Advisory Board
ATTENTION:
I haven't consulted this board for years, basically
since I closed the actual museum in my house.
These were folks who graciously consented to
be board members of what I had hoped to be
the future
physical museum.
Barbara
Czerwinski, Ph.D., R.N.
Associate professor of nursing, University of
Texas at
Houston, U.S.A.
Dr. Czerwinski helped create the hygienic
facilities for
the space shuttle, and is now conducting a study of the hygienic
requirements
of the women in the U.S. military for the Department of Defense.
Harry Finley, B.A., ex officio
Founder and director of
the Museum
of Menstruation. More bio data in Who's Who in America 2006
and Who's
Who in the World 2006 (Marquis, to be published Nov.
2005).
Stephanie Harzewski,
B.A.
Department of Women's Studies, Rutgers
University, U.S.A.
Ms. Harzewski's interests include menstrual
culture in
the United States after 1970, including menstrual extraction and
the revived
use of washable pads.
Monica Lange,
Ph.D.
Faculty in Women's Studies and Psychology,
California State
University, Long Beach
A licensed clinical psychologist, Dr. Lange's
research
focuses on women's health issues, menstrual product safety and
improving
women's ability to make informed consumer decisions.
Rachel K. Sobel,
B.A.
Writer for U. S. News & World Report
As a student at Harvard, Ms. Sobel researched
the MUM archives
for her senior thesis.
Advoquita Stude, B.
A.
Department of Environmental Engineering,
California Institute
of Technology, U.S.A.
Ms. Stude focuses on the development of
tampons.
Lana Thompson,
M.A.
Boca Raton, Florida
Ms. Thompson is an anthropologist who writes
about the
history of medicine and women's studies. She is the author of
"The
Wandering Womb: A cultural history of outrageous beliefs about
women,"
and is working on her next two books. She teaches forensic
anthropology.
Philip
M. Tierno, Jr., Ph.D.
Director of clinical microbiology and
immunology, New York
University Medical Center
Associate professor of pathology, New York
University School
of Medicine, U.S.A.
Dr. Tierno is the leading independent
investigator of menstrual
products safety, and was instrumental in promoting the change to
safer materials
in menstrual products after the toxic shock crisis of the early
1980s.
Cheryl Turner,
B.A.
Dayton, Ohio, U.S.A.
Mrs. Turner is a licensed social worker and a
menstrual
health educator, and owns her own business, Moon Song Trilogy.
Miki
Walsh, B.S.
Hollywood, California
Ms. Walsh, who occupies a museum board seat
reserved for
people under 26 years of age, is working on material for
menarche education
for girls and their families, and is helping develop the Museum
of Menstruation.
She was the MUM spokeswoman at GirlCon '97 at Wellesley College
in mid-April
1997. Ms. Walsh tap dances, and she can put her whole fist into
her mouth.
Former member (deceased)
Gretchen Worden,
B.A.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Ms. Worden directs the Mütter Museum, part of
the
College of Physicians of Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, U.S.A.);
her museum
ranks with the National Museum of Health and Medicine,
in Washington, D.C., as the best in America. (Mütter Museum Web site.)
Obituary
Other
Appointments (as of 1998)
Staff
Professor Mack C. Padd
The Distinguished
Service Institutional
Wallace C. Meyer Memorial Pouncer at the Museum of
Menstruation
The "Black Thunderbolt"
- also called MaxiMUM - specializes in the capture of small,
potentially
harmful moving objects; enjoys Fancy Feast (Savory Salmon
especially); and
likes getting scratched in just the right place (who
doesn't?). Here's more, with
photo!
BUT . . .
Recently, the MUM
director has observed
Prof. Padd either dozing off or staring into space an awful
lot, often at
birds pecking at seed right outside the glass doors of the
museum. His mouse-capture
production is stagnant; as a matter of fact, he has never
caught one. He's
become a . . . "fat cat."
I brought this up with
him on 6 November,
in his rating month, pointing out that his perqs exceeded his
performance.
He shrieked what sounded like "Tenure!" to suggestions that he
either move on, "get with it," or forget Fancy Feast.
MUM is reviewing its
policy of tenure,
reflecting a nationwide trend.
(A car tire crushed Max's
head in
the summer of 2008. He became an indoor-outdoor cat after the
vet told me
he suffered from failing kidneys and thyroid and I knew Max
wanted to spend
time outdoors more than anything else.
The good thing is that he died fast. He was 14.)
Professor
Minnie
Padd
The Distinguished
Service Institutional
Albert Lasker Memorial Pouncer at the Museum of Menstruation
MiniMUM joined the
MUM pouncing
staff in 1998. His c.v. includes repeated chasing-up-the-tree
events of the following staff member, and aggressive
greeting of guests in the museum; in this, he perfectly
balances
out MaxiMUM (above), who hides under the Director's bed when
visitors are
present.
Prof. Padd, probably a Maine coon cat, takes
his title
from the father of American advertising, Albert
Lasker, whose name also graces the highest award in
American medicine.
(Minnie has been missing since early May 1999,
the day
before my coronary angioplasty, and is probably dead. I miss
him!)
Visiting Assistant
Professor Pam
T. Padd (say the name quickly)
The Distinguished
Institutional
fax and Fibs Early Commercial Tampon Memorial Part-Time
Pouncer at the Museum
of Menstruation
Although beaten up and chased into tree tops
almost every
day by Professor Minnie Padd, PamdimoniMUM,
a blue-eyed tabby kitten who doggedly,
so to
speak, looks through the glass doors of the museum for hours
daily, surely
preventing small mouse-like creatures from entering, joins MUM
as the newest
staff member!
The Director of the
museum - me -
will override the resoundingly negative decision of the
faculty committee
(the other Professor Padd, above) to make her full time, with
museum live-in
privileges. (No picture yet available)
Fibs and fax
tampons
were among the earliest commercial tampons; indeed, fax
- always
written lower case and in italics - may be the earliest, from
the early
1930s.
And read about five
feline museum interns, Fibs, fax,
Meds,
Zeenie-Weenie, and Wix.
homepage
| MUM
address & What does MUM
mean? | e-mail the
museum | privacy on this site |
who runs
this museum?? |
Amazing women! | the art
of menstruation | artists
(non-menstrual)
| asbestos | belts
| bidets | founder bio
| Bly, Nellie | MUM board
| books: menstruation and menopause
(and reviews) | cats
| company
booklets directory | contraception
and religion
| costumes | menstrual cups
| cup usage | dispensers
| douches, pain, sprays | essay
directory | extraction | famous
women in menstrual hygiene ads | FAQ
| founder/director biography | humor | huts | links
| masturbation | media coverage
of MUM | miscellaneous | museum
future | Norwegian menstruation
exhibit | odor (olor)|
pad
directory | patent medicine |
poetry
directory | products, current
| religion | your remedies for
menstrual discomfort | menstrual products safety
| science | shame
| slapping, menstrual | sponges
| synchrony | tampon
directory | early tampons |
teen
ads directory | tour of the
former museum
(video) | underpants
directory | videos, films
directory | Words and expressions about
menstruation | Would you stop
menstruating if you could? |
What did women
do about menstruation in the past? |
washable pads
© 2005 Harry Finley. It is
illegal to
reproduce or distribute any of the work on this Web site in
any manner or
medium without written permission of the author. Please report
suspected
violations to [email protected]