|
The Board of Trustees of Wabash College on January 28, 2006,
unanimously elected Dr. Patrick E. White as the 15th
president of the private liberal arts college for men. White,
currently the Vice President and Dean of Faculty at Saint
Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana, will succeed Andrew T.
Ford on July 1. Joseph D. Barnette, Jr., chairman of the
Wabash Board of Trustees, made the announcement at the
conclusion of the group’s regularly scheduled January
meeting. Dr. White also will serve as Professor of English at
Wabash
.
“Wabash is one of
America
’s greatest liberal arts colleges, rich in tradition and
even richer in promise and possibilities,” said White. “To
be chosen to lead
Wabash
to new heights of achievement as its next president is a great
honor. I look forward with energy and passion to work with the
men of Wabash, their extraordinary faculty, staff, and
administrators, the incredibly talented and dedicated alumni,
and the deeply committed Board of Trustees in order to enhance
Wabash
College
’s greatness, its leadership among liberal arts colleges,
and its influence in the world.”
Ford, now in his 14th
year as president of
Wabash
, announced last May his intention to step down at the
conclusion of the current academic year. A search committee,
chaired by John N. Fox, Jr. and comprising trustees and
faculty and including an administrator, alumni representative,
and student body president, was formed in May and made its
final recommendation to the Board of Trustees on Saturday.
“The Board is delighted to announce that Patrick White will
be the 15th
president of
Wabash
College
,” said Barnette. “I commend the diligent work of the
search committee, whose thorough work produced an excellent
pool of candidates. The Board believes Dr. White’s passion
for the liberal arts, track record as an administrator, and
his enthusiasm for the students of Wabash are qualities well
suited for
Wabash
’s next president.”
Dr. White has served as Vice President and Dean of Faculty at
Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana, since 2002.
Previously he was the Associate Dean of Faculty from 1988 to
2002, and is Professor of English. He has spearheaded a number
of academic initiatives at Saint Mary’s, including
establishing the Center for Academic Innovation and the
creation of grants, which support collaborative research
between faculty and students and among the faculty members
themselves. Dr. White was also one of the designers of Saint
Mary’s Center for Women’s InterCultural Leadership, a
Lilly Endowment-funded initiative.
Prior to his service at Saint Mary’s, he served as chair of
the Department of Language and Literature at
Pfieffer
College
(1985-1988) and taught at
Westmar
College
from 1976 through 1985. He graduated with honors from the
University
of
Chicago
in 1971, and earned his master's and Ph.D. in English and
American Literature from the
University
of
Iowa
.
Dr. White and his wife, Chris, have two daughters, Katie and
Molly, who are juniors at Saint Mary’s College, and a son,
Paddy, who is a graduate of the
University
of
Chicago
and is currently a third-year medical school student at
Indiana
University
. Chris is a certified family nurse practitioner, who is a
Clinical Assistant Professor, teaching community health
nursing at Indiana University South Bend.
“In making its recommendation to the Board, the search
committee was most impressed by Dr. White’s calm, thoughtful
demeanor and his sense of
Wabash
’s mission of transforming the lives of the students who
enroll here,” said Fox, who chaired the committee. “We
value the leadership he has shown in developing innovations in
teaching and learning and in faculty and faculty-student
research. He embraces our high standards for excellence in
teaching and our passion for an environment that places
students at the heart of the learning environment.”
Ford,
Wabash
president since 1993, led the college to unprecedented growth
in recruitment and fund raising, while spearheading a physical
transformation of the school’s facilities. Ford drove
Wabash’s recently completed Campaign for Leadership, which
generated $136.1 million for the development of student and
faculty programs and the construction of a $30 million biology
and chemistry building; $7 million renovation of the
college’s mathematics, computer science, and physics
facilities; the construction of the $20 million Allen
Athletics and Recreation Center; the construction of the $2
million Malcolm X Institute of Black Studies; and the new
construction or renovation of five of the college’s nine
residential fraternity houses. Further, under Ford’s
leadership, Wabash established the
Center
of
Inquiry
in the Liberal Arts at
Wabash
College
, funded with an initial grant of $20.8 million from Lilly
Endowment Inc. and further funded in late 2005 with an
additional $12.5 million.
“Saint Mary’s and
Wabash
are in one important way very different,” added White. “
Wabash
is a college for men; Saint Mary’s, of course, a college for
women. But both share a respect for students, a commitment to
education of the whole person, and a calling of all students
to greatness. At Wabash, I will work to art
icu
late the special virtues of a
Wabash
liberal arts education, what this college for men has to offer
students, the world of higher education, and American culture
and society.”
Founded in 1832,
Wabash
is a liberal arts college for men whose mission is to educate
men to think critically, act responsibly, lead effectively,
and live humanely. One of three men’s colleges remaining in
the
United States
,
Wabash
boasts a student body of 871 students and a privately managed
endowment totaling over $320 million.
|