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Fordham names first woman and first layperson as president

FILE - In this Wednesday, Nov. 14, 2018 photo, Loyola University New Orleans President Tania Tetlow speaks during an interview with the Associated Press in New Orleans. The first woman and first layperson to become president of a 110-year-old Jesuit university in New Orleans will make the same history at an older Jesuit university in New York. Loyola University-New Orleans and Fordham University said in news releases Thursday, Feb. 10, 2022, that Tetlow will start July 1 as Fordham's next president. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File) (Gerald Herbert, Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Fordham University, a Jesuit institution in New York, has named Tania Tetlow as its new president. She is the first woman and first layperson to lead the school in its 181-year history.

Tetlow broke the same two barriers in her previous job, serving since 2018 as president of Loyola University New Orleans, a 110-year-old Jesuit university.

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Tetlow was unanimously elected Thursday and will start July 1, said Fordham Board of Trustees Chairman Robert Daleo in a news release.

“This is a historic and exciting moment for Fordham. As a university that seeks to transform its students’ lives, we are preparing to be transformed by bold new leadership,” he wrote.

Fordham’s president, the Rev. Joseph McShane, is stepping down after about two decades in office. As the number of Jesuits in the U.S. continues to dwindle, McShane said at a news conference, it was time to embrace change.

“The demographic realities are harsh. ... Right now, nationwide, there are only 2,086 Jesuits, the average age is over 70, so we wanted to make sure that the university was in the best of all possible hands. Those hands are Tania’s,” McShane said.

For Tetlow, a layperson transitioning from one Jesuit university to another, she said it was important for the laity to preserve the history and status of Jesuit education.

“For me, being the first lay president at Loyola, it was an opportunity to remind everyone that given the waning number of priests among us, that we have to own the mission as lay people or else we will lose,” she said at the news conference.

Tetlow said one of her main priorities at Fordham would be diversifying the student body.

Under Tetlow, Loyola’s enrollment grew by 11%, and the largest and most diverse freshman class in school history started in fall 2021, Loyola said in a separate news release. It credited her with starting new academic programs in growing fields, including neuroscience, nursing, marketing and communications, environmental law, health care administration and cybersecurity, and with strengthening the school’s financial foundation.

Loyola has about 3,800 students; Fordham, founded in 1841, about 15,000.

“We are so grateful for President Tetlow’s dedicated leadership, and are thrilled for her and her new colleagues at Fordham University,” said Steve Landry, chair of Loyola’s board of trustees. “We wish her great success as she moves on to this prestigious position at a fellow Jesuit university."

Tetlow became president of Loyola in August 2018 and was formally inaugurated that November.

Father Justin Daffron, Loyola’s vice president of mission and identity, will be its interim president.

“It has been the greatest privilege to serve as president of Loyola, an extraordinary institution that means so much to me and generations of my family,” said Tetlow, whose parents taught there and whose uncle was a dean.

“My decision to take on this new position is bittersweet, but I know Loyola is in excellent hands,” she said. “I am so proud of the work we accomplished together and will be celebrating Loyola’s continued success from New York.”

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Associated Press reporter Janet McConnaughey in New Orleans contributed to thus report.

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.