MILANO GRADUATE SCHOOL
Fred P. Hochberg was named dean of the Milano Graduate School. Mr. Hochberg has

more than 25 years of experience in business, government, civil rights and philanthropy. From mid-1998 to early 2001, he served as deputy, then acting administrator, of the Small Business Administration. Earlier, in more than 20 years with the Lillian Vernon Company, Mr. Hochberg led the transformation of a small mail order company into a publicly traded direct-marketing corporation. Mr. Hochberg holds a B.A. from New York University and an M.B.A. from Columbia University. He also attended the Kennedy School of Governments Executive Leadership Program at Harvard University. He formerly was a trustee of New School University and chair of The New Schools Board of Governors. He is a trustee of the Citizens Budget Commission, FINCA (an international micro-lending institution) and Lillian Vernon International House at NYU.
Martin Greller was named chair of the Milano Graduate Schools human resources management program. Prior to his appointment, he was director of the University of Wyomings master in business administration program. He specializes in manager and organizational effectiveness, career issues for workers over 50 and new business ventures, and he is the author of more than 30 articles in academic journals and magazines. He holds a doctorate from Yale University.
Darrick Hamilton joins the Milano Graduate School as assistant professor in the

urban policy analysis and management program. He recently completed a Ford Foundation fellowship on poverty, the underclass and public policy at the Poverty Research and Training Center, and the Institute for Social Researchs program for research on Black Americans, both at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He also was named to a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation in Health Policy Fellowship at Yale Universitys Institution for Social and Policy Studies. Mr. Hamilton holds a Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.