Robert A. Kennedy - Biography
A Minnesota native
who has served in faculty and administrative roles at some of the
nation's leading public universities, Robert A. Kennedy became the
University of Maine's 18th president on April 15, 2005. He
arrived at UMaine in 2000, first serving as vice president for academic
affairs and provost, followed by an eight-month stint as interim
president.
Kennedy graduated
from the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, in 1968. After service in
the U.S. Army, where he conducted research on vitamin A metabolism in
humans, he earned a Ph.D. in botany from the University of California,
Berkeley. Kennedy began his academic career on the faculty of the
University of Iowa, followed by faculty and administrative appointments
at Washington State University, The Ohio State University, the
University of Maryland and Texas A&M University. Immediately before
coming to UMaine, Kennedy served for eight years as Vice President for
Research and Associate Provost for Graduate Studies at Texas A&M. While
at A&M, Kennedy was a member of the Government/University/Industry
Research Roundtable at the National Academy of Sciences and was a
founding director of NASA's National Space Biomedical Research
Institute, developed to study the technological and physiological
impediments related to space flight to Mars. This project involved
extensive work with NASA, the Johnson Space Center and the Baylor
College of Medicine.
Kennedy's UMaine
presidency has been marked by the ongoing development of what he calls
the "New Model Land-Grant University," an institution that leads
statewide collaborative efforts with other educational and research
institutions, sharing resources and finding creative, efficient ways to
serve state needs. He has traveled all over Maine, spreading the word
about UMaine's quality and value and helping to raise the institution's
public image to unprecedented levels.
He has also initiated
"Campaign Maine," a six-year fundraising campaign with a minimum goal of
$150 million. This is the largest private undertaking in UMaine's
142-year history.