A person can have all the talent in the world, but it means very little if you lack personal integrity. It is a good thing that the university community learned that Dunn lacked integrity before he could do any damage.
Looking to the future, I would hope that the trustees stop living in the past and end their obsession with strong academic credentials for the next president. Academic standards on any campus are sustained by individual faculty members in classrooms and laboratories. A president can set the tone but has very little to do with the learning process on a daily basis. Instead a modern college president must have three abilities: a public relations expert, a fund-raiser, and (for a state school) a lobbyist amidst politicians. A tv report just suggested that the trustees spent $109,000 in the process of selecting Dunn. They better do a superior, and more cost-effective, job this time around.