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| Alabama State University | |
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| Motto: | Service is Sovereignty |
| Established: | 1875 |
| Type: | Public, HBCU |
| President: | Dr. William H. Harris (Interim) |
| Vice-president: | John Knight |
| Provost: | Dr. Karyn Scissum-Gunn |
| Students: | 5,600 |
| Undergraduates: | 4,600 |
| Postgraduates: | 1,000 |
| Location: | Montgomery, Alabama United States |
| Sports: | football baseball basketball golf tennis track cheerleading soccer softball bowling and volleyball |
| Colors: | Black and Old Gold |
| Nickname: | Hornets and Lady Hornets |
| Athletics: | NCAA Division I FCS |
| Affiliations: | Southwestern Athletic Conference |
| Website: | www.alasu.edu |
Alabama State University, founded 1867, is a historically black university located in Montgomery, Alabama. ASU is a member school of the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund.
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Alabama State University has an enrollment of more than 5,000 students from 42 states and 7 countries.[citation needed] One-third of the students are non-Alabama residents and 11 percent are minorities. The student-faculty ratio is 18 to 1. Alabama State University has 7 degree-granting colleges or schools or divisions.
Alabama State University offers 47 degree programs including 31 bachelors’, 11 masters’, and two Education Specialists and three doctoral programs.
Alabama State University founded in 1867 as the Lincoln Normal School of Marion in Marion, Alabama, a private institution for blacks, by nine former slaves. The founders and original trustees were Joey P. Pinch, Thomas Speed, Nicholas Dale, James Childs, Thomas Lee, John Freeman, Nathan Levert, David Harris and Alexander H. Curtis. The Lincoln School was incorporated on July 18, 1867 and opened November 13, 1867 with 113 students. In 1868, the Alabama State Board of Education designated the school a Normal School and it became known as Lincoln Normal School. In December 1873, the State Board accepted the transfer of title to the school after a legislative act was passed authorizing the state to fund a Normal School, and George N. Card was named President. Thus, in 1874, this predecessor of Alabama State University became America's first state-supported educational institution for blacks. This began ASU’s rich history as a “Teacher’s College.”
In 1878, the second president, William Paterson, was appointed. He is honored as a founder of Alabama State University and was the president for 37 of the first 48 years of its existence. Paterson was instrumental in the move from Marion to Montgomery in 1887. In 1887, the university opened in its new location in Montgomery but an Alabama State Supreme Court ruling forced the school to change its name; thus, the school was renamed the Normal School for Colored Students.
In the decades that followed Lincoln Normal School became a junior college and in 1928 became a full four-year institution. In 1929 it became State Teachers College, Alabama State College for Negroes in 1948 and Alabama State College in 1954. In 1969, the State Board of Education, then the governing body of the university, approved a name change; the institution became Alabama State University. The 1995 Knight vs. Alabama remedial decree transformed ASU into a comprehensive regional institution paving the way for two new undergraduate programs, four new graduate programs, diversity scholarship funding and endowment, funding to build a state-of-the art health sciences facility and a facility renewal allocation to refurbish three existing buildings.
WVAS-FM was launched on June 15, 1984, beaming 25,000 watts of power from the fifth floor of the Levi Watkins Learning Center for two years before moving to its current location at Thomas Kilby Hall. Today, WVAS has grown to 80,000 watts and enjoys a listenership that spans 18 counties, reaching a total population of more than 651,000. In recent years, the station has also begun streaming its broadcast via the Web, connecting a global audience to the university.
In the early 1990s witnessed the beginning of WAPR-FM (Alabama Public Radio), which Alabama State University and Troy University, both of which already held station licenses of their own, cooperated with the University of Alabama in building and operating. WAPR-FM 88.3--Selma - The signal reaches the region known colloquially as the Black Belt, about 13 counties in the west central and central parts of Alabama, including the city of Montgomery.
ASU's has Georgian-style red-brick classroom buildings and architecturally contemporary structures. [1] ASU is home to the state-of-the-art 7,400 seat academic and sports facility the ASU Acadome; the Levi Watkins Learning Center; a five-story brick structure with more than 267,000 volumes, the state-of-the-art John L. Buskey Health Sciences Center; which is 80,000 square-feet facility which houses classrooms, offices, an interdisciplinary clinic, three therapeutic rehabilitation labs, state-of-the-art Gross Anatomy Lab, Laboratory for the Analysis of Human Motion (LAHM), a Women’s Health/Cardiopulmonary lab, and a health sciences computer lab, and WVAS-FM 90.7; the 80,000-watt, university operated public radio station.
Alabama State University charters more than 70 student organizations, including nine Greek Letter Organizations, a full range of men’s and women’s sports and 17 honors organizations. In addition to social, cultural and religious groups, there are musical opportunities, such as the Marching Hornets and the University Choir, and departmental organizations for most majors. Men’s intercollegiate athletic programs include baseball, basketball, tennis, track and field, volleyball, softball, golf, bowling, and cross country. The ASU Hornets are members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference, SWAC, and compete at the NCAA Division 1 level.
| Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rosa Parks | civil rights pioneer | ||
| Rickey Smiley | comedian/actor | ||
| Tarvaris Jackson | quarterback for the Minnesota Vikings | [2] | |
| Africa Miranda | singer | [3] | |
| Dr. Joe L. Reed | civil rights pioneer | ||
| Reggie Barlow | wide receiver for the Jacksonville Jaguars & current head coach of ASU football | ||
| Jesse White | 37th Secretary of State of Illinois | ||
| Dr. Yvonne Kennedy | Former President of Bishop State Community College | ||
| Tangi Miller | actress with The WB's Felicity | ||
| Darryl Lassiter | Producer and Director | ||
| Dr. Fred Shuttlesworth | clergy, civil rights legend | ||
| Fred Gray | attorney who represented Rosa Parks during the Montgomery Bus Boycott | ||
| Erskine Hawkins | noted jazz musician, composer of "Tuxedo Junction" | ||
| Dr. Ralph Simpson | first black to earn the Ph.D. in music from Michigan State University; was Dean of the School of Music at Tennessee State U. | ||
| Dionne Walters | contestant on America's Next Top Model | ||
| London "Deelishis" Charles | Winner of reality show Flavor of Love 2 | ||
| Marcus Winn | Linebacker for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League | ||
| Togo Coles | former USTA Pro Circuits tennis player | ||
| Doug Williams | Comedian/Actor | ||
| Ralph David Abernathy | Civil Rights Leader | ||
| Eddie Robinson | former American football linebacker who played 11 seasons in the NFL for the Houston Oilers, Jacksonville Jaguars, Tennessee Titans, and the Buffalo Bills. He started for the Titans in Super Bowl XXXIV. | ||
| Woody McCorvey | Assistant Head Football Coach for The Mississippi State University Bulldogs | ||
| James Daniels | Tight Ends Coach for the Pittsburgh Steelers | ||
| Kefla Hare | Actor, educator, motivational speaker; MTV Road Rules Down Under (season 6 cast member), Hip Hop Harry (Emmy nominated children series on TLC and Discovery Kids |
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| Name | Department | Notability | Reference |
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| Tonea Stewart | actress, playwright, and Dean of Performing Arts | ||
| Webb-Christburg | notable civil rights activist, author of Selma Lord Selma! and Dr. Martin Luther King's proclaimed "smallest freedom fighter". | ||
| Arthur D. Baylor | first black police chief of Montgomery, Alabama | ||
| Alvin Holmes | famous Alabama legislator, also an alumnus | ||
| Ralph J. Bryson | English professor and Grand Historian of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity | ||
| Horace B. Lamar | Music | Professor and Former Dean of School of Music |
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