PrintAndrew Hugine, S.C. State University’s president from 2003 to 2008, was named one of three finalists for the top spot at Alabama A&M University. A final decision is expected to be made Saturday. Hugine was ousted by the S.C. State board of trustees in 2007 and subsequently sued the school over his firing.
Staff Report
Published Jan. 29, 2009
Former S.C. State University President Andrew Hugine has been selected as a finalist for president at Alabama A&M University.
The top three picks for the spot were announced Wednesday, and interviews with the finalists will take place Friday with students, faculty and administrators. The board of trustees is expected to make a decision at a meeting Saturday, university spokesman Jerome Saintjones said.
Hugine, S.C. State’s ninth president, was voted out of the presidency by the school’s board of trustees in December 2007. The board cited his performance review and poor academic improvements at the school. The move stirred controversy within and outside the board. Hugine was placed on administrative leave until his last day in January 2008. He had been president since 2003.
In 2008, Hugine filed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against S.C. State and several board members, claiming breach of contract and defamation of character. He said trustees conspired behind closed doors to fire him. The lawsuit also calls into question who is to blame in an alleged misuse of public funds at the university, which is the subject of an ongoing state investigation.
Alabama A&M’s most recent president, Robert Jennings, left in March after a conflict with the board.
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