Thomas Anderson, Professor, Philosophy is in his 33rd year at Marquette. He has served on the Academic Senate and its Executive Committee, Vice-President of COF, Chair of the Faculty Appeals Committee, member of Faculty Hearing Committee, Assistant Chair and Chair of the Philosophy Department; Marquette Faculty Association for Interracial Justice -- co-President, College of Arts and Sciences Curriculum Committee; College of Arts & Sciences Humanities Rank and Tenure Committee, EOP Advisory Board. He is also past President of the American Catholic Philosophical Association. Dennis E. Garrett is an Associate Professor of Marketing at Marquette University. Prof. Garrett received his doctorate in marketing from the University of Illinois in 1985. Prior to joining the Marquette faculty in 1990, Prof. Garrett taught at the University of Oklahoma. Prof. Garrett's primary research interest is in the area of customer satisfaction, customer service, and customer relationship management. His research articles have appeared in a variety of business, marketing, and communication journals including Journal of Marketing, Journal of Marketing Research, Journal of Consumer Affairs, Journal of Consumer Marketing, Journal of Business Ethics, Journal of Marketing Education, Journal of Consumer Satisfaction/Dissatisfaction and Complaining Behavior, Communication Monographs, Customer Relationship Management, Business and Society Review and Journal of Business Strategies. He is also a co-author of Marketing Theory: Evolution and Evaluation (John Wiley Publishers), which has been translated and published in Japan. Dr. Kim L. Halula, Chair of the Department of Dental Hygiene and Associate Dean of the College of Health Sciences, joined Marquette University's faculty in 1981. She received her B.S. and M.S. from The Ohio State University and her Ph.D. from Marquette University. She has held leadership positions within the American Association of Dental Schools, the National Dental Hygiene Directors and the American Dental Association Commission on Dental Accreditation. She has served on a number of committees within national organizations that have dealt with issues as they pertain to gender and professional equity issues within the professions of Dentistry and Dental hygiene. Dr. Carla H. Hay, associate professor of history, received her Ph.D. from the University of Kentucky. She joined Marquette's faculty in 1970. A specialist in British history and women's history, she has authored various publications on British radicals and most recently has co-edited a collection of essays on childbirth. She has also served as editor of Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture and currently serves on the editorial boards of The Historian and Milwaukee History. The recipient of fellowships and grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Philosophical Society, and the Mellon Foundation, she is a past president of Phi Alpha Theta (national history honor society), the Midwest American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, and the NCAA's Faculty Athletics Representatives Association. She served on the NCAA's Committee on Women's Athletics and currently is a member of the AAUP's Committee W on the Status of Women in the Academic Profession. At Marquette, in addition to chairing the Athletic Board and the Committee on Faculty, she developed and served as the first Coordinator of the Women's Studies Program. Diane Long Hoeveler is Professor of English and Coordinator of the Women's Studies Program at Marquette University. She is author of Romantic Androgyny and Gothic Feminism, as well as numerous other collections of essays about literature and gender. Currently, she serves as President of the American Conference on Romanticism, and she has received grants from the NEH and the Wisconsin Humanities Committee. She specializes in teaching women's literature, and has organized the past six national conferences sponsored by the Women's Studies Program at MU. D. Thomas Hughson, S.J. (Ph.D., University of St. Michael's College, Toronto, 1981).Associate Professor Hughson specializes in Catholic systematic and fundamental theology with particular focus upon pneumatology, ecclesiology, grace, and religious liberty. He edited the dissertation of John Courtney Murray, Matthias Scheeben on Faith: The Doctoral Dissertation of John Courtney Murray, has authored "Dulles and Aquinas on Revelation" (The Thomist, July 1998: 445-71), and The Believer as Citizen: John Courtney Murray in a New Context, among other contributions. Currently he is inquiring into the doctrinal implications of social Catholicism, Murray's theory of consensus, and the meaning of ecumenism. Cheryl L. Maranto: Associate Professor and Associate Dean, College of Business Administration. Ph.D. in Social Science, concentration in Labor and Industrial Relations, disciplinary cognates in economics and sociology. Published research includes estimation of gender wage differentials, publishing productivity among faculty, and weight-based employment discrimination and how it interacts with gender. Courses developed and taught: Employment Law, Diversity in Organizations, Labor Relations and Human Resource Management. Invited keynote speaker at the Diversity Kick-Off (diversity training for top managers), Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development, December 1999. Daniel C. McDonald, S.J. is the Executive Director for University Mission and Identity at Marquette University since September of 1998. Prior to that he was Vice President then Director of the Jesuit Conference USA. He holds a Ph.D. in Sociology and taught in the Department of Social and Cultural Sciences at Marquette from 1988 - 1993. He has been chief investigator on several national studies, including the National Health Study of the Society of Jesus. Dr. Elise Sampson is a tenured, Associate Professor at Marquette University. She received her dental degree and license to practice dentistry from Birmingham University, England in 1961 and an M.A. in Educational Administration from Marquette University in 1995. She practiced dentistry in the U..K. for 13 years and has been on the teaching faculty at Marquette University School of Dentistry since 1974. She is presently Acting Head of the Division of Oral Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences. Her major interests and areas of research have been in infectious diseases, infection control and the dental treatment of HIV infected patients. Dr. Sampson is a past president of the Wisconsin section of the American College of Dentists. She is married to Gerard Memmel and has three children all of whom are Marquette University graduates. Dr. Mary Jane Schank is a Professor in the College of Nursing. She received her BSN from the University of Wisconsin, MSN from the University of Colorado, and Ph.D. from Marquette University. Dr. Schank teaches courses in professional issues, adult and gerontologic nursing, and foundations of nursing. She currently serves as Coordinator, Graduate Older Adult Nursing Program and as an Associate Director, Wisconsin Geriatric Education Center. In 1993, Dr. Schank received the Marquette University Faculty Award for Teaching Excellence. Her research focuses on professional values, gerontology, and women's health. Dr. Schank is active in College as well as numerous University committees. M. Barbara Silver-Thorn received the B.S. degree in Chemical Engineering from Northwestern University in 1985. She received the M.S. degree in Chemical, Bio & Materials Engineering from Arizona State University in 1987. In 1991, she received the Ph.D. degree in biomedical Engineering from Northwestern University. She then continued her research at Northwestern University as a post-doctoral fellow in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery. In 1992, she joined the faculty of the Biomedical Engineering Department at Marquette University where she is currently an Associate Professor. She is also an Adjunct Associate Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at the Medical College of Wisconsin. Her research interests include soft tissue mechanics as it relates to the design of lower extremity prostheses, orthopaedic biomechanics, human motion analysis, and dental biomechanics. She is active in Department and College committees, as well as the University Committee of Faculty. Karen Slattery is an Associate Professor in the Department of Broadcast & Electronic Communication. She received her B.A. from the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. She teaches courses and conducts research in the areas of broadcast journalism and media ethics. She joined the BREC faculty in 1989. Prior to teaching at Marquette, she worked as a full-time television news producer and reporter. Nancy E. Snow is an Associate Professor in the Philosophy Department at Marquette University, where she has taught for eleven years. She received her B.A. and M.A. from Marquette, and her Ph.D. from the University of Notre Dame. Her areas of specialization are ethics, social, and political philosophy, and the philosophy of law. She has published in feminist philosophy, and has an ongoing interest in the status of women at Marquette. Dr. Peter Toumanoff received a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Washington in 1977 and has been teaching at Marquette University since 1979. He specializes in applied microeconomic theory, comparative economic systems, and communist and postcommunist economies. He has published numerous articles on the theoretical underpinnings and empirical effects of institutional change in both capitalist and communist economies, in addition to a textbook on Mathematical Economics. He served as Chair of the Department of Economics from 1991 to 1994. Brian R. Unsworth received his Ph.D. in Biochemistry from London University in 1965. He undertook postdoctoral research at the University of Wisconsin, Madison from 1965-1967, and at the University of California, San Diego from 1967-69. He joined Marquette University as Assistant Professor of Biology in 1969. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 1975, and to Professor in 1983. He served as Assistant Chair of Biology from 1996-97, and has been Chair since 1997. He teaches an upper division undergraduate course and graduate courses in developmental biology. His research is supported by grants from NASA and from the NIH. He publishes on the mechanisms involved in organogenesis, particularly of the neuroendocrine adrenal medulla. His work may find application in alleviating neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's disease. He is also involved in space biology research. He has collaborated with the Russians by investigating quail development on the MIR, and he has had cells grown on board the space shuttle. He has served on several university committees including the Board of Graduate Studies, the Committee on Research, Marquette 2000, the University Promotion and Tenure Committee, the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee, the Academic Senate, and the Steering and Strategic Planning Committee. He is currently a member of the University Budget Committee, the Gender Equity Committee and the University Core Curriculum Review Committee. Phoebe Weaver Williams, an Associate Professor of Law, has been a member of the Law School faculty since 1985. She earned both her A.B. (1969) and J.D. (1981) degrees from Marquette University. A tenured professor since 1992 Prof. Williams teaching and research interests are in the subject areas of corporate, labor, and employment discrimination law. She has published articles on various subject areas that include discrimination in the sports industry, the history of African American women lawyers, and drug testing of employees. Professor Williams has served as the Director of Research for a major study of discrimination in the Milwaukee Construction industry. She has also served on task force projects convened by Senator Herbert Kohl to review nominees to the United States Supreme Court and as a member and reporter for a task force convened by State of Wisconsin Governor, Tommy Thompson, to study racial profiling. During 1992 she was appointed by Mayor John Norquist to the City of Milwaukee Fire and Police Commission and served as a Commissioner until July 1997. Professor Williams has received recognition and awards from a number of community organizations for her public service. Her most recent awards include, a 2000 "Stamp on Milwaukee Award" for community service from the United States Postal Service, a 1999 "Black Excellence Award" in Education, and a 1998 Commendation from the Wisconsin Association of Minority Attorneys. Christine M. Wiseman is a Professor of Law and the Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs. She joined the full-time faculty of the Law School in 1980 and since then has taught courses in Evidence, Constitutional Criminal Procedure, Civil Procedure, Jurisdiction and Remedies. In 1991, Professor Wiseman received the Marquette University Faculty Award for Teaching Excellence, and in 1996 she received the first annual James D. Ghiardi Law Faculty Award for outstanding classroom teaching and scholarship. Before joining the Marquette faculty, Professor Wiseman served as an Assistant Wisconsin Attorney General with the Criminal Appeals Division and a law clerk to the Honorable Robert W. Warren, United States District Court, Eastern District of Wisconsin (deceased). She has since served as reporter to the Wisconsin State Bar Committee on Justice and the Judiciary and was a member of the Wisconsin Task Force on Equal Justice. In 1989, Professor Wiseman received the Wisconsin Civil Liberties Union Volunteer Attorney of the Year Award for her representation of Texas death row inmate Billy Conn Gardner, and in 1995, that representation earned her the Posner Foundation Pro Bono Award. She was recognized this year as a "Woman of Influence" by the Wisconsin Business Journal. She is currently a member of the Wisconsin State Elections Board and the board of the Federal Defender Services of Eastern Wisconsin, Inc. She has co-authored WISCONSIN PRACTICE: CRIMINAL PRACTICE & PROCEDURE (West 1996) and PUNITIVE DAMAGES: LAW AND PRACTICE (2d. ed. 2000).
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