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Winter of 1909
- The Tennessee General Assembly passed the General Education Bill of 1909, authorizing the creation of normal schools in each of the state’s three grand divisions and an agricultural and industrial school.
1911
- First faculty meeting held in the office of President Sidney G. Gilbreath.
October 2, 1911
- East Tennessee State Normal School opens, 29 students register first day; two courses of study offered, a four-year high school curriculum and a two-year normal school curriculum. Normal School consisted of the departments of education, English, history, science, languages, industrial training, agriculture, and the training school.
October 10, 1911
- Normal School dedication ceremony held
November 3, 1911
- Navy blue and gold chosen as school colors
November 17, 1911
- Literary societies for men and women organized – Pestalozzian for men and Sapphonian for women
December 1911
- Departments of music and art added
March 1912
- Departments of Latin and domestic science added
- Committee on Social Life establishes rules of social behavior for Normal School students
December 4, 1912
- “No young woman student in the normal school will be permitted to dine at a public hotel with an escort and without a chaperon; and no young woman student will be permitted to attend any public dance.” – Sidney G. Gilbreath
- State Normal School Faculty Association formed
1913
- The three state normal schools establish the Inter-Normal Debating Team
1914
- President Gilbreath raises money for student loan fund
1915
- Alumni Association organized
- Model School building constructed
January 1916
- First constitution of the United Student Body; first president of United Student Body – Theodore R. Eutsler – elected
May 1916
- First May Day festival held
September 1916
- New course added in piano, violin and voice
September 1916
- New departments added in methods expression, physical education, bookkeeping and penmanship
October 4, 1916
- Mrs. Sidney G. Gilbreath organizes the Women’s Faculty Club
1917
- Practice Teachers’ Club organized
September 1918
- Student Army Training Corps on campus during fall quarter
- New departments added in biology, chemistry, geography, and physics
Winter 1918
- Women’s basketball team completes 1917-18 basketball season undefeated, 6-0 record
1919
- First yearbook, Old Hickory, published
- Third year of courses added to curriculum
March 1920
- The committee on commencement costumes reports in favor of caps and gowns for graduation
- First football team fielded, the Normalites have 3-3 season
April 25, 1921
- The first party for the entire student body held
1922
- The first gymnasium completed
- Taylor Hall (men’s residence) constructed
1923
- First school newspaper, Chalkline, published
- The structure now housing the B. Carroll Reece Museum constructed to house the library
1924
- Normal School baseball team has undefeated season
January 1925
- Name changed to East Tennessee State Teachers College
September 1, 1925
- Dr. Charles C. Sherrod inaugurated as second president of East Tennessee State
September 1925
- Fourth year of courses added to curriculum
November 28, 1925
November 1925
- First student handbook published
February 1926
- East Tennessee State becomes an accredited member of the American Association of Teachers’ Colleges
May 28, 1926
- First graduating class to receive four-year degrees from East Tennessee State
Spring 1926
September 1926
- Mathematics and Physical Science Departments added
December 1927
- East Tennessee State becomes an accredited member of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools
1928
- Training School, now University School (Alexander Hall), constructed
1929
- First women awarded athletic letters: Florence Boum, Dorothy Whitlock
February 1929
- First radio for dormitories
June 21, 1929
- State Board of Education turns over to East Tennessee State the new training school building
September 1929
- Biological sciences and directed teaching departments added
Fall Quarter 1929
- Educational tests given to all students for the first time
July 1930
- Name change to State Teachers College, Johnson City
Fall Quarter 1930
January 1931
- TC sweaters given to all football players
- Sherrod Library constructed; at the time it was called the fireproof library; dedicated Aug. 27
1932
- First full-time athletic coach, Gene McMurray, hired
September 1933
- Social studies department added
November 1933
- Athletic relations with Milligan College reestablished after 1922 dispute
1934
- WPA builds a football field on the site of the present-day science building
1935
- First volume of the Alumni Quarterly published
- East Tennessee State athletic teams first referred to as the “Buccaneers”
October 9-10, 1936
- The 25th anniversary of the founding of the college celebrated
- The Amphitheatre completed
- The Tennessee state legislature debates closing the college as “an unnecessary luxury”
1937
- First Buccaneer yearbook published
November 11, 1937
- Flagpole in triangle between administration building (Gilbreath Hall) and library building dedicated
September 1938
- Freshman Rules (later called "Rat Week") begin during fall quarter
Fall Quarter 1938
- Bucs are football champs of Smoky Mountain Conference
January 1939
- Library receives $6,000 for acquisition of books from the Carnegie Foundation
- Civilian Pilot Training Program begins on campus
1940
- “Nearly 70” graduate in largest-ever graduating class
1941
- College grill opens in cafeteria building
- Second generation of students welcomed to Teachers College on school’s 30th anniversary
December 5, 1941
- Winter quarter registration numbers drop over 10 percent resulting from high numbers of enlistments in the armed services
September 1942
- Business administration department added
- Brown Hall (science building) constructed
March 1, 1943
- 2205 Army Air Forces Air-Base Unit arrives on campus and stays until June 30, 1944
March 1943
- Name changed to East Tennessee State College
- Program for the preparation of nurses and assistant health workers added with the cooperation of officials of the Appalachian Hospital in Johnson City
1944
- Sam Wilson Hall (business) constructed
1945
- 85 World War II veterans enter ETSC as postwar enrollment climbs to 461
1946
- Servicemen returning from World War II enter college on GI Bill of Rights for first time; 225 enter ETSC during spring quarter
- Bucs basketball team wins Smoky Mountain Tournament
January 1947
- Enrollment reaches record as servicemen attend college on the GI Bill
- Rat Week revived
1948
- Dean of Women Ella V. Ross named Johnson City’s first “Woman of the Year”
November 20, 1948
- 10,000 fans watch Bucs and Milligan College battle to a scoreless tie in football
- Power Plant begins operation
1949
- Dr. Burgin E. Dossett Sr. inaugurated as the third president of East Tennessee State
- Graduate school organized
- Browning Hall (men’s residence) constructed
1950
- Teaching Aids Laboratory (now IMC) organized
September 1950
- ETSC offers first athletic scholarships
1951
- East Tennessee State awards its first master’s degree
1952
- ETSC withdraws from the Smoky Mountain Conference and joins the Volunteer State Athletic Conference (VSAC)
- Brooks Gymnasium and Carson Hall constructed
- ETSC victorious in Burley Bowl
September 1953
- Military science, religion, speech correction and audiology courses added to the curriculum
- Stone Hall (women’s residence) constructed
- Football team wins Burley Bowl second consecutive year
1954
- East Tennessee State adopts rules of compliance to the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court ruling against racial segregation
November 1954
- Kappa Delta and Alpha Delta Pi become national sororities
- First college museum opens at ETSC
September 1955
- College organized into schools and departments; four schools: Arts and Sciences, Business Administration and Economics, Education and Graduate Studies
- Old gymnasium (built in 1928) moved to become part of Mathes Hall (music and military science)
1956
- First bookstore opens on campus
- Dean of students post created
- WETS begins broadcast as closed-circuit radio station
- Fall quarter enrollment tops 4,000
1957
- ETSC joins the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC)
- Yoakley Hall (women’s residence) constructed
1958
- Lambda Chi Alpha opens first fraternity house in Tennessee at 431 West Maple Street
- ROTC forms Honor Guard at ETSC
1959
April 1959
- ETSC cagers win George Mikan Award; named “most improved” NCAA club for 1958-59 season
1960
- Lamb Hall (health) and the student union building constructed
1961
- East Tennessee State College celebrates its 50th anniversary; a telegram of congratulations received by President Dossett from President John F. Kennedy
- Ellington Hall (men’s residence), Powell Hall (women’s residence) and Burleson Hall (English) constructed, and Carson Hall receives an addition
- Student book exchange opens
- Sidney G. Gilbreath dies on January 6, age 91
- Enrollment tops 5,000
1962
- Social Work program established
- Upper and lower division requirements defined and placed in effect
- Record 2,000 freshmen enrolled
February 1963
- ETSC achieves university status, becoming East Tennessee State University
- West Hall (women’s residence) constructed
1964
- Enrollment reaches 7,000
- Undergraduate program in psychology established
April 1964
- Construction begins on B. Carroll Reece Museum addition
1965
- Traffic regulations require registration of vehicles for the first time
- University organized into four colleges and one school: Colleges of Arts and Sciences, Business Administration and Economics, Health, and Education and the Graduate School
- Ross Panhellenic (women’s residence) and Frank Clement Hall (men’s residence) constructed
1966
- Nell Dossett Hall (women’s residence), Wilson-Wallis Hall (industrial education) and Ball Hall (art) constructed
- University centers open in Bristol and Greeneville
October 7, 1966
- First annual Folk Festival held
September 1967
- Student body president Jerry S. Jones announces that freshmen will be welcomed on campus during School Spirit Week rather than being harassed as in previous years during Rat Week
- First master of science degree awarded
- McCord and Cooper halls (men’s residences), Lucille Clement Hall (women’s residence) and Hutcheson Hall (geography and geology) constructed
- Sherrod Library addition constructed
February 1968
- Dr. D. P. Culp inaugurated as the fourth president of East Tennessee State University.
- New construction begins on $3.5 million science building
- ETSU moves to top position among Johnson City’s industries and institutions on the basis of annual payroll
1969
- Dossett Hall (administration) constructed
- Journalism department added
- Dental hygiene department begins
- Clinchfield Railroad decides to run “high line” through south side of campus on a right-of-way held by the railroad since the turn of the century; construction of the line begins
December 13, 1969
- ETSU Buccaneers defeat Louisiana Tech, led by quarterback Terry Bradshaw, in the Grantland Rice Bowl
October 20, 1970
- President Richard M. Nixon visits campus and makes address
1970
- Addition constructed on Lamb Hall (health)
1971
- Kingsport University Center constructed
January 1972
- Neil Cusack sets world record in marathon for 19-year-olds
July 1972
- ETSU placed under control of central Board of Regents
1973
- The university placed under censure by the American Association of University Professors
- Memorial Center (Mini-Dome) groundbreaking
- Mack P. Davis Apartments constructed
- Brown Hall (science) expanded
January 1974
- WETS-FM begins broadcasting
March 1974
- The Tennessee legislature creates a free standing College of Medicine to be developed utilizing the Teague-Cranston Act
April 1974
- Cross-country All-American Neil Cusack of ETSU’s “Irish Brigade” wins the Boston Marathon with third-fastest time ever
- Women athletes join intercollegiate athletic program
- Luntsford Hall (apartments) constructed
- First Mockingbird student arts magazine published
January 27, 1975
- First meeting of Faculty Senate held
- Cooperative Education Program added
- Bond Building (physical plant offices) constructed
- Shelbridge acquired as the presidential residence
- Gilbreath Hall renovated
October 1975
- Family practice residency programs in Johnson City and Kingsport accredited
1976
- Construction completed on the Clack Building (chilling plant) and the D.P. Culp University Center
March 22, 1976
- Kingsport Family Practice Center opens under auspices of the department of family practice in the Quillen-Dishner College of Medicine
July 1976
- Family practice residency programs in Bristol, Veterans Administration Medical Center and Watauga Area Mental Health Center receive accreditation
October 1976
- Bristol Family Practice Center opens
Summer 1977
- Dr. Arthur H. DeRosier, Jr., inaugurated as fifth president of East Tennessee State University
- ETSU organized into seven colleges and schools; Colleges: Arts and Sciences, Business, Education, Health and Medicine. Schools: Graduate Studies, Continuing Education.
July 1977
- Residency program in internal medicine receives accreditation
Fall 1977
1978
- ETSU joins the Southern Conference after 21 years in the OVC
- Student union building renovated to become part of the College of Medicine
August 1978
- Medical school enrolls its first class of 24 students
- Schools of Public and Allied Health, Nursing, and Applied Science and Technology established
1979
- First student representative serves on alumni board
- Sherrod Library designated state document depository
1980
- Dr. Ronald E. Beller becomes the sixth president of East Tennessee State University.
May 1980
- Residency program in surgery receives accreditation
June 27, 1980
- Quillen-Dishner College of Medicine officially named by the State Board of Regents
October 11, 1980
- ETSU parrot “Pepper” comes in a big egg and hatches during the homecoming festivities
Fall 1980
- ETSU goes on the semester system
- First NCAA riflery championships held at ETSU
1981
- State Board of Regents approves master of education degree at ETSU
- Teresa Bowers selected as first distinguished alumna of the arts
- Construction of WETS-FM transmitter tower and building on Holston Mountain begins
November 7, 1981
- Entertainers Chet Atkins, Floyd Cramer, Boots Randolph, and Helen Reddy join Gov. Lamar Alexander at Johnson City’s Freedom Hall to raise money for the Floyd Cramer Scholarship Fund in ETSU’s Department of Music
1982
- Perrier Fitness Trail, 1.3 miles, with 18 fitness stations, completed
- Quillen-Dishner College of Medicine receives full accreditation from Liaison Committee on Medical Education
- First M.D. degrees awarded by Quillen-Dishner College of Medicine
1983
- Medical school facility opens on Veterans Administration grounds
- Student Services Center established in the Culp University Center to meet special needs of commuting and nontraditional students
- Residency program in pathology receives accreditation
October 14, 1983
- Congressman James H. Quillen dedicates medical school facility at Veterans Administration
July 1, 1984
- Center for Appalachian Studies and Services (CASS) opens
- Dr. Jack Higgs, Department of English, named one of the eight top university professors in the United States by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE)
August 1984
- Cooper Annex demolished
- First dry (non-alcoholic) rush held by fraternities
September 6, 1984
- Senators Albert Gore, Jr. (D.-TN), and Claude Pepper (D-FL) convene a senate subcommittee hearing on Alzheimer’s disease at the D. P. Culp University Center
September 1984
- ETSU Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology approved by State Board of Regents
October 1984
- CASE president James Fisher addresses the first university-wide convocation
- Brown Hall (science) renovated
1985
- First issue of Now and Then published by Center for Appalachian Studies and Services
May 18, 1985
- Vice President George Bush visits ETSU to honor Congressman and Mrs. James H. Quillen at a reception to recognize the creation of the Cecile Cox Quillen Chair of Medicine
- East Tennessee State University named a Homecoming ’86 community by the State of Tennessee
August 23, 1985
- Medical library dedicated at Quillen-Dishner College of Medicine
October 10, 1985
- A proclamation ceremony held to kick off ETSU’s 75th birthday celebration (ETSU President Dr. Ronald E. Beller presented a letter of congratulations from President Reagan on Oct. 23 – 1985 Homecoming proclamation ceremony)
- Burleson Hall (English) renovated
- Residency program in psychiatry receives accreditation
November 1985
- Environmental health department’s baccalaureate and graduate programs reaccredited and declared “best in U.S.” by National Environmental Health Association
1986
- ETSU celebrates its diamond anniversary – 75 years of tradition and vision in East Tennessee
- Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series begins; addresses delivered by Felix C. Lowe, Alex Haley, Wally Schirra and F. Lee Bailey
September 3, 1986
- Ribbon cutting ceremony for the addition of bus shuttle system for campus transport with university and city officials, partners with the Johnson City Transit System
September 4, 1986
- Joan Mondale, wife of former Vice President Walter Mondale, delivers the fifth talk in the Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series in honor of former ETSU President Dr. Arthur H. DeRosier Jr.
October 1, 1986
- Sixth lecture in the Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series featuring John Naisbitt, author of Megatrends, in honor of Dr. Ronald E. Beller, ETSU President since 1980.
October 4, 1986
- Thirty-minute television documentary airs on WCYB: East Tennessee State University: 75 Years of Excellence
October 23, 1986
- Quillen-Dishner College of Medicine receives three-year accreditation, the longest period in the medical school’s history
April 14, 1987
- College of Business achieves accreditation of its bachelor’s and master’s programs from the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business
August 3, 1987
- Record year in research and sponsored programs support, with over $5 million received
September 3, 1987
- ETSU rings the Unity Bell as well as the historic hand bell at the Reece Museum for Bells Across America, a 200-minute bell-ringing ceremony celebrating the signing of the Constitution
September 9, 1987
- Record enrollment: 10,198
December 2, 1987
- ETSU’s Center for Adult Programs and Services opens
April 5, 1988
- ETSU adopts a new logo featuring a mountain range over the initials ETSU in Andover typeface, the work of 1973 art alumnus Richard D. Maxey
August 26, 1988
- Dedication ceremony for Carl A. Jones Hall at the Quillen-Dishner College of Medicine, named in honor of the President and Publisher of the Johnson City Press
September 13, 1988
- Record enrollment: 11,156, breaking the 11,000 mark for the first time
October 4, 1988
- Master’s program in Storytelling begins
October 13, 1988
- Former President Jimmy Carter visits ETSU to participate in the Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series
May 1989
- The inaugural George L. Carter Award is bestowed to Mr. Allen Harris, Jr.
June 30, 1989
- The ETSU medical school is renamed the James H. Quillen College of Medicine
July 3, 1989
- WETS-FM goes to 24-hour programming
October 26, 1989
- Professor Andrei Anikin, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s chief advisor on economic restructuring, is featured speaker in the Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series
January 23, 1990
- President Gerald R. Ford speaks as part of the Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series
March 14, 1990
- U. S. Senator Albert Gore, Jr., is the keynote speaker for Earth Day
May 1990
- College of Nursing opens Johnson City Downtown Clinic
September 1990
- Mountain City Extended Hours Health Center, which is managed by the ETSU College of Nursing, opens
November 9, 1990
- ETSU Bluegrass Band participates in the Soviet Union’s International Folk Festival in Moscow
April 8, 1991
- Rev. Jesse Jackson speaks as part of the Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series
June 1991
- ETSU announces $6.1 million grant from the W. K. Kellogg Foundation to initiate the Community Partnerships for Health Professions Education Program
July 1, 1991
- Dr. Bert C. Bach named Interim President
September 13, 1991
March 20, 1992
- Men’s basketball defeats No. 3 seed Arizona in the first round of the NCAA Tournament
May 1992
- Dr. Roy S. Nicks named Interim President and obtains the post on a permanent basis one year later
June 6, 1992
- James H. Quillen College of Medicine dedicates the Palma L. Robinson Clinical Education Center
October 24, 1992
- Hostage negotiator Terry Waite speaks as part of the Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series
August 1993
September 9, 1993
- Harry Smith from CBS News delivers talk in Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series
June 10, 1994
- News conference announcing Alias|Silicon Graphics partnership with ETSU
October 13, 1994
- Ribbon-cutting held for computer lab in Culp Center
March 12, 1995
- University School announces it will go to year-round schedule
March 28, 1995
- Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series hosts Cherokee Chief Wilma Mankiller
February 6, 1996
April 2, 1996
- ETSU Computer Science program ranked as national leader by Computerworld
October 22, 1996
- Groundbreaking for new library
December 31, 1996
January 1, 1997
- Dr. Paul E. Stanton, Jr. becomes the eighth president of ETSU
August 1, 1997
- Smoking ban enforced in ETSU buildings
August 6, 1997
- Record year for research and sponsored programs: $14 million
October 2, 1997
- Novelist William Styron speaks as part of the Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series
May 14, 1998
- ETSU Foundation records first $10 million year in private giving
August 19, 1998
- ETSU tops $20 million for research funding
January 11, 1999
- The new Charles C. Sherrod Library opens
February 24, 1999
- The Presidential Distinguished Lecture Series hosts Linda Wertheimer from National Public Radio
February 27, 2000
- Charles C. Sherrod Library recognized nationally as “Outstanding Building” in the 1999 Architectural Portfolio of American School & University magazine
August 23, 2000
- ETSU receives $26.7 million in research funding
August 2000
- ETSU admits first class of students in the Roan Scholars Leadership Program
October 25, 2000
- ETSU publishes Home and Away: A University Brings Food to the Table, a book of stories and recipes
March 27, 2001
- ETSU dedicates the Scott M. Niswonger Digital Media Center
April 25, 2001
- ETSU Division of Theatre presents Hear That Whistle Blow…Erwin Train A Coming at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington D.C.
September 11, 2001
- ETSU classes cancelled due to terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in New York City
September 27, 2001
- ETSU celebrates $90 million fundraising campaign total on 90th birthday
January 18, 2002
- James H. Quillen College of Medicine dedicates Stanton-Gerber Hall, basic sciences building, in honor of ETSU President Dr. Paul E. Stanton, Jr., and Dr. Carl J. Gerber, director of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center
May 9, 2002
- Annual giving pushes Campaign for ETSU Tomorrow total to $105 million
September 26, 2002
- Tennessee Governor Don Sundquist announces $8 million Tennessee Department of Transportation grant for development of visitor center at Gray Fossil Site
October 21, 2002
- ETSU becomes the first institution in the Tennessee Board of Regents and University of Tennessee systems to create its own research foundation
July 1, 2003
- College of Business and College of Applied Science and Technology merge to form College of Business and Technology
November 22, 2003
- ETSU football team plays final game, winning 16-13 over The Citadel
January 28, 2004
- Congressman James H. Quillen leaves ETSU over $14.6 million for two scholarship endowments
February 13, 2004
- Rare red panda found at ETSU’s Gray Fossil Site
February 27, 2004
- ETSU unveils Center for Experiential Learning at the College of Medicine
April 2, 2004
- ETSU names College of Education for Claudius G. Clemmer, a former teacher in a one-room school
October 30, 2004
- The ETSU Alumni Gallery, which includes the George L. Carter and the Outstanding Alumni Walls, is dedicated in the D.P. Culp University Center.
March 17, 2005
- Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen issues a challenge that ETSU raise $5 million in 90 days for a proposed College of Pharmacy before going to the Tennessee Board of Regents and Tennessee Higher Education Commission for approval, and an additional $2.5 million before the arrival of the first class
July 1, 2005
- ETSU Honors College is established
July 14, 2005
- The Tennessee Higher Education Commission gives the final authorization for the ETSU College of Pharmacy
August 2005
- ETSU joins Atlantic Sun Conference
August 31, 2005
- Dedication held for the ETSU Foundation Carillon and Alumni Plaza, which was the first gift to the university to celebrate ETSU’s upcoming centennial
January 5, 2006
- East Tennessee State University is among nation’s first to receive accreditation from the Association for the Accreditation of Human Research Protection Programs, Inc. (AAHRPP)
March 21, 2006
- Dr. Maya Angelou gives lecture at ETSU
September 15, 2006
- ETSU dedicates Roy S. Nicks Hall in the renovated building that formerly housed the Charles C. Sherrod Library
December 16, 2006
- ETSU begins holding two commencement ceremonies
January 8, 2007
- Inaugural white coat ceremony for the College of Pharmacy is held in D. P. Culp University Center
March 3, 2007
- U.S.News & World Report ranks Quillen College of Medicine third in nation for excellence in rural medicine
August 31, 2007
- ETSU and General Shale Brick Natural History Museum and Visitor Center at the Gray Fossil Site opens to the general public
October 26, 2007
- Governors Hall, new ETSU residence facility, dedicated
October 30, 2007
- The ETSU PRIDE Walk is dedicated.
November 8, 2007
- George L. Carter Railroad Museum opens
December 17, 2007
- College of Public and Allied Health splits to become two colleges: College of Public Health and the College of Clinical and Rehabilitative Health Sciences
February 16, 2008
- ETSU celebrates “Program of the Year” award from the National Rural Health Association (NRHA), presented to the Community Partnerships for Health Professions Education Program
February 19, 2008
- Nearly complete skeleton of fossil red panda discovered at ETSU Gray Fossil Site is only one in the world and the “find of a lifetime”
May 22, 2008
- Pharmacy school named in honor of benefactor Bill Gatton
June 16, 2008
- The William L. Jenkins Forensic Center is dedicated
June 24, 2008
- The Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE) awards Candidate Status to the Bill Gatton College of Pharmacy
August 11, 2008
- ETSU becomes a Tobacco-Free Campus
February 6, 2009
- Mary B. Martin School of the Arts established
September 16, 2009
- ETSU enrollment tops 14,000
October 2009
- ETSU’s College of Public Health receives accreditation from the Council on Education for Public Health, becoming the first school in Tennessee, and the only one in South-Central Appalachia, to earn that designation
November 3, 2009
- ETSU announces the nation’s first doctoral program in sport science and physiology
November 20, 2009
- ETSU announces the world’s first major in Bluegrass, Old-Time and Country Music, offered through the College of Arts and Sciences’ Department of Appalachian Studies
July 1, 2010
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