News

HMS Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.

News

Cambridge Police Respond to Three Armed Robberies Over Holiday Weekend

News

What’s Next for Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery Initiative?

News

MassDOT Adds Unpopular Train Layover to Allston I-90 Project in Sudden Reversal

News

Denied Winter Campus Housing, International Students Scramble to Find Alternative Options

Dunster Master Resigns to 'Live Own Life'

Moore to Conduct Anthropological Research in East Africa

By Rebecca A. Jeschke

Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) Sally Falk Moore resigned Tuesday as the master of Dunster House because she and her husband want to make time for academic work, she said yesterday.

Moore distributed a letter yesterday to Dunster residents explaining that she and Co-Master D. Cresap Moore "must get on with our own work and our lives in ways which the mastership would not allow." Moore resigned as GSAS dean last year.

"There comes a time for this and a time for that, and it was time for us to leave," said Cresap Moore.

Dean of the College L. Fred Jewett '57 said the Moores told him on Tuesday that they would step down. He said he had expected them to remain in the post for five more years. The Moores renewed their five-year appointment last fall.

But Cresap Moore said family problems had "opened the memory of our own mortality," forcing them to give up the post.

He said that one reason they had decided to resign was that the two plan to travel extensively over the next few years. He said that if they remained at Dunster House, students would have had to deal with acting masters from time to time.

"We are showing our respect for the house by leaving," he said.

And, Cresap Moore said, being a master is "also tiring, especially for someone in their 60s."

Last year, two masters--Myra A. Mayman of Cabot House and Arthur L. Loeb of Dudley--resigned. But Jewett said he did not think the Moores' resignation was part of a trend.

"[Losing] one or two a year is pretty standard," Jewett said. "The ones that left had been doing it for a pretty long time."

Jewett said he has not appointed a search committee to look for a new master.

Dunster senior tutor Jeffrey Wolcowitz said he thought students will have a significant say in the choice of a new master. He said a committee of four to six representatives from the house, including one member of the Senior Common Room, will present Jewett with a list of candidates and desired characteristics.

President Bok has the final word on the appointment of masters.

Sally Moore, who is also a professor of anthropology, said it was "understood" that this year would be her last as dean. She said next year, when she had planned to be on sabbatical from Dunster House, she will do anthropological work in East Africa. And Cresap Moore said he would like to do some historical work in England.

Jewett said the Moores were "wonderful masters" who were popular in the house. He added that their decision to leave was personal, saying they had no bad feelings about Dunster House.

Residents of Dunster House said yesterday they were surprised by the masters' decision.

House committee co-chair Anil K. Shrivastava '90 said he was "pretty shocked" at the news of the masters' resignation. He said students were under the impression that the Moores would continue as masters until 1993.

Dunster House resident Teodoro C. Silva '89 said many residents would miss "sitting down with Cresap at dinner. His stories were pretty funny."

One resident, John C. Abbe '87-'89, said last year he and his roommates made shirts reading "Cresap and Jeff in '88" for the presidential campaign. "Jeff" is Wolcowitz. Abbe said over 100 shirts were sold.

"I was very much hoping they would stay. I think they did a wonder- ful job," Wolcowitz said.

Cresap Moore said he and his wife will move toNorth Cambridge, to a community with other formermasters. "We can tell gossipy tales of oldmasterhood," he said

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags