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The Dartmouth
April 4, 2026
The Dartmouth
News
News

Gallo '99 is elected new Assembly VP

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The Student Assembly elected James Gallo '99 as its new vice president at the first meeting of Spring term last night, but tabled a host of proposed constitutional amendments. Gallo replaces Janelle Ruley '00, who was elected for a two-week tenure at the end of last term after Nahoko Kawakyu '99 resigned.




News

Hutton helped create College's endowment

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While at Dartmouth, Vice President and Treasurer Lyn Hutton molded a successful and interesting career while managing an approximately $300 million budget and $900 million endowment. Hutton, the College's highest ranking female administrator and first female vice president and chief financial officer, is responsible for managing the College's stock portfolio, its human resources department, the Hanover Inn, Dartmouth Dining Services and land donated to the College.





News

Empty Parkhurst: New president's clean slate: Freedman's successor faces many decisions

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With yesterday's announcement of two more high-level administrative resignations, the leadership vacuum that was once an opportunity for Dartmouth's next president has become his or her first crisis. When the College's Board of Trustees announces President James Freedman's successor, that person will inherit a Parkhurst Hall with four major offices vacant -- the vice president and the dean of the College offices on the first floor, the provost office upstairs and the dean of residential life office in the basement. Beyond the walls of Parkhurst, the Thayer School of Engineering is still without a permanent dean following Elsa Garmire's resignation last summer. Administrative turnover often precedes and follows new presidencies at institutions of higher learning -- in the first few years after Freedman's inauguration, he appointed a new dean of the College, a new provost, a new vice president/treasurer and a new dean of the faculty. But what makes the current situation different is that the openings are all concurrent with the presidential void. And because of the timing of the resignations, it will be difficult to fill positions with candidates from other universities who are, for the most part, already committed to another year at their current schools. The next president will most likely take over a school with a number of acting administrators whose temporary reassignments leave holes in other parts of the College's work force. During the search periods for long-term replacements, the acting administrators can either get a number of projects under way, which would dictate in large part what the new administrators will have on their agendas, or they can delay major decisions until the positions are permanently filled, which would prolong the freeze on new projects which has marked the current lame-duck period. Turco's impending absence is not the only vacancy in the Office of Residential Life -- Associate Dean of Residential Life Bud Beatty left last year to become director of student housing and residential programs at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. While Assistant Dean of Residential Life Mary Liscinsky has been filling in for Beatty, a permanent replacement has not yet been found. The College is also looking for permanent area directors to replace Chris Foley, who also left last year, and Chris Chambers, who is filling in for Liscinsky. Once all the smoke has cleared, however, the next president will have a chance to install a larger than usual number of administrators at once. This large-scale overhaul could merely be a sign of the changing face of higher education.





News

Boraz to be new rabbi for College

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Edward Boraz has been named the new College rabbi and Jewish Chaplain for Hillel, the College's Jewish students' organization, and the Upper Valley Jewish Community following a year-long search in which the committee responsible scrapped its initial efforts in November and appointed a temporary rabbi last term. Former College Rabbi Daniel Siegel announced his resignation in February of 1997 after 10 years at the College. The search committee unanimously selected Boraz, who is a graduate of Hebrew Union College and has served as rabbi for the Bnai Tzedek congregation in Cincinnati for eight years. Philip Posner, the interim rabbi, will serve until Boraz takes over this summer. The search committee consisted of Dean of the Tucker Foundation Scott Brown, Dean of First-Year Students Peter Goldsmith, Upper Valley Jewish Community representative Rebecca Gottesman, Physics Professor Jane Lipson, Computer Science Professor Cliff Stein and former president of Hillel Shirley Sperling '98. Boraz was ordained as a reform rabbi and is currently serving a "rather strict conservative congregation," UVJC President Morton Wise said. Wise said Boraz was "much more than a reform rabbi" because of his vast experience with other types of Judaism.



News

Winter term is a busy one for the College: Pelton, Assembly VP announce resignations

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Resignations and controversial visiting speakers were some of the major events in the busiest Winter term the College has seen since the destruction of shanties on the Green garnered national attention in 1986. The biggest newsmaker on campus last term was Dean of the College Lee Pelton, who announced in early January that he will step down on June 16 to become the president of Willamette University in Salem, Ore.





News

Conway, Cole to be Spring term fellows

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The first female president of Smith College, Jill Conway, and the first female African American president of Spelman College, Johnnetta Cole, will be the Montgomery Fellows for Spring term. Executive Director of the Montgomery Endowment Barbara Gerstner's announcement of two female fellows coincides with the 25th anniversary of coeducation at the College. Conway, a best-selling author who holds over 30 honorary degrees from North American colleges and universities, will be in residence from April 1-10, and Gerstner has already planned an itinerary for her. "I've already got her schedule filled with going to classes and meeting a wide range of students," she said. Conway's 10-day stay will be highlighted by a public address on Thursday, April 2 at 4 p.m.