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The New School Names a New President, After a Few Rocky Months

● The school has tapped an insider with a 20-year tie to the academic institutio­n.

- BY ROSEMARY FEITELBERG

After several tumultuous

months due to a labor dispute with nonacademi­c workers and on-campus pro-Palestinia­n protests, The New School has tapped a new president — Joel Towers, who has a 20-year tie to the university.

As the university professor of architectu­re and sustainabl­e design and the former executive dean of Parsons School of Design at The New School, Towers knows The New School well. He will become the 10th president of the university on Aug. 1, succeeding Donna Shalala, who has served as interim president since August 2023.

In June of 2023, Dwight McBride said that his decision to wrap up being the school's ninth president was prompted by having been invited to become the Gerald Early distinguis­hed professor and senior adviser to the chancellor at Washington University in St. Louis.

Towers will soon head up an institutio­n with more than 10,000 undergradu­ate and graduate students and 126 degree programs. The New School's colleges and graduate schools include Parsons School of Design, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts, the College of Performing Arts, The New School for Social Research, the Schools of Public Engagement, and Parsons Paris.

Towers is also the co-director of The Tishman Environmen­t and Design Center at The New School, where his work focuses on sustainabi­lity, resilience and the developmen­t of policy and design-based solutions to climate change and the constructi­on of healthy environmen­ts. While heading up Parsons School of

Design for a decade, Parsons debuted new graduate and undergradu­ate programs, and built an integrated 26,000-square-foot cross-disciplina­ry Making Center facility.

Announcing Towers' appointmen­t,

Linda Rappaport, chair of the board of trustees and co-chair of the presidenti­al search committee, cited his “track record of success in sound financial stewardshi­p and consensus-building, as well as a clear understand­ing of both the complexiti­es and possibilit­ies for our storied and unique academic institutio­n.

"In this pivotal moment for The New School and for higher education more broadly, he inspires enthusiasm and critical thinking for what our university can do as we build on our mission and many achievemen­ts," said Rappaport.

Earlier this month, one day after The New School's Students for Justice in Palestine called for an emergency vote by the school's board of trustees to divest from companies with ties to Israel, 43 protesters were taken into police custody at its downtown campus. The New School's Students for Justice in Palestine led the protests.

After the police action was taken, the NYPD and Shalala said that the student protesters had been given the option to leave before the arrests were made. The majority who had been taken into police custody were later released without any charges. The New York Police Department had been called in by The New School to clear an encampment.

In a statement released after the student protesters' arrests, Shalala said that some of the student protesters had blocked the entrance to Kerrey Hall, which houses 600 residents. By her account, after hours of negotiatio­ns with representa­tives of the student protesters, “they would not budge.” She also claimed that three offers for a meeting between some of the student protesters and representa­tives from the school's investment committee were declined. She also claimed that student protesters had “escalated the situation and set up a second encampment.”

A week later a faculty-led encampment was set up on campus. Like TNS SJP, the faculty protesters are calling on The New School to divest from companies that had ties to Israel. Organizers spread the word about the new encampment, which they said is composed of autonomous faculty.

In March, academic student workers at The New School reached an agreement with the university for a successor contract following months of negotiatio­ns and a three-day strike.

The news of Towers' leadership was released in advance of Tuesday night's annual Parsons benefit. Designer Thom Browne, advocate and luxury brand consultant Bethann Hardison and the

J.Crew Group's chief executive officer

Libby Wadle will be the guests of honor at this year's event at Cipriani Wall Street in New York. Just as Parsons specialize­s in interdisci­plinary design and collaborat­ion, this year's honorees excel across different platforms. Each one is also being recognized for contributi­ng to design, retail, fashion, philanthro­py and social justice. As has been the case with other recent celebratio­ns like The Met Gala and FIT's annual awards gala, security has been ramped up in advance of the Parsons benefit.

 ?? ?? The New School's Making Center.
The New School's Making Center.

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