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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
23, No. 13, Feb. 5, 2004

UI president announces February
2005 retirement
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| James
J. Stukel
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James J. Stukel,
UI president since 1995, will retire effective Feb. 1, 2005, drawing
to a close his 43-year affiliation with the university.
Stukel, 66, became the 15th UI president in August 1995.
A product of the College of Engineering on the Urbana campus, Stukel
re-engineered the UI administrative structure, making it more efficient,
and reinvested the savings into core missions of education, research
and public service. Stukel oversaw a major expansion of the university,
including the addition of the Springfield campus, $640 million in capital
projects to enhance scholarship and research on all three campuses and
a broader focus on economic development in Illinois through the transfer
of research-based technology to private business and industry. Federal
research grants and contracts to the university nearly doubled in nine
years under Stukel to $519 million annually. University fund raising
set records in his tenure, more than doubling the active and total endowment
to today’s $1.5 billion.
“I have been affiliated with the University of Illinois as a graduate
student, faculty member, researcher and administrator since 1961, and
it has been an exhilarating and satisfying relationship,” Stukel
said Jan. 23 in announcing his decision to retire as president. “The
opportunity to serve as president of this great institution has been
an honor and a privilege.”
“Among the most remarkable things about this complex and comprehensive
university is its people,” Stukel said. “The talent, creativity
and drive of our students, faculty, staff and administrators distinguish
this as a world-class institution where great things are accomplished.
The trustees are an invaluable resource for their loyal and vigilant
stewardship. Our legions of alumni and generous friends provide the
spirit and resources necessary for our margin of excellence.”
After next February, Stukel said he and his wife, Joan, plan to spend
their time with their children and grandchildren on their sailboat in
Chicago and at their vacation home. “But there is still important
work ahead, and I will be actively involved with trustees, faculty and
staff in the administration of the university while the search for a
new president is under way,” Stukel said.
The university’s board of trustees will choose Stukel’s
successor from a list of candidates recommended by a consultative committee.
A hallmark of Stukel’s presidency has been his personal interaction
with people in every region of the state on behalf of the university.
Since taking office, Stukel logged more than 200,000 miles and conducted
50 daylong community visits across Illinois. The initiative was the
first of its kind for the UI. Stukel also established Illinois Connection,
a coalition to strengthen the relationship between the university and
citizens of the state.
“Jim Stukel is a wonderful leader and person,” said Nancy
Cantor, the chancellor of the Urbana campus. “It’s a pleasure
to work with him. I’m impressed with his commitment to the university
for so many years, and I’m grateful for his contributions.”
Board of trustees Chairman Lawrence C. Eppley hailed Stukel’s
tenure as president and said his legacy is a diverse and vibrant institution
that has withstood the rigors of a difficult economy through astute
management.
“By every measure – the superior quality of our students,
the excellence of our faculty and staff, the breadth of our public engagement,
our commitment to economic development and the soundness of our endowment
– Jim has succeeded in raising and preserving the exceptional
quality of the University of Illinois,” Eppley said.
C. Peter Magrath, the president of the National Association of State
Universities and Land-Grant Colleges, described Stukel as a fervent
and effective champion of public higher education whose presence will
be missed. Stukel last year completed a term as chair of the association’s
board of directors.
The UI has made the following changes under Stukel:
- In 1995, merged
Sangamon State University into the UI, becoming the UI at Springfield.
- Expanded the
acreage of the east campus of UIC by about 50 percent and supported
a south campus development of more than $1 billion.
- Established
the office of Vice President for Technology and Economic Development
to support the continuous improvement of technology management and
transfer.
- Established
Research Park LLC to encourage research, development and commercialization
of the university’s intellectual assets, and to foster economic
growth in the state.
- Created IllinoisVENTURES
LLC to provide start-up services to faculty, students or staff inventors
and entrepreneurs in creating companies that commercialize university-based
technology, inventions and innovations.
- Standardized
all administrative and support systems across the university, the
most comprehensive technology integration initiative undertaken by
any American university at the time.
- Created UI-Online,
which provides online course, degree programs and public service activities
offered by the campuses. Currently, 7,000 students are enrolled in
online courses.
Stukel, a native of Joliet, Ill., earned his bachelor’s degree
in engineering from Purdue University in 1959. He received his master’s
degree in 1963 and his doctorate in engineering in 1968, both from
the Urbana campus
Stukel launched
his UI career as a teaching and research assistant at Urbana. He became
a professor of engineering in 1975 and held a series of administrative
posts until 1985, when he moved to UIC to become vice chancellor for
research and dean of the graduate college. He was named chancellor of
UIC in 1991, where he served until being named university president
in 1995.
University
begins to assemble committee
By
John Loos, Student Assistant
James J. Stukel’s successor will be chosen by a search committee
consisting of members elected by the University Senates Conference and
the Senate Executive Committee. If precedent holds, the committee will
consist of four faculty members from each campus, a student from each
campus, one faculty member at large serving as the committee chair,
and one representative each from the academic professional staff, the
Alumni Association, the UI Foundation and the support staff. The committee
will have one year to make its selection.
The process would be similar to the one implemented nearly 10 years
ago to find a successor to former UI President Stanley Ikenberry. That
search, led by a 20-person committee, ended after seven months of meetings
and interviews with the selection of Stukel in February 1995.
Using the services of Korn/Ferry, an executive search firm in Dallas,
the last committee reviewed nearly 150 names before thinning the list.
Once there were six candidates remaining, the committee chair and UI
Board of Trustees interviewed each candidate.
The University Senates Conference will make recommendations for the
search committee to the UI Board of Trustees from the nominations of
student and faculty members made by the Senates of each campus.
The Urbana-Champaign Senate will consider nominations to elect eight
faculty members and two students at its regular meeting at 3:10 p.m.
Feb. 16 in Foellinger Auditorium. The Senate Executive Committee asked
the Senate’s Committee on Committees to nominate 12 faculty members
and four students to be considered by the full Senate from those who
received nominations from the campus community.
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