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1831: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees was created by the Alabama legislature.
March 7, 1860: The first class of 15 graduated from the Medical College of Alabama after a one-year term.
1869: Following the resumption of the school, five students graduated from the Medical College of Alabama after a one-year term.
January 1884: A group of Birmingham women met at the First Methodist Episcopal Church South and formed the Daughters of the United Charities.
October 23, 1888: The Hospital of the United Charities, a precursor to Hillman Hospital, opened in Birmingham.
October 13, 1893: With the start of the new school term, the Medical College of Alabama lengthened requirements for graduation from a two-year to three-year course.
June 9, 1894: The Birmingham Medical College was organized as a proprietary school and incorporated by the state legislature.
December 1, 1894: The Hospital of the United Charities (predecessor of the Hillman Hospital) burned to the ground.
1895: The first graduating class of the Birmingham Medical College was composed of one student, William Josiah Clark, who graduated after a one-year term.
1900: When opened for the fall term, the Department of Pharmacy at the Medical College of Alabama had two female students working toward a PhG degree: Lela M. Semler and Esther Turner Colston.
July 12, 1902: Cornerstones were laid for the Birmingham Medical College and the Hillman Hospital.
February 28, 1905: Hillman Hospital Training School for Nurses graduated its first class.
March 6, 1907: The Mobile medical school dissolved its own board of trustees, and The University of Alabama Board of Trustees gained sole control over the Mobile program.
September 12, 1912: The trustees of the proprietary Birmingham Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical College transferred all land, buildings, and equipment to The University of Alabama Board of Trustees, who agreed to continue the school until the enrolled students completed their studies.
May 27, 1915: The last class of 44 graduated from the Birmingham Medical College, and the program was terminated by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
1920: Doctor Clyde Brooks became the first dean of the University of Alabama’s two-year medical school in Tuscaloosa.
1922: Hillman Hospital received its first accreditation.
May 26, 1925: Jimmie Ethel Montgomery received a B.S. degree in Medicine from The University of Alabama, thus becoming the first female to graduate from the medical school.
April 1929: Hillman Hospital School of Nursing Residence was dedicated.
1932: Doctor Louise H. Branscomb, a gynecologist, became the first female physician granted staff privileges at the county-operated Hillman Hospital.
April 11, 1938: The cornerstone was laid -- after construction began -- on the Hillman Hospital Outpatient Clinic Building.
November 19, 1939: Hillman Hospital Outpatient Clinic Building was dedicated.
November 29, 1940: Brewer Dixon was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
1941: Doctor George H. Denny became president of The University of Alabama -- for a second time -- and served until the following year.
1942: In the fall term, E. A. Lowe became the second director of the Birmingham Extension Center.
June 2, 1943: The Jones Bill, Alabama Act 89, authorized an expansion of the two-year Medical College of Alabama to a four-year program and appropriated over $1.3 million for buildings, equipment, and maintenance.
August 1, 1944: Doctor Roy R. Kracke became first dean of the four-year Medical College of Alabama.
December 20, 1944: The University of Alabama entered into a 99-year contract with Jefferson County for the use of Jefferson and Hillman Hospitals.
June 27, 1945: With the Newton Bill, Alabama Act 207, the state legislature created The University of Alabama School of Dentistry but appropriated no funds for its operation.
1945: The Cullom Apartments located at the corner of South 20th Street and 8th Avenue South were acquired for use as student dormitories and as faculty housing.
November 30, 1946: William H. Key, Jr., was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
June 1947: In the immediate post-war years, total enrollment at the Birmingham Extension Center had surged to over 2,000 students.
November 22, 1947: William H. Mitchell was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
June 1948: Doctor Joseph F. Volker was named first dean of the School of Dentistry.
October 1948: A separate library was established for the School of Dentistry.
June 3, 1949: The Class of 1949, the first class to spend all four years of medical school in Birmingham, graduated with 24 male and 7 female students.
November 9, 1949: The Alabama legislature approved plans for a joint medical college and dental school building.
October 28, 1950: Thomas D. Russell was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
1950: School of Practical Nursing, a nine-month program, was established at Jefferson-Hillman Hospital.
Dix had appeared in the very first Town and Gown production back in 1950 and had starred in both the original Broadway and Hollywood versions of “Best Foot Forward."
June 1951: Eunice White received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Alabama School of Nursing, becoming the school’s first graduate.
1951: To complete the Medical and Dental Basic Science Building and Dental Clinic, the new basic science building at the Medical Center, Doctor Joseph F. Volker added several hospital beds to qualify for Federal funds under the Hill-Burton Act.
September 13, 1952: The Medical Center Library reopened in its new space in the South Wing of the first and second floors of the New Hillman Building.
1952: Construction began adjacent to the Medical Center on a new four-story “adult education center,” an administrative and classroom building to house the University of Alabama Birmingham Extension Center.
June 8, 1953: Students from the University of Alabama School of Nursing in Tuscaloosa first came to the Medical Center for clinical training in the hospital complex.
May 29, 1954: John A. Caddell was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
June 6, 1954: The new University of Alabama Extension Center Building was completed adjacent to the Medical Center and opened in official ceremonies.
December 1954: The former Birmingham Little Theater building on South 26th Street was donated to The University of Alabama by the family of General Louis V. Clark.
1954: Matthew F. McNulty, Jr., was appointed administrator of Jefferson-Hillman Hospital.
May 28, 1955: Jefferson-Hillman Hospital was renamed University Hospital and Hillman Clinic.
1955: Doctor Joseph F. Volker was appointed director of Research and Graduate Studies and continued as dean of the dental school.
August 11, 1956: Ernest G. Williams was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
January 1957: The Medical Center Bulletin was first published as the University of Alabama Medical Center News Bulletin.
1957: For the fall term, total enrollment at the Birmingham Extension Center was 1,856 students.
June 9, 1958: The deed to the ten and one-half block expansion area was transferred to The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
1958: Doctor George W. Campbell was named director of the Birmingham Extension Center.
December 1959: Birmingham native Patricia "Pat" Neal (later renamed as Fannie Flagg) appeared in a Town and Gown Theatre production of "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." She had one line of dialogue in her speaking debut.
July 1, 1960: Doctor Joseph F. Volker began a one-year leave-of-absence to direct the Arizona Medical School Study.
September 1960: Three medical-social fraternities, Phi Beta Pi (Sigma chapter), Nu Sigma Nu (Beta Phi chapter), and Phi Chi (Iota chapter), formed the first inter-fraternity council at the Medical Center.
1960: The world's first clinical use of a commercially made fiberoptic endoscope for observing the inside on an organ or cavity was used at University Hospital.
April 1961: A fund-raising goal of $850,000 was met for the expansion of the engineering programs at the Birmingham Extension Center, with a majority of the funds being provided by Birmingham businesses.
In 1961, the native of Red Level, Alabama, would be appointed Surgeon-General of the United States; he was the first Alabamian named as America’s top public health official.
July 1962: The Medical Center Apartments opened.
1962: The General Clinical Research Center was established at the Medical Center with a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Doctor Clifton K. Meador was named as the center's first director.
1963: Engineering students were first able to complete all four years of classes at the Birmingham Extension Center.
1963: The medical school's Division of Continuing Medical Education first offered continuing education courses to Alabama physicians.
May 27, 1964: The first Medical Student Research Day was held preceding the Honors Convocation of the Medical College of Alabama.
July 2, 1964: President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibited segregation in any facilities receiving federal funds from the Hill-Burton Act.
1964: First classes were held in the new Engineering Building adjacent to the Birmingham Extension Center.
1964: The Medical Rehabilitation Research and Training Center was established with Doctor William C. Fleming as director.
July 18, 1965: The former University Hospital School of Nursing Residence was rededicated as the Roy R. Kracke Clinical Services Building.
August 1965: University of Alabama Medical Center Foundation was created as a non-profit corporation.
September 1965: Sarah Louise Fisher became the first African American student in The University of Alabama School of Nursing, then located on the campus in Tuscaloosa.
April 27, 1966: Doctor Joseph F. Volker delivered the third Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Way of an Administrator."
September 15, 1966: The Birmingham Extension Center programs were elevated to the four-year College of General Studies, which remained as a branch of The University of Alabama.
December 1966: Senator Lister Hill announced original grant funding for the Alabama Regional Medical Program.
1966: Center for Hospital Continuing Education was established.
June 23, 1967: The Committee on Optometry, a joint state legislative committee chaired by Representative Hugh D. Merrill, found there was “a need for a school of optometry to be located in the State of Alabama” and recommended that it be placed “at an existing state university."
August 18, 1967: Jeremiah E. Abbott received the first master’s degree from the engineering program in the College of General Studies.
September 22, 1967: The Veterans Administration Research Wing was dedicated.
1967: The Alabama legislature granted its first direct appropriation ($1.1 million) to the College of General Studies.
June 1968: Barbara Walker Mitchell became the first African American graduate of the University Hospital School of Nursing.
1968: Alabama Transplant Center was created in the Medical Center and served as the clinical center for all transplant activities at UAB.
June 16, 1969: Doctor Joseph F. Volker was named first president of UAB.
August 29, 1969: Governor Albert P. Brewer signed an act appropriating $50,000 for the development of a School of Community and Allied Health Resources at UAB.
1969: For the first academic term of the newly independent UAB, the dental school at UAB had at least twenty-three clinical or basic science faculty with international backgrounds.
1969: Rust Research Center, which housed the university's computer center, opened.
March 1970: The Greater Birmingham Alliance to Stop Pollution (GASP) held its first meeting with over 50 attendees.
June 30, 1970: Doctor Florence A. Hixson retired as first dean of the School of Nursing.
December 1970: The first Ph.D. program, biology, was approved for the College of General Studies.
March 11, 1971: The Center for Developmental and Learning Disorders was named in honor of former Alabama governor Chauncey Sparks.
May 29, 1971: John T. Oliver, Jr., was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
September 1, 1971: Stevan Grebel became first director of UAB's ballet program; his wife, Melanie Mihalic Grebel, became assistant to the director.
September 1971: Doctor Jerry D. Young became first dean of the School of Business.
1971: UAB's central administrative offices opened in the 7-11 Building.
April 17, 1972: Doctor Charles A. McCallum, Jr., delivered the ninth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Challenge of Service."
September 24, 1972: Doctor Dalton E. McFarland received appointment as UAB’s first “University Professor,” a position designed to cross all school and departmental lines.
The SGA operated the coffee shop until it was closed in the winter of 1972.
1972: Air Force ROTC first became available to undergraduate students through a cooperative program with Samford University.
March 7-8, 1973: The Diabetes Research and Education Building was dedicated in the Medical Center as the nation's first public, university-affiliated diabetes hospital.
June 7, 1973: Doctor Frederick W. Conner became first dean of the School of Humanities.
June 7, 1973: Doctor George E. Passey became first dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences.
September 15, 1973: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved a resolution naming the University College Library as the Mervyn H. Sterne Library after the late Birmingham businessman and philanthropist Mervyn H. Sterne.
1973: The Diabetes Research and Training Center was established with Doctor William J. Reddy as first director.
March 1974: Doctor John B. Dunbar became first vice president for Administration.
October 5, 1974: The Silver Anniversary Celebration of the UAB Town and Gown Theatre was the inaugural theatrical event held at the city’s new Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center.
December 15, 1974: Patience Hodges Claybon became the first African American female graduate of the School of Medicine.
September 17, 1975: Doctor John W. Kirklin delivered the twelfth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Training of Horses, Quarterbacks, Pilots, and Surgeons."
1975: Doctor John W. Kirklin became the second president of The University of Alabama Health Services Foundation.
June 1, 1976: The Ambulatory Dialysis Center opened at 516 South 20th Street.
December 4, 1976: School of Community and Allied Health Resources was renamed the School of Public and Allied Health, Doctor Keith D. Blayney renamed as dean.
1976: The Center for Aging was established.
September 26, 1977: Doctor Thomas N. James delivered the fourteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Dobermans, Dalmatians, and Deaf Children."
1977: Sports Medicine Institute established as an official UAB center.
1977: World's first effective treatment for a viral disease, the deadly herpes simplex encephalitis, occurred at University Hospital.
February 1, 1978: The Russell Ambulatory Center was dedicated.
September 22, 1978: Doctor Marie L. O'Koren delivered the fifteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Nursing: Past Realities and Future Imperatives."
November 29, 1978: The School of Public and Allied Health was renamed the School of Community and Allied Health, Doctor Keith D. Blayney remained as dean.
1978: Blazer cheerleading squad of 10 formed in the spring with John Slivka and Susan Rheuby as Head Cheerleaders.
January 23, 1979: In a reception held in the Rust Research Center, Gladys McQueen was honored as UAB’s first “Employee of the Year.” She had been selected as the university’s first “Employee of the Month” the previous January.
October 19, 1979: Doctor J. Claude Bennett delivered the sixteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Bench and the Bedside."
October 26, 1979: Martha Simms Rambo and Thomas E. Rast were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
1979: Center for Nursing Research was established.
April 30, 1980: Twin Towers, a student residence hall, opened.
September 1980: The Army ROTC program was initiated at UAB, one of 41 universities throughout the country to gain an Reserve Officers' Training Corps program.
1980: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees dropped the designation University of Alabama System Medical Education Program (UASMEP) for the system’s medical programs in Birmingham, Huntsville, and Tuscaloosa.
1980: The former Jefferson County Public Health Building was demolished.
October 23, 1981: Doctor James A. Pittman, Jr., delivered the eighteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Progress."
May 17, 1982: Wanda Hightower Jordan became the first UAB athlete to have a jersey retired.
November 12, 1982: Doctor Max D. Cooper delivered the nineteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Of Mice, Men, and Chickens."
June 1983: The UAB Critical Care Transport Service began.
1983: Tom Seals became the first head coach of the new Rifle team.
November 9, 1984: Doctor Harriet P. Dustan delivered the twenty-first Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Alabama and The Golden Age of Medical Research."
1984: Doctor Anthony C. L. Barnard named dean and co-director of the Graduate School.
Bunn, who had retired in 1984, was the founding chairman and chief executive officer of the BellSouth Corporation.
April 15, 1985: UAB's first International Food Festival was held in the Mini Park.
June 27, 1985: Center for Health Risk Assessment and Disease Prevention was established.
November 15, 1985: Doctor Leonard H. Robinson delivered the twenty-second Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Excellence Revisited: Prescription for The Future."
January 23, 1986: The Ben S. Weil Endowed Chair of Industrial Distribution was established in the School of Business.
November 14, 1986: Doctor Charles E. Butterworth, Jr., delivered the twenty-third Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Function of A University Professor."
April 2, 1987: Doctor Cordell Wynn and George S. Shirley were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
June 2, 1987: School of Community and Allied Health was renamed the School of Health Related Professions, Doctor Keith D. Blayney remained as dean.
October 1987: Mervyn H. Sterne Library was rededicated after the completion of a major expansion and renovation project.
1987: The movie, “The Verne Miller Story,” was released.
February 5, 1988: The School of Humanities was renamed the School of Arts and Humanities; Doctor Theodore M. Benditt remained as dean.
May 6, 1988: The Center for Management Study was established with Doctor M. Gene Newport as first center director.
November 18, 1988: Doctor Basil I. Hirschowitz selected as the twenty-fifth Distinguished Faculty Lecturer.
March 15, 1989: Doctor John M. Lyons became first vice president for Planning and Information Management.
1989: The Smolian House and the Friendship House were sold by UAB.
June 22, 1990: James D. Loftin and T. Michael Goodrich were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
August 1, 1990: Doctor Tennant S. McWilliams became third dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, succeeding Belinda McCarthy who had served as interim dean since June first.
November 9, 1990: Doctor Juan M. Navia delivered the twenty-seventh Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "On the Idea of a University: Personal Reflections."
1990: The first annual Step Show was held at UAB.
1991: Doctor Kenneth J. Roozen became first vice president for Research and University Affairs, after the merger of the offices of research development and university affairs.
May 6, 1992: UAB unveiled new office space for the Blazer Football coaches and staff in a section of Birmingham’s Legion Field.
December 11, 1992: Sidney L. McDonald was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
1992: Doctor John N. Whitaker became the fourth president of The University of Alabama Health Services Foundation.
March 23, 1993: In the first night game held at the Jerry D. Young Memorial Field, the Men's Baseball team defeated Southern Mississippi by a score of 6 to 4.
June 16, 1993: Groundbreaking was held for the Alys Robinson Stephens Performing Arts Center.
December 3, 1993: Doctor Charles E. Bugg delivered the thirtieth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Magic of Crystals."
1993: UAB's economic impact on the Birmingham region was estimated at more than $1.5 billion per year.
June 10, 1994: Frank and Kathleen Ellis Ryals School of Public Health Building groundbreaking ceremony was held.
September 14, 1994: Construction began on a major expansion of the Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences.
November 18, 1994: Doctor Arnold G. Diethelm delivered the thirty-first Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Patient."
April 21, 1995: The Stroke Research Center renamed Comprehensive Stroke Research Center.
June 30, 1995: A new university-wide Faculty Senate first met.
November 17, 1995: Doctor Albert F. LoBuglio delivered the thirty-second Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "UAB Research - Is the Cup Half Empty?"
1995: The Offices of Vice President for Health Affairs and Vice President for Academic Affairs were abolished and replaced by a new Provost's Office.
October 18, 1996: Doctor Gail H. Cassell delivered the thirty-third Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Emerging Infections: A Global Threat."
November 2, 1996: The weekly NPR show "Whad’Ya Know?" with host Michael Feldman was broadcast live from the stage of the concert hall at the new Alys Stephens Performing Arts Center.
May 2, 1997: The renovated and expanded Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences was rededicated.
March 1998: Odessa Woolfolk Community Service Award established and first awarded to Associate Professor Linda W. Goodson.
August 9, 1998: Marla Townsend became the first head coach of the new Women's Fast-Pitch Softball team.
September 1998: UAB's economic impact on the Birmingham region was estimated at more than $2 billion per year.
1998: Hejal C. Patel, a first-year medical student, was named to USA Today’s All-USA College Academic First Team.
May 1, 1999: UAB Health Center in Moody opened.
November 1999: The university launched a Capital Campaign with a goal of $250 million.
February 2000: An open house officially opened the Gambro Healthcare Birmingham-Central Building on the corner of University Boulevard and South 21st Street.
April 28, 2000: The Alabama Commission on Higher Education (ACHE) approved the African American Studies major at UAB, ending a multi-decade process to establish the major.
October 11, 2000: Doctor Larry J. DeLucas presented the thirty-seventh annual Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Space Exploration and NASA's Biotechnology Research Program."
March 2, 2001: A statue of UAB's founding athletic director and first men's basketball coach Gene Bartow was dedicated in the Bartow Arena.
November 19, 2001: The Center for Advanced Surgical Aesthetics was approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
March 18, 2002: An open house was held in the newly renovated Spencer Honors House.
October 25, 2002: Doctor Eric Hunter presented the thirty-ninth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Why Birmingham, Alabama?"
November 21, 2002: Watson Brown was named as third Director of Athletics after having served as interim director since August.
April 2003: The UAB Health Sciences bookstore location on South 20th Street was closed and the bookstore was relocated to the Hill University Center.
September 19, 2003: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved the Center for Heart Failure Research.
2003: Construction began on Parking Deck No.
November 11, 2004: Doctor William J. Koopman presented the forty-first Distinguished Faculty Lecture, “Leadership in Academic Medicine.”
May 1, 2005: The Campus Recreation Center opened.
October 1, 2005: Doctor Ray L. Watts became the sixth president of the University of Alabama Health Services Foundation.
November 1, 2005: Doctor Bryan D. Noe became the dean of the UAB Graduate School.
March 1, 2006: Doctor Cynthia G. Brumfield became University Hospital’s third chief-of-staff, the first female to be named to the position.
April 6, 2006: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved the Mucosal HIV and Immunobiology Center.
September 12, 2006: A formal dedication ceremony was held for the new Blazer Hall and for the Commons on the Green, UAB's new campus dining facility.
February 14, 2007: Brian W. Mackin, a former Blazer baseball player and an alumnus of UAB, was named as the fourth Athletics Director at UAB.
October 11, 2007: Doctor Dale J. Benos presented the forty-fourth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Science, Publications and Society: What Have You Done For Me Lately?"
2007: The President's Diversity Awards were first presented by UAB to members of the university faculty, staff, and students.
November 6, 2008: Doctor Robert P. Kimberly presented the forty-fifth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "And Gladly Teach."
May 2009: UAB received an anonymous gift of $5 million to be used chiefly for scholarships for women or minorities.
October 12, 2009: Doctor Suzanne M. Michalek presented the forty-sixth annual Distinguished Faculty Lecture, “UAB and Mucosal Immunology: Past, Present and Future.”
September 2010: Doctor Sergio B. Stagno, chair of the Department of Pediatrics, became seventh president of the University of Alabama Health Services Foundation.
December 8, 2010: Doctor Edward E. Partridge delivered the forty-seventh Distinguished Faculty Lecture, “Civil War, Civil Rights and the New Moral Imperative: Leadership of a Different Color.”
In 2010 UAB became one of the first two civilian hospitals in the US to host a SOST.
October 10, 2011: Doctor David B. Allison presented the forty-eighth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, “The Fire of Life.”
2011: Paul W. Bryant, Jr., was elected president pro tempore of The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
March 27, 2012: Jerod Haase was introduced as the fifth head coach of the Men’s Basketball team.
August 20, 2012: Doctor Eric P. Jack, associate dean, was named as interim dean of the School of Business, to be effective October first.
October 10, 2012: Doctor Stephen Barnes presented the forty-ninth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, “Science, Collaborations, Alternatives, and the Future.”
February 8, 2013: Doctor Anupam Agarwal, director of the Division of Nephrology, was named as interim Senior Vice President for Medicine and dean of the School of Medicine following the appointment of Dean Ray L. Watts as the seventh president of UAB.
November 13, 2013: Doctor John F. Kearney presented the fiftieth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "How One Year Turned Into Forty Years at UAB."
January 22, 2014: In a press conference in Bartow Arena, Bill Clark was introduced as the fifth head coach of the Blazer Football team.
June 1, 2014: Doctor J. Fred Olive, a long time member of the library faculty, became interim director of the Mervyn Sterne Library upon the retirement of Doctor Jerry W. Stephens.
November 12, 2014: Doctor Kirby I. Bland presented the fifty-first Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Evolution of Evidence-Based Science and Education at UAB."
March 30, 2015: “Complex Vision,” artist Yaacov Agam’s towering kinetic sculpture, was returned to the façade of the Callahan Eye Foundation Hospital after it had been restored by Agam and by Art Creations and Renovations, a business located in Florida.
August 24, 2015: Doctor Lori L. McMahon was named as dean of the UAB Graduate School.
April 6, 2016: Robert "Rob" Ehsan was announced as the sixth Head Coach of men's basketball just nine days after being named as interim.
February 15, 2017: Doctor Karen M. Meneses presented the fifty-third Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "From Bataan to Birmingham: Stories of Survivors."
July 2017: Doctor Keith A. “Tony” Jones became the ninth president of the University of Alabama Health Services Foundation.
September 25, 2017: A ribbon-cutting ceremony opened the new UAB Meadow Classroom in a 1,500 acre wooded area within Birmingham’s Red Mountain Park.
The $527 million was a $48 million (10 percent) increase from fiscal year 2017.
March 5, 2018: Doctor Victor Darley-Usmar presented the fifty-fourth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Who Moved My Electron?"
August 9, 2018: A new building for the UAB Police Department was opened on South 14th Street.
March 18, 2019: Doctor Mona N. Fouad presented the fifty-fifth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "When Health Disparities Became Science."
June 7, 2019: Evelyn VanSant Mauldin was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
July 2019: Conference USA announced its new athletics Conference Hall of Fame.
January 13, 2020: Proton International at UAB, the state’s first proton therapy center, was opened with a ribbon cutting ceremony.
June 29, 2020: Governor Kay Ivey announced programs to provide COVID-19 testing and symptom monitoring for the state's public higher education institutions.
April 30, 2021: Doctor Robert M. Centor presented the fifty-seventh Distinguished Faculty Lecture, “The Importance of Clinician Educators.” Because of the global COVID-19 pandemic, the lecture was presented virtually in an online platform.
November 5, 2021: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved the renaming of UAB's on-campus soccer field as PNC Field.
May 3, 2022: Doctor Casey Weaver, a professor of pathology, was elected to membership in the National Academy of Sciences, the third UAB faculty member to be so honored.
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