H. Patrick Swygert (left) and John E. Maupin, Jr. (right) |
Rattler Nation has learned that two of the names that are being
pushed are H. Patrick Swygert, former president of Howard University, and John
E. Maupin Jr., the retiring president of the Morehouse School of Medicine. At this time, neither Swygert, 70, nor Maupin, 67, has publicly expressed
interest in the FAMU presidency.
Swygert is currently a professor at the Howard School of Law.
He returned to the faculty in 2008 after leading the university for 13 years.
Before becoming Howard’s president, he headed the University at Albany, State
University of New York from 1990 through 1995. He earned both his undergraduate
degree (1965) and his law degree from Howard (1968).
Maupin will retire from the presidency of the Morehouse
School of Medicine on June 30, 2014. He has held that position for almost seven
years. Prior to that, he served as the president of Meharry Medical College from 1994
through 2006. Maupin earned his undergraduate degree from San Jose State
College (1968), a doctor of dental surgery degree from Meharry (1972), and a master
of business administration from Loyola College in Baltimore (1979).
Even though there appears to be some who want these two names
(and others) to be fast-tracked to the finalist stage with little public discussion, there
are many questions that need to be asked and answered publicly.
There would also be questions about whether Maupin would attempt break down the faculty tenure system at FAMU.
According to an article published by the Associated Press,
Maupin implemented a sweeping overhaul of the Meharry’s tenure system during his time as the president of that school. While the
faculty approved the changes, former Professor Joel Trupin claimed “faculty
members had little choice but to approve the policy changes, because Meharry’s
administration had vowed to withhold recommendations for promotions and tenure
until they did.” Trupin was one of three former Meharry faculty members who
sued the school after they were denied contract renewals in 2003, alleging that they
were pushed out because they had publicly criticized the Maupin administration.
An investigating committee of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) accused
the Maupin administration of effectively eliminating tenure at Meharry. The committee report, which was published by the AAUP in 2004, concluded that: “In replacing a system of indefinite tenure with
tenure for a span of ten years, and with no assurance that the burden of proof
in a decision against further retention rests on the administration, the
Meharry Medical College administration has effectively scuttled the system of
tenure as it is understood generally in American higher education.”