James_H._Marshall

James H. Marshall

James H. Marshall

American academic administrator


James Harper Marshall (July 21, 1931 – December 16, 2007) was an American administrator who served as the 5th president of Hofstra University from 1972 to 1973.

Quick Facts 5th President of Hofstra University, Preceded by ...

Administrative career

Marshall attained the post of President of Hofstra University following the sudden relievement of Clifford Lee Lord so that he would become chancellor. The controversy had been so much that a trustee had resigned his post on the Board due to Marhsall's "...unspecific capabilities...as president and chief executive".[3] Marshall's tenure was then riddled with other woes, such as a looming $1 million deficit in June 1972, as Hofstra' endowment was only $7 million at the time.[4]

However, Marshall's tenure was ultimately remembered for the 1973 raid that was conducted on Hofstra's campus in coordination with the Nassau County Police Department. The university had helped to coordinate the raid with local officials after the police had denied their request to have the students turn themselves over to police voluntarily, and that indictments were already in place for the students. As a result, 28 students were arrested for selling various sorts of narcotics.[5] In response to the aftermath of the raid, Marshall had called Hofstra "hell of a good school" and had denied any knowledge of knowing of the raid before being contacted by the department.[6]

Marshall also made some significant appointments to University Deanships when he appointed Monroe Freedman as the second Dean of Hofstra Law and Harold Lazarus as the Dean for the School of Business.[7]

Marshall had then left the presidency on June 20, 1973.


References

  1. Silver, Roy R. (1972-04-30). "Administration Shuffle Brings Controversy to Hofstra Campus". The New York Times. ProQuest 119456203.
  2. Topol, Manny; Van Hainte, Bill; Sullivan, Colleen (1973-02-28). "Raid on the Hofstra Campus: A Quiet Drug Raid at Hofstra Nassau County". Newsday. ProQuest 919046190.
Preceded by President of Hofstra University
1972–1973
Succeeded by



Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article James_H._Marshall, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.