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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, January 11, 2007

University of Hawai'i celebrating its centennial all this year

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By Loren Moreno
Advertiser Staff Writer

YOU'RE INVITED TO JOIN IN

Saturday: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Centennial Kickoff Celebration, UH-Manoa campus

Jan. 19: UH Day at the state Capitol

Feb. 14: UH Day of Volunteering

March 19: Signing Day activities at UH-Manoa, charter documents exhibit at Hawai'i Hall

April 27: Aloha Bash at Andrews Amphitheater at UH-Manoa

May 13: 96th annual commencement exercises

For a complete list, visit www.hawaii.edu/centennial/index.html.

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HIGHLIGHTS OF THE UNIVERSITY'S HISTORY

1907: Founded as the College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, a U.S. Land Grant institution

1912: Renamed College of Hawai'i and relocated to Manoa Valley

1922: Ka Leo O Hawai'i, the university's first student newspaper, is founded

1941: Classes suspended for two months following the Dec. 7 Pearl Harbor attack

1951: UH-Hilo approved

1964: The UH community colleges system established, with Honolulu, Kapi'olani, Kaua'i and Maui campuses

1969: Leeward Community College opens

1972: Windward Community College opens

1976: West O'ahu College opens

1989: West O'ahu College becomes UH-West O'ahu

1990: Hawai'i Community College established

2001: UH-Hilo offers the nation's first master's degree in indigenous language and the first such doctoral program three years later

2004: Flood inundates the UH-Manoa campus

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A yearlong celebration of the University of Hawai'i's 100-year history will begin this weekend with a kickoff event on the UH-Manoa campus.

Since its founding in 1907 as the College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, more than a million students have trickled through the doors of UH-Manoa. What began as a school of fewer than 10 students and 13 faculty members in Thomas Square in Honolulu has grown to the state's largest university, based in lush Manoa Valley with more than 20,000 students enrolled.

Its distinguished alumni include U.S. Sen. Daniel Akaka, the late U.S. Rep. Patsy Mink, former U.S. Rep. Patricia Saiki and Army Maj. Gen. Robert G.F. Lee.

The university's flagship campus will mark a century of higher education with a campuswide open house on Saturday. Over the next year, events will focus on the centennial theme "Honoring Our Past, Celebrating Our Present, Creating our Future."

The celebration will include a Centennial Distinguished Lecture Series, bringing internationally recognized scholars to UH-Manoa.

"The University of Hawai'i touches virtually every family in Hawai'i in some way, and it's important for people to remember and recognize that," said Manoa chancellor Denise Konan.

"More than half of the university's hundred years unfolded first at Manoa, and so our campus serves as the foundation for what we know as the great university system of today. The centennial commemoration is a great opportunity for people to connect — and reconnect — with the campus," she said.

This year also marks the centennial for the entire university system, which began with its flagship campus, UH-Manoa, and later grew to include UH-Hilo, UH-West O'ahu and seven community colleges. The state's higher-education system now serves more than 80,000 students.

To coincide with the milestone year, the University of Hawai'i Foundation is embarking on its most ambitious fundraising effort. The foundation has a centennial goal of $250 million and had raised more than $155 million as of December 2006.

Reach Loren Moreno at lmoreno@honoluluadvertiser.com.