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Sesquicentennial Moments
Fridays at 6:42 and 8:42 a.m.

Dr. Joel Rhodes shares highlights and historical moments from Southeast Missouri State University's history during its sesquicentennial year.

  • Like the adjacent stadium, Houck Field House honors Regent Louis Houck, but the original structure owed its existence to the most renowned evangelist of the 1920s: a major league baseball player-turned-preacher, Billy Sunday.
  • We celebrated our centennial in 1973 with quite a bit of buzz on campus. Enrollments were approaching a record 8,000. The college had officially become Southeast Missouri State University the year before in 1972. And the last major construction project of the first hundred years was underway; a vast, new student union to replace the outgrown Memorial Hall.
  • In 1950, Southeast opened its first multiple-purpose student union, a student-centered recreation hall and lounge, dedicated to students who served in World War II, and all branches of the armed forces since the institution’s founding.
  • As part of the post-war building boom under President Mark Scully, Southeast added a new facility in 1960 named for Dr. Arthur Clay Magill, long-time Professor of Chemistry, and Chair of the Science Department.
  • Nineteen sixties-style “student power” protests finally arrived on the Southeast campus in September 1977, when activists set up a tent encampment on the terraces to draw attention to their discontent with student housing curfews and regulations handed down from the 1920s and 1950s.
  • Campus protests are commonly associated with the Vietnam era and the 1960s, and while Southeast had one of those too, our university’s most spectacular disturbance unfolded years earlier on June 8, 1921, affectionally known as “Dearmont Day.”
  • To meet the massive - and urgent - demand for military servicemen in World War II, Southeast joined hundreds of other colleges as temporary training centers, supplying manpower for the nation’s total war effort.
  • With Southeast enrollments expected to reach 5,000 by 1970, President Mark Scully and the Regents kept pace with mounting demand for student housing by constructing four high-rise dormitories down in a wooded ravine north of campus, known to generations of students as the "Home of the Birds."
  • For over three decades, Sadie Kent reigned as matriarch of Southeast’s library. As many students and faculty suspected, it was actually Miss Kent’s library, not the university’s. “Some remember her as an overbearing Army general,” professor Harold Grauel observed, “who acted as if every book and every piece of furniture in the library were like rare jewels to be guarded with her life.”
  • Under President Mark Scully’s leadership our school experienced tremendous growth – thanks to the arrival of post-war baby boomers – and took on its modern appearance, including the evolution from college to Southeast Missouri State University in 1972.