Le Moyne College

MBA Program

Director:

George Kulick, Ph.D.
Grewen Hall Room 209K
(315) 445-4786
MBA@lemoyne.edu

Le Moyne attracts faculty who enhance the student-focused orientation of the College. Nearly all MBA faculty are full-time and have strong academic and professional backgrounds. Most have held management positions in the public and private sectors. They engage in research that supports their primary mission of teaching students at the leading edge of their respective fields. Faculty research finds its way into the classroom and thus enriches significantly the educational experience.

One of Le Moyne's strengths is strong student-faculty interaction. Faculty are available to work on projects, research and career plans. Faculty regularly attend conferences and development workshops to become more effective educators. As a result, the program dynamically responds to the changing needs of adult learners.
Here are profiles of a few of our faculty. We invite you to talk with them and their colleagues.
 
Salwa H. Ammar (1987).  Professor of Business Administration. B.S. Salford University, M.S. and Ph.D. University of Florida. Operations management; artificial intelligence; inventory management; approximate reasoning and decision making.

Bernard A. Arogyaswamy (1986). Professor of Business Administration. BS, College of Engineering; M.B.A., D.B.A. Kent State University. Value management; total quality management; Japanese management; strategic management.

John J. Considine (1978). Professor of Business Administration. BA, Gettysburg College; MBA, Ph.D., Syracuse University. Transportation, logistics, market forecasting; not-for-profit marketing.

Wally J. Elmer (1979). Professor of Business Administration. BS, MBA, Ph.D., Syracuse University. Marketing research and management; higher education marketing; industrial marketing.

Martha Grabowski (1987). Professor of Business Administration. BS, Merchant Marine Academy; MBA, MS, Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Expert systems; knowledge engineering; transportation management; artificial intelligence.

Wayne A. Grove (2002). Associate Professor of Economics. B.A., Illinois Wesleyan University; M.S. American University; PH.D, University of Illinois

Chongyoul Kim (1986). Associate Professor of Business Administration. BA, Kyongbuk University; MBA, Ph.D., Rutgers University. International finance; banking management; financial institutions and markets.

George E. Kulick (1988). Assistant Professor of Business Administration. BS, Syracuse University; MS, Rutgers University; Ph.D., Syracuse University. Quantitative methods; survey methods and statistics. kulick@lemoyne.edu

Greg M. Lepak (1986). Professor of Business Administration. BS, State University of New York at Buffalo; MS, Ph.D., State University of New York at Albany. Quantitative methods; operations management; time series analysis.

Shin-Jeng Lin (2000). Assistant Professor of Business. BA, National Sun Yat-sen University; MS, MA, University of Florida. Management Information Systems, E Commerce. Ph.D., Rutgers University.

Roger D. Lund (1978). Professor of English. BA, University of Denver; MA, Ph.D., University of Virginia. Business communications; rhetoric; satire; business---humanities linkages.

David L. Moore (1990). Associate Professor of Business Administration. B.S.B.A., Old Dominion University; M.S.B.A., Ph.D., University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Marketing; advertising management; research methods; consumer behavior; environmental marketing.

Dennis O'Connor (1986). Associate Professor of Business Administration. MA, Cleveland University; Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University. Organizational behavior, leadership dynamics, career management and assessment.

Daniel L. Orne (1990). Associate Professor of Business Administration. BS, MS, Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Strategic management; manufacturing strategy; business ethics; management of technology and information.

Jinhu Qian (2002). Assistant Professor of Business Administration. BEng, MS, University of Science and Technology. MS, Louisiana State University. Ph.D. University of Houston

Jonathan C. Schonsheck (1978). Professor of Philosophy. BA, Valparaiso University; MA, University of Dayton; Ph.D., Ohio State University. Moral philosophy; criminalization; business ethics.

Han G. Woo (2004). Assistant Professor of Business Administration. BA MIS, Soule National University. Ph.D., Georgia State University.

Ronald H. Wright (1977).  Professor of Business Administration. BA, King College; M.Div. Colgate-Rochester Divinity School; MA, Ph.D., University of Kentucky. Quantitative methods in management; large scale planning models; inventory management.

1419 Salt Springs Road, Syracuse, NY 13214   ·   (800) 333-4733   ·   (315) 445-4100