CARE.

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Address: School of Dentistry Marquette University 1801 W. Wisconsin Ave. P.O. Box 1881 Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881 Phone: (800) 445-5385 or (414) 288-3532 Web: www.marquette.edu/dentistry CARE.

Transcript of CARE.

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Address: School of Dentistry Marquette University 1801 W. Wisconsin Ave. P.O. Box 1881 Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881

Phone: (800) 445-5385 or (414) 288-3532 Web: www.marquette.edu/dentistry

CARE.

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SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY

SERVE.

LEARN.

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Angela Chiappetta

When Angela graduates, she’ll be a third-generation

dentist; both her grandfather and father graduated

from Marquette’s School of Dentistry. Because she is

enrolled on an ROTC scholarship, Angela will also be an

Air Force captain and practice dentistry on a U.S. base.

“Everything I’ve done through the Air Force has been

awesome,” she says. “I learned about strengths I didn’t

know I had.” Like jumping out of an airplane as part of

her reserve training. Angela wanted to become a den-

tist after seeing the impact her father has on patients’

lives. She earned her undergraduate degree from the

University of Notre Dame. “When I started dental school

at Marquette, I felt like I was starting from square one,”

she says. “Since I’ve been here, I’ve learned so much.”

“Since I’ve been here,

I’ve learned so much.”

CONTENTS

Dental School and Clinic 3

Dental Curriculum 4

Admissions 6

Financial Aid 9

Multicultural Affairs 10

Marquette 13

Milwaukee 14

Visit 16

Contact Information 16

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Marquette University does not discriminate in any manner contrary to law or justice on the

basis of race, color, gender, age, sexual orientation, religion, disability, veteran’s status or

national origin in its educational programs or activities, including employment and admissions.

At the same time, Marquette cherishes its right and duty to seek and retain personnel who will

make a positive contribution to its religious character, goals, and mission in order to enhance

the Catholic, Jesuit tradition.

© 2005, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wis.

Produced by the School of Dentistry and the Office of Public Affairs.

Phone: (800) 445-5385 or (414) 288-3532

Web: www.marquette.edu/dentistry

Address: School of Dentistry

Marquette University

1801 W. Wisconsin Ave.

P.O. Box 1881

Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881

SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY

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Marquette University is at the forefront of dental education

E

very step you take in our four-year program will be guided by faculty and practicing

professionals who uphold Marquette’s vision: to train highly skilled oral health

care practitioners to bring top quality dental care to urban and rural

communities across the country — and around the world.

Our beautiful 120,000-square-foot dental school and clinic — Wisconsin’s

only — offers the most advanced clinical resources and instructional

technology available, supporting a dramatically different, one-of-a kind

curriculum developed by our faculty to better prepare students for dental

practice and patient care.

What does all this mean to you? For starters, you’ll learn and practice in a

patient-centered environment that resembles the real world of dentistry, one

that will help you understand the link between oral and physical health.

You’ll attend fewer traditional lectures because more of your time will

be spent working with patients. You’ll participate in university outreach

programs at urban, rural and special-patient clinics, getting firsthand

experience in public health. You’ll begin refining hand skills your first year.

You’ll also be immersed in a rigorous learning model that combines training

in advanced dental practices with access to faculty experts committed to

advancing dental knowledge through their own innovative research.

Bottom line? You’ll be prepared to enter practice, immediately upon graduation.

Another reason to consider Marquette University is our Catholic, Jesuit tradition. Marquette’s School

of Dentistry is a professional school at the gateway of one of the country’s most reputable universities.

We’re an urban campus, right next door to downtown Milwaukee — one of America’s most livable cities.

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Marquette University School of Dentistry

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Pre-clinical simulation laboratory

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Orthodontic dentistry clinicDental rounds room

Our Dental School and Clinic

Our building reflects the way we want to train you. It’s designed and built to support

our multidisciplinary curriculum, serving patients from the community we’re located in.

It’s also a support center for dental professionals throughout Wisconsin.

As a student, here’s what you’ll have access to:

• Eight 12-chair practice operatories designed to resemble and function like small, private dental offices

• A pre-clinical simulation laboratory where first- and second-year students practice their hand skills on

high-tech mannequins

• Specialty-care clinics designed for pediatric dentistry, advanced care, surgical services and

graduate prosthodontic, orthodontic and endodontic programs

• Leading dental researchers whose questions and discoveries are revealing new treatment options

• Centralized clinics with adjoining teaching space for general dentistry rounds

• Large lecture hall and adjacent break-out space offering the latest in presentation technology

• Clinical-research and faculty-practice facilities

• A technology-testing center exhibiting next-generation dental equipment and products

• An information center used to develop the newest and best distance learning and teledentistry technology,

connecting dental professionals worldwide to Marquette for lifelong learning

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Pre-clinical simulation laboratory

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Our Curriculum Vision

W e’re a patient- and student-centered dental school, balanced between

the basic, clinical and behavioral science facets of dental care.

On the patient side, you’ll be immersed in a model of education that mimics dental practice.

By the end of your second year of school, you will have covered the realm of dentistry.

• You’ll take fewer traditional courses

• You’ll learn to become a competent clinician and diagnostician

• You’ll use your skills to identify and manage your patients’ oral health concerns

• You’ll understand biological processes and how they relate to dental health

Beginning your freshman year, you’ll do rounds with faculty once a

week and participate in small group learning. Juniors and seniors

also do once-a-semester formal presentations.

We’ve also integrated practice management into our curriculum.

Professional dentists will teach you the business side of

dentistry and how to be a good businessperson.

Because our curriculum is centered in the Catholic, Jesuit belief

that the classroom is not the real world, you’ll bring your skills

to life as you work with actual patients. One-fourth of your

academic career will be dedicated to treating patients at urban

and rural clinical sites affiliated with Marquette University.

Now, for the student side of things. You will have the same

faculty group leader throughout your academic career. You won’t

be lost in a sea of 80 classmates.

Respect is at the center of our relationships with students. We’re

proactive in helping you get through the program. And you’ll like

the atmosphere. We’re a collegial dental school. Students help

each other. Faculty and students regularly interact socially.

We also believe in combining formal experience with scholarly

activity, so we support our students in going to work in places

like Italy, Greece, Ireland and the National Institute of Health.

Our flexible curriculum makes it easy for you to arrange your

classes to accommodate these unique experiences.

Graduate SpecializationsCertificate and master’s available

Endodontics

Orthodontics

Prosthodontics

Other ProgramsAdvanced General Dentistry (certificate)

Dental Biomaterials (certificate)

Hospital AffiliationsTraining is offered at these sites in pediatric dentistry,

oral medicine and oral surgery:

Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin

Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital

Ever see a toothbrush

being made?

One of America’s few toothbrush

manufacturers is in Eau Claire,

Wis., and owned by a Marquette

University School of Dentistry

graduate. We take regular field

trips there, as well as a number of

other places around the country.

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Dr. Christopher Okunseri

Assistant professor and program director of public health,

Dr. Okunseri is also a researcher whose interests include

oral epidemiology, health service and behavioral science

as they relate to racial and ethnic minority populations.

Since Okunseri joined Marquette, his focus has been

identifying the impact, severity and prevention of oral

disease in the Hmong population. Why Marquette?

“I saw a lot of potential here. It’s definitely an environment

to grow in,” he says. In addition to his research, Okunseri

works at the faculty dental practice one day a week

treating patients. He also is a member of several dental

associations, is widely published and mentors post- and

pre-doctoral dental students. Whether it’s patients or

students, “I am constantly engaged in teaching,” he says.

“I saw a lot of potential here.

It’s definitely an environment

to grow in.”

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AdmissionsAdmissions Criteria

Each year we take the time to carefully select those students we feel are

the best fit for our program. While the admissions committee’s decision

is largely academic, other characteristics we consider in making an

admissions decision include:

• Quality of college/university attended

• Course selection rigor

• Trend of performance (GPA)

• DAT score (Canadian DAT accepted)

• Orientation to the profession

• Motivation and values

• Extracurricular/leadership/service background

• Personal interview

Application ProcedureCandidates should apply for admis-sion 12-15 months prior to the date of expected enrollment. You may apply after completing at least 60 semester hours of the minimum 90 semester hours required of pre-dental college work. (Candidates with baccalaureate degrees earned prior to dental school enrollment may be most competitive.) You may apply using the American Association of Dental Schools Application Service or by obtaining Marquette’s in-house application. AADSAS applications can be found at www.ADEA.org.org/AADSAS Serious

applicants should submit their

credentials before September 1.

Dental Admissions Test Candidates must complete and obtain acceptable scores on the DAT. The test is offered almost every day of the year at Prometric Testing Centers across the United States. It can be taken more than once, but the admissions committee will only consider the most recent test results. The Canadian DAT is acceptable.

Review and Selection of StudentsThe admissions committee starts the review process as soon as applications begin to arrive in June. Interviews are conducted primarily in October and November, and the first offers of admission are made in early December. Once all primary spaces in the class are filled, an alternate pool is created. A $1,000 nonrefundable deposit is required to reserve a space in the class. This deposit is credited to each student’s first-semester tuition.

We enroll only 80 freshmen each

year to ensure that every student

receives the personal attention they

require to succeed in this intense,

exciting learning environment.

Contact Dental Admissions

Phone: (800) 445-5385 or (414) 288-3532

Fax: (414) 288-6505

Web: www.marquette.edu/dentistry

PRE-DENTAL REQUIREMENTS

College studies should be completed at a 4-year, accredited college or university.

The minimum entrance requirement is 90 semester credits of liberal arts study including:

English 6 semester creditsGeneral Chemistry 8 semester creditsOrganic Chemistry 8 semester creditsBiology or Zoology 8 semester creditsPhysics 8 semester creditsElectives 52 semester credits

Total 90 semester credits

All science courses must include laboratory instruction. Suggested pre-dental science

electives include anatomy, cell biology, genetics, biochemistry, microbiology and physiology.

Math courses are suggested in preparation for physics and advanced chemistry.

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See inside back pocket

for cost information and

a profile of this year’s

freshman class.

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Applicant StatusDepending on your desired enrollment status, the following credentials are required to complete

your file. Applications are processed from June 1 through March 1. Offers of admission begin

December 1. For optimal consideration, applicants should submit all application

materials by September 1.

Required Credentials

FRESHMAN (ALL)

• Application form

• Application fee

• Official college transcripts

• Official DAT scores (Canadian DAT accepted)

• Three letters of recommendations (one pre-health committee letter will be

accepted in place of three individual letters)

Advanced Standing: Consideration for admission with advanced standing is given to students

seeking a transfer from a U.S. dental school, as well as to foreign-trained dentists seeking

licensure to practice in the United States. Advanced standing candidates must complete

three years of study at Marquette. Space availability in the sophomore class must exist

in order for us to admit any candidates with advanced standing.

FOREIGN ADVANCED STANDING

• Application form

• Application fee

• Course by course evaluation of

dental school transcripts

• National Boards Part I

• Three letters of recommendation

TRANSFER

• Application form

• Application fee

• Official college and dental school transcripts

• Official DAT scores

• National Board scores (if taken)

• Three letters of recommendation

• Dean’s letter from school of transfer

States with students enrolled at the School of Dentistry, 2004-2005

States without students currently enrolled in the School of Dentistry

�WI

TX

OKAR

LA

MS AL GA

FL

KS

NE

NM

CO

AZ

MO

IA

IL IN

MI

MN

SD

ND

WY

MT

UTNV

ID

WA

OR

CA

TN

KY

OHPA

NY

NC

SC

VA

ME

VTNH

MD

DE

NJCT

MA

RI

WV

A NATIONAL DRAW

Marquette is a private institution that welcomes applicants and students from all

over the United States. Here's where our currently enrolled students come from:

ORIENTATION

Classes begin

Best time to

APPLY

Read, review and screen applications

INTERVIEWING

Offers made

Class fills

Alternate pool is created

MAY

JUNE

JULY

AUGUST

SEPTEMBER

OCTOBER

NOVEMBER

DECEMBER

JANUARY

FEBRUARY

MARCH

APRIL

MAY

JUNE

JULY

AUGUST

SEPTEMBER

ADMISSIONS TIMELINE

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Jesse McGuire

Jesse McGuire was first exposed to the dental profession at a career fair at his high school. “It had all

the things I’d been wanting in a career,” he says. So after completing his undergraduate work in Los

Angeles, the Phoenix native headed to Marquette to participate in courses offered by the university’s

Health Careers Opportunity Program, applied to dental school, got accepted and hasn’t looked back.

Passionate about business too, McGuire also plans to get an M.B.A. after his dental degree then go

back home to practice. “There aren’t that many African American men in business, let alone the

medical and dental professions,” he says. “I owe something to the community that raised me.”

“I owe something to the community that raised me.”

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Scholarships and Financial AidEach year more than $11 million in financial assistance is awarded to dental students. More than

$600,000 of this is gift aid offered through generous donations to the School of Dentistry from

alumni and friends. The remainder is in the form of loan assistance offered through government

and private resources. All need-based financial assistance is administered through the Marquette

University Office of Student Financial Aid. Detailed information about aid sources is available

in the School of Dentistry Dental Bulletin and on the Marquette University Office of Student

Financial Aid Web site at www.marquette.edu/financialaid.

Steps for Obtaining Financial AssistanceSufficient aid is available to cover moderate expenses. Be sure to complete all

steps in a timely fashion and in this order.

1. Be admitted to the School of Dentistry

2. Complete and return the supplementary Admission/Scholarship Application

3. Complete your federal income tax statement no later than February 15

4. Register for a PIN. Your Personal Identification Number or PIN will serve as

your electronic signature on your Free Application for Federal Student Aid

(FAFSA) application. Apply for your PIN online at www.pin.ed.gov

5. Complete the FAFSA online at www.fafsa.ed.gov after January 1

6. Check your credit record; good credit is essential for some private loan programs

7. Respond immediately to all correspondence from Marquette University

8. Keep your address current with Marquette University and the U.S. Postal

Service

Contact Office of Student Financial Aid

Phone: (414) 288-7390

Web: www.marquette.edu/financialaid

Contact FAFSA

Phone: (800) 4-FEDAID

Web: www.fafsa.ed.gov

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Multicultural AffairsThe School of Dentistry is committed to attracting and retaining a diverse student body. We work to improve

access to health care professions for multicultural and disadvantaged students through the federal Health

Careers Opportunity Program. Our Office of Multicultural Affairs administers a national recruitment program and

comprehensive support network that guides financially and educationally disadvantaged candidates through

application, admission and enrollment processes. Other programming includes motivational, academic and

financial aid counseling, as well as tutoring and community outreach.

Summer ProgramsTwo HCOP-funded summer programs are available to help students develop the academics and hand skills necessary for

dental health professions. Admission to these programs is limited. Transportation and room and board are provided.

Pre-enrollment Support Program

This seven-week summer experience introduces selected students to the dental

curriculum and assists them in making a successful transition from pre-professional

to professional studies.

College Science Enrichment Program

Also a seven-week summer experience, CSEP is targeted at college sophomores, juniors

and seniors interested in learning and understanding more about dentistry. Participants are

exposed to a variety of skill sets necessary to succeed in the field. Interested candidates

must have completed at least one year of biology and chemistry, submit three letters of

recommendation, and provide an official college transcript showing a cumulative GPA

above 2.5.

Student Services The School of Dentistry’s Office of Student Services is committed to helping students manage the demands of

this rigorous educational program. Student Services staff are available daily to answer student questions and

serve as liaison with several campus offices including the Registrar, Financial Aid, the Bursar and the Counseling

Center. In addition, Student Services manages these important programs:

Orientation — Our three-day orientation program introduces students to all that Marquette University and Milwaukee

have to offer. You’ll meet with the School of Dentistry dean and faculty, talk with continuing students about their academic

experiences, learn about insurance programs available to single and married dental students through the Wisconsin Dental

Association, pick up your dental instruments and more.

Mentorship — Designed through a unique collaboration with the Wisconsin Dental Association and Pierre Fauchard

Academy, the School of Dentistry’s mentorship program is the template for similar programs nationwide. Dentists throughout

Wisconsin serve as mentors and advisers to dental students, forming professional relationships and friendships that last a lifetime.

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Dr. Sheila Stover, Dent ‘97

Dr. Sheila Stover, director of rural outreach programs at

Marquette University School of Dentistry, supervises third- and

fourth-year dental students and postgraduate residents doing

rotations at rural dental clinics throughout Wisconsin. And she

travels anywhere from 200 to 650 miles four days a week

to do it. An endodontist, Dr. Stover is also in private practice

and a clinical assistant professor at Marquette. One goal of the

program she heads is to introduce dental students to disadvan-

taged patient populations in need of dental care. “We want to

make the clinic experience come alive for students,” she says.

“Working at rural outreach clinics helps them expand on what

they learn in the classroom by applying it.”

“We want to make the clinic

experience come alive for students.”

Marquette University Dental Outreach Clinic Affiliations

Health Education Center Dental Clinic, Chippewa Valley Technical College

Tri-County Community Clinic, Fox Valley Technical College

Marshfield Clinic Ladysmith Dental Center

Ministry Dental Clinic, St. Michael's Hospital in Stevens Point

Marquette University School of Dentistry Clinic

Isaac Coggs Community Health Center, serving a primarily elderly African American population

Matthew Keenan Dental Clinic, serving a Hispanic population

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Dr. Kate Gilson, Arts ’96, Dent ‘99

Dr. Gene Shoemaker, Arts ’83, Dent ‘89

Raised in Oshkosh, Wis., Dr. Gene Shoemaker began practicing general

dentistry immediately after graduating from Marquette. A few years later,

he bought a 2,500-patient practice in Waukesha, Wis. With the Wisconsin

Dental Association, Dr. Shoemaker helped develop the Marquette School

of Dentistry’s Mentorship Program, which matches dentists from around

the state with Marquette dental students. That’s how he met Kate Gilson,

also from Oshkosh, after becoming her mentor her freshman year.

A few years after Dr. Gilson finished her residency, she became a

partner in Shoemaker’s dental practice. “We’d known each other for

seven years and I knew she had received an outstanding education,”

he says. “It was a natural fit.” Today, Dr. Gilson herself is a mentor to

Marquette dental students. “Because I’d had such a good experience,

I wanted to give that back,” she says.

“Because I’d had such a good experience,

I wanted to give that back”

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Marquette University There are many facets of Marquette University that make this the best place to pursue your dental education. You will be

studying at a Catholic, Jesuit institution where professional students like you find ways to combine time dedicated to studies

with time volunteered in service to others. You will be a part of a diverse campus community, brought alive by 11,000 students

— coming from throughout the United States and 80 countries — who learn just as much from each other as they do in the

classroom. You will learn from world-class professional and research faculty who take the time to share their experience and

expertise. And you will do your living and learning in a city that offers countless opportunities for internships, externships and

clinical experiences within minutes of campus. You will leave here equipped with the professional skills and experience to be a

leader in your profession as well as your community.

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JOHN P. RAYNOR, S.J., LIBRARY WISCONSIN AVENUE ST. JOAN OF ARC CHAPEL PATRICK AND BEATRICE HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART

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Two waterfronts

Whether you’re on a bike, scooter, skates or your own feet, the parks and beaches of Milwaukee’s

lakefront are the place to get away without having to go far. The lakefront is also the home to Summerfest,

which, for 10 days in summer, is the center of the music world with thousands of acts from country and metal to

hip-hop and pop.

Just 10 blocks from campus, lazily winding its way through the city, is the Milwaukee

River. Skirting its edges is the RiverWalk, where you’ll find brew pubs, parks and

Milwaukee’s Historic Third Ward, a warehouse district converted into some of the

city’s best new shops, restaurants and living spaces.

Whether you’re catching big acts at Summerfest, the world’s largest music festival, or

smaller ones at Shank Hall, a club on the city’s East Side inspired by the movie This is

Spinal Tap, you’ll never run out of places to hear great music in Milwaukee. If musicals

are your thing, head to the Marcus Center for the Performing Arts, a regular stop of

all touring Broadway shows.

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Milwaukee, Wisconsin

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Sit among hundreds of fluttering butterflies in the Milwaukee Public Museum’s butterfly

exhibit. When you’re done there, head over to the museum’s giant IMAX theatre or

Discovery World — The James Lovell Museum of Science, Economics and Technology,

named by NBC’s Today Show as one of the nation’s top five interactive museums.

Paris has the Eiffel Tower. New York has the Empire State Building. Milwaukee has

the Quadracci Pavilion, designed by world renowned architect Santiago Calatrava.

Nicknamed "the Calatrava," this $100 million addition to the Milwaukee Art Museum on

Milwaukee’s lakefront looks like a giant bird unfurling its wings and has put Milwaukee

on the world’s architectural map.

Home to the Milwaukee Brewers, Miller Park opened in 2001 and was the site of the 2002 All-Star Game. Just eight

blocks from Marquette is the Bradley Center, home of Marquette basketball, as well as the Milwaukee Bucks (NBA),

Admirals (AHL) and Wave (MISL).

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The Quadracci Pavilion of the Milwaukee Art Museum

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©2005 Marquette University – 4/2005

Visitor Parking749 N. 16th St.

Visitor Parking1240 W. Wells St.

Visitor Parking749 N. 16th St.74749749School of Dentistry1801 W. Wisconsin Ave.

Alumni Memorial UnionUniversity Information & Visitors Center

To Lake Michigan

School of Dentistry1801 W. Wisconsin Ave.

Bus

Greyhound and Badger bus lines

are located on 7th Street between

Wisconsin Avenue and Michigan

Street. Upon your arrival, you

may walk the five blocks west to

Marquette or take a cab.

Plane General Mitchell International

Airport services Milwaukee and

is about a 15-mile cab ride to

campus.

TrainAmtrak’s terminal is at St. Paul

Avenue and 5th Street, a seven-

block cab ride to campus.

Visit MarquetteWe encourage you to visit us and tour our facility. To arrange a visit/tour, simply call the admissions office

at (800) 445-5385 or (414) 288-3532 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Central Time, Monday through Friday.

CONTACT INFORMATION

A list of campus addresses and phone numbers follow for your convenience. All Marquette mail may be sent c/o Marquette University, P.O. Box 1881, Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881

Dental SchoolDental Admissions

Brian Trecek, director

School of Dentistry, 102B

1801 W. Wisconsin Ave.

P.O. Box 1881

Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881

Phone: (414) 288-3532 or (800) 445-5385

Fax: (414) 288-6505

Web: www.marquette.edu/dentistry

Dental Student Services

Linda Gleason, director

School of Dentistry, 102H

Phone: (414) 288-6577 or (800) 445-5385

Fax: (414) 288-6505

Office of Multicultural Affairs/

Health Careers Opportunity Program

School of Dentistry, 102F

Phone: (414) 288-1533 or (800) 445-5385

Fax: (414) 288-5593

Marquette University OfficesOffice of the Bursar

1618 W. Wells Street

Phone: (414) 288-7157

University Apartments and

Off-campus Student Services

1500 W. Wells Street

Phone: (414) 288-7281

Fax: (414) 288-5545

Office of Student Financial Aid

Carla Smith-Liebich

1212 Building, 415

Phone: (414) 288-7390

Fax: (414) 288-1718

Automobile

From the West on I-94Exit at 35th Street (#309A). Turn left at

the stoplight onto 35th Street. Drive

about 1/2 mile to West Wisconsin

Avenue and turn right. Take Wisconsin

Avenue east 1 and 1/2 miles to

Marquette. This route is marked with

university signage.

Getting to Marquette

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From the South on I-43/I-94Follow I-43/I-94 north toward down-

town Milwaukee to exit 72B on the left

(Madison). Stay on I-94 and exit at 35th

Street (#309A). Turn right onto North

35th Street and drive 1/2 mile north to

West Wisconsin Avenue. Turn right and

take Wisconsin Avenue east 1 and 1/2

miles to campus. This route is marked

with university signage.

From the North on I-43Exit at North Avenue (#73C). Stay in

the center lane for several blocks until

the road turns into 6th Street. Drive

south on 6th Street about 2 miles to

West Wisconsin Avenue. Turn right and

take Wisconsin Avenue west 1/2 mile

to campus. This route is marked with

university signage.

The Wisconsin Department of Transportation is currently working on the reconstruction of the Marquette Interchange, which connects three major highways (I-94, I-43 and I-794). Construction is scheduled to extend through 2008. Here are some directions and routes to make planning your visit to campus as simple as possible. Also, please consult www.marquette.edu/interchange or www.mchange.org for updates on the project.

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