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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Aug. 2, 2005) -- After seven years as dean of the
School of Nursing at Tennessee Tech University, Marilyn Musacchio has
resigned to accept a position as chairperson of the School of Nursing
at Spalding University in her hometown of Louisville, Ky. She will leave
TTU mid August.
Musacchio's decision to move on comes at a turning point in the history
of the 25-year-old nursing program at Tennessee Tech.
"I have enjoyed working with Dean Musacchio, and I appreciate the
contributions she has made to Tennessee Tech," said TTU President
Robert Bell. "Dean Musacchio's involvement in our fund-raising campaign
for a new building to house our School of Nursing was instrumental to
its success. This is a milestone for the program and for the university.
Her new position sounds as if it offers tremendous new opportunities,
and I wish her every success."
Musacchio joined the TTU faculty at a time when the nursing program was
suffering growing pains; within a month of her arrival on campus, she
began overseeing the move from the school's original home, which had been
condemned for its poor structural condition, into temporary offices and
classrooms. Over the next few years, as planning for a new building took
place, she shepherded her faculty and students through several temporary
locations.
She was deeply involved in the architectural planning and fund-raising
process, which ended successfully this summer with $2.5 million in federal
funds, $4 million in private funds, and legislative approval of $15.4
million to complete the funding phase of the new building. Construction
is expected to start in the summer of 2006.
Over the past two years, Musacchio played a leadership role with the
inception of an online master's degree program in nursing. Offered through
the Regents Online Degree Program, which is administered by the Tennessee
Board of Regents, the M.S.N. will include a focus on rural health issues,
and Musacchio has been developing a specialized curriculum devoted to
that topic.
A highly decorated veteran of the U.S. Army Reserve, Musacchio joined
the TTU faculty after six years with the University of Alabama at Birmingham
School of Nursing and 16 years at the University of Kentucky College of
Nursing. Her 26 years of service to the Reserve culminated with an appointment
as Brigadier General; she was the only second reserve female and second
reserve nurse ever to hold that position. She received the highest award
for recognition of professional accomplishment in the Army Medical Department
bestowed by the Surgeon General of the U.S. Army.
A native of Louisville, Musacchio earned her bachelor's degree from Spalding,
a master's and nurse-midwife certificate from the University of Kentucky
at Lexington, and a doctorate in nursing research from Case Western Reserve
University in Cleveland, Ohio.
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— Monica Greppin
This information posted 2 August 2005
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