[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 164 (Wednesday, November 4, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H7632-H7633]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE SERVICE OF WILLIAM ``BRIT'' KIRWAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Costello of Pennsylvania). The Chair
recognizes the gentleman from Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, first, I would say I was moved by the remarks
of the gentleman who just spoke, and I know we all join him in his
sentiments.
[[Page H7633]]
Mr. Speaker, I rise today to pay tribute to an individual who has
made a remarkable impact on higher education in this country and in my
State. He has done that for more than a half a century.
William English ``Brit'' Kirwan retired at the end of the June as
chancellor of the University System of Maryland. He served as
chancellor for the past 12 years, and, during that time, he oversaw the
period of growth, transformation, and achievement, which included the
integration of on-line technology with course instruction and a 24
percent increase in enrollment.
Dr. Kirwan's lifetime of service to higher education, Mr. Speaker,
began in his youth, which was spent on or around college campuses in
Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky, and Durham, North Carolina.
His father, Dr. A.D. Kirwan, was an accomplished educator and college
administrator as well, having written and lectured in history at the
University of Kentucky and later served as dean and its president.
Brit Kirwan followed in his father's footsteps, luckily for all of
us, attending the University of Kentucky, and later pursuing his
master's and doctorate in mathematics from Rutgers University in New
Jersey.
Dr. Kirwan came to the University of Maryland College Park in 1964, a
year after I graduated. He came as an assistant professor of math.
After 24 years teaching in the department, and having been elevated to
the department chair, and then provost, Dr. Kirwan was selected as the
president of the university in 1988.
He led the university system of Maryland's flagship campus for a
decade, before leaving to become president of The Ohio State
University.
I think I speak for all Marylanders when I say we were very happy
when he came back to Maryland. I was a member of the Board of Regents
at the time, and I remember participating in a meeting when we were
searching for a new chancellor.
I asked my colleagues, ``If we could get Brit to come back, what
would you think?'' All of them were extraordinarily enthusiastic.
So I called his house in Ohio, and his wife, Patty, answered, and I
asked her if she and Brit would be interested in returning. Patty
immediately replied they would both like to be closer to their
grandchildren. Luckily, they were living in Maryland.
I took that as a good sign and, a short time later, Brit was back as
chancellor of the university system. He managed a network that serves
over 165,000 undergraduate and graduate students at 12 universities,
two regional higher education centers, and one research center. It is
the 12th largest university system in America. Under Dr. Kirwan's
leadership, it has become a national model for excellence in higher
education, research, and applied innovation.
Dr. Kirwan has been called upon by both Democratic and Republican
Presidents over the years to advise on issues relating to higher
education access and performance. And certainly, he has been asked by
United States Senators and Members of this House for his advice and
counsel as well.
He has been committed, throughout his years as an administrator, Mr.
Speaker, to the principle that education ought to be accessible to all,
and it ought to be seen as a tool to help people enrich their lives for
learning, while advancing their careers. Among his major priorities
have been making the university campuses more diverse and making
attending college more affordable.
Under his leadership, the university system built partnerships with
the private sector and the State and Federal Government in order to
further the cause of advanced research and innovation that has
practical application for economic growth and national defense.
Last year, Mr. Speaker, I was proud to be on hand to inaugurate a new
test site in southern Maryland for unmanned aircraft systems, which
will help in the development of new aerospace technologies and bring
business development and skilled jobs to that region.
Dr. Kirwan has always understood that we need to do more to ensure
that everyone who wants to pursue higher education can do so and that
our colleges and universities are helping to produce skilled innovators
and workers. He knew that the university system was a partner in
economic growth in our State and that university and academic
institutions were partners in growing the U.S. economy.
Mr. Speaker, I have had the pleasure of working closely with Dr.
Kirwan for many years, and I have seen, firsthand, his passion for
higher education, his respect for faculty and staff, and his love of
students.
Last week, I had the opportunity to participate in a ceremony to
rededicate the University of Maryland mathematics building in honor of
Dr. Brit Kirwan. That building, in which he taught mathematics, is now
named in his honor for him.
All of us, Mr. Speaker, have witnessed his determination to make the
university system of Maryland a source of pride for our State and for
our country, and he has done so.
He has been a man who is deeply devoted to his wife, Patty, a
wonderful woman, and their wonderful family and their community. Patty
Kirwan is, herself, an extraordinary partner in the success that she
and Brit have both achieved.
Mr. Speaker, Chancellor Brit Kirwan is a man of extraordinary
intellect, vision, understanding, compassion, character, and principle.
He has brought all of these traits to bear in all of the important
roles he performed throughout every endeavor in his life.
On behalf of all of us who live in our State but, indeed, on behalf
of all the citizens of the United States whom he has advantaged in one
way or another, I thank Dr. Kirwan for his leadership on behalf of the
higher education for our State and for our country.
Dr. Kirwan has stepped down as chancellor, but, Mr. Speaker, I know
he will continue to lend all of his great talents to making higher
education ever more effective and his country ever more successful.
Well done, Doctor.
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