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Prosperity
  Coming of Age: SVSC Becomes SVSU
1980-89
 

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Basil Clark

Basil Clark compares high student enrollments with earlier populations

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The 1980's were a decade of great growth for the college. In November of 1987, Saginaw Valley State College was reclassified as Saginaw Valley State University with a student enrollment of nearly 6,000.

With a strong foundation and deep-rooted identity, SVSU began building for the future of what is now one of Michigan's most respected universities.

SVSC began the decade by crossing international borders and hosting the university's first international students. In 1981, SVSC received enough votes from the Academic Affairs President's Council to begin its engineering program.

Wickes Fire

Half way through the decade, SVSC was faced with the tragic fire of the Wickes Annex. It not only recovered from that fire, but flourished in the last part of the 1980's with the reclassification of the school as a university; by breaking ground for Instructional Facility #2 , the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Gallery, and the Ryder Center ; by dedicating the Arbury Fine Arts Center, and by naming Jack Ryder the university's second President in 1989 to lead it into the last decade of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first century.
Ryder Center ConstructionThis picture captures the early construction stages of the student activity center proudly named after and dedicated to
Jack Ryder.

 

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Last modified April 24, 2001