For ten years, he led the Miami Central Rocket Marching Band
and modeled its drills on Foster’s examples. He then returned to FAMU as a
music professor and worked his way up to become the second-in-command behind Marching
100 Director Julian White, the man who had succeeded Foster.
So when FAMU’s interim administration turned Chipman down
for the band directorship this year and opted to reopen the search, many
Rattlers were outraged.
FAMU alumnus and former state senator Alfred “Al” Lawson
directed very strong criticism against Interim President Larry Robinson. He suggested
that the interim administration might be bending to outside pressures that are
suspicious of Chipman simply because he was on the Marching 100's staff when
the hazing death of band member Robert Champion took place in 2011.
“You should not let the politics of the band situation
prevent a person of his caliber from getting the job,” Lawson told reporter Tampa
Bay Times reporter Tia Mitchell.
But former FAMU President Frederick S. Humphries disagrees with
Lawson. He thinks that Robinson made the right decision when he chose to reopen
the search.
“The band director has to come from outside of the
university and that person has to be squeaky clean in terms of their operation
in a band configuration,” Humphries said.
Student safety in the Marching 100 was one of the concerns
that led the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) to place FAMU
on a one-year probation back in December, 2012.
According to The FAMUan, Humphries explained that “it would
be impossible for the school to show [SACS] that it is working in honesty if a
Marching 100 staff member is chosen as the new director of marching and pep
bands.”
Humphries knows the written rules and unstated rules of SACS
from decades of experience. He led Tennessee State University through a
successful SACS reaffirmation process and achieved reaffirmation of FAMU’s
SACS accreditation twice.
If FAMU loses its accreditation, it will become ineligible
for all the grant and student financial aid programs run by the federal
government. Alumni who graduate after the accreditation is revoked would be
ineligible for jobs or graduate schools that require a degree from an
accredited baccalaureate program.