998 issue of Hilltopics.

1998

Washington Gov. Gary Locke participates in a dialogue on race and bigotry in

the Compton Union Building, with students, faculty and staff. In an address, he

said, "The gift of cultural pluralism is grounded in mutual respect and

democracy."

1998

The new $27 million, 100,000-square-foot Engineering, Teaching and Research

Laboratory opened. Adjacent to Dana Hall, the four-story structure was funded

by the U.S. Department of Energy.

1997

A new state law gave WSU a major educational leadership role in Spokane, and

management responsibilities for the Riverpoint campus.

1998

The WSU Creamery, home of Ferdinand's, celebrated its 50th anniversary.

Previously located in Troy Hall, Ferdinand's moved to new facilities in the

Food Quality Building in 1992. WSU cheeses, including Cougar Gold, are sold

worldwide.

1998

The first students recruited to WSU through the College of Education's Future

Teachers of Color program graduated during the 1998 Commencement.

1998

Pine Manor was torn down. Built by the Works Progress Administration in 1937

with a knotty pine interior, it was operated as a cooperative house,

independent of the university's housing system. In 1963, fire safety concerns

brought an end to its use as a dormitory. WSU purchased it and renovated it

into headquarters for an internationally recognized anthropology program.

1998

The Bill Chipman Palouse Trail opened. Built on an abandoned railroad bed, the

recreational path parallels the highway between Pullman and Moscow. Creating

the eight-mile recreational asphalt trail involved two states, two cities, and

WSU and the University of Idaho. The late Bill Chipman, Pullman car dealer, was

a UI graduate and supporter of his alma mater and WSU.

1998

At age 102, Dorothy Otto Kennedy, the oldest living graduate of the WSU College

of Pharmacy, died in Everett. She earned her degree in 1916 and went on to

practice pharmacy in Reardan in eastern Washington and Everett in western

Washington.

1998

A $1 million renovation of the "Bookie," WSU's student book store, was

completed. The facility now includes a 1,000-square foot den with a fireplace,

plus an espresso bar as part of the Wazzu Café.

1998

WSU's official fall semester Pullman campus enrollments reached 17,912.

System-wide WSU registration totaled 20,998. The 2,877 new freshmen comprised

the largest incoming class since 2,970 enrolled in 1980.

1998

Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine (Sept. 1998 issue) ranked WSU 39th

among the nation's "Top 100 Values in State Universities."

1998

A new poetry corner in the Holland/New Library Atrium was named to honor Ruth

Slonim, professor emeritus of English.

1998

On March 26, the WSU Alumni Association began a six-month centennial

celebration. The association started in 1898, eight years after the state

Legislature created the land-grant college (March 28, 1890).

1999

In March, the 24th annual Pal-Loots-Pu, a three-day celebration and dance

competition, was held, sponsored by Ku-Ah-Mah, the Native American student

organization at WSU.

1999

WSU's campuses in Spokane, the Tri-Cities and Vancouver celebrated their 10th

anniversaries. They were all created by the state Legislature on July 1, 1989.

1999

Jamie Kern represented WSU's 150,000th graduate at commencement.

1999

WSU alumnus and Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen became the 29th recipient of

the Regents' Distinguished Alumnus Award during Commencement.

1999

The Admissions Office suite in the Lighty Student Services is dedicated in Stan

Berry's name. He worked 33 years in admissions, 22 of them as director.

1998

President Samuel Smith, age 59, announced he will retire in the summer of 2000.

He underwent successful surgery for cancer in March 1998. He said his health is

good and notes the university "has just finished a very successful Legislative

session that provided much needed dollars for faculty salaries and

construction" in Pullman at the branch campuses. A search committee is

appointed to assist the WSU Regents in finding a successor.

1999

The May issue of Yahoo Internet Life Magazine rates WSU the No. 1 "wired"

public university in America.

2000

2000

Crimson Company, the student show choir, one of WSU's most popular public

relations vehicles for nearly a quarter of a century, was discontinued after

its final tour in May due to budget cuts. The decision was made by the

executive board of the WSU Alumni Association, the group's sponsor.

2000

The WSU baseball facility was renamed Bailey-Brayton Field, honoring Buck

Bailey and Bobo Brayton, who coached the Cougars, 1927-41 and 1946-61 (Bailey)

and 1962-94 (Brayton). Originally located near Hollingbery Fieldhouse, a new

Bailey Field opened in 1980 near the Beasley Performing Arts Coliseum.

2000

Steve Wymer became the first person in WSU history to serve three different

terms as president of the Associated Students of WSU. He initially became

president, upon succession while serving as ASWSU vice president, in 1998-1999.

He was elected ASWSU president in 1999-2000 and reelected for 2000-2001.

2000

On June 8, V. Lane Rawlins became WSU's ninth president succeeding eighth

president, Samuel H. Smith, who served from July 1, 1985 to June 8, 2000.

Rawlins, previously president of The University of Memphis in Tennessee, was a

former WSU faculty member and administrator. He joined the economics faculty in

1968, later served as chair of the department of economics, and was WSU vice

provost from 1982-86.

2000

Construction on the new $39 million Student Recreation Center neared

completion, scheduled to open in January 2001.

Originally compiled by Bob Smawley.'' Updated 5/11/94 by Mark D. Peck and

3/25/96 by Christina R. Parrish and Cynthia Hulse. Updated fall 2000 by Barb

Petura and Tim Marsh. If you have corrections to this document, please contact

us. Thank you.

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