EDIT:Since you're there anyways, bump your throttle up a bit and see if it starts charging. That would be the fastest easiest thing to do first. My needle drops down if my truck goes below it's normal idle point.
I'd say the first thing to check is the regulator ground. It grounds through it's own body, so make sure it's mounting holes in the firewall aren't rusty or anything, and smear some Nev-R-seize in the bolts before you put them back in. EDIT: also, check the blue wire going into the regulator for key-on power:
Then check the fusible link itself for the alternator. It's the black one that's a good bit bigger than the others. Just bend it around and see of it feels like there's no wire inside of it. Next, check where the fusible link charge wie where it exits the alternator. There is a connector near it that may have come apart.
If you're feeling particularly brave, there should be 3 wires going into your alternator. The bigger, black charge wire, a small blue wire, and a green wire.(the 4th black wire going to the front of the engine is just a ground for the alternator case) If this is the case, test the blue wire to make sure it's getting key-on power. If so, I
THINK that grounding the green wire will make the alternator go full-charge. You can try this, at your own risk, to make sure the alternator is actually good. Don't do it any longer than needed to get a voltage reading at the battery, as doing it too long could ruin/cook/explode the battery.
I may have missed some easy checks, since I'm doing this at work

, but I guess after that you could take the battery and alternator and have them tested. It is possible they were bad when new. If nothing else, another VR could be put on, but 1990 is right. The cheaper ones have never done me any good.
Another Edit: Never unplug/plug in the VR while the key is on or the engine is running. It's supposedly bad for them, and may ruin it.
I'll edit if I think of anything else, and encourage anyone else to correct anything I may have wrong.