The Magazine of Marquette University | Winter 2006

 

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We Are Marquette | News-Events-People
 
Quite a journey

It took 124 years, but he has arrived.

Travel with Marquette friends

Trips keep you in touch. Get information about many of these 2006 alumni travel opportunities.

An independent thinker

Dr. William R. Wiener will work to build support for faculty research and enhance interdisciplinary relationships between graduate and professional programs.

Ice pond to hardwood

Ice pond to hardwood. Carolyn Kieger comes from a family — and a state — that’s nuts about hockey. So how did she end up becoming a Marquette basketball star?

Speech Path moves

Looking out of his office window in Monitor Hall, Dr. Ed Korabic saw the future for Marquette’s Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology — right across the street. Last fall they moved in.

Calling all peacemakers

Through interreligious dialogue, participants hoped to foster an awareness of the need for people of all faiths to promote justice and peace.

Music to our ears

“Music is a liberal art and part of a humanistic education. Bringing Wisconsin’s largest fine arts institution
to Marquette seemed a natural collaboration."

Marquette meets New York

Alumni came to the Harvard Club of New York City to network, hear what’s happening at Marquette, and learn by attending one of three breakout sessions.

Protecting the protectors

Marquette and the Milwaukee Police Department collaborate to study cardiovascular disease.

Q & A with Coach Crean

Since Men’s Basketball Head Coach Tom Crean came to Marquette, he's turned the Fanatics season-ticket package into a critical school supply, led the Golden Eagles to the Final Four, and brought Marquette into the Big East Conference. So what’s so big about that?

Spreading democracy

Andrew S. Natsios, formerly administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, explained why the United States invests in democracy initiatives around the world when he was a guest at a special Soup with Substance lunch on campus.

Scholarship honors pioneer

She was believed to be the oldest working journalist in the nation when she died this past February at the age of 102.

Engage the world

A Marquette education puts students in touch with the world.

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