Thomas Rosenquist, Ph.D., Named Vice Chancellor for Research for UNMC

Following a national search, Chancellor Harold M. Maurer, M.D., announced

today that Thomas Rosenquist, Ph.D. has been named vice chancellor for

research for the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Dr. Rosenquist

has been serving as interim vice chancellor for research since July.

The appointment is a landmark event, Dr. Maurer said, as it marks the

first time UNMC has ever had a vice chancellor for research. The appointment

is effective Feb. 1, pending approval by the University of Nebraska Board

of Regents at its Jan. 19 meeting.

With our research funding growing significantly, this is a crucial

position at UNMC, Dr. Maurer said. Im confident Dr. Rosenquist will

provide the leadership and vision needed to develop our campus research

enterprise to achieve our goal of ranking among the leading research institutions

in the United States.

While serving as interim vice chancellor, he demonstrated his outstanding

abilities and has already had significant success in building a research

infrastructure on campus, directing the UNMC Tobacco Settlement Biomedical

Research Development program and developing a program statement for the

Research Center of Excellence.

He knows the campus. He knows the city. He knows the state. And he

knows the research business. Hes a perfect fit for this position.

Dr. Maurer praised the work of the search committee headed by William

Berndt, Ph.D., vice chancellor for academic affairs. Other members of the

search committee included Ira Fox, M.D., associate dean for research and

development, UNMC College of Medicine, Ada Lindsey, Ph.D., dean of the

UNMC College of Nursing, and John McClain, Ph.D., associate vice chancellor,

academic affairs.

Dr. Berndt said the committee reviewed about 20 applicants for the position

and brought in four finalists for interviews.

A prolific researcher, Dr. Rosenquist currently has more than $8.3 million

in funding from the National Institutes of Health. Earlier this year, he

received a five-year, $5.6 million program project grant from the National

Heart, Lung and Blood Institute to study the causes of congenital heart

defects. For several years, he has served as a grant reviewer for the National

Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.

Its an honor to be selected as the first vice chancellor for research

for UNMC, Dr. Rosenquist said. I appreciate the confidence Dr. Maurer

has placed in me and look forward to serving on his senior administration

team. This is an exciting time to be a part of the research enterprise

at UNMC with the Research Center of Excellence under construction and the

Tobacco Settlement funding greatly enhancing our biomedical research.

UNMC has set a strategic goal of increasing research funding by 30 percent

each year. In 2000-01, UNMCs research funding exceeded $41.3 million.

Based on first quarter results in fiscal year 2001-02, Dr. Rosenquist said

it looks like UNMC will make its goal of increasing research funding by

30 percent this year.

The vice chancellor for research becomes the third vice chancellor post

at UNMC. The other vice chancellors are Dr. Berndt and Don Leuenberger,

vice chancellor for business and finance.

In addition to directing the Tobacco Settlement Biomedical Research

Development Program, the vice chancellor for research will oversee several

other major components of UNMCs research enterprise, including direction

of  the Nebraska Research Initiative, the UNMC Research Council, the

UNMC Research Board, and the Comparative Medicine program. The vice chancellor

for research also oversees Sponsored Programs Administration, which provides

support for the grant application process, and along with the vice chancellor

for academic affairs has joint oversight of the Office of Regulatory Affairs.

Dr. Rosenquist, 59, joined UNMC in 1992 as chairman and professor of

the Cell Biology and Anatomy Department. In 1999, he was appointed director

of research development and was named to the von Housen Professorship.

Before coming to UNMC, Dr. Rosenquist had 22 years of experience in academic

medicine, including four years at the University of Southern California

School of Medicine and 18 years at the Medical College of Georgia.

He attracted national and international attention in 1998 when he headed

a research study which determined that the key ingredient in non-prescription

cough medicine can produce a variety of birth defects and fetal death in

an animal model, thus suggesting that pregnant women might want to avoid

using cough medicine. A developmental biologist, Dr. Rosenquists research

has focused primarily on the causes of congenital heart defects.

Under his leadership, the UNMC Cell Biology and Anatomy Department was

honored with the University-wide Departmental Teaching Award in 1997. The

$25,000 award recognized the department for its strong commitment to the

education of students and for its contribution to teaching excellence in

the University of Nebraska System. The department was recognized for several

areas of excellence, including having a large number of outstanding teaching

award recipients; exceptional performance by students in national standardized

examinations; faculty participation in innovative curricula; and the success

of graduates in the graduate training program.

He earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Dubuque in

1964, his masters degree in 1967 from New Mexico Highlands State University,

and his doctorate from Louisiana State University in 1969.