Youngstown State president to Southern Illinois

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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — The Southern Illinois University
board of trustees named former Illinois state superintendent of
education as the school’s president on Monday.
Youngstown State
University President Randy J. Dunn will be SIU’s eighth president,
replacing Glenn Poshard, who is retiring in June despite having a
contract that runs to 2015.
"Randy Dunn has both the skills and
the background to ensure that SIU continues to live up to its mission of
providing a quality education for thousands of students, serving as an
academic and economic engine and meeting the health care needs of
individuals and families in central and southern Illinois," board
chairman Randal Thomas said in the news release.
SIU, which has
campuses in Carbondale and Edwardsville as well as medical and dental
schools, will pay Dunn $430,000, according to university officials.
Dunn’s
appointment comes five months after the university, with the assistance
of search firm R. William Funk and Associates, launched a national
search for new president. University officials say Dunn’s name was one
of five finalists given to the board of trustees after an advisory
committee screened about 100 applicants.
Dunn was an associate
professor at SIU when he left in 2004 to become Illinois’ state
superintendent of education. In 2006, he left that post to become
president of Murray State University in Kentucky, and moved on to
Youngstown State in Ohio last May.
Poshard, who served five terms
in Congress and was a member of the state General Assembly before that,
lost a gubernatorial race to Republican George Ryan in 1998 before
serving four years as vice chancellor at SIU’s Carbondale campus. He was
named president in 2005.
Poshard’s tenure wasn’t without controversy.
He
came under fire in 2007 for a 1984 doctoral dissertation, which critics
claim was partly plagiarized and demanded his resignation. However, a
seven-member review panel determined the dissertation included
"inadvertent or unintended" plagiarism that could be easily remedied
without costing him his job.
Poshard also was criticized in 2009
for a university contract that some said was given improperly to his
son’s marketing agency. The contract involved a regional initiative to
bring broadband to southern Illinois. The university’s general counsel
investigated the dealings and found nothing out of order.
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