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Fall - Texas Woman's University

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Martin Accepts Endowed Chair in Library Science<br />

Dr. Robert Martin<br />

When Dr. Robert S.<br />

Martin was appointed to<br />

the Lillian Bradshaw<br />

Endowed Chair in Library<br />

Science at <strong>Texas</strong> Woman’s<br />

<strong>University</strong> this summer,<br />

he became the second<br />

endowed chairholder at<br />

the university. More will<br />

follow, as Chancellor and<br />

President Dr. Ann Stuart<br />

leads the initiative to<br />

increase the number within<br />

the next five years.<br />

“An endowed chair is<br />

the highest honor a university<br />

can bestow on a<br />

faculty member in recognition<br />

of excellence in a<br />

particular field of study,”<br />

Dr. Stuart said. “Increasing<br />

the number of<br />

endowed chairs at TWU<br />

not only will enhance our<br />

teaching and research, but<br />

also will attract faculty of<br />

distinction.”<br />

Dr. Martin was professor<br />

and interim director of<br />

TWU’s School of Library<br />

and Information Studies<br />

when President George W.<br />

Bush nominated him to be<br />

director of the national<br />

Institute of Museum and<br />

Library Services in 2001.<br />

Dr. Martin was the<br />

first librarian to serve as<br />

director of the IMLS, a<br />

federal grant-making<br />

agency dedicated to helping<br />

the nation’s 15,000<br />

museums and 122,000<br />

libraries serve their communities.<br />

The U.S. Senate<br />

unanimously confirmed<br />

his nomination.<br />

Dr. Martin’s term with<br />

the IMLS ended July 12,<br />

and he returned to TWU<br />

this fall. He said that<br />

knowing Mrs. Bradshaw<br />

personally adds something<br />

special to his new<br />

position.<br />

“It’s a great honor to<br />

be the person who gets to<br />

sit in this chair, as it<br />

were,” Dr. Martin said.<br />

The Lillian Bradshaw<br />

Endowed Chair in Library<br />

Science is named in honor<br />

of Mrs. Lillian Bradshaw,<br />

director of the Dallas<br />

Public Library from 1962-<br />

1984.<br />

Dr. Judith McFarlane,<br />

professor of nursing on<br />

TWU’s Houston campus,<br />

currently holds TWU’s<br />

other endowed chair, the<br />

Parry Nursing Chair in<br />

Health Promotion and<br />

Disease Prevention.<br />

Photo by Patrick Sutton<br />

The <strong>Texas</strong> Woman’s <strong>University</strong><br />

School of Management has<br />

been named one of Entrepreneur<br />

Magazine’s Top 10<br />

Entrepreneurial Colleges in the<br />

limited curriculum category for<br />

the second consecutive year.<br />

TWU is one of only 124<br />

schools recognized nationally<br />

in the category, which is<br />

designed for smaller programs. The strength of TWU’s<br />

Small Business Institute, Students in Free Enterprise chapter, shown above,<br />

and its small business and entrepreneurship minor were key factors in the selection.<br />

In Memoriam:<br />

Ray Poliakoff<br />

You can help fund the <strong>Texas</strong> <strong>Woman's</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

Drama Department's first-ever theater performance<br />

in New York City. TWU, in conjunction with the<br />

Gaiety School of Acting in Ireland, will present the<br />

performance art piece "The Long March" March 27-<br />

April 2, 2006 in an off-Broadway theater. Some 30<br />

students and five faculty and musicians will join<br />

director Patrick Sutton and playwright Martin M.<br />

Maguire for the production. Help us raise the<br />

$50,000 needed for our New York debut by making<br />

a contribution using the coupon on page 3.<br />

Ray R. Poliakoff, the<br />

husband of <strong>Texas</strong> Woman’s<br />

<strong>University</strong>’s Chancellor and<br />

President Dr. Ann Stuart,<br />

passed away Sept. 24. He<br />

was 86.<br />

A remembrance service<br />

was held on Sept. 28<br />

in Hubbard Hall on the<br />

TWU Denton campus<br />

followed by burial in<br />

Memorial Park Cemetery<br />

in St. Petersburg, Fla.<br />

Born March 12, 1919,<br />

Poliakoff served in an Army<br />

reconnaissance intelligence<br />

unit in Europe during<br />

World War II, and was<br />

wounded twice in combat.<br />

He earned a bachelor’s<br />

degree in law and a doctorate<br />

in jurisprudence from<br />

Indiana <strong>University</strong> School<br />

of Law. He also received a<br />

master of arts degree in<br />

humanities from the<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Evansville in<br />

Indiana.<br />

Poliakoff spent most of<br />

his career in the oil, gas and<br />

mineral industries both<br />

nationally and internationally.<br />

He and Dr. Stuart<br />

were married on Aug. 22,<br />

1980, in St. Petersburg, Fla.<br />

“The things I admired<br />

most about him were his<br />

integrity, his unselfishness,<br />

certainly his intelligence<br />

and the fact that he loved<br />

me so,” Dr. Stuart said.<br />

Memorials may be<br />

made to the Ann Stuart and<br />

Ray R. Poliakoff Scholarship<br />

Endowment Fund, c/o<br />

<strong>Texas</strong> Woman’s <strong>University</strong><br />

Foundation, P.O. Box<br />

425618, Denton, TX<br />

76204-5618.<br />

Fuentes Honored by Academy of Nurse Practitioners<br />

Photo by Chad Windham<br />

Elizabeth Esparza Fuentes<br />

The American<br />

Academy of Nurse<br />

Practitioners (AANP) has<br />

honored TWU assistant<br />

professor of nursing<br />

Elizabeth Esparza Fuentes<br />

with its State Award for<br />

Nurse Practitioner<br />

Excellence.<br />

The award recognizes<br />

one nurse practitioner<br />

from each state who<br />

demonstrates excellence in<br />

practice, research, nurse<br />

practitioner education or<br />

community affairs.<br />

Fuentes received the<br />

honor during the AANP<br />

20th Annual National<br />

Conference in Fort<br />

Lauderdale on June 19.<br />

“Ms. Fuentes is one of<br />

our distinguished Dallas<br />

nursing faculty who<br />

emphasizes the importance<br />

of life-long, professional<br />

education to her<br />

students,” said Dr. Marcia<br />

Hern, dean of TWU’s<br />

College of Nursing. “I am<br />

proud to say Elizabeth is<br />

revered by her peers as a<br />

master teacher and is<br />

highly deserving of this<br />

prestigious award.”<br />

The AANP was<br />

founded in 1985 and is the<br />

oldest and largest full-service<br />

national professional<br />

organization for nurse<br />

practitioners of all specialties.<br />

With more than<br />

19,500 individual members<br />

and 106 group members,<br />

AANP represents the<br />

interests of approximately<br />

90,000 nurse practitioners<br />

around the country.<br />

AANP continually<br />

advocates for the active<br />

role of nurse practitioners<br />

as providers of high-quality,<br />

cost-effective health<br />

care.<br />

“I was honored to<br />

receive the State Award<br />

for Excellence,” Fuentes<br />

said. “As a native Texan, I<br />

felt humbled just for being<br />

nominated as our state's<br />

representative. This<br />

recognition by the academy<br />

makes me proud to be<br />

a nurse practitioner.”<br />

4 TWU TIMES FALL 2005 www.twu.edu

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