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California State University, Northridge company history timeline

1958

In 1958 a student vote chose the school colors red and white and 'Matadors' as the school mascot over 158 nominations for possible nicknames.

"By the time its first catalog appeared in 1958, diminutive Valley State had already mounted a program in Business, and it flourished.

1959

In 1959, the university became the first State College to have its own computer.

1962

In 1962, Oviatt was promoted to the Vice President of Academic Affairs after acting campus president Blomgrem stepped down due to intense student protests.

1963

Additionally, in November 1963 the university established its own radio station, which continues operation to this day as KCSN.

1964

Having just won the primary in Oregon, California would be crucial in deciding the Republican nominee for the 1964 presidential election.

1968

The April assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee, soon followed by the June assassination of Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angeles, then the August 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, had led to a series of riots throughout the nation.

Aside from the demonstrations, the university also catered to hippie culture when Janis Joplin performed with Big Brother and the Holding Company at what is now the Matadome on May 12, 1968.

1969

Additionally, the Newport Pop Festival was held at the Devonshire Downs, now CSUN's North Campus, in June 1969 and attracted 200,000 attendees to watch performances by Jimi Hendrix, Ike & Tina Turner, Marvin Gaye, Jethro Tull and various others.

The students and faculty on campus in 1969 were protesting low minority admission rates, lack of action on racism complaints, and pushing for the creation of ethnic studies programs.

Cultural clubs like Ballet Folklorico Aztlan, also known as BFA, would not exist on campus without the activism of students and faculty during the 1969 protests.

1971

The last such demonstration was in May 1971, on the first anniversary of the Kent State shootings.

1972

The college also officially renamed itself to California State University, Northridge on June 1, 1972, by action of the Legislature and the Board of Trustees of the California State University.

The University adopted its current name of California State University, Northridge in 1972.

The National Center on Deafness was established in 1972 as a way to serve deaf students at the university.

1973

On October 24, 1973, the Oviatt Library was completed and opened.

1974

In 1974, in partnership with UC Santa Barbara, CSUN opened the Ventura Learning Center in Ventura.

1975

In 1975, the construction of the CSUN sculpture began at the southeast corner of campus after the design by alumnus John T. Banks.

1981

In 1981, the campus officially established a foreign exchange student program with Japan, China, Ukraine, South Korea, Taiwan, Brazil and the Netherlands.

1990

In 1990, the Marilyn Magaram Center for Food Science, Nutrition and Dietetics was established; the Oviatt Library east and west wings were added; and the campus could boast of having the California State University system's only fully established astronomy department with a planetarium.

CSUN moved up to Division 1 in 1990.

1994

The 1994 Northridge earthquake struck on January 17 and caused $400 million in damage to the campus, the heaviest damage ever sustained by an American college campus.

In the aftermath of the 1994 earthquake, CSUN civil engineering faculty and students took part in the research on earthquake protection of building structures, in particular, in the field of seismic performance, vibration control, and base isolation.

1995

On January 17, 1995, President Bill Clinton visited the campus to commemorate the first anniversary of the quake.

1999

In April 1999, the Board of CSU trustees decided to give $27 million to construct post-earthquake projects.

2000

The university opened the first Central American Studies program in the nation in May 2000.

Oviatt had the opportunity to negotiate with student and faculty activist groups, but instead of working with students Oviatt had police stationed by his offices and had students arrested for unlawful assembly. It was not until over 2000 students and faculty gathered outside administrative offices that Oviatt was willing to negotiate for the creation of ethnic studies programs.

2001

Due to state and university budget deficits, in 2001 CSUN dropped Football, a team that cost the university $1 million a year and had little fan support.

2003

In 2003, both University Hall and Manzanita Hall were opened, marking the completion of the earthquake recovery program.

2006

CSUN men's Soccer reached the 3rd Round of the 2006 NCAA tournament, knocking out Big West Conference rival UC Santa Barbara in the 2nd Round.

2007

As of August 22, 2007, the University had completed the rebuilding project.

The university in 2007, with clean energy advocates, built the new 1 megawatt fuel cell power plant which was the largest of its kind in any university in the world.

The campus community maintained its legacy of activism when budget cuts and tuition fee hikes were announced during the financial crisis of 2007–08.

2008

Students formed the Students Against Rising Tuition group and protested while Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger visited the campus in February 2008.

2009

CSUN beat Pacific in 2009, and was seeded 15th in the NCAA tournament and lost to the second seed Memphis.

2010

Protests against the budget cuts continued on March 4, 2010 when a statewide protest against the budget cuts was organized, with several professors cancelling class and large numbers of students leaving their classes to join the protests and march down Reseda Boulevard.

CSUN also dropped men's and women's swimming in 2010 due to a statewide and campus budget crisis.

The men's Volleyball team also made the Final Four in 2010 but lost to Penn State and spent several weeks as the number one ranked team in the Nation.

2011

In 2011, 100 Citizens in San Fernando aired on the ABC7 News Channel.

2012

In 2012, the program obtained recognition from the White_House, winning Popular Choice award in First Lady Michelle_Obama’s Let’s Move video challenge.

2014

On January 20, 2014, 100 Citizens launched a new program, The Diabetes Prevention Program, to raise awareness of the high occurrence diabetes has in Los Angeles.

The women's basketball team won the Big West Championship for the first time in 2014.

The University's Pi Kappa Phi chapter surrendered their charter in 2014 following the hazing related death of Armando Villa.

2020

The university ceased in-person instruction on March 12, 2020, when the pandemic started to take hold in the United States.

The same year, president Dianne F. Harrison announced she would retire at the end of June 2020.

The university saw major revenue losses as a result of the pandemic and announced a budget cut in August 2020, despite receiving the 7th largest amount in the nation from the first wave of Covid relief funds under the CARES Act.

2021

For more information about study spaces, book checkouts by locker, electronic textbooks, and more, visit Library Resources During COVID-19. (Posted on: 05/09/2021 05:59am)

Nazarian College Magazine - Fall 2021

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California State University, Northridge may also be known as or be related to California State University - Northridge Foundation, California State University Northridge, California State University-Northridge and California State University, Northridge.