UNO Magazine Summer 2017
UNO CHANCELLOR A TRUE MAVERICK
UNO’s newest chancellor, Jeffrey P. Gold, M.D., has gone by many titles: a doctor, an administrator, an educator, a leader, a dream maker and, now, he’s a Maverick.
On April 27, Gold, who also is chancellor of the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC), was named by University of Nebraska President Hank Bounds, Ph.D., to serve as chancellor of UNO.
Gold takes over for Chancellor Emeritus John Christensen, Ph.D., who retired after leading UNO for more than decade. And though he now oversees two premier Omaha institutions — one medical and one metropolitan — it appears this is something Gold has been preparing for his entire life.
Working-class roots
Growing up in New York City, Gold’s formative years were much like that of many UNO students. He and his brother were born to working-class parents and were two of the first in their family to go to college.
Even before graduating from high school, Gold was set on pursuing higher education by any means possible. He did so by enrolling at Cornell University on an engineering college scholarship.
“I grew up in a very humble setting in the inner city of New York,” the chancellor says. “My ticket to get out of the inner city was to get a scholarship to go to college, and at that time engineering scholarships were much more plentiful than non-engineering scholarships.”
Despite being drawn to medicine from a young age, he knew that getting that first foot in the door would be all it took to prove himself and begin to accomplish his goals.
“I studied what was called, in those days, Applied Theoretical Mechanics, all the while earning the pre-medical requirements, never giving up my dream to go to medical school,” he says.
Throughout his educational career, which included graduating top of his class in Cornell’s Weill College of Medicine, Gold took every opportunity he could to engage in research and teaching — even as an undergraduate and graduate student.
“It gave me a lot of respect for the value of higher education and my first really good look at the inner-workings of a large undergraduate experience,” Gold says. “It gave me a lot of respect for how hard the faculty work and how much goes into planning a curriculum, delivering curriculum and running through the annual academic cycle.”
Renewed perspective
Flash forward nearly 40 years and it’s easy to see that Gold has applied that same tenacity and drive throughout his career.
Beginning with his residency at New York Presbyterian’s Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and through his role as chancellor and executive vice president of Biosciences and Health Affairs at the University of Toledo (prior to coming to Omaha), Gold has accumulated an impressive legacy as a surgeon, community leader and educator.
And yet, he is most proud of most recently earning the title “grandpa” following the birth of twins — a boy and a girl — from his son and daughter-in-law late last year.
“They have really changed our lives in many different ways,” he says. “I never thought much about what it would mean to be called grandpa — but it turns out I really like it and it’s given me a renewed perspective on why it is that I do what I do, what are the contributions that we are going to make as a great university, in education, in healthcare, in community outreach, in research and science, to make their world a better world.”
Making an impression
It is that same selflessness and commitment to improving the lives of future generations that has so impressed UNO faculty and students.
“His investment in UNO started well before his role as chancellor,” says Paul Davis, associate professor of biology. “His visionary support of various UNO-UNMC pipelines, including those designed to diversify the Omaha healthcare community, has been a blessing to students and community partners.”
Davis has worked closely with the College of Medicine at UNMC to create the Urban Health Opportunities Program (UHOP), which launched in August 2016 and provides a direct pipeline to medical school at UNMC for students who want to provide health care to underrepresented communities.
“Chancellor Gold has demonstrated time and again the need for programs and offerings to be student-centered and community-lifting,” Davis says. “This is a leadership focus that is highly valued at UNO, and every expectation is that he will carry these values over as the new chancellor.”
Additionally, a number of faculty at UNO have joint appointments at UNMC, including Nick Stergiou, director of UNO’s Biomechanics Research Building. It is because of those close partnerships that UNO has been able to secure millions in research grants from federal entities like the National Institutes of Health.
“I don’t believe we have any grant or a project in biomechanics where we don’t work with UNMC,” Stergiou says. “Chancellor Gold is an amazing leader and visionary. During his time here, the ties between the UNO Biomechanics and UNMC have been further strengthened.”
UNO Student Body President Carlo Eby has already had several meetings with Gold and knows that he is committed to a strong student experience.
“Chancellor Gold is not afraid to ask tough questions, but it’s all with the intention to set this university on the path of continued success,” he says. “He demands excellence from himself, and in turn, others around him seem to elevate their game to match his level of professionalism. He makes those around him want to be the best they can be, and that’s a great attitude and energy to have on campus.”
Chancellor Gold says that, as leader of both UNO and UNMC, he foresees countless other opportunities — including everything from the hard sciences to athletic training to rural community engagement — that will help students achieve their dreams and improve the lives of citizens in Nebraska and around the world.
To achieve these goals, Chancellor Gold says he will continue to rely on the most important piece of advice he’s ever received, when he was first named dean at the College of Medicine at the Medical University of Ohio more than a decade ago:
“You surround yourself with the very best people, make sure they have the resources they need, stay out of their way and then bask in their reflected glory. Whether it’s our students, our patients, our faculty, our staff — anything I can do to make their dreams come true is to the betterment of our community. And, of course, to the betterment of their life.”