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UNLV SEARCH: Familiar face under consideration for president's post

Chancellor suggests making interim choice permanent




So, who in the world is Neal Smatresk and just exactly how do you say his name?

Smatresk (it rhymes with mattress) is the higher ed chancellor's pick to become UNLV's new president. The full Board of Regents is scheduled to vote on the appointment next week.


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  • Smatresk has been the university's executive vice president and provost since 2007. That means he has been the behind-the-scenes boss of the university, the guy who makes things run smoothly. That's a provost's job.

    When regents demoted President David Ashley earlier this month, Smatresk immediately took over as acting president.

    He is a biologist by trade, is 58 years old, lives in Henderson, has two grown children and has been married for 31 years.

    Smatresk came to UNLV -- hired by Ashley after a national search -- from the University of Hawaii at Manoa, where he was the chief academic officer for three years. That appointment came after 22 years at the University of Texas, where he served as a professor, a department chairman and a dean.

    Smatresk declined to be interviewed for this story. He offered, through a spokesman, only an "I am honored to have been nominated."

    But it has long been speculated he would be the top pick to take over at UNLV.

    He is praised, by and large, as a people person who knows the university inside and out.

    "I think he'll be a source of confidence for the students," said Adam Cronis, the student body president.

    John Filler, the chairman of the faculty senate, called Smatresk "a fine choice for the job."

    In the two-plus weeks since Ashley was demoted, system Chancellor Dan Klaich and Board of Regents Chairman James Dean Leavitt had a choice to make: Appoint a temporary president and launch a national search to find a permanent president or find somebody who could take over immediately and stay for a couple of years.

    They initially said they would do the former. They expected the board to appoint an interim president -- Smatresk, former President Carol Harter and former law school dean Richard Morgan were the top talked-about picks -- and then launch a search this fall.

    But in a series of meetings with faculty, administrators, students, alumni, community groups and donors, a theme emerged: Now is not a good time to bring in a new leader.

    The economy is in the pits, the university's budget is being cut, a vital accreditation review is on the schedule, a capital campaign is wrapping up, the formula that splits up higher education money among the colleges and universities probably will be rewritten and the Legislature is scheduled to meet in less than 18 months, where more budget cuts could be mandated.

    All of that means, insiders said, that the university needs someone right now who knows what's going on.

    Klaich, in a memo to board members in which he recommends Smatresk, called the provost an effective communicator, enthusiastic, open minded, likeable and a visionary.

    Some of those are issues about which Ashley was criticized.

    "He doesn't give off any sort of elitist air," Cronis said of Smatresk.

    But, like Ashley, Smatresk has never led a university before. Partly to guard against making the wrong choice, he will be offered a two-year contract, not the four-year contract typically offered to new presidents. The board and Smatresk will have the option of extending the contract for another year once those two years are up.

    At least officially, Smatresk will be the university's "acting president" during those two years, though Leavitt insisted Smatresk will be endowed with all the power and responsibility that any permanent president would have.

    What happens then is unknown. Smatresk could be hired on permanently, or he could be dismissed and a new search launched.

    Said Regent Ron Knecht: "Neal Smatresk could turn out to be just ideal. Or (the pick) could get us through the next two years and he turns out to be a B or a B-plus and we need a world-class talent, so we do a search."

    Contact reporter Richard Lake at rlake@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0307.

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    GOODMAN wrote on July 29, 2009 06:51 PM: He lives in Henderson??

    Shocking...who would have thought.

    I thought the well to do were all moving to Freemont St. where the Mayor is "rebuilding" the down town area for the more affluent.


    crzinvegas wrote on July 29, 2009 08:32 AM: It is inappropriate for the Chancellor to 'suggest' that Smatresk be given the job of president permanently before a)he's had the interim job long enough to determine how well he does (a provost's duties are very different from those of a president), and b) there is a national search as required by the bylaws to see if he really is the best choice. Being liked on campus is irrelevant. This is not a popularity contest. It's time for the regents to get this right.


    The beat goes on .. wrote on July 29, 2009 08:32 AM: UNLV finally gets rid of the pathetic atletic director ... and moves up the, equally, assistant.

    Next, the president ... and moves up the assistant. "Now is not a good time to bring in a new leader." When is a good time? Translation: things are so out of control they can't find anyone to take on the job. And, the regents & dullard faculty leaders are terrified of a true "change agent".

    Entrenched status quo. Same with CCSD. That's why Nevada swims near the bottom in the education pond.


    Sally wrote on July 29, 2009 08:16 AM: It's so nice on campus now since the troll Jim Rogers has left.
    Why it even smells better.
    The sky is blue. Flowers blooming.
    We couldn't be happier.
    Sounds like it didn't take the troll very long to start gutting his crappy little tee vee station over on skid row.
    Does it smell inside the building?
    Tell us.
    Cause he really stunk up the place here. Smelly. Change them old man diapers.


    Michael wrote on July 29, 2009 07:44 AM: The only thing UNLV is looking for in this post is fund raising. Why don't the reagents smarten up? Appoint the Sultan of Brunei to the post. He owns a tract of land in Henderson & pays taxes so you can say he's (sort of) a local. Won't have to pay him a salary or any benefits. UNLV will have a "minority" in the top position. And, his mega-bucks can get UNLV out of the taxpayers pocket. Total win, win!!


    Hey Reb says wrote on July 29, 2009 06:53 AM: I sure hope being "endowed with all the power and responsibility that any permanent president would have" means that Dr. Smatresk will promote the cause of diversity by demoting those in charge of diversity.