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University of Montevallo president to retire

University of Montevallo president to retire

Yahoo05-05-2025
MONTEVALLO, Ala. (WIAT) — The second-longest serving president in University of Montevallo history will be retiring from the position when July ends.
John W. Stewart III made the announcement Monday. Stewart was inaugurated as the university's president October 14, 2010.
'Cindi and I are incredibly grateful to the UM community for so many wonderful years together,' Stewart said in a statement. 'We appreciate the many meaningful relationships we've enjoyed with our students, faculty, staff and alumni, and we wish the UM family all the best in the future.'
The 15th president in UM history, Stewart focused on developing new academic programs and improving the university's financial health. According to the UM, it increased the number of first-year freshman and transfer applications under Stewart's tenure. More students started living on campus as Stewart continued leading the university. He also improved funding for faculty salaries.
Stewart began the UM President's Outdoor Scholars Program. A bass fishing team in that program has claimed four straight Bass Pro Shops School of the Year titles. The Montevallo MADE program for first-year student populations has garnered a 90% retention rate.
Man accused of strangling Alabama pageant queen charged in murder-for-hire plot enters not guilty plea
Before arriving in Shelby County, Stewart worked as the vice president for institutional advancement at Flagler College in St. Augustine, Florida. Stewart earned his bachelor's degree at Wake Forest University, his master's degree from Washington College and his doctor of philosophy in English from the University of Southern Mississippi.
The UM Board of Trustees will handle the search for the university's 16th president.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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That same law requires safe repatriation of the children. But Casas is skeptical of that. Even if the funding has been restored, the demand can't keep up. In April, more than 8,300 children ages 11 and under were ordered deported by immigration courts. That is the highest number for that age group in any month since tracking began over 35 years ago, according to court data from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, as first reported by The Independent. Since Trump took office in January, judges have ordered the removal of over 53,000 immigrant children, according to the data collected. Most of those children are elementary school age or younger. Approximately 15,000 were under the age of 4, and another 20,000 were between 4 and 11 years old. Teenagers have also been affected, with 17,000 ordered deported, though that number is still below the peak seen in 2020, during Trump's first term. Some of the children are unaccompanied minors, like Xally and Daneli, but it's unclear how many, since immigration authorities stopped tracking that data years ago. In the Chicago area, it's hard to know how many children are currently being detained or deported, due to gaps in the available data. But according to data obtained by the Deportation Data Project and analyzed by the Tribune, at least 16 minors were deported or left the U.S. after being booked in Chicago-area ICE detention centers during Trump's first 150 days back in office. Another seven cases are still pending. If all seven of those cases result in deportation, that would bring the total to 23 minors — about the same number as were deported in the final 150 days of the Biden administration. But the latest available ICE data doesn't capture any efforts since late June. When Xally learned that Daneli had returned home, she panicked. The two girls had spent a few nights at the church, confiding in each other the fear that few other young girls would understand. 'Would I have to do that too?' she asked herself. 'I don't want to. I like school here, I want to go back after summer break.' Xally is enrolled at Robert Abbott Middle School in Waukegan, where she would enter eighth grade if she stays in the country. Meanwhile, her summer has been shadowed by fear and uncertainty. Just days after receiving the letter, her family quietly marked her 13th birthday — no guests, no music, no gifts. She can't even go anymore to the beach, a place that once felt like the freedom and safety she and her mother had desperately sought after being released from federal custody.

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