UIHistories Project: A History of the University of Illinois by Kalev Leetaru
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Repository: UIHistories Project: Board of Trustees Minutes - 1994 [PAGE 259]

Caption: Board of Trustees Minutes - 1994
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1995]

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS

247

ERIC J. DADEY, assistant professor of pharmaceutics and pharmacodynamics, beginning March 15, 1995 (NY), at an annual salary of $57,000. Hannah B. Higgins, assistant professor of history of architecture and art, beginning January 6, 1995 (N), at an annual salary of $32,000. EUGENIE F. HILDEBRANDT, assistant professor of public health nursing, beginning January 6, 1995 (1), at an annual salary of $39,000. DARRIK S. H. L. KIM, Assistant Professor of pharmacognosy in medicinal chemistry and pharmacognosy, beginning February 1, 1995 (1), at an annual salary of $40,000.

Urbana-Champaign

A N N P. BISHOP, assistant professor, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, beginning January 30, 1995 (N), at an annual salary of $39,000. JAMES ANDREW MARLEY, assistant professor, School of Social Work, beginning February 21, 1995 (N), at an annual salary of $36,000. RICHARD PETERSON, assistant professor of East Asian languages and cultures, beginning January 18, 1995 (N), at an annual salary of $35,000.

Administrative Staff

JOHN D. SMITH, director of health social work, University of Illinois Hospital, on 90 percent time, and clinical assistant professor, Jane Addams College of Social Work, on 10 percent time, beginning January 23, 1995 (NY90;NY10), at an annual salary of $69,500.

On motion of Ms. Lopez, these appointments were confirmed. Discontinuance of the Ph.D. in Public Policy Analysis; Establish Its Four Programmatic Tracks as Separate Doctoral Programs, Chicago

(6) The chancellor at Chicago, with the advice of the Chicago Senate and the Graduate College, recommends the discontinuance of the Doctor of Philosophy in Public Policy Analysis (PPA) and the establishment of its four programmatic tracks as separate doctoral programs. The Doctor of Philosophy in Public Policy Analysis is to be terminated only upon the establishment of all four programmatic tracks as separate programs. The resulting four programs and the units in which they will be housed are as follows: 1. The PPA/Economics track will be designated the Ph.D. in Economics and housed in the Department of Economics in the College of Business Administration; 2. The PPA/Education track will be designated the Ph.D. in Educational Policy and Administration and housed in the College of Education; 3. The PPA/Political Science track will be designated the Ph.D. in Political Science and housed in the Department of Political Science in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; and, 4. The PPA/Urban Planning and Policy track will be designated the Ph.D. in Urban Planning and Policy and housed in the Urban Planning and Policy unit of the new College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs. The Ph.D. in Public Policy Analysis was created in 1975 as an integrated, multidisciplinary, and research-oriented doctoral program designed to produce graduates with a solid understanding of the nature of public policies and their advantages and limitations, the process by which public policies are formulated and implemented, and the methods for analyzing and evaluating public policies. With the addition of the education track in 1978, the program consisted of four tracks, the other three tracks being political science, economics, and urban planning.