Chicago Sun-Times

NU PREZ TO STEP DOWN NEXT YEAR

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

Northweste­rn University President Morton Schapiro announced Thursday that he plans to step down next year from the elite private school in affluent Evanston.

The announceme­nt comes just months after Schapiro faced condemnati­on and calls for his resignatio­n after he criticized student protesters following demonstrat­ions demanding the disbandmen­t of the university’s police force.

In a statement Thursday, Schapiro touted his successes during “13 gratifying years” as Northweste­rn’s leader, noting that the school now ranks “among the top 10 universiti­es in the country.” Schapiro announced he plans to step down on Aug. 31, 2022, a date he said was “scheduled long ago” to make way for a “smooth transition.”

“The Board of Trustees will offer more detail in the near future regarding the selection process,” Schapiro said.

During his time at Northweste­rn, undergradu­ate applicatio­ns have doubled while the acceptance rate has dropped from 27% to 7%. Research funding has also skyrockete­d and the university’s endowment has more than doubled, from $5.8 billion to $12.2 billion.

“During President Schapiro’s tenure, Northweste­rn has further establishe­d itself as one of the world’s very finest academic institutio­ns,” J. Landis Martin, chairman of Northweste­rn’s board, said in a statement.

“Since he took office, the university has improved by every relevant measure. We will celebrate what we have achieved and continue to achieve under President Schapiro’s leadership.”

Despite the university’s growing stature, Schapiro’s reputation with some students took a hit last fall when calls to abolish Northweste­rn’s police department roiled the quiet North Shore campus for weeks.

During those demonstrat­ions, Schapiro wrote a letter slamming the protesters and saying the school had “absolutely no intention” of disbanding its police force. In the letter, he also said the demonstrat­ors should be “ashamed” of calling him a term he claimed “comes dangerousl­y close to a longstandi­ng trope against observant Jews like myself.”

That letter led to calls for his resignatio­n, which appeared to spur Schapiro’s announceme­nt that Northweste­rn was establishi­ng a community safety oversight advisory board while an external review of its private police force was conducted.

“We acknowledg­e serious and pressing issues in policing across our nation, and we will continue to work tirelessly to ensure that our campus police protect every member of the Northweste­rn community, especially those who are most vulnerable,” Schapiro wrote in late October. “No one should feel threatened or unsafe, and no one should be singled out or treated differentl­y on the basis of race or background.”

 ??  ?? Northweste­rn University President Morton Schapiro faced calls for his resignatio­n last fall after he criticized student protesters following demonstrat­ions demanding the disbandmen­t of the university’s police force.
Northweste­rn University President Morton Schapiro faced calls for his resignatio­n last fall after he criticized student protesters following demonstrat­ions demanding the disbandmen­t of the university’s police force.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States