1990
Dr. Beverly Robinson is appointed by the Secretary of Health and Human Services to the advisory committee for the Task Force on Homelessness and Severe Mental Illness.
School of Nursing’s proposal to establish a nursing program at UT Pan American is approved.
The School of Nursing receives the $200,000 Thelma and Joe Crow Endowed Professorship in Nursing. Dr. Mary Matteson is named the first recipient.
1991
Faculty and students answer the call to serve in Operation Desert Storm.
Wealtha McGurn, Ph.D., RN, and Mary Ann Matteson, Ph.D., RN receive the school’s first National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant.
1992
In conjunction with the School of Aerospace at Brooks Air Force Base, the School of Nursing becomes the first in the nation to offer an elective in Hyperbaric Therapy.
1993
Barbara Holtzclaw, Ph.D., RN is elected to the Executive Committee of the American Nurses Association Council of Nurse Researchers.
The Nurses’ Prenatal Clinic (originally the Routine Obstetrical Clinic) completes 15 years of service to women in San Antonio.
The Nursing Advisory Council obtains $100,000 Endowed Professorship in Oncology Nursing and establishes a fund for use by Ph.D. students.
Ruth Stewart, MSN, RNC is named by Governor Ann Richards to chair the Texas State Board of Public Health.
1994
Jane Dimmitt is the first Ph.D. student to graduate from the School of Nursing.
1995
February 3, 1995, was a significant day, as close to 200 individuals from San Antonio and Austin gathered for the official groundbreaking for the School of Nursing building expansion.
1996
An outreach Doctoral Program in Nursing is implemented in conjunction with the School of Nursing at Texas A&M University Corpus Christi.
1997
Patty L. Hawken, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, retires after 23 years as the Dean of the School of Nursing.
A Pediatric Nurse Practitioner major is approved by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.
Janet Allan, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, assumes the role of Dean.
1999
Norma Martinez Rogers, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, founded Juntos Podemos after observing that Hispanic students completed the nursing program at lower rates than their peers. The program uses mentoring to provide support to students and reduce the negative effects of social and educational disparities.