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David Schultz, Professor, School of Business, Hamline University

Schultz is one of the most widely-known and respected political experts in the region. He is available for news analysis and background as a non-partisan expert on both national and local coverage of election law, money and politics, campaigns and elections, media and politics, government ethics, and political advertising.

Schultz teaches classes on government ethics in the School of Business. He also teaches election law at the Hamline University School of Law. A Fulbright scholar who has taught election law abroad, Schultz is the author of more than 25 books. His degrees include a PhD in political science from the University of Minnesota, an LLM from the University of London and a JD from the University of Minnesota Law School. Schultz has been interviewed by many media including New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, Today Show and National Public Radio.

JacQui Getty, Media Relations, Hamline University, 651-523-2475, jgetty01@hamline.edu 

Direct to Schultz: 612.396.8043

Debra Petersen, Associate Professor, Communication and Journalism Department, University of St. Thomas
651-962-5828 (w), 612-987-1114 (cell), dlpetersen@stthomas.edu

Petersen's research interests include presidential inaugurations and especially first ladies. She will be teaching in Hawaii (which has many ties to the new president) much of January 2009 but can be reached for interviews via e-mail and her cell phone.

Petersen is engaged in research on the rhetoric of first ladies, and received a grant to conduct research at the Eleanor Roosevelt archives in Hyde Park, N.Y.  She also conducts research on women and politics, including women engaged in international political communication.

Jim Winterer, St. Thomas News Service, 651-962-6404, jcwinterer@stthomas.edu

Kay Wolsborn, Professor of Political Science, College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University

Wolsborn has expertise in voting behavior and political parties. She is chair of the political science department for the 2008-09 academic year and is teaching courses this year on Politics & Political Life, U.S. Political Parties and Elections, Introduction to U.S. Politics, and Gender and Politics.

Wolsborn is a frequent faculty expert on political topics with local and regional media. Wolsborn has taught at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University since 1984. She has a B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. from Washington State University.

Diane Hageman, CSB Director of Media Relations, 320-363-5748, dhageman@csbsju.edu

Terry Flower, Professor of Physics, College of St. Catherine

Flower was a delegate to the RNC and chair of the Dakota County chapter of McCain’s campaign.

Locke holds a B.A. from Whitman College and an M.A. and Ph.D from Rutgers University. Her research interests lie in the moral elements of democracy. She currently teaches courses on race and politics, American political thought, and democratic principles.

Julie Michener, Media Relations Manager, College of St. Catherine, www.stkate.edu, 651-690-6521, 651-253-8931, jcmichener@stkate.edu

Jillian Locke, Associate Professor of Political Science, Gustavus Adolphus College

Locke’s expertise is in the area of democratic theory, feminist theory, history of political thought, race and politics.

Locke holds a B.A. from Whitman College and an M.A. and Ph.D from Rutgers University. Her research interests lie in the moral elements of democracy. She currently teaches courses on race and politics, American political thought, and democratic principles.

Matt Thomas, Media Relations Manager, Gustavus Adolphus College, 507-933-7510, mthomas@gustavus.edu

Daniel Hofrenning, Professor of Political Science, St. Olaf College, 507-786-3128 (w), 507-786-4665 (h), dhofrenn@stolaf.edu

Hofrenning is an expert in U.S. politics, public policy, and religion and politics.

Hofrenning, author of the book In Washington But Not Of It: The Prophetic Politics of Religious Lobbyists, teaches public policy and American politics. He most recently has been quoted by the New York Times and appeared on CNN’s Lou Dobbs program. He also has provided commentary for MPR, KARE-11 and FOX-9. His opinion pieces have appeared in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the St. Paul Pioneer Press and at MSNBC.com.

David Gonnerman, St. Olaf media relations, 507-786-3315, gonnermd@stolaf.edu

David E. Woodard, History/Political Science (department chair), Concordia University, St. Paul

Woodard is interested in the history of U.S. politics. He has studied and taught about presidential elections, parties, and campaigns throughout history. He remembers the first state election he followed: the 1966 senate contest in Illinois between Paul Douglas and Charles Percy. He has also done political commentary on several local television stations.

Woodard received a B.A. in both Political Science and History from Western Illinois University. He earned his M.A. from Southern Illinois University and a Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota in 1996. Woodard has been teaching at Concordia University since 1999.

Jill Johnson, Director of University Marketing & Communications, Concordia University, St. Paul, 651-641-8755, jjohnson@csp.edu

Nancy Zingale, Professor Emerita of Political Science, Retired Professor and former chair of Political Science Department, University of St. Thomas, 651-962-6928, nhzingale@stthomas.edu

Zingale's expertise is in the areas of elections, public opinion, political parties, survey research and polling.

Zingale has commented on elections for newspapers and radio and television stations, and has analyzed exit polls for NBC News. She holds a Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota and is co-author of “Political Behavior of the American Electorate” (now in its 11th edition) and “Partisan Realignment: Voters, Parties and Government in American History.”

Jim Winterer, St. Thomas News Service, 651-962-6404, jcwinterer@stthomas.edu

Adrienne E. Christiansen, Associate Professor and Chair, Political Science, Macalester College

Christiansen studies political communication/rhetoric. Her scholarly efforts have focused on the language of war and the rhetoric of social movements. Most recently, she has been drawn to visual persuasion, particularly as manifested in political editorial cartoons and in the role political monuments play in maintaining conflict in Cyprus.

She received her B.A. and M.A. from Kansas University, and her Ph.D. in Speech Communication from the University of Minnesota. Christiansen has been at Macalester since 1990.

Barbara Laskin, Media Relations, Macalester College, (651) 696-6451, laskin@macalester.edu

Julie Dolan, Associate Professor, Political Science, Macalester College

Dolan is interested in women and politics, presidential campaigns and elections. She is currently working on a book about Senator Hillary Clinton.  Her research and teaching interests include bureaucratic politics, women and politics, public policy, research methods and Congress.

She has published articles in a variety of journals, including PS: Political Science and Politics, Public Administration Review, the Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, Women & Politics, and the Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics. Dolan received her B.A .in Political Science from St. Olaf College and received her Ph.D. in Political Science from American University.

Barbara K. Laskin, Media Relations Manager, Macalester College, 651-696-6451, laskin@macalester.edu

Chris Gilbert, Professor of Political Science, Gustavus Adolphus College

Gilbert’s areas of expertise include American politics and elections, religion and politics, political parties, research methods, Minnesota politics.

Gilbert received his B.A. from Moravian College and his Ph.D. from Washington University in St. Louis. He has authored four books including his latest, The Political Influence of American Churches. He has offered political analysis in the past for MPR, WCCO radio, the Star Tribune, and the Pioneer Press.

Matt Thomas, Media Relations Manager, Gustavus Adolphus College, 507-933-7510, mthomas@gustavus.edu

Stacey Hunter Hecht, Department Chair/Associate Professor of Political Science, Bethel University

Hunter Hecht’s areas of expertise include Social Policy, Cosmopolitanism, Citizenship & Immigration Policy, and Religion and Politics.

Ph.D., University of Minnesota, B.A., Pennsylvania State University. Hunter Hecht has been a frequent political contributor on local public television's live public affairs program, “Almanac.”

Amanda Wanke, Director of Media and Internal Communications, Bethel University, 651-638-6266, a-wanke@bethel.edu

Mary Jo McGuire, Faculty member, Master of Arts in Organizational Leadership and Political Science, College of St. Catherine

McGuire’s areas of expertise include ethics and leadership, public policy and current issues. Consulting in public policy, advocacy, leadership and non-profit board management, Maguire co-founded MJ2 Group, a bi-partisan consulting company. She served fourteen years as a state representative in the Minnesota Legislature.

Maguire earned a B.A. in Business Administration from the College of St. Catherine, a J.D. from Hamline University School of Law, and an M.A. in Public Administration from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

Julie Michener, Media Relations Manager, College of St. Catherine, www.stkate.edu, 651-690-6521, 651-253-8931, jcmichener@stkate.edu

James H. Read, Professor of Political Science, College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University, 320-363-5239, jread@csbsju.edu

In 1992, Read was a candidate for the Minnesota House of Representatives in District 14A. He is author of an upcoming book titled Doorstep Democracy: Face-to-Face Politics in the Heartland (University of Minnesota Press, 2008) where he demonstrates how conversations between citizens concerned about their communities can get us beyond the television ads, mass mailings and sound bites to rejuvenate American democracy.

Read has been a professor at CSB and SJU since 1988. He received an A.B. degree from the University of Chicago and a M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University.

Michael Hemmesch, Director of Media Relations, Saint John’s University, 320-363-2595, mhemmesch@csbsju.edu

Direct to Read: 320-363-5239, jread@csbsju.edu

Andy Aoki, Augsburg College

Political Science professor Aoki is finishing a book on immigrants’ effects on electoral politics.

 

Jeff Shelman, Director of News and Media Services, 612-330-1476, shelman@augsburg.edu

Nancy Fischer, Augsburg College

Fisher is researching how media at the New York Times and the London Times portray the twin cities in their respective newspapers. She is particularly interested in how the media coverage around the RNC will portray the Twin Cities.

 

Jeff Shelman, Director of News and Media Services, 612-330-1476, shelman@augsburg.edu

Joe Underhill-Cady, Augsburg College

Political Science professor Underhill-Cady teaches a class on Mississippi River politics — it includes having students canoeing down the river.

 

Jeff Shelman, Director of News and Media Services, 612-330-1476, shelman@augsburg.edu

John Shockley, Assistant Professor, Political Science, Augsburg College

Shockley’s expertise lies in the areas of American Politics, campaigns and elections, ethics of campaigning and campaign finance reform.

Shockley earned his M.A.and  Ph.D in political science from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and his B.A. from the University of Texas, Austin.

Jeff Shelman, Director of News and Media Services, 612-330-1476, shelman@augsburg.edu

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