Two Presidents Appointed to MAAC Schools

Two Presidents Appointed to MAAC Schools

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From reports from Monmouth and Niagara public relations offices:

Edison, N.J. - The MAAC welcomes two new presidents who will begin their tenure during the 2013-14 academic year - Dr. Paul R. Brown at Monmouth University and Rev. James J. Maher, C.M. at Niagara University.


Monmouth's Board of Trustees announced that Brown, current dean of the College of Business and Economics at Lehigh University, has been appointed the eighth president of Monmouth University effective August 1, 2013. He will succeed Paul G. Gaffney II who will retire on July 31, 2013 after 10 years of strong leadership.

"Dr. Brown was our first and unanimous choice to be the new president of Monmouth University. He is an outstanding leader with the qualifications to help Monmouth University continue to prosper as a strong, vibrant institution," stated Chair of the Board Robert B. Sculthorpe '63.

The Board of Trustees made the decision at a special meeting on February 26.

Dr. Brown commented: "It is with tremendous excitement that I look forward to joining the Monmouth University community as its eighth president. The University's enthusiasm and commitment to making its mark on the higher education landscape is palpable across Monmouth's Board of Trustees, faculty and staff. Students are at the heart of Monmouth, and it is my honor to serve them, as well as the larger university community, in an effort to reach new heights of excellence. I could not be more thrilled with this opportunity."

Brown is the current dean of the College of Business and Economics at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, a position he assumed in July 2007. Under Brown's leadership, over the course of a ten-month period in 2010, the College of Business and Economics completed a transformative and wide-sweeping Strategic Plan. The Plan was unanimously endorsed by the faculty and sets the trajectory for the College over the next ten years. During his tenure, he managed historically high levels of enrollment in both undergraduate and graduate programs as well as recruited and hired faculty at an unprecedented pace. In addition, Brown implemented major leadership changes, particularly focusing on undergraduate and graduate program leadership as well as leadership of the College's centers. During his time at Lehigh, he raised over $40 million in unrestricted funds and for endowed faculty chairs.

Prior to joining Lehigh, Brown spent over twenty years at New York University's Stern School of Business where he held a variety of senior academic and administrative positions at both the school and university level. He served as the associate dean of executive MBA Programs, and academic director of TRIUM, NYU Stern's global executive MBA program in alliance with the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) and HEC School of Management, Paris. He also served as chair of the Department of Accounting, Taxation and Business Law at NYU Stern.

His research interests in financial reporting and analysis include: financial statement analysis, FASB/SEC policy analysis, international reporting and analysis, earnings measurement and management, as well as managing earnings expectations.

Brown is a professor of accounting with an emphasis on financial analysis and governance. He co-authored Financial Reporting, Financial Statement Analysis, and Valuation: A Strategic Perspective (through sixth edition), a widely used textbook in undergraduate, MBA and executive education programs. In addition, he is the author of the eBook, Foundations of Financial Statement Analysis, which is used in both traditional teaching and mixed-mode distance learning settings.
Brown graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Franklin and Marshall College where he received his Bachelor of Arts Degree, and received his Doctor of Philosophy as well as his Masters of Professional Accountancy degrees from the University of Texas at Austin.

Brown and his wife, Joan G. Fishman, and daughter, Emma, will move to Doherty House, the presidential residence, this summer. Currently, Joan is the Board Vice-President of the Cancer Support Community of the Greater Lehigh Valley. This fall Emma will begin her university studies at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.


The Catholic and Vincentian institution announced that Father Maher, currently the executive vice president for mission and student services at St. John's University, would succeed the Rev. Joseph L. Levesque, C.M. Father Levesque announced in January that he would be resigning from his position at the conclusion of the current academic year.

The presidential transition will be official Aug. 1, 2013.

"It is great to be here today," Father Maher acknowledged during Wednesday's announcement to the university community. "I have been well prepared by my 22 years of administrative service at St. John's University and am humbled at this opportunity, not just because of the role I have been asked to serve, but also because of where this role takes me - this great institution, Niagara University.

"The time will come for me to lay out a vision for Niagara's future, but it will only happen after I have had the opportunity to actively listen to all of you. I say this - we Niagarans have a great story to tell. Niagara University is a bright, shining city on a hill, illuminated by great faculty and students, committed administrators and staff members who, by their example, make Niagara a special place with wonderful academic programs and a living mission.

"I stand before you in humility and gratitude in continuing to make the vision of St. Vincent de Paul a reality for Niagara University."

Father Maher comes to Niagara following a 22-year career at St. John's, including the last two as executive vice president for mission and student services. He has spent nearly three years as a member of Niagara University's Board of Trustees, lending his expertise to committees on educational policy and finance.

Father Maher's brother, the Rev. John Maher, C.M., is a 1976 Niagara graduate, and worked on campus in several capacities from 2005 to 2011.

In addition to his volunteer and familial ties to Niagara, Father Maher resided on the university's auxiliary campus in the mid-1980s as a member of the Vincentian Service Corps.

"It was at this special place, Niagara University, where I actively discerned my vocation to the priesthood with a young Vincentian priest, Father Greg Gay, who also happens now to be our Superior General," he said. "So it is with great conviction and enthusiasm that I tell you Niagara University is a very special place to me."
During his tenure at St. John's, Father Maher has served as campus minister to the athletics department, vice president of university ministry, vice president of student affairs, executive director of the Vincentian Institute for Social Action, and as a board member for the St. John's Bread & Life Program, the second largest emergency food provider in New York City.

Father Maher pronounced his vows to the Vincentian community in May of 1989 and was ordained to the priesthood on May 26, 1990, at Mary Immaculate Seminary in Northampton, Pa. He received his bachelor's degree from St. John's University in 1984, and earned master's degrees in divinity (1989) and theology (1990) from Mary Immaculate.

In May 2004, Father Maher was granted a doctor of ministry by The Immaculate Conception Seminary and Graduate School of Theology. Father Maher focused his doctoral research on NIKE Inc. and its contracted factories in Vietnam, as well as Catholic social teaching and worker development programs.
He has attended the Harvard Management Development Program, the Stevens Institute, and the Harvard University Institute of Educational Management, and presented and published on civic engagement, Catholic education and corporate responsibility.

In recognition of his service to the community, Father Maher was named "New Yorker of the Week" in 1995 by Time Warner NY1. In 1998, he received the President's Medal from St. John's University and was selected as one of the Outstanding Young Men of America.

Father Maher received the Cross and Anchor award from Holy Cross Roman Catholic High School for exemplary service in 2001. In 2004, he was named one of the "Top 100 Irish-Americans in the United States" by Irish American Magazine. In 2009, Father Maher received the Pietas Medal from St. John's for his commitment, service and dedication to the university.

Along with acting as a trustee for DePaul University, Father Maher also serves as an appointed Provincial Counselor to the Eastern Province of the Vincentian Community.

"Our next president is student-focused, collaborative, energetic, strong in management and leadership, and committed to the Catholic and Vincentian tradition," stated Jeffrey Holzschuh, '82, chair of Niagara University's Board of Trustees. "We are extremely confident that this man will continue to move Niagara forward, building upon the strong foundation laid by Father Levesque."

During Father Levesque's 13 years as president of Niagara, the university experienced a continuous process of positive transformation, highlighted by close to $100 million in new campus construction, renovation and improvement projects.

Father Levesque will remain on campus at NU with the title of president emeritus, as approved by the university's Board of Trustees.