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NEWS
| JAN. 15
Witt's End
President accepts UAs top position
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| Special to The Shorthorn: Tuscaloosa
News: Robert Sutton |
| University President Robert Witt addresses
the media after the University of Alabama named him its
president. Dr. Witt emerged as the sole finalist out of
150 on Jan. 17. He visited the Tuscaloosa campus Wednesday
for interviews with faculty and students. The search committee
says it chose Witt after seeing his work at UTA. |
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By Amber
Tafoya
Contribution to The Shorthorn
University of Alabama Board of Trustees
named UTA President Robert Witt to the schools highest post
Monday.
The board voted unanimously for Dr. Witt at its 10:30 a.m. meeting
today after Alabama Chancellor Malcolm Portera recommended Witt.
He will leave Arlington by March 1, his anticipated first day at
the university.
After the decision, Alabama students, faculty and administration
honored Witt and his wife, music adjunct professor Anne Witt, UA
spokesperson Kelly Reinhart said.
The tone of todays meeting was very much that Dr. Witt
was the right person at the right time for the University of Alabama,
she said.
After he was nominated for the presidency, Witt met with Alabama
officials for an interview with presidential search advisory committee
members in December after being nominated.
Witt was announced the sole candidate from a pool of 150 by Alabama
officials Jan. 17 and was contacted by the search committee.
Witt returned to Alabama on Wednesday for an open forum to meet
with students and faculty before final interviews with trustees
Monday morning.
Witts Alabama supporters believe he is the right choice because
of his 35-year run with the UT System, his contributions to student
growth at UTA and the research programs he brought to the university.
Witt began his presidency at UTA in 1995 and established the universitys
first local black ministers alliance and a Hispanic Advisory
Board the same year. He also created the Nanotechnology Research
Teaching Building and the Arlington Business Incubator at UTA.
Jeremiah Arsenault, UA Student Government Association president,
said students connected with Witts Alabama ties through his
wife, who graduated from UA in 1967. Her parents live in the state.
One of the first issues Witt is expected to address is UAs
funding during the state legislative session, said Cathy Andreen,
Alabamas media relations director. Alabamas legislative
session will begin in March.
The Texas Legislature started its session this month and representatives
expect funding requests to UTA and other state universities will
be hard to find because of a $9.9 billion state deficit and a 7
percent proposed budget cut.
Gov. Rick Perry asked state agencies on Friday to cut at least 7
percent from their budgets. UTA depends on state funding to cover
about 41 percent of its budget.
Finding funding for UTA will be hard with or without Witt, Governmental
Relations Director Kate Kettles said. She will be in Austin today
attending committee meetings and meeting with representatives.
I will report everything to Dr. Witt, she said. He
still is the president.
Dana Dunn, vice president for academic affairs, said Witt will keep
in touch with UTA when he moves to Alabama.
He will have to tie up some loose ends, she said.
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