Robert Carothers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born(1942-09-03)September 3, 1942
Knownforpresidency of two universities and chancellorship the Minnesota State College System
Spouse(s)Mary Patricia Ruane (m. 1974)
Jayne Elise Richmond[1]
Children3
Robert Lee Carothers
Born(1942-09-03)September 3, 1942
Known forpresidency of two universities and chancellorship the Minnesota State College System
Spouse(s)Mary Patricia Ruane (m. 1974)
Jayne Elise Richmond[1]
Children3
Academic background
Alma materEdinboro University (B.A. 1965, English)
Kent State University (Ph.D. 1969, English Literature)
McDowell School of Law, University of Akron (J.D. 1980)
Academic work
InstitutionsEdinboro University (1969-1983)
Southwest Minnesota State University (president 1983-1986)
Minnesota State University System (chancellor 1986-1991)
University of Rhode Island (president 1991 to 2009)

Robert Lee Carothers (born September 3, 1942),[2] a writer and poet, served as chancellor of the Minnesota State University System and the tenth president of the University of Rhode Island from 1991 to 2009.

Robert Carothers was born on September 3, 1942, in Sewickley, Pennsylvania to Robert Fleming Carothers and Mary (Skinner) Carothers.[2] He attended public schools in the Quaker Valley. Carothers received his B.A. degree from Edinboro University in Pennsylvania in 1965.[2] He joined Delta Sigma Phi fraternity Delta Nu Chapter in 1962 and was elected the President of the Fraternity twice.[2] From 1960 to 1968, Carothers served in the United States Army, and availed of military scholarships for his studies.[2] On November 2, 1974, he married Mary Patricia "Pattie" Ruane (1948–2022).[3]

Carothers earned a Ph.D. degree at Kent State University in 1969 and a J.D. degree from the McDowell School of Law, University of Akron in 1980,[4] and he was admitted into the Pennsylvania Bar Association in 1981.[5]

Academic career

Robert Carothers began his academic career in 1969 at his alma mater Edinboro University as a professor and dean, eventually becoming its vice president.[6] He went on to serve as president of Southwest Minnesota State University from 1983 to 1986, and chancellor of the Minnesota State University System from 1986 to 1991 before being selected as the tenth president of the University of Rhode Island.[7] Early in his presidential tenure at URI, Carothers was faced with the takeover of Taft Hall, the oldest academic building on campus, by 200 mostly African-American students protesting racial discrimination on campus. Carothers was able to diffuse the tensions by advocating for a Multicultural Center at the heart of the campus.[8][9] Throughout his tenure at URI, he was known for changing the student culture of the university from a 'party school' to an outward looking 'college with a conscience.'[4]

He was a member of National Institute Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (Committee on Campus Drinking 1999 to 2002).[2] Also during his presidential tenure, Carothers and his second wife Jayne Richmond, dean of URI's University College, were active in URI campus philanthropic projects.[10] During his administration, there was a strengthening of anti-discrimination toward LGBTQ members of the campus community.[11] He retired from academia in May 2009 and David M. Dooley, former Provost at Montana State University, took over as the URI's 11th President.

Retirement and honors

Selected publications

References

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