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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Dr. Robert Witt has been named president
of The University of Alabama. Witt comes to UA from the University
of Texas at Arlington where he has served as president since 1995.
The Board of Trustees today voted unanimously to appoint Witt to
the position. Witt was selected by a presidential search committee
from among some 150 applicants and nominees.
Described as “a learned scholar, a chairholder in a top
10 business school, an experienced president with a long and aggressive
track record, and a community builder,” Witt brings excellent
academic credentials as well as top-level teaching and administrative
experience to UA.
Witt joined the business school faculty at the University of Texas
at Austin in 1968, and rose through the ranks as chair and associate
dean. He was named the Zale Corporation Centennial Professor in
Business in 1983. Two years later he was named to the Mortimer Centennial
Professorship in Business and that year became acting dean of business.
In 1985, he was named dean, a position he would hold for nine years
at a business school ranked by the Wall Street Journal as one of
the top seven schools of business in the world.
In 1995, Witt went to UT-Arlington as interim president. He was
named permanent president in 1996. UT-Arlington, described as “facing
seemingly insurmountable problems” in 1995, is the fastest
growing university in Texas today, with a 12.5 percent enrollment
increase last fall alone.
At UT-Arlington, Witt’s accomplishments included:
- Partnering with the Chamber of Commerce to establish the Arlington
Technology Incubator;
- Creating a Nanotechnology Research and Teaching Facility; and
- Establishing the University’s first alliance of African
American ministers and a Hispanic Advisory Board to assure the
needs of minority students are addressed.
In addition, UT-Arlington recently broke ground on an $8.5 million
Workforce Development and Continuing Education building and the
fourth new student housing facility to be built in two years.
Witt received his bachelor’s degree in economics from Bates
College, his M.B.A. from Dartmouth College and his Ph.D. from Penn
State University.
On campus last week to meet with members of the University community,
Witt addressed faculty, staff and students in a public meeting,
and met with the Faculty Senate steering committee, students and
other groups.
In his remarks to the open meeting audience, Witt called being
chosen for The University of Alabama presidency “one of the
greatest honors I’ve received in my career.” He said
he was drawn to UA’s “nationally ranked programs,”
strong commitment to research, large and active alumni base and
its potential to become a top-tier university.
“I’m at a stage in my career [where] I’m not
looking for a stepping stone to my next job,” he said. “I’m
looking for a capstone, and I can’t think of a better capstone
to an academic career than the flagship university of the state
of Alabama.”
Witt praised the work of Interim President Barry Mason, whom he
has known for more than 20 years, for moving the campus forward.
“Advancing the core mission of teaching, research and service
is paramount,” Witt said. He noted that his academic values
include understanding that when an institution enrolls a student,
it shares in the responsibility of his or her well-being; that faculty
governance and a relationship with the academic community are built
on communication; and that pursuing aggressive goals and high standards
is a key to success.
Witt cited opportunities in forming stronger collaborative and
strategic alliances with a variety of institutions, organizations,
and community groups; leveraging resources to achieve goals; strengthening
research support to enable faculty to increase their funding, and
raising public funds.
He noted that alumni and friends “give to an institution
because of pride, not need.” UA’s strong athletics program
contributes to that pride, he said. “It’s extremely
important. A strong intercollegiate program gives you visibility
on a constant basis. If a university had to go and pay for the coverage
on a daily basis that a strong, successful intercollegiate program
offers, no university could afford to buy that kind of coverage.
Equally important…a strong intercollegiate program builds
relationships with alumni and current students. It builds the bonds
that lead to financial support of the institution. It is vital,”
he said.
When it comes to recruiting top students, Witt said, “The
University should own this state.” He expressed strong commitment
to an aggressive recruitment plan.
Witt’s wife, Anne, is the daughter of Edward and Elizabeth
Cleino of Tuscaloosa. She graduated from UA in 1967. Her father
is a professor emeritus of music at UA.
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