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Minnesota State University, Mankato
Presidential Search Committee
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NEWS RELEASE
For immediate release
February 13, 2002
Richard Davenport Recommended as President of Minnesota
State University, Mankato.
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities Chancellor James
H. McCormick has recommended the appointment of Richard Davenport
as president of Minnesota State University, Mankato.
Davenport, 56, provost and vice president for academic affairs
at Central Michigan University in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan,
was one of three finalists whose names were forwarded by a
16-member search committee headed by Metropolitan State University
President Wilson Bradshaw. The chancellor's recommendation
will be considered by the MnSCU Board of Trustees at its Feb.
21 meeting. If approved by the board, Davenport would begin
serving as president July 1.
"Dr. Davenport's academic leadership is very impressive,"
McCormick said. "He has been instrumental in efforts
to enhance Central Michigan University's reputation for academic
excellence."
The chancellor said Davenport also has spearheaded aggressive
efforts to create partnerships with the private sector, corporate
and governmental groups to promote cooperative education,
internship and grant opportunities.
Davenport received a doctorate in higher education administration
from Iowa State University. He also holds a master's degree
in speech and hearing science from Colorado State University
and a bachelor's degree in speech and hearing disorders from
the University of Nebraska, Kearney.
Since 1990, he has held senior positions and served as a
tenured full professor at Central Michigan University, an
institution with about 27,000 students. Prior to that, he
served as dean of the graduate school and associate vice president
for academic affairs at Western State College of Colorado
in Gunnison, Colo., for four years.
From 1980 to 1986 he was chairperson and professor in the
Department of Communicative Disorders at a three-college consortium
in Winona that includes Winona State University, and from
1977 to 1980 he was an assistant professor in speech science,
pathology and audiology at St. Cloud State University.
"It will be an exciting and challenging opportunity
to carry on the rich traditions of academic excellence at
Minnesota State University, Mankato," Davenport said.
"I am prepared to direct my energy, passion, vision and
expertise to meet the needs of students, faculty, staff and
the Mankato community and region."
Davenport and his wife, Sharleen, have two children. Minnesota
State University, Mankato, which serves more than 15,000 students
annually, is the second-largest institution in the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities system. The system consists
of 34 institutions throughout the state, serving about 225,000
students each year in credit-based courses.
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