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Timeline
1965
1966
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A steering committee is
formed to study the proposed junior college district,
projected enrollment and financing possibilities.
-
A petition to form a
community college district is submitted to the Illinois
Junior College Board in Springfield. Soon after, the
Illinois Junior College Board and the Illinois Board of
Education approve the establishment of a community
college district for the southwest suburbs.
1967
-
Area residents pass a
referendum approving the formation of a community
college.
-
An election creates
Community College District 524 and its first seven
trustees. Theodore F. Lownik is named Board Chairman.
-
The first temporary office
for the unnamed college is established at 4740 W. 95th
Street in Oak Lawn.
1968
-
The Board of Trustees
holds a contest to name the college, and after a
citizen's committee reviews the names, the board chooses
Moraine Valley Community College. The name relates to
the college's location—where the Valparaiso and Tinley
moraines meet to form a valley.
-
The first classes are held
on Sept. 16 for 1,218 Moraine Valley students in leased
warehouses on 115th Street in Alsip.
-
Dr. Robert E. Turner
begins his tenure as the college's first president after
serving as president of Macomb Community College in
Warren, Michigan.
1969
-
The first Student Congress
forms.
-
The Oak Lawn Rotary Club
establishes a scholarship fund for Moraine Valley
students.
-
Seven temporary buildings
open, the first structures on the new Palos Hills campus.
1970
-
Students are first offered
computerized registration as credit and noncredit
enrollment reaches 4,089.
-
Construction begins on the
first permanent facility, Building A.
-
Consumer advocate Ralph
Nader addresses students on campus as part of the
Moraine Valley concert/lecture series.
1971
-
The college's gymnasium
opens.
-
Moraine Valley is invited
to join the League for Innovation in the Community
College.
-
Noted child care authority
Dr. Benjamin Spock is a featured speaker at a lecture
for students.
1972
-
The first permanent campus
structure, Building A, opens.
-
The first annual Messiah
concert is held.
-
The first tree is planted
on campus.
-
Sen. Paul Simon (D-IL)
visits Moraine Valley.
1973
-
Moraine Valley starts the
first two-year special education program in Illinois.
-
The college begins
restoration of its Nature Study Area on campus.
-
The men's gymnastics team
places third in state competition.
1974
-
The first independent
study and nontraditional learning programs are offered.
-
Lights are added to the
tennis courts.
-
The first student trustee
is elected to the board.
1975
-
Dr. James D. Koeller is
appointed Moraine Valley's second president.
-
The college joins the
Northern Illinois Learning Resources Cooperative.
-
Construction begins on
Buildings B and L.
-
Total enrollment reaches
9,749.
1976
-
The college starts its
Returning Woman Program, offering support services for
women returning to school.
-
A re-enactment of the
Revolutionary War is staged on campus.
1977
-
Buildings B and L open,
increasing classroom, office and resource space.
-
The first Seniorama health
fair for senior citizens is held.
1978
-
The original student
governing body, the Commission Board, forms.
-
The new Learning Resources
Center/Library, Adult Center, and Career Planning and
Placement Center all open as student services expand.
1979
1980
-
Former Vice President
Walter Mondale visits the college to address students
about the hostage situation in Iran.
-
Moraine Valley's
enrollment grows to 12,614.
1981
-
Baby boomers continue to
seek an education at Moraine Valley, pushing the year's
enrollment up 12.5 percent.
-
The college publishes
the first issue of its literary magazine, the Mastodon.
1982
-
Moraine Valley hires Dr.
Fred Gaskin as its third president.
-
The
Moraine Valley Community College Foundation is formed.
-
Construction begins on the
new College Center.
1983
1984
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The College Center and the
Health Fitness Center open.
-
Presidential hopeful Gary
Hart and former Sen. Charles Percy (R-IL) each make
stops on campus.
-
The football team, in only
its second season, wins the conference title.
1985
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Enrollment reaches 17,021.
-
New programs and events,
like Weekend College and College Career Night, are
inaugurated.
1986
-
Construction begins on the
state-of-the-art Center for Contemporary Technology and
is highlighted by the presence of Illinois Gov. James
Thompson at the groundbreaking.
-
The literacy program wins
the Governor's Home Town Award.
1987
-
Moraine Valley celebrates
"20 Years of Building Strong Futures" and continues its
development within the community.
-
The college lays the
groundwork for high-tech training agreements with
several international technology leaders, further
establishing itself as a partner with business and
industry.
1988
-
President Ronald Reagan
visits campus.
-
The Center for
Contemporary Technology opens.
-
General Motors holds a
special technical demonstration of its Sunraycer
solar-powered car at the college.
1989
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Ten members from Beijing
Machinery and Electronics College arrive on campus to
begin six months of research and study as part of a
sister-college relationship.
-
The Commission of the
Bicentennial of the United States Constitution in
Washington, D.C. names Moraine Valley a Bicentennial
Campus.
1990
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Pulitzer Prize-winning
Chicago Tribune columnist Clarence Page addresses the
college's graduates.
-
The Alumni Association is
established.
-
Ten members of the Polish
Delegation of Business and Labor visit the college's
Ridgeland Center to tour the Electrical Construction
Program.
1991
-
Dr. Vernon O. Crawley is
named the college's fourth president.
-
Construction gets underway
on the Fine and Performing Arts Center.
-
Moraine Valley is
officially named one of 12 satellite offices of the
Illinois World Trade Center.
1992
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Moraine Valley celebrates
"Lifelong Learning" with a 25th anniversary observance
and the burial of a time capsule.
-
Jamie Farr, popular cast
member on the hit TV series M*A*S*H, is a featured guest
speaker.
-
Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar
visits the campus, announcing the release of more than
$1.6 million in state funds for a campus remodeling
project.
-
The college dedicates its
new G. Jack Bradley Observation Deck in the Nature Study
Area.
-
Students, faculty and
staff vote to adopt Moraine Valley's first college flag.
1993
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The college establishes a
Center for Peace and Conflict Resolution, working with
community leaders.
-
Moraine Valley's AutoCAD
Authorized Training Center is the only such center in
the United States to win five Autodesk Awards for
training excellence.
-
A student ambassador
program begins with students representing Moraine Valley
at recruitment activities and college events.
1994
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The Fine and Performing
Arts Center opens its doors. Home to the Dorothy Menker
Theater, John and Angeline Oremus Theater, and the
Robert F. DeCaprio Art Gallery, it is a cultural jewel
for the southwest suburbs. The community approved a $15
million referendum to finance the project.
-
The Moving Wall, a
traveling monument honoring Vietnam veterans, attracts
thousands of community residents during its visit to
campus.
-
An automated system goes
into service, allowing students to register for classes,
make tuition payments by credit card, change their
schedule, and check course availability by touch-tone
telephone.
-
During the spring,
temporary buildings that housed offices and classrooms
are finally razed.
-
The college combines support services for minority and international
students with the creation of the Center for Cultural
Diversity.
-
An armillary sundial
handcrafted by retired mathematics Professor Roger
Carlsen, is installed on the observation deck in the
Nature Study Area.
1995
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Almost 400 faculty and
staff begin using an electronic mail system.
-
The Illinois Community
College Board recognizes Moraine Valley for offering a
training and development assessment program to address
the needs of the workplace.
-
The college enters into a
partnership with Christ Hospital and Medical Center for
the training of students in careers as patient care
associates and with Little Company of Mary Hospital for
the training of students as certified nurse assistants.
1996
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The college launches its
Web site.
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Faculty members begin
using the Internet in their fall semester courses.
Internet access also becomes available in the library
and the Center for Contemporary Technology.
-
Moraine Valley excels in
its first full year as a member of the Skyway Athletic
Conference, winning conference championships in women's
softball, men's soccer and men's basketball.
-
The Barbara Bush
Foundation for Family Literacy selects the college's
Family Reading program as one of only 14 recipients of
national grants.
-
Thanks to the opening of
Moraine Valley's Center for Advanced Studies, four-year
colleges and universities offer students and community
members the opportunity to complete their bachelor's or
master's degrees on the Moraine Valley campus.
1997
-
Gwendolyn Brooks, the
first African-American to receive the Pulitzer Prize for
poetry and an Illinois Poet Laureate, visits the Fine
and Performing Arts Center, where she recites some of her
award-winning work.
-
To ensure a smooth
transfer to senior institutions, Moraine Valley
completes program revisions to meet requirements of the
Illinois Articulation Initiative.
-
The Chicago Sun-Times
hosts a forum on campus giving students an opportunity
to discuss family, economics, technology, and politics.
-
More than 1,000 students,
staff and community members take part in AIDS Awareness
Week activities.
1998
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United Parcel Service
commissions the college's art students to create a mural
to celebrate the company's role in transporting Keiko,
the orca whale made famous in the movie Free Willy, from
its home in Oregon to its native waters near Iceland.
The 50-foot mural was hung at UPS in Hodgkins.
-
Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar
visits the college to show support for state funding of
a new building on campus to house 27 multipurpose
classrooms, a bookstore, meeting rooms and offices
(Building D).
-
College unveils the new
school mascot, the Cyclones, replacing the Marauders.
-
Students for the first time
can register for classes, print a schedule and
view final grades online.
-
"Virtual college" is
introduced, providing students with 10 courses taught
via the Internet.
-
A new off-campus education
center at Dwight D. Eisenhower High School in Blue
Island opens its doors to students.
-
Singer Michael Bolton's
"Bombers" and a team comprised of local sports
celebrities match skills in the Heart to Heart Celebrity
softball game played at the college to benefit Hope
Children's Hospital in Oak Lawn.
1999
-
Creation of an intranet
site allows faculty and staff members online access to
internal information about the college.
-
Moraine Valley begins its
partnership with United Parcel Service in the Earn and
Learn Program.
-
The college establishes a
Biology Resource Center in the library to provide
multimedia support to students.
-
Moraine Valley is selected
as the new location of the Department of Corrections
Training Academy, which provides training to Cook County
local corrections officers.
-
The Chicago Cows on Parade
citywide art exhibit in 1999 includes a cow titled
"Children on Parade" designed by Associate Art Professor Judith Raphael.
2000
-
Moraine Valley is selected
as one of only 12 Vanguard Learning Colleges in the
country—the only one in Illinois—for its outstanding record
of achievement in learning-centered education.
-
A traveling Smithsonian
Institute exhibition focusing on a unique culture
created by escaped slaves brought to Caribbean countries
from Africa makes Moraine Valley its only s top in
Illinois.
-
Student Government
Association members travel to Springfield to discuss
issues affecting today's community college students.
-
The Automotive Technology
Department is designated as an official DaimlerChrysler
CAP (Chrysler Apprenticeship Program) training center
for the Chicagoland area. The college hosts the
Daimler/Chrysler regional finals for the 'Build Your
Dream Car" competition. Moraine Valley is the only
community college selected to host the regional finals
of the country's national competition.
-
United States Vice
President Dick Cheney visits campus while on the
campaign trail.
-
Diligent attention by the
Y2K task force to the college's computer systems, fax
machines and even elevators keeps the 'bug" at bay and
the college operating smoothly into the new millennium.
-
International student
enrollment peaks to a new high with the registration of
more than 240 students from 45 countries.
2001
-
The Nature Study Area
celebrates its 25th anniversary as an outdoor classroom
and unique natural resource. It is one of the only
places in Cook County where you can see the three beach
levels of Old Lake Chicago, now Lake Michigan.
-
The Academic Skills Center
is renamed in honor of Dr. Irene Brodie, former dean of
Developmental Education, for her generous monetary gift
to enhance programs and services for underprepared
students.
-
An increase in demand for
online courses prompts the college to boost online class
offerings to 32.
-
The 10th annual Holidays
Around the World celebration brings more than 700 school
children to campus with handmade ornaments from
different countries to decorate campus evergreens.
-
Marking a tradition of
service to the community, the college hosts its 20th
General Educational Development graduation.
-
Area high school students
experience a college-level class through Moraine
Valley's new Jump Start Program that offers one free
college class to qualified high school students.
-
The college's newest
academic facility, Building D, opens. The facility
includes a CyberCafe, university-like Bookstore, and
modern classrooms.
2002
-
The Bob and Marge Bobb
Student Life Center opens in the College Center, serving
as the hub for student clubs and a
space to relax with friends.
-
A new 1.45-mile walking
path is installed around the campus perimeter drive.
-
The college introduces a
new Web site address—www.morainevalley.edu.
-
The college's national
honor society, Phi Theta Kappa, receives the highest
possible five-star status for achievement for the fourth
consecutive year.
2003
-
The Moraine Valley Chorale
performs at the legendary Carnegie Hall in New York
along with 21 other choruses representing community
colleges from the United States and Canada.
-
The college's Cisco
Academy and Local Area Network Program are announced as
one of only four faculty training centers in the world
to provide faculty training for the new Fundamentals of
Wireless LANs.
-
As one of only 12
community colleges in the nation selected as a Vanguard
Learning College, the initiative earns a Public
Broadcasting System Award in Advanced Teaching and
Learning.
-
A new mentoring program
for women in technology boosts female enrollment in
technology fields with the use of mentors who help
create a supportive environment.
-
A new partnership between
the college and Walt Disney World sends 36 students to
Orlando, Fla., as spring-semester interns.
-
Fall semester sees a
record-high enrollment of 14,380 students, while spring
enrollment again sets the record with 14,750 students.
2004
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Moraine Valley becomes the
second largest community college in Illinois.
-
Award-winning journalist Bill Kurtis (also a community college graduate)
holds a probing discussion on campus on the death
penalty, an issue raised in his book, The Death Penalty
on Trial: Crisis in American Justice."
-
The National Science
Foundation awards Moraine Valley a $3 million grant to
establish on campus the first Midwest Regional Center
for Systems Security and Information Assurance.
-
A telescope built and
donated by Tom McCague, retired department chair and
associate professor of Biology, is installed on the G. Jack Bradley Observation Deck in the college's
Nature Study Area.
-
The Moraine Valley
Education Center at Blue Island opens its doors, making
it the first full-service off-campus extension site.
-
Noteworthy speakers on
campus include Harry Mark Petrakis, novelist, who shares
his tales of Greek life in America; FOX-TV anchor Robin
Robinson, a keynote speaker during Black History Month;
Fulbright Scholar Dr. Adnan Mehdi Ibrahim El Amine from
Lebanon; and Ray Hanania, an Arab-American journalist.
-
A traveling display of
Mary Shelley's legendary creature, Frankenstein, visits
the college as part of a national tour.
2005
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U.S. Sen. Barack Obama,
joined by Illinois Senate President Emil Jones Jr.,
speaks during the college's Black History Month
celebration.
-
A record 1,568 degrees and
certificates are awarded to the class of 2005, the
highest number of graduates in Moraine Valley's history.
-
Major renovations
transform the 35-year-old library into a magnificent
resource for contemporary learning.
-
Men's soccer team is the
first college from the United States invited to
participate in an international tournament in Rotterdam,
Holland. It also is the first Moraine Valley team to
compete abroad.
-
Marking the 50th
anniversary of the Fulbright Program, Harriet Fulbright,
wife of the late Sen. William J. Fulbright, program
founder, speaks at the college on the importance of
international education exchanges.
2006
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District residents give
their
vote of confidence by approving an $89 million bond
referendum to fund technology upgrades, a science
building, an instructional and job training center,
enhanced facilities dedicated to student programs and
services, and a new education center in the southwest
sector of the district.
-
Along with the addition of
a new front entrance to the college comes a new address:
9000 W. College Pkwy.
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The women's volleyball
team, the only team from the United States invited to
participate in an international tournament in Dublin,
Ireland, earns a silver medal.
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Enrollment swells to more
than 17,000 students per semester, putting the college
in the ranks of the fastest growing community colleges
in the nation.
-
Moraine Valley and Saint
Xavier University sign a dual admission agreement that
will provide a smooth transfer for students wishing to
pursue a bachelor's degree in nursing at Saint Xavier
after completing their associate's degree at Moraine
Valley.
-
The college's Forensics
team earns a gold medal at the National Community
College Speech and Debate tournament.
-
The Glacier wins second
place in the two-year college category of the national
2006 Newspaper of the Year award by the Collegiate
Press, plus obtains a second-place finish in the Illinois
Community College Journalism Association awards.
2007
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A groundbreaking ceremony
in November commemorates the start of an $89 million
campus expansion project that includes the Student Services
Center (College Center) Renovation and Addition,
and construction of the Moraine Business and Conference
Center (Instructional and Job Training Center) and the Vernon O. Crawley Science Hall.
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Moraine Valley faculty
Richard Wolf and Andrew Zbeeb's successful presentation
at the Centre for Medieval and Renaissance Studies in
Oxford, England, prompts an invitation for Moraine
Valley students to study at the Centre. Moraine Valley
is the first community college in the world to be
invited to participate in this prestigious program.
-
Moraine Valley celebrates
'A
Proud Past. A Brighter Future" our 40th anniversary.
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The college's Global
Education and Humanities departments host a presentation
by Aaron Elster, a child survivor of the Holocaust.
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Building 100, the last of
the temporary buildings, is razed.
2008
- Two Moraine Valley students are the first
community college students from the United States to participate in the
prestigious Centre for Medieval and Renaissance Studies summer program in
Oxford, England.
- The college hosts a seminar to help businesses learn to “go green” and offers
a multitude of one-day classes to teach home and business owners how to become
more environmentally friendly.
- Construction
continues as scheduled on the Dr. Vernon O. Crawley Science Hall, the
Moraine Business and Conference Center, and the Student Services Center and
Student Union renovation and addition.
- The college in February 2008 hosts Drepung Loseling monks from Tibet, who perform instrumental
music and chants, and create a traditional mandala sand painting on campus.
- A Moraine Valley student is the first apprentice from outside England to
participate in a summer training program tending to the Alnwick Garden, located
on the property of the Duchess of Northumberland in England.
- Spring enrollment of 18,065 students surpasses several of Moraine Valley’s
all-time records: enrollment for any semester; credit students, and credit hours
in a spring semester. Summer school enrollment also rises to
a record high of 11,665 students, exceeding the 11,000-student mark for the
sixth consecutive year.
- Biology and environmental science faculty members work to restore the
college’s Nature Study Area prairie by eliminating non-native plants through a
planned burn in April 2008.
- The groundbreaking ceremony for the
Southwest Education Center, held Nov. 11, leads the way for the college’s
first “green” building. The center, to be built at 179th Street and 94th
Avenue, will introduce energy efficient and environmentally conscious
design.
2009
- Site work begins for the Southwest
Education Center to be constructed in Tinley Park. The building, which is
certified LEED, will use geothermal wells to connect thermal pipes with the
Earth below the frost line to send warm air into the building.
- The college in July hosts Gov. Pat Quinn
and the Illinois Green Governments Coordinating Council’s 2009 Sustainable
University Symposium.
- Library receives the Excellence in
Academic Libraries national award for its creativity and innovation in
meeting the needs of students and all library-users, and for creating
programs that support distance and lifelong learning.
- The college’s Forensics team takes 2nd
place in a national tournament and earned four individual medals in
competition with more than 500 participants from 79 teams.
- Major construction projects come to
fruition with building dedications in October. The Student Union opens in
March, and the Dr. Vernon O. Crawley Science Hall and Moraine Business and
Conference Center open in August. A portion of the renovated offices in the
Student Services Center opens in October.
- Growth at the college continues, with
enrollment for fall 2009 semester that sets a record high with 19,071
students.
- Men’s soccer and women’s volleyball teams
travel to Milan, Italy, to participate in the 2009 World Interuniversity
Games.
- Dr. Vernon O. Crawley, college president,
is selected national Marie Y. Martin Chief Executive Officer of the Year by
the Association of Community College Trustees. Dr. Crawley also was a
recipient of the regional award presented by the ACCT.
2010
- The Southwest Education Center in Tinley
Park opens in October as the college’s first LEED (Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design) certified building, featuring geothermal wells,
daylighting, water-saving fixtures, lighting controls, recycled materials,
and much more.
- The college plants a community garden in
conjunction with Urban Farming and Kraft Food’s Triscuit brand that bears
lettuce, peppers, cucumbers and other vegetables.
- Renovations to the Student Services
Center, formerly the College Center, is completed putting many services
under one roof.
- A team of Moraine Valley students takes
first place in the Collegiate Cyber Defense competition, beating out
colleges and universities from California, Washington and the Midwest.
- Moraine Valley hosts the daughter of the
last remaining World War II veteran who was accompanied by a photographer
and a traveling photo exhibit depicting the faces of the war.
- Moraine Valley is designated a National
Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Two-Year Education by
the National Security Agency, one of only six two-year colleges in the
country to receive this honor.
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