Samuel L. Stanley | |
---|---|
![]() Stanley in 2014 | |
21st President ofMichigan State University | |
In office August 1, 2019 – November 4, 2022 | |
Preceded by | Lou Anna Simon John Engler (interim) Satish Udpa (acting) |
Succeeded by | Teresa Woodruff (interim) Kevin Guskiewicz |
5thPresident of Stony Brook University | |
In office July 1, 2009 – July 31, 2019 | |
Preceded by | Shirley Strum Kenny |
Succeeded by | Michael A. Bernstein (interim) Maurie D. McInnis |
Personal details | |
Born | Samuel Leonard Stanley Jr. (1954-01-11)January 11, 1954 (age 71) Seattle, Washington, U.S. |
Education | University of Chicago (BA) Harvard University (MD) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Internal medicine |
Institutions | |
Samuel L. Stanley Jr. (born January 11, 1954) is an Americaneducator andbiomedical researcher. He was president ofMichigan State University from 2019 to November 2022, and president ofStony Brook University from 2009 to 2019.[1][2] Stanley is one of the founding directors of the Midwest Regional Center of Excellence forBiodefense and EmergingInfectious Diseases Research.[1][2]
On October 13, 2022, Stanley announced his resignation as president of Michigan State University, and stepped down on November 4, 2022.[3][4]
Samuel L. Stanley Jr. attendedWinston Churchill High School, located in Potomac, Maryland, and graduated in 1972. He then attended theUniversity of Chicago, where he graduated with honors inBiological Sciences in 1976 and was inducted intoPhi Beta Kappa in the same year.[1][2][5] As anAlbert Schweitzer fellow ofHarvard Medical School, Stanley received hisM.D. specializing inInternal Medicine in 1980.[1][6]
He served as amedical intern atMassachusetts General Hospital between 1980 and 1981 and stayed to complete his residency inInternal Medicine atMassachusetts General Hospital.[1] He was appointed as an associate member of theAmerican College of Physicians.[1] During his time at Mass General, Stanley met colleague and future wife, Dr. Ellen Li, who was concurrently completing her residency in internal medicine.[7]
Between 1983 and 1984, Stanley was afellow ininfectious diseases atWashington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri.[1][2][8][9] While there, he was a Pfizer Postdoctoral Fellow inmicrobiology andimmunology.[1] He became a professor in the department ofmedicine, and served in the Division of Infectious Diseases and Department of Molecular Microbiology. Stanley also served as director of the National Institutes of Health-funded Midwest Regional Center of Excellence for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases Research. In 2006, he was namedvice-chancellor for research atWashington University in St. Louis.[5]
On May 12, 2009, Stanley was named the fifth president ofStony Brook University, a position he formally assumed on July 1, 2009, making him the first physician to serve as Stony Brook University's president.[10][11]
Stanley's tenure at Stony Brook was marked by enhancing the faculty, boosting minority and low-income student enrollment, raising academic success rates, and increasing research funding and the university's endowment level.[12] Stony Brook University saw its largest donation in school andState University of New York history when mathematicianJim Simons gifted $150 million to the school.[13] In 2012, Stanley and his wife announced the establishment of the Ellen Li and Samuel S. Stanley Jr. Endowed Scholarship in the Stony Brook University School of Medicine.[14] He also associated the university with the United Nations HeForShe program and committed the university to addressing gender equity issues.[15]
Upon Stanley's arrival, Stony Brook faced a $13 million budget deficit which grew to $21 million and led to a hiring freeze in December 2009 and closure of the 81-acre campus in Southampton in 2010.[16][17] Students brought suit to the university over the closure, resulting in a settlement which included a public apology by Stanley and an agreement to maintain an environmental degree program the students were enrolled in.[18] By 2017, Stony Brook's budget deficit grew to $35 million which led to development of a budget plan which included controversial cuts to the university's humanities funding.[19][20][21][22][23]
According to theChronicle of Higher Education, Stanley's salary was $690,040 during the 2014–15 school year and ranked the 25th-highest amongst public university executives in the United States; from 2009 to 2012, the Stony Brook Foundation awarded Stanley $250,000 in addition to his base salary.[24]
In January 2015, Stanley began his term on the NCAA Division I board of directors.[25] On July 19, 2016, Stanley was appointed to the NCAA board of governors.[26] The board adopted a sexual violence policy in 2017 and in 2018 heard recommendations to tie athlete eligibility to behavior, but took no immediate action.[27] Stanley's term expired in 2018 and in 2020 the board expanded the NCAA's sexual violence policy to require student-athletes to annually disclose any investigations or disciplinary matters in their past.[28][29]
Stanley was named president of Michigan State University on May 28, 2019,[30] to succeedLou Anna Simon, who resigned in the wake of theLarry Nassar scandal, with his tenure officially beginning on August 1.[31][32] On August 29, 2019, two Michigan State students were charged with falseterrorism threats after posting a plan to assassinate Stanley on the Michigan Statesubreddit.[33]
The new president said early in his tenure that his top priority was to make Michigan State as safe, respectful and welcoming as it can be.[34] Meeting with and listening to members of the university community, including conversations with groups of sexual assault survivors, was a focus of his first months at MSU.[35] Feedback from those survivor sessions was also meant to help develop recommendations to improve the university's handling of sexual assault and formulate a comprehensive plan.[36] Late in 2019, Stanley announced two new institutional planning initiatives, one focused on issues ofdiversity, equity, and inclusion and the other a comprehensive university strategic planning process.[37][38] He also launched an initiative in late 2019 to investigate development of a campus multicultural center.[39]
Stanley restructured administration of the university's medical, osteopathic and nursing colleges and its clinical services in October 2019 to improve oversight and alignment of health care, education, and research activities.[40] The university broke ground Nov. 18, 2019 on a $19.5 million, gift-funded medical innovation facility next to MSU's $88.1 million Grand Rapids Research Center and close to its College of Human Medicine in downtown Grand Rapids.[41]
Stanley announced his resignation from Michigan State on October 13, 2022, stating that he no longer had confidence in the university's board of trustees. Some members of the board had been pressing him to retire, based on their criticism of his handling of the case of a dean in the Broad College of Business, who had been made to leave after allegations of sexual misconduct. Stanley's resignation was scheduled to take effect on January 11, 2023, but his last day was November 4, 2022.[3] He was the third MSU president in a row to tender his resignation since January 2018.[42]
Stanley was abiomedical researcher. His research interest inimmunity from infections led him to publish several articles about the characterization of keyproteins and pathways involved in amebic, bacterial and viral infections, blood-bornepathogen risks inhemophilia therapy, and the identification of new strain- specificclones.[1][43] Better defense against infection was a key focus of his research.[5]
In 2008, he worked to create the Midwest Regional Center for Excellence inBiodefense and EmergingInfectious Diseases Research, with a $37 million grant from theNational Institutes of Health.[5] The center was established with goals of improving biodefense, in reaction to the post-September 11bioterrorism threat andanthrax attacks.[44] He has also served on the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity, theNIH Blue Ribbon Panel on the New England Infectious Diseases Research Laboratory, theNIH National Advisory Allergy & Infectious Diseases Council and committees led by theUnited States Department of Commerce.[1]
Stanley is also the recipient of awards, including the Burroughs Wellcome Scholar Award in MolecularParasitology and the Distinguished Service Teaching Award from Washington University.[5]Stanley is currently the owner of 3patents.[1] He also serves as an ambassador for thePaul G. Rogers Society for Global Health Research and has received anhonorary doctorate degree in Science fromKonkuk University inSouth Korea.[2]
Stanley is married to Ellen Li, a practicing gastroenterologist and active researcher.[citation needed]