Just as Radcliffe College welcomes a new director of the Murray Research Center and seeks to hire an interim vice president, another administrator has decided to leave.
Susan Shefte, the administrative director of the Radcliffe Public Policy Institute (RPPI), is the fourth high-level Radcliffe official to depart from the college in the last six months-just days after Radcliffe Director of Communications Lyn Chamberlin cleaned out her desk.
Shefte will join Harvard's Vice President for Administration, Sally H. Zeckhauser, as director of special projects on Feb. 1. Shefte's move down the street comes after 15 years of service at Radcliffe.
"It's not that far. It's a couple of blocks," Shefte said. "It's a bigger job-many more responsibilities and challenges."
According to Shefte, her departure was not motivated by Radcliffe's uncertain future.
"I wasn't looking for a job-I was called," Shefte said. "I have no qualms about Radcliffe. I would be very content staying here for quite a while."
"Radcliffe officials maintained that Shefte's departure, like the three others of recent months, were unrelated to one another or to Radcliffe's current climate.
"There will always be turnover at Harvard, Radcliffe and every other institution," said Radcliffe spokesperson Michael A. Armini. "I'd hate to live in a world where everyone had to have the same job for the rest of their lives."
Armini said RPPI's projects will be unaffected by Shefte's departure.
"The public policy institute is vibrant and producing cutting edge research," he said. "[The departure] won't have any adverse impact."
Nancy J. Dunn, vice president for finance and administration, resigned to join the World Wildlife Fund in December. Martha Ann Fuller, director of development, left Radcliffe in June.
Temp Job
Meanwhile, Radcliffe has begun to advertise for an "interim" replacement for Dunn.
According to a posting placed on the University's employment opportunities Web site, the new vice president will have a "defined term of at least 18 months and not more than 2 years, at ROOKIES Other schools courted Ryba, but she chose Harvard because it was the "best of both worlds" in terms of the strength of the academics and the basketball program. Back at Ellington High School, Monti received a great deal of exposure in her junior year when her team won the state finals. Read more in News