Former Isenberg School dean picked to lead UMass-Dartmouth
Mark Fuller, currently a vice chancellor at UMass Amherst, takes over Jan. 19 as interim chancellor of the university’s Dartmouth campus. PHOTO COURTESY OF UMASS
Published: 1/12/2021 4:41:09 PM
A nine-year dean of the University of Massachusetts Amherst’s business school who now holds the flagship campus’ top development role will take over next week as the interim chancellor of UMass Dartmouth.
UMass President Marty Meehan announced Tuesday that Mark Fuller, the vice chancellor for advancement at UMass Amherst and former dean of UMass Amherst’s Isenberg School of Management, will step into the Dartmouth job on Jan. 19.
Mark Fuller, vice chancellor for advancement at UMass Amherst, picked to lead UMass Dartmouth
Updated Jan 12, 2021;
Posted Jan 12, 2021
Mark Fuller, currently a vice chancellor at UMass Amherst, takes over Jan. 19 as interim chancellor of the university s Dartmouth campus.
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By Katie Lannan | State House News Service
A nine-year dean of the University of Massachusetts Amherst’s business school who now holds the flagship campus’ top development role will take over next week as the interim chancellor of UMass Dartmouth.
UMass President Marty Meehan announced Tuesday that Mark Fuller, the vice chancellor for advancement at UMass Amherst and former dean of UMass Amherst’s Isenberg School of Management, will step into the Dartmouth job on Jan. 19.
A nine-year dean of the University of Massachusetts Amherst s business school who now holds the flagship campus top development role will take over next week as the interim chancellor of UMass Dartmouth.
Mark Fuller, the vice chancellor for advancement at UMass Amherst and former dean of UMass Amherst's Isenberg School of Management, will step into the Dartmouth job on Jan. 19.
By State House News Service
The four undergraduate University of Massachusetts campuses are expecting to bring back more students in the spring than the small number who were living in dorms this fall semester, but would all still be operating at less than half-occupancy under estimates shared Thursday.
The UMass campuses in Amherst, Boston, Dartmouth and Lowell are expecting to operate in a partially remote model in the spring, university treasurer Lisa Calise told the system s trustees Thursday.
Lower numbers of students on each campus because of that model mean that UMass will take in about $80 million less than anticipated in housing and dining revenue, contributing to a $335 million shortfall the university is managing through this fiscal year.