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The Nice Vice

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Hail to the chief

Hail to the chief

THE ETHOS OF BOND UNIVERSITY IS ‘STUDENTS FIRST’. THE LEADER WHO SET THE TONE WAS INAUGURAL VICE CHANCELLOR DON WATTS, WHO DIED EARLIER THIS YEAR AGED 88.

by Ken Robinson

Vice Chancellor Don Watts had a lot on his plate in 1989. The new Gold Coast university he had agreed to lead two years earlier was finally open but many of its buildings were not. The true extent of founder Alan Bond’s finances were being laid bare in the media, leading to questions about the future of his namesake enterprise. And Professor Watts had just signed up to become a late-night taxi driver in Surfers Paradise. The pledge, made in front of students and parents at the Opening Day Ceremony on May 15, was unequivocal. If students found themselves stranded on the Glitter Strip in the early hours with no way to return to their on-campus accommodation, they were to call Professor Watts and he would give them a ride home.

“He never had to do it but the offer was there,” his wife Michelle Watts says. “I think the parents felt reassured that someone cared about their children, because most of the young people came from elsewhere. Not a lot lived on the Gold Coast.” Mind you, Professor Watts would probably have relished the chance to slip into his little sports car for a late night drive. “He had an MG and one day someone reported that a student was making a lot of noise driving around the campus. It was actually Don,” Mrs Watts says. “He loved to rev it up!”

Bond University has led national student experience measures for 17 years but the standard was set long before by its inaugural Vice Chancellor Donald Walter Watts AM who died in his hometown of Perth on May 23, aged 88. The esteemed educator studied, taught and led at leading universities around the world but in 2014 said he considered Bond his ‘finest contribution to education’. Professor Watts was born on April 1, 1934 and went on to became an internationally recognised expert in inorganic chemistry. He enrolled at the University of Western Australia (UWA) in 1951 at the age of 16 to study a Bachelor of Science and attained a PhD before moving to University College London on a CSIRO Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in 1959. It was in London that he reconnected with his soon-to-be wife Michelle Yeomans who was teaching in the East End during a working holiday. The pair had met years earlier on family holidays when they were 12 and 10 respectively.

“(After the teaching stint) I went off to Europe to meet my parents and I said to Don, ‘Write to me at post restante here, here, here and here’, not expecting that he would. And I got to the first stop and there was a letter. When I got back to London and we met up we were married very soon after, because I was booked to come back to Australia with my family on the ship. So it was either get married and stay, or say goodbye. We were married for 62 years.”

The newlyweds returned to Australia in 1962, with Professor Watts becoming a Senior Lecturer in Physical and Inorganic Chemistry at UWA, rising to a Readership in 1968 and a Personal Chair in 1978. In 1980 he was appointed Director of the Western Australian Institute of Technology which became Curtin University of Technology. Professor Watts was its inaugural Vice Chancellor. He would go on to launch not one, but two universities, arriving on the Gold Coast in July 1987 to oversee the recruitment of academics and construction of the Bond campus which Mrs Watts says was ‘horrific – a mud puddle amidst pine trees’ following

The dynamic couple established the high-water mark in standards of student care and their actions set Bond on its journey of leading the nation in the student experience.

Overseeing construction as the University takes shape.

Vice Chancellor Tim Brailsford with Michelle and Don Watts at their home in Western Australia. months of wet weather delays.

Professor Watts told the 20th anniversary edition of the Arch in 2009 that he took the job because it was ‘absolutely vital’ there was an alternative to public university education in Australia. “I felt the overbearing bureaucracy in public education needed to be shaken by the existence of a private alternative.”

Professor Watts’ recruitment was a two-for-one deal, with Mrs Watts taking an active role in the University and the lives of its first 322 students. One of them, Claire Bibby (Class of 1989), remembers the isolation she sometimes felt as a West Australian on the Gold Coast and how fellow Sandgropers the Watts made her feel at home – literally. “I’ve always treasured my memories of Michelle and Don inviting the cohort of 15 or so Perth students into their home,” Ms Bibby says. “They both made us feel welcome and cared for and understood the depths of our own homesickness and vulnerability. I’ve always cherished my recollection of them opening their hearts and home to us and embracing us with their kindness and generosity of spirit.” While focussed on student achievements, the Watts reminded students to enjoy their time at university and participate in the social life of campus. It was at the suggestion of students that the University’s tavern be named Don’s and it remains a hub of campus social life to this day.

Tom Betts, another 892 student and foundation staff member, describes Professor Watts as ‘a bloke and a human being first, a university administrator second’. “During the contentious and fraught few weeks leading up to opening day in May 1989, when catastrophic rainfall set construction back months, Don showed his true self,” Mr Betts says. “In the middle of these battles, Don dropped everything to rush into the Gold Coast hinterland

L to R: Ella Watts, Cooper Watts, Fran Caratti, Michelle Watts, Andrew Watts, Ruby Watts and Angus Watts at the memorial function for Professor Watts.

Angus Watts holding Don's tankard at the memorial celebration at Don's Tavern. L to R: Scott Beasley and Vice Chancellor Tim Brailsford attend the memorial celebration at Don’s Tavern.

to join the search for a faculty dean (Steven Johnson) who was tragically swept away by raging floodwaters on his way to the campus. When his body was found, Don helped carry him out of the mud like a soldier with a fallen comrade. That kind of leadership isn’t taught at business schools.”

During his academic career Professor Watts spent time at the University of Southern California as a Fulbright Scholar, at the University of Toronto and the Australian National University. Outside of academe, Professor Watts held a number of distinguished positions including a seat on the Australian Science and Technology Council, Executive Chairman of the Northern Territory Trade Development Zone, board positions on the Western Australia Institute of Sport and Queensland Academy of Sport, and Chairman of the Australian Space Council.

Current Vice Chancellor Professor Tim Brailsford says Professor Watts’ contribution to the University has been ‘immense and remains unparalleled’. “Professor Watts and his wife Michelle welcomed and embraced the initial cohort of Bondies and subsequent cohorts, taking care of both the students’ academic and personal needs,” Professor Brailsford says. “The dynamic couple established the high-water mark in standards of student care and their actions set Bond on its journey of leading the nation in the student experience.”

Professor Watts was the first recipient of an Honorary Doctorate from Bond University in 1990, his final year at the helm. His achievements and contribution to education were recognised in the 1998 Australia Day Honours when he was made a Member of the Order of Australia. Following a stint working for the Northern Territory government, Professor Watts retired in 1995 and returned to Perth where he was asked to become an advisor to the Vice Chancellor of The University of Notre Dame, which he was for 20 years. The couple visited Bond University regularly, attending the 25th Anniversary Ball in 2014, and celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary in 2020.

Mrs Watts and her family were special guests at Bond University in September to attend a function marking the contribution of her late husband. Appropriately, it was held at Don’s Tavern. Professor Watts is survived by Michelle, sons Andrew and Tim, their partners Fran and Gill, and grandchildren Isaac, Ella, Angus, Caleb, Corinna, Ruby and Cooper.

Watch the video of the memorial celebration here

From the editor

In this edition, we talk to Bondies about how the ups and downs of their careers have prepared them for the heights they are now scaling.

Robert Sheppard is the man in charge of making sure FIFA’s 2022 World Cup runs smoothly amid controversy around the host nation, while CEO Airlie MacLachlan shares lessons from her own 30 years in business.

Ultramarathon runner Zoe Hawkins reflects on the literal heights she had to climb in training for one of the world’s most gruelling runs and Sky’s Stephen van Rooyen explains how seismic shifts brought forth a whole new way of making television.

We also profile the University’s inaugural Vice Chancellor, Professor Don Watts.

We hope you enjoy their stories of perseverance and innovation.

Best wishes for a safe and happy end to 2022. I look forward to seeing you at Homecoming in May 2023.

Nicole Walker (Class of 2001) Head of Alumni Relations

Cover image: Robert Sheppard at FIFA headquarters in Zurich, photographed by Chantelle Flores.

Contents

the ARCH - EDITION 31, NOVEMBER 2022

16 36

In Profile

2 The Nice Vice

Around Campus

8 When life gives you lemons 10 Upgrade for Basil Sellers 11 Kumai Karulbo Indigenous Gala 12 International travel back on the menu 14 BondCare TLC extends to PNG

Philanthropy

16 Airlie sees equal beauty in numbers and art

The Big Question

20 Is current global instability slowing the transition to a net-zero emissions future?

Research

22 Hack of all trades

On the world stage

26 Robert Sheppard 30 Zoe Hawkins 32 Patrick Buckley 34 Lleyton Hails 36 Stephen van Rooyen

Bondies on the Move

38 Class year updates 1993-2020

Sport

44 Women claim triple crown of championships 47 Bonanza in Birmingham 51 Hail to the chief

ALUMNI CENTRE

Step Up to the Board

2023-2024 ALUMNI ADVISORY BOARD ELECTIONS

Nominations open November 2022. Voting will take place January 2023.

alumni.bond.edu.au/advisoryboard

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