60th Anniversary Timeline: 1990s
Posted on December 13, 2023 by USA Marketing and Communications
A NEW ERA Founding President Dr. Frederick Whiddon retires. Both a pragmatist and a visionary, Whiddon in 35 years builds from scratch a major university. Stressing academic excellence, he strongly prefers hiring faculty members with doctoral degrees. He hands over to his successor a teaching, research and healthcare leader with nine schools and colleges and a hospital system. A year later, the University launches its first nine online classes, in education, business and nursing. Today, entire undergraduate and graduate programs are available online.
1990
Creating the Commons
èƵ buys the Kingswood Shopping Center, diagonally from campus at Old Shell Road and University Boulevard. It becomes University Commons, housing the College of Education and Professional Studies and the Department of Psychology.
1994
Youngest Grad
Ten-year-old Michael Kearney receives a degree in anthropology, becoming the world’s youngest-ever university graduate. Later pursuits include winning $1 million on the web-based game show “Gold Rush” and performing with an improvisational comedy troupe.
1995
From the NBA to USA
èƵ makes national news by hiring former National Basketball Association and University
of Minnesota Coach Bill Musselman. He leads èƵ to the NCAA postseason tournament
in his second season, then returns
to the NBA.
1997
Call her Dr. Secretary
èƵ awards its first-ever honorary degree, naming then-U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright a Doctor of Humane Letters.
1998
Secondary President
Dr. Frederick Whiddon retires as president. V. Gordon Moulton, vice president for services and planning, succeeds him. In his 15-year presidency, èƵ completes more than half a billion dollars’ worth of construction, greatly expands healthcare facilities and research programs, and becomes an economic powerhouse employing 5,500 people.
1999
Mitchell Center Opens
The 208,300-square foot Mitchell Center opens, giving èƵ a top-flight multipurpose facility for large events. It serves as the home for men’s and women’s basketball, for which it seats 10,000, and permanently brings Commencement to campus from its long-standing venue at the Mobile Civic Center.