WEDNESDAY, March 27
W&L Names Vanderbilts Provost as 24th President
LEXINGTON, VA. Washington and Lee University today named Dr. Thomas G. Burish the chief academic and administrative officer at Vanderbilt University as the 24th president of the nations ninth oldest university.
Tom Burish has a proven record of success as a teacher, scholar, public
figure and university leader, said Rector J. Frank Surface, chairman of
the Board of Trustees, a W&L alumnus and a Jacksonville, Fla., businessman.
He has the vision, energy, experience and institutional understanding
to lead Washington and Lee, recognized as one of the nations best liberal
arts universities and schools of law, to the forefront of its peers, added
Surface.
Burish an officer on the board of directors of the American Cancer Society
and a leader on many of its scientific and research committees is a renowned
psychology professor who has applied his expertise to give people with cancer
better lives. He is a longtime accreditation reviewer and advisor to national
universities, medical centers and the U.S. Army.
He also has worked closely with the National Cancer Institute and is a member
of the National Dialogue on Cancer co-chaired by former President and Mrs. George
Bush.
Burish will assume the presidency on July 1 and immediately lead W&Ls
$225 million Capital Campaign, which has raised $175 million to date. The Campaign
for the Rising Generation was launched publicly in October and continues through
December 2003.
Through his groundbreaking research, gifted teaching and prolific writing,
Tom Burish has helped tens of thousands of cancer patients better cope with
the emotional and physical pain of this disease. That, alone, is a great legacy,
said John R. Seffrin, the American Cancer Societys chief executive officer.
But knowing Tom, he will seek and reach other great heights as president
of Washington and Lee.
Burishs success in increasing diversity among Vanderbilts faculty
and student body, his launching of interdisciplinary collaborations, his dedication
to both teaching and research, and his efforts to reduce student alcohol abuse
efforts also well underway at Washington and Lee are among his
key priorities.
I am exhilarated, humbled and grateful to be chosen as the next president
of Washington and Lee University, said Burish, who also will hold a W&L
psychology professorship.
Washington and Lee is a great university with a superb faculty, supportive
board, strong students, excellent curriculum and a distinctive blend of programs
and schools, he added. But, perhaps, its most enduring quality is
that it has accomplished all of this while also being deeply committed to core
values such as honesty, integrity and civility. It is clearly a special place.
Burish, 51, succeeds acting President Laurent Boetsch, W&Ls dean of
the college and vice president of academic affairs who will remain acting president
through June 30. Boetsch, a 1969 W&L alumnus, has led the University since
the death of President John W. Elrod, who died of cancer July 27, 2001.
The Board of Trustees unanimous election of Burish was announced to a
crowd of students, faculty and townspeople who gathered at noon today at W&Ls
historic Lee Chapel. Activities continued through the afternoon, when Burish
was welcomed informally by the W&L community at a reception hosted by Elizabeth
and Larry Boetsch on the Universitys National Historic Landmark grounds.
The recipient of national teaching and research awards, Burish is the author
of four textbooks, co-author of 16 additional books and has written nearly 70
articles for academic and lay journals, both in the U.S. and abroad. He is on
the editorial board of the Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings
and previously served as an editor or editorial board member of nine other national
journals.
As Vanderbilts longest-serving provost, Burish has overseen the student-run
honor system and eight deans including those for Vanderbilts schools of
law, business, divinity, engineering and arts and science. He also has spearheaded
Vanderbilts admissions operation, budgetary process, strategic plan, faculty
tenure procedures and minority recruitment efforts.
In his 10-year tenure as chief academic officer, Vanderbilts student body
has increased in quality and diversity, with 14 percent of its 5,868 undergraduates
being African-American, Hispanic or Asian-American. W&Ls non-white
enrollment totals 8 percent of its 2,137 students, who represent 46 states,
the District of Columbia and 36 countries.
U.S. News & World Report ranks Vanderbilt 21st in the top 50 national research
universities. Washington and Lee is ranked 13th in the nations top 50
liberal arts colleges and W&Ls School of Law is ranked among the top
20 public and private law schools nationally, according to U.S. News.
Burishs Selection
Burishs selection follows a six-month national search
involving more than 150 candidates in academic, corporate, government, foundation,
law and other professional fields. The faculty-led Search and Screening Committee,
whose 25 members included professors, trustees, alumni, staff and student representatives,
recommended five finalists to the Board of Trustees presidential Nominating
Committee.
After meeting with the finalists, the board committee recommended Burish to
the 32-member Board of Trustees, which elected him unanimously in a recent meeting.
In our review of dozens of candidates from across the country, Tom Burish
quickly stood out for his character and dynamic mix of talents in finance, teaching,
scholarship and leadership both at Vanderbilt and in his active service
to the American Cancer Society and other national organizations, said
Pamela J. White, a W&L trustee, alumna, Baltimore attorney and president
of the Maryland State Bar Association.
Added Professor Harlan R. Beckley, chairman of the Search and Screening Committee,
Tom Burish combines humor, humaneness and clarity of purpose in a way
that will win the affection and respect of every Washington and Lee constituency.
Give Tom 30 seconds and you will like him. Give him two minutes, and he
will inspire you to do your best to make Washington and Lee the best it can
be, added Beckley, director of W&Ls Shepherd Program for the
Interdisciplinary Study of Poverty.
Burish follows other recent presidents who joined W&L after distinguished academic careers elsewhere. Elrod joined W&L as dean of the college in 1984 from Iowa State University and was elected W&Ls 22nd president in 1995. His predecessor, John D. Wilson, was executive vice president and provost at Virginia Tech when named president in 1982.
It was under Wilsons leadership that W&L became co-educational, its
endowment doubled, its 15 fraternities were renovated and the Lenfest Center
for the Performing Arts opened. Elrod further increased W&Ls endowment
and continued campus improvements marked by a major science addition; new athletic
facilities; and the construction of W&Ls five sororities houses.
That building boom is now in its final stage with this falls reopening
of the journalism building after its high-tech renovation, the planned construction
of a new art-music academic facility and next years opening of the four-story
John W. Elrod University Commons.
Burish: Brilliant, Focused
Joining
Vanderbilt in 1976 as an assistant psychology professor, Burish quickly rose
through the ranks to become a full professor, both in psychology and in medicine,
and director of Vanderbilts clinical training program and chairman of
the psychology department. Burish was named associate provost in 1986 and took
over Vanderbilts chief academic post in 1992.
David F. Partlett, dean of W&Ls School of Law and formerly Vanderbilts
law school dean, describes Burish as a brilliant intellectual with a clear
strategic focus.
As provost, Tom had the hardest job at Vanderbilt. The university has
been very ambitious in its drive to excellence and Tom has been the pilot of
that endeavor, Partlett added. At the same time, Tom has promoted
fine teaching and has sought quality in all aspects of student life. He has
promoted with equal intensity Vanderbilts quality of student life and
its academic endeavors.
Added Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., president of the University of Notre Dame
and a friend of Burish, He is a man of wide intellectual interests and
a person who can operate at the highest intellectual level with academics from
a wide range of disciplines.
He is smart, capable and dedicated, said Kent D. Syverud, dean of
Vanderbilts law school. Ive watched him handle almost all
types of crises a university leader can face from a budget deficit to
an enraged major donor to a stressful tenure decision. Tom fairly decided each
issue with aplomb and integrity, and took responsibility in a way that strengthened
Vanderbilt.
Burish, a licensed psychologist, holds psychology degrees from Notre Dame and
the University of Kansas. He is a member of the Academy of Behavioral Medicine
Research and is a fellow at the American Psychological Society and at the American
Psychological Association.
His wife, Pamela Burish, is professional director of Bredex Corp., which designs
Web-based assessment tools for schools and students grades K-6. A longtime teacher,
Mrs. Burish is the 1997-2000 recipient of Apple Computers Distinguished
Educator Award, the Milken Family Foundation National Teaching Award and was
selected Tennessees 1995 Teacher of the Year.
Pam and Tom Burish have two sons: Mark, 22, a senior at Princeton University
majoring in molecular biology; and Brent, 20, a sophomore at the University
of Notre Dame studying biology and business.