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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. –Thousands of University of Alabama “baby boom” era
students remember Dr. Robert H. Garner – either as the teacher of many undergraduate
chemistry classes or as one of the University’s most sought-out advisers who
guided them through rough academic times or helped them stay the course into medical
or law school.
Garner, UA professor emeritus of chemistry, died Monday at the age of 71.
Garner served for 35 years on the UA faculty including 21 years as assistant dean
and head of the Office of Student Services in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences.
Garner’s early career at UA coincided with the “baby boom” years
of the 1960s and 1970s when UA saw record growth in enrollments. Courses that prepared
students for medical school, nursing, and other health professions were in high
demand, and he was well known by pre-health professions students for his undergraduate
courses in introductory organic chemistry as well as his courses in chemistry for
non-majors, nursing, and dietetics students.
In 1967 he became chairman of UA’s Health Professions Advising Committee that
established guidelines and policies to assist health-professions students with academic
planning. He served in that post until 1971 and again from 1986 to his retirement
in 1994.
In his retirement years, Garner remained active at the University, heading advising
projects, teaching chemistry for non-majors, and actively working with Rural Medical
Scholars, Rural Health Scholars, and the Minority Health Scholars programs, joint
projects of UA’s College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Community Health
Sciences.
Throughout his career, he was recognized for developing innovative programs in both
research and teaching to mentor students and help them be successful.
An active researcher in the area of organic chemistry, Garner served as a research
adviser for 12 graduate students and directed a highly successful National Science
Foundation-sponsored summer program which provided undergraduates with paid research
experience in faculty laboratories and which continues today. He successfully obtained
grants from the National Science Foundation for a science education program for
high school teachers in 1970, for a cooperative program with two-year colleges for
1972-1974, and a major U.S. Department of Education grant to establish a mentoring
program for minority pre-medical students.
“The University has lost one of its legendary faculty members and administrators,” said
Dr. Bob Olin, dean of UA’s College of Arts and Sciences. “Long before
mentoring programs and student learning communities were being promoted in higher
education, Bob Garner was starting programs designed with one purpose: to help students
succeed in their education and gain entry into their chosen careers. As a teacher
and researcher, his focus was always on the student. During his 21 years as an assistant
dean, he transformed the way the largest unit of the University helps students plan
their academic careers and was a model for later innovations.”
In 1973, Garner became assistant dean for natural sciences and for student services
in the College of Arts and Sciences, UA’s largest division with nearly 5,000
students at that time. Under his leadership, the College’s Office of Student
Services was expanded to accommodate the growing number of students coming to UA.
He hired the College’s first team of professional academic advisers; established
specialized advising programs for pre-health, pre-law, and pre-professional majors;
designed and taught an academic orientation program for first-semester students; and
instituted a program of continued advising leading up to graduation and post-graduate
planning.
“Dr. Garner was a wonderfully kind and compassionate man who always had the
best interest of the student at heart,” said Jeannie Thomley, registrar in the
Office of Student Services of the College of Arts and Sciences, who was hired by Garner
in 1986 as the College’s first full-time health professions adviser.
“He was never too busy to help students whether it was tutoring for organic
chemistry or preparing a medical school application,” said Thomley. “It
was truly a joy to work for someone with such integrity and who led by example. Retirement
didn’t slow him down. Within the last two weeks, he was conducting practice
interviews with students planning to apply to medical school, and he was doing an
enormous amount of work with our joint medical scholars program with the College of
Community Health Sciences. If the students needed him, he was always there.”
Garner served on UA’s planning committee for the Paul Bryant Continuing Education Center
in 1984-1985 and on the Alabama State Department of Education Committee on Advanced Placement
from 1982-1987.
He was a member of the national and local chapters of the American Chemical Society and served
as chairman of the Alabama Section of the American Chemical Society in 1965-1966. He also was
a member of the National Association of Advisors for the Health Professions.
A native of Mobile, Garner graduated from Murphy High School and received a Bachelor of Science
degree from Vanderbilt University in 1954 and a doctorate in chemistry from Rice University of
Houston, Texas, in 1958. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society at Vanderbilt and the
Society of Sigma Xi at Rice University.
At The University of Alabama, he was an honorary member of Gamma Sigma Epsilon chemistry
honor society and Alpha Epsilon Delta pre-medical honor society and Golden Key scholastic
honor society.
Garner served for many years as a member of the board of directors of both Habitat
of Tuscaloosa and the Kiwanis Club of Greater Tuscaloosa. He was a member of Calvary
Baptist church where he has served on a number of committees, assisted with youth
camp and where he was currently serving as Sunday School Teacher of the Curtis Evans
Sunday school class.
Garner is survived by his wife, Margaret Garner, assistant professor and director
of nutritional education and services at the University of Alabama College of Medicine;
and sons Mark Daniel Garner, Robert David Garner, Jonathan William Garner, Benjamin
Pipkin Garner, and Thomas Weatherford Garner.
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