Brewster C. Denny, Professor and Dean Emeritus of Public Affairs, Ph.D., Fletcher School of Diplomacy, Tufts University, 1959: American Foreign Policy
Diana Gale, Senior Lecturer Emeritus of Public Affairs, Ph.D., University of Washingon, 1981 (Urban Planning): Strategic and Resource Management Planning, Leadership Development, Coaching and Organizational Management
Margaret T. Gordon, Professor and Dean Emeritus of Public Affairs, Ph.D., Northwestern University, 1972 (Sociology): News Media and Public Policy, Urban Policy, Women's Issues
Barry I. Hyman, Professor Emeritus of Public Affairs and Mechanical Engineering, Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, 1965 (Engineering Mechanics): Technology and Public Policy, Energy Policy, Quantitative Methods
Hubert G. Locke, Professor and Dean Emeritus of Public Affairs, Corbally Professor of Public Service, M.A., University of Michigan, 1961 (Comparative Literature): Urban Affairs, Law and Justice
Additional faculty information is available for Current Faculty A-G, Current Faculty H-Z, Lecturers, Researchers, & Practitioners, and Adjunct & Affiliate Faculty.

Brewster Denny
Dean Emeritus and Professor of Public Affairs
Ph.D., Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, 1959
Areas of Specialization:
American Foreign Policy
Academically, Brewster Denny is an historian. He was the founder and first Dean of Evans School (1962-1980) in addition to teaching and has headed the Marine Affairs effort (1972-1979) and was the head of the Foreign Affairs professional program from 1967-1990. His public service includes: naval service in WWII and the Korean War period, eight years as a Supervisory Intelligence Research Analyst assessing Soviet special weapons capabilities and intentions, member of the Professional Staff of the US Senate Subcommittee on National Policy Machinery, an advisor in the national security transition between the Eisenhower and the Kennedy Administrations, United States Representative to the General Assembly of the UN, and representative of the US National Academy of Sciences to help on science policy in Thailand, Korea, the Philippines and Jordan. Since 1974 he has been a Trustee of the Twentieth Century Fund (now called The Century Foundation) and from 1986-1994 was the Chairman of the Board. In that role he has worked on a number of the Fund’s research programs and assisted in the design of projects and the review of manuscripts especially on foreign policy, arms control, intelligence, post war organization of Europe, and US Russian relations after the Cold War. He speaks, reads and writes Russian and has visited Russia twice and has served as an advisor to some of the programs there. He is active in a number of local public service activities including as chair of the Children’s Budget Coalition of the Children’s Alliance.
Curriculum Vitae (6KB PDF)

Diana Gale
Senior Lecturer Emeritus of Public Affairs
Ph.D., University of Washingon, 1981
Areas of Specialization
Strategic and Resource Management Planning, Leadership Development, Coaching & Organizational Management
Diana Gale is Senior Lecturer Emeritus at the Daniel J. Evans School of Public Affairs. She is the former Director of Seattle Public Utilities and the City of Seattle Office of Management and Budget. She became the first director of Seattle Public Utilities when the department was created in 1997. She was responsible for all aspects of Seattle's utilities including water, sewer, drainage, solid waste, engineering services and utilities customer services. Previously, Diana served as the superintendent of the Seattle Water Department for the regional area delivering water services to 1.2 million people. Prior to that she was the director of Seattle's Office of Management and Budget. As budget director, she initiated a biennial budget process which resulted in the first-ever two-year budget for the City of Seattle, as well as a strategic capital investment plan and an innovative program of quality management and performance measurement. Before working as budget director, she was director of the Solid Waste Utility and executive director of the Legislative Department. As director of Solid Waste, she initiated the nationally renowned recycling and composting programs which have led Seattle to a 44% recycling rate.
Diana has extensive community involvement work in the arts and the environment. She is on the Board of the Seattle Opera, the Seattle Chamber Music Festival, Long Live The Kings (a salmon restoration organization) and the International Water Management Council.
Curriculum Vitae (202KB PDF)

Margaret T. Gordon
Professor of Public Affairs and Dean Emeritus
Ph.D., Northwestern University, 1972
Areas of Specialization:
News Media and Public Policy, News Media and Society, Crimes Against Women, Fear of Crime, Public Access to Information
Margaret T. Gordon joined the Evans School as Professor and Dean in 1988 and after ten years stepped down as Dean to continue her research and teaching at the Evans School. Professor Gordon received her Ph.D. degree in Sociology from Northwestern University and bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern. She was the Director of NU’s Center for Urban Affairs and Policy Research from 1980-1988. As a professor in the Medill School of Journalism and the departments of Sociology and Urban Affairs, she taught courses in Urban Policy Analysis and News Media and Society. At the Evans School she teaches News Media and Public Policy and Race, Ethnicity and Public Policy. Professor Gordon’s research has focused on: the news media and the public’s declining trust in government; the news media and public policy making; and women’s fear and self-protective behaviors. She is currently researching new forms of journalism, and is working on a team evaluating the impacts of the Gates Foundations Library Program which is seeking to provide universal access to computers and the Internet through public libraries.
Curriculum Vitae (33KB PDF)
Barry I. Hyman
Professor of Public Affairs and Mechanical Engineering
Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1965
Areas of Specialization:
Technology and Public Policy, Energy and Environmental Policy
Professor Hyman’s main research and teaching interests are in technology and public policy, and energy policy and management. His current research focuses on energy and environmental characteristics of manufacturing processes. From 1973-75 he served as staff engineer to the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce. He was the 1985 recipient of the Chester F. Carlson Award for Innovation in Engineering Education and was named 1995 Academic Engineer of the Year by the Puget Sound Engineering Council. Dr. Hyman is currently Vice President for Government Relations of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.

Hubert G. Locke
Professor and Dean Emeritus of Public Affairs
M.A., University of Michigan, 1961
Areas of Specialization:
Urban Affairs, Law and Justice
After graduate work at the University of Michigan, Hubert G. Locke became the first Executive Director of the Citizens Committee for Equal Opportunity (a civil rights organization) in Detroit (1962-65). Subsequently, he was appointed Administrative Assistant to the Detroit Commissioner of Police (1966-67), Adjunct Assistant Professor of Urban Education and Fellow of the Center for Urban Studies at Wayne State University (1967-72), and Dean of the College of Public Affairs and Community Service and Associate Professor of Urban Studies at the University of Nebraska at Omaha (1972-75). He came to the University in 1976 as Professor of Public Affairs and Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. In 1977, Dean Locke was appointed Vice Provost for Academic Affairs and in 1982, Dean of the Evans School. His major research interests are in management and policy issues in American policing but he devotes a considerable amount of his spare time to writing on the experiences of German society during the era of National Socialism. He is a member of the Boards of Trustees of the Bullitt Foundation, Common Cause, the Institute of European Studies, and the Pacific School of Religion. He is chair of the State Sentencing Guidelines Commission. He is author and editor of several books and numerous chapters in publications dealing with race, criminal justice, religion and public policy.
Curriculum Vitae (12KB PDF)