Post: | Chancellor |
Body: | the University of Nebraska Omaha |
Incumbent: | Joanne Li |
Incumbentsince: | July 1, 2021 |
Department: | University of Nebraska Omaha |
Appointer: | Board of Regents |
Reports To: | President of the University of Nebraska |
First: | Daniel E. Jenkins |
Salary: | $430,000 |
Website: | Office of the Chancellor |
The chancellor of the University of Nebraska Omaha is the chief administrator of the University of Nebraska Omaha and is selected by the University of Nebraska system president and approved by the Board of Regents. The position has been held by Joanne Li since July 2021.[1]
The University of Nebraska Omaha, originally called the University of Omaha, was founded as a private, nonsectarian, religious institution in September 1908; however, the University of Omaha did not choose a president until a year later when classes began in September 1909.[2] The Rev. Daniel Edwards Jenkins was appointed acting president in September 1909 and was made full president in 1910. At the time he was appointed, Jenkins served as professor of systematic theology and apologetics on the faculty of Omaha Presbyterian Theological Seminary. Jenkins served 17 years as the president of the University of Omaha before ill health due to overwork brought about his departure in December 1926.[3] He was expected to return as president,[4] but he never did and instead died in November 1927. W. Gilbert James, dean of the University of Omaha, served as interim president in Jenkins' absence until a successor could be found.[5]
In July 1927, Jenkins was made president emeritus of the university when the board announced that it had hired 34-year-old Rev. Karl Frederick Wettstone, the president of the University of Dubuque, to succeed him.[6] [7] However, Wettstone's short tenure was tumultuous, with students hanging him in effigy and demanding his resignation after he refused to ratify a student-body election.[8] Consequently, Wettstone resigned after only one year, citing his inability to raise funds and to obtain accreditation for the university.[9] The university then hired E. Wesley Emery, then president of York College, to succeed Wettstone.[10] [11] Emery's tenure was also short since, as the university sought accreditation, the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools required that heads of universities it accredited have a Doctor of Philosophy degree, and Emery only had a Doctor of Divinity degree. Thus, after only two years of service, Emery departed, and W. Gilbert James was once again appointed acting president of the university.[12]
In 1930, the city of Omaha took control of the University of Omaha, turning it into a public municipal institution rather than a private, religious university. In 1931, after an eight-month search, the Board of Regents named William E. Sealock, then dean of the teachers' college at the University of Nebraska, president of the newly created Municipal University of Omaha.[13] Sealock was hired with the agreement that the university would move to a new location.[14] Sealock soon ran into disagreements with the Board of Regents, leading to his removal as president four years later in June 1935. However, two regents resigned in protest, some faculty threatened to quit, and a large group consisting of students, faculty, and community members, displeased with the board's decision, rallied to ask them to reconsider and reinstate Sealock.[15] Several days later, after being informed that the Board of Regents was unlikely to change its mind, Sealock committed suicide by ingesting poison on July 7, 1935.[16] Close friend of the Sealock family John G. Neihardt traveled back from Missouri to attend his funeral.[17] After Sealock's ouster, the Board of Regents failed to name an interim president and was threatened with an investigation by the American Association of University Professors. As the highest-ranking officer of the university, Edgar A. Holt, dean of the college of arts and sciences, was the de facto interim president, although the Board of Regents refused to officially appoint him due to his ardent support of Sealock after his removal.[18] Homer W. Anderson was rumored as a possible candidate for acting president, but he declined, offering instead to act only in an advisory role.[19] [20] [21]
On August 15, 1935, the Board of Regents unanimously named Rowland Haynes, former Nebraska administrator for the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, president.[22] After serving as president for 13 years, Haynes retired due to a state law for which he had advocated that required heads of universities to retire at age 70. Haynes was named president emeritus, and the Board of Regents then appointed Milo Bail, dean of the college of education at Butler University, to succeed him.[23] Bail would go on to become widely recognized as one of the university's most influential presidents, serving for 17 years.[24] To succeed Bail, the Board of Regents appointed Leland E. Traywick, the formerly ousted president of Southwest Missouri State University, on February 1, 1965.[25] [26] However, Traywick lasted only two years before he resigned to pursue other scholarly activities.[27] The board then appointed Kirk E. Naylor, the dean of administration at the university, to become acting president. He was later named president on June 5, 1967.[28]
In 1968, the Municipal University of Omaha was merged into the University of Nebraska system, creating the new University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO). Three years later, after disagreements with the Board of Regents and University of Nebraska President D. B. Varner, Kirk Naylor was fired by the Board of Regents.[29] It was at this time that the Board of Regents also changed the title of the post from "president" to "chancellor," and thus John V. Blackwell was appointed the acting chancellor until a replacement for Naylor could be found. Ronald Roskens, the executive vice president at Kent State University, was hired as the next chancellor of UNO in July 1972.[30] Roskens later resigned his position as chancellor in 1977 to become D. B. Varner's replacement as President of the University of Nebraska. Roskens then hired Del Weber, a native Nebraskan who was serving as the dean of the college of education at Arizona State University, as his replacement as UNO chancellor.[31] Weber went on to become the longest-serving chancellor at UNO, serving in the position for 20 years before retiring.[32] In 1986, Weber initially accepted the top administrative position at the University of Nevada, only to turn it down the next day to remain at UNO after the faculty senate asked him to stay. Upon his retirement, a UNO campus building was named after him: the Del and Lou Ann Weber Fine Arts Building.
In 1997, Nancy Belck was appointed as UNO's chancellor. The first woman to serve in this position, she was previously the chancellor at Southern Illinois University.[33] Nine years later, Belck resigned after controversy over how the budget of the athletic department was handled as well as allegations that she falsified an expense report.[34] In the wake of Belck's resignation, vice chancellor for academic and student services John E. Christensen was appointed interim chancellor and was later made full chancellor.[35] He was the first chancellor to have also been an alumnus of UNO.[36] After Christensen's retirement, Jeffrey P. Gold, chancellor of the University of Nebraska Medical Center, was appointed interim chancellor of UNO and was later made full chancellor as well.[37] [38] After Gold stepped down to become the executive vice president and provost of the University of Nebraska system, Joanne Li, the first Asian-American to hold the position, was appointed UNO's 16th chancellor.
No. | Portrait | Chancellor | Term | End of tenure |
---|---|---|---|---|
President of the University of Omaha (1909–1931) | ||||
1 | Daniel Edwards Jenkins | Sep 1909 – Dec 1926 | Resigned due to declining health | |
Interim | W. Gilbert James | Dec 1926 – Sep 1927 | ||
2 | Karl Frederick Wettstone | Sep 1927 – July 4, 1928 | Resigned due to conflict with students and budgetary concerns | |
3 | Ernest Wesley Emery | July 4, 1928 – July 17, 1930 | Resigned because he lacked a Ph.D. required for accreditation | |
4 | W. Gilbert James | July 17, 1930 – Aug 31, 1931 | ||
President of the Municipal University of Omaha (1931–1968) | ||||
5 | William Elmer Sealock | Sep 1, 1931 – July 7, 1935 | Fired by the Board of Regents and subsequently committed suicide | |
De facto Interim | Edgar A. Holt | July 7, 1935 – Aug 14, 1935 | ||
6 | Rowland B. Haynes | Aug 15, 1935 – June 30, 1948 | Retired to return to teaching | |
7 | (Philip) Milo Bail | July 1, 1948 – Jan 31, 1965 | Retired | |
8 | Leland E. Traywick | Feb 1, 1965 – Dec 31, 1966 | Resigned | |
President of the University of Nebraska at Omaha (1968–1971) | ||||
9 | Kirk E. Naylor | Jan 1, 1967 – Aug 7, 1971 | Fired by the Board of Regents | |
Chancellor of the University of Nebraska at Omaha (1971–present) | ||||
10 | John Victor Blackwell | Aug 8, 1971 – June 30, 1972 | ||
11 | Ronald W. Roskens | July 1, 1971 – Dec 31, 1976 | Resigned to become President of the University of Nebraska | |
Interim | Herbert Garfinkel[39] | Jan 1, 1977 – Aug 31, 1977 | ||
12 | Delbert D. "Del" Weber | Sep 1, 1977[40] – June 30, 1997 | Retired | |
Interim | Ernest J. Peck Jr.[41] | July 1, 1997 – Aug 31, 1997 | ||
13 | Nancy Belck | Sep 1, 1997 – Sep 12, 2006 | Resigned over mismanagement of funds | |
14 | John E. Christensen | Sep 13, 2006 – May 8, 2017 | Retired | |
15 | Jeffrey P. Gold | May 8, 2017 – June 30, 2021 | Resigned to become executive vice president and provost of the University of Nebraska system | |
16 | Joanne Li[42] | July 1, 2021 – present | ||