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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Dr. Keith McDowell, vice president of
research and information technology at the University of Texas
at Arlington, has been named vice president for research at The
University of Alabama.
“Keith McDowell brings to our university a unique
combination of individual research achievement, proven
leadership in academic research administration and extensive
research agency experience. He will be an excellent leader to
help us achieve our goals in the area of funded research at The
University of Alabama,” said UA President Robert E. Witt.
McDowell was selected for this new position at UA following a
national search. The appointment is effective Monday, Nov. 17.
McDowell came to the University of Texas at Arlington in 1991
as a professor of chemistry. He held several academic posts at
UT Arlington including chair of chemistry, dean of the graduate
school and his current post, vice president of research and
information technology. From 1979-1991 he was affiliated with
Los Alamos National Laboratory where he was a researcher and
administrator. He also served on the chemistry faculty at
Clemson University and as a research associate at the State
University of New York at Stony Brook. He served as a teaching
fellow at Harvard from 1966-71.
McDowell holds a bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Wake
Forest University and a Ph.D. in chemical physics from Harvard.
He has authored or co-authored more than 70 journal articles
in chemistry and physics and is a frequent presenter at national
and international scientific meetings. As a group leader at Los
Alamos he was involved in many different research projects with
funding totaling more than $4 million per year.
He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Omicron Delta
Kappa leadership honorary, the American Chemical Society and the
American Physical Society. He received the Harvard Teaching
Fellow Award for excellence in teaching in 1967 and in 1968, and
was an Alfred P. Sloan Fellow from 1978-81 while serving on the
faculty at Clemson.
Dr. Robert Wells, assistant academic vice president for
research, has been serving as interim vice president for
research at UA during the search process. “Bob Wells, with his
many dedicated years of experience at The University of Alabama,
has provided excellent transitional leadership, and we are
grateful for his service,” Witt said.
Witt also thanked the search committee for their work in
identifying several outstanding candidates for the position. Dr.
Amy Ward, professor of biological sciences, chaired the
committee.
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