Millennium Magazine_2ndEd

480 MILLENNIUM-SECOND EDITION F or over four decades David Marc Mirvis has taught health and public policy to undergraduate and graduate students. A diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine and the National Board of Medical Examiners, Dr. Mirvis currently serves as an adjunct professor for the department of public health at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Since 1977, he has worked with the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in various capacities, serving as chief of the section of medical physics, director of the division of health services and health policy research, an instructor of medicine, assistant professor, associate professor and associate dean. Outside of the classroom, he has also shared his knowledge as an associate editor, editor, associate producer and reviewer of many publications. He has published 17 book chapters, 164 articles in professional journals, and 100 abstracts. Dr. Mirvis is affiliated with Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society and the American Society for Clinical Investigation and is a fellow of the American Heart Association Council on Circulation. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Yeshiva University and a Doctor of Medicine from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. PROFESSOR EMERITUS University of Tennessee Health Science Center Memphis, TN DAVID MARC MIRVIS, MD P rofessor James P. Miller has been a member of the physics faculty at Boston University since 1979, having previously served as an assistant professor and associate professor before obtaining his current position. In addition to his role as an academic, he is a prominent researcher who is presently the co-spokesman of the Mu2e Experiment at Fermilab, the purpose of which is to improve upon the current limit on muon-to-electron conversion. Under his leadership, the project has been regularly commended for its potential impact on the field of physics. He is also a participant in the AlCap experiment, which studies the emission products of nuclear muon capture for forthcoming muon-to-electron conversion experiments. Dr. Miller is also a prolific author who has contributed articles to numerous industry publications, such as Physical Review Letters, Physical Review, Nuclear Physics, and Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research. The recipient of a BS and MS from Carnegie-Mellon University, he completed postdoctoral fellowships at the California Institute of Technology and the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. He is a member of the American Physical Society. PROFESSOR, DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS Boston University Boston, MA JAMES P. MILLER, PHD Millennium Magazine Featured Listee

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