Michael P. Malone

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Michael P. Malone
10th President of
Montana State University
In office
January 1, 1991 (acting)
March 1991 (permanent) – December 21, 1999
Preceded byWilliam Tietz
Succeeded byGeoffrey Gamble
Personal details
Born(1940-04-18)April 18, 1940
Pomeroy, Washington, United States
DiedDecember 21, 1999(1999-12-21) (aged 59)
Bozeman, Montana, United States
SpouseKathleen Campbell Malone
ChildrenMolly, Thomas;
Clint, Molly, Wendy (stepchildren)
Alma materGonzaga University
Washington State University
ProfessionProfessor of History
Websitewww.montana.edu

Michael Peter Malone (April 18, 1940 – December 21, 1999) was an American

The Missoulian and the Great Falls Tribune newspapers as one of the 100 most influential Montanans of the 20th century. His Montana: A History of Two Centuries (co-written with Richard B. Roeder) was called the "definitive history of the state" by the Bozeman Daily Chronicle.[1]

Early life

Malone was born on April 18, 1940, in Pomeroy, Washington, to John and Delores (Cheyne) Malone.[2][3] His father was the son of a farmer who (with his brothers) owned several farms in Garfield, Walla Walla, and Whitman counties. The Malones were of Irish descent, and Michael was deeply proud of his heritage.[4] His mother, Delores, was born in Zillah, Washington, and his parents married on November 14, 1936. Malone's father managed McKeirnan Hardware and Implement in Pomeroy, and attended Holy Rosary Catholic Church.[3]

Michael was the Malone's only child. However, in 1954, the Malones' close friends, Jack and Kathryn Bowman, died in an automobile accident. The Malones then raised the Bowmans' four children, Ray, Wynn, Kevin, and Jennie. Michael Malone considered them his half-siblings.[3] As a teenager, he worked harvesting peas for the Green Giant vegetable company.[4] Michael "had an especially close relationship with his father",[1] and he had a significant influence on Michael.[4] Michael Malone later said his father was the "finest man he ever knew".[1] John Malone suffered from severe cardiac problems in the 1960s, which worried Michael a great deal.[4] John Malone died in 1972,[4] and Michael believed that he lost a great deal from losing his father at an early age.[4]

Malone's mother married Ronald L. Chard of Pomeroy in 1974. She died at the age of 84 in May 1998, just 18 months before her son.[3]

Malone enrolled at

magna cum laude with a bachelor's degree.[6] He then enrolled in the doctorate program in American studies at Washington State University in Pullman, Washington, graduating with a Ph.D. in 1966.[2]

Academic career

Malone sought and won a teaching position at Texas A&M University for the 1966–1967 school year.[2]

He left Texas A&M and took a position as an assistant history professor at Montana State University in the fall of 1967.[5] He was promoted to associate professor in 1970 and professor in 1973.[5] He was named head of the Department of History and Philosophy in 1976. Three years later, he was appointed dean of graduate studies for the entire university.[2] He was appointed director of the Burton K. Wheeler Center at MSU in 1987, and served in that position until 1990. He resigned as dean of graduate studies in 1988 after being named interim vice president for academic affairs.[2] He was reappointed interim vice president twice more, in 1989 and 1990.[6]

During his academic career at MSU, Malone wrote seven books. His 1989 book, The American West (co-authored with Richard W. Etulain) was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.[6] By 1990, he was working on a biography of James J. Hill, the late 19th and early 20th century railroad executive whose Great Northern Railway played a critical role in the economic expansion of Montana.[6]

He also traveled widely across Montana, lecturing in many of the state's small towns on Montana history. In 1972 and 1973, he and fellow MSU professor of history Richard Roeder traveled across the state to educate citizens about the newly created Montana Committee for the Humanities (now known as Humanities Montana), which greatly enhanced public participation in the agency's programs. He also lectured extensively throughout the West on a variety of topics in the history of the American West.[7]

As dean of graduate studies, Malone was critical of what he perceived as the state's lack of foresight regarding higher education. He told the Los Angeles Times that the state legislature was unwilling to invest in academic disciplines that would help build the technology sector, and generally failed to invest in higher education as a whole. He also criticized the state for failing to teach business skills and entrepreneurship. "We're victims of the old mind-set, that any corporation heading for Montana must be bent on rape. Montana is the last of the Old West and we're in crisis and we're not doing the most obvious things that have to be done," he said. "We're trying to preserve a unique life style and trying to put our feet into the future at the same time. So far we really haven't come to terms with the conflict this creates."[8]

In 1987, Malone pressed the United States Congress to make "tuition-remission" scholarships tax-exempt, so that more students would be encouraged to seek graduate education.[9]

Montana State University presidency

Appointment

Montana State University president William Tietz announced his retirement at the end of 1990.[10]

Malone was unanimously named MSU's acting president on January 1, 1991,[6] at a salary of $86,000 per year. After a nationwide search, the board of regents of the Montana University System narrowed the list of finalists to three: Malone; Dr. Harold Allen, vice president for graduate studies, research and economic development at the University of Toledo; and Dr. Rex Cottle, dean of the School of Business at the University of Mississippi (and later president of Lamar University in Texas). In March 1991, Malone was named MSU's 10th president.[5]

Presidential achievements

Malone was the first MSU president to preside over the Billings, Great Falls, and Havre campuses.[2][11] He subsequently appointed the first chancellors of the three major campuses in 1995: Ron Sexton at Montana State University Billings, Will Weaver at Great Falls College Montana State University, and William Daehling at Montana State University–Northern. He also appointed the second chancellor at MSU-Northern, Michael Rao.[12]

Malone's governance style was democratic and personal. Faculty, employee, and student leaders agreed that he sought input and consensus on decisions.[5] Malone was personable and friendly to faculty, workers, and students alike. His willingness to talk one-on-one with clerical staff was "unusual", according to university registrar Chuck Nelson.[5]

Malone's friendly style extended to his relationship with the state legislature as well. Tom Stump, MSU's vice president for finances, said Malone was personally quite popular with legislators and their staff. MSU's chief lobbyist, Cathy Conover, also noted that Malone sought to provide the legislature with the right information and an honest assessment, which earned him a great deal of personal respect.[5]

During Malone's presidency, Montana State University witnessed "one of the greatest expansions in campus history", as a large number of new buildings were constructed.

Brick Breeden Fieldhouse, the $12 million Agricultural Biosciences Building (1999), and the $7.5 million Renne Library renovation (1999).[5]

The refurbishment of the two athletics buildings was especially important. Bruce Parker, MSU's associated athletics director, said funding for these projects was directly attributable to the president: "None of the athletics renovations would have happened without Mike Malone".[5] The stadium renovation included new public-area seating, three tiers of skyboxes, and a camera deck to permit televising of games. Inside the stadium were a new second-floor banquet room, third-floor bar and concessions area, and handicapped-accessible seating, doors, restrooms, and other areas throughout the structure. Every skybox contained indoor seating for 12, outdoor seating for 12 (with overhead radiant heating elements), and blue-and-gold floor tiled wet bars, and cost $7,000 to construct. Two-thirds of the skyboxes had been rented by the time the renovations were complete.[13]

In 1999, Malone fired Bobcats football head coach Cliff Hysell after eight losing seasons. Malone hired Mike Kramer, the winning coach at Eastern Washington University.[14]

Research and enrollment were other areas where Malone achieved success. He pushed hard for faculty and the university to seek and win federal funding for scientific research. The success here was significant: Federal research funding grew from just $13 million in the late 1980s to more than $50 million in 1999.[1] The undergraduate curriculum was revamped,[1] and he pushed a program to "guarantee" that each student could graduate within four years.[15] Under Malone's leadership, enrollment at Montana State University hit a historic high of 11,746 students in 1999.[5] Consistent with his earlier focus on technology development and education, he also established the Burns Telecommunications Center.[1]

Financial pressures were heavy during Malone's tenure. He reenergized and expanded alumni fund-raising programs and worked to have alumni become more active in campus life, and pushed the MSU Foundation to redouble its fund-raising efforts.

MEA-MFT struck for higher pay in 1992, and Malone lobbied the state legislature for higher clerical/administrative pay in 1998.[5]

Scandals

Two minor scandals hit Montana State University during Malone's tenure: The

NCAA rules. Malone's consensus-building governance style was apparent in both cases, according to vice president for student affairs Allen Yarnell.[5]

College National Finals Rodeo
From 1971 to 1996, the College National Finals Rodeo was held every year at the MSU campus in Bozeman.
[17] For years, the U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Company had distributed free samples of Skoal and Copenhagen dipping tobacco to students at the event.[18] The event moved away from MSU in 1997 after 1996 attendance fell 3,000 short of the 25,000-attendee goal.[17] During that year, Malone held meetings during which it was decided that, should the rodeo finals return, smokeless tobacco products could no longer be distributed on campus. The consensus was that this was not a controversial issue.[19] But in late August 1998, the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association (NIRA) voted unanimously to not return to Bozeman due to the no-tobacco-handouts rule.[19] MSU rodeo coach John Larick public voiced his opposition to Malone's decision, which he called "disgusting".[18] The Bozeman Area Chamber of Commerce also expressed its unhappiness,[18] as the event brought about $1.2 million a year to the local economy.[17]

MSU and Bozeman business leaders attempted to compromise with the NIRA by offering to permit distribution of coupons for free or discounted tobacco products. Malone expressed his willingness to compromise, so long as tobacco was not distributed free.[18] Despite local business opposition to the university's decision, Malone said he had received 20 positive and 13 negative comments from the public, and would stand firm.[18] But on October 2, 1998, NIRA reaffirmed its decision not to return to Bozeman. The association said U.S. Smokeless Tobacco donated $200,000 in rodeo scholarships each year, and it would not alienate this sponsor. MSU vice president Glenn Lewis expressed his view that NIRA never seriously considered the coupon alternative.[17]

Women's basketball
On October 31, 1999, Malone fired MSU women's basketball head coach Tracey Sheehan and assistant coach Jeff Malby. Complaints by student-athletes, athletics department personnel, students' doctors, and team trainers led to an NCAA investigation into charges that the two coaches were overworking their team. The NCAA found that athletes were required to engage in pre-season practice longer than the eight hours per week allowed by the NCAA. (In some cases, athletes were required to practice 16 hours a week or more.) Coaches demanded that athletes return to practice before injuries were fully healed, an excessive number of "overuse injuries" were occurring, and coaches disregarded the welfare of the athletes in their care. (NCAA rules forbid excessive practice that results in stress injuries or overuse injuries, and require coaches to follow doctors' advice when seeking to return an athlete to active status.) As many as 15 athletes on the Lady Bobcats team had overuse injuries such as

tendonitis. The NCAA also found that the two coaches regularly exceeded the number of allowable hours for "athletically related activities" and failed to provide the mandatory "positive relationship between student athletes and coach...by engaging in activities which are [...] conducive to the welfare of student athletes".[20]

The NCAA permitted Montana State to impose its own sanctions on the women's basketball program.[20]

Criticisms

Although widely considered a successful president and very well-liked, Malone received criticism in several areas.

In 2009, MSU chief legislative lobbyist Cathy Conover said that relations with the state legislature had been somewhat poor under Malone (although she did not name him explicitly). She expressed her opinion that MSU officials talked too much about how little money they had, and criticized the legislature too much for not investing in higher education. She believed that Malone's successor, Geoffrey Gamble, had a far more positive style that was "a sea change" and which led the Republican-dominated state legislature to rave about him.[21]

Gamble himself implicitly criticized some of Malone's financial decisions. The football stadium renovations, he noted, had gone ahead even though MSU did not have the money in-hand to pay for them. That, he noted, was a common budgetary tactic at MSU. One of the first financial rules Gamble laid down when his presidency began was to pledge that the university would not initiate projects without having the money to complete them.[21]

Others also questions Malone's financial priorities. Tuition doubled during his time in office, angering students. Some faculty criticized his willingness to construct new buildings while declining to pay for teaching equipment (copiers and projectors) and maintenance (such as fixing broken or defective thermostats). According to the Bozeman Daily Chronicle, Malone tried to respond to these criticisms by rescinding some budget cuts, and by creating a new faculty/student/worker budget committee to make recommendations about spending priorities.[5]

Death

Malone was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy in 1995. According to physicians, his heart was damaged by an undetected viral infection some years earlier, and was greatly enlarged and weakened.[5]

Michael P. Malone died at 1:15 a.m. at

heart attack at 1:15 A.M.[5]

His funeral was a private

Mass, and he was buried in the Catholic section of Sunset Hills Cemetery.[2]

Other roles

Malone was active in history, professional, and other organizations throughout his life.

He was a member of the board of directors of the National Association of State Universities and Land-grant Colleges (now known as the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities), and was chair of its International Commission.[2] He was also a board member of the Commission on Colleges of the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities and the Western Association of Graduate Schools.[1]

In addition to his many roles at Montana State University, he also served on the board of directors of the Montana State University Foundation and the board of trustees of the Museum of the Rockies.[7]

Malone served his profession in a wide range of ways. he was a member of the board of directors of the

Montana, The Magazine of Western History, Pacific Northwest Quarterly, and the Pacific Historical Review.[7]

Legacy

Michael P. Malone was widely respected as a historian of Montana and the American West. The Great Falls Tribune and The Missoulian, two large Montana newspapers, each named him one of the 100 most influential Montanans of the 20th century.[1][5] He was regularly interviewed in print and on television on various history subjects, including a lengthy segment for the PBS documentary series, The Irish in America.[5]

His popularity at MSU led to several awards and honors from the college. In 1999, the university established the Michael P. Malone Professor of History endowed chair in his honor. Nearly $50,000 was raised for the endowment in the first week after his death.

Tyrannosaurus rex held by the Museum of the Rockies. It was the first full-scale bronze skeleton of a dinosaur in the world, and was erected at the entrance of the museum. It was named "Big Mike" in his honor in 2002.[24] In 2010, MSU renamed the Centennial Mall the Michael Malone Centennial Mall to recognize his efforts which led to its construction.[25] In 2011, Malone was named as one of Montana State's most important presidents—following in the footsteps of William Tietz—by MSU historians Jeffrey Safford, Pierce Mullen, and Robert Rydell in an interview with the Bozeman Daily Chronicle.[26] Montana State University Archives and Special Collections holds the Michael P. Malone Papers, which consists of correspondence and research materials.[27]

Other organizations have also honored Malone. In 2000, the National Association of State Universities and Land-grant Colleges established the Michael P. Malone International Leadership Award to recognize individuals who make outstanding contributions in international education.[7][28] The same year, the Montana Ambassadors organization named its Educator of the Year award for Malone.[29] In 2002, the Western History Association established the Michael P. Malone Award for the best published article, commentary, or essay on state, provincial, or territorial history in North America.[30] Journalist Rick Allen won the first $500 Malone Award in 2002 for his article on the Montana Vigilantes.[31]

Publications

At the time of his death, Malone had written nine books and 20 articles.[2]

Among these were Montana: A History of Two Centuries, co-written with Richard B. Roeder. It was first published in 1976 and a revised edition (co-written with William L. Lang) issued in 1992.[32] One Montana newspaper called it "the standard text on state history".[5] Malone published The Battle for Butte in 1981. Lang, professor of history at Portland State University, called it "[o]ne of Malone's most important books" because it focused less on biography and parochially on Butte and analyzed the broader trends and pressures being exerted by emerging national corporations and economic consolidation.[25] His last work was Montana Century, a richly photographed coffee table book public in October 1999. It sold 13,000 copies in its first three months and by December 1999 was in its third printing.[5] In 1989, Malone and co-author Richard W. Etulain finished The American West. It was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.[6] When he died, Malone had a contract with Yale University Press to write a new book re-conceptualizing the history of the American West.[5]

Malone had a reputation as an excellent scholar and writer. Retired MSU professor of history Jeffrey Safford noted that Malone tended to synthesize the work of others with his own research, and was much more interested in the exercise of power than mere "who" and "where".[5] Journalist and author Timothy Egan, writing for the New York Times in 1993, argued that Malone avoided both the traditional cowboys-and-Indians view of the American West as well as the historical revisionism of "New West" historians. Malone argued for a return to source materials such as diaries and memoirs of the time, which neither treated settlers and Native Americans as if they were in a John Wayne movie nor made them out to be homogeneous outcasts. Original source materials, he argued, showed the West to be diverse and much more interesting than the more common depiction of white hard-scrabble farmers made it out to be.[33] According to Lang, Malone's emphasis on national and global factors in the history of the American West was controversial. Yet, it also had a significant impact at larger, reputable university history departments at Yale and Harvard.[25]

Malone did not stop practicing his profession once he became a university administrator. Although he did not have as much time to conduct research and write as he was promoted,[34] Safford characterized Malone's professional output as a university president as "absolutely extraordinary."[5]

Published books

  • The Search for Paradigm in Western American History, 1930-2000 (in progress, 1999; unfinished)
  • Montana Century: 100 Years in Pictures and Words (1999); editor
  • Montana: A Contemporary Profile (1997)
  • James J. Hill: Empire Builder of the Northwest (1996)
  • The American West: A Twentieth Century History (1989) with Richard W. Etulain [35]
  • Historians and the American West (1983) with Rodman W. Paul
  • The Battle for Butte: Mining and Politics on the Northern Frontier (1981)
  • Montana: A History of Two Centuries (1976) with Richard B. Roeder (1st ed.); with Roeder and William L. Lang (2d ed.) [36]
  • Montana As It Was, 1876: A Centennial Overview (1975) with Richard B. Roeder
  • C. Ben Ross and the New Deal in Idaho (1970); editor
  • The Montana Past: An Anthology (1969); editor with Richard B. Roeder

Personal life

Michael P. Michael married Kathleen Campbell on April 18, 1983.[2] He already had two children, Molly and Thomas.[1] He became a stepfather to Kathy's children Clint, Molly, and Wendy.[1]

He was survived in death by his wife, Kathy; his two children and three stepchildren, his stepfather, and his four foster siblings.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Obituary for Michael P. Malone." Bozeman Daily Chronicle. December 21, 1999. Accessed 2013-08-10.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Michael P. Malone, 59, Native of Pomeroy." Lewiston Morning Tribune. December 24, 1999.
  3. ^ a b c d "Dolores Malone Chard, 84, Pomeroy Homemaker." Lewiston Morning Tribune. May 27, 1998.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Mullen, Pierce. "Homage to the Life and Memory of Michael Peter Malone, 1940-1999." The Montana Professor. 10:1 (Winter 2000). Accessed 2013-08-10.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Schontzler, Gail. "MSU President Mike Malone Dies." Bozeman Daily Chronicle. December 21, 1999. Accessed 2013-08-10.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Garfield County Native Named MSU President." Lewiston Morning Tribune. November 6, 1991.
  7. ^ a b c d Cantrell, Anne. "President Michael P. Malone Heritage." Office of the President. Montana State University. No date. Accessed 2013-08-11.
  8. ^ Lamba, David. "Wary of Change." Los Angeles Times. October 23, 1986.
  9. ^ Luther, Jim. "Tax Amendments Would Benefit Investors, Alaskan Children, Football Coaches." Associated Press. July 23, 1987.
  10. ^ Schontzler, Gail. "Bill Tietz - The Maverick Who Shaped MSU." Bozeman Daily Chronicle. November 2, 2007.
  11. ^ On July 1, 1994, Montana restructured the Montana University System. Eastern Montana College in Billings, Montana Northern College in Havre, and the Vocational-Technical Center in Great Falls lost their independence and were made satellite campuses of Montana State University. Although Montana's seven tribal colleges remained independent (as they are sponsored by sovereign nations), the state required them to integrate their teaching, operations, and academic operations with both Montana State University and the University of Montana in order to continue to receive state funding.
  12. ^ Kurtzman, Laura. "College Leader Leaving." San Jose Mercury-News. April 16, 1998.
  13. ^ "Lutey, Tom. "Newly Refurbished MSU Stadium a Hit With Fans." Associated Press. September 7, 1998.
  14. ^ Bergum, Steve. "Bad Vibes From Start." The Spokesman Review. October 6, 2000.
  15. ^ "Across the USA." USA Today. September 13, 1994.
  16. ^ Kleinhuizen, Jeff. "Sprawling Montana Is An Academic Success Story." USA Today. February 26, 1991.
  17. ^ a b c d "College National Finals Rodeo Not Returning to Bozeman." Associated Press. October 3, 1998.
  18. ^ a b c d e "Montana State Not Giving Up On Luring College National Finals Rodeo." Associated Press. September 5, 1998.
  19. ^ a b "College Rodeo Site Smoked Over Chewing Tobacco Flap." Chicago Tribune. September 4, 1998; "National Rodeo Group Nixes College Site After Tobacco Giveaway Flap." Associated Press. September 4, 1998.
  20. ^ a b "MSU Women's Basketball Coaches Sheehan, Malby Fired." Associated Press. November 1, 1999.
  21. ^ a b Schontzler, Gail. "Geoff Gamble - A Hard Act to Follow." Bozeman Daily Chronicle. August 29, 2009.
  22. ^ "State and Regional." Associated Press. December 29, 1999.
  23. ^ "Murphy Gives Lecture as New Malone Professor of History." Bozeman Daily Chronicle. November 9, 2005.
  24. ^ Boswell, Evelyn and Trinity-Stevens, Annette. "Big Crowd, Big Mike: Turn Out for Paleontology Conference." Research and Creative Activities: 2001-2002. Office of the Vice President for Research. Montana State University. 2003. Archived 2011-02-07 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 2013-08-10.
  25. ^ a b c Schontzler, Gail. "Mike Malone Remembered for Making History at Montana State University, Remaking Western History." Bozeman Daily Chronicle. September 30, 2011. Accessed 2013-08-10.
  26. ^ Writer, GAIL SCHONTZLER, Chronicle Staff. "Presidential debate: Who were MSU's most important presidents?". Bozeman Daily Chronicle. Retrieved 2022-04-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ "Michael P. Malone papers, 1962-2000, Finding aid citation item from Montana State University (MSU) Library Archives Finding Aids Database - Montana State University (MSU) Library". arc.lib.montana.edu. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  28. ^ "Michael P. Malone International Leadership Awards." 2013 Call for Nominations. Commission on International Initiatives. Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities. 2013.[permanent dead link] Accessed 2013-08-11.
  29. ^ "MSU President Honored by Montana Ambassadors as Educator of the Year." MSU News Service. March 24, 2012. Accessed 2013-08-11.
  30. ^ "Author Wins Malone Award For Article on Montana Vigilantes." Bozeman Daily Chronicle. December 18, 2002.
  31. ^ "Author wins Malone award for article on Montana vigilantes." Bozeman Daily Chronicle. November 25, 2002. Accessed 2013-08-11.
  32. ^ Upchurch, Michael. "Some Titles From the Northwest Bookshelf." Seattle Times. June 7, 1992; "UW Press Has 2 New Books Coming in March." Lewiston Morning Tribune. February 7, 1992.
  33. ^ Egan, Timothy. "Offspring of Indians and Settlers Edit Histories of the Oregon Trail." New York Times. May 31, 1993.
  34. ^ Etulain, Richard W. "Preface." In Richard W. Etulain and Michael P. Malone. The American West: A Modern History, 1900 to the Present. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2007, p. xii.
  35. .
  36. .

External links