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TALENTS OF VOCALISTS SALUTED IN COMPETITION
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O’CONNELL ENDS ITS SEASON WITH A WIN
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Sun Gazette
VOLUME 82 NO. 49 NOVEMBER 9-15, 2017
ARLINGTON’S SOURCE FOR HOMETOWN NEWS SINCE 1935
Winners Look Beyond Election to 2018 SCOTT McCAFFREY Staff Writer
then return to the institution as a professor of marketing in the fall of 2019. During his years at the university, Shank presided over rebuilding of its Ballston campus, inaugurated a $40 million capital campaign and worked to expand academic programs and athletics. “Dr. Shank means more to Marymount than I can adequately express,”
With the election behind them, Arlington’s next County Board and School Board members have a learning curve as they gear up to take office at the start of the new year. “It’s really just to observe, soak up as much as I can, learn as much as I can,” said Erik Gutshall, who will succeed the retiring Jay Fisette on the County Board, of his plans not just for the next seven weeks before he is sworn in, but for his first months in elected office. Gutshall, who currently serves as chairman of the Arlington Planning Commission, won the Democratic endorsement in a fourway primary held in May. On Nov. 7, he held back independents Audrey Clem- Gutshall and O’Grady ent and Charles McCullough. It was only the second time the seat has turned over since 1974. There will be plenty of issues for Gutshall to bone up on as he transitions to the five-member County Board, from developing strategies to encourage construction of housing for the middle class and finding land for schools and other county facilities, to the redevelopment of Lee Highway and deciding how much should be spent in resuscitating the Metro system. One of his main goals, Gutshall said, was to find ways to bring a broader spec-
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More than three-quarters of a million dollars was raised at the 2017 Arlington Free Clinic gala, held Oct. 28 at the Ritz-Carlton Tysons Corner. The annual event provides about one-third of the total operating funds for the clinic, which supports the needs of 1,600 low-income ERIC G. BROWN PHOTOGRAPHY uninsured Arlington residents. Find full coverage inside on Page 3.
Marymount’s Shank to Step Down at End of the ‘17-’18 Academic Year
Marymount University president Matthew Shank will step down when his contract expires at the end of the 2017-18 academic year, the university announced Nov. 6. “It has been a joy to work with so many intelligent, passionate and genuinely caring colleagues,” Shank said in a note to the Marymount community, announcing his plan to depart after seven years at the helm of the school. He did not offer specific reasons for opting against accepting a new contract, but did say the board of trustees had asked him to continue in the post. The trustees have offered Shank the opportunity to take a year’s sabbatical,
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