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Inauguration

Nancy A. Roseman inaugurated as Dickinson's 28th president

by Tony Moore
September 28, 2013

Delegates representing 63 U.S. and international colleges and universities filed down High Street toward Old West, and hundreds of attendees streamed through every entrance to the lawn of the John Dickinson campus today, as the community gathered for the inauguration of Nancy A. Roseman as Dickinson鈥檚 28th president.

In her opening remarks, Jennifer Ward Reynolds 鈥77, chair of the Board of Trustees, noted Roseman鈥檚 desire to be a part of the Dickinson community and its rich history. 鈥淪he didn鈥檛 want to be president of a college,鈥 she said. 鈥淪he wanted to be president of this college.鈥

Roseman is the first female president in the college鈥檚 230-year history, and generations of Dickinsonians in town for Homecoming & Family Weekend attended the ceremony en mass. Also on hand to see Roseman鈥檚 inauguration were friends and family from across the country and around the globe, including her parents, Gwen and Leonard Roseman.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very special for a parent to be a witness to an occasion like this,鈥 said Leonard Roseman.


President Roseman鈥檚 mentor and longtime friend Morton Schapiro, president of Northwestern University, delivered remarks, touting the significant place the liberal-arts education holds in modern society.

鈥淲e provide a product that鈥檚 never been more in demand, never had a higher economic and social return and never has been more important for the world鈥檚 future,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f there was a time for bold presidential leadership in higher education, Nancy, it is now and it is you.鈥

Amy Farrell, the John J. Curley 鈥60 and Ann Conser Curley 鈥63 Faculty Chair in the Liberal Arts, represented the faculty and touted Roseman as a valuable ally in advancing Dickinson鈥檚 scholarly agenda, saying, 鈥淲e share a great passion for our teaching, our scholarship and the intellectual vibrancy of this institution.鈥

In his remarks, William Nelligan 鈥14, president of Dickinson鈥檚 Student Senate, said he was 鈥渋nspired and awed鈥 by Roseman when he first spoke with her and has remained so ever since.

鈥淪he is a scholar who knows that the issues affecting our world today ... demand robust interdisciplinary approaches,鈥 he said and, addressing Roseman directly, concluded, 鈥淥n behalf of the entire student body, congratulations, and welcome home.鈥

Opening her inauguration address, Roseman told attendees, 鈥淭his is an extraordinary community, working together with common purpose, united in this enterprise of educating generation after generation of young people in the liberal arts.鈥

And her personal message was as clear as peals from the Denny Bell: That 230-year-old common purpose remains unshaken, and the college鈥檚 mission diligently addresses the needs of tomorrow.

鈥淒ickinson 鈥 fully embraces diversity in every form,鈥 Roseman said. 鈥淸We are] a college that purposefully reflects society and the world, so as to better prepare students for that world, a college that proudly cites developing cultural competency as one of its core missions.鈥

In 鈥渁 world full of complexity and difference,鈥 Roseman sees Dickinson as an institution that serves as a steady wellspring of knowledge, multifarious perspectives and unambiguous focus, all of which position the college perfectly for the future.

鈥淲e are an institution that has much clarity in its philosophy and in its priorities,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ur model is sound. Our product is sound and needed now more than ever.鈥