1950-1999 Timeline
Aerial view of North Campus in 1950. Photographer: John Hill. Courtesy of University Archives.

1950 - 1999 Timeline

1950
  • Sargent Hall is completed.
  • The Computer Center opens and features a newly purchased 650 IBM mainframe computer.
1951
  • Northwestern's football team appears on television for the first time.
1952
  • Shepard Hall is completed.
1955
  • Kresge Centennial Hall and Bobb and McCulloch Halls are built.
1956
  • Warren Beatty appears in a Waa-Mu Show.
  • Gary Marshall graduates from Medill and becomes a TV and movie producer.
1957
  • Daily Northwestern staffers first paint the Rock.
1958
  • English professor Edward Hungerford starts the forerunner of Northwestern's TriQuarterly literary journal.
1959
  • Elder Hall is completed.
1960
  • Allison Hall is built.
  • Ann Margret performs in a Waa-Mu Show.
  • Jerry Reinsdorf graduates from the School of Law.
1961
  • Searle Student Health Center opens.
1962
  • Richard Gephardt graduates from the School of Speech and later becomes a Congressman.
1963
  • Jacquelyn Mayer becomes Northwestern's first Miss America.
1964
  • Alice Millar Chapel is completed.
1965
  • Vogelback Computing Center opens.
  • Chapter of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) is founded at Northwestern.
1966
  • Northwestern University Medical Center is organized from seven hospitals affiliated with the University.
  • Professor Myron L. Bender supervises the first known synthesis of a fully functioning enzyme.
1968
  • Rebecca Crown Center is built.
  • Black students occupy University business offices to protest for improvement in the racial climate on campus.
1969
  • Graduate School of Management is formed and undergraduate School of Business is discontinued.
  • Associated Student Government is formed out of the Student Senate.
  • Shelley Long appears in a Waa-Mu Show.
1970
  • University Library and Engelhart Hall built.
  • From May 6 to 13, campus is shut down in protest of Kent State shootings; this is the longest the school has ever been closed.
1971
  • The University's affirmative action program established.
1972
  • Norris University Center, Francis Searle Building and Foster-Walker Complex are completed.
  • Wesley Memorial Hospital and Passavant Hospital merge to form Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
  • The first five residential colleges established.
1974
  • Bloomquist Recreation Center is built.
  • The football stadium gets artificial turf.
  • Patrick Quinn is named the first University archivist.
1975
  • Pick-Staiger Concert Hall is completed.
  • The first Dance Marathon is held.
1979
  • Women's Basketball wins its first Big Ten title.
1980
  • Mary and Leigh Block Gallery opens.
  • Women's Basketball wins their second Big Ten title.
1982
  • The football team's 32-game losing streak ends.
1985
  • Arnold Weber becomes University President.
1987
  • Jennifer D. Averill named the nation's outstanding hockey player.
  • Northwestern University/Evanston Research Park begins operation.
  • The Henry Crown Sports Pavilion and Dellora A. and Lester J. Norris Aquatics Center open.
1989
  • The Rock is moved 30 feet to the east as part of a beautification project in the plaza between Harris Hall and University Hall.
  • Penn State joins the Big Ten.
1990
  • The sorority and fraternity run is moved from new student week to the Winter quarter.
1991
  • Wrestler Mike Funk becomes Northwestern's first 4-time All-American.
1992
  • Leon Forrest, professor of African American Studies and English publishes Divine Days.
  • Charles Deering McCormick donates $10 million to establish endowed professorships that recognize outstanding teachers.
1993
  • Garry Wills wins the Pulitzer Prize for his book Lincoln at Gettysburg.
  • The NUNet computer network installed.
1995
  • Henry Bienen becomes University President.
  • Northwestern ranks third in the nation in football, wins Big Ten, and loses to the University of Southern California in Rose Bowl.
1996
  • Princess Diana visits Northwestern.
1997
  • The football stadium restored to natural grass surface.
1998
  • Professor John Pople is awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.