05-24-94 New Dean of Humanities NEW DEAN ANNOUNCED FOR OHIO STATE'S COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES COLUMBUS -- Kermit L. Hall, dean of the Henry Kendall College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Tulsa since 1992, will become the dean of the College of Humanities at The Ohio State University. The announcement was made Tuesday (5/24) by Richard Sisson, Ohio State's senior vice president for academic affairs and provost. The appointment, which has the support of President E. Gordon Gee and which is subject to approval by the University Board of Trustees, is effective July 1, 1994. Hall's salary will be $135,000. Sisson said that Hall brings to the deanship a depth and breadth of professional experience that will "help the college enhance its existing areas of excellence and vigorously explore new areas. "Dr. Hall's record is one of exploration, achievement, and distinction," Sisson said. "Despite the considerable teaching and administrative responsibilities assumed during his career, he has maintained a high level of scholarly research and has contributed immeasurably to our understanding of the performance and the place of the judiciary in society and to the impact that judicial proceedings and decisions have in our lives. His qualifications are unique and he will bring much to the academic discourse at Ohio State." Hall received a Ph.D. in history from the University of Minnesota in 1972. He received an M.S.L. degree from the Yale University Law School in 1980, an M.A. degree from Syracuse University 1967, and a B.A. degree from the University of Akron in 1966. "I am extremely pleased with the appointment of Dr. Hall," Gee said. "He is one of this nation's outstanding scholars with a proven record in administration. As well, he is a creative and highly skilled teacher and an energetic proponent of sharing the lessons of his scholarly research with the community at large. He brings with him an interdisciplinary approach that will benefit the entire university." Prior to serving as dean at the University of Tulsa, he was a professor of history and law for 10 years at the University of Florida, where he also served three years as chairperson of the Department of History and two years as director and chair of the University Council on Faculty Development. He has also been an associate professor of history at Wayne State University and an assistant professor of history at Vanderbilt University. He is the author of five books on the history of law, the courts, and public life. He has been the editor or co-editor of nine others. He was editor-in-chief of The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court, a book that has received numerous awards including the 1993 Gavel Award of the American Bar Association, the 1993 American Library Association Outstanding Book Award, and the 1993 New York Public Library Distinguished Book Award. He has contributed articles and chapters to many other books and publications. He has held positions of professional leadership in many organizations and has lectured widely, including at Ohio State where he presented a talk entitled "The Power of Comparison in Teaching About Rights" at the Mershon Center in 1993. Hall is one of five persons recently appointed by President Clinton and confirmed by the U.S. Senate to serve on the John F. Kennedy Presidential Assassination Records Review Board, a board charged with supervising the release of documents connected with the investigation of the assassination of President Kennedy. Hall is one of five persons who will travel to Lithuania and Poland in late June and early July to explain the American constitutional system to leaders in those countries. The program is sponsored by the U.S. Information Agency. He and his wife, Phyllis Hall, are both Ohio natives. She has taught elementary school for 20 years. Hall said his appointment is an opportunity for him "to get back to my Ohio roots and to do so at the flagship research institution in the state." "I look forward to providing academic leadership to a group of wonderfully talented scholars and teachers," Hall said. "The College of Humanities has an enviable reputation that would prove attractive to the nation's best faculty and graduate and undergraduate students. The college is a wonderful resource for humanistic learning for all the citizens of Ohio. I look forward to listening to the chairs, directors, and faculty and to working with all of them in building the college into a premier institution of humanistic learning and teaching. Working together, we will make the next quarter century an era of achievement as great as -- if not greater than -- the quarter century just passed." He said he has great enthusiasm for Ohio State's land grant mission of teaching, research, and service, adding, "It's great to be a Buckeye again!" David O. Frantz has been serving as acting dean of the College of Humanities for the past year. Frantz, who received his A.B. degree from Princeton University and his doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania, is a professor of English who specializes in Renaissance literature. He has been a member of the Ohio State faculty for 26 years and served as associate dean in the College of Humanities prior to his appointment as acting dean. "Dr. Frantz has done an outstanding job for us during a challenging transition marked by financial uncertainty and programmatic change," Sisson said. "The entire university is indebted to David for his sensitivity, his commitment, and his leadership in guiding the college for the past year and for his contributions to the college during his tenure as acting dean." The College of Humanities is composed of 12 departments, six centers, and the Division of Comparative Studies in Humanities. The departments are: Black Studies; Classics; East Asian Languages and Literatures; English; French and Italian; Germanic Languages and Literatures; History; Linguistics; Near Eastern, Judaic, and Hellenic Languages and Literatures; Philosophy; Slavic and East European Languages and Literatures; and Spanish and Portuguese. The centers are: Epigraphical Studies, Folklore Studies, Foreign Language, Jewish Studies, Medieval and Renaissance Studies, and Women's Studies. As of Autumn 1993, the college had 322 faculty and 1,633 undergraduate majors and 888 graduate students. # Contact: Dr. Richard Sisson, (614) 292-5881. [Submitted by: GERSTNER (gerstner@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Tue, 24 May 1994 15:42:22 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.