History of Texas A&M University

History of Texas A&M University

The history of Texas A&M University, the first public institution of higher education in Texas, began in 1871, when the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas was established as a land-grant college by the Texas Legislature. Classes began on October 4, 1876. Although Texas A&M was originally established under the Texas Constitution as a branch of the yet-to-be-created University of Texas, subsequent acts of the Texas Legislature never gave the University any authority over Texas A&M.

For much of its first century, enrollment at Texas A&M was restricted to men who were willing to participate in the Corps of Cadets and receive military training. During this time, a limited number of women were allowed to attend classes but forbidden from gaining a degree. During World War I, 49% of A&M graduates were in military service, and in 1918, the senior class was mustered into military service to fight in France. During World War II, Texas A&M produced over 20,000 combat troops, contributing more officers than both of the military academies combined.

Shortly after World War II, the Texas Legislature redefined Texas A&M as a university and the flagship school of the Texas A&M University System, making official the school's status as a clear and separate institution from the University of Texas. In the 1960s, the state legislature renamed the school Texas A&M University, with the "A&M" becoming purely symbolic. Under the leadership of James Earl Rudder, the school became racially integrated and coeducational. Membership in the Corps of Cadets became voluntary.

In the latter half of the twentieth century, the university was recognized for its research with the designations sea-grant university and space-grant university. The school was further honored in 1997 with the establishment of the George Bush Presidential Library on the western edge of the campus.

Early years

The US Congress laid the groundwork for the establishment of Texas A&M with their proposal of the Morrill Act. The Morrill Act, signed into law July 2, 1862, was created to enable states to establish colleges where the "leading object shall be, without excluding other scientific and classical studies and including military tactics, to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and mechanical arts...in order to promote the liberal and practical education of the industrial classes in the several pursuits and professions in life". States were granted public lands to be sold at auctions to establish a permanent fund to support the schools. Both the Republic of Texas and the Texas State Legislature also set aside public lands for a future college.

The Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, known as Texas A.M.C., was established by the state legislature on April 17, 1871 as the state's first public institution of higher education.citation|title=The Texas Constitution, Article 7 - Education, Section 13 - Agricultural and Mechanical College|publisher=State of Texas|url=http://tlo2.tlc.state.tx.us/txconst/sections/cn000700-001300.html|accessdate=2007-08-06] The legislature provided US$75,000 for the construction of buildings at the new school, and state leaders invested profits from the sale of convert|180000|acre|km2|-1|sp=us received under the Land-Grant College Act in gold frontier defense bonds, creating a permanent endowment for the college. A committee tasked with finding a home for the new college chose Brazos County, which agreed to donate convert|2416|acre|km2|-1|sp=us of land.cite web|last = Dethloff|first = Henry C.|authorlink=Henry C. Dethloff|title = Texas A&M University|publisher = The Handbook of Texas|url = http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/TT/kct8.html|accessdate = 2007-03-22] Jefferson Davis, former President of the Confederate States of America, was offered the presidency of the college but turned it down. [cite web|last=Chapman|first=David L.|title=Thomas S. Gathright: Dedicated to Success, Doomed to Failure.|publisher=Cushing Memorial Library and Archives|url=http://library.tamu.edu/cushing/collectn/univarch/texag/articles/95/june.html|accessdate=2008-02-27]

The college officially opened on October 4, 1876 with six professors. Forty students were present on the first day of classes, but by the end of the school year the number had grown to 106 students. Only men were admitted, and all students were required to participate in the Corps of Cadets and receive military training. The campus bore minimal resemblance to its modern counterpart. Wild animals roamed freely around the campus, and the area served as a meeting point for the Great Western Cattle Trail.cite book | last = Dethloff | first = Henry C.|authorlink=Henry C. Dethloff | title =A Pictorial History of Texas A&M University, 1876–1976 | place=, Texas | publisher =Texas A&M University Press | year =1975 |pages=16–17]

Despite its name, the college taught no classes in agriculture, instead concentrating on classical studies, languages, literature, and applied mathematics. After four years, students could attain degrees in scientific agriculture, civil and mining engineering, and language and literature.Dethloff (1975), p 18.] Local farmers complained that the college was abusing its mission, and, in November 1879, the president and faculty were replaced and given a mandated curriculum in agriculture and engineering.

During these early years, student life was molded by the Corps of Cadets. The Corps was divided into a battalion of three companies, and rivalry among the companies was strong, giving birth to the Aggie spirit and future traditions. No bonfires, yell practices, or athletics teams existed as yet, and social clubs and fraternities were discouraged.Dethloff (1975), pp 21–22.]

Enrollment, which had climbed as high as 500 students, declined to only 80 students in 1883, the year the University of Texas opened in Austin, Texas. Although the Texas Constitution specified that the Agricultural and Mechanical College was to be a branch of a proposed University of Texas, the Austin school was established with a separate Board of Regents. Texas A.M.C. continued to be governed by its own Board of Directors.

The two Texas schools quickly began to battle over the limited funds that the state legislature made available for higher education. In 1887, the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station was established at Texas A.M.C., enabling the college to gain more funding. Many residents of the state saw little need for two colleges in Texas, and some wanted to close the agricultural and mechanical school.

ul Ross era

Texas A.M.C. president Lawrence Sullivan Ross, known affectionately to students as "Sully", is credited for saving the school from closure and transforming it into a respected military institution.citation | last=Ferrell | first=Christopher | title=Ross Elevated College from 'Reform School' | newspaper=The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date=2001 | url=http://theeagle.com/aandmnews/anniversary/1rossbio.htm | accessdate=2008-06-24] Ross, the immediate past governor of Texas, had been a well-respected Confederate Brigadier General and enjoyed a good reputation among state residents.

When Ross arrived at the school, he found no running water, a housing shortage, a disgruntled faculty, and many students running wild. As Ross began to make improvements, parents began to send their children to the school in the hopes that they would learn from Ross's example. Although enrollment had always been limited to men, in 1893, Ethel Hudson, the daughter of an A&M professor, became the first woman to attend classes at the school and helped edit the annual yearbook. She was made an honorary member of the class of 1895. Several years later her twin sisters became honorary members of the class of 1903, and slowly other daughters of Aggie professors were allowed to attend classes.

Under Ross's nowrap|seven and one-half year tenure, many enduring Aggie traditions formed. These traditions include the first Aggie Ring, the first yearbook, and the formation of the Aggie Band. Ross's tenure also saw the school's first intercollegiate football game, played against the University of Texas.

Program expansion

By 1910, the school listed nowrap|eight degree programs, including agriculture, architecture, agricultural engineering, chemical engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, and textile engineering. nowrap|Five years later the state legislature, in cooperation with the United States Department of Agriculture, established the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, organized the Texas Forest Service, and authorized a School of Veterinary Medicine at the college. The college was unprepared for the growth, and for the next nowrap|ten years nowrap|several hundred students lived in tents in a field in the middle of campus.

During this time, women were also given a more official standing. The Texas Legislature in 1911 refused to give A&M permission to hold a summer semester unless women were also permitted to attend. For the next several decades during the summers cadets were not required to be in uniform and women could attend class and participate in intramural activities.

Texas A&M graduates were called to use their military training during World War I, and by 1918, 49% of all graduates of the college were in military service, a larger percentage than any other college or university. In early September 1918, the entire senior class was mustered into military service, with plans to send the younger students at staggered dates throughout the next year. Many of the seniors were fighting in France when the war ended two months later.citation | last = Liffick | first = Brandie | title = Tradition spanning generations | newspaper = The Battalion | date = October 30, 2001 | url =http://media.www.thebatt.com/media/storage/paper657/news/2001/10/03/Ams125th/Tradition.Spanning.Generations-515912.shtml | accessdate = 2007-03-22] In total, over 1200 former students served as commissioned officers during World War I.

Texas A&M Hillel, the oldest Hillel organization in the United States, was founded in 1920 at the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas (now Texas A&M). The organization occurred three years before the national Hillel Foundation was organized at University of Illinois. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=abwSjUgVQwIC&pg=PA160&dq=texas+a%26m+hillel&sig=ACfU3U30Xh9TCM_YhhQJ2GihECDKVRsaGA From Christian Science to Jewish Science: Spiritual Healing and American Jews] Oxford University Press page 160] [cite news | url=http://www.jewishweek.org/news/newscontent.php3?artid=10860 | publisher=The Jewish Week | title=A Cushy Fit In Bush Country | author=Gabrielle Birkner | date=2005-05-06 | accessdate=2007-12-30]

After the war, Texas A&M grew rapidly and became nationally recognized for its programs in agriculture, engineering, and military science. The first graduate school was organized in 1924, and, in 1925, Mary Evelyn Crawford Locke became the first female to receive a diploma from Texas A&M, although she was not allowed to participate in the graduation ceremony.cite web | title=Crawford Learning Community | publisher=Texas A&M University Department of General Academic Programs | url=http://aggieaccess2.tamu.edu/crawfordlearningcomm.aspx | accessdate=2008-06-24] The following month the Board of Directors officially prohibited all women from enrolling. In 1926, they codified that women in summer school had an unofficial status and could not pursue a degree. By 1930, however, over nowrap|1800 women had attended classes at A&M.

In the late 1920s, following the discovery of oil on university lands, Texas A&M and the University of Texas negotiated a settlement for the division of the Permanent University Fund which enabled A&M to receive one-third of the revenue. This guaranteed wealth enabled A&M to expand. Enrollment increased even during the Great Depression, as student cooperative housing projects enabled the students to attend the school at low costs. During the Depression, as professors were forced to accept a 25% pay cut, the Board of Directors partially rescinded its order against female enrollment, allowing no more than nowrap|20 females at a time to enroll in the school, and further restricting the group to daughters of professors.citation | last=Kavanagh | first=Colleen | title=Questioning Tradition | newspaper=The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date=2001 | url=http://theeagle.com/aandmnews/anniversary/1questioningtradition.htm | accessdate=2008-06-24]

Texas A&M expanded its degree offerings in the late 1930s and awarded its first Ph.D. in 1940. Other programs at the college likewise began offering doctoral degrees throughout the next few decades.

World War II gave Texas A&M an opportunity to prove itself on a worldwide stage. The school produced nowrap|20,229 fighting men who served in combat; of these, 14,123 were officers, more than the combined total of the United States Naval Academy and the United States Military Academy and more than three times the totals of any other Senior Military College."Keepers of the Spirit", page 160, by John A. Adams Jr.] [cite web|url=http://cadets.tamu.edu/standard.aspx|title=Texas A&M Standard|publisher=Texas A&M Corps of Cadets|accessdate=2007-02-27|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070203022506/http://cadets.tamu.edu/standard.aspx|archivedate=2007-02-03] Seven Aggies received the Medal of Honor during the worldwide conflict, tying with Virginia Tech as the most of any school outside of the military academies at West Point and Annapolis, and nowrap|29 former students reached the rank of general. In addition, the college received nationwide exposure during the war when a reporter wrote a widely-distributed story about the Aggie Muster on the island of Corregidor.cite web |url = http://clubs.aggienetwork.com/emeraldcoastamc/muster.htm |title = Aggie Muster |accessdate = 2006-12-17 |publisher = Emerald Coast A&M Club ] The intense interest resulted in a World War II propaganda movie, "We've Never Been Licked", which was filmed on the A&M campus and showcased many of the school traditions. [citation|last=Crowther|first=Bosley|title=Movie Review: We've Never Been Licked (1943)|date=August 19, 1943|newspaper= The New York Times|url=http://movies2.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9503E0DD103CEE3BBC4152DFBE668388659EDE| accessdate=2007-08-03] [Cite web|title=We've Never Been Licked|publisher=AnneGwynne.Com|url=http://www.annegwynne.com/motion-picture/weve_never_been_licked.htm| accessdate=2007-08-03 | archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20051226140743/http://www.annegwynne.com/motion-picture/weve_never_been_licked.htm | archivedate=2005-12-26]

Though Texas A&M was originally established as a branch of the yet-to-be-created University of Texas, subsequent acts of the Texas Legislature never gave the University any authority over Texas A&M. This internal legal conflict in Texas was nullified in 1948 when Texas A&M became the flagship school of the newly created Texas A&M University System, a clear and separate institution from the University of Texas System. A&M's Board of Directors continued to oversee the system.cite web |title = A&M System History | publisher = Texas A&M University System | url =http://tamusystem.tamu.edu/overview/history.html | accessdate = 2007-03-22] Enrollment soared as many former soldiers used the G.I. Bill to further their education. Unprepared for the growth, between 1949 and 1953 Texas A&M used the former Bryan Air Force Base as an extension of the campus. An estimated nowrap|5,500 men lived, studied, ate, showered, and attended classes at the base, which became known as the Annex (and later as Riverside Campus).citation | last=Gillentine | first=Kristy | title=Aggies recall days at Annex | newspaper=The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date=March 11, 2007 | url=http://theeagle.com/stories/031107/am_20070311019.php| accessdate=2008-06-24]

Rudder era

The Texas Legislature defeated a nonbinding resolution in the 1950s to encourage A&M to admit women. The school newspaper, "The Battalion" began writing editorials to encourage coeducation, causing the Student Senate to demand the editor of the paper resign. Later in the year students defeated 2–1 a campus resolution on coeducation.

On March 26, 1959 retired Major General James Earl Rudder, who arguably had the most significant effect on the campus, became the 16th president of the college, his alma mater.Dethloff (1975), p. 184] At the time, the college was still an all-male military school with a nowrap|7,500 student enrollment. Within several years of his arrival, the 58th Legislature of Texas officially changed the name of the school from the A&M College of Texas to Texas A&M University. The Legislature specified that in the new name of the school, the A and the M were purely symbolic, reflecting the school's past, and no longer stood for "Agricultural and Mechanical".

With Rudder's strong encouragement, in 1963, the A&M Board of Directors officially reversed their stance on admitting women.citation | last=Ferrell | first=Christopher | title=Rudder's influence is evident on campus | newspaper=The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date=2001 | url=http://theeagle.com/aandmnews/anniversary/1rudderbio.htm | accessdate=2008-06-24] The wives and daughters of faculty, staff and students as well as female staff members were finally allowed to officially participate in undergraduate programs, although they were not permitted to join the Corps of Cadets.

The following year the college was officially integrated as A&M welcomed its first African American student. More change ensued, as, in 1965, the Board of Directors voted to make membership in the Corps of Cadets voluntary. The same year the Board voted to allow any woman, not just those connected to students and professors, to attend the university. The Board required that Rudder approve each female applicant; he accepted any woman who met the academic requirements. During Rudder's tenure, African-American students were also welcomed, and in 1967, James L. Courtney of Dallas became the first African-American to receive an undergraduate degree from Texas A&M University. He remained at Texas A&M and, in 1970, became the first African-American to receive a D.V.M. degree from the College of Veterinary Medicine.cite news |url=http://tamunews.tamu.edu/archives/article.php?articleid=3934&month=1&year=1998 |title=First African-American Vet Grad Honored As Outstanding Alumnus |accessdate=2008-06-24 |date=1998-01-19 |last=Charleton |first=Gene |publisher=Texas A&M University Office of University Relations]

When Rudder died in 1970, after nowrap|11 years as president of the school, Texas A&M University had grown to more than nowrap|14,000 students from all nowrap|50 states and nowrap|75 nations. The school had become coeducational and had even begun construction of an all-female dormitory. The curriculum had been broadened, with upgraded academic and faculty standards, and the school had initiated a multi-million dollar building program.Dethloff (1975), p. 188.]

Recent years

On September 17, 1971, Texas A&M University was one of the first four institutions to be designated a sea-grant college in recognition of oceanographic development and research. A third designation was added on August 31, 1989 when Texas A&M was named a space-grant college. The university remains one of few institutions nationwide to hold designations as a land-, sea-, and space-grant college. [cite web | title = About Us | publisher = Texas Sea Grant College Program | url = http://texas-sea-grant.tamu.edu/about/about.php | accessdate = 2007-05-10 ]

The Corps welcomed its first female members in the fall of 1974. At the time, the women were segregated into a special unit, known as W-1, and suffered harassment from many of their male counterparts.citation | last = Korzenewski | first = Claire-Jean | title = The First Women to Join the Cadets | newspaper = The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date = September 9, 2004 | url =http://www.theeagle.com/aandmnews/091004clairejean.php | accessdate = 2007-03-22] Women were originally prohibited from serving in leadership positions or in the more elite Corps units such as the band and Ross Volunteers. These groups were opened to female participation in 1988, following a federal court decision in a class-action lawsuit filed by a female cadet. Two years later, in 1990, female-only units were eliminated.citation | last = Nauman | first = Brett | title = Women Joined Corps 30 Years Ago | newspaper = The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date = September 10, 2004 | url =http://www.theeagle.com/aandmnews/091004womencadets.php | accessdate = 2007-03-22]

The George Bush Presidential Library was established in 1997 on convert|90|acre|m2|-1|sp=us of land donated by Texas A&M at the western edge of the campus. This tenth presidential library was built between 1995 and 1997 and contains the presidential and vice-presidential papers of George H.W. Bush and the vice-presidential papers of Dan Quayle.cite web | title = The Birth of the Tenth Presidential Library: The Bush Presidential Materials Project, 1993–1994 | publisher = George Bush Presidential Library | url=http://bushlibrary.tamu.edu/giq.html | accessdate=2007-03-22 | archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070807120208/http://bushlibrary.tamu.edu/giq.html | archivedate=2007-08-07]

To coincide with the opening of the George Bush Presidential Library, Texas A&M established the George Bush School of Government and Public Service. The school, offers a master's degree in public policy and one in international affairs as well as two research degrees, officially launched in 1997. It became a separate school within the university A&M in 1999.cite web | title=The Bush School of Government and Public Service: History | publisher = Texas A&M University | year=2005 | url=http://bush.tamu.edu/about%5Fus/history/ | accessdate=2007-03-22 | archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070624193315/http://bush.tamu.edu/about_us/history/ | archivedate=2007-06-24 ]

Bonfire collapse

At 2:32 a.m. on November 18, 1999, the partially completed Aggie Bonfire, standing convert|40|ft|m|0|sp=us tall and consisting of about nowrap|5000 logs, collapsed during construction. Of the nowrap|58 students and former students working on the stack, 12 were killed and 27 others were injured. The incident received nationwide attention, with over nowrap|50 satellite trucks broadcasting from the Texas A&M campus within hours.cite web | last=Cook | first=John Lee, Jr. | title=Bonfire Collapse | publisher=U.S. Department of Homeland Security | url=http://www.usfa.dhs.gov/downloads/pdf/publications/tr-133-508.pdf | format=PDF | accessdate=2007-03-03 | archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070207014046/http://www.usfa.dhs.gov/downloads/pdf/publications/tr-133-508.pdf | archivedate=2007-02-07]

On November 25, 1999, the date that Bonfire would have burned, Aggies instead held a vigil and remembrance ceremony on site. Over nowrap|40,000 people, including former President George H.W. Bush and his wife Barbara and then-Texas governor George W. Bush and his wife Laura, lit candles and observed up to nowrap|two hours of silence at the site of the Bonfire collapse.citation | last=Whitmarsch | first=Geneva | title=Thousands Mourn Fallen Aggies | newspaper=The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date=November 26, 1999 | url=http://theeagle.com/bonfire/storyarchive/november1999/261199a.htm| accessdate=2008-06-24 ]

A commission put together by Texas A&M University discovered that a number of factors led to the Bonfire collapse, including "excessive internal stresses" on the logs and "inadequate containment strength", where the wiring used to tie the logs together was not strong enough. The wiring broke after logs from upper tiers were "wedged" into lower tiers.

Texas A&M officials, Bonfire student leaders, and the university itself were the subject of several lawsuits by parents of the students injured or deceased in the collapse.citation | last=LeBas | first=John | title=Suits claim A&M tried to skirt Bonfire liability | newspaper=The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date=June 23, 2002 | url=http://theeagle.com/aandmnews/062302bonfireclaims.htm | accessdate=2008-06-24 ] On May 21, 2004, Federal Judge Samuel B. Kent dismissed all claims against the Texas A&M officials,citation | last =Pierce | first =Carrie | title = Court says A&M is not liable in Bonfire lawsuit | newspaper = The Battalion | date = June 2, 2004 | url =http://media.www.thebatt.com/media/storage/paper657/news/2004/06/02/News/Court.Says.Am.Is.Not.Liable.In.Bonfire.Lawsuit-683943.shtml | accessdate = 2007-03-13 ] and, in 2005, 36 of the 64 original defendants, including all of the student leaders, settled their portion of the case for an estimated nowrap|US$4.25 million, paid by their insurance companies.citation | last = Kapitan | first =Craig | title = Bonfire case under scrutiny by court | newspaper = The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date = September 3, 2006 | url =http://www.theeagle.com/stories/090306/am_20060903005.php | accessdate = 2007-03-13] citation | last =Avison | first =April | title = Judge dismisses a Bonfire lawsuit | newspaper = The Bryan-College Station Eagle | date = July 27, 2006 | url =http://www.theeagle.com/stories/072706/am_20060727029.php | accessdate = 2007-03-13 ] A federal appeals court dismissed the remaining lawsuits against Texas A&M and its officials in 2007.Citation | last = Van Der Werf | first =Martin |title = Appeals Court Upholds Dismissal of Lawsuits Over Texas A&M Bonfire Accident | newspaper = The Chronicle of Higher Education| date = April 25, 2007 | url =http://chronicle.com/news/article/2169/appeals-court-upholds-dismissal-of-lawsuits-over-texas-am-bonfire-accident|accessdate = 2007-05-24]

Vision 2020

In 1997, university president Ray Bowen appointed a task force to create a new strategic plan for the university. The task force, made up of more than 250 faculty, staff, students, former students, local residents, and various private- and public-sector representatives, devoted more than two years to examining all aspects of the university and studying benchmark institutions before unveiling the plan, dubbed Vision 2020, in 1999.

Vision 2020's goal is to make Texas A&M University recognized as a consensus "top 10" public university by the year 2020. The plan identifies nowrap|12 areas in which the university should focus on improving.cite web |url = http://www.tamu.edu/vision2020/ |title = Introduction |accessdate = 2007-01-02 |date = |publisher = Texas A&M University ] Dr. Robert M. Gates succeeded Bowen in 2002, and during his four year tenure as president, Vision 2020's short-term focus narrowed to four key steps: [cite web |url=http://www.tamu.edu/convocation/convaddress/gates2005.html |title=Convocation Address: 2005 |accessdate = 2007-01-02 |date = 2005-09-09 |publisher = Texas A&M University ]
* Increasing the size of the faculty by nowrap|447 positions within nowrap|five years.
* Improving student diversity among minority groups.
* Building new academic facilities totaling roughly nowrap|US$272 million.
* Enriching the undergraduate and graduate education experience.Gates' leadership resulted in the largest academic expansion in the university's history. As of September 8, 2006, Vision 2020's progress includes: [cite web | url=http://www.tamu.edu/convocation/convaddress/gates2006.html | title=Convocation Address: 2006 |accessdate=2008-06-24 |date=2006-09-08 | publisher=Texas A&M University ]

* 346 new teachers and researchers from around the world with completion slated for September 1, 2007
* Hispanic enrollment increased 9.6%, African-American enrollment increased 9.4%, and Asian-American enrollment rose 24.3% compared to 2005.
* Over nowrap|$500 million in new construction across campus including Interdisciplinary Life Sciences Building (nowrap|US$95 million), two emerging technologies buildings (nowrap|US$50 million each), and a nuclear magnetic resonance imaging building (nowrap|US$8 million).
* The student-faculty ratio dropped from 22:1 in 2001 to 20:1 in the fall of 2005.

Hurricane relief

Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Texas A&M opened Reed Arena as a temporary shelter to house over nowrap|200 evacuees from New Orleans. Although school was barely in session and there was minimal notice, the students and staff of A&M prepared the facility, setting up several hundred beds on the arena floor and making arrangements for the evacuees to get new clothes and have medical checks. Aggie students organized a child care facility, and Aggie athletes escorted teenagers to the Aggie Rec Center to play basketball.cite web | last=Gates | first=Robert M. | authorlink=Robert Gates | title=Relief Efforts at Texas A&M | publisher=Texas A&M University | date=September 6, 2005 | url=http://giving.tamu.edu/content/content.php?KatrinaLetter | accessdate=2007-02-27 | archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070214111536/http://giving.tamu.edu/content/content.php?KatrinaLetter | archivedate=2007-02-14] Less than three weeks later, Reed Arena was again opened as a temporary shelter for people fleeing Hurricane Rita.citation | last = Watkins | first = Matthew | title = A&M to host coastal evacuees, hospital transfers | newspaper = The Battalion | date = September 22, 2005 | url =http://media.www.thebatt.com/media/storage/paper657/news/2005/09/22/News/Am.To.Host.Coastal.Evacuees.Hospital.Transfers-994365.shtml | accessdate = 2007-02-27 ]

Current status

With strong support from Rice University and the University of Texas at Austin, the Association of American Universities inducted Texas A&M in May 2001, based on the depth of the university's research and academic programs.cite press release|title=Texas A&M Selected For Membership In Association Of American Universities|publisher=Texas A&M University|date=May 7, 2001|url=http://tamunews.tamu.edu/archives/article.php?articleid=10936&month=5&year=2001|accessdate=2008-06-24] Furthermore, in 2004, the honors organization Phi Beta Kappa opened its 265th chapter at Texas A&M.cite press release|title=Texas A&M Joins Phi Beta Kappa Ranks|publisher=Texas A&M University|date=February 17, 2004|url=http://tamunews.tamu.edu/archives/article.php?articleid=17464&month=2&year=2004|accessdate=2008-06-24]

On December 18, 2006, former Texas A&M University president Robert M. Gates was sworn in as the 22nd U.S. Secretary of Defense. Gates' successor, Elsa Murano, on January 3, 2008 became both the university's first female and first Hispanic president. [cite news|url=http://www.chron.com/CDA/archives/archive.mpl?id=2008_4488799|title=Murano wins confirmation as president of Texas A&M
publisher=Houston Chronicle|accessdate=2008-06-24|date=2008-01-04|author=Tresaugue, Matthew
]

The university has a current enrollment of more than 45,000, with more than 8,000 graduate and professional students, making it one of the largest universities in America. As of 2007, the percentage of women and men at the school are roughly equal. However, for a number of years female of the freshman class have outnumbered males. The university has awarded more than nowrap|320,000 degrees, of which 70,000 have been graduate and professional degrees.cite web | title = Texas A&M University Facts | publisher = Texas A&M University | url = http://www.tamu.edu/home/aboutam/amfacts/index.html | accessdate = 2007-03-22]

References

External links

* [http://cushing.tamu.edu/collections/images/ Historical Images of Texas A&M University - Cushing Memorial Library]


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