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duk eng Student-written since 1940 Edmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering at Duke University | 2016 pratt.duke.edu dukengineer.pratt.duke.edu INSIDE: Duke Engineering from every angle Meet the new dean Hacking for good Tackling Grand Challenges

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dukengStudent-written since 1940

Edmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering at Duke University | 2016

pratt.duke.edudukengineer.pratt.duke.edu

INSIDE:Duke Engineering from every angleMeet the new dean Hacking for goodTackling Grand Challenges

The F

oundry

Duke University celebrated the grand opening of its brand new makerspace on September 3, 2015. Dubbed “The Foundry,” the newly renovat-ed basement of Gross Hall features 7,600 feet of project space for Duke student teams, faculty and staff.

pratt.duke.edu

Letters2 Letter from the Editor 3 Meet the Editors4 Letter from the Dean5 Letter from the ESG President 6 Letter from the EGSC President

Features8 Meet Pratt’s Next Dean 12 From Tiny Details to Big Picture: The New Face of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Duke 16 Tackling the Grand Challenges

Research20 Piloting Drones into the Future 23 Demystifying Big Data 24 Bleeding Duke Blue – Supercomputing and the Cardiovascular System

On Campus26 Hacking for the Future of Medicine: Healthcare Hackathon Takes Duke 29 Duke IEEE: Innovation without Bounds30 HackDuke: Coding for Good 32 Duke AERO: Giving Lift to Student’s Careers

Profiles34 Innovative Purification Technologies for Contaminated Drinking Water In Uganda37 John Oxaal: Pratt BME’s Entrepreneur in Residence

Alumni and Giving 39 Classnotes48 Honor Roll

dukengineerEdmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering at Duke University | 2016

Editor-in-ChiefEfe Aras

Associate EditorsPetek Sener

Claudia DantoinAmy Xiong

Consulting EditorsMinnie Glymph

Ken Kingery

DesignerLacey Chylack

CoverModeled blood flow

through an aorta divided by processor (page 24) 62 10

2016 dukengineer 32 2016 dukengineer

l e t te rs | MEET THE EDITORS

Efe Aras is a junior studying electrical and computer engineer-ing with additional interests in computer science, mathematics and philosophy. He is involved with both the Pratt Fellows program and the Grand Challenge Scholars program, and active in Alpha Phi Omega and Wellness House. His research interests are modeling traffic and constructing simulations to analyze traffic flow and the reliability of autonomous cars. During his free time, he likes thinking, reading (particularly the Harry Potter series) and talking with his friends.

Amy Xiong is a sophomore biomedical and electrical/com-puter engineering double major who likes to design and create. She was born and raised in Minnesota, and is proud of it--oc-casionally you might see her in flip flops during the “winter” here. On campus, Amy is involved with the Grand Challenge Scholars program, the Alice M. Baldwin Scholars and the Career Center. She enjoys watching good movies, taking photos and exploring new places.

Claudia Dantoin is a junior from Mequon, Wisconsin. She is currently juggling classes in the electrical and computer engi-neering, chemistry and French departments. She enjoys explor-ing the interaction of technology and medicine and is excited by the many possibilities that the future holds in these fields. She has completed internships at both Google and at Microsoft, and loves to solve interesting problems. In her free time she enjoys cheering for the Green Bay Packers, horseback riding and watching Audrey Hepburn films.

Petek Sener is a sophomore majoring in biomedical engineer-ing, with focus on tissue engi-neering. She is also interested in neuroscience. She enjoys working out at the gym, traveling and trying different kinds of food.

dukengineer

About a year ago, I was sur-prised by my multivariable calculus grade, so without a second thought, I emailed my professor to ask about

my test. Professor Ingrid Daubechies did not deny my request; she answered all of my questions with patience over Skype. Most of the world only knows her as the founder of the new JPEG standard, not through her helpfulness as a professor.

This anecdote summarizes the ex-ceptionality of Pratt professors. Within these pages, you will read wonderful sci-entific achievements that Pratt professors have accomplished. From unmanned drones to quantifying information, Duke Engineering hosts some of the most remarkable professors the world has to offer. What makes Pratt stand out is that these professors are also willing to give students advice about life, answer their questions about an extracurricu-lar project late on a Friday night and hold extra office hours when a student cannot make them. These professors are both academically strong and personally accessible, something that is uncommon amongst engineering colleges around the world.

Within these pages, you will also read about students who worked on water purification in Uganda. You may marvel at a student-made drink mixing robot. You may start thinking about your own thinking when you read about a student who is doing re-

search to understand the neural basis of decision-making. These students, while working through an intensive engineer-ing curriculum, spend their extra time applying their engineering knowledge to solve some of the world’s most complex problems. We cannot put everyone’s story into our pages, since there are so many more stories out there. From working on improving bladder health through neural stimulation to making neural networks to analyze sounds, Pratt students know how to spend their time and constantly improve themselves.

What is also special about Pratt is that student endeavors are supported by the school. Some of these students have been honored as Grand Challenge Scholars or Pratt Research Fellows, where the school funds student research that addresses some of the world’s greatest problems. Some of the projects undertaken relate to medicine, and others relate to creating a sustainable world. In this way, Pratt stu-dents, together with their advisors, try to find clever solutions to some of the great challenges our world is facing.

Pratt has had a great year, and we are excited to share with you what has hap-pened on the academic front. Just know that Pratt students are way more multi-faceted than what we can put on these pages and that these students, coupled with phenomenal faculty, are what make Pratt the amazing place that it is.

Efe Aras2015-2016 editor, DukEngineer

Why Pratt? Why is Pratt an amazing engineering school? This

question has quite a simple answer: Pratt brings together devoted professors and hard-working students to improve the world.

l e t te rs | FROM THE EDITOR

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l e t te rs | THE ESG PRESIDENT

E ngineering Student Government (ESG) was excited to jump into the 2015-2016 school year! As a mature organization, ESG prides

itself on being an outcome- rather than process-driven group, always looking ahead on how to best use resources to benefit the Pratt student body. We added new roles and grew the ESG board to include 15 very determined and enthusiastic members who worked hard this year to help the Pratt community. We continued to support Pratt student groups in their ventures, served as a voice for the undergraduate community and planned exciting events throughout the year.

Our board worked with and support-ed all of the amazing engineering groups within Pratt. This year, we were able to supply funding to all of the student groups who presented their ideas for the upcoming year. ESG looks forward to working closely with and supporting these groups as they continue to amaze the world with their accomplishments.

ESG also represented the undergraduate community during the search for a new dean. We worked with the undergraduate student body to get feedback about what Pratt undergrads thought were the most important attributes and qualifications for the new dean, the items that should be at the top of the next dean’s to-do list, and how this incoming dean could support and enhance the student culture through their leadership style and approach. ESG worked in close collaboration with the Pratt Dean Search Committee throughout this process to voice the opinions of Duke’s engineer-ing undergraduates during this important transition.

During the fall, ESG continued with the annual traditions of E-Oktober-fest and E-Picnic to provide a fun environ-ment for students to celebrate and socialize

with their fellow Pratt peers. These events provided students with delicious food, mu-sic, company and some well-earned Pratt SWAG to wear proudly. Both events saw a great turnout with excited students enjoy-ing the sunshine and the much anticipated Pratt T-shirts.

The spring saw a completely sold out E-Ball at Hope Valley Country Club. Pratt undergrads and faculty celebrated together at the lovely venue, dining on deli-cious food, showing off moves on the dance floor, and enjoying an evening of socializing and leisure as a break from the hard work of the semester.

ESG continued to host E-Socials every Friday afternoon in the E-Quad. Our board members worked hard to bring both outside companies and Pratt student groups to sponsor the E-Socials. This year, we had some amazing companies present and net-work with students as they began to search for jobs and internships. We were also lucky to display the work of some of the amazing Pratt student groups, including Duke Elec-tric Vehicles and Girls Engineering Change. With the help of our freshman board mem-bers, ESG also hosted some freshman-spe-cific events to help facilitate camaraderie amongst the newest Pratt members.

ESG looks forward to supporting and enhancing student life for Pratt undergrad-uates in the upcoming years. We are excited and honored to be a part of the Pratt community.

Becky Bauer Executive President

Becky Bauer is a senior majoring in mechanical engineering and the president of

the Engineering Student Government.

l e t te rs | FROM THE DEAN

I’m proud to share with you the latest issue of DukEngineer—our school’s student-written, student-edited magazine that has been a tradition here at Duke

since 1940. To me, DukEngineer is a shining example of the

kind of student-led engagement that sets Duke apart. Our students are incredibly involved in their education, both inside and outside the class-room, and enthusiastic about the myriad oppor-tunities for making a difference here at Duke and out in the world.

In this issue, you’ll read about student-organized hackathons designed to inspire innovations that improve human health, address inequality, encour-age sustainability and improve innovation. Students describe their research to improve drug delivery, address the negative effects of urban development and develop low-cost glasses for distribution in developing countries. You can also check out reports from student clubs such as Duke IEEE and Duke AERO—both of which are among the dozen-plus engineering groups now housed in The Foundry, our new 7,600-square-foot “makerspace” opened last fall to encourage even more innovative, entrepreneurial and experiential learning for all Duke students.

It’s been a great year for Pratt students, and for Pratt faculty as well. In these pages, our student writers will introduce you to just a few of them, including new Civil & Environmental Engineering chair Mark Wiesner and three of the terrific group of professors who have joined Pratt in recent years—Missy Cummings, Galen Reeves and Amanda Randles.

I’m also proud to share that this year one of our outstanding faculty members was named to the National Academy of Engineering—Jennifer West, the Fitzpatrick Family University Professor of Engineering and associate dean for PhD education, who was recognized “for developments in photo-thermal and theranostic therapies and bioabsorbed scaffolds for tissue regeneration.” Also named NAE members this year were Duke Board of Trustees member Bill Hawkins E’76 and former Pratt dean

Kristina Johnson—giving us a total of 23 alumni and six faculty who are NAE members. This reflects a steady climb over the past decade, and speaks not only to the widening impact our alumni are making on the world, but also to the rising stature of our faculty who are training the next generation of Duke engineers.

Finally, I know you will be excited to read the interview with our next Vinik Dean of Engineering, Ravi Bellamkonda, who joins Duke in August 2016. Ravi comes to Pratt from the Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, a joint department between Georgia Tech and Emory University. He is nationally recognized for his leadership in engineering edu-cation and research, and will continue developing innovative teaching and research programs that will escalate Pratt’s rise into the top ranks of engineering schools.

I have enjoyed serving as the interim Vinik Dean of Engineering over the past year as Duke searched for the new dean, and have been continually inspired by the amazing work of our faculty and students as well as the support of our alumni and friends. I hope you’ll enjoy reading more in this issue.

George A. TruskeyVinik Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering (interim)

R. Eugene and Susie E. Goodson Professor of Biomedical Engineering

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Ugonna Ohiri at work in the Jokerst Lab.

Pratt PhD students in making effective career decisions and preparing students for the real world. This program continues its ongoing success through various workshops, seminars, networking opportunities and internship resources. PhD Plus Leadership Chair Lauren Czaplicki and the rest of her board have done a fantastic job leading this program.

EGSC is also very active in improving re-search support and academic awareness across Pratt. Thus far, EGSC has hosted an Exter-nal Funding Workshop for graduate students seeking to gain insight from Pratt fellowship recipients and better compete for prestigious fellowships. We have also organized a BME/MEMS Graduate Student Seminar Series, where graduate students are able to showcase their amazing contributions through either a specialized research topic or lab technique. We plan to organize a few more seminar series in the spring, so we invite you to join us and appreciate all of the hard work our graduate students put forth on a weekly basis.

Socially, EGSC will continue to provide unique opportunities for our graduate stu-dents to unwind after a long week of research. Each Friday, EGSC organizes an engineering social (E-social) in Twinnies, from 4:30-6:00 pm. This event is typically hosted by an as-sortment of companies and graduate student organizations. One of our interesting ideas in the past was to help reduce the enormous amount of plastic cups and replace them with reusable steins. EGSC was able to collaborate with Sustainable Duke on this effort to help “green-ify” future E-socials. This environmen-tal thrust has been pretty successful thus far, and we plan to increase awareness in the near future. Some of our other social efforts have included a free screening of “The PhD Movie

2,” a Duke-Kentucky basketball viewing party, co-sponsorship of the GPSC Winter Formal, organizing the first-ever Graduate &

Professional Student Talent Showcase, and many others. We invite you to join us at some of our future social events.

In my two years as EGSC President, I have been blessed with the opportunity to work with a very diverse and exciting executive board. My “championship team” of graduate students includes:

Janie Cooper (Vice President)Clinton Cahall (Treasurer)Lauren Redfern (Secretary/Communications

Chair, Fall ‘15)Alice Li (Secretary/Communications Chair,

Spring ‘16)Joseph Camilo (EGSC-ECE Departmental

Representative)Anna Knight (EGSC-BME Departmental

Representative)Savannah Volkoff (EGSC-CEE Departmen-

tal Representative)Mathias Berger (EGSC-MEMS Depart-

mental Representative)Tushar Krishnan (EGSC-MS Representa-

tive)

I look forward to continuing to bounce ingenious ideas around with the board and produce results for the Pratt community. The character and class exemplified by our EGSC student leaders is a major reason I not only chose to run for a second term as EGSC president, but also why Duke continues to be such a uniquely balanced and wonderful place to be.

Ugonna Ohiri is a third-year PhD student in electrical and computer

engineering and president of the Engineering Graduate Student Council

l e t te rs | THE EGSC PRESIDENT

n the heels of celebrating the 75th anniversary of engineering at Duke during 2014-2015, Pratt will be transitioning to a new Vinik Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering, effective August

2016. As president of the Engi-neering Graduate Student Council

(EGSC), I had the pleasure to meet and chat with Dr. Ravi Bellamkonda

before he accepted this position. Immedi-ately, I noticed how dynamic and vibrant his personality as a leader was.

As Pratt has grown into one of the nation’s fastest-rising engineering programs, with more than 2,500 current and next-genera-tion leaders, I believe Dr. Bellamkonda will continue to exponentially help our program ascend to even newer heights. In terms of EGSC, we hope to continue to serve as cata-lysts between our graduate students, faculty, staff and alumni. Particularly, we are dedi-cated to representing the interests and con-cerns of the Duke University Pratt School of Engineering. EGSC works to facilitate the integration of new incoming Pratt graduate students and to promote social interaction, academic interaction and community out-reach amongst fellow graduate students.

Before my second year as EGSC Pres-ident, Vice President Janie Cooper and I chose to take a step back and reevaluate the mission of EGSC. As a start, we decided to place an emphasis on connecting to and serving our local community. We felt the need to reinforce this principle by participat-ing in community service projects around the local Durham area. We believed that many of us would not be where we are in life without people serving the community in some capacity.

Some of our outreach events included working with The Kramden Institute, where we refurbished computers and awarded them to local high school students; Urban Ministries of Durham, where we sorted and

donated clothing for children, men and women who are in danger of being homeless; and Habitat for Humanity, where we spent a few hours building and renovating homes. We plan to continue our outreach efforts during the spring semester. These efforts include volunteering at Hillside High School and offering the students an opportunity to hear about our cool research and see what pursuing science-related studies can lead to. We also plan to engage with our community by continuing some of our fall efforts.

One of EGSC’s more gratifying events will be the sixth annual Mahato Image & Photo Contest. This year, the event will be in conjunction with the annual Center for Biomolecular and Tissue Engineering (CBTE) Kewaunee Lecture. In 2008, Abhijit Mahato, a Duke international engineering graduate student, was tragically killed. In remembrance of Abhijit, the Pratt School of Engineering and the Duke Graduate & Professional Student Council (GPSC) have generously sponsored the annual event to celebrate his passion for the merging of the visual arts and scientific research.

This year’s Kewaunee Lecture will be given by Dr. Mina Bissell, a Distinguished Scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Dr. Bissell has been recognized for her lifetime contributions to the fields of breast cancer research and the nucleus environment to gene expression in normal and malignant tissue.

We strongly encourage you to submit a “cool” photo for the competition, which will stimulate interest in a novel concept or provide further insight into an established theory. Winning images will be displayed in the atrium of the Fitzpatrick Center (FCIE-MAS) during the upcoming year.

One of this year’s more successful pro-grams that ESGC collaborated with was the PhD Plus Professional Development Program. PhD Plus is a student-funded, student-run program designed to assist

OThe Engineering

Graduate Student Council

facilitates the integration of new incoming Pratt graduate

students and promotes social

interaction, academic

interaction and community

outreach amongst our

fellow graduate students.

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mean to be an engineer 20 years from now. We’re mov-ing into a world where the most important thing is not just mastering some technical content, but mastering how to extract knowledge from plain information. Technical content is increasingly freely available, and engineering talent is com-ing from all over the world, so we need to ask ourselves, “What are the characteristics of a Duke engineer that set her or him apart and make them sought-after talent?”

In my opinion, besides technical mastery, being multidimensional is important. The ability to solve complex problems with incomplete information, work in diverse teams, communicate with felicity—we think of these as soft skills, but they are the skills that will separate the technically competent from

Ravi BellamkondaB.Eng in biomedical engineering,

College of Engineering, Osmania University (India)

PhD in medical science and biomaterials, Brown University

Research focus: Engineered devices for brain tumor therapy; immuno-modulation for PNS and CNS repair; biomaterials; brain- machine interfaces.

Founder of three start-up companies

Selected honors: Clemson Award for Applied Research (Society for Bio-materials), EUREKA award (Nation-al Cancer Institute), CAREER award (National Science Foundation), and best professor award (Georgia Tech BME students)

Family: Married to Lalita Kaligotla; two children, son Mihir (16) and daughter Ameya (12)

Hobbies: Tennis, keeping up with current events, reading (“Mostly young adult fiction my children recommend to me—we’re big fans of Harry Potter and The Bartimaeus Trilogy for instance!”)

“We need to ask ourselves, ‘What are the

characteristics of a Duke

engineer that set her or him

apart and make them sought-

after talent?’”

the world within the context of a very strong university really attracted me. Duke also has a reputation for being entrepre-neurial and forward-thinking, with a dynamism and flexibil-ity to reach a little further and not just play it safe. I like that it has a culture of not being afraid to take risks to try to solve problems.

Q. During the interview pro-cess you spoke with dozens of leaders and faculty from Pratt and across Duke. Based on those conversations, do you have a sense of what your first priorities will be?My first priority will be to spend time listening. The search process engaged many people but it was just a small cross-section of the whole, so I want to meet with faculty, staff, students, alumni and partners in various programs

Q. What attracted you to the job as engineering dean at Duke?Well, I have a very good job right now, so I was not actively looking to move. In fact I engaged in the search because it was Duke—it’s such a special place. Pratt is a great engineering school that’s set in a comprehensive research university, with strong schools like Medicine, Trinity, Fuqua, Nicholas, and others. If you look at the challenges the world is facing in areas like energy, the environment, health and transportation, the solutions to these challenges all have a technological compo-nent at their heart, but they are not technical challenges alone—policy, economics and politics all need to come to-gether as well. So the idea that our faculty and students can take on these challenges and work collaboratively to change

Meet Pratt’s Next Dean

and at various levels to learn more.

Based on my preliminary en-gagement, I do think we have two special opportunities that I’d like to explore in consulta-tion with the faculty.

One is clearly defining certain areas of research in which we can be absolutely world-class, the best in the country and the world. I think focusing on areas where we can truly lead—in research, in startup generation, in graduate programs and interdisciplinary partnerships—that’s how we’ll really make a difference. This is not to say we don’t value what each of our faculty does. Ar-ticulation of our strengths will benefit everyone, and increase the likelihood that we build even more strengths.

On the education side, there are special opportunities for us to think about what it will

Ravi Bellamkonda will become the new Vinik Dean of Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering on August 1, 2016. Currently chair of the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Institute of

Technology and Emory University, Bellamkonda also serves as president of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE).

Bellamkonda was appointed in January 2016 after an international search, and was cited by Duke’s President Richard Brodhead for his “outstanding personal accomplishment and visionary leadership.”

We recently chatted with Bellamkonda about his perspectives on Pratt and hopes for the future of Duke Engineering.

f ea tu r e | LEADERSHIP

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about. It has been a high priority for me at Georgia Tech and Emory and will be a high priority for me at Pratt. It’s important to not only recruit and retain faculty and students who are more representative of our diverse society, but also to honestly ask ourselves whether we are really doing all we can to ensure the success of every individual we already have here as a part of the Pratt family.

I’d like Pratt and Duke to be a destination that attracts the best, brightest, most diverse faculty, students and staff because it becomes widely known that all of Duke will root for each person’s success. I personally would like to enable this journey by helping to create the culture, the in-frastructure, the resources and reward systems that will allow our faculty, students and staff to feel free to be creative, and

Q. How would you describe your leadership style?Well, you might want to ask the wonderful people I work with [laughs]! The simplest way to capture my style is to say that I like to enable the best in each of us.

I’d like us to collectively create an environment that is inspiring and meaningful, so that all of us feel like we are part of a noble enterprise trying to find the truth about something—how to address an environmental problem or how to cure cancer, or discovering something fundamental that wasn’t known before.

An important part of that is making sure that everyone feels valued for the different per-spectives and backgrounds they bring. I know Duke and Pratt are actively working to foster diversity and inclusion, and that is something I care deeply

Pictured left to right: In the lab, robotics competition, CEE fieldwork in Bolivia.

be in touch with our love of engineering and science, and of teaching, learning, scholarship and service, so we can make a difference in the world.

Q. Anything else you’d like to say?Just that it’s an honor to be named dean of Pratt. It’s a wonderful institution with a very bright future, and I’m looking forward to working as hard as I can and to the best of my ability to facilitate our journey to define what the future of engineering is going to be. I believe Pratt has the opportunity to lead, and I am confident we will!

— Pratt Communications

them, because their ideas, networks and resources are critical to our success.

I’d also like to explore ways to enhance ties between Pratt and other Duke schools and programs to continue building partnerships that will help us all rise. And there are a few structural but important things we need to put into place to enable our goals. Appropriate research and learning spaces are critical for Pratt to realize its full poten-tial, for instance.

So, the financial strength of Pratt is not the goal, but it is a key enabler of our ability to do transformative research and provide the best experience to our students—who represent the best talent in the world--so they can in turn build the kind of world you and I would be proud to live in.

“I’d like us to collectively create an environment that is inspir-ing and mean-ingful, so that all of us feel like we are part of a noble enterprise trying to find the truth about something.”

— Ravi Bellamkonda

the day we’d like to equip our students to become thought leaders and help build in them a sense of fearlessness in tack-ling complex challenges.

Q. How about priorities beyond the core areas of education and research? My other priorities are really about fostering relationships, community engagement and philanthropy to support our education and research mis-sions. Neither Pratt nor Duke would be as special as they are without the generous support of alumni and well-wishers. Philanthropy in many ways is the magic ingredient, the transformative enabler that allows Pratt and Duke to leap ahead and lead. I also hope to connect with alumni, parents, industry partners and the Durham community to see how we can best engage

the engineering leaders that Duke nurtures. I think Duke already does an excellent job of this with programs like Bass Connections, Grand Challenge Scholars, and entrepreneurship and “maker” opportunities, but I’d like us to think deliberate-ly about ways to continue to encourage deep, student-driven learning from the very begin-ning of the student experience.

In graduate education, I think Pratt has done a great job enabling students to gain professional experience through programs such as PhD Plus. Only one in eight PhD students actually goes on to an academic career, so providing the opportunity for students to engage in entrepreneurial activity and internships that will give them true experience in the business, government or non-profit worlds is increas-ingly important. At the end of

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international commerce [and] the way goods move across borders,” Wiesner explains.

Nevertheless, the proposal stalled, with administrators unable to agree on how the proposed institute would focus their efforts. Many were cold to the idea of studying nanomaterials’ environmental consequences, which Wiesner insisted should be included in the proposal. “Looking at it before it possibly becomes a problem,” he explains, is imperative.

When Wiesner began working at Duke in 2006, he found renewed enthusiasm toward the idea of an institute explicitly studying the impli-cations of nanomaterials, both artificial and natural, on the environment. With support

displayed that the potential effects and applications of the “nano-enabled economy” were poorly understood. As director of Rice’s Energy & Environmental Systems Insti-tute, Wiesner partnered with a group that included Nobel Laureate Richard Smalley and co-authored a proposal to the National Science Foundation. Their goal was to create a cen-ter to study nanotechnology in environmental and biological engineering; Wiesner authored the environmental component, while Jennifer West, now a Duke BME faculty member, led the bioengineering portion.

“There’s a huge need for information [about nanoma-terials] that could help guide regulations. That’s potentially going to have an impact on

instrumentation offers today’s scientists unprecedented access to the nano-world, which, he recalls, “we didn’t appreciate, and certainly couldn’t quanti-fy… thirty years ago.” Wiesner started working with nanotech-nology in membrane transport systems, but the scope of his interest quickly broadened.

“Like any good environmen-tal scientist, when you start using new materials, you start to ask questions [about] the environmental implications of these materials,” he recounts. With new abilities to track and understand the movement of nanoparticles through systems, researchers were realizing that answers to these questions were suddenly within reach.

Growing international interest in nanomaterials

One of thirty simulated wetland ecosystems in the mesocosms. These offer researchers a uniquely realistic environment in which to conduct ex-periments on nano-material transport, transformation, and biological/ecological interactions.

percent increase in new awards for research and rose consider-ably in the U.S. News rankings of environmental engineering programs.

As I sit down in his Hudson Hall office for the first time, Wiesner apologizes for his jet lag—he’s just returned from a trip to China, where he’ll be again next week before traveling to Vienna. (The life of an internationally awarded researcher, unsurprisingly, involves little rest.) The eager freshman in me has a million questions for him, but I force myself to relax. We’ll take it from the beginning, I decide, with CEINT.

Each word measured and deliberate, Wiesner starts to tell his story.

The Center for the Environmental Implications of NanoTechnologyWhile researching water treatment technology at Rice University, Wiesner first began to investigate nanomateri-als—particulates billionths of a meter in size. Modern

When asked what the role of a de-partment head is at a major

research university like Duke, Mark Wiesner has a definitive answer—facilitator.

“Making the resources we have available to the faculty and students, and allowing the faculty to do their jobs,” says Wiesner, chair of the civil and environmental engineering de-partment at Duke, who seems to know what he’s talking about. “I’ve always been lucky enough to have had great chairs here.”

Wiesner is perhaps best known as the director of the Center for the Environmental Implications of NanoTechnol-ogy (CEINT), an inter-univer-sity research institute he helped found here at Duke. But as of this past July, Wiesner holds another major position within the Blue Devil community: he succeeded John Albertson as the chair of Pratt’s Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering. Under Albertson, the department enjoyed a 50

The New Face of Civil & Environmental Engineering at Duke

From Tiny Details to Big Picture

Mark Wiesner, PhD, CEE Department Chair & CEINT Director.

The James L. Meriam Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Wiesner began his studies in the liberal arts and was originally a musician. He still plays bass with local blues and jazz groups as well as community orchestras. In 2015, Wiesner was also inducted into the National Academy of Engineering, among the highest profes-sional honors for engineers.

f ea tu r e | CEE . C i v i l a n d E n v i r o n m e n t a l E n g i n e e r i n g

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ment and global health.” But “most critical,” he tells

me, is maintaining a close relationship between students and faculty. This extends far beyond the classroom. “Collab-oration is personal,” Wiesner says. “Having a department where students and faculty get together as friends and col-leagues, [where] ideas can easily flow and networks can easily form—that’s what a depart-ment should do. That’s what a university should do.” n

Kyle Baer is a freshman pursuing a degree in civil

engineering and a certificate in architectural engineering.

based on such modeling, he believes that we’re capable of far more.

I ask about enrollment; even some Pratt students seem to know relatively little about CEE, the smallest of the engineering departments. Wiesner thinks this has to do in part with CEE’s accessibility to students early on. He sees a single introductory course to each of the degree programs, environmental and civil, as crucial to promoting early un-dergraduate involvement. It’s also important “that we have really engaging capstone-type experiences, as well as experi-ences along the way that get into issues like global develop-

he posits. “Is that a reasonable question to ask, even? Does it make sense to talk about all nanomaterials, or should we be talking about categories?”

Nineteen years of research into the nano-world haven’t given us all the answers yet, but talking to Wiesner, it feels like we’re well on our way.

CEE at DukeThe conversation turns in time to his new role as CEE chair (I force myself to resist geeking out further over the meso-cosms). “It’s more of a service than a promotion,” Wiesner explains to me: a way of giving back to your department. Be-yond his self-described role as facilitator, this means shaping the curriculum to keep up with new developments and remaining competitive.

The interplay between engineering and aesthetics is a particular area Wiesner would like to see more integrated into teaching. “Environment is aesthetics, of course, but when you talk about aesthetics in the engineered concept, it goes all the way to electrical engineers. Steve Jobs and his notion that the iPhone should be a beauti-ful thing ... that’s a concept we need to develop more into the curriculum.”

Integrating modern compu-tational tools is another field Wiesner looks to focus on more. “So much of what was done in the past by cut-and-try . . . well, you can calculate these things, all the way down to the nanoscale, and then scale that up to the entire structure,” he says. Though much of engineering is already

The Center for the Environmental Implications of NanoTechnology (CEINT) includes researchers from seven different universities: Duke University (head-quarters), Carnegie Mellon University, Stanford University, Howard University, Virginia Tech, Baylor University and the University of Kentucky.

f ea tu r e | CEE . C i v i l a n d E n v i r o n m e n t a l E n g i n e e r i n g

Wiesner at CEINT’s mesocosms, a re-search facility lo-cated in the Duke Forest. It houses self-contained environments in which nanomate-rials are released and studied.

CEINT’s findings, he says, are essential in “correcting certain trajectories that are not good and hopefully accelerating trajectories of uses of nanoma-terials that we think are going to have huge benefits.” A big part of this is organizing their findings into accessible data-bases like the NanoInformatics Knowledge Commons (NIKC) as a resource for prospective nanotech developers.

“If you’re paying attention,” Wiesner quips, “you’ll no-tice that’s ‘Saint Nick.’” And indeed, for those creating the nanotechnology of our present and future, CEINT’s research may indeed be Christmas come early. Understanding risk is a major part of any engineering or business effort. “Are nanomaterials the next DDT, the next Freon, or not?”

ditions to ions—we didn’t know that,” he tells me. “What might those particles bring along with them? Things can stick to particles.”

CEINT also studies nano-tech’s ecosystem-level effects. “We’ve got this whole facility out in the Duke forest, the mesocosms (pictured above), where we can do controlled releases of nanomaterials to see where they go, how fast they get there, and who or what they impact along the way,” Wiesner says with a hint of excitement in his voice. It’s infectious—as he paints me a picture of CEINT’s self-con-tained testing environment, I can’t help but to feel similarly enthusiastic.

Wiesner sees this research directly shaping the develop-ment of new technologies.

from Congress, a group of researchers from seven univer-sities founded the Center for the Environmental Implica-tions of Nano Technology with Wiesner as director. CEINT, pronounced ‘saint,’ is head-quartered at Duke—which, he says, is no accident.

“This is just the perfect place for ‘doing’ environment because there’s every element,” Wiesner enumerates, firing off a list of examples: environ-mental economics, toxicology, policy, chemistry, law and engineering.

These resources enable CEINT to “look at every aspect of [nanotechnology’s] implica-tions”—for instance, study-ing nanomaterials’ effects on organisms at a cellular level. “Plants take up metals, as it turns out, as particles in ad-

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Yitaek HwangEngineering Better Medicines

Yitaek Hwang is a senior double majoring in biomedi-cal engineering and electrical and computer engineering. His project addresses the “engineering better medicines” Grand Challenge.

According to the website ViFlex, approximately 700 million people in develop-ing countries cannot obtain glasses, resulting in more than $200 billion in lost economic output annually. In devel-oping countries, the price of glasses for citizens is too high and there are too few optom-etrists available to prescribe them.

To combat this shortfall, Yitaek and the start-up compa-ny ViFlex have developed in-novative, adjustable, low-cost glasses that can be distributed in areas in need. He also plans to develop an inexpensive prototype for a device that can prescribe vision correction and is currently researching optic theory and image processing to create this diagnostic device.

understand the mechanisms occurring, thereby allowing them to devise novel drug-test-ing methods.

Oxidative stress, one of Hannah’s focuses, is thought to cause premature aging of endothelial cells. By simulating this stress in ordinary vessels, Hannah and her colleagues were able to model regions that were prone to atherosclerosis. Mechanical injury, when com-bined with vascular disease, has been shown to prolong endo-thelial dysfunction. Hannah devised a mechanical injury model to study endothelial dysfunction in cultured cells. Lastly, she designed a blood vessel matrix from a stronger material known as fibrin. This has allowed researchers to ex-pand the types of cells in these types of experiments.

of preclinical animal trials and clinical trials with hu-mans. Many clinical trials fail, however, due to the differences between animals and humans.

The Tissue Chip Project addresses this problem through the engineering of living tissues outside of the human body, hence the term “tissue chip.” In conjunction with this project, Hannah’s research focuses on inducing injury on these 3D-engineered blood vessels and studying the inner lining, known as the endothelial layer.

Endothelial dysfunction inhibits its job of controlling clotting. Various vascular diseases and injuries can be attributed to or result in endo-thelial dysfunction. A study of vascular injury on engineered tissue outside of the body enables researchers to better

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The Grand Challenges are a call for engineers to lead in resolving some of the world’s most pressing problems.

Nearly a decade ago, the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) created a list of pressing concerns for humanity to address in the next 100 years—ambitious goals such as reverse-engineering the brain, making solar energy economical, securing cyberspace and providing access to clean water for

the 1 billion who currently lack it. These 14 goals became known as the Grand Challenges for Engineering and have served as a guiding force to many engineering questions. Even President Obama picked up on the call to arms, encouraging all philanthropists and institutions to pursue these challenges in his Strategy for Ameri-can Innovation.

In line with this vision, Tom Katsouleas, at the time dean of Duke University’s Pratt School of Engineering; Richard Miller, president of the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering; and Yannis Yortsos, dean of the University of Southern

California’s Viterbi School of Engineering, in 2009 proposed a new educational model to prepare engineers to address these challenges that has become known as the Grand Challenge Scholars Program (GCS). The program was launched and en-dorsed by the NAE, and in 2015, Katsouleas and colleagues led a charge that resulted in a quarter of the nation’s engi-neering deans—representing 122 schools—signing a letter of commitment pledging to establish similar programs at their institutions. The letter was presented to President Obama at the White House in March 2015.

Students apply to the GCS program at the end of their soph-omore year. If they are selected, they embark on their journey of integrating research, interdisciplinary ideas, innovation and service into their education. At Duke, these students are also

given access to $5,000 in funding to complete their project. Today, the program at Duke—now known as the Thomas C. Katsouleas NAE

Grand Challenge Scholars Program—has graduated 73 Grand Challenge Scholars. Each year, an endowment created by Susie Simon in honor of her late husband Steve Simon, former chair of the Board of Visitors for Pratt, supports 10 “Simon Scholars” in the program. And with a total of 25 students currently enrolled in the Grand Challenge Scholars Program, many exciting projects are in the works.

Here are some of our graduating Grand Challenge Scholars:

Medicines, Neurons and Infrastructure

Tackling the GrandChallenges

Hannah VaughanEngineering Better Medicines

Hannah Vaughan is a senior majoring in biomedical en-gineering who is working on improving drug development through tissue engineering in the laboratory of George Truskey, the R. Eugene and Susie E. Goodson Professor of Biomedical Engineering and interim dean of the Pratt School of Engineering. Han-nah’s involvement in the GCS program has laid the founda-tions for her career in research, and she intends to matriculate to graduate school this coming year.

For a particular drug to be introduced into the market, it must be tested extensively to ensure the safety of its users. The normal process for drug testing includes a combination

f ea tu r e | GRAND CHALLENGES

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for choosing the correct cues while researchers recorded their neural output. From the resulting data, Min-

young and her team conclud-ed that the rhesus monkeys behaved as if they could only employ three characteristics of the stimuli at a time while making decisions, as opposed to humans who can use more than four. They also found that the monkeys did not practice satisficing or heuristic techniques, unlike humans who drop the worst cue when pressure increases.This experiment has en-

abled the lab group to further our understanding of decision-making. Min-young intends to employ this experience by working for a biotechnology company after graduation.

Minyoung RyooReverse-Engineering the Brain

Minyoung Ryoo, a current se-nior in the laboratory of Marc Sommer, associate professor of biomedical engineering, is researching the computational and neural basis of deci-sion-making. Her main focus of study centers on a particular aspect of decision-making known as heuristics. Heuristic techniques are em-

ployed in times of stress when an individual needs to make a decision with limited time and/or understanding. The process of prioritizing various pockets of information over others is known as satisficing. To simulate this phenome-

non, Minyoung and her team designed an experiment with visual stimuli that constantly vary by shape, color, border color and orientation. With each variable weighted differ-ently, rhesus monkeys watched the display and were rewarded

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The Road AheadThe Grand Challenge Scholars Pro-gram has helped direct the creative innovation of Duke’s students and faculty toward today’s most pressing problems. In just a few years, great progress has been made. Ground-breaking research is happening every day at Pratt and other research institutions. Before long, the Grand Challenge Scholars of today will join mankind’s quest for betterment and work to broaden the frontier of understanding. n

Ashish Vankara is a freshman on the pre-medicine track majoring in

biomedical engineering.

The Thomas C. Katsouleas NAE GrandChallenge Scholars Program has graduated 73 Grand Challenge Scholars with another 25 students currently enrolled.

political entities in relation to their influence in these urban areas. To date, she has con-cluded that communities must encourage citizens to live in higher-density housing in the city and help raise graduation rates by integrating inner-city school districts with suburban districts.

To supplement her research in urban development, Noura has also traveled on a Duke Engineers for International Development trip, where she assisted in designing and building a bridge for a secluded community in Base, Rwanada. There, she witnessed firsthand the fruits of development such as increased access to water, schools and medical care.

ties with low graduation rates and high crime rates.

Similarly, if a shopping com-plex is being built, property values nearby tend to increase, and only those who own their homes or can sustain the rent increase can afford to stay. This process is known as gentrifi-cation. Within the Durham community, gentrification is occurring as land is devel-oped, displacing economically disadvantaged residents. There are countless other potential negative effects of urban devel-opment, and Noura is shaping her career goals to address these issues.

Noura’s studies focus on remedying gentrification and residential segregation. Her research involves analyzing

Noura Von Briesen is a senior majoring in civil and envi-ronmental engineering. Her project seeks to find ways to counter the negative socioeco-nomic effects of urban devel-opment.

Although urban develop-ment projects bring in money and jobs, they can also cause various detrimental effects. For instance, a highway project through an urban district can often induce those who can afford to move away to do so. This removes money and stability from the communi-ty, leaving those who cannot afford to move away in an ever-poorer environment with-out the means to improve their situation. This phenomenon can give rise to poor communi-

Noura Von BriesenImproving Urban Infrastructure

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From small quadcopters, like the one shown here, to large machines operated by the military, Professor Missy Cummings is an expert in un-manned aerial vehicles.

Engineering is more than just a series of cumbersome problem sets. It is the quest to discover the unknown. Engineers jump at the opportunity to tackle a problem and explore

feasible solutions. Frequently, their efforts result in extraordinary, revolutionary findings.

Mary (Missy) Cummings, professor of me-chanical engineering and materials science, takes extraordinary to a new level. A pioneer in the field of drone research, Cummings has become an expert on everyone’s favorite Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV).

After becoming one of the first female fighter pilots in the United States Navy, Cummings left the force in 1999 to pursue other interests, namely research. Her experiences as a fighter pilot motivated her to improve the methods used to fly military planes. Her drive stems from the fact that she has witnessed multiple instances where pilots put their lives in danger simply by not being aware of their surroundings.

In beginning to find a solution to this problem, Cummings searched for the roots of the issue.

“It was clear to me that the planes were being designed not with the

human in mind,” said Cummings, noting that in many cases, it becomes difficult for engi-neers to master both physical design and have a thorough understanding of human cognitive strength and limitations.

Consequently, the human element often be-comes secondary to the electrical and mechan-ical design of aircraft systems. For example, Cummings says that it was a bragging point for fighter pilots that Lockheed Martin says it takes 1.7 individuals to fly a plane, which demon-strates how human capability is sometimes exceeded in this field.

Such conclusions inspired Cummings to delve into the feasibility of UAVs and landed her in the role of directing the Humans and Autonomy Lab at Duke, where she studies the interactions of humans and computer decision-making. Cummings initially faced incredible adversity for promoting the notion of UAVs, but she persevered nonetheless. Her research surprisingly led her to the insight that drones could be built without monumental technological discover-ies—that their real limitation is not the design of the aircraft but the design of the ground control stations.

In 1990, drones made their debut in Amer-ican military missions. Since then, they have been used in various capacities including President Barack Obama’s “drone war” targeting terrorists and militants. This application of the technology, however, has been the centerpiece of intense debate in American society. Though drones add innumerable advantages to coun-terterrorism efforts, the ability to have them controlled remotely has heightened concerns of privacy violations extending beyond the realm of the military.

Outside the operations of the military, the future may already be here.

Piloting Drones into the Future

r esea r ch | MEMS . M e c h a n i c a l E n g i n e e r i n g a n d M a t e r i a l s S c i e n c e

“It was clear to me that

the planes were being

designed not with

the human in mind.”

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Digging into DataMany of the most important scientific and technological advances of the next several decades will follow from our ability to collect, understand and communicate mas-sive amounts of data. The amount of data in the mod-ern day has made the ability to understand and analyze invaluable. And according to Reeves, the vast amounts of information have cre-ated critical and complex questions.

“Data is powerful,” says Reeves. “The information in medical data could greatly improve medicine. But how do you get it out, and what happens if you make a mis-take? If you have the right data but conduct the wrong analysis, you can make the wrong conclusions. And that can result in a detrimental outcome.”

Reeves describes the study of information models at

Demystifying Big DataHow much information does one need to answer a question reliably? The mathematical tools used to understand the tradeoffs between data and uncertainty can be found in the fields of engineering, signal processing, information theory and statistics.

Galen Reeves, an assistant professor with joint appointments in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Department of Statistical Science, emphasizes the signifi-cance of a technical perspective on information.

“Although the early applications of information theory were focused on signal processing and communication applications, the mathematical foundations apply much more broadly to problems in data analysis and statistical inference,” says Reeves. “So a lot of the analysis is, in a sense, a mathematical understanding of what it means to communicate.”

r esea r ch | ECE . E l e c t r i c a l a n d C o m p u t e r E n g i n e e r i n g

1the “boundary” between two directions—one mathematical and the other applied. One type of model closely resem-bles reality and is difficult to draw conclusions from. The other contains more math-ematical abstractions and is easier to study. While the latter is not necessarily clear in how it relates to the real world, it enables drawing deep, interesting conclusions.

Phase TransitionsHigh-dimensional statistical inference problems sometimes exhibit phase transitions, in which a small change in infor-mation leads to large changes in measures of uncertainty (e.g. probability of error or posterior variance). The study of where and why these phase transitions occur provides new ways to characterize prob-lems and to analyze tradeoffs between information, compu-tation and structure. Such an understanding can lead to new

ways of thinking and new solutions.

For example, social networks follow this “phase transition” behavior. When observing which celebrities, politicians and other notable figures influence one another, the data is initially chaotic. Lines of influence connect a few figures but portray noth-ing clear about the relation-ships as a whole. But with a small bit of information, key players can suddenly be identified.

The significance of these phase transitions extends into every area that entails massive amounts of data.

“How do you understand these phase transitions?” asks Reeves. “How do you use them to inform algorithms used in a Google search or in solving some other basic problem?”

Blessings and CursesAnalyzing the vast quantities of data involved with these “phase transitions” is not

always possible with today’s computers. In his research, Reeves looked at the com-putational limitations of computers, which are still unable to accomplish tasks that “blow up exponentially in complexity.” Because there is an insufficient amount of computing power in the world to check all possible states, statisticians rely on algorithms and suboptimal searches to be computational-ly efficient.

Reeves says this phenom-enon is the “curse of dimen-sionality.” Originally coined by Richard Bellman, the phrase refers to how the num-ber of possible states grows exponentially with known parameters, and how data can “blow up” to a million un-known values with a million observed variables.

On the other hand, there is also the “blessing of dimen-sionality.” As data is scaled up, the number of random interactions becomes so large that the macroscopic behav-ior becomes predictable and nonrandom.

“The analysis can become beautiful when the data are large and complex,” Reeves said. “But much of this math cannot be brute forced via numerical simulation. Instead, one sometimes needs to go back to the pencil and paper to understand the mathemati-cal properties of data.” n

Lucy Zhang is a freshman double majoring in electrical

and computer engineering and computer science.

2016 dukengineer 23

“The number of drones in the civilian world will eclipse the number in the military, if it hasn’t already.”

“The number of drones in the civilian world will eclipse the number in the military,” said Cummings. “If it hasn’t already.”

This is most prominently shown by the push many large companies are initiating to begin the widespread commer-cialization of drones, including Amazon, Google and Walmart. All three companies joined the drone delivery race hoping to incorporate drones into their regular shipping methods in the near future. The result of this application could be ground-breaking in terms of shipping/delivery methods. If implemented to predicted efficiency, it has been reported that Amazon could deliver a package 30 minutes or less after placing an order online.

The other emerging question of UAV application addresses when we are going to see airplanes with automated pilots. As far as commercial airlines flying pilotless, Cummings reports that it is unlikely to happen. She adds that when-ever there is a group of people together in one place, they will need someone who is in charge of leading everyone. In the case of a commercial airline, the pilot fills that role.

But military planes are a different sto-ry. According to Cummings, the troop leader on board assumes the role of lead-ing the passengers, and therefore no pilot is necessary. Consequently, the military is trying to achieve troop transport with no pilot. Concern still lies in the security of this means of transport as well as the reliability of the electronic systems that transmit and receive data, but accom-plishing this would be a revolutionary step for the military.

Another major concern associated with the streamlining of UAVs into our daily lives is the question of who is operating them. Cummings agrees that a major concern for manufacturers is that

they must remember that a drone pilot does not have the same training or flying experience as a real pilot. She says they are actually more similar to a video game operator, and manu-facturers should implement additional technology to minimize the risk of crashing. After all, it could be difficult to keep a drone from crashing thousands of

miles away from where its operator is located.

Regardless of the above concerns, Cummings continues to reap the bene-fits of all of the applications that drones can be applied to. Her most impactful project at the moment involves an elephant tracking drone system. With a proof of concept demonstration completed in Africa, the drones make it cheap and easy to monitor elephants’ safety, health and activity in the wild.

Admirably, Cummings has accom-plished every researcher’s dream. She has seen her research advance from prelim-inary inquiries to discussions of com-mercialization. Now she is moving on to tackle other technological riddles.

Cummings is starting research on self-driving cars, as well as undertak-ing the task of turning the copilot of a two-person cockpit into a robot. She is working on creating an R2-D2-type machine that, when placed in the seat of any type of aircraft, will know how to execute a mission.

This project has undeniable poten-tial since, in the words of Cummings herself, “The computer is a better pilot than man or woman when it comes to the actual skill of flying a plane. But hu-mans still reign supreme when it comes to solving complex problems under significant uncertainty.” n

Amy Vitha is a sophomore majoring in mechanical engineering.

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To maximize com-puting efficiency, the blood flow in an aorta is split geometrically between different processors. Each box is handled by a different proces-sor, with the color indicating how ac-tive that processor is while running a particular task.

supercomputers to model the entirety of the vascular system,” says Randles. “And those won’t exist for another decade or so.”

In the meantime, she has plenty to keep her busy, as her current work focuses on mak-ing the red blood cells in the simulation deformable to make a more true-to-life model. However, the ultimate goal of Randles’s research is to provide doctors with patient-specific tools to diagnose, treat and study cardiovascular diseases.

In 10 more years, supercom-puters could be the cornerstone of modern medicine, a shining example of the importance of biomedical engineering as an intersection of engineering and medicine. n

Samuel James is a freshman majoring in biomedical

engineering.

actually winning games now, which hardly happened when I was here.”

As Duke and Durham grow and evolve, so does super-computing. In 10 years, the Durham Performing Arts Center, Ameri-can Tobacco Campus

and amazing restaurants have turned Durham into a vibrant city. Meanwhile, the maximal achieved performance of the fastest supercomputer has increased by 5000 percent.

Randles’s research is already breaking ground, but with the current generation of super-computers, only small regions of the cardiovascular system can be modeled. The scale of her research is limited by the technology available.

“We need bigger, better

innovative application of parallel computing to challenges in science, en-gineering and large-scale data analytics. It is con-sidered an honor to be selected as a finalist for the prize, with hundreds of papers submitted for consideration. This is the second time Randles has been a finalist for the prize, the first being in 2010.

Supercomputing the FutureReturning to Duke after a 10-year hiatus has been an inter-esting experience for Randles.

“When I was a student, there were far fewer restaurant options and you typically went into downtown Durham only for Duke-sponsored events. Safety was also a concern,” says Randles. “Now downtown Durham is this really cool place. It’s definitely gotten a lot nicer. And the football team is

Professor Randles worked with BlueGene supercomputers like the one pictured and uses similar supercomputers to run her simulations.

“Doctors actually come to my office.That’s unheard-of at most other places.”

cancer cells in the bloodstream. It also has the potential to identify areas at risk for plaque buildup and indicate the most efficient surgical options.

The Duke DifferenceWhile it’s true that Randles bled Duke Blue as an under-graduate, she ultimately de-cided to return because of the unique relationship between Pratt and the doctors at Duke Medicine.

“Doctors actually come to my office,” says Randles. “That’s unheard-of at most other places.”

And doctors have good reason to pay attention to Ran-dles’s research. The algorithms she’s developing can be applied on a case-by-case basis, creating unique, patient-specific models to help doctors provide the most efficient and effective care possible. It will be a few more years before the research is ready to be implemented, but 3-D printed models are already proving the validity of the simulations.

The close relationship between engineers at Pratt and doctors at the medical campus is a trademark of the biomedi-cal engineering (BME) depart-ment at Duke. Randles, like other BME faculty, is a leader in creating novel engineering solutions to important health-care problems. She was recently named one of five finalists for the Gordon Bell Prize in High-Performance Computing.

The Gordon Bell Prize recognizes the extraordinary progress made each year in the

When Amanda Randles was finishing her bachelor’s degree at Duke, the most powerful supercomputer in the world was BlueGene/L. The computer had a maximal achieved performance of 280.6 tera-

FLOPS (28 trillion simple operations) per second, and Durham was better known for its crime rate than its food. Just over a de-cade later, Randles has returned to Duke as an assistant professor of biomedical engineering with a much improved city at her door-step and superior supercomputing technology at her fingertips.

After graduating with a dual degree in physics and comput-er science, Randles worked at IBM developing the BlueGene supercomputing project. After three years on the project, she went to Harvard University, where she received her master’s degree in computer science and a doctorate in applied physics. She then moved on to become a Lawrence Fellow at the Lawrence Liver-more National Laboratory (LLNL).

Since then, Randles has been pioneering the use of supercom-puting to solve biomedical problems. Until recently, supercom-puters were used almost exclusively by physicists and the military, but researchers like Randles noted that when it came to biomedi-cal challenges, “There was so much data available, but not enough to do with it.”

Using her extensive experience with supercomputing, Randles developed algorithms for high-performance supercomputers that can process the data from MRI and CT scans to generate he-modynamics models with the potential to revolutionize the way medical solutions are applied to individual patients.

Randles takes advantage of high-performance supercomputing to simulate blood flow in the human vascular system. Her lab uses the Blue Gene/Q supercomputers at LLNL. The latest results were from Sequoia, a parallel, load-balancing system with a maximal achieved performance of over 16.32 petaFLOPS per second. That’s over 58 times the speed of the fastest supercomputer when she graduated from Duke in 2005.

This massive computing power allows Randles to model pa-tient-specific blood flow in large regions of the vasculature. By sim-ulating flow at the scale of red blood cells, the 3-D simulation has the potential to accurately predict the movement of metastasizing

Supercomputing and the Cardiovascular System

Bleeding Duke Blue

r esea r ch | BME . B i o m e d i c a l E n g i n e e r i n g

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The Trent Semans Center for Health Education at Duke

Let’s Talk About Healthcare:48 Hours of Hacking for InnovationDay one of THInC opened with infinite possibility. With over 127 participants from all three participating academic institu-tions as well as those in industry, the potential for collaboration and the excitement in the Trent Semans Center at Duke was electric. Agenda item number one was to pitch the various “pain points” that participants wanted to fix, with only 60 sec-onds to convince others that their idea deserved a remedy that weekend. Without any prior team formation, all participants had an equal opportunity to find other like-minded individ-uals with which they could collaborate; once again, creating the space for thoughtful teamwork amongst the Triangle area’s brightest and most talented.

More than 40 pain points later, the participants now faced a difficult challenge: choosing a problem and attempting to brainstorm a solution. Round two of the pitches would involve each of the newly formed teams again coming to the front of the room and explaining their solution to the previously identified problem. With no slides, a fledgling idea and another 60 seconds, these teams, now narrowed to 25 solution ideas, attempted to explain why their ideas merited being built.

With ideas ranging from creating a better way for those with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) to breathe easier, to others that helped increase efficiency in the waiting room, the diversity of topics and the potential solutions that followed only served to highlight the incredible potential that the weekend would offer.

From these solution pitches came the first of many audience interactions. As Gokhale noted, “We are all members of the healthcare community in some way. It only made sense to make this as much of a group event as possible.”

True to this mission, the audience became the “review board” for all of the ideas. In the end, audience members narrowed down the ideas to 15 that were chosen to make it through to the end of the weekend.

However, the collaborative nature of the competition did not end there. Over the course of the less than 48 hours that teams had to design, build and prepare to present their device to the judges, more than 30 area experts and mentors were brought in to help the teams with various aspects of their proj-ects. Mentors in everything from hard-ware, wearables and cloud-computing to product marketing and sales were brought in to help guide the teams in crafting a full end-to-end experience that could be pitched in a limited timeframe and also

show the judges a product with potential for further exploration and investment. With ready resources, many cups of coffee and excitement in the air, the teams set to work.

and brightest minds. The final organization spanned the three major academic institutions in the area—Duke, UNC and NC State—encompassing “a variety of academic and profes-sional disciplines… everything from the engineering and design talent at NC State, the UNC medical and pharmacy strength, and Duke business, engineering, and medical interests.”

With a wide variety of ages and experience, and partici-pants ranging from undergrad-uates to faculty and staff, the event promised to be much more than simply a room full of empty pizza boxes.

“Here,we bring togethereverything, creatingour own healthcareincubator.”

within the scope of just one weekend.”

With this goal in mind, Gokhale set to work, reaching out to members of the Duke community and beyond, gaug-ing interest and determining the scope of the project.

“It became evident,” said Gokhale, “that this project could really have some lasting impact. The Triangle area is so full of amazing talent in the biomedical and biotechnology space, that if we just brought them all into the same room, the results produced would be tremendous.”

True to this prediction, by the time of hackathon week-end the event promised to showcase the Triangle’s best

Healthcare Hackathon Takes Duke

Hacking for the Future of Medicine

A New Kind of HackathonPizza boxes scattered around the room. Developers typing furiously into their keyboards. Even at 3 a.m., the midnight oil is still burning. These are the images typically associated with the word “hackathon.” Yet these are also images conspicuously absent from the incredible yet unique work that was performed over the THInC weekend. The brain-child of Tanmay Gokhale, a current MD/PhD candidate at the Duke School of Medicine and Pratt School of Engi-neering, this design challenge was crafted with the idea of fostering collaboration and future development work in a meaningful way.

According to Gokhale, the model for this challenge came from hearing about a similar experience hosted by Massa-chusetts Institute of Technol-ogy (MIT) graduate student Lina Colucci (P’12). She had recently organized a similar event at MIT aimed at resolv-ing various “pain points”—un-solved problems in healthcare. After Colucci delivered a talk at Duke in February 2015 around this topic, Gokhale began to brainstorm.

“I knew that there was so much opportunity to continue this work here at Duke,” said Gokhale. “I wanted to help fos-ter similar experiences with as much of a potential for future collaboration as possible, even

INNOVATION. EFFICIENCY. SOLUTION-BUILDING. These are some of the words heard surrounding the inaugural healthcare hackathon that took place in September 2015 at the Duke University Trent Semans Center for Health Education. Headlined as the Triangle Health Innovation Challenge, or THInC, a joint effort between Duke’s School of Medicine Innovation and Entrepreneurship Activity Group and the Carolina Health Entrepreneurship Initiative, this event brought together a diverse group of participants prepared to take on some of the toughest healthcare challenges.

For two days, teams moved through the process of identifying problems, craft-ing solutions and pitching them to various industry leaders in biotechnology. Even with less than 48 hours to complete it all, anything was possible.

On Campus | STUDENT TEAMS

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On Campus | STUDENT TEAMS

Innovationwithout BoundsSoutheastCon Every year, Duke’s branch of the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineers (IEEE) competes against other collegiate teams in the Hardware Competition at IEEE SoutheastCon. With its fun but relevant themes, this competition helps students gain a better understanding of how robotics can be applied to modern-day problems. In preparation, Duke IEEE typically splits up into separate groups to work on different aspects of their robot, such as its software and hardware. They later reconvene to incorporate all the com-ponents, which allows members to cooperate with one another while developing their knowledge in the areas they are most interested in.

In 2015, SoutheastCon took place in Fort Lauderdale, FL, and the theme was road trips. Points were earned based on the robot’s ability to travel along a distinctly marked path, play with an

electronic children’s toy, write out “IEEE” using an Etch-A-Sketch, rotate a row of a Rubik’s cube and carry a single playing card to the end of the course. The robots are autonomous, meaning that they are pre-programmed and do not have a driver to control them. Since the robots are expected to maneuver the course entirely on their own, most of the work occurs before the day of the competi-tion itself.

Duke IEEE spent approximately two months building their robot. Its four-wheel perpendicular drive system made it easier to maneuver turns, and a photoresistor was used to detect the start signal, which was a red LED light. Stacks, an ab-

stract data type that executes code in reverse order (starting from what was done last), were used to make their robot retrace its steps after every obsta-cle before continuing along the course. This aspect of its coding was extremely advantageous and set Duke IEEE apart from other teams, which often hard-coded their robots to turn around. In these cases, if the programming didn’t exactly match the course, then the robot could easily veer off path.

Mixing Drinks with Technology One of Duke IEEE’s most popular projects was the drink mixer that they created for the 75th anniversary of the Pratt School of Engineering. Debuted during the 2014 Pratt Alumni Weekend, this unique mixer impressed both current and returning Duke engineers. Constructed from clear laser-cut and frosted acrylic, its design was sturdy yet sleek. Multicolored LEDs, programmed using the open-source electronic prototyping platform Arduino, created a stunning lights display that synced to whatever music was playing during the event. Users could personalize their drinks using an Android app that would measure and mix specific ratios of ingredients.

The drink mixer has been used for multiple occasions since its debut, such as for the Foundry Open House and Club Fair. It has been quite suc-cessful in garnering positive reactions, as shown by the rise in Duke IEEE’s recruitment following these events.

Upcoming projects on Duke IEEE’s agenda include building a word clock and a chess-playing robot and attending their annual SoutheastCon entry. The group meets in The Foundry maker-space at Duke every Saturday to work on these projects, plan new ones and teach skills to less-ex-perienced members. Having grown tremendously in both number and expertise since their start in 2013, Duke IEEE will surely continue to impress.

Natalie Le is a freshman planning to double major in electrical and

computer engineering and physics.

Left, Duke IEEE’s 2015 SoutheastCon robot, which placed

13th out of 50 teams. Some parts had been removed following the

competition.

Right, Duke IEEE’s drink machine cap-

tured attention at last fall’s Open House for The Foundry—Duke’s

new student mak-erspace. The entire

mixer consists of three major sections, which pump different beverages in specific quantities through a

system of tubes.

The Finish Line in Sight:Pitching an Idea, a Solution, and an Investment in the Future

In the end, the pitches, taking various forms and solving various solutions, came together on the Sun-day afternoon of the hackathon for three-minute presentations aimed at impressing the judges, whose job it was to identify the most innovative solution to each of the pain points selected

Judging criteria came down to five categories:

Impact—if the team had de-fined the problem they were attempting to solve well

Execution—if the solution was novel and had the potential to be viable in the marketplace

Business Plan—if the team was able to articulate how they planned to sell and scale the product

The Pitch—if the pitch touched on all relevant questions and showed some polish, and

Team Dynamic—whether the team was composed of a di-verse enough group of talent that the problem could be solved from various angles.

With such high standards set, the teams made their final pitches for

how each of their solutions was the most innovative and well-rounded to their particular problem. Each of the teams was then given two minutes for a question-and-answer session with the judges, who analyzed each of the solutions as serious contenders as solutions from all angles.

Overseeing the incredible challenge set before partic-ipants, the judges spanned a variety of disciplines and backgrounds. P. Kay Wagon-er, PhD, entrepreneur-in-res-idence at the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy; Bobby Bahram, MBA, an executive in the biotechnology space; and Eric Poon, MD, chief health information officer for Duke Health, were the three judges tasked with finding the very best of the bunch. This was no small task.

After the two-day marathon was complete, one team emerged victorious, taking the $4,000 cash prize intended as seed money for the budding group. With a simple yet comprehensive pitch for a wearable device designed to help those with physical therapy regimes to stay on track and accountable, while also informing them whether they were doing their exercises safely and effec-tively, the group stole the show and snagged the coveted first-place prize.

Moving ForwardMore Solutions to ExploreWhile the inaugural healthcare hackathon may be over, there are plenty more opportunities to help improve the “pain

points” of healthcare. “We see this as

becoming an annual event,” said Gokha-le. “We realized that people coming together like this need that initial push to get started. Here, we bring together everything, creating our own

healthcare incubator.”Though there may always

be a pain point or two in the future of healthcare, looking at events like THInC begins to ask the audience whether or not they could find a solution as well. All it takes is an idea and 60 seconds to show others the path to explore how a “pain point” becomes nothing more than an opportunity to innovate. n

Claudia Dantoin is a junior exploring the possibilities of

engineering changes in health-care. She is also an editor for

the DukEngineer Magazine.

From left to right: Tannya Cal (T’17), Shih-Han (Sean) Chang (G’15), Mihir Pershad (UNC), Meghana Shamsunder (UNC) and Dhruv Patel (P’19). Not pictured: Cameron Valadez (P’17).

Below: Tanmay Gokhale.

30 2016 dukengineer

the hackathon, the HackDuke team worked on HackWeek, which had various track-related speakers and programming workshops. After the hack-athon, the team is continuing on creating more programming workshops and bringing social impact speakers. Also new this year, the team is working on making selected projects from the hackathon into long-term projects so that students can learn not only to prototype at the hackathon, but also learn to maintain their code through a long-term project made for a community nonprofit. n

Joyce Choi is a freshman double majoring in electrical and computer engineering and

computer science.

team created an inventory system for foodbanks in which users simply need to take a picture of an item to enter it into the system. The winning Health & Wellness track team used Google Project Tango to assist blind people in navigat-ing their surroundings. For the Energy & Environment track, the winning team created a tracks movement and GPS information to bring awareness to daily decisions that nega-tively affect the environment. The winning Education track team created a program that uses speech recognition to take notes of lectures and organizes notes by keywords.

HackDuke is more than just a two-day event though. The team’s goal is to build a hacker community at Duke. Before

Google, Facebook and YikYak, and students have opportunities to connect with these compa-nies at the event.

When asked what makes HackDuke different from other hackathons, director of HackDuke Jesse Hu said, “I think HackDuke does a great job of de-emphasizing com-petition and prizes to foster community. It is really close to the spirit of hacking. That sort of goes away when it’s all about prizes.”

To ensure an inclusive envi-ronment, HackDuke created a separate novice prize track. All novices were placed in Schicia-no Auditorium with mentors so that they could have easy access to help and guidance during the entire hackathon.

The winning Inequality track

Students work around the clock to create hardware and software solutions together for social good at HackDuke.

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hacks. Grand prize winners of each track get the chance to donate to a non-profit of their choice.

Duke’s hackathon scene started in the spring of 2013 with hackBlue, a hackathon created by students at Duke and the University of North Carolina. HackDuke started in the fall of 2013, becoming the nation’s first philanthropic hackathon with its emphasis on social good.

Since 2013, HackDuke has grown to have more than 3000 applications, more than 750 hackers, more than 100 proj-ects, 24 sponsors and more than 60 mentors at this year’s event. With such a large event, the or-ganizing team has grown from 8 members to 30. The event is sponsored by companies such as

A five-foot-long nyan cat made out of multicolored sticky notes graced the

glass windows of the engineer-ing buildings on the e-quad—the creativity in the air was palpable on the weekend of November 7, 2015.

HackDuke is a 24-hour coding competition with an emphasis on coding for social good. Hackers come from all across the nation and globe, from as far away as the West Coast and England, to create software and/or hardware solutions in a collaborative environment on one of four tracks: Inequality, Energy & The Environment, Health & Wellness, and Education. Students of all skill levels work in teams of up to four on these

On Campus | STUDENT TEAMS

HackDuke Coding for Social Good

Rita Lo

“HackDuke does a great job of de-emphasizing competition and prizes

to foster community. It is really close to the spirit of hacking.”

2016 dukengineer 3332 2016 dukengineer

present it in front of a panel of industry representatives in Florida.

The organization is also planning events such as a NASA hack-a-thon and a visit to the local General Electric Aviation assembly plant. With this vision, it promises to be an exciting year for the Duke AERO Society! Stay up to date on their activities at sites.duke.edu/aero. n

Matt Tobin is a junior majoring in mechanical engineering

and physics. He is also pursuing the Aerospace Certificate.

He serves as president of the Duke AERO Society.

Team members from the formerly

separate “Reduced Gravity Club” mon-itor pump function

and tubing integrity during microgravity

conditions.

tunnel in the manufacturing and testing of these wings.

Additionally, club members have formed a team to join the national RASC-AL compe-tition, sponsored by NASA and the National Institute of Aerospace (NIA). This team is working to engineer the entire mission architecture of a 1-G, earth-independent space station. This ambitious endeavor involves designing and planning for everything from mission funding to space station construction to life-sustaining technologies on board. If selected to compete in the final stage of the competi-tion, the team will produce a comprehensive research paper of their findings and plan and

Club members are modeling, constructing and testing wing planforms and engineering the mission architecture

of a 1-G, earth-independent space station.

for aerospace projects, the two groups rejoined, with the reintegration being completed this year. As one unified entity, the society ensures that its projects will be able to enjoy the support they need, making for an overall more active and effective organization.

With the goal of exposing members to both hands-on and theoretical, as well as aeronauti-cal and aerospace research, the AERO Society is focusing this

year on two projects. First, club members are modeling differ-ent wing planforms using 3-D modeling software, and then constructing these different planforms with balsa wood and heat shrink plastic. Students will gain hands-on experience working with Duke’s laser cutter and possibly its wind

structions to weather balloon launches to experiments on the effects of microgravity on the human eye, with a wide range of applications in aviation, bio-medical engineering, robotics and more.

This diversity of applications has, at times, led to a lack of focus for the group: the history of the Duke AERO Society can in some ways be viewed as an extended identity crisis. Originally a single universi-

ty branch of the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), the group divided three years ago into an AIAA club and a “Reduced Gravity Club,” which focused on a research project tested on NASA’s microgravity plane. Last year, though, in order to provide the necessary support

Aerospace Engineer-ing at Duke is a discipline that exists in something of an

academic ‘twilight zone.’ As a certificate program within the mechanical engineering and materials science department, pursuing aerospace engineering at Duke requires slightly more classes than a minor, though it is not independent enough to be considered its own major. For the handful of students from each class, then, who are interested in the field, involve-ment in aerospace research is necessary to gain better familiarity with and experience in the field.

To facilitate students’ expo-sure to aerospace and aeronau-tical engineering projects with-in and outside of the university, the Duke AERO Society is a student organization that works to connect its members to “Aviation Engineering Re-search Opportunities” (hence the acronym). The group has been involved in a variety of projects, from quadcopter con-

Giving Lift to Students’ Careers

On Campus | DUKE AERO

2016 dukengineer 3534 2016 dukengineer

to three liters per hour. My goal was to make the filter faster by increasing the flow rate with bigger pores but still maintaining the 98 percent bacterial removal efficiency.

The filters I built were disks made from coffee grounds and clay. We pounded clay powder, combined and kneaded it by hand, designed our own hand press using a 3-D printer for

the plastic cast, and shaped our filter with no mechanical parts. I tested them with different types of waters, such as tap water and pond water.

What was the hardest or most frustrating part of working on the project?The Grand Challenge expe-rience has helped me better understand both the gravity of

gave the water a peculiar taste. People unanimously agreed on boiling the water, but I noticed that lots of them didn’t—espe-cially men who thought they were “stronger than sickness” or were too impatient to wash their hands and boil water.

Ceramic filters are the most recommended treatment options, but they seep out the water very slowly, around two

Village children using buckets to collect drinking wa-ter from a stream

http://inhabitat.com/ceramic-water-filters-win-iwa-award-for-cambodia/

How does your water filter work? How is it different than existing ceramic water filters as well as current methods of cleaning out water?After talking with various residents, I found that there were two primary solutions used to clean their water. Some residents had tried using chlo-rine tablets, but they stopped using them since the tablets

Did you have the opportunity to talk with some of the Ugandan residents?Yes, I did interview people about how they used water and what their current solu-tions were. Kaihura lies on the main highway, where a Swiss company built a gravity line connecting to lots of homes, so most people living close to the road received access to clean water. Of course, not everyone has the means to pay for the purified water, and the gravity line is not able to reach homes farther away.

In one village around 15 to 20 minutes away from Kaihura, the residents obtained their water from a muddy stream running nearby. Another village I visited was quite isolated, so the only water source was an open murky spring where animals also grazed. Apparently, the villagers applied for a well, but the process is extremely slow.

Innovative Purification Technologies for Contaminated Drinking Water In Uganda

How did you get interested in your project topic?I traveled to Uganda the sum-mer after my freshman year as part of Duke Engage. The following year, I visited Togo and worked with another NAE Grand Challenge Scholar, during which I got interest-ed in the program. After my junior year, I visited Uganda again to research the depth of the drinking water problem and how useful an innovation such as a ceramic water filter could be. In the village of Kai-hura, I sampled water sources and tested them for bacteria, collected data on the severity of waterborne diseases and ob-served the installation of a new well in the community—the most popular water solution used by the government and non-governmental organiza-tions (NGO)s.

pro f i l e | ALUMNI

The Thomas C. Katsouleas NAE Grand Challenge Scholars Program at Duke is dedicated to addressing new engineering challenges ranging from making solar energy economical to reverse engineering the human

brain. Scholars must address complex social issues that require innovative tech-nology, puzzle solving and a desire to change the world. A 2014 Scholar, Mona Dai aimed to provide reliable access to portable water purification technologies in sub-Saharan Africa. Currently working in Richmond, Virginia, Mona will soon begin graduate school to study environmental health at Johns Hopkins.

Mona Dai

“Meeting the Ugandan people, I knew I could potentiallyhave the solution to improvingtheir lives and that made merealize what enormous weight lies behind being an engineer.”

2016 dukengineer 3736 2016 dukengineer

Lessons from ExperienceAs an entrepreneur, venture capitalist and board member of various companies, Oxaal has a breadth of knowledge with innovation and startup culture. He has learned that while one may often have a great idea for a product to compete with existing companies, there are several barriers that one must first overcome.

Oxaal isolates three main criteria when giving the green light to invest in a company and its product. Does the product meet the demand of the market? Is the market for the product large enough?

How will the company com-pete for market share?

Oxaal landed on these criteria through years of trials and tribulations. For exam-ple, Oxaal once invested in a storage processor that was twice as fast, consumed 15 percent of the power and cost about 70 percent less than any other processor that was on the market. While on paper this

product seemed extremely viable, in the market, sales were vastly disappointing.

After a market research project, Oxaal’s team discov-ered that consumers were more interested in the durability, the reparability and the software compatibility of the product rather than raw performance.

Oxaal is Duke BME’s entrepre-neur-in-residence for the 2015-2016 school year, and a general partner at Sevin Rosen Funds. He serves on the boards of Ethertronics, Luxtera, Metabo-lon, Scintera and others.

Duke BME’s Entrepreneur-in-Residence

John Oxaal

pro f i l e | ALUMNI

John Oxaal has worked on a variety of projects and products in the entre-preneurial space. After graduating from Duke, Oxaal got his first op-portunity from Olaf von Ramm, professor of biomedical engineering at Duke University, who invited him to work on a real-time 2-D ultrasound

machine. Realizing he needed more business knowledge, Oxaal pursued a business de-

gree from the University of Chicago. This helped him found Volumetrics Medi-cal Imaging, Inc. with Professor von Ramm, which developed the first real-time 3-D ultrasound machine.

After the success, Oxaal joined Sevin Rosen funds, where he remains today, and focuses in areas such as imaging, computing, photonics, RF communica-tions and semiconductors.

“Duke is well-positioned to reap the great rewards in biomedical technologies.”

Far left, clay disk prototypes for ce-ramic water filters; above top, Mona collects data on the contamination level of a village stream; Above, Mona concen-trates on making contaminated water to test her water filters

the drinking water challenge as well as the frustration inherent to making change. In making the ceramic filters, I found that that structural integrity of the material started to degrade if pores were made too big. At the same time, the percentage of water filtration and flow were related by an unexpected parabolic relationship. I real-ized that there were so many variables that could contribute to failure that making an effec-tive water filter took more time than I originally thought.

What was your best moment during your visit to Uganda?I remember one moment with the founder of the NGO I worked with. She held up a petri dish covered in colonies of bacteria and announced, “If people saw this, they would really understand what germs are.” And that got me thinking, is that all that people need? They don’t even need technol-ogy to fully understand the importance of drinking clean water. So I think that was the most interesting moment for me, especially since the communities in Uganda did not understand “dirty” as tiny, wiggling bacteria invisible to

the human eye. They only knew the word “dirty” in the sense of visible dust or grime.

Tell me about someone interesting you met.Every Ugandan is in-teresting. Most of the people I talked with asked for new ideas that could help make their water better be-cause they knew something was wrong with the quality. After the trip, I kept in touch with several of them over Facebook. One of my friends wanted to learn to be a lab technician, so he was going back to be fully certified. I think Duke Engage in Uganda is the most unique out of all the places students visit, because lots of people have gone back more than once.

Now that you’ve gone through the NAE Grand Challenge Scholars program, what would you say to future students who are interested in applying their knowledge of engineering learned at Duke?Duke is a great school in encouraging people to do prac-

tical applications since there’s lots of different areas of fund-ing, especially in engineering. For those working on projects to help a community, ask peo-ple what they need rather than telling them what you think they need. We shouldn’t try to find a problem with their situ-ation. It’s important to listen to the public and figure out what they want, because it’s pointless to make them something that they never use. Also, I realized being in a place working and talking with people is the best way to find solutions. You can’t just read a textbook and try to build something, you have to talk to the people who will use your product everyday. Working on the NAE Grand Challenge was as much about engineering as it was about the culture and community I worked with.

Meeting the Ugandan peo-ple, I knew I could potentially have the solution to improving their lives and that made me realize what enormous weight lies behind being an engineer. n

Anika Radiya-Dixit is a junior majoring in computer science

and electrical engineering.

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1940sEdward P. Nickinson, Jr. E’48 and Betty Kuhl Nickinson T’48 celebrated their 66th wedding anniversary in October 2014. Their oldest offspring, Edward III, Princeton 1972, has been a circuit Judge in Pensacola for 25 years. Their second, Patricia, PhD, Penn State, 1999, is head of “Bizcom” at University of South Florida, and their third, Merritt T’77, is a Presbyterian minister in Aberdeen, MD. They have five grandchildren and two “great-grands.”

1950sMalcolm G. Murray, Jr. E’52 has written articles on a variety of subjects, mostly for the Baytown Sun, his local five-days-a-week newspaper, for several years. He still does occasional consulting in Industrial Machinery shaft/cou-pling alignment and has five pat-ents in this field. He sold patent access, inventory and tooling for amiable air/sea buoyant plastic rescue signal mirrors, including one model which is U.S. Coast Guard approved. He is currently working on an improved piece of hospital equipment based on observations as a patient.

Harold D. Scheid’s E’56 wife, Lois, passed away September 14, 2014. His granddaughter, Lauren Scheid, graduated from the Duke School of Nursing in December 2014 with a master’s degree.

Lawrence D. Decker E’57 retired from teaching at Wentworth Insti-tute of Technology a year and a half ago. He is enjoying retirement.

1960sKenneth Watov E’61 retired from the practice of intellectual property law and closed his office in Princeton Junction, NJ, as of October 2014.

Bernard M. Stanton E’62 entered his father’s family gasoline business and immediately began building car wash facilities after a very productive three years in the Navy. From 1966 through 1969, sixteen facilities in four states were constructed, followed by a 6,000-square-foot office ware-house facility. Over the next 10 years, four new locations were built and half of the original locations received modern additions. In 1986, Buck was elected president of the national carwash associa-tion after years of involvement and traveled the nation speaking and learning. Buck has a dear wife, Carol, plus kids and grandkids, and is now retired, playing golf, walking the dogs, reading good books and organizing out-of-town golf trips for his friends. Not to mention following Duke basket-ball… and now football too.

Brian W. Sheron E’69 is currently director of the Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washing-ton, D.C.

1970sStephen R. Shepherd’s E’72 spouse of 47 years died in 2008. He moved from Charlotte after her passing to Carolina Beach. He is happily retired from Managing Health Care facilities for 40 years. His son now runs his franchise business Great Clips for Hair in Charlotte with nine stores currently.

Michael G. Thomason E’73 became professor emeritus of electrical engineering and comput-er science at the University of Ten-nessee – Knoxville after more than 40 years teaching and conducting research, during which he par-ticipated in numerous NIH study sections. Employers of Thomason’s

PhD advisees at UTK include the Swiss Institute of Technology, the University of Hawaii, Microsoft and Google.

David A. Ennis E’75 formed Ennis Consulting LLC – practicing PE.

Richard M. Prevatt E’77 and his wife, Tina, would like to announce the engagement of their eldest son, Matthew, to his sweetheart Isabella Disarufino. They will marry in London during December and return to San Diego, where Matthew serves as a pilot in the U.S. Navy. Their second son, Michael, pursues his university studies in Mary-land, and their daughter, Andrea, continues her studies at Liberty University in Virginia. Tina enjoys middle and high school teaching and advanced studies in nutritional health. And he provides advanced technical systems engineering and leads the Patuxent River Division for their growing company, Integrity Applications Incorporated.

1980sJohn E. Ortiz E’82 shifted gears professionally into custom cloud and mobile design and develop-ment with a crowdsourcing twist at Appirio in San Francisco, CA. He has two sons in college at UC-Boulder and San Diego State, and his spouse works at Edcast, an education start-up. He is living the Silicon Valley lifestyle.

Murray R. Snyder E’82 is a retired Navy Captain and former subma-rine commanding officer. He is a professor in the mechanical and aerospace engineering department at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Murray is also an instrument-rated private pilot with over 1250 hours of flight time and owns an Aerotrelz tube and fabric airplane.

John L. Russell E’83 was CEO of the wireless cardiac medical device company Corventis until its recent acquisition by Medtronic in 2014. He is now CEO of Cardiva Medical, Inc., another venture-cap-ital-financed cardiac medical device company. John, his wife Sara, and their five children live in the Twin Cities area of Minnesota.

Lawrence J. Lang E’86 recently accepted a position at PLUMgrid, Inc. located in Santa Clara, CA, as president and CEO. The software company creates secure virtual networks for large enterprises around the world.

1990sPatricia M. Barr’s E’90 epic space opera WYNDE received a Gold Medal for Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror eBook in the 2014 Independent Publisher Awards.

Jong S. Lim G’91, who earned his doctorate under the advising of Professor Adrian Bejan, is now the second in command at Geely, the top Chinese automaker, which recently acquired Volvo and lots of accolades for quality and independence. He recently received a top industry award in China, the “1000 Best Foreign Experts” award. The ceremony was conducted by China’s Premier, and Jong was selected as one of the four speakers.

John A. Sartor E’92 was named chief executive officer at PS&S.

David A. Deal, Jr., E’93 DC pioneer in technology for social responsibility and non-profits, is passing the reins to Johan Hammerstrom as the next chief executive officer at Community IT Innovators.

Classnotes

equivalent of finding a whole new continent.”

One example is silicon photonics—one of Oxaal’s favorite fields. Silicon photon-ics describes silicon chips that can manipulate light. While silicon chips generally work on electrons, using photons

within these chips allows them to be much faster.

Parting WordsOne final word of wisdom from Oxaal: “Measure twice and cut once. Before you invest years of your life pur-suing a particular idea, do a mental experiment and figure out whether the market’s big enough, whether you have the competitive advantage to sustain, and whether you meet the needs of the market before you spend a long time pursu-ing a certain thing.” n

Martin Li is a first year Pratt student and a projected

biomedical engineering and electrical and computer

engineering double major.

variety of medical devices and applications that can be developed to improve the efficiency of patient care. And according to Oxaal, “Duke is well-positioned to reap the great reward” in biomedical technologies. For example, with the increased power of

smartphones, doctors can get vital signs wirelessly rather than looking at a chart at the foot of a patient’s bed.

Oxaal notes that the process of starting and developing a company has gotten signifi-cantly easier since the advent of computers. Operating expenses are constantly reduced, compu-tational processing speeds up the production of manuscripts, and the internet allows for greater information exchange and easier advertising.

But while there may be more people working in new areas of technology, its enormous boom over the past two decades provides a giant increase in base technology that hasn’t been fully explored. According to Oxaal, “It’s the

While their product was argu-ably better, it failed to meet the demands of the market.

Lessons from Google EarthExperiences like these will help Oxaal in his role as entre-preneur-in-residence, which involves giving advice to po-tential entrepreneurs at Duke. But Oxaal has also learned a great deal from others.

A former colleague of Oxaal’s, Chikai Ohazama, emphasized that one needs an idea of how technology will evolve and use that knowledge to develop a profit model. His foresight brought the world to everyone’s fingertips.

Ohazama realized that semiconductor technology would likely advance from extremely expensive and bulky machines into more compact models that could easily fit into someone’s pocket. He later cofounded Keyhole, Inc., which was subsequently bought by Google.

You know Keyhole, Inc. better as Google Earth. Google Earth, while computational-ly intensive, can be accessed using the powerful chips today on smartphones, proving Oha-zama’s foresight accurate.

Lessons for the FutureOxaal believes that the recent advances in the biomedical fields—such as the increased understanding of the genome, advances in biochemistry and data applications combined with engineering—are vast fields yet to be explored.

The future lies in a wide

“Measure twice and cut once.”

2016 dukengineer 41

Erdem Sahillioglu X’07 led the team that won Accenture’s global Accelerating Innovation IoT (Inter-net of Things) Challenge this year. This is an internal challenge at Ac-centure, a company of more than 358,000 employees. More than 220 teams participated in this highly competitive challenge from across the world. With his team, Erdem found and developed an innovative “Life-saving Safety App” idea using the Internet of Things technologies that would create value for the society and Accen-ture’s clients. After graduating from Duke’s MEM Program, Erdem joined Accenture in Turkey. He has been delivering projects mainly in the telecom industry both in his home country and abroad.

Brian J. Lewis E’07, X’10 and Rebecca Fairchild-Lewis T’07 are happy to announce their marriage on September 6, 2014, in Essex Junction, VT. They currently reside in Washington, DC. Many Duke alumni were in attendance span-ning classes from 1976 to 2010.

Jessica Barlow Becker E’09 and Michael Nathan Becker got mar-ried on November 15, 2014.

Mathavi Jothimurugesan Stras-burger E’10 and Lee Strasburger T’10 are happy to announce their marriage on October 18, 2014, in the Sarah P. Duke Gardens, Durham, NC. They currently reside in Atlanta, GA.

Drew M. Haerer G’11 mar-ried Mary Pratt R’11, R’14 on September 6, 2014. Nic is currently working at the Duke University Nicholas School of the Environment with Dr. Pratson as a research analyst.

Kyle R. Ulrich E’12, G’15, G’19 and Devin Marie (Jones) Ulrich T’14 were married in the Duke Chapel on April 25, 2015.

Arthur S. Jones, Jr. E’37 passed away in New Haven, CT on June 13, 2015, at 99 years of age.

Robert T. “Ted” McLaughlin E’44 went to be with the Lord on Monday, Decem-ber 8, 2014. A native of Charlotte, NC, Ted was born June 1, 1923, and was the younger son of the late Rosamond Lucas and Joseph McLaughlin. He grad-uated in 1941 from Central High School in Charlotte and from Duke University in 1944 with a BSME. He then served with the 6th Infantry Division in the Phil-ippines in WWII and with the occupation of Korea after the Japanese surrender. He married Bettie Blanche Haughton, also of Charlotte, on September 6, 1947. They had a remarkable marriage for 67 years. Ted worked for Edgcomb Metals (formerly Edgcomb Steel Co.) for 40 years. While in Charlotte, he was an active member of Myers Park United Methodist Church, the Charlotte Country Club, the Colonels Club and the Pied-mont Club. Ted enjoyed sports. In high school, he was a championship tennis player winning the city singles title in his age bracket. He also played football. At Duke Ted ran track. Throughout his adult lifetime, Ted was known best for his devotion to his family, his loyalty to his lifelong friends, his faithfulness to his church and his pleasure in golf. He found meaning in tutoring children at Bethlehem Center of Charlotte. He also served on Citizens for Effective Govern-ment, a private organization dedicated to encouraging and pursuing honest government, and the city management of Charlotte. In 2008 after living 85 years in Charlotte, Ted moved with Bettie to Durham, NC, to The Forest at Duke, where Ted was known for his gracious spirit, kind manners and steadiness. Ted was dearly loved by his family as a husband, father and grandfather. He was a sterling human being of rare quality—a man of faithfulness, integrity, humility and a noble spirit. Always a gentleman, never self-regarding, he took great interest in other people. He sought to understand and make better the lives

of other human beings in whatever ways he could. He was a voracious learner, keen to broaden his mind and to share meaningful books or ideas with each of his children and grandchildren. His love for the Lord increased as his physical sight and hearing diminished. His life has made an indelible mark of enduring good on his progeny.

Alfred J. Barrett, Jr. E’52 passed away on April 19, 2014.

George W. Pearsall, ScD, PE, who served as dean of engineering at Duke from 1969-1974 and 1982-1983, died on February 21, 2016, at age 82. A tribute webpage has been estab-lished in his memory at mems.duke.edu/dean-pearsall.

James F. Proctor E’56 passed away May 3, 2015, in Silver Spring, MD. Jim grew up in Durham, NC, and loved Duke from a very early age. He will be missed greatly!

Walter C. Metz, Jr. E’65, G’68 died unexpectedly on January 8, 2015. He was born in Elkin, NC, on August 4, 1943, the son of the late Walter Cade Metz and Josephine Scheffer Metz. He graduated from Duke University with a degree in electrical engineering in 1965 and completed an engineering master’s degree the following year. In 1967, he joined IBM as a systems engineer in the company’s Raleigh office and remained with the company as an engineer until last year, when his division was acquired by Lenovo. He began a new project with Lenovo at Research Triangle Park last year.

Kerem Harmanci G’86, G’01 passed away in June 2010.

InMem

ory

Thomas W. Hash II, E’93 a radiologist from Duke University Medical Center, will bring his medical expertise to Brazil as part of the International Visiting Professor Program offered by the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). The program fosters international relations among radiology societies to assist with medical education in developing and newly developed nations. Hash will spend his 90-day visit giving presentations and teaching intensive seminars to radiology residents, as well as attending conferences and meetings.

Russell B. Copeland E’94 has hung up his quill writing invest-ment advisory newsletters (the entire industry has completely jumped the shark!) and is focusing on gaining a national presence for his Austin-based chocolate company called “Miles of Chocolate.” It is an outra-geously good baked chocolate dessert (it’s NOT a brownie, nor is it fudge) and is in growth mode. Keep an eye out for it! And go ahead and “Like” them on Facebook!

Kimberly A. Coie E’95 recently did custom website design work using Squarespace for the Pastel Society of Colorado.

Andrew V. Kayes, E’95 medical director of Maui Diagnostic Imaging, was recently named the intersociety private practice rep-resentative for the American Col-lege of Radiology. This title holds a two-year term that will have him traveling to the mainland for conferences and now puts a Ha-waiian representative on the front line of all things radiological. What makes this nomination even more special is that he is the first Hawaiian radiologist to ever hold this title. It’s an honor to be

chosen to represent the private practice sector and it’s a special moment to have radiologists from Hawaii involved in shaping our field of expertise nationally. He has been an active member of the ACR for 13 years, which heralds over 37,000 members. He will officially start his duties as private practice representa-tive in May 2015 at an awards ceremony held in Washington D.C. Kayes is grateful to be a part of his Maui community where he and his wife, WanYu, happily raise their three kids, William (7), Nikki (5) and Henry (2).

J. Thomas Parry E’95 and his wife, Tracey, are proud to announce the adoption of a girl, Annabelle Kilby Parry. Annabelle was born on February 25, 2015.

Mukund Jain E’96 was fortunate enough to co-author a book (“Case in Point: Graph Analysis for Consulting and Case Inter-views”) that would help aspiring management consultants prepare for their interviews. Securing a position at these firms requires successfully solving cases that describe a business problem. He believes this will help Duke students be better prepared.

Joseph L. Giacobbe E’98 and his wife, Christina, are proud to announce the birth of a baby boy, Joseph William. He was born on March 9, 2015, in Yale Hospital, New Haven CT, and weighed 7 lb., 11.5 oz. Proudly welcomed by mom, dad and big brother, Andrew, who is nine years old.

Ken Inouye E’98 and Aya Inouye are proud to announce the birth of a baby girl, Sara. She was born on March 10, 2015, in Ashiya, Japan, and weighed 6 lb., 7 oz. The older brother, Taisei (2), is super excited about his little sister as well.

Tram V. Nguyen E’99 has been promoted to global head of cor-porate strategy for BofA – which includes top of the house strategy, m+a and principal investments.

2000sGrant R. Allen E’00 and his wife, Katherine, are proud to announce the birth of their baby girl, Gracen Kennedy Allen, born September 20, 2014, in Washington, D.C. Weighing a healthy 9 lb., 8 oz., Grace loves to root on her favorite Duke player, #3 Grayson Allen.

Daniel S. Wang E’01 and Nikki Wang are proud to announce the birth of a baby boy, Eric S. Wang. He was born on December 20, 2014, in Fairfax, VA.

Danielle Chalson E’02 and Andrew Chalson T’02 are happy to announce the birth of their baby boy, Jackson Avram. He was born on December 13, 2014, in Manhasset, NY, and weighed 8 lb., 3 oz.

Kevin L. Hoover E’02, X’03 and his wife, Sarah Elizabeth, would like to announce the birth of their daughter, Lily Grace Hoover, on April 3, 2015.

Nathan A. Fredrickson E’03 and Alise Edwards T’03 are proud to announce the birth of a baby boy, Nolan Andrew. He was born on November 13, 2014, in Raleigh, NC, and weighed 7 lb., 11 oz.

Amar K. Tanna E’03 married Sonya Amratlal in May 2014.

Mark W. Younger E’03 and Ashley J. Younger T’03 are proud to an-nounce the birth of their daughter, Hope Searle Younger. She joins their other three children, Amelia Natalie, born May 28, 2009, Syd-ney Margaret, born on September 20, 2010, and Roger William, born March 27, 2013.

Mordejai Burstein E’04, B’08 and Brian J. Fried T’02 found-ed a start-up called Zinkerz. Both alums came back to education work after some very cool careers. Mordejai, who is Panamanian and credits his time at Duke with changing his under-standing of the possibilities of a quality education, also currently runs four business companies throughout China and South America (working in textiles) and is the primary financier of Zinkerz. He got married as an undergrad-uate and has three kids. He also got his MBA at Duke, and his stories about transitioning to a demanding academic and open social culture from Panaman, while married, are hilarious.

Cameron V. Levy E’04 has been working 80 hours a week for three and a half years on a startup called Beansprock to help employ-ers find prospective employees that better fit their job descrip-tions to avoid the huge turnover and wasted money in business, education, etc. After working as a consultant all over the world, Cam-eron realized that many employees were unhappy with their jobs and/or companies. He feels there is a real need for a better placement tool to fill positions.

Shelby A. Neal E’06 and her hus-band, John William Neal VI T’00, are proud to announce the birth of their son, John William Neal VII. He was born on March 23, 2015, in Charleston, SC, and weighed 10 lb., 3 oz.

William B. Senner E’06, X’06 and his wife, Kate, are proud to announce the birth of their daughter, Violet Marie Senner, on February 20, 2015 at 3:20 p.m., weighing 7 lb., 14 oz., and measuring 19 in. long.

40 2016 dukengineer

Classnotes

2016 dukengineer 4342 2016 dukengineer

Open Invitation to the Engineering Alumni Awards Banquet

Many of you may not realize it, but there is an Engineering Alumni Awards Banquet held annually in April at the Washington Duke Inn on the Duke campus. Approximately 200 attend this event each year where we honor many of our faculty, students, alumni and friends. The

banquet was originally organized in 1956 to recognize the Distinguished Alum-nus, Young Alumnus and Service Award recipients for the School of Engineering; however it is now expanded to recognize and honor faculty through their excel-lence in teaching and research as well.

I hope if your travels bring you to the Duke campus in April that you might arrange your schedule so that you can attend the banquet. After 26 years, I can

tell you it is fascinating to learn of the many achievements of our award winners.

The banquet is also the occasion to recognize the scholarship and fellowship endowment providers and their respective student recipi-ents as well as the named professorships at the school. Pratt now has over 150 named scholarships and 43 named professorships! These numbers have grown significantly during the last few years through the help of specific “matching programs.” We recognize these special individuals and list their names in the banquet program.

We are fortunate to have a new scholarship-matching program available now for those of you who would like to initiate a new scholarship, or would simply like to add to your existing scholarship endowment. A minimum gift of $100,000 is required and the pay-ments may be spread over as many as five years. Gifts will be matched dollar-for-dollar from $100,000 to $500,000! Please contact the En-gineering Development Office at 919-660-5108 if you would like to participate in this program. By the way, if you would like to able to

meet the student scholars, there is a similar university dinner held in the fall each year recognizing scholarship providers and their respective student recipients.

On our website at pratt.duke.edu/alumni/major-gift-donors you can see the current endowed scholarships at the Pratt School of Engineering. Scholarships are critical to our goals to recruit outstanding talent to the Pratt School of Engineering and offer a world-class education to those students who may not otherwise have had the opportunity to attend Duke. A Duke engineering education provides our students with the opportunity to make a difference in the human condition, to protect and preserve the environment, and to contribute to the economic vitality of our society. Students are hungry for opportunities to make a difference in the world. Could you hope for any better return on your investment?

As always, we are happy to talk with you about providing a scholarship at the school and to help answer any questions you may have. Thank you for consider-ing this as one more way that you might support your school.

Robert W. “Judge” Carr, Jr. E’71Senior Associate Dean

Development and Alumni Affairs Edmund T. Pratt, Jr. School of Engineering

g iv ing | DEVELOPMENT AND ALUMNI AFFAIRS

Award winners at the 2016 Duke Engineering Alumni Awards Ban-quet. Clockwise from top left: Roger Nightingale, Jungsang Kim, Matthew Christensen E’02, Brenton Hoffman, Suzanne Gregory E’87, Deborah Fraze, Claudia Gunsch, Patricia Scheller E’81. Not pictured: Jennifer West.

connected with the school and with each other, the EAA uses Facebook, LinkedIn and other social media to facilitate communications. A newsletter is also planned to keep alumni updated on current events at the school.

Besides the opportunities to get involved listed above, please also consider joining the Engi-neering Alumni Council, the governing and operating board of the EAA. Engineering alum-ni, Engineering Student Gov-ernment leaders and members of Pratt’s development team comprise the Council. In ad-dition to practicing engineers, our volunteer members include doctors, lawyers, venture capitalists and entrepreneurs. The primary responsibility is to coordinate the activities of the EAA in support of the Pratt School and its alumni. If you are interested in joining the Council, please contact Pam Hanson at [email protected].

The Engineering Alumni Association and the Pratt com-munity need you. If you are already involved, thank you. If not, I hope that you will consider becoming involved in one—or more—of these ways.

Sincerely,Dixie T. Wells E’91

PresidentEngineering Alumni Association

In the spirit of keeping connected with the school and with each other, the EAA uses Facebook, LinkedIn and other social media to facilitate communications.

Students submit proposals and provide presentations as part of a rigorous application process for acquiring funding for their projects. In some instances, the EAA represents a primary funding source, with-out which the activities may not be possible.

Each year, the EAA bestows three awards: the Distinguished Alumnus Award, the Distin-guished Young Alumnus Award and the Distinguished Service Award. You can nominate a former classmate, colleague or friend for one of the distin-guished alumnus or service awards online at pratt.duke.edu/alumni-awards.

We celebrate the achieve-ments of these award recipients each year at the Engineering Alumni Banquet. Having attended several of these ban-quets, I always marvel at the reactions of these recipients as they accept their awards, and enjoy hearing firsthand the achievements and accomplish-ments that have made them so deserving of these distinctions.

Attending the Engineering Alumni Banquet provides the opportunity to personal-ly interact with these award recipients, as well as current Pratt students. I hope you will make plans to join your fellow alumni, former professors and current students at next year’s banquet; be on the lookout for an invitation early next year.

In the spirit of keeping

Dear Fellow Engineering Alumni:

The Engineering Alumni Association needs you! In each issue of DukEngi-

neer, we read about amazing opportunities that today’s engineering students have while at Duke. What you may not know is how the Engineer-ing Alumni Association (EAA) contributes to the innovation, creativity and growth happen-ing on campus. I invite you to consider becoming a member by visiting gifts.duke.edu/pratt.

The EAA focuses on three major ongoing initiatives: stu-dent projects, annual alumni and service awards, and alumni awareness.

You may have read about some of the student projects or seen a recent commercial fea-turing Duke’s electric vehicle (youtube.com/watch?v=O3XMzg-C25Ko). Pratt students represent the very best and the brightest, with a thirst for knowledge and experience, and an unending desire to be involved with ac-tivities that extend beyond the standard curriculum.

Members of the EAA help support longstanding student projects and initiatives of engi-neering student organizations such as ASCE, IEEE, NSBE and SWE. These activities also extend to endeavors such as Duke Formula SAE (former-ly Duke Motorsports), the Duke Robotics Club, Duke Engineering World Health and Duke Engineers for Interna-tional Development.

g iv ing | EAC PRESIDENT

2016 dukengineer 4544 2016 dukengineer

McChesney Family Foundation Scholarship # 2 FundIrene Lilly and William W. McCutchen, Jr. Scholarship Endowment FundMcDade Family Pratt Scholarship FundCapers and Marion McDonald Scholarship FundDawn R. and John M. McDonald III Family Scholarship FundJohn B. McGaughy Scholarship Quasi Endowment FundJ. Bradford McIlvain Scholarship FundMcJunkin Family Scholarship FundMcNerney Family Scholarship FundEric R. Meier Family Scholarship FundJan L. Mize Scholarship Endowment FundRobert T. and Suellen G. Monk Family Foundation Scholarship FundThomas R. Mullen, Jr. Scholarship FundJoan P. and Alvin R. Murphy, Jr. Scholarship FundNatelli Engineering Scholarship FundStephen M. and Tracy A. Nickelsburg Scholarship FundMichael Frances Nolan Scholarship EndowmentNorton Family Scholarship FundPietrewicz Family Scholarship FundRobert H. Pinnix Scholarship FundElizabeth N. and George S. Plattenburg, Jr. Scholarship FundSky Polega Scholarship Endowment FundJames F. Rabenhorst Scholarship FundLindsay Ann Rawot Memorial Scholarship FundNora Lea and Edward M. Reefe Scholarship Endowment FundMarie Foote Reel Scholarship FundJames E. and Janis J. Rehlaender Scholarship Endowment FundSuzanne Gregory and Theodore Reiss Family Scholarship FundRhodes Family Scholarship FundWilliam I. Riker, Jr. Scholarship FundRobertson Family Scholarship FundMary M. and Timothy P. Rooney Scholarship FundChuck and Jeanne Rudiger Scholarship FundHelen R. and Vernon H. Scarborough Scholarship FundMary Kay and Paul Scarborough Scholarship FundKenneth Thomas Schiciano Scholarship FundSchneirov Family Scholarship FundSechrest Family Scholarship Endowment FundGerard T. Shannon Scholarship FundMarion Shepard Scholarship FundCarrie Downey Shoemaker Memorial Scholarship FundConnie Simmons Scholarship Endowment FundJ. Stephen Simon Scholarship FundSpearman Family Scholarship Fund

Clifton G. Stoneburner and Dorothy Reichman Stoneburner FundCatherine and James L. Stuart Scholarship FundSullivan Family Scholarship FundSutherland Family Engineering Scholarship FundW. John and Dorothy J. Swartz Scholarship Endowment FundScott E. Telesz Scholarship FundRichard Miles Thompson FundGeorge J. and Ujjwala S. Titus Scholarship FundT. Edward Torgerson Scholarship Endowment FundHorace Trumbauer Memorial FundUbben Family Scholarship FundCharles R. Vail Engineering Endowment FundValdés Family Scholarship FundAleksandar Sedmak Vesic and Milena Sedmak Vesic Scholarship FundJeffrey N. and Penny Vinik Scholarship FundWahl Family Scholarship FundJames V. Walsh Engineering Scholarship FundMike Walsh Scholarship FundWatkins Family Scholarship FundRichard D. Webb and R. Davis Webb, Jr. Scholarship Quasi FundMichael O. and Susan J. Wheeler Scholarship Endowment FundWhitney Family Scholarship FundBeverly A. and Jerry C. Wilkinson Scholarship FundMyrtle Coker Wilkinson Scholarship Endowment FundEric V. and Carolyn J. Witt Scholarship FundFrederick P. and Thalia H. Witt Scholarship FundThomas M. and Debra S. Woodard Scholarship Endowment FundVernon O. and Bernice M. Woodard Scholarship Endowment FundBrian Glenn Wright Memorial Scholarship Endowment FundSharon C. and Harold L. Yoh III Scholarship FundChristopher H. and Josefine Young Scholarship FundJohn J. Young Engineering ScholarshipWilliam H. Younger Scholarship Fund

Donald M. and Judith C. Alstadt Scholarship FundAnonymous ScholarshipK. P. Arges Scholarship FundB. E. & K. Endowed Engineering Scholarship FundEric F. Bam Scholarship FundC. Leland Bassett Scholarship EndowmentBennett Family Scholarship FundCarolina B. Berini Endowment FundJoe F. Berini Endowment FundBingle Family Scholarship FundWalter J. Bishop Family Scholarship FundBee-Keng Boey Scholarship FundStephen and Alicia Bolze Scholarship FundStephen T. and Karen A. L. Boswell Scholarship FundWilliam M. Boyer Scholarship FundTyler Ahern Brown Memorial Scholarship FundDale and Catherine Buchanan Scholarship FundDorcas Maynor and E. Ray Bucher, Jr. Scholarship Endowment FundRaul Salvador Buelvas III Scholarship FundThomas A. Burger, Jr. Scholarship FundBycoff Family Scholarship FundMarjorie B. and Robert W. Carr, Jr. Scholarship FundJohn T. Chambers Program for Excellence in Undergraduate Education

Challenge FundJohn T. Chambers Scholarship Endowment FundJulia and Howard Clark Scholarship FundSchool of Engineering Class of 1981 EndowmentEngineering Class of 1985 Scholarship FundPeggie C. Cleveland Engineering Endowment FundCochran Family Scholarship FundJohn Cocke Scholarship FundNorman A. Cocke III Scholarship Endowment FundColey Family Scholarship FundDarryl W. and Shirley A. Copeland Scholarship FundCurran Family Scholarship FundWilliam C. and Elle R. Dackis Engineering Scholarship Endowment FundDaues Family Scholarship FundLinda Ruth Dean Scholarship FundLinda D. and John M. Derrick, Jr. Scholarship Endowment FundDickinson Family Scholarship Endowment FundMarie E. and Robert O. Dierks Scholarship EndowmentFrederick E. and Claire B. Ehrsam Scholarship Endowment FundErnest Elsevier Scholarship FundDavid W. Erdman Scholarship FundF. Reid Ervin Scholarship Endowment Fund

W. M. Ervin and Mary Collins Ervin Scholarship FundThomas F. Ferdinand Scholarship Quasi FundC. Neal Fleming Memorial Scholarship Endowment FundFlorence Family Scholarship FundGarda Scholarship EndowmentW. H. Gardner, Jr. Scholarship Endowment FundNicholas and Amanda Gelber Scholarship FundJohn S. and Lynn V. Gilbert Scholarship FundClair H. Gingher Endowment FundGeorge M. and R. (Lee) Grills Scholarship FundGulf Oil Science and Engineering ScholarshipHamamatsu Ralph Eno Scholarship FundWilliam J. and Patricia M. Hanenberg Scholarship FundThomas E. and Susan C. Harrington Endowment FundMarilyn A. and R. Keith Harrison, Jr. Scholarship Endowment FundHawk Family Scholarship FundSharon D. and William A. Hawkins III Scholarship FundGeorge R. Herbert Engineering Scholarship FundHogg Family Scholarship FundDr. Henry Kent Holland Scholarship FundHollett Family Scholarship FundJeffrey D. and Kathleen D. Ix Scholarship Endowment FundJoseph H. Jarboe Engineering Scholarship FundVinay J. Jayaram Scholarship FundKristina M. Johnson Scholarship Endowment FundOwen C. Johnson Scholarship FundEdwin L. and Lucille Finch Jones Fund # 1J. A. Jones Fund for Engineering # 2Alan L. and Carol M. Kaganov Scholarship Endowment FundRonald G. and Nedra A. Kalish Scholarship Endowment FundLee and Caridad Kenna Family Scholarship FundBennett D. Klein Scholarship FundEdward L. and Winifred M. Koffenberger Scholarship Endowment FundKumar Family Scholarship FundChun H. and Edith Lam Scholarship FundLang Family Scholarship FundEugene M. Levin Scholarship Endowment FundLilly Scholarship Fund for EngineeringSusan Edith Lown and Benjamin Franklin Kaiser Scholarship FundMacLeod Stewardship Foundation, Inc. Scholarship Endowment FundMatthews Family Scholarship FundMattson Family Scholarship FundRichard Maxwell Engineering ScholarshipDavid P. McCallie, Jr. Scholarship FundMcChesney Family Foundation Scholarship Fund

EndowedScholarships2014-2015 | Edmund T. Pratt, Jr. School of Engineering

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Annual FundDollars Raised2014-2015 (By Class)

Annual FundClass Participation2014-2015 (By Class)

$0  

$50,000  

$100,000  

$150,000  

$200,000  

$250,000  

HCC  

1966

 19

67  

1968

 19

69  

1970

 19

71  

1972

 19

73  

1974

 19

75  

1976

 19

77  

1978

 19

79  

1980

 19

81  

1982

 19

83  

1984

 19

85  

1986

 19

87  

1988

 19

89  

1990

 19

91  

1992

 19

93  

1994

 19

95  

1996

 19

97  

1998

 19

99  

2000

 20

01  

2002

 20

03  

2004

 20

05  

2006

 20

07  

2008

 20

09  

2010

 20

11  

2012

 20

13  

2014

 20

15  

Annual  Fund  Dollars  Raised  2014-­‐2015  (By  Class)  

0%  

10%  

20%  

30%  

40%  

50%  

60%  

70%  

HCC  

1967

 

1969

 

1971

 

1973

 

1975

 

1977

 

1979

 

1981

 

1983

 

1985

 

1987

 

1989

 

1991

 

1993

 

1995

 

1997

 

1999

 

2001

 

2003

 

2005

 

2007

 

2009

 

2011

 

2013

 

2015

 

Annual  Fund  Class  Par-cipa-on    2014-­‐2015  (By  Class)  

Annual Fund CampaignCLASS GOAL Dollars Raised Participation 2014-2015 % Participation Goal 2015-2016 2015-2016 2014-2015 HCC $239,000 $238,451 45% 48% 1966 $30,000 $28,710 35% 37% 1967 $52,500 $52,223 50% 50% 1968 $23,000 $22,958 46% 47% 1969 $17,000 $16,869 40% 41% 1970 $12,500 $12,431 44% 44% 1971 $85,000 $78,780 67% 69% 1972 $15,000 $14,960 46% 47% 1973 $91,750 $91,625 47% 48% 1974 $7,800 $7,640 44% 45% 1975 $15,000 $14,998 39% 40% 1976 $46,000 $43,366 39% 43% 1977 $39,000 $38,938 31% 32% 1978 $45,500 $45,450 36% 37% 1979 $63,000 $62,677 38% 39% 1980 $95,000 $94,076 40% 41% 1981 $250,000 $212,707 38% 42% 1982 $60,500 $60,286 37% 38% 1983 $99,000 $98,814 34% 35% 1984 $134,000 $133,651 38% 39% 1985 $90,500 $90,430 43% 44% 1986 $49,000 $46,504 36% 40% 1987 $108,000 $107,746 36% 40% 1988 $57,000 $56,659 43% 44% 1989 $58,000 $57,638 37% 38% 1990 $66,500 $66,301 41% 42% 1991 $24,000 $22,168 36% 39% 1992 $65,000 $64,978 36% 37% 1993 $28,500 $28,208 35% 36% 1994 $147,500 $147,213 31% 32% 1995 $19,000 $18,886 33% 34% 1996 $30,500 $28,402 39% 42% 1997 $37,600 $37,511 34% 36% 1998 $28,750 $28,630 32% 33% 1999 $18,500 $18,377 37% 38% 2000 $34,300 $34,240 33% 40% 2001 $35,000 $30,128 38% 50% 2002 $24,500 $24,413 36% 38% 2003 $8,100 $8,013 35% 38% 2004 $6,800 $6,778 27% 35% 2005 $17,500 $17,447 43% 44% 2006 $12,000 $10,702 42% 50% 2007 $9,500 $9,334 49% 50% 2008 $8,000 $7,702 44% 45% 2009 $19,000 $18,883 42% 44% 2010 $8,600 $8,533 48% 49% 2011 $12,000 $10,529 37% 41% 2012 $6,200 $6,107 39% 40% 2013 $6,500 $6,481 30% 31% 2014 $4,000 $3,963 24% 26% 2015 $5,500 $5,340 39% 26% 2016 $2,000 $0 0% 51%

Alumni $2,468,400 $2,397,854 40% 41.5%Parents and Friends $1,081,600 $1,126,569 Total $3,550,000 $3,524,423

2016 dukengineer 4948 2016 dukengineer

Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Press P’16 Mr. James E. Rehlaender P’07, P’09, P’12#*^ Mrs. Sarah Estes Relyea# Mr. Michael S. Rosenthal T’00 Mr. Sam B. Rovit T’79# Mrs. Suzanne B. Rowland P’14# Mr. Edward E. and Dr. Susan L. Fehrer-Sawyer P’16 Mrs. Susan G. Simon#^ Mrs. Gaye L. and Mr. James J. Stathis T’79, P’17# Ms. Lucia Bassett T’77 and Mr. Steven R. Steinhilber T’76# Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Franz Stern T’88# Mrs. Dorothy Swartz P’89, P’94#^ Mrs. Holly Tabernilla P’19 Mrs. Sheryl H. Ting Wang P’16 Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Treybig P’16 Ms. Priscilla Trinchet P’17 Mrs. Barbara S. Turnbull# Mr. Dennis Wang P’16 Mrs. Marion Theresa Rucker Watkins ESQ T’96, L’99# Mrs. Jessica Few Whitehurst T’94# Ms. Kathleen McConnell Williams T’80#

Washington Duke Society Partner$5,000 - $9,999 1948 Gordon L. Smith Jr.# 1956 William A. Kumpf 1957 Paul D. Risher 1958 Harold L. Yoh Jr.#*^ 1960 James N. Barton#* Walter A. Johnson Jan Lee Mize#* 1961 Tom E. Leib# Carl E. Rudiger Jr. 1962 Cleveland C. Kern Jr.#* 1963 Charles L. Grossman# 1964 James F. Rabenhorst#*^ 1966 Randolph K. Repass#*^ 1967 Stephen C. Coley# George H. Crowell# 1969 Robert Charles Marlay 1971 David W. Erdman Brian H. Kennedy 1973 Ozey Knight Horton Jr.# 1975 Mark E. Baldwin David F. Cammerzell 1976 Philip J. Hawk# John Thomas Fearnley Oxaal 1977 Robert L. Galloway Jr.# David P. Spearman# 1978 Henry Kent Holland#^ Jeffrey D. Ix#* 1979 Russell C. Albanese Kathleen D. Ix#* James E. Kemler Richard Bentley Parran Jr. Nicholas Zaldastani#

1980 Andrew Louis Kirby 1981 Amjad Bseisu J. Bradford McIlvain# 1982 John W. Barton Christopher Bertrand Cook# William Burris Gex# 1983 Farley William Bolwell William James Florence III# Steven Craig Rosner# Harold Lionel Yoh III#*^ 1984 Douglas Ernest Giordano Julie Anne Keenan# Sam Michael Liang Carolyn O’Hara Molthrop 1985 Richard Joseph Pond David Lloyd Pratt# Michael T. Yamamoto# 1986 Joseph Lang Aston Peter W. Flur#* Jonathan Michael Guerster# Lawrence Joseph Lang# 1987 Suzanne M. Gregory# Court Veghte Lorenzini Denise Allen Williams 1988 Carlton Hayes Gerber David Paul Kirchhoff# Franklyn Tyler Morrison III Tracy Anne Nickelsburg# Joseph Saldutti# Lee Jamie Tiedrich Jeffrey M. Yoh#* 1989 Dwight E. Galbi Kyung In Han Stephen Michael Nickelsburg# Sean Welch O’Brien Peter John Perrone# Steven Charles Sands Scott Edward Telesz# 1990 Michael Goodwin Cetta John J. Glushik# Ananth Natarajan Robert L. Seelig# 1991 Stacy Stansell Gardner#^ 1992 Mahesh Chandrakant Bhumralkar# John Patrick Rodgers 1993 Margaret Best Rodgers William John Scheessele 1994 Joseph Michael Bollinger, Jr.# Geoffrey Richard Erickson 1995 David Nathaniel Buza 1997 Bharet Malhotra Theodore Grey Perkins Bret Alan Rogers 1998 Amanda Hallet Gelber# Nicholas Robert Gelber# 1999 Margaret Prestwood Chiou 2001 Kevin Edwards Sarah B. Higgins

2002 Mr. Matthew Quinn Christensen

Parents and Friends Mrs. Marilyn A. Albanese Ms. Judith L. Anderson Mrs. Lisa Lew Aston T”86 Mrs. Sally Polsfoot Baldwin P’07, P’08 Mrs. Elizabeth Hanna Barton# Mrs. Michelle Henry Barton Mr. and Mrs. D. Theodore Berghorst P’04, P’09# Mrs. Michelle Totina Bollinger# Mrs. Kara Bolwell P’19 Mrs. Suha Riad Tawfiq Bseisu Dr. Karen E. Campbell# Mrs. Denise Schrier Cetta T’90 Mrs. Tessa Anne Chamberlain Mr. Eric Brian Childs T’01 Mr. Frankie Chiou T’97 Mrs. Jane G. Coley# Mrs. Jane Cote’-Cook T’85# Mrs. Nancy Melzer Crowell P’05, P’08# Mrs. Karin J. Dell’Antonia# Mrs. Elizabeth Dickinson WC’61#*^ Ms. Caroline Mae Dooley T’95 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Eckersley P’16 Mrs. Lynn Kendr Erdman# Mrs. Deborah Steinberg Erickson T’01 Dr. Sharon A. Essner-Podbela P’16 Mrs. Dorlisa King Flur T’87, B’88#* Mr. Matthew R. Gardner#^ Mrs. Kelly Matthews Gerber T’88 Mrs. Nicetas Giordano P’19 Mrs. Robyn Glushik# The Honorable and Mrs. David C. Godbey P’15, P’16 Mrs. Marie C. Grossman WC’63# Mrs. Kimberly Smith Guerster# Mrs. Sara Anne Hawk P’06# Mr. Jesse Hermann# Dr. Steven Patrick Higgins MD T’98 Dr. Valerie Lynn Hillings PHD T’93 Mrs. Edith A. N’64 and Mr. C. Roger Hoffman T’63# Mrs. Eva M. Holland#^ Ms. Leigh Ann Holt N’84 Mrs. Sarah Horton# Mrs. Mary English Johnson WC’59 Mrs. Polly Jo Kemler Mrs. Barbara T. Kennedy T’73 Mrs. Carol Rogers Kern N’64#* Mrs. Nancy Trettis Kirby P’09, P’12 Mrs. Sandra Smith Kirchhoff T’89# Mrs. Mary Gorter T’81 and Mr. Bradley R. Krey P’15# Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kritzmacher P’16 Mr. and Mrs. Roger A. Krone P’14 Mr. Alexander Pierre Kvamme T’10 Mrs. Katherine Broome Lang P’17#

Mrs. Bettsy Creigh Leib N’62# Mr. and Mrs. Donald Andrew Lewis P’07# Dr. Kelly K. Liang, M.D. P’19 Mrs. Robin Neff Lorenzini T’87 Dr. John Joseph Mastrototaro G’84, G’89 Mrs. Maura McIlvain# Mrs. Tamara Ann Milliken Mrs. Linda Greene Mize# Dr. David Charles Molthrop Jr. T’83 Mrs. Margaret Soracchi Morrison Mrs. Margaret Natarajan Mrs. Paula O’Brien Mrs. Sheryl Lynn T’84 and Mr. Robert E. Olson P’17, P’19 Mrs. Marjorie R. Oxaal Ms. Leslie Susan Parran N’79 Dr. Henry Garland Pavy, Jr. G’93 Dr. Maureen Keogh Pavy T’90, M’94 Mrs. Melissa Ellen Perkins Mrs. Margaret Cobey Perrone T’89# Mr. Joseph W. Podbela P’16 Mrs. Maureen Deanna Pond P’19 Ms. Julie M. Pratt P’14# Mrs. Carol S. Rabenhorst#^ Dr. Theodore F. Reiss# Ms. Nancy Margolis Risman P’14 Ms. Sally-Christine Rodgers#*^ Ms. Julie W. Rogers T’97, L’04 Mrs. Carol Rosner P’18# Mrs. Jeanne Kurtzon Rudiger Mrs. Petra Saldutti Mrs. Margie Sands Mr. Ian Simmons Mrs. Frances Street Smith# Mrs. Patricia Ann Spearman P’06, P’08, P’11# Dr. Cheryl R. S. Talpalar T’82 and Mr. Alan M. Talpalar T’83# Ms. Nancy Evelyn Tate P’08 Mrs. Susan Lynne Telesz# Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Udell P’18 Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Walker P’17, P’19 Mr. David Lawrence T’78 and Mrs. Mary Louise Wertz P’14# Mr. Brian Williams Mrs. Sharon Crutcher Yoh T’83#*^ Mrs. Suzanne Lee Yoh P’17#* Mrs. Yao Yuan Dr. Kevin X. Zhang G’93

Washington Duke Society Fellow $2,500 - $4,999 1944 William Charles Dackis# 1947 Warren J. Meyer 1956 George Jones Evans 1959 Peter J. Denker# Raymond Eugene Goodson#*^ William K. West Jr.# 1960 Edward E. Kaufman

Honor Roll 2014-15

Duke Annual Fund Leadership Giving Societies

President’s Society • Executive Cabinet $100,000+• Cabinet Member $50,000-$99,999• Executive Council $25,000-$49,999• Council $10,000-$24,999

Washington Duke Society • Partner - $5,000-$9,999• Fellow - $2,500-$4,999• Member - $1,000-$2,499

Recognizing Leadership GivingEach year, leadership contributions represent more than 75 percent of the Annual Fund’s cash total. These gifts provide the university with flexible resources to support a wide range of important needs. In recognition of these generous donors, Duke has established

a number of leadership gift clubs. Membership is renewable an-nually and is based on Annual Fund gifts made or facilitated by the individual and his/her spouse. Corporate matching gifts count toward membership if received or verified within the fiscal year.

President’s Society Executive Cabinet$100,000+ 1963 E. Towson Moore#* Parents and Friends Mrs. Linda L. Moore WC’62#* Estate of John C. Batten, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David Eklund P’18# President’s Society Cabinet$50,000 - $99,999 1962 William Walter McCutchen, Jr.#*^ 1971 John T. Chambers#*^ 1973 Fred Mehlert Fehsenfeld Jr.#^ 1981 Martha Lee Monserrate#^ John Michael Pearson#^ Jeffrey N. Vinik#*^ 1983 Daniel M. Dickinson#*^ 1984 Kenneth Thomas Schiciano#*^ 1987 Lawrence D. Lenihan, Jr.#^ 1994 Mr. Michael James Bingle# Parents and Friends Mrs. Eryn Ament Bingle# Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dahl P’15 Mrs. Gina Dickinson P’15#*^ Mrs. Suzanne White Fehsenfeld P’16#^ Mrs. Irene Lilly McCutchen WC’62#*^ Mr. Herbert Hardinge McDade III T’81#^ Mrs. Christine S. Pearson N’84#^ Mrs. Penny Vinik P’13#*^ President’s Society Executive Council $25,000 - $49,999 1960 Alan L. Kaganov#*^

1967 Jerry C. Wilkinson#*^ 1973 William Joseph Hanenberg# 1979 Charles A. Tharnstrom# 1980 James Drury Heerwagen# Timothy Peter Rooney#^ 1983 John Martin McDonald, III# Eric James Schiffer# 1985 Nelson Elbert Matthews Jr.# 1987 George N. Mattson II#^ Parents and Friends Mr. and Mrs. James C. Buie P’17 Mrs. Carol M. Kaganov#*^ Mrs. Jennifer R. Matthews P’19! Mrs. Holly Melissa Laningham Mattson# ̂ Ms. Denise Leslie McCain-Tharnstrom T’80# Mrs. Dawn Renee McDonald P’17# Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Bernard Meehan P’07, P’10# Mr. and Mrs. Biggs Cunnungham Porter T’76, P’14# Ms. Mary Massman Rooney P’14#^ Mrs. Karen Schiffer# Ms. Hilary A. Schneider P’19# Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Shannahan P’18Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Sternberg P’08#^ Mrs. Beverly Anne Wilkinson P’98, P’00, P’03#*^

President’s Society Council $10,000 - $24,999 1950 Robert Willis Chapman 1956 William John Swartz#*^ 1961 John M. Derrick Jr.#* Robert Allen Garda#*^ 1966 Thomas E. Harrington#*

1968 Donald H. Turnbull# 1970 R. Keith Harrison Jr.#* 1976 William A. Hawkins III#*^ 1977 Janis J. Rehlaender#*^ 1978 Herman Cone III# 1979 Douglas A. McGraw# 1980 Christopher Martin Relyea# 1981 James Christopher Daues# David Ivison Rowland# Armando Alejandro Tabernilla 1982 John Craig Hausman III Thomas Anthony Natelli#^ 1983 David McDowell Bennett# 1984 James Kelly McGowan# Andrew Murray White Katharyn Mountain White 1985 Stephen Ray Bolze# 1986 Scott Jay Arnold 1987 Cameron Harold Fowler# Michael George Rhodes#^ 1988 Michael Anton Harman 1989 Susan Green Daniel Robert Rudolph Wahl Jr.# 1990 Michael Patrick Dierks Alfred Winborne Mordecai 1992 Robert James Stets, Jr.# Seth Alain Watkins# 1994 Stefan Alexander Dyckerhoff Valerie Marx Love#^ Alan Lee Whitehurst# 1996 James Karl Henry Jr. Clement David Pappas 2000 Herbert Frederick Bohnet IV Stacy Lynn Pineles 2002 Alyssa Fanelli# 2009 Sahil Pankaj Patel

Parents and Friends Mrs. Betsy O. and Donald S. Bagley, II T’87, P16 Mr. Rodolfo A. Baquerizo Sr. P’15, P’17 Ms. Penny A. Bennett P’14, P’16# Mr. John W. Bernstein P’15 Mr. David Todd Bolno T’00 Mrs. Alicia Ann Bolze P’15# Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Bruno P’16 Mr. Barry Norman Bycoff P’06, P’09# Mrs. Cordylia Crook Chapman WC’50 Mrs. Donna M. Cone# Mr. Aaron Scott Daniel T’89 Ms. Diana Davenport P’15 Mrs. Linda Derrick# Mrs. Rose Kueffner Donnell WC’41#* Mrs. Wendy G. Dyckerhoff Mrs. Annie Lewis J. Garda WC’61#*^ Mrs. Mary Palmer Harman B’98 Mrs. Marilyn Agnes Harrison WC’61#* Mrs. Terry Hausman Mrs. Sharon Doyle Hawkins P’09#*^ Mr. William Doyle Hawkins T’14 Mrs. Stephanie Hawley Henry T’96 Ms. Kathryn Anne Hollister T’81#*^ Ms. Suein L. Hwang Mr. and Mrs. Steven Michael Klebanoff P’15 Mr. David M. Love T’94#^ Mrs. Abigail C. Mackenzie P’11# Mrs. Mary Nancy McGowan# Mrs. Marianne B. McGraw P’07# Dr. Bradley Lewis Miller T’81#*^ Mrs. Victoria Stover Mordecai T’91 Mrs. Karen Marie Natelli P’10#^ Mrs. Jean Parke-Wahl# Mr. Pankaj S. Patel P’09# Dr. Stephen Williams Powelson P’08

Young Alumni Leadership Society • $500-$999 for undergraduates 5-9 years out• $250-$999 for undergraduates 1-4 years out

Student Leadership Society • $100+ for current undergraduate students

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Paul A. Vadnais 1974 David Mark Upham 1975 David M. Wheeler 1976 Edward Anapol Laurie Catherine Conner Bayard L. Powell# 1977 G. Robert Graham George E. Murphy# W. Russell Scheirman II David B. Stewart 1978 Victoria Smith Bell Gary W. Burchill, Ph.D. Michael L. Gollobin Rebecca R. Lula#^ Pamela R. Moore Lisa Schichtel Orton Ph.D. Elizabeth Duggins Peloso#* Gregory Scot Wolcott

1979 J. Theodore Balph Bentley John Boger Cynthia Neuberger Brooks Albert N. Gore, III Alden S. Hart Jr. Joan Lowe Marks# Karen S. Martin Michael T. Plantamura David Michael Savard# Stephen R. Spector 1980 Keith Noman Cole Pedro Carlos Fenjves David Griffith Inman Jeffrey Warren Reedy Cynthia P. Walden# 1981 James P. G. Dalton Jr. Edward Ferguson Hendershot Simon Y. C. Lau

Keith D. Paulsen Richard Walter Pekala George Smith Plattenburg Jr.# Thomas Beck Robey Craig Jay Soloff 1982 Anne Fox Ayanian Danal Alexander Blessis Carolyn Naemi Chase Suresh Kishin Gursahaney Catherine Louise Iacobo Howard Ira Levy William Randal Mendez Thomas Ken Sawanobori 1983 Robert Charles Bourg James Arthur Cavenaugh III Allison Haack Glackin Elizabeth Sill Owen David Ross Pitser Deborah Treash Simpson Christopher Michael Waters 1984 John Dailey Barker Laura Bond Barker Benjamin Cabell Bonifant Elizabeth Ann Carter Jeffrey Steven Ebeling Kevin James Fellhoelter Andrew Justin Lawson Miss Deborah Jane MacKay Sarah DeCrane Norton 1985 Matthew Nelson Diehl Anand David Kasbekar Laura Criss Papp Phillip Reaves Pickett Kevin Douglas Romer Anthony David Ryan

Spencer William White Kemp Bowling Wills 1986 James Edward Albright David Thomas Dellaero MD Sam Ghazaleh Mark Allison Potsdam# Robert Freeman Shuford Jr. Steven Kent Stranne 1987 Robert F. Brandenburg, III William Andrew Colavecchio Marc James Falleroni Will Mercer Larkin Jr. Steven E. Lawson Gregory Allen Murray II Lisa Miller Willis 1988 Stephanie Ciccarelli Commander Richard Frederick Herbst James Robert Lowry Elmer Allas Ramirez 1989 Tricia Eisenstein Brentjens M.D. Christine Louise Hunter M.D. Thomas William Lattin Jr. Mark Kenneth Roche Frederick George Springman Elizabeth Christine Tyler-Kabara Ph.D. John Loyal Willis 1990 William Earle Beasley Jr. Cheryl Senter Brashears John Allan Dickson Paul Thomas Hertlein Brian T. Maurer Richard Edward Nicholas Timothy Lucien Proulx Hans-Peter Tandon Robert David Wescott Cheryl A. White Ross Martin Younger 1991 Eric Martin Free Daniel Raymond King Steven H. Lin Aurora Dawn Pryor David M. Thurber Kenneth Scott Weinberg 1992 Scott Douglas Booth John Joseph Devaney Jr. M.D. Jaime Daniel Hobbeheydar Christopher Kemp Hunt Jeffrey Scott McVeigh Elizabeth Ann Mittendorf James L. Pratt William Tilghman Schlough 1993 Louis Anthony Falvo III Michael R. Gustafson, II Gregory P. Lissy Brian Alex Pietrewicz# William Stephen Poole 1994 Henry Frederick Butehorn, III, M.D. James Arthur Grover

# James B. Duke Society: Recognizing those individuals who have followed the example and generosity of Duke University’s founder, James B. Duke, by continuing his vision through involvement and support, and by providing cumulative gifts exceeding $100,000, pledged or paid, to all areas of Duke University.

^ Braxton Craven Society:Recognizing individuals whose extraordinary commitment and leadership have helped transform Duke, just as President Craven transformed Union Institute into Trinity College, and whose generous support of the university totals $1 million or more, pledged or paid.

* Founders Society: Recognizing those individuals who have distinguished themselves by looking to the future of Duke and the School of Engineering, these members have generously established a permanent endowment for the School of Engineering to commemo-rate their loyalty and support in perpetuity. (active from 1980 through 2004)”

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1961 Ernest D. Taylor Sr. 1963 John C. Orr 1964 Richard Barton Fair 1966 Katherine C. Norris P.E. 1967 Howard P. McJunkin Jr.# 1968 Norman A. Cocke III#* Richard Nathan Wilkerson 1969 Joseph H. Jarboe#^ 1970 Alan G. Goedde Ph.D. 1972 Paul Ruffin Scarborough#* Gerald R. Whitt ESQ 1973 Mark Charles Davis Ph.D. 1974 Robert Edward Fraile 1976 Neal J. Galinko Edward T. Stockbridge 1978 Banks Jefferson Clark# Brenda Harrison Letzler 1979 David B. Dabney Jonathan Norton# 1980 Scott Alex Brandt Linda S. Floyd Marla Jane Franks Jeffrey William Miller 1981 Caroline S. Schlaseman# 1982 Gunnar W. Zorn III 1983 John Thomas Meaney Nicholas Joseph Naclerio# 1984 Page Ives Lemel David Roland Smith Frank Eugene Wierengo 1985 Eric Todd Chabinsky Debra Pistorino Parrish Barry Evan Schneirov# Ledi S. Trutna# 1986 Julie Hollander Grill William M. Ricci Michael L. Rigsby, Jr. 1987 Richard Hasbrouck Bevier Laura Beth Graham-Ford 1988 Greg Alcorn Thomas Alan Burger Jr.# Brian Joseph Hogan Salim Farouk Idriss Leslie Susan Prescott 1989 Christopher Lawrence Eisenbies 1990 Lisa Ann Bader Dennis Joseph Courtney Bruce L. Faulkner Christopher Bret Johnson 1991 Tanya Shoenfelt Nizialek# Joseph Croman Peterson, Jr. 1992 Douglas Alan Hardy Mark Bernard Williams 1993 Holly Morris Espy Jeffrey Kenneth Lopez 1994 Dennis Michael Feenaghty Megan Bishop Moore Anne Sempowski Ward

1997 Varish Goyal 2000 Daniel Robert Silver Gabriel Ernesto Tsuboyama Richard Stockton Vandermass 2001 David Richard Mandel 2005 Thomas C. Goltermann, Jr. 2005 Kevin Steven Parker 2009 Douglas William Bycoff 2011 Richard Y. Li

Parents and Friends Mrs. Karen Rose Alcorn Mr. and Mrs. Billy Charles Anderson P’11# Mr. Jeff Bader Mrs. Laura Fuller Bevier T’87 Mrs. Linda Anne and Admiral Frank L. Bowman USN (Retired) T’66 Mrs. Mary Anne Brandt P’16 Mrs. Mary Kay Burwell Scarborough P’08#* Ms. Bonnie Lynn Bycoff P’06, P’09# Mr. Lorne Victor Bycoff T’06 Mr. and Mrs. William M. Camp P’17, P’19 Mrs. Linda Pak Chabinsky T’85 Mrs. Wonmee Chun P’13, P’18 Dr. Charlotte R. Clark T’79, F’83, G’07# Mrs. Christine Courtney Dr. Leonardo Cruz Ph.D. G’68 Mrs. Lydia F. Cruz Mrs. Nancy A. Dabney T’79 Mrs. Elle Rallis Dackis# Mrs. Charron Denker# Ms. Amy Dering Mrs. Ann M. DiMaio Mr. and Mrs. William R. Dougherty P’16 Mrs. Sandra Eisenbies Mr. Thomas Kleberg Espy T’94 Mrs. M. Clare Fair Mrs. Cherie Fogle Faulkner Mrs. Juliana Feenaghty Mr. Andrew N. Ford Mrs. Susan Englander Fraile Mrs. Susan Elizabeth Goodson G’62# Mrs. Mansi Agarwal Goyal Dr. Warren M. Grill Ph.D. Mr. Roshan B. Gudapati P’17 Mr. and Mrs. Seetharaman Harikrishnan P’16 Mr. and Mrs. Merle C. Hazelton P’16 Mr. Matthew Healey Dr. Diane Holditch-Davis N’73 Dr. Marilyn M. Idriss T’88, M’92 Mrs. Anne Clark Jarboe P’04#^ Ms. Hayes Neely Jones T’06, T’08 Mr. Stephen Connell Jones T’06, X’11 Mrs. Lynne M. Kaufman WC’61 Mrs. Jenny Keh Mr. Allan Y. Kim T’88 Mr. Peter A. Land T’83 Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Leibowitz P’18

Ms. Angela Ann Lessuise T’00 Mr. Jonathan Robert Letzler T’78 Dr. Mary D. and Thomas S. Livingston P’15, P’18 Mr. and Mrs. Jayson L. Lutzky P’14 Mrs. Rebecca Cheryl Mandel T’03 Mrs. Elizabeth Toomey McCachren G’77 Dr. S. Spence McCachren Jr. M.D. M’79 Mrs. Mary Lou McJunkin Mr. Colin M. McKinnon T’77, B’82 Mrs. Patterson Neal McKinnon B’84 Ms. Susan Blake Meaney P’14 Mrs. Krishnaveni Meka P’17 Mrs. Elizabeth Roach Miller Mr. Steven David Moore T’93, L’96 Mrs. Jacqueline Morrison Naclerio ESQ T’83 Mr. Nicholas Daniel Naclerio E’17 Mr. Jason Christopher Nizialek T’91# Mrs. Lynn Norton P’13# Mr. and Mrs. Richard Laurence Parish III P’07 Mrs. Jennifer Elaine Peterson Mr. and Mrs. John E. Reid P’16, P’19 Dr. Cynthia Karfias Rigsby MD T’86, M’90 Mr. Guy Willis Schlaseman T’79# Mrs. Michelle Pinsky Silver T’00 Mrs. Anna L. Smith Mr. and Mrs. James M. Spellings P’15 Mrs. M. Virginia Stockbridge Mr. Michael T. Traylor T’89 Mrs. Michelle Domonique Traylor Ms. Anna A. Wu and Dean George A. Truskey P’10#*Mr. Mark Trutna P’17# Mrs. Anne R. West N’61# Mrs. Barbara Valk Wierengo P’13 Mrs. Betty Simmons Wilkerson Mrs. Stacey Wyche Williams Ms. Julie Suzanne Withers T’78 Dr. Pamela M. Zorn T’84 Washington Duke Society Member$1,000 - $2,499 1942 Robert Rivers Everett* 1944 Guilbert L. Brandon 1946 Alvin R. Murphy Jr.# 1949 Joseph E. Carson III Leon C. Cheek Jr. USMC (Retired) 1950 William Alexander Elrod 1951 Robert M. Borst* Charles W. Treat# 1952 William Davis McRae 1956 James A. Cavenaugh Jr.# Robert Eadie Harold D. Scheid 1957 John David Peyton 1959 Robert W. Anderson#* C. Leland Bassett#* C. Thomas Biggs Robert Bruce McFarland

John D. Roberts# Mebane E. Turner Jr. 1960 William F. Chambers Ph.D. 1961 Michael P. Bell Martin George Buehler Joseph M. Hunt, III John Nelson Kersey Bruce G. Leonard# 1962 Armon Dula Thomas Eugene Gallagher Charles Thomas Paul Colonel George P. Summers# 1963 George M. Grills#* Paul Allan Rauschelbach 1964 Admiral Grant T. Hollett Jr. Retired# Captain Michael Nickelsburg USN (Retired)# 1965 Nathanael Broker Douglas A. Cotter# William F. Cromartie Thomas A. Furness, III George P. Kelley 1966 Roderick A. MacLeod* 1967 Peter C. Brockett# Robert C. deGroof, Ph.D.# F. Barry McWilliams 1968 Kenneth Spaulding Chestnut Robert C. Phares Russell L. Schoudt Robert T. Summers# 1969 James D. Kemp Alvin H. Mayo Jr. Turner Whitted PHD Thomas M. Woodard#* 1970 Edward Doyle, Jr. Jonathan F. Llewellyn Robert K. Smith 1971 Robert W. Althaus# Robert W. Carr, Jr.#*^ Truman D. Donoho III Donald M. Helfer Chun H. Lam# Douglas S. Perry Curt A. Rawley# James L. Stuart ESQ# Allen F. Suit George Joseph White 1972 Frank Birinyi Edward G. Buckley Tedd H. Jett Paul Little III Alan D. Sherwood Giles Wesley Vick, III 1973 Robert R. Ando Walter Jeffrey Bishop# Glenn D. Jordan Jr. Scott Anderson McHugh John Francis Rodenhauser

Honor Roll

Dr. Ronald Jay Epstein Ph.D. G’96 Mrs. Ann T. Everett Mrs. Tina M. Falker Mrs. Kristen Falvo Mrs. June Dunn Fenjves P’08, P’19 Mrs. Susan Stix Fisher T’76 and Mr. Charles Avery Fisher Jr#. Dr. and Mrs. Albert J. Folgueras P’17 Mrs. Tamara Duncan Free T’93, B’99 Mrs. Linda P. Furness Mrs. Mary A. Gallagher Dr. Jane E. and Mr. Peter L. Garrambone, Jr. P’15 Mrs. Katherine H. Gelatt Mrs. Irene A. Ghazaleh Mrs. Susan W. and Mr. Mark P. Gitomer T’68, P’07 Mr. George B. Glackin III P’12, P’14 Mr. and Mrs Herman Samuel Glaswand P’10 Mrs. Charlotte Gollobin P’78, P’80 Ms. Jeanette Shelor Gore Mrs. Gloria Kathleen Graham Mrs. Dale Greenberg Mrs. Rosalie Grills# Mr. and Mrs. Keith A. Grover P’18 Ms. Julie Guest T’85 Mrs. Neerja Jain Gursahaney Mrs. Lenora M. Gustafson P’93, P’99 Dr. Kara Haas T’80# Mrs. Janet E. Harman P’17 Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Harrington P’08# Mrs. Carolyn Cantlay Hart Mr. and Mrs. Randell L. Harwood P’17 Dr. Xiaowei Sherry He Ph.D. G’91 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hedgecock P’18 Mrs. Patricia K. Helfer Ms. Karen Klein Herbst T’87 Mrs. Kristina Devlin Hertlein Mr. Stephen Phillip Hindman P’00, P’04 Mr. Vincent Paul Hindman T’99 Mr. Alexander A. Hockman P’13, P’14 Mrs. Lynn Hollett P’93, P’02# Professor Karla F. L’05 and Mr. Russell Holloway G’97 Mr. and Mrs. John J. Hoy T’67, P’09 Dr. Lucas Hsu Ph.D. G’91 Mr. Jairy C. Hunter Mr. George W. Huntley III T’64 Dr. Tadashi Ihara Ph.D. G’90 Mrs. Michelle Marie Ingram Mrs. Alison Giordano Ismael T’96 Mrs. Mary Ball Jackson Dr. Mudit Kumar Jain Ph.D. G’99 Mrs. Lora Witner Jett Dr. Kristina M. Johnson#* Mrs. Barbara Blue Jones# Mr. Samuel F. Jones#* Mrs. Elizabeth Neal Jordan P’13 Dr. Joseph F. Kabara

Mrs. Joyce M. Kasbekar P’18 Dr. Thomas Katsouleas# Mrs. Barbara B. Kelley Mrs. Andrea Robinson Kells T’99 and Mr. Richard Winfield Kells T’01 Mrs. Sally Kemp P’98, P’02 Mrs. Delia Chamberlin Kersey WC’62 Mr. Wonseok Kim P’16 Dr. Ram S. Krishnan G’75# Dr. Bryan J. Krol M.D. M’96 Mrs. Ji Young Kwon P’16 Dr. Meena E. Lagnese T’99 Mrs. Edith Lam P’00# Mrs. Elizabeth Bross Larkin Mrs. Ruth Ann Lattin Mrs. Annie Leung Lau Dr. and Mrs. Glenn W. Laub P’15, P’18 Mr. and Mrs. Danny Lavy P’16 Mrs. Melissa Berg Lawson Shin Ho Lee Mrs. Christine McCarthy Levering T’00 Dr. Stephanie and Dr. James Levey P’18 Mrs. Faith Frankel Levy P’17 Mr. Harold Leonard Lewis T’81 Mrs. Janis Moss Light T’78 Mrs. Barbara J. Lineberry Ms. Karen S. Lissy T’94 Dr. Jing Liu P’15 Mrs. Trilby Duncan Llewellyn WC’70 Ms. Deborah Lowham Mrs. Suzanne Lee Lowry P’05 Mr. Robert B. Lueck Mr. S. Scott MacLeod#^ Mrs. Christina Madhany T’07 Mrs. Jacqueline Leigh Majors Arwood Mr. Christopher Nicholas Manning T’95 Ms. Elena Daly Marcuss T”95 Mr. Justin Paul Markle T’00 Mrs. Neha Markle Dr. Steven Edward Marks T’78# Ms. Elizabeth Harper McCormick T’06 Mr. Howie McDonell Dr. Kathleen McGann M.D. P’16 Mr. John Edel McGrath P’14 Mrs. Sharon McHugh Mrs. Amy Murnick McKeag T’98, B’06 Mr. and Mrs. David M. McKenna P’16 Mr. Reginald McKenzie P’15 Mrs. Melissa Theis McVeigh T’92 Mrs. Sara Pettes McWilliams WC’68 Mrs. Radhika Menon-Jain Dr. Andrea E. Miller-Bruce P’15, P’17 Mrs. Helen Gail Mitchell McFarland Mr. Matthew Wood Mittelstadt T’99 Mr. Dominic S. Moffa P’18 Ms. Doris Morris P’15 Mr. William F. Morris III P’15 Mrs. Joan Perry Murphy# Mrs. Amy Larson Murray T’88

Dr. Inga H. and Dr. David R. Musselman P’17 Mrs. Jennifer Rachel Bentz Nagda T’96 Ms. Valerie Felice Nahmad T’00 Ms. Maya Nakhdjavani Rao B’11 Mrs. Kathleen C. Neibart Dr. and Mrs. Steven I. Neibart P’16 Mrs. Kristin Iager Nesline N’78 and Mr. Vincent Paul Nesline P’05 Mrs. Diann Miller Nickelsburg WC’66# Mr. Daniel Norton Mr. David Evan Orton G’79 Dr. Rodney Scott Owen P’14 Mrs. Jacqueline S. Paulsen T’82 Mrs. Robyn H. Pekala T’81 Mr. Robert A. Peloso P’05, P’06# Mr. and Dr. James M. Perry P’05, P’06 Mrs. Peggy Francis Phares Mrs. Andrea Jonas Pickett B’91 Dr. Daniel A. Pitt T’71 Mrs. Elizabeth N. Plattenburg T’82# Mrs. Suzanne Tucker Plybon T’80 and Mr. William Thomas Plybon P’14 Mrs. Carrie Elizabeth Poole Dr. and Mrs. Maurice R. Poplausky P’17 Mr. and Mrs. Edward Poplawski P’10 Mr. and Mrs. William D. Power P’17 Mrs. Susan O’Callahan Pratt T’92 Mr. Shangfei Qu P’09 Mrs. Melissa Ramirez Mrs. Melanie Johnson Raubach T’04 Mrs. Dorothy Joyce Rauschelbach WC’63 Mrs. Kathy Rawley# Mrs. Katherine Reedy Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Reilly P’16 Mrs. Jill G. Robey Mrs. Ruth Scott Rodenhauser WC’72 Mrs. Guadalupe Rojas-Krol Mrs. Lisajane Romer Mrs. Julia Whitehurst Roy T’85 Mr. Simon Paul Roy P’15 Mrs. Kelly Perkins Ryan T’85 Mrs. Johannah Diane Sakimura T’07 Mrs. Marcela Marie Sanchez Mrs. Diane M. Sawanobori Mrs. Lois A. Scheid Mrs. Jolyn Scheirman Mrs. Erin Kinoshita Schlough Dr. Jayshree Sethuraman Iyer# Mrs. Charlene Sherwood Mrs. Lori E. Shuford Mr. Gary Michael Simpson P’15 Mr. LeRoy Simpson Mr. Matthew Scott Slovik T’04 Mrs. Elizabeth Y. Smith N’70 Mrs. Dauretta A. Soloff P’13 Mrs. Kindra Spector Mr. Dean P. Stephens P’16 Dr. and Mrs. Robert Francis Stevens G’74, G’80 Mrs. Frances M. Stewart

Mr. and Mrs. William W. B. Stewart T’70 Ms. Elizabeth Ann Stivers P’15 Mr. Richard Leroy Strasburger Jr. T’10 Mrs. Catherine Stuart P’12# Dr. Ravi Subrahmanyan Ph.D. G’85, G’88# Dr. and Mrs. Ravichandran Subrahmanyan P’18 Mrs. Carole Summers# Mrs. Juanita Wilkes Summers P’04# Mr. and Mrs. Jingwei Sun P’18 Mrs. Pratbha Tanna P’03 Mr. David James Thacker T”97 Mrs. Meredith Tomlin Thacker Mrs. Anne H. Thompson Dr. David Y. Tong P’15 Mr. Haitao Tong P’18 Dr. James Dimitrious Torosis P’11 Mrs. Deborah Tracy-Proulx Mrs. Linda Lyon Turner Mrs. Karen S. Upham Mrs. Susan E. Vadnais Mrs. Stephanie Deidre Schueler Vick Mrs. Lynda S. Vickers-Smith P’98, P’00 Dr. Luis Villa P’00, P’13 Mr. and Mrs. John Vitha P’14 Mr. Mark Christopher Walden T’81# Mr. Peng Wang Wendy Wei Wang, Ph.D. G’98, G’99 Mrs. Helen Cho Waters Mr. and Mrs. Richard Watts P’18 Mrs. Jessica Bradley Weinberg Mrs. Kristine Atkinson Wescott Mrs. Patricia S. Wheeler T’76 Mr. Allen White Mrs. Nancy A. White P’02 Mrs. Cathleen P. Whitted Mr. Steven Blair Wilson T’91 Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Wayne Winterhof P’04, P’14# Mrs. Nancy Bodine Wolcott Dr. Catherine Louise Wood Ph.D. G’80, M’81 Mrs. Debra A. Woodard# Mrs. Chuanyao Yan P’18 Mrs. Josefine Charlotte Young# Ms. Jenny Ji Myung Yu Mr. Lewis E. Zaretzki B’99 Mrs. Lihong Zhang P’09 Dr. Zhiguo Zhang P’18 Professor Pei Zhong P’16 Mrs. Hui Zhou P’18 Mr. Christopher Zuehlsdorff

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Honor Roll

Maria A. Manning Heidi Pellerano Julie Davidson Rocherolle Nancy Rose Ryan Donahue 1995 Tomas H. Ayala Scott William Dubbeling Mohammad Belall Ismael Robert A McClung 1996 Ethan Isaac Berger Thomas M. Brundage James Douglas Campbell III Andrew Barnard Carver Daniel Vernon Ingram David Bruce Morton Suneel N. Nagda 1997 Stacey Jean Davis Francisco Javier Fernandez Sara Hassan Furber Gregory Joseph Anatol Murad Anita Marie Suchdeo Patrick Charles Thomasma Damon Christopher Waters Christopher Hilton Young# 1998 Adam Michael Giannone Julianne Marie Hartzell Jessica Beil Hindman Ram Mohan Jagannath Travis Michael Troyer 1999 Joshua Philip Arwood Young Jae Choi Vladislav D. Ivanov Anthony Lagnese Mark S. McKeag Ann Nelson Mittelstadt Jason David Stipanov

Eric Zen-Shah Wang 2000 Grant Allen Edward Keith Donnelly Eren Mehmet Ergin John M. Gagliardi, III Michael Sergio Hernandez-Soria Christopher Rowland Levering Adam Richard Schimel 2001 John Nathan Day Lauren Smetko Dieterich Charles Shih-Han Lin Justin Mulhern Offen Christopher Andrew Winter 2002 John Randolph Means 2003 Max David Cohen Charles Prentice Gelatt Amar Kumar Tanna 2004 David Brandon Jones Matthew Raubach 2005 John Robert Felkins Andrew B. Holbrook Jeffrey Michael McCormick Lindsay M. Smith Bering Tsang 2006 Omaira Caroline Brightman Qahir Madhany Mika Johana Tanimoto-Stroy 2007 Benjamin Schaefer Abram Eric Leigh Geller Noah Sakimura 2008 John Stephen Choi Christopher Michael Parides 2009 Molly Rebecca Bierman 2010 Alex S. Reinstein Mathavi J. Strasburger

2013 Yumian Deng Jennifer Eugenia Villa 2014 Carly Lutzky 2015 Mahkayla M. McKenzie Brian Alexander Tong

Parents and Friends Mrs. Kristen Elizabeth Albright Mrs. Katherine Kennedy Allen Mrs. Deborah Stoneman and Mr. Robert Mccray Altany T’77 Mrs. Marybeth Althaus# Mrs. Courtney and Dr. Kenneth Wayne Altman G’84, G’88, M’93 Mrs. Taimi T. Anderson# Mrs. Rosanna Ando Ms. Marisa Mena Avansino T’01 Dr. John Zaven Ayanian T’82 Ms. Evelyn Rebecca Ballard T’04 Mrs. Rebecca Bostian Bassett P’89, P’93# Mr. James R. Bell III T’78 Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bernstein P’17 Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bertsch T’65 Mrs. Mary Golson Biggs WC’62 Mrs. Claudia Bloom Dr. Beth S. Boger T’78 Mrs. Clare Marguerit Bonifant Mrs. Alyson Miller Booth Mrs. Mary J. Borromeo P’16 Mrs. Barbara Campbell Borst Ms. Catherine Jean Boyne P’15 Mr. Robert Lee Brashears Dr. Renier Brentjens Mr. David Jeffrey Brightman P’06 Mrs. Laureen Belle Brockett P’09, P’10#

Mrs. Carole Broker Mr. Anthony G. Brooks Dr. Robert W. Bruce P’15, P’17 Mr. John Albert Brunalli P’98 Mrs. Victoria Jean Brundage Mr. Woody Bucher III Mrs. Marcia Louise Buehler Mrs. Cristina D. Burchill Mr. and Mrs. Rob Burkholder P’18 Mrs. Lori Joseph Butehorn Dr. Jan Caryl Cantor-Hockman T’82 Mrs. Mary E. Caponera P’12# Ms. Kimberly J. Carahasen B”99 Mr. and Mrs. Gene A. Carlone P’97 Dr. Marjorie Barnwell Carr D’92#*^ Mrs. Jean Bradley Carson WC’54 Ms. Phyllis K. Cathey P’16 Mrs. Evan Trulove Cavenaugh Mrs. Mary D. Chambers G’65 Mr. Eric T. Chase Mrs. Carolyn Stanley Cheek Mr. Ming Chen P’17 Mrs. Carol H. Chestnut Mrs. Jenny Soonjoo Choi P’08 Mr. Lee Ciccarelli Ms. Mary Beth Clark P’18 Mr. William Christopher Clarke Ms. Carolyn V. Cotton Dr. Susan Amber Cummings P’11 Mrs. Maria Alcina Dalton P’17 Mr. and Mrs. Taiwo Danmola P’18 Mrs. Huong T. Dao P’16, P’18 Mrs. Julia C. T’77 and Dr. Eugene D. Day Jr. T’77 Mrs. Taylor Christine Day T’00 Ms. Diane H. Debrovner P’15 Dr. Ellen deGroof P’02# Mrs. Joanne Burke Dellaero T’86 Mrs. Susan Marie B’90 and Mr. Gregory DeMarco B’91 Mrs. Jennifer Tationa Devaney Mr. Walter John Dex Jr. T’88 Mrs. Yenii Chen Dex Ms. Shu-Guo Diao P’16 Mrs. Karla Diehl Dr. Claire Diep P’17 Mr. Christopher William Dieterich T’01 Mr. and Mrs. Mark L. Dinapoli P’17 Dr. Nam K. Do P’16, P’18 Mr. Jack Donahue Mrs. Tilly H. Donoho Mrs. Holly Dubbeling Mrs. Frances W. Paget Dudley WC’71 Mrs. Rose Marie Dula Dr. Preston Dunnmon T’80, M’84, B’02# Ms. Eleanor K. Durham P’16 Ms. Virginia Sugden Durham E’16 Mrs. Susan Huttenlocher Ebeling Mr. and Mrs. Mark P. Ellis P’16 Mrs. Catherine Shamon Epstein R’96

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Robert G. Dawson, Jr. (8)Richard L. Goldstein (9)Paul E. Heath, Jr. (16)Edward G. Jenkins (25)Leonidas J. Jones II (11)Kun-Ha Kim (22)Fred R. LePage (7)F. Sherwood Lewis (25)Charles T. Lindsay, Jr. (4)Lucas R. Lineberry (4)Thomas J. McDermott (6)David P. Montgomery, Jr. (24)Jerry W. Neal, Sr. (4)Rodney D. Neal (9)James W. Redmond (11)Douglas W. Rusta (1)Thomas C. Stapleford (3)Gene L. Van Curen (20)Donald G. Wasson (1)Harold L. Yoh, Jr. (8)

Class of 1959Robert W. Anderson (1)C. Leland Bassett (5)Michael S. Bender (25)William J. Best (25)C. Thomas Biggs (9)R. Wiley Bourne, Jr. (2)Kim C. Cannon (18)Anthony W. Clark (20)Ralph H. Clinard, Jr. (22)Norman W. Dean (24)Peter J. Denker (25)Archie L. Fitzkee (5)Bob Gamble (15)James F. Girand (12)Harrison C. Givens III (2)Raymond E. Goodson (2)Ronald L. Helton (5)H. Richard Kessler (19)J. Tate Lanning, Jr. (18)David A. Lower (22)Robert B. McFarland (18)Fred H. McIntyre, Jr. (22)Louis M. Mogol (16)David A. Page (25)Gordon D. Pyle (13)William A. Reichard (12)John D. Roberts (25)Powell S. Smith (2)Thomas R. Taylor (22)Mebane E. Turner, Jr. (17)William K. West, Jr. (18)C. Joseph Wine (5)Joseph A. Yura (22)

Class of 1960George Bandre III (14)James N. Barton (25)Thomas R. Bazemore (23)Jack B. Bowman, Jr. (2)William F. Chambers (21)Roger D. Crum (9)Richard P. Dale (4)Rix A. Dieffanbach (5)F. Paul Fisher (22)Harmon T. Gnuse (1)James R. Grube, II (18)Howard P. Haines (1)Arthur R. Henry, Jr. (1)Jerry W. Hillard (25)John W. Holt (1)Walter A. Johnson (2)Alan L. Kaganov (25)Edward E. Kaufman (25)Walter A. Konefal (22)Daniel E. McConnell (6)J. Samuel McKnight (25)Leland W. Miller (13)Jan L. Mize (25)Allyn S. Norton, Jr. (7)Larry E. Parsons (3)William J. Raynes (1)George E. Shank (9)George H. C. Shutt, III (22)Philip C. Smith (13)Gerald Strickland (25)

Class of 1961Michael P. Bell (24)Robert P. Biggers (13)Martin G. Buehler (19)Ronald E. Busch (22)John M. Derrick, Jr. (24)Carlyn E. Dinkler (2)James J. Ebert (22)Wilson W. Farrell (6)Robert A. Garda (25)C. Gary Gerst (3)Charles F. Gibson (12)Larry B. Hester (25)Theodore J. Humphrey II (8)Joseph M. Hunt, III (21)John N. Kersey (5)Tom E. Leib (1)Bruce G. Leonard (25)Henry C. Phillips (1)W. Mikell Powell (19)L. Russell Ranson, Jr. (11)Gerry E. Roberts (25)Carl E. Rudiger, Jr. (15)

Thomas R. Styers, Jr. (2)Ernest D. Taylor, Sr. (19)Kenneth Watov (3)William H. Wheater (10)

Class of 1962Albert T. Bowyer (2)Louis B. Bresee (24)Robert M. Burch (2)Douglas M. Chapin (2)Edwin L. Chesnutt (6)Joseph B. Clemmons III (9)David M. Dean, Jr. (17)Armon Dula (24)Thomas E. Gallagher (25)James T. Gobbel, Jr. (14)Richard A. Helwig (4)Randall C. Herring (25)Cleveland C. Kern, Jr. (6)William W. McCutchen (25)Thomas E. Newman (4)Tom Paul (21)W. George Roach (25)Robert W. Ross (24)J. Lee Sammons (25)Howard C. Shaffer III (17)Bernard M. Stanton, Jr. (17)George P. Summers (25)John H. Taylor (6)William M. P. Taylor (5)Robert M. Turner (25)Robert Voorhees (16)Robert E. Whitmore (11)Roger M. Williams (24)

Class of 1963George R. Bailey, Jr. (3)David W. Blumfeldt (2)Travis C. Broesche (12)Leon W. Couch II (7)Don A. Dettmering (21)Richard T. DeWitt (16)Robert “Sonny” Epps III (24)Carl L. Freeman (1)Warner W. Freese (13)George M. Grills (4)Charles L. Grossman (24)Robert J. Knorr (6)Fred T. Knowles (2)Ted S. Levy (24)William J. Lyren (14)Steven L. Matthews (13)Eugene C. Menne (24)Edwin H. Mumford (12)Sid Nurkin (24)

James T. O’Kelley, Jr. (6)John C. Orr (9)Charles M. Poel (4)William W. Price, Jr. (3)Paul A. Rauschelbach (20)Edward W. Snyder (8)Wilfred J. Vaudreuil, Jr. (21)George J. Wisecarver (11)

Class of 1964Sid E. Atkinson (13)Frank Berstein (15)Charles R. Bowman (5)Wayne E. Bridges (1)David A. Coolidge (8)Ray L. Cox (5)Richard B. Fair (1)Allan R. Haworth (3)Barry S. Hertslet (6)Robert W. Heyer (1)Grant T. Hollett, Jr. (15)Arthur C. Hutzler (4)Katharine E. Jordan (3)M. Esat Kadaster (1)James W. Kinsler (12)Stuart D. Leland (25)Richard C. Linger (7)Richard J. Morris (25)Michael Nickelsburg (25)James F. Rabenhorst (25)John H. Roediger (22)Stuart I. Rutkin (11)Robert A. Sewell (14)J. William Springer (25)Ronald C. Steed (4)Thomas N. Taylor (9)Douglas A. Thomas (25)David W. Trott (6)John A. Wanklyn (13)Samuel H. Williams, Jr. (9)Robert R. Wonsidler (2)G. Toms Yarger (25)

Class of 196529 Donors/56 Class Roll52% ParticipationJohn A. Abbott, III (24)Edward F. Baird (6)Nathanael Broker (6)Paul F. Brown, Jr. (17)Robert C. Campbell (12)Douglas A. Cotter (24)William F. Cromartie (16)Ronald B. Falciani (4)Edward W. Fishback, Jr. (5)

George H. Flowers, III (24)Jerry D. Francis (3)Richard A. Frazer (18)Thomas A. Furness III (1)John B. Goody (18)Quincy B. Hocutt (5)George P. Kelley (18)Paul V. Kirby (2)William Lanier (14)James R. Mathewson, Jr. (7)John C. McClain (6)C. Blake McDowell III (18)Lyman F. Narten II (3)James M. A. Parsley (22)Robert R. Reed (8)James R. Scuffham, Jr. (4)Terry A. Simpson (4)William A. Simpson (19)Michael S. Walsh, Jr. (20)Richard B. Woods, Jr. (11)

Class of 196625 Donors/72 Class Roll35% ParticipationRobert N. Armstrong (4)Jeffrey M. Brick (13)Charles H. Cruse (10)John A. Foltz (9)Harry P. Gray (4)Thomas E. Harrington (7)Grady T. Helms, Jr. (10)Roger W. Hughes (21)H.T. Lyons, Jr. (12)Roderick A. MacLeod (25)Frank A. Manola (25)William L. McClenahan (6)Judith A. Nicholson (11)Katherine C. Norris (23)William C. Pendleton (4)R. David G. Pyne (2)Randolph K. Repass (11)Charles H. Rogers (23)Hendrik G. M. Sijthoff (12)Rodney O. Stewart (5)Chris Stiles (15)Richard S. Thomas (1)William L. Thomas III (6)Samuel A. Walker, III (25)

Class of 196725 Donors/50 Class Roll50% ParticipationThomas S. Allen (3)Donald A. Ashby (6)Kenneth C. Behnken (24)

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Half-Century Club403 Donors/901 Class Roll45% Participation

Class of 1942Robert R. Everett (25)

Class of 1943Vance B. Martin (25)William H. Wetmore, Jr. (19)

Class of 1944Charles R. Bayman (9)Guilbert L. Brandon (25)William C. Dackis (1)Bruce E. Hogarth (25)W. Young Johnston (10)Robert E. Stroupe (3)Claude B. Williams, Jr. (22)

Class of 1945William B. Gum (25)Harold Ornoff (25)

Class of 1946Richard E. Bisbe (25)John J. Geier (5)Ronald L. Hutchinson (25)Alvin R. Murphy, Jr. (11)Richard D. Schwartz (17)Muriel T. Williams (18)

Class of 1947John C. Bullard (9)Arthur A. Edwards (25)George F. Epps (5)Eugene W. Griffin, Jr. (7)W. Jack Hardman (1)Israel S. Larkin (3)

Edward M. Linker (25)Warren J. Meyer (25)Clifford L. Sayre, Jr. (25)Ralph G. Simpson, Jr. (6)John W. Vaughan, Sr. (25)

Class of 1948John L. Knoble, Jr. (25)Edward P. Nickinson, Jr. (6)Wallace B. Salter (25)Gordon L. Smith, Jr. (25)Joseph A. Sousa (25)Don G. Virgin (8)

Class of 1949Richard A. Bugg, Jr. (12)Joseph E. Carson III (21)Leon C. Cheek, Jr. (9)Lindell A. Davidson (8)Fred W. Goodman (25)Walter P. Hardee, Jr. (25)W. Wallace McMahon (5)Irvin G. Speas (3)Julian M. Warren (13)Joseph F. Wells III (3)

Class of 1950Richard K. Best (19)Robert W. Chapman (4)Eugene Chesson (2)William A. Elrod (24)Jack B. Harris (19)George A. Lillie (25)Harvey H. Stewart, Jr. (25)George Trusk (25)Hubert L. Wilson, Jr. (25)

Class of 1951Robert M. Borst (12)

Richard L. Combs (25)Charles T. Duttweiler (1)Harvey E. Fiegel (25)Edgar C. Fox, Jr. (25)Clarence A. Johnson, Jr. (3)Peter L. Kastrinelis (1)Eugene J. Komlosi (23)Elwyn H. Lowe (6)William H. Maass (4)Arthur W. McConnell (20)Nichols J. Melton (11)Paul J. Miller (25)Eugene D. Pearson (4)John D. Rusack (25)Wesley H. Shirk, Jr. (3)Donald H. Townsend (8)Charles W. Treat (25)Nicholas J. Tronolone, Jr. (4)Wesley C. Van Buren (8)Robert L. Van Dyck (25)

Class of 1952 W. E. Ballard (25)S. Page Butt, Jr. (25)H. William Collins (20)Daniel N. Cote (6)Hubert V. Davis, Jr. (5)Otto W. Dieffenbach, Jr. (5)Charles C. Fishburne (1)William E. Hankins, Jr. (4)Kenneth R. Johnson (25)Kenneth E. C. Lloyd (21)Philip S. McMullan, Jr. (9)William D. McRae (25)Gerald K. Morton (1)Malcolm G. Murray, Jr. (19)Ralph M. Seeley (5)Ralph M. Winters, Jr. (12)

Class of 1953W. James Chamberlain (1)Eugene T. Daniel (1)Charles Sherfy Jones (16)Joseph E. Kennedy, Jr. (7)Lincoln D. Kraeuter (13)Forrest E. Nelson (8)Donald H. Rutter (17)F. Williams Sarles (5)Louis C. Tepe (3)William V. Wright (25)

Class of 1954Shem K. Blackley, Jr. (25)Robert M. Brown (25)George H. Dawson (9)Marvin C. Decker (21)Lewis T. Fitch (25)Joseph H. Healey (12)Gene L. James (5)Alfred E. Kerby (9)Lloyd A. Liatti (20)John W. Montgomery, Jr. (25)Thomas E. Perry II (4)Kirvan H. Pierson, Jr. (25)Marshall F. Reed, Jr. (9)Ronald L. Wilson (6)

Class of 1955Fred C. Aldridge, Jr. (2)Dan E. Bellinger (5)Thomas R. Foard (1)Rhett T. George, Jr. (2)Edward A. Hamilton (23)Burton E. Hannay (24)Norman J. Hart (7)Oscar T. Hines, Jr. (9)Richard J. Kraus (3)Paul W. Pritchard, Jr. (19)W. Shelby Reaves (5)William Russell (15)John L. Schmitt (27)Roddy N. Shingleton (27)Charles E. Slater (22)John G. Snyder (5)John D. Stone (1)Peter P. Van Blarcom (9)David L. Wagner (1)Gerard E. Woodbury (25)

Class of 1956Baron B. Adams, Jr. (10)Richard G. Amos (25)William D. Beck, Jr. (6)Robert F. Bradley (1)

Sterling M. Brockwell, Jr. (18)James A. Cavenaugh, Jr. (25)R. Reginald Chapman (25)Robert N. Clark (1)Robert Eadie (2)George J. Evans (25)Edgar J. Gunter, Jr. (8)Herman C. Hambrick, II (25)James E. Hardin, Sr. (17)George Huling (17)Paul D. King, Jr. (6)Thomas C. Kirkman, Jr. (19)William A. Kumpf (21)Norwood G. Long (3)Richard D. Manuel (25)Joseph Marchese (15)Robert S. Martin, Jr. (5)Harry W. Merz, Jr. (3)James F. Proctor (2)Commie W. Riggsbee (3)Harold D. Scheid (8)T. Donald Stiegler (25)W. John Swartz (25)Thomas E. Tabor (21)John C. Williams, III (22)

Class of 1957Edwin J. Boothroyd (4)Robert C. Clifton (3)Lawrence D. Decker (25)G. Roy Elmore, Jr. (19)Ben M. Frizzell, Jr. (12)Robert S. Goudy (2)Walter E. Greene (25)W. Edward Hammond (1)Donald H. Heim (15)Sidney G. Lineker, Jr. (22)Joseph W. Little, Jr. (25)Thomas F. Lowe (13)Henry L. Mahns (4)Donald F. Manning (25)Howard P. Meredith, Jr. (25)John D. Peyton (25)William E. Richardson (3)Paul D. Risher (20)Reef Ruefer (15)Parvin M. Russell, Jr. (10)John D. Spanagel (25)Roger W. Tatem (5)

Class of 1958Jon C. Bankert, Jr. (16)William M. Boyer (11)Curtis E. Cobb (2)William H. Cozart, Jr. (2)

Listed below and on the following pages are those Engineering Alumni that showed their affinity for the School by supporting the 2014-2015 Annual Fund Campaign. We are most grateful to those who donated to the School because they allowed us to reach 40% participation. Our goal is to reach a 42% participation rate in 2015-2016. Please don’t let your consecutive giving lapse by missing a year!

To better recognize our consistent donors, their names are denoted in bold for five years of consecutive giving. For those who graduated less than five years ago their names will also be in bold if they have given each year since graduation. Finally, to recognize consecutive giving over the years, we are placing the number of years you have supported the School in parenthesis next to your name. We will update the list each year to continue recognizing our loyal alumni.

THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!!

PRATT SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING 2014-2015

Annual Fund

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Annual FundJ. Erby Wilkinson (11)Ray L. Wooten (25)

Class of 197539 Donors/100 Class Roll39% ParticipationAthanasios Aridgides (9)Peggy L. Asplund (19)Mark E. Baldwin (20)Montford W. Bryant (18)David F. Cammerzell (3)Hugh G. Chilton III (5)Wade T. Cooper, Jr. (18)Frank J. Coulter, Jr. (25)Patricia T. Crisenbery (3)Tyler Dawson (4)Donald J. Ennen (25)David A. Ennis (11)David B. Epstein (18)Ian P. Fetterman (4)William C. Fletcher, Jr. (10)Michael A. Freeman (16)John C. Garvey (8)Frank W. Gayle (16)Michael L. Halladay (25)Gerald C. Hartman (1)John A. Hornaday, Jr. (5)R. Thomas Hower (2)Kent C. Hustvedt (12)Christopher R. Long (1)Martin R. Meyer, Jr. (16)H. William Prahl III (1)Cory D. Rind (16)Jerry C. Ruddle (4)Alan K. Schuler (18)Malcolm T. Shealy (3)William L. Shoemaker (25)Bruce D. Sterrett (25)R. Gregory Stortstrom (25)David Ullmann (16)Peter W. Waxter (14)David M. Wheeler (25)John S. Young, Jr. (1)

Class of 197637 Donors/96 Class Roll 39% ParticipationEdward Anapol (25)Bruce B. Appleton (19)Gary T. Brotherson (15)Jan W. Cacheris (19)Lawrence C. Caldwell (17)W. Winn Chatham (6)Laurie C. Conner (15)Peter J. Deutch (5)

Robert E. Donaho (24)Neal J. Galinko (25)Philip J. Hawk (24)William A. Hawkins (18)Stuart J. Heyman (25)George A. Irwin (2)Dwight T. Kernodle, Jr. (2)Kenneth R. Maples (21)Gordon E. Melville (18)Betsy Miller-Jones (17)Stockton Miller-Jones (17)DeWitt A. Nunn, Jr. (23)Margery F. Overton (2)John T. F. Oxaal (2)Curtis M. Pearson (13)Bayard L. Powell (25)Thomas C. Rearick (2)James A. Ritcey (2)William B. Scantland (5)James M. Snyder, Jr. (1)Jeffrey I. Spiritos (8)Edward T. Stockbridge (25)Max D. Ulrich (1)Dennis M. White (13)Robert K. Willet (25)J. Grafton Withers (5)William A. Worrell (14)

Class of 197737 Donors/120 Class Roll31% ParticipationM. Scott Albert (11)Steven C. Bartolutti (21)Jeffrey D. Blauvelt (11)Philip C. Buescher (12)Robert T. Crowder (8)Ana E. Diaz (4)Doug S. Doores (11)Stephen K. Y. Eng (16)Edith W. Fleming (8)Douglas W. Fredericks (1)Robert L. Galloway, Jr. (25)George D. Gehrett (10)G. Robert Graham (25)Bruce W. Hoffman (19)Elizabeth A. Hooper (1)Robert T. Hyatt (19)Michael C. Keel (18)Kenneth B. Keels Jr. (12)Robert T Kraemer, Jr. (8)William H. Lamason II (19)Robert G. Leech (25)David H. Llewellyn (12)Mary Z. Martin (25)Christopher R. Mellott (4)

George E. Murphy (25)Richard M. Prevatt III (13)Thomas F. Rahlfs (12)Janis J. Rehlaender (25)Robert B. Rosequist (1)W. Russell Scheirman II (12)Robert E. Schmid, Jr. (1)David P. Spearman (25)David B. Stewart (9)Collier T. Weiner (13)Cliff A. Younger (25)Barry L. Zalph (1)

Class of 197850 Donors/139 Class Roll 36% ParticipationArthur Astorino, Jr. (3)Elise T. Atkins (25)Scott B. Baden (5)Eric F. Bam (25)Francis H. Beam III (10)Victoria S. Bell (20)Melton C. Bost (7)Kathleen S. Bowman (1)Gary W. Burchill (3)Martin Cala (23)Banks J. Clark (20)Herman Cone, III (23)Richard O. Deaderick, Jr. (2)John K. Dolph (13)Jonathan P. Eagle (5)David S. Enterline (10)James B. Ferguson III (7)Eric L. Ferraro (5)Brian F. Gaston (6)Erik R. Gillman (13)Michael L. Gollobin (1)Dale T. Guidry (22)Richard A. Henrikson (14)Joseph G. Hitselberger, Jr. (5)Lisa G. Hoffman (20)Henry Kent Holland (14)John G. Hovis (6)Alison Ives (24)Jeffrey D. Ix (25)Joe M. Kellis (5)Robert A. Kilpatrick (2)Carolyn C. Leech (25)Brenda H. Letzler (10)James C. Lordeman (25)Rebecca Lula (19)Michael E. McConnell (7)Pamela R. Moore (14)F. Wesley Newman, Jr. (13)Lisa S. Orton (14)

Elizabeth D. Peloso (25)Charles W. Poppe, Jr. (1)Ronald L. Sapio (5)B. Davison Smith, Jr. (2)Randall T. Smith (14)C. Thomas Stuart, Jr. (20)Thomas S. Tully (5)Jackie Walker (15)Shao F. Wang (8)Richard D. Willis (16)Gregory S. Wolcott (24)

Class of 197954 Donors/143 Class Roll 38% ParticipationRussell C. Albanese (5)Michael W. Alston (18)Per K. Aschan (2)J. Theodore Balph (25)Bentley J. Boger (1)Cynthia N. Brooks (25)Beth R. Caron (2)Jill S. Cobbs (13)David M. Cobosco (1)David B. Dabney (2)Nancy Deacon-Davis (2)John C. Downing (4)Douglas E. Farst (17)Wilson M. Fraser, Jr. (1)Betsy J. Frauenthal (18)Albert N. Gore III (2)Laura H. Guth (1)Alden Hart (15)James D. Huey (9)Kathleen D. Ix (25)James E. Kemler (25)Helen Krauss (1)Donald K. Lee (22)Michael Lorusso, Jr. (19)Joseph M. Luchetski (25)Joan L. Marks (25)Karen S. Martin (13)Douglas A. McGraw (22)Scott F. Midkiff (5)John Milner, Jr. (25)Jay A. Nadel (20)Suzanne E. Nash (1)Jonathan Norton (16)Richard B. Parran, Jr. (18)Michael T. Plantamura (6)Scott D. Poelker (1)John W. Rathke (6)Cristian M. Rodriguez (3)David M. Savard (23)Alvin J. Sill III (25)

Laurence S. Sloman (12)Stephen R. Spector (25)Julia L. Stevens (5)Charles A. Tharnstrom (6)Jonathan D. Truwit (25)Barbara A. Vogel (12)Bradley G. Watts (25)R. Davis Webb, Jr. (25)Richard M. West (19)Bryan K. Wheelock (12)Thomas L. Whitehair (4)Nicholas Zaldastani (3)

Class of 198073 Donors/181 Class Roll40% ParticipationBetty Ann H. Abblitt (1)Nancy E. Alston (18)Katherine Andriole (12)Suzanne M. Beaumont (3)Clinton C. Bennett III (20)John Brandeau (2)Robert K. Brandt (5)Scott A. Brandt (2)Michele M. Carbonell (12)R. Gregg Caro (2)Antoinette M. Cecere (19)Keith N. Cole (1)Robert S. Conway (11)David O. Cook (25)Harry C. Dietz III (1)Brockton R. Ellwood (1)Pedro C. Fenjves (21)Lynn T. Flach (13)Thomas H. Flournoy (8)Linda S. Floyd (23)Tench C. Forbes (1)Marla J. Franks (25)Linda J. Gabbard (6)Richard C. Gaskins, Jr. (4)Thomas G. Geldermann (3)Anita G. Gieser (2)John H. Gieser (2)William M. Gilliland (4)David A. Goodwin (1)James D. Heerwagen (18)John G. Holland (8)Robert D. Huang (1)David G. Inman (5)Mary P. Jordan (1)Barbara Kieker (15)Andrew L. Kirby (25)William F. Larson (2)David G. Lutz (1)Steven T. Maher (5)

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Peter C. Brockett (24)Lewis M. Brodnax (12)Charles G. Browne (18)Stephen C. Coley (24)George H. Crowell (20)J. Harrison Daniel, Jr. (10)Robert C. deGroof (21)Marshall A. Gallop, Jr. (23)Donald S. Gaw (4)Robin W. Gould (1)Randall A. Henry (5)M. Parrish Hirasaki (14)Nina M. Lord (16)Howard P. McJunkin (12)F. Barry McWilliams (23)Herbert Mumford III (15)Lindsay O. Robinson (6)Frank M. Slater (20)Roger W. Stokes (18)D. Bruce Wiesley, Jr. (8)Jerry C. Wilkinson (24)

Class of 196825 Donors/54 Class Roll46% ParticipationKenneth S. Chestnut (6)Charles W. Churchman (25)Norman A. Cocke III (25)R. Scott Cross (6)Martin E. Falk (25)Tom Gunn (15)Lee M. Kenna, Jr. (19)Harold H. Lane, Jr. (2)Samuel P. Lapham (8)Charles H. Leach, Jr. (3)James E. Lunson, Jr. (25)Robert B. MacDuff (21)Dennis H. Mathias (19)Eric R. Myers (25)Kenneth T. Page (7)Lee D. Petty, Jr. (12)Robert C. Phares (25)Philip N. Post (2)Dan G. Robertson (14)Russell L. Schoudt (20)Peter M. Stetler (13)Robert T. Summers (8)Donald H. Turnbull (25)Robert P. Weismantel (25)Richard N. Wilkerson (18)

Class of 196928 Donors/70 Class Roll40% ParticipationSharon L. Bonney (23)

Thomas W. Brohard (5)Benjamin H. Cooksey III (2)H. Richard Emerick (8)William G. Fry (25)Paul A. Gottlieb (25)Ethan D. Grossman (9)Michael D. Harper (8)Henry T. Harris (18)F. Owen Irvine, Jr. (2)James R. Jackson (5)Joseph H. Jarboe (23)James D. Kemp (18)Daniel E. Kincaid (14)James E. Lenz (23)Robert C. Marlay (25)Alvin H. Mayo, Jr. (11)A. Dean Morgan (9)Richard A. Nay (25)Robert A. Phelan (13)Frederic M. Ramsey (11)James T. Riley (23)Brian W. Sheron (12)William T. Tita (2)Ferol B. Vernon, Jr. (25)William C. Webb (9)Turner Whitted (16)Thomas M. Woodard (25)

Class of 197026 Donors/59 Class Roll44% ParticipationJonathan Alper (13)Joseph H. Baden (6)Hubert V. Bailey (6)Walter G. Bashaw (18)Kenneth D. Bieber (25)David S. Crow (15)Edward J. Doyle, Jr. (3)Alan G. Goedde (24)R. Keith Harrison (28)Clifton C. Hickman (6)William R. Impey (2)Richard D. Ireland (9)Raymond J. Kuhlmeier, Jr. (18)Jonathan F. Llewellyn (25)Robert E. Milbourne, II (21)Robert T. Monk, Jr. (4)John G. Ordway III (19)Kenneth H. Pugh (6)David T. Simmons (2)Robert K. Smith (6)Richard S. Taylor (25)Ronald E. Terry (1)John D. Zegeer (25)

Class of 197155 Donors/82 Class Roll67% ParticipationRobert W. Althaus (25)Janice K. Anderson (6)R. Scott Bayles (23)Marion L. Blount (25)Stephen M. Bonwich (20)Robert W. Carr, Jr. (25)John T. Chambers (19)Robert E. Cheney (25)James W. Davis (8)Henry R. Derr (25)Truman D. Donoho, III (25)Arthur L. Downes, Jr. (25)David W. Erdman (25)Ted K. Field (25)Glen M. Gallagher (25)Vance D. Gregory, Jr. (22)J. Bill Hanson (25)R. Reeves Hayter (4)John H. Hebrank (7)Donald M. Helfer (25)Jack C. Holland (3)Michael D. Jones (18)Thomas R. Kagarise (2)Allen J. Kasden (2)John C. Kelley (25)Brian H. Kennedy (6)Chun H. Lam (25)David G. Marcelli (5)John S. Marold (25)Thomas D. Matlock (23)Thomas H. Medlin (25)Hunter Moricle (20)George T. Muller (3)Robert F. Olivere (12)Michael C. Parrott (25)Douglas S. Perry (7)William R. B. Potter (25)Curt A. Rawley (16)James L. Reese (25)Peter R. Romeyn (25)John H. Rudd (25)Charles G. Sandell (18)Charles M. Skinner (11)Jeffrey O. Smith (1)Duane Southerland, Jr. (25)James L. Stuart (19)Allen F. Suit (25)David C. Swarts (20)Clarence E. Thomas, Jr. (25)John L. Waldruff (20)Thomas L. Warren (25)George J. White (22)

Robert S. Willig (10)Phillip S. Wilson (1)

Class of 197232 Donors/69 Class Roll46% ParticipationSteven R. Bentson (4)Frank Birinyi (25)Edward G. Buckley (25)Joseph F. Chudecki, Jr. (21)John N. Crowder, Jr. (11)Daniel A. Dell’Osa (21)Thomas M. Dicicco (18)Paul S. Follansbee (8)George D. Graham (6)Samuel M. Grant (25)Donald P. Halsey III (1)Joseph A. Harland (19)Tedd H. Jett (25)Timothy W. Joseph (11)Ervin H. Kelman (9)David W. Kibler (1)Murray A. Korn (5)Robert Y. Li (6)Paul Little III (25)Stephen D. McCullers (25)Larry W. Mobley (23)William D. Needham (17)John H. Nicholson III (11)Royden P. Saffores (8)E. John Saleeby (18)Paul R. Scarborough (25)Alan D. Sherwood (25)Giles W. Vick III (5)Gerald R. Whitt (6)David M. Word (13)

Class of 197340 Donors/85 Class Roll 47% ParticipationRobert R. Ando (19)Joseph C. Bates III (25)Bruce H. Battjer (1)Henry P. Betz (25)Walter J. Bishop (17)Robert S. Bogan (21)John J. Borgschulte (7)Peter A. Bozick (10)Robert B. Brower (25)George G. Clarke (14)William E. Cowart (16)Dewey J. Cunningham (1)Mark C. Davis (5)John G. Dudley (25)John F. Dunlap (7)

Fred M. Fehsenfeld, Jr. (2)Donald W. Goodman (7)William J. Hanenberg (20)Edward R. Harback (2)Charlotte S. Harman (17)Ozey K. Horton, Jr. (25)Glenn D. Jordan, Jr. (5)James W. Lee (4)Kenneth W. Lumsden (6)Kenneth W. Marinak (4)Scott A. McHugh (19)James B. Nicholas (12)Donald R. Riekert (5)John F. Rodenhauser (3)Stephen B. Rogers (25)C. Christopher Ross (2)Randall J. Rost (1)Blair B. Sanders (13)Joseph H. Schmid (7)Warren B. Shaw (8)Mark G. Smith (1)James A. Strycharz (2)Michael E. Sullivan (2)Paul A. Vadnais (6)David H. Watts (25)

Class of 197433 Donors/75 Class Roll44% ParticipationJohn P. Ankrum (3)Dwight S. Aston (23)R. Jack Bowers III (8)Clyde R. Butler, Jr. (5)James D. Collins (2)Scott A. Crawford (1)John W. B. Curtis (14)Richard M. Ely (1)Robert E. Fraile (24)Robert A. Hyde (17)Richard C. Johnson, Sr. (2)Samuel G. Joseph (10)Bruce Klitzman (24)James E. Krekorian (23)Carl E. Lehman, Jr. (19)John M. Logsdon (23)James F. McAlister, Jr. (25)Capers W. McDonald (25)Stephen J. Montgomery (5)David E. Thomas (1)Philip W. Thor (24)D. Mark Upham (8)Stephen A. Van Albert (6)Philip H. Vorsatz (8)Samuel S. Waters IV (4)Stephen L. Whiteside (2)

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Nicolette B. Naso (25)Michael J. Natoli (2)Sarah D. Norton (12)Michele K. Peel (5)Amy A. Petersen (25)Walter M. Petroll (7)Kurt P. Pletcher (1)Dean W. Pletz (8)Dawn K. Pratt (25)Raymond R. Rackley (2)Scott H. Robinson (7)Brian F. Rockermann (1)Charles J. Rogers (24)Kenneth T. Schiciano (23)Phillip A. Scott (18)John B. Sibson, Jr. (6)David R. Smith (18)Andrew M. White (9)Katharyn M. White (9)Frank E. Wierengo (25)Christopher T. Wilde (22)Katherine B. Young (1)

Class of 198595 Donors/219 Class Roll43% ParticipationMatthew D. Bacchetta (16)Belinda A. Bacon (12)Peter T. Baker (2)Christopher J. Bedell (23)Paul G. Bernhard (17)Stephen R. Bolze (18)Susan A. Botyrius (2)Audrey V. Brown (2)Dale L. Brunelle (8)Richard G. Bryan (2)Eric T. Chabinsky (1)Caroline C. Chow (1)Karen E. Conover (4)Cynthia Cooper (7)Michael G. D’Antonio (19)Aileen M. De Soto (6)Matthew N. Diehl (1)Kevin A. Dorsey (11)David A. English (1)Richard A. Ferguson (13)Scott P. Gatje (25)Stuart M. Gaynes (19)Bryan C. Gee (18)Jane L. Gerb (16)Charles A. Gove (14)Sarah M. Greifenberger (12)Teresa A. Habacker (1)J. Joseph Handley (11)Michael P. Hebert (1)

Warren S. Hilton (1)Rebecca Inderbitzen (1)Tanya J. Johnson (6)Craig E. Jones (6)Anand D. Kasbekar (18)Bennett S. King (11)Felix D. Klebe (3)William H. Koch (6)Kenji A. Kojima (2)John A. Kollins III (3)Michael A. Korman (14)Roman M. Kowalchuk (21)Scott Kresge (4)Imad S. Labban (13)Jane A. S. Labban (13)Stuart J. Laidlaw (3)John R. Lambert (1)Jean G. Levett (25)Amy E. Lutz (3)Darren K. Maness (16)Marie L. Marchesseault (2)Christopher C. Marselli (1)Paul M. Matsumura (23)Nelson E. Matthews, Jr. (12)Laurence E. McCahill (1)Marybeth McGinn (16)Kevin B. Nace (25)James R. O’Connell, Jr. (15)Carol L. Ollen (1)Laura C. Papp (1)Debra M. Parrish (8)John L. Penvenne (8)Timothy D. Pettit (18)Phillip R. Pickett (6)Richard J. Pond (13)David L. Pratt (25)Henry M. Quillian III (1)James P. Rattray (2)Michael T. Renaud (1)Douglas S. Rex (4)Brian J. Roach (11)David E. Robbins (11)Robert E. Robinson, Jr. (13)Kevin D. Romer (6)A. David Ryan (1)Lisa M. Scales (1)Barry E. Schneirov (25)Bryan A. Shang (1)Jeffrey S. Spear (14)Anne P. Sprague (1)Ledi S. Trutna (22)Beth Urdahl (16)Peter W. Waring (6)Spencer W. White (17)Kemp B. Wills (18)

Roni H. Wolfe (13)Michael T. Yamamoto (17)Orest B. Zborowski (1)Mark R. Zilling (6)

Class of 198679 Donors/221 Class Roll36% ParticipationAnthony M. Abate (1)Daniel T. Adams (3)Samuel M. Al-Aish (1)James E. Albright (2)Thomas L. Antonino (9)Scott J. Arnold (6)Jun Asai (23)J. Lang Aston (1)Laura P. Baird (1)Mark R. Benz (19)David P. Boch (25)Elizabeth A. Brosnan (2)Jacqueline E. Brown (5)Heidi A. Cerjan (7)Curt A. Cimei (10)Richard Conway (3)Thomas C. Daily (15)David T. Dellaero (1)Lisa L. Dworkin (3)Linda S. Ermides (5)Gregory A. Esses (8)Jon R. Fahs, Jr. (5)Allen H. Farrington (13)Peter W. Flur (25)Gary W. Geck (6)Sam A. Ghazaleh (18)Jon K. Gotow (5)Richard M. Greenwald (16)Julie H. Grill (20)Jeffrey W. Grossman (1)Jonathan M. Guerster (25)Kurt W. Haas (6)Robert J. Harward (6)R. Barton Houck II (4)Katherine L. B. Humphreys (1)John M. Kuttler (8)Lawrence J. Lang (13)Kenneth B. Lazarus (12)Wayne M. Lefkowitz (4)Carmen S. Lehtinen (3)Robert S. LeVine (25)Evan J. Levy (2)Jane F. Mashiko (10)Douglas M. McCracken (5)Charles G. McKee (1)Thomas C. McThenia, Jr. (2)Kathryn L. Miller (1)

Michele H. Miller (25)Deborah L. Mooradian (1)Mark M. Murray (7)Amy M. Novak (25)Roberta G. Oyakawa (6)Anne C. Pappalardo (6)Jeffrey A. Parker (1)Murry K. Pierce (6)Mark A. Potsdam (25)William M. Ricci (5)Michael Rigsby (15)Laurence Rosenberg (4)Catherine P. Sarrett (5)Judith B. Schmitz (7)Howard A. Shoobe (2)Robert F. Shuford, Jr. (15)Mark W. Sikorski (15)John J. Stefanski (1)Dee M. Stewart (21)Steven K. Stranne (3)Elias J. Torre (25)Billie S. Walden (6)Paul A. Wiese (1)

Class of 198770 Donors/196 Class Roll 36% ParticipationHenrik Bacho (2)Anna E. H. Bampton (1)Richard H. Bevier (3)Robert F. Brandenburg III (12)Richard C. Brown (19)Mark R. Brubaker (1)Brenton E. Bunn (15)Robert G. Carter (5)David Ciaffa (15)William A. Colavecchio (6)Daniel C. Connell (1)James J. Dean (8)Karim S. El-Fishawy (1)Marc J. Falleroni (1)Nancy D. Feagin (1)Barron C. Fishburne (4)Cameron H. Fowler (22)Kenneth A. Fox (12)Phillip C. Gallagher (1)Laura B. Graham-Ford (9)Charles A. Grandy (8)Suzanne M. Gregory (21)Kenneth J. Heater (10)Michael K. Hillard (1)Barbara Thompson Isaf (9)Bruce D. Johnson (1)Will M. Larkin, Jr. (17)

Steven E. Lawson (9)Man Q. Le (1)David G. Leason (1)Lawrence D. Lenihan, Jr. (2)Timothy F. Loomis (1)Court V. Lorenzini (5)Robert P. Maliff (15)David L. Marchese (4)Jeffrey P. McCrea (5)Brett D. Mensh (1)Scott I. Merz (16)Gregory A. Murray II (2)Lowell Nelson (15)Roger W. Nightingale (25)Christopher M. F. Poli (2)Frederic S. Resnic (25)Hollace S. Rhodes (13)Michael G. Rhodes (11)Jeffrey D. Robison (1)William L. Rollins (4)Thomas G. Romary (1)Iyad S. Saidi (1)Reuben G. Schooler (1)Robert S. Shepard (1)Gregory C. Siuciak (1)Craig R. Stiffler (5)Martin C. Trively (4)John-Kelly C. Warren (8)Yaffa Weaver-Brown (16)Denise A. Williams (8)C. Eric Williford (2)Lisa M. Willis (21)Richard A. Wortman (6)Samuel C. Yoon (1)Phillip P. Zammataro (3)Joseph S. Zaren (2)Jeffrey W. Zimmerman (1)

Class of 198874 Donors/174 Class Roll43% ParticipationGregory J. Alcorn (16)Gerard W. Appert (21)Catherine C. Betor (3)Richard S. Bloomfeld (2)Rebecca R. Board (23)Douglas S. Bowman (2)Thomas A. Burger, Jr. (15)Christopher D. Caldwell (16)Pete Campbell (3)Kevin B. Catlin (16)Jackie T. Chan (7)Stephanie Ciccarelli (1)Jess T. Clark (16)Diane T. Crean (2)

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Annual FundBeverly Marson (15)Donald B. McGonigle (21)Donald C. Mikush, Jr. (14)Jean W. Miller (1)Jeffrey W. Miller (13)Paul R. Moulton (25)David Munnikhuysen (17)Gregory S. Nizich (5)Nancy J. Pelc (16)Jeffrey W. Reedy (20)Christopher M. Relyea (25)Timothy P. Rooney (25)Mack T. Ruffin IV (25)Andrew E. Scherer (25)Cheryl S. Sourbeer (1)Jonathan B. Sourbeer (1)Charles W. Stankiewicz (15)Dale R. Stanton-Hoyle (14)Lisa F. Stilwell (6)Douglas B. Strott (7)Joseph M. Szewczak (1)Lloyd R. Tripp (3)Larry D. Vandendriessche (18)Alison R. Vuille (6)Cynthia P. Walden (18)Warren R. Weber (12)Marc D. Weinshenker (23)Richard E. Williams (19)Craig A. Witt (18)Kyle S. Witt (18)

Class of 198166 Donors/175 Class Roll38% ParticipationG. Daniel Adams, Jr. (6)Richard L. Aicher (4)John W. Allison (4)Wilton D. Alston (1)Caryn L. Bacon (2)June T. Brennock (3)P. James Brentnell (1)Janet L. Brooks (1)Amjad A. Bseisu (5)Sara E. Bures (5)Kwokming J. Cheng (1)Alan R. Cohen (4)Robert B. Conner (1)Darryl W. Copeland, Jr. (20)James P. G. Dalton, Jr. (2)James C. Daues (11)David L. Drobeck (3)Laura S. Foulk (4)Joseph A. Gorvetzian (1)Edward J. Grogan (16)Edward F. Hendershot (20)

Deborah J. Herts (5)William A. Huting (1)Cynthia D. Kaiser (3)Patrick J. Keegan (25)Mark J. Keister (5)Brian S. Kelleher (4)Cheryl M. Laborde (1)Simon Y. C. Lau (10)Perry H. Leo (16)Michael W. Lutz (6)Linda W. H. Mackie (25)Carl E. McCants (16)Martha M. McDade (25)James B. McIlvain (21)Nicholas I. Morgan (9)Laurent Nicolov (8)Laura S. Nystrom (24)Keith D. Paulsen (2)J. Michael Pearson (7)Richard W. Pekala (25)George S. Plattenburg, Jr. (21)Edward J. Rapp II (3)Louise C. Riddle (13)Thomas B. Robey (19)Heyward G. Robinson (2)James B. Roseborough (2)David I. Rowland (12)Caroline S. Schlaseman (25)Wesley R. Scott (1)Janet L. W. Slagle (6)Craig J. Soloff (18)Armando A. Tabernilla (24)Thomas G. Tilden (9)Paul H. Trotter (1)Vestal C. Tutterow (23)John Tyson II (1)Philip B. Wah, Jr. (2)Michael S. Wainer (25)Janet M. Weber (8)

Class of 198267 Donors/183 Class Roll37% ParticipationS. James Abert (4)Anne F. Ayanian (15)John W. Barton (21)Alan R. Blankshain (2)Danal A. Blessis (16)John A. Board, Jr. (23)Robin K. Bochner (4)Carolyn N. Chase (25)Christopher B. Cook (25)Becky A. Cuthbertson (11)Hal A. Davis III (8)Scott H. Davis (3)

Randolph R. Few, Jr. (1)Kevin E. Flynn (16)Elizabeth A. H. Fortino (5)Edwin M. Geanes (5)William B. Gex (14)Jane W. Gezon (4)Virginia T. Gibbs (5)Nancy D. Glaser (5)Scott D. Greenwald (7)Suresh K. Gursahaney (1)Randolph M. Haldeman (10) John C. Hausman III (11)Akiko Hayashi (9)Steven P. Hayes (25)Catherine L. Iacobo (12)Mark R. Jeffers (18)Pamela C. Jenkins (1)Mark B. Kadonoff (18)Bruce T. Kroeschell (25)Mary Josephine R. Lee (1)Peter G. LeRoy (1)Howard I. Levy (11)Joel M. Marks (9)Barbara C. McCurdy (16)Bruce A. McDermott (5)Richard A. McDonnell II (6)William R. Mendez (10)Brian D. Miller (1)Thomas A. Natelli (10)Keith S. Novak (5)Lisa Z. Olens (21)John Ortiz (15)Anthony Pines (5)Mary O. Price (1)Jeffrey R. Rehm (2)David S. Rittenhouse (1)LeeAnn Robinson (1)Susan B. Ross (10)Kenneth G. Sandberg (19)Thomas K. Sawanobori (10)Mark J. Schaub (1)Mitchell J. Shein (9)Peter T. Tucker (17)Claudia H. Ziegler (1)Gunnar W. Zorn, III (24)

Class of 198366 Donors/194 Class Roll34% participationLillian P. Baldwin (1)David M. Bennett (20)Ivan L. Blinoff (13)Farley W. Bolwell (13)Robert C. Bourg (20)James S. Carter (25)

Thomas L. Carter (4)James A. Cavenaugh III (16)Crista V. Clancy (1)Bart R. Combs (5)J. Mark Dennis (13)Andrew Ditchik (1)Robert J. Ferrall (8)William J. Florence III (2)Jonathan E. Friedman (1)Graziano D. Giglio (16)Allison H. Glackin (25)Daniel M. Godfrey (1)Daniel J. Griffith (25)Boris I. Ilicic (14)Elizabeth T. Jolly (2)Bart R. Kessler (21)Mark Kitchens (15)David E. Korn (25)Anthony J. Lardaro (7)Scott J. MacEwen (13)Cynthia L. Manieri (25)Robert J. McAuliffe (14)John M. McDonald, III (23)John T. Meaney (13)Philip D. Miller (4)Nicholas J. Naclerio (5)Alan K. Novick (11)David S. Orlin (1)Elizabeth S. Owen (24)Eric G. Pfaff (1)David R. Pitser (25)David A. Rahdert (10)Terrence J. Ransbury, Jr. (16)Susan M. Ray (1)Matthew B. Reischer (1)Letitia E. Roe (6)Kathleen V. Rogers (2)Steven C. Rosner (10)John L. Russell (5)Julian Safir (1)Brian J. Savoie (3)Eric J. Schiffer (8)Allan B. Shang (6)James G. Short III (3)Deborah T. Simpson (8)David M. Strickland (25)Joseph C. Sussingham (3)James P. Toomey (7)Christopher M. Waters (2)Joseph B. Wood, III (19)Harold L. Yoh, III (25)Rebecca P. Zayatz (1)

Class of 198482 Donors/218 Class Roll38% participationGlenn D. Altchek (2)Bruce J. Andersen (21)John D. Barker (14)Laura B. Barker (14)Kym T. Bean (20)Benjamin C. Bonifant (6)K. Monroe Bridges (25)Andrew M. Brown (7)Robert G. Brown (2)David A. Brumbaugh, Jr. (5)Marjorie G. Bryen (7)Elizabeth A. Carter (2)John Chae (4)Robert M. Coleman (20)Andrew Cowan (16)David W. Craig (6)Stephen C. Davis (2)Jose B. De Castro (14)Thomas F. Dziwulski (12)Jeffrey S. Ebeling (25)Gregory G. Economos (1)Kevin J. Fellhoelter (2)David G. Fernald, Jr. (9)Tacie J. Fox (1)Brian L. Garrison (3)Omar Ghattas (9)Daniel R. Gilmore (24)Douglas E. Giordano (3)Leonard Ray Goldfarb (13)Gregory D. Graflund (9)David J. Gregory (11)R. Campbell Hewell, Jr. (2)John M. Iaconis (1)Anne R. Jacobson (25)Robert P Judd, Jr. (2)Julie A. Keenan (20)Joel C. Kent (1)Liisa T. Kuhn (1)Andrew J. Lawson (17)Richard B. Lazarus (17)Donald H. Leathem, Jr. (25)Wah K. Lee (7)Page I. Lemel (25)Samuel M. Liang (23)Gary W. Lyons (1)Deborah J. MacKay (6)Alain G. Magro (13)James K. McGowan (5)Carolyn O. Molthrop (9)Corell L. Moore (17)David H. Moore (20)Reginald K. Moore (4)

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Annual FundDavid M. Thurber (1)Matthew W. Twiggs (18)Meredith C. Upchurch (3)William D. Webster (14)Kenneth S. Weinberg (14)Dixie T. Wells (23)

Class of 199275 Donors/211 Class Roll36% ParticipationVictor S. Adler (4)Derek D. Albert (2)Kristy B. Arbogast (23)Kristen S. Bernhardt (12)Michael S. Bertisch (3)Alan D. Betensley (1)Mahesh C. Bhumralkar (16)Meesha M. Bond (1)Wendy S. Bonner (1)Scott D. Booth (18)Christopher A. Casper (5)N. Abraham Cohn (16)Richard G. Collins (1)Mark D. Crandon (1)Cyrus K. Dastur (4)Timothy Davis (13)John J. Devaney, Jr. (7)Greg A. Erens (11)Susan M. Eugenis (23)Tricia G. Gilbert (19)John E. Grupp (6)Karen M. Guido (23)Michael L. Guido (23)Jeff B. Hales (1)David B. Hanes (20)Douglas A. Hardy (18)Julie M. Hasenwinkle (3)Lisa M. Hibschman (17)Jaime D. Hobbeheydar (5)Delilah J. Huelsing (4)Christopher K. Hunt (1)Kristen B. Kardovich (1)James C. Lacefield (16)James V. Lawler (1)Kemper E. Lewis (17)Erik Lorscheider (9)Jarvis T. Lowndes (9)Elizabeth M. Lutostansky (4)Mark E. Mason (5)Andrew W. McCown (2)David W. McNabola (1)Jeffrey S. McVeigh (3)Elizabeth A. Mittendorf (1)Terry J. Myerson (1)Julia J. Nakhleh (22)

Brian J. Nalle (2)Joseph A. Oswald III (3)Ivan P. Parra (2)James L. Pratt (22)Anish D. Rajparia (6)Joshua E. Reiss (1)John P. Rodgers (19)Chris Roy (3)John A. Sartor (3)William T. Schlough (8)Peter V. Schroeder (4)Elizabeth J. Sciaudone (21)Eric A. Stach (1)Judd W. Staples (10)Robert J. Stets, Jr. (23)Bradley A. Stewart (12)Matthew C. Strauss (23)Kimberlee P. Van Horn (1)Matthew D. Wade (22)Sharon L. Washington (2)Seth A. Watkins (22)Mark B. Williams (6)Scott E. Williams (1)David J. Witzel (9)

Class of 199371 Donors/204 Class Roll35% ParticipationFilip Banovac (3)Sridevi V. Basavaraju (6)Adam W. Cates (22)Emil T. Chuck (1)Julie H. Cochran (16)B. Cason Coplin (22)Emily A. Crawford (22)Michael L. Davitt (4)David A. Deal, Jr. (1)Ian C. Doiron (4)Thomas S. Eppinger (22)Holly M. Espy (22)Louis A. Falvo III (22)Nicole M. Finger (17)James F. Fox II (16)Michael R. Gustafson II (7)Jeffrey A. Hancock (18)Thomas W. Hash II (18)Grant T. Hollett, IV (17)Jill M. Hudkins (6)Alva S. Huffman III (6)Stephen S. Huh (17)George W. Jordan III (7)Robert I. Kempfe (1)Karl W. Kottke (5)Peter J. Laz, Jr. (1)Laura L. Lenderman (22)

Gregory P. Lissy (14)Rickard C. Loftman (2)Jeffrey K. Lopez (5)Daniel H. Loughlin (20)Brian E. Mackay (7)Spiro J. Maroulis (1)Jay Moller (6)Pravene A. Nath (2)Christine M. Nesbit (9)Eric C. Nesbit (9)Erik N. Oberg (22)Stirling E. Olson (14)Gregory M. Organ (4)Graham A. Orriss (9)Jennifer K. Orriss (9)Abraham D. Palmer (22)Debra M. Parisi (17)Hong S. Park (5)Joseph C. Parker (9)Gillian F. Parton (3)Neeraja B. Peterson (3)Brian A. Pietrewicz (3)W. Stephen Poole (6)Vibhav N. Prasad (1)Richard T. Rhee (17)Margaret B. Rodgers (19)Michael K. Ryan (7)Joseph E. Schafstall (17)William J. Scheessele (6)Ershela L. Sims (11)David J. Sullivan (6)Jon R. Tervo (21)Jeffrey J. Tsai (4)Sheila C. Tsai (8)Tracy B. Verhoeven (16)David S. Wasik (18)David T. Wei (13)Stephen D. Williams (12)Jason N. Workman (22)Stewart S. Worrell (8)Robert A. Wyatt (4)Brain K. Yamanouchi (22)

Class of 199483 Donors/265 Class Roll31% ParticipationStephen C. Abate (18)Anthony J. Bellezza (11)Michael J. Bingle (17)Joseph M. Bollinger (19)Henry F. Butehorn III (2)Chalmers H. Butler (3)James L. Caroland (2)Candace E. Clary (1)Brian S. Clise (12)

Russell B. Copeland (21)Eric C. Correll (6)James P. Creighton (13)Taylor M. Davenport (16)Elizabeth A. Debartolo (21)Nancy R. Donahue (6)Michael J. Donnelly (17)Rebecca B. Drabenstott (9)Richard S. Dreger, Jr. (8)Stefan A. Dyckerhoff (10)Jason L. Ekedahl (21)Geoffrey R. Erickson (3)Dennis M. Feenaghty (12)Mark A. Golden (1)James A. Grover (19)Susan H. Guswa (16)Halim Habiby (12)Dennis J. Hanzlik (13)Brian L. Helm (6)Kevin M. Hilton (3)Steven C. House (12)Geoff L. Hughes (1)D. Talmadge Hull III (1)Warren H. James (6)Pamela D. Jobert (4)Chad R. Johnson (18)John R. Koon (2)Mark E. Kraynak (7)Wilson Y. Lee (8)Joseph A. Levitin (17)Audra P. Loftman (2)David C. Lott (4)Valerie M. Love (21)Joseph E. Mancusi (1)Maria A. Manning (4)Julie K. Marzano (1)M. Jonathan Mathers (7)Deanna J. H. Mathews (17)Elizabeth G. Mazhari (10)Megan B. Moore (8)Howard G. Nelson (20)Joaquim S. Neto (2)Heidi R. Pellerano (11)Malcolm W. Peverley, Jr. (13)Julia V. Phillips (21)Michael T Prewett (19)Michael L. A. Reams (17)Julie D. Rocherolle (2)Andrea R. Roddy (16)Christopher R. Salter (6)Robert G. Santos (13)Gayle H. Schlueter (1)Dana F. Schneider (9)Danielle W. Shelley (5)Mark V. Slominski (6)

Charles K. Smoak (7)James R. Sokolowski (15)Christopher J. Thornton (1)Andrew T. Vedder (6)Anne S. Ward (2)Alan L. Whitehurst (16)Jonathan M. Williams (15)Christopher D. Wilson (20)

Class of 199560 Donors/183 Class Roll30% ParticipationMatthew J. Alinger (19)Lisa L. Anderson-Hall (3)Thomas H. Ayala (9)Robert R. Bailey (20)Jennifer T. Bhojwani (16)Clifford J. Billings (20)Jeffrey E. Bischoff (6)David N. Buza (19)Michael S. Caines (13)Jeffrey A. Chard (17)Charles D. Choi (19)Allison B. Cleveland (13)Jeffrey J. Cook (3)Monica D. DelCampo (16)Scott W. Dubbeling (20)Richard E. Finley (4) James R. Funk (1)Elizabeth J. Gaske (13)David J. Genova (3)Heather A. B. Harries (20)Laura V. Hawkins (13)Mohammad B. Ismael (20)Michael J. Jurgens (12)Benli Kao (17)Andrew V. Kayes (12)Kevin G. Klinedinst (9)David A. Landau (10)Cristin L. Lawrence (19)Matthew B. Malchow (2)Brian K. Marchiel (1)Steven A. McClelland (18)Robert A. McClung (12)Joel R. K. Moody (17)Thanh Nguyen (4)Naomi A. Oak (20)Uche S. Osuji (4)Gregory D. Parker (9)Amit I. Patel (1)Brian T. Racilla (8)Marshall A. Robers (15)Judge Robinette (8)Vineet K. Sarin (15)Betts S. Slingluff III (6)

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Jeffrey M. Dodson (4)Christopher J. English (25)Erik T. Eppers (4)Kristen A. Fisher (10)Randall J. Fuller (11)Randy Geehr (15)Carlton H. Gerber (3)Thomas A. Godin (2)Robert J. Goebel (8)Richard S. Goldenson (24)Judith S. Gordon (5)James D. Hanemann (1)Michael A. Harman (11)Jill W. Hazan (1)Richard F. Herbst (13)Jennifer S. Hill (14)Richard K. Hill (14)Gregory O. Hjelmstad (2)Brian J. Hogan (1)Jeffrey W. Hughes (8)Salim F. Idriss (5)Gregory A. Janicik (10)Roger B. Johnson (3)Meredith S. Josephs (12)David P. Kirchoff (13)Conrad V. Langenhagen (2)Sarah E. Levin (25)David E. Levine (14)Eric T. Lind (1)Thomas S. Lindsay (15)James “J.R.” R. Lowry (21)Christopher M. McDermott (1)Margaret A. McDermott (1)John M. Meiggs (3)Steven P. Monti (22)Franklyn T. Morrison (1)Michael Munley (15)David E. Myers (3)Tracy A. Nickelsburg (22)Leslie S. Prescott (25)Elmer A. Ramirez (1)Randy Redmon (13)Tracey F. Reimann (25)Bartt H. Richards (18)Paul F. Ridgway (21)Charles M. Roebuck, III (23)William C. Ruotola (10)Richard W. Russell (6)Joseph A. Saldutti, Jr. (14)Philip A. Sigler (1)Lee J. Tiedrich (5)Kenneth R. Velleman (25)Steven L. Walker (1)Karen D. Wehner (1)Eric F. Winakur (18)

Charles W. Wyble, Jr. (25)Jeffrey M. Yoh (25)

Class of 198964 Donors/174 Class Roll37% ParticipationTroy G. Arnold III (8)Jeffrey G. Bassett (16)Steven B. Baumberger (3)Thomas M. Betor (3)Kevin J. Bozic (1)Tricia Brentjens (1)Kevin A. Brooks (1)Jonathan H. Burdette (2)Mary C. Carlson (4)Susan G. Daniel (2)Babita L. Deitrich (16)James M. Drozd (12)Christopher L. Eisenbies (3)Jason M. Ettinger (4)Todd C. Farley (2)George Fox, Jr. (18)Dwight Galbi (14)Giraldo J. Gutierrez (1)Tina M. Gutierrez (1)Kyung I. Han (2)Beth F. Hanson (18)Steven R. Harman (4)William F. Herbert, Jr. (17)Laura L. P. Hluck (20)Christine L. Hunter (14)David A. Igel (3)James D. Kolenski (2)Thomas W. Lattin, Jr. (5)Leonard H. Lee (1)Deborah D. Leland (2)Mia K. Nadasky (17)Stephen M. Nickelsburg (21)Kathryn R. Nightingale (25)Sean W. O’Brien (5)Richard J. Pattinson (25)Joseph A. Paydarfar (6)Peter J. Perrone (6)John W. Perry (1)Krista B. Ridgway (21)Jennifer K. Robinson (24)Mark K. Roche (1)Brad E. Rosenthal (7)Steven C. Sands (1)Peter J. Schwaller (7)Vijay M. Shah (21)Shereen S. Shermak (1)Frederick G. Springman (4)Scott E. Telesz (25)Stephen G. Tell (19)

Elizabeth C. Tyler-Kabara (23)Sheila K. Van Nederveen (11)Gregory M. Vaudreuil (1)Robert R. Wahl, Jr. (13)John L. Willis (21)D. Trevor Winters (1)

Class of 1990107 Donors/262 Class Roll41% ParticipationJohn D. Adkins II (1)Jamal Ahmad (14)Sean J. Allburn (6)Eric W. Anderson (15)Phillip A. Ayoung-Chee (2)Lisa A. Bader (1)Patricia M. Barr (2)Alan H. Baydush (8)William E. Beasley, Jr. (1)Susan B. Beauchamp (5)Torsten Berger (6)Katherine Y. Bielefeld (17)Matthew R. Bielefeld (14)F. Greg Bowman (1)Steven T. Boycan (6)Anne E. Brack (17)Cheryl S. Brashears (1)Ellen K. Brezic (4)Thomas K. Burnet (1)Joseph J. Byrne (1)Thomas K. Callaway (20)William P. Cerreta (1)Michael G. Cetta (20)Peter J. Chomyn III (14)Kai-I Chung (2)Andrew E. Clark (1)Gregory J. Clary (13)Megan K. Conover (4)Mark S. Conrad (6)Dennis J. Courtney (3)Bert A. Davenport (1)John A. Dickson (4)Michael P. Dierks (23)Jeffrey D. Dinkel (10)Shannon Dreyfuss (15)Christopher G. Duffy (2)Kenneth R. Dugas (25)Kenneth J. Dunleavy (12)Bruce L. Faulkner (23)Cynthia A. Fink (1)Christopher V. Forinash (19)Elizabeth K. Forinash (19)Amy B. Fowler (1)Rick Gayle (3)John J. Glushik (11)

Shawn J. Goodier (17)R. Brooks Gronlund (1)William A. Gutknecht (12)Daniel S. Hamburger (2)D. Gregory Hartman (1)Michael J. Heffernan (1)Paul T. Hertlein (19)Michael A. Hughes (4)Michael J. Isman (3)Chris Johnson (15)Andrew K. Jones (1)Elizabeth S. Joslin (20)Lance M. Kaplan (5)Mary M. Kile (16)Douglas C. Kley (9)Linda L. Kordziel (1)John M. Lang (1)Christine C. Lodge (14)Brian J. Mangan (2)David P. Matarazzo (3)Brian T. Maurer (2)Eileen B. MacDonald (1)John McDonald (2)Thomas E. McMullen (9)Keir P. Meisner (1)Brian E. Miller (1)Brenda Y. Mirabile (17)Alfred W. Mordecai (23)Ananth Natarajan (1)Richard E. Nicholas (25)Carlos R. Olarte (2)Robert A. Oliver (4)Robert H. Owens (22)Douglas B. Pfaff (19)Timothy L. Proulx (17)Henry C. Purdy (6)John P. Reddy (25)Robert L. Seelig (21)Brenda C. Shepherd (7)Anthony J. Sikorski (17)Brian P. Somerday (22)James R. Stalder (10)Samuel J. Stevenson (21)W. Mark Strickland (1)Hans-Peter Tandon (7)Edward L. Trimble (17)Torii P. Turman (1)Cheryl D. Vecchio (5)Jeffrey L. Warhaftig (1)Joseph P. Wedding III (3)Robert D. Wescott (11)James G. Whayne (3)Cheryl A. F. White (25)John C. Wroton (25)Ross M. Younger (1)

Class of 199163 Donors/176 Class Roll36% ParticipationMichael J. M. Arichea (19)Rob Aung (15)Paul M. Barnhart (4)Peter F. Biro (2)Sandra H. Bonat (1)Michael W. Broome (2)Andrew A. Butler (3)Bryan D. Cannon (1)James L. Chittenden (3)T. Glenn Coleman (8)Thomas A. Corpus (20)Jonathan L. Danielson (20)Steven D. Ertel (17)Richard L. Feliciano (14)Eric J. Felt (10)Eric M. Free (2)Alan D. Friedman (13)Stacy S. Gardner (24)Vickie L. Gibbs (1)Daniel C. Go II (5)Timothy A. Gosnell (15)Jon R. Hibschman (17)Robert Ari Hirschfeld (17)Josefina S. Hobbs (7)Stacey W. Johnson (8)E. Vincent Jolley (2)David C. Kaelber (2)William G. Karpovich (8)Jeong M. Kim (2)Daniel R. King (5)Eric W. Koehler (4)Carla M. Lawson (2)Benjamin H. Le Blanc (16)Steven H. Lin (11)Tanya Shoenfel Nizialek (17)Michael S. O’Leary (22)Scott D. Olson (3)Hamang M. Patel (1)John D. Pazienza (17)Christopher H. Pencis (21)Jennifer Boyd Pencis (21)Robert E. Perry (1)Joseph C. Peterson, Jr. (5)Denise I. Pittaro (1)Aurora D. Pryor (1)Michael D. Pyle (8)Timothy J. Rade (21)Thomas C. Robey (9)Paul L. Rodriguez (1)Barry S. Safier (16)Sheila F. Steele (24)Craig A. Straley (2)

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Ann N. Mittelstadt (14)Rebecca C. Nalevanko (2)Christopher Nygren (1)Laurel B. Passantino (11)Jonathan S. Pielop (1)William L. Portnoy, Jr. (3)Mia K. Rahn (4)William T. Seddon (5)Dipak P. Shah (1)Jason T. Shibata (2)Nickie Singleton (3)Kristina Smith (1)Suneeta S. Sohoni (2)Jordan P. Steinberg (13)Jason D. Stipanov (1)Sarah C. Townsley (16)Brian A. Turner (4)Daniel L. Wang (5)Eric Z. Wang (8)James G. Warriner (7)Steven E. Williams (9)

Class of 200069 Donors/210 Class Roll33% ParticipationGrant R. Allen (2)Jeffrey T. Barber (4)Todd E. Behrens (4)Carla W. Benigni (15)Herbert F. Bohnet IV (9)Adam M. Brown (4)William N. Camp II (15)Kevin Cheung (4)Li C. Cheung (4)Matthew A. Cornwell (15)Tate L. Crumbley (14)E. Keith Donnelly (6)Kevin M. Eckhardt (1)Mehmet E. Ergin (15)Eugene C. Farng (2)Brian C. Fox (3)John M. Gagliardi III (2)Geoff W. Habicht (5)Manish M. Hebbar (4)Michael Hernandez-Soria (15)Jeffrey M. Hindman (14)Laura Huang (9)Brian D. Jones (1)Michael G. Kamas (15)Daniel R. S. Kauffman (6)Sarah A. Knutson (2)Samuel R. Kuo (8)Bruce P. Lai (1)George C. LaVerde (11)Alice H. Lee (12)

Christopher R. Levering (6)Nana H. Little (5)Daniel C. Lowrie (13)Michael S. C. McTaggart (1)Jason L. O’Meara (7)Nirlep A. Patel (4)Stacy L. Pineles (11)Isai Ramirez, Jr. (1)Jeremy B. Ratz (13)Jacquelyn J. Renton (6)Nathan S. Samras (2)Adam R. Schimel (1)Albert J. Schuette, Jr. (4)Cary K. Shiao (3)Daniel R. Silver (15)Rebecca A. Simmons (2)Brian M. Stempel (13)Adam G. Stewart (13)Benjamin I. Strautin (9)Morgan P. Suckow (10)Dennis C. Sumera (10)Yushing E. Sun (3)Chi-Tsai Tang (1)Joseph S. Tate (4)Andrew P. Tojek (13)Gabriel E. Tsuboyama (8)Meaghan M. Turner (1)Paul H. Tzur (10)Justin L. Van Buren (15)Richard S. Vandermass (6)Elizabeth A. Vickerman (9)Peter A. Weld (2) Justin L. Wingo (1)Lauren K. Wisniewski (16)Kristin K. Wolfe (6)

Class of 200171 Donors/185 Class Roll38% ParticipationIngrid L. Abendroth (14)Brian C. Alonso (6)Brian R. Appel (3)Alexis L. Beatty (8)Ashish A. Bhimani (5)Christopher T. Blitz (13)James A. Bryan (12)Jonathan L. Caine (1)Ty A. Cashen (6)Emmanuel Y. Chang (1)Christopher C. Chiou (10)Mark R. Contarino (5)Stephanie S. Cook (2)John N. Day (11)Melissa V. Desnoyers (8)Lauren S. Dieterich (12)

W. Grant Dollens (2)Justin L. Doull (14)Jason B. Dunham (3)Kevin Edwards (2)Andrew S. Exnicios (6)Jessica L. Foley (14)Allison H. Gaskins (13)Stephan R. Gaskins (12)John F. Hack III (13)Bryn D. Harder (12)Gregory T. Hasbrouck (14)Sarah B. Higgins (14)Christopher B. Highley (12)Judith Jacobson (6)Aydin A. Kadaster (10)Kerry M. Kidwell (14)Jin S. Kim (7)Paul A. Klenk (14)Jennifer Koh (11)Rebecca M. Kohl-Gomez (1)Dwight K. Lee (1)Linette Lee (1)Charles S. Lin (3)Lauren N. Louis (14)David R. Mandel (6)David J. Marquard III (6)Thomas M. Meese (14)Mahesh R. Narayanaswamy (2)Daniel B. Neill (6)Justin M. Offen (4)Anthony M. Pettes (1)Clayton D. Poppe (12)James L. Ruth (7)Sophia T. Santillan (14)Nicole S. Schwartz (14)Nicholas W. Sehn (8)Harsha Setty (3)Amy C. Sharma (14)Navin Sharma (13)Theodore C. Shih (2)Harmander Singh (5)Lauren S. Stienes (13)Emily D. Tzur (10)Daniel S. Wang (2)Ashley A. Weiner (14)Michael E. Weissinger (6)Ngai C. Wong (1)Christopher A. Winter (3)Michael Y. Xia (10)Amol R. Yajnik (10)Kent T. Young (12)

Class of 200262 Donors/174 Class Roll36% ParticipationAdib Abla (3)Benjamin J. Aitken (3)Nader H. Al Ansari (5)Benjamin D. Atkins (10)Jesse L. Atkinson (13)Benjamin S. Borns (6)Cody Brownell (4)Adam P. Burns (4)Heather R. Byrd (13)John F. Cheng (11)Matthew Q. Christensen (5)Herbert J. Cooper (12)Joshua P. Davis (9)Andrew J. Declercq (2)Jeffrey S. Earhart (1)Sitaramesh Emani (1)Jon T. Enberg (1)Alyssa Fanelli (6)John A. T. Fath (8)Charles R. Forton (13)Julie K. Furt (13)Tan Gao (9)James A. Grant (1)Christopher M. Grocki (8)Jaclyn E. Hanifen (13)Sunil B. Hari (4)Benjamin M. Harrison (4)Susan Kaziny (9)Scott D. Kiffer (1)Kathryn A. Klima (1)David H. Lake (5)Daniel E. Librot (1)Kristina L. Lundberg (4)Christina M. Luquire (10)Patrick B. Luquire (10)John Means (13)Andrew J. Meyers (4)Steven R. Meyers (13)Ryan J. Miller (10)Deepa Mishra (9)Clark M. O’Niell (12)Sarah A. Park (12)Amil A. Patel (4)Kyle M. Richardson (3)Stacey L. Richardson (3)Mark S. Rockwood (5)James A. Romes (6)Maulin V. Shah (7)Laney S. Stoddard (12)Michael J. Tantillo (1)Stephen T. Thompson (10)Hung-Wei Tsai (2)

Stacey E. Tylka (3)Clinton D. Walker (13)Alfred Wong (4)Rami D. Zheman (13)

Class of 200358 Donors/168 Class Roll35% ParticipationJoseph G. Baltz (12)Craig R. Brown (2)Darin H. Buxbaum (12)Stephanie C. Chan (4)Nathan L. Chao (2)Reechik Chatterjee (1)Ka Y. Chau (9)David Y. Chong (10)Max D. Cohen (12)Michael L. Desimone (3)David S. Dipietro (9)Thomas L. Earp (3)Martin A. Elisco (12)Charles P. Gelatt (10)Anthony R. Geonnotti III (4)Keith J. Grawert (2)Elizabeth A. Herbst (10)Alexander L. Hooper (1)Saleem Hussain (1)Karen C. Hwang (5)Huikai Karol (7)Robert T. Kazmierski (12)Jeong M. Kim (1)David R. Kolstein (2)Mark D. Krasniewski (12)Gopind N. Kumar (5)Anu R. Lamba (1)Christine T. Lin (10)David H. Logan (6)Matthew J. Mailloux (12)David R. Maloney (1)Margaret F. Mandell (7)Victor S. Mangona (3)Michael B. Marion (1)Paige L. Nelson (2)Andy T. Ng (13)Rizwan A. Parvez (10)Vadim S. Polikov (12)Zachary M. Robertson (10)Daniel J. Roller (4)Christopher A. Ross (1)Robert W. Schneider (2)Elizabeth R. Strautin (12)Matthew F. Sutherland (3)Mausumi N. Syamal (2)Anthony P. Tagliaferri (1)Amar K. Tanna (12)

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Annual FundMelissa B. Stevens (1)Christopher D. Tapia (10)Tiffanie N. Towns (1)Beverly C. Tyler (3)Robert A. Vincent (1)Stephen M. Waite (7)Robert J. Waldner (4)H. Davis Ward III (8)Judd T. Willmann (12)James C. Woodring (5)Fair Leah Yeager (20)David R. Zalesky (1)

Class of 199680 Donors/204 Class Roll39% ParticipationSwati Agarwal (9)Alexander G. Agrios (1)Sherry M. Altman (8)Imron T. Aly (17)Andrew J. Armstrong (4)J. Tucker Bailey (8)Gary J. Barnhart (19)Ethan I. Berger (19)German E. Blomeier (5)Thomas M. Brundage (19)Frank Bruni (19)Eric B. Callaghan (9)James D. Campbell, III (17)Andrew B. Carver (19)Chui-Shan L. Chila (5)Brian J. Chung (19)Daniel V. Covello, Jr. (1)Angelo B. Cruz (19)Leslie L. Dickey (12)Laura B. Feeley (13)Phillip C. Gallagher (2)Sunil N. Gandhi (16)Geoff K. Gavin (19)Brett W. Goudie (2)Robert J. Haley (19)Jay D. Helms (1)Lorie D. Helms (1)James K. Henry, Jr. (15)Keren Hilger (3)Benjamin M. Holzman (6)Catherine N. Hounfodji (10)Daniel V. Ingram (4)Vinay J. Jayaram (1)Holly C. Kelly (4)Jason S. Kim (3)Andrew H. LaVoy (4)Jeffrey D. Lewis (19)Franklin J. Lin (2)Nathan R. Loomis (2)

Mark W. McIntosh (2)Jeffrey M. Milheizler (19)Brian M. Monroe (1)Amanda M. Montgomery (9)David B. Morton (4)William A. Mourad (1)Roberto C. Munoz (19)Suneel N. Nagda (8)Drew G. Narayan (4)Travis R. Nesbit (1)Michael T. Nowak (1)William R. Overall (16)Allison C. Pajunas (1)Clement D. Pappas (11)Robert J. Parsley (18)Estela J. Patron (17)Daniel J. Paul (1)Will J. Peppo (6)Nancy W. Pham (6)Alexander W. Rice (5)Evangelos B. Ringas (19)Christopher T. Sabatino (17)Derek K. Schubert (10)Kevin R. Schwall (16)Scott M. Shimp (19)Kristine M. Singley (4)Joshua B. Skudlarick (13)Daniel J. Sorin (16)Michael D. Swinson (4)Janis M. Taube (4)Shannon O. Thornton (9)Maura G. Tira (19)Joshua M. Unger (2)James S. Walsh (3)Wade Ware (5)Daniel P. Weinstein (17)Elizabeth C. Wong (3)Eric K. Wong (3)

Class of 199770 Donors/207 Class Roll34% ParticipationFrank A. Badalamenti (11)L. Ross Baker, Jr. (11)Peter C. Carlone (18)Natasha D. Case (4)Y. Alan Chang (1)Jim Chartier (4)Josiah C. Cocks (5)Amy E. Croot (18)Stacey J. Davis (4)Jeffrey W. Donnithorne (9)Lee Anne Duval (3)Steven W. Fass (9)Francisco J. Fernandez (4)

Melissa B. Field (4)James T. Fishburn (1)Robert P. Flowers (18)Sara H. Furber (2)Daniel A. Godrick (15)Varish Goyal (6)Geoffrey T. Hart (1)Amara L. Hildebrand (5)Melanie K. Hsiao (1)Elaine Y. Hsieh (6)Harris H. Hwang (13)Joseph S. Joson (5)Amy W. Kelly (2)Christopher C. Kelly (4)Sarah L. Kieweg (18)Mara E. Kingsley (5)Kurt E. Knaub (4)Robert C. Kunz (6)Morgan B. LaRue (12)Melanie J. Licis (12)Bharet Malhotra (6)Mi-Mi L. McCloskey (18)Theron L. Metz (18)Jeffrey K. Mills (14)Kevin E. Moore (2)Maureen L. Mulcahy (3)Gregory J. A. Murad (7)Rebecca E. Nadel (1)Sangki Oak (3)Theodore G. Perkins (4)Rebecca L. S. Peterson (18)Jason B. Piche (9)Richard Z. Polidi (12)Bryan S. Rheem (5)Heather Y. Rodin (14)Martina B. Roediger (11)Bret A. Rogers (18)Charles W. Saletta (18)Jill A. Schreifer (11)Todd A. Spears (18)Dierdre V. Strigenz (18)Anita M. Suchdeo (9)Susan R. Sweeney (2)Marwan K. S. Tabbara (25)Linda M. Thomas (13)Patrick C. Thomasma (7)Lanette Y. Tyler (6)Sanjay K. Vanguri (6)Matthew J. Walker (1)Damon C. Waters (1)Michael A. Wesley (18)Ian D. Wood (4)Christopher H. Young (13)Jennifer G. Zawacki (7)

Class of 199869 Donors/217 Class Roll32% ParticipationPaul G. Bamert (15)Kevin E. Bonebrake (5)Rajeev K. Chopra (5)Jennifer E. Coker (1)James D. Congdon (17)Jenny C. Darocha (1)Jeffrey C. Demenkow (1)Steven J. Drechsler (15)Alexander H. Feng (10)Samuel C. Fiechter (3)Amanda H. Gelber (14)Nicholas R. Gelber (15)Steven I. Geller (2)Joseph L. Giacobbe (12)Adam M. Giannone (9)Sacha N. Goodson (13)Kimberly R. Gordon (16)Russell S. Groves (14)Deborah C. Hartman (10)Julianne M. Hartzell (2)Matthew J. Hasik (4)Jessica R. B. Hindman (10)Edward B. Houston (4)William M. Houston (9)Faraz Hussain (7)Ram M. Jagannath (1)David M. Jordan (17)Robert K. Judge (12)Katherine L. Karazim-Walker (4)Teresa C. Kelley (6)Brian A. Kilpela (6)Julius C. Lai (17)Lawrence P. Lai (17)Marc R. Larochelle (3)Timothy P. Lessek (5)Jason F. Luck (2)Ross Mayo, Jr. (9)Patrick M. McLaughlin (12)Gerald S. Meyer (15)Robin C. Meysenburg (3)Rodrigo J. Morales (1)Sean M. O’Connor (7)Lee Ott IV (2)Yung H. Park (17)Audrey E. Penrose (4)Jennifer J. Peters (9)Bradley A. Phelps (10)Michelle E. N. Reichenbach (7)Lucas G. Rugani (15)Mark W. Sessoms (14)Pinata H. Sessoms (16)Scott A. Skorupa (9)

Neil N. Snyder, IV (17)Cheryl E. Starcher (16)Jesse J. Sturm (1)Frederic T. Tenney (9)Travis M. Troyer (16)Jonathan B. Tyler (6)Robert B. Vermillion (3)Justin C. Ward (1)Jason A. Wiley (5)Jonathan A. Wray (9)Matthew S. Wright (1)

Class of 199968 Donors/186 Class Roll37% ParticipationBrigitte M. C. Addimando (7)Timothy E. Allen (16)Joshua P. Arwood (6)Neil S. Berlin (13)Sarah S. Bernstein (13)Brian R. Bleus (12)Jennifer Brownlie (11)Chadwick L. Campbell (2)Margaret P. Chiou (6)Sam H. Cho (4)Young J. Choi (4)John C. Cocker (3)Richard T. Curtis (16)Jason W. Custer (1)Jason G. Darling (6)Anthony T. Debenedet (4)Harold C. Dunn (5)Megan T. Elfers (15)Jonathan A. Feifs (2)Marco G. Fernandez (6)Philip M. Garber (1)Karen E. Ginster (3)Angela Y. Giuffrida (10)Kevin P. Golart (2)Andrew W. Gonce (3)Amy M. Goodman (8)Kathleen R. Grishman (8)Brian G. Guernsey (4)Lisa L. Hughey (1)Vladidslav Ivanov (9)Lauren K. Katzenellenbogen (1)Jesse N. Krohmer (1)Anthony Lagnese (16)Jeannie Young Lee (16)Mark C. Lim (2)Kevin M. Lochner (1)Keri E. Lorincz (8)Matthew H. Lunn (6)Kevin B. McGowan (16)Mark S. McKeag (4)

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Annual FundLisa J. Burton (6)James J. Bush, Jr. (1)Blake H. Byers (1)Daniel E. Carlin (1)Aaron L. Carlson (7)Dennis J. Cattel (8)Rachel L. Chaitt (2)Vitaly Chibisov (1)Stephanie J. Chiu (5)Matthew D. Clements (6)Todd S. Cobb (3)Frank S. Coleman (8)Wade T. Cooper (8)William L. Cooper III (6)Elizabeth F. Courtney (4)Conlin D. Crow (8)John M. Dayton (6)Nishanth K. Dev (8)Frank M. Dreher (8)Natalie C. Eagleburger (8)Arthur C. Fischer-Zernin (5)Claudia Fischmann (2)Andrew A. Fitzpatrick (7)Amanda M. Fuller (7)Peter M. Gebhard (8)Eric L. Geller (5)Shaina M. Gram (2)Kelly F. Greer (8)Daron N. Gunn (4)Cameron A. Harrison (5)Richard C. Harting (8)Lori C. Hennemeier (2)Jeffrey C. Herbert (8)Meredith C. Herbert (7)Justin D. Hilliard (1)David Huie (5)Michael S. Humeniuk (4)Eric C. Hung (5)Bibek Joshi (8)John Kang (8)Turan A. Kayagil (8)Keigo Kawaji (1)David P. Kelley (5)Emily S. Kelley (8)Jeffrey A. Kessler (8)Harshvardhan Kondapalli (1)Tobias F. Kraus (8)Gregory B. Larkin (8)Tzuo-Hann Law (8)Brian J. Lewis (8)Andrew J. Longenecker (8)Adam G. Luchansky (4)Leonard B. Medlock (1)Shawn J. Mendonca (8)Meredith C. Min (5)

Kristin D. Morgan (6)Lu Morrison (8)Amy R. Motomura (8)Katie M. Myers (1)Phillip D. Nicholson (2)Wayne C. W. Parker III (5)Ryan C. Pertz (7)Molly M. Rhodes (8)Casey J. Rubin (1)Noah Sakimura (8)John M. Schoenleber (3)Andrea G. Schwartz (1)Todd M. Seaver (1)Timothy L. Shih (1)Jessica Son (4)Eric M. Spitz (8)Michael H. Stanley (3)Jason Strasser (8)Caroline A. Strojny (1)Bryan J. Van Dyke (5)Elizabeth A. Vasievich (8)Charles Wang (4)Aida M. Wiebke (6)Rebecca E. Wilusz (8)Wendy Young (5)Xiaoning Yuan (3)Xin Zheng (3)Michael D. Zimmerman (6)

Class of 200896 Donors/219 Class Roll44% ParticipationMargaret A. Abernathy (3)Robert C. Allen (4)Nii A. Ampa-Sowa (7)Timothy D. Antonelli (7)Scott K. Bailey (5)Dennis M. Bartlett (2)Michael E. Bauer (6)Drew E. Braucht (3)Matthew P. Burke (5)Andrew P. Camacho (5)Matthew F. Campbell (6)Ian L. Cassidy (6)Heidi Y. Chang (7)Dean S. Chiang (1)John S. Choi (2)Priscilla F. Chyn (7)Stephen T. Clark (5)Daniel Q. Coral (1)Homero Coronado, Jr. (2)John A. Crowell (3)Q. Chelsea Curran (7)William W. Davis (5)Rahul P. Dewal (3)

Audrei E. Drummond (3)Amauche Emenari (1)Thomas J. Feehan (1)Patrick J. Friscia (1)Audrey J. Gaskins (5)Aaron D. Gilbert (1)Philip J. Gorman (7)Meagan E. Gray (1)Karli S. Griffeth (5)Brandon R. Guard (5)Sara C. Guerrero (7)Benjamin B. Haynes (5)Brian P. Herrmann (1)Sara A. Hinds (3)Rachel W. Hoffman (2)William A. Hoffman IV (5)Yuxuan Hu (7)Alexander Hwang (1)Jordan B. Iceton (4)Eric A. Josephs (2)John M. Kearney (2)Michael A. Keel (6)Neha Krishnamohan (7)Chen Li (1)Yong Liang (1)Sebastian Liska (5)Cristian C. Liu (7)Peter A. Ludas (1)Arjun Madan-Mohan (5)Justin C. Maxwell (1)Alexander N. McKinnon (3)Gregory Meyers (2)Laura K. Moore (4)Arthur Mui (2)Christopher J. Neufeld (3)Holly H. Ohlsson (7)Eric J. Ojerholm (7)Chinyere T. Okoli (7)Christopher M. Parides (2)Lee M. Pearson (7)John L. Perkins (3)Drew G. Rindner (5)Alyx C. Rosen (6)Daniel L. Ryan (6)Michael T. Schaper (6)Jeffrey D. Schwane (7)Craig S. Silverman (4)Geoffrey L. Southmayd (7)William S. Strickland (1)John F. Sullivan (7)Rick A. Szcodronski (5)Megan K. Tooley (5)Adam R. Udasin (6)Leslie M. Voorhees (7)David M. Wagner (7)

Scott K. Wagoner (3)Terence P. Wallace (7)Andrew S. Waterman (7)Philip J. Wolfe (6)Yvonne J. Yamanaka (7)Edison M. Zhang (5)

Class of 2009114 Donors/274 Class Roll42% ParticipationErsen Akici (1)Peter W. Allen (6)Laura M. Angle (6)Brian N. Arnold (1)Samantha E. Beardsley (2)Jessica B. Becker (6)Daniel A. Beeler (6)Alexander C. Berghorst (6)Molly R. Bierman (6)Alexander T. Brehm (6)Seth P. Brown (5)David H. Bryska (1)Aidan M. Burke (5)Thomas A. Burkland (5)Aneesh R. Butani (2)Douglas W. Bycoff (6)Laura H. Chavez (3)Christal P. Chow (6)Katharyn Cordero (6)Rafael A. Cordero (4)Amanda J. Daly (6)Ana F. De Matos (3)Adam J. Dixon (6)Elana B. Edwards (7)Patrick J. Eibl (6)Arthur J. Everson (4)Gregory E. Filpus (1)Edmund P. Finley (4)Bryan E. Fleming (6)William G. Gardner (5)Christopher G. Gibson (1)Lucas M. Gong (2)Mikhail Gordin (2)Alexander H. Gorham (6)Benjamin D. Grant (5)William A. Gravely III (1)Jason P. Greenhut (5)Shi Gu (5)Xin Gu (2)Thomas J. Hadzor (6)Philip S. Harvey (4)Perry B. Haynsworth (6)Antonia R. Helbling (6)Peter J. Hollender (2)Andrew Hsiao (6)

Haonan Hu (1)Alexander G. Hunter (4)Ami S. Joshi (3)Shyam R. Joshi (3)Henry T. Jue (1)Daniel H. Klein (6)Mary Ellen I. Koran (6)David W. Kunz (5)Brian C. Lake (2)Aaron Lee (2)Ashley M. Lee (1)Daniel D. Lee (5)Alex S. Li (3)Vincent Y. Ling (6)Kassity Y. Liu (6)Tai T. Mai (5)Jenna E. Maloka (6)Eric S. Mansfield (6)Nicholas S. Menchel (5)Irem Mertol (5)Daniel W. Mistarz (6)David J. Mitteness (6)Todd E. Monson (3)Justin N. Mullen (6)Jessica A. Munn (6)Amy E. Munnelly (5)Kathleen M. Murphy (6)Mhoire L. Murphy (6)Adam L. Nelson (6)Andrew Ng (2)Dana R. Nicholson (6)Sahil P. Patel (6)Ian D. Peikon (1)Ryan G. Pitera (1)Preston S. Porter (5)Daniel P. Ravens (1)James V. Razick (6)Bryan P. Reisch (3)Paul M. Riherd (2)Alyssa J. Roessler (1)Christopher R. Rowland (6)Michael B. Russell (3)James L. Schulhof, Jr. (2)Michael L. Silver (5)Anne Sloan (6)Scott A. Steinberg (5)Bryan D. Stem (1)Whitney L. Stewart (2)Di Sun (1)Caitlin A. Therrien (3)Amanda C. Tong (6)Ibrahim K. Toukan (6)Stephanie L. Tupi (2)Christopher M. Wade (5)Yifan Wang (6)

2016 dukengineer 65

MinJie Tong (1)Noelle A. Trent (4)Dorion D. Watkins (1)Gregory M. Williams (12)Fran L. Wu (12)Mark W. Younger (2)

Class of 200461 Donors/224 Class Roll27% ParticipationJamie M. Alders (2)John D. Alexander (11)Michael A. Babcock (5)Megan A. Baldwin (7)Daniel J. Barrett (1)William O. Bell, Jr. (2)Jason Bhardwaj (8)Jonathan J. Bittner (11)Lindsay C. Boole (1)Christopher M. Boston (4)Jason E. Chatterjee (9)Udayaditya Chatterjee (8)Meredith M. Cheng (5)Kengyeh K. Chu (10)Hyun O. Chung (7)Patrick R. Colsher (3)Teresa T. Crowe (10)James M. Dayton (2)Jose D. De Ojeda (2)Christopher J. Dillenbeck (11)Allison M. Douglas (10)Jonathan D. Drillings (9)Joseph T. Elliott (5)Ethan L. Filip (1)Eric J. Gardner (6)Isik Gungen (3)Bradley H. Hledik (10)D. Brandon Jones (11)Jeffrey R. Jones (8)Jeffrey A. Keeney (3)Beum K. Kim (6)Megan M. Klenow (1)Jason B. Laderman (11)Jeffrey M. Lake (3)Paul A. Lisi (1)Harry B. Marr, Jr. (6)Patrick C. Mathias (7)Vito F. Mecca (11)Alice H. Meyer (11)Thomas C. Meyer (1)Zachary M. Novak (1)Shadia A. Oshodi (1)Michael R. Parsons (9)Matthew R. Raubach (5)Casey B. Reardon (1)

Georgia A. Richter (8)Christopher J. Sample (11)Sumit A. Shah (1)Russell Swagart (11)Neil G. Terry (2)Jennifer L. Thompson (4)Paul G. Toomey (1)Kevin L. Wong (1)Stephen T. Wu (8)

Class of 2005110 Donors/253 Class Roll43% ParticipationCharles Adams (1)Meredith W. Allin (10)Pasquale Arcese IV (10)Varun R. Baba (2)Noel Bakhtian (10)Jeffrey D. Burlin (10)Benjamin Burnham (4)Avery C. Capone (1)Jonathan R. Carter (9)Dennis S. Casey (8)Laura M. Castaing (10)Pengyu Cheng (1)Melvin H. Chiang (2)Albert P. Chu (1)Patrick R. Crosby (3)George A. Crowell (4)Michael G. Curcio (10)Danielle M. Davidian (3)Jeremy R. Davis (10)Pierre J. deBoisblanc (3)Julius K. Degesys (10)Brian O. Diekman (1)Kirk Donahoe (3)Jonathan A. Donahue (9)David R. Dorough (10)Andrew F. Dreher (10)Michael N. Economo (8)Aya Eguchi (1)John R. Felkins (10)Thomas J. Fernandez (5)James V. Finchum (7)Jacob J. Flomenberg (1)Andrew D. Galanopoulos (2)Haven R. Garber (10)Emma H. Giamartino (2)Darwin Goei (3)Thomas C. Goltermann, Jr. (10)Charles Gomez (1)Steven A. Gore (8)Michael Guadano (10)Twinkle R. Gupta (2)Charles T. Hagan IV (9)

Adam P. Hall (10)Megan Hanson (7)James D. Heaney (9)Bevin E. Hearn (1)Stacey Hero (8)Brian R. Hirsh (10)Vy U. Hoang (8)Andrew B. Holbrook (10)Todd Joseph (1)Bryan Justice (3)Tushar S. Kirtane (9)Jia-Wei K. Ko (1)Emily M. Kovalchick (10)David Kuban (2)Timothy C. Lamson (1)Richard M. Larrey, Jr. (8)Anthony G. Lau (4)Justin Leonard (1)Jennifer M. Libling (8)Bo Liu (9)Vincent C. Mao (9)Kyle A. McCarter (1)Jeffrey M. McCormick (3)John R. McDowell IV (6)Andrew Meyerson (2)Tiara C. Monroe (5)Douglas G. Mullen (4)Paul S. Nesline (10)Shaun M. Noonan (10)Yaw A. Nyame (10)Lauren Opoliner (10)Kevin S. Parker (10)Nathan M. Partin (1)Julianna S. Peacock (10)Andrew D. Portnoy (10)Michele E Pugh (10)Thomas Rawley (1)Melanie B. Roller (9)Merrill J. Roller (8)Allison B. Rosen (2)Sarah C. Ruffner (2)Susruta Sarathy (1)Michael T. Scott (4)Justin M. Shapiro (3)Nathan S. Sherrard (8)Lindsay M. Smith (1)Charles B. Soileau (4)Isaac E. Specter (7)Daniel Stepner (3)Jason S. Su (4)Joseph P. Tadduni (8)Jiromi Terawaki (1)Sean Timpane (6)Peter B. Toth (1)Bering Tsang (1)

Kathryn N. Weaver (1)Adam L. Weinberger (10)Jennifer L. Wilbur (10)Michael D. Zordan (4)

Class of 200694 Donors/226 Class Roll42% ParticipationBilal M. Aijazi (4)Christine N. Armstrong (5)Terry M. Arnold II (7)Alexandru V. Avram (5)Gareth T. Barendse (5)Nasir H. Bhanpuri (8)Justin D. Bieber (5)Jeffrey D. Boyer (1)Omaira C. Brightman (9)Joseph M. Bruni (3)Lorenna L. Buck (9)Katherine E. Bulgrin (9)Ashley J. Burns (9)Thomas A. Califf (7)John C. Champion (9)Rachel W. Champion (9)Zubair H. Chao (3)Elizabeth V. Chong (1)Patrick T. Cleary (2)Mark H. Connell (5)Michael D. Cote (7)David R. Crowe (9)Bonnie S. Davis (1)Robert R. Demason (6)Roger M. Diebold (8)Eric W. Dooley (6)James T. Elkin (9)Stephen C. Felkins (9)Steven W. Gangstead (9)James T. Garnevicus (1)Peter I. Golden (6)Joseph B. Gosse (1)Ryan S. Habbley (9)Ashleigh T. Hales (1)Hunter B. Halten (1)Matthew W. Hawk (9)Melissa Hawk (9)Clare B. Hawthorne (9)Derek R. Hower (9)Xinfeng Hu (1)William L. Hwang (9)Carolyn E. Jones (7)Daniel M. Kaplan (9)Andrew S. Katz (1)Clifton E. Kerr (3) Emily Y. Kos (9)Raymond T. Kozikowski III (8)

Jonathan S. Lee (5)Justin R. Lee (1)Kristen B. Lee (9)Jun Liu (9)Dorothy Lowell (1)Christopher H. Lubkert (5)Qahir Madhany (5)Matthew K. Mian (1)Albert G. Moore III (2)J. Cooper Moore (2)Christopher R. Morecroft (9)Emily M. Mugler (9)Ty K. Mukherji (1)Shelby A. Neal (9)Devin C. Odom (5)Sara K. Oliver (9)Courtney L. Olmsted (9)Branon C. Painter (9)Jianling K. Png (8)Brent G. Powers (8)Yupeng Qiu (9)Mahir H. Rabbi (1)Anna L. Rack-Gomer (9)Brooke L. Rennick (2)David J. Rodriguez (5)Daniel B. Rosenberg (9)Andrew R. Schmidt (9)Erik P. Schmidt (6)Roman G. Schwarz (5)William B. Senner (9)Blake E. Sowerby (5)Andrew M. Stalnecker (5)Peter L. Staver (3)Kathryn F. Sullivan (9)Mika J. Tanimoto-Story (9)Kimberly W. Truesdale (2)Margaret White (4)Caroline K. Wray (9)Randy M. Yamada (1)Brian C. Yeh (2)Adam J. Zuckerman (7)

Class of 200797 Donors/197 Class Roll49% ParticipationBenjamin S. Abram (2)Byron Alvarez (8)Jonathan M. Arnstein (1)Nicole L. Axelrod (8)Aaron T. Baxter (6)John B. Borofka (8)Elan H. Bresslour (8)Vijay K. Brihmadesam (8)Carlos D. Briseno III (2)Robert A. Buechler (5)

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Maurizio Martinovic (2)Annelise J. Mesler (2)Jennifer L. Molnar (2)Zaki D. Moustafa (3)James W. Mullally (3)Keith B. Norman, Jr. (1)Michael D. Oberst (1)Izundu C. Obi-Onuoha (3)Albert K. Oh (2)Flavio K. Ono (1)Jeffrey W. Peyser (3)David K. Piech (2)David C. Radford (3)Vijay Ram (2)Catherine W. Ramsey (3)Jordan H. Rehlaender (3)Michael R. Rhodes (3)Andrew G. Rohm (3)Roshan K. Sadanani (3)Steven L. Schlaseman (3)Aaron D. Schroeder (3)Thomas G. Schuhmann, Jr. (2)Robyn N. Schwartzman (3)Han-Yu Shen (2)Lauren E. Shwisberg (3)Alex B. Sloan (3)Martin H. Steren (3)Michael S. Sullivan (3)Haosi Sun (1)Ross K. Taggart (3)Anna C. Territo (3)Daniel P. Tweed-Kent (1)David R. Vander Schaaf (2)Craig J. Wasilewsky (2)Katrina M. Wisdom (1)Thomas Q. Xu (3)Xin Xu (1)Jiaqi Yan (3)Ross M. Younger (2)

Class of 201387 Donors/291 Class Roll30% ParticipationJohan Adami (1)Jennifer M. Arnold (2)Supriya M. Balachander (2)Thomas M. Bierbower (2)Matthew Brown (1)Ross P. Cahoon (2)Michael S. Cai (2)Timothy A. Carlon (2)Natalia R. Carvalho (1)Frank Chang (2)Christine D. Dalton (1)Chris Dennis (2)

Joshua De Santiago (1)Yumian Deng (1)Kerri Devine (2)Alexander Dou (1)Hunter C. Douglas (1)Stephanie O. Dudzinski (1)Derek C. du Plessix (2)Robin L. Farrell (2)Lee A. Ferber (2)Matthew S. Fisher (2)Neil M. Gallagher (2)Christina A. Gancayco (2)Niloy Ghosh (2)Trenton H. Going (1)Juan F. G. Granados (1)Dwight J. Griffis (1)Erinn M. P. Grigsby (2)Ali Hartley (1)Jeremy D. Hockman (2)Colin A. Howard (1)Donald V. Husa (2)Owen Im (1)Kevin Jye Jen (2)Wei Q. Jiang (2)Mark Kagika (1)Hersh K. Lakdawala (1)Christine E. Larson (2)Carl E. Lawson (2)Cheryl J. Lee (2)Alexander T. Mariakakis (2)Mason H. Meier (2)Ryan D. Millner (1)Jessie A. Nadler (2)Davis J. Nelson (1)Andy Ni (1)Brian G. Norton (2)Amit Parekh (1)Bradley R. Peet (1)Nicholas Pignotti (1)Aimee R. Raleigh (1)James C. Rankin (1)Howard C. Ray III (2)Danielle S. Reinhardt (1)Michele Reshef (2)Gregory A. Robins (2)Devin Rojas (1)Michael C. Ross (2)Laura E. Sciarrino (1)Tejen A. Shah (1)Michael W. Simmonds (1)Alexander S. Skabardonis (1)Emily Sloan (2)Colette B. Soloff (2)Evan Strother (2)Bennie Su (2)

John Tran (2)Joshua O. Usoro (2)Jennifer E. Villa (1)Dazhong Xuan (1)Sahitya K. Yarlagadda (1)Steven K. Yarmoska (2)Chen Zhao (1)

Class of 201457 Donors/276 Class Roll21% ParticipationAndrew M. Ang (1)Jade M. Brown (1)Jessica Cao (1)Jeffrey S. Chen (1)Virginia Chen (1)Deborah Chi (1)Jordan A. Cirocco (1)Wyatt C. Colby (1)Natalie A. Cybriwsky (1)Shreyas N. Dahotre (1)Lucy C. Dawson (1)Sean D. Dickey (1)George W. Fan (1)Graham R. Friday (1)Mark A. Gockowski (1)Kelsey C. Goon (1)Ajeet P. S. Hansra (1)Jennifer E. Hewitt (1)Mark A. Hoffman (1)Amay N. Jhaveri (1)Michael J. Keane (1)Caroline M. Kiritsy (1)Katharine S. Krieger (1)Victoria Li (1)Helio C. Liu (1)Carly M. Lutzky (1)Scott T. Martin (1)Clinton R. McKelvey (1)Samuel N. Miller (1)Ellen F. Morgan (1)Jackson B. Morton II (1)Michael J. Mosser (1)Matthew E. Nagle (1)Jennifer M. Nichols (1)Adam C. Nolte (1)Matthew Palko (1)Daniel C. Patterson (1)Stuart M. Reit (1)James T. Risman (1)Glenn H. Rivkees (1)Adam A. Roth (1)Tianyu Shi (1)Timothy Shih (1)Robert T. Spratley (1)

Eric B. Stach (1)Bradley T. Stankey (1)Benjamin A. Stone (1)Danping Sun (1)Christine C. Tormey (1)Steven G. Wan (1)Christopher P. Waybill (1)Amber S. Witt (1)Kristie L. Yang (1)Arlens Zeqollari (1)Mo Zhou (1)

Class of 2015Senior Class Gift112 Donors/290 Class Roll39% Participation

Rachel E. AlbrightJessica B. AllenJachimike C. AmalunwezeRobert S. AnselRuslan ArdashevKayla N. BakhshianSteven W. BaoMatthew F. BaronGaurav BhatKyle R. BhatiaJulian C. BorreyEmily F. BriereKatherine E. BrockRobert W. Bruce IIISamuel D. ButenskyChristopher A. BuxtonAbigail R. CarignanEdward P. CatterallAllison M. ChaffoBojia ChenHoward A. H. ChenRhea D. ChitaliaGriffin A. CooperKendall M. CovingtonSpencer R. DahlMona Q. DaiJeffrey R. DayJohn M. DickinsonThomas M. DonleyJustin W. EricksonKatherine L. ErnstEric D. EssoyanNatalie S. FaheyIsa L. FerrallStefan E. FertalaJeremy A. FischerJames FlynnJustin J. FuThomas G. Garrambone

Ekaterina V. GorbachevaCharles J. GuthrieGrace Y. HanMatthew Z. HendricksDavid HuangAllison T. HyansZhiyu JiangLucas A. JohnstonKevin F. KeppelHyun S. KimJustine KimLindsey B. KirschenbaumAnna E. KnightTodd W. KoorbuschDavid R. KornbergTaylor R. LaubStephanie N. LaughtonCharlotte A. LawrenceCaroline LehmanVirginia N. LehmanJennifer A. LevinZachary S. LeytusAohui LinKatherine M. Livingston Andrew J. LokkerMatthew L. LuMengyun LuKatherine M. MacAdamKayla P. ManziPritam MathivananKenneth N. McAndrewsMahkayla M. McKenzieGregory R. S. McLeanShanice J. McLeanKevin P. McVayKitt L. MillerJoshua A. MitchellHenrique R. Q. MoraesGift NyikayarambaJason P. OettingerMax H. OrensteinAnshuman PrasadLe QiKarthika RajaJason E. RiceLucas W. RoseMatthew A. RoyDerek D. SchockenJohn B. ShoemakerLauren J. SilversteinMorgan G. SimonsSean Q. S. SimpsonBenjamin F. SpilsburyGueorgui TerzievMatthew D. Tiberii

2016 dukengineer 67

Annual FundAndrew P. Ward (4)Daniel C. Wolf (6)Duo Xu (3)Tianhe Zhang (3)Jiang Zhu (6)

Class of 2010118 Donors/245 Class Roll48% ParticipationPongpitch Amatyakul (5)Christopher H. Baker (2)Jason H. Begleiter (2)David J. Benjamin (1)Nicholas P. Bobrinskoy (5)John M. Burton, Jr. (5)John-Peter E. Cafaro (1)Christopher Y. Caughman (5)Vyshak Chandra (1)Olivia C. Chang (5)David Chen (2)Wei-Ting Chen (1)Jaeho Choi (1)Oranat P. Chuchuen (1)Brianne F. Connolly (5)Marian F. Dickinson (1)James V. DiMaiolo (5)Xuan Ding (5)Alex D. Edelsburg (4)David A. Eitel (5)Frederick W. Esch (5)Jason H. R. Ethier (2)Stephanie R. Everett (5)Michael M. Feng (1)Margaret I. Finch (3)Stephanie K. Finch (5)Andrew D. First (5)Erin A. Franz (3)Thomas C. Gallmeyer (1)William R. Gamerota (5)Jasdeep S. Garcha (1)Daniel B. Gaultney (1)Yiwen Ge (1)Kasey C. Geibel (2)Douglas M. Giannantonio (5)Jordan C. Goldstein (5)Jing Guo (5)Adam D. Grasch (1)Eric C. Hall (5)Daniel F. Hanks (5)Zachary M. Harvanek (4)Blake A. Hechtman (1)Douglas M. Helferich (5)Katherine M. Henderson (5)Sandy K. Ho (1)Pia F. Hoellerbauer (5)

Justin S. Hong (2)Margaret A. Hopkins (2)Peter E. Horgan, Jr. (1)Xiaodi Huang (1)Elizabeth H. Hwang (3)Fred Hwang (3)Dongwoon Hyun (1)Scott M. Ings (1)Paras P. Jhaveri (5)Brian J. Kim (5)Nadeem R. Kolia (1)Stephanie M. Korszen (2)Michael J. Kramarz (5)Nicholas C. A. Laucis (1)Gustavo Lee (5)George W. Lefelar (5)Jordan A. Lewis (5)Jack Li (5)Xiao T. Li (5)Victor C. Lieu (5)Ping Lin (3)Genevieve Lipp (1)Emily A. Liu (5)Ashley H. Lyerly (6)Samanthe M. Lyons (5)Thomas K. Marmaduke (1)Karley Marty (1)Michael A. McArthur (2)Matthew T. McKenna (4)Jason C. Mitchell (1)Carson C. Moore (2)Gerard J. Moorman, Jr. (4)Ronald E. Murhammer (1)Melissa K. Murphy (5)David E. Nammour (1)Alexandra Nichols (5)Leonard Pfeiffer V (1)Christopher C. Pierce (1)Alaina R. Pleatman (5)Emily Poplawski (5)Ankit Prasad (5)Sushma K. Reddy (1)Jason D. Rehlaender (3)Alex S. Reinstein (5)Samuel J. Reiss (5)Taylor C. Rhyne (4)Kalen J. Riley (5)Karan Sabharwal (1)Jorge Santin (1)Rishabh B. Sinha (1)Kevin C. Story (5)Mathavi J. Strasburger (5)Ernest K. Svenson (1)Prashant K. Swaminathan (1)David M. Tainter (2)

Jason S. Taylor (3)Michelle A. Torski (5)Peter H. Truskey (1)Kevin B. Wade (2)Amy M. Wen (3)Jamie F. Wilkie (2)Peter C. Williams (5)Tianyi Wu (5)Patrick P. Ye (5)Rebecca C. Yu (2)

Class of 201198 Donors/262 Class Roll37% ParticipationParv Aggarwal (4)Joseph K. Ahdoot (5)Pamela G. Anderson (3)Michael R. Ansel (1)Michael T. Bell (4)Rachel L. Belzer (4)Michael J. Black (1)Anna M. Brown (4)Adam W. Caccavale (4)Haoyu Chen (4)Shame Chikoro (4)Brett B. Cook (4)Jeffrey L. Cooper (1)Hatti Cutcliffe (4)Philip A. Danser (2)Matthew T. Davis (3)Hudson H. Duan (4)Jared A. Dunnmon (4)Megan K. Finley (4)Christopher R. Finocchi (4)Jeffrey L. Forte, Jr. (4)Lyndsey M. Fyffe (4)Benedict J. Gagne (4)Elyse L. Glover (3)Ashwin Goyal (1)Ankur B. Gupta (2)Andrew J. Harris (3)Justin M. Haseltine (4)Emtiaz Hassan (4)Ethan G. Hoch (4)Corinne E. Horn (1)Hanjun Hwang (1)Robert W. Hyberg (4)Sean L. Hyberg (2)Fernando X. Iglesia (1)Brandon D. Jones (4)Ga-Young Joung (4)Samuel G. Klein (4)Samantha M. Klug (4)Lauren A. Kottis (4)Jeffrey S. Kreutter (4)

Francesco LaRocca (1)So Y. Lee (3)Charles R. Levergood (4)Chao Li (1)Richard Y. Li (1)Xinlu Liu (1)Edward Liao (4)Maria C. Lopez (3)James E. Love, IV (4)Trisha K. Lowe (2)Brooke T. Luo (2)Daniel J. Moss (4)Ralph Nathan (4)Smauel F. Pancoast IV (3)Hannah Park (4)Yeon-Woo Park (3)Cameron E. Parrish (4)Andrew T. Pettit (4)Adam W. Pollak (1)Mark W. Pratt (4)Anita M. Raheja (4)Vikramaditya V. Raju (1)Travis J. Rapp (3)Trevor G. Reid (4)Joseph P. Repp (4)Emma V. Rovit (4)James L. Royce (1)James M. Royston, Jr. (4)Alexander J. Safrit (3)Laila Sharafi (3)Anna K. Sleeter (3)Tracy K. Spataro (1)Mark H. Strom (2)Eric N. L. Thorne (4)Guillermo A. Tinoco (1)Chen-Ling C. Tsai (4)Sarah J. Tuchler (1)Anjali S. Vora (4)Jeremy T. Walch (4)Kelly A. Waldman (4)Matthew M. Wander (4)Xin Wen (2)Anne Weng (3)Scott A. Winkleman (2)Benjamin Y. Xie (1)Eskinder Zewdu (1)Ka Zhang (4)Scott N. Zhang (4)

Class of 2012104 Donors/269 Class Roll39% ParticipationVidhan Agrawal (3)Hamid A. Ali (1)Amy M. Allen (3)

John T. Anton (3)Megan C. Arias (3)Bharat Arora (1)Laura L. Barnes (3)Christopher R. Bayliss (1)Adam J. Bennett (3)Ronald C. Cass (1)Melody H. Y. Chan (3)Ruvi Chauhan (1)Meng-Yang Chen (3)Michael Chen (3)Elizabeth R. Cobb (3)Robert P. Cochran, Jr. (1)Lina A. Colucci (3)Erin L. Convery (3)Robert M. Curtis (2)Kevin M. Deland (2)David J. Delfassy (1)Michael J. Deng (2)Denis S. Didenko (3)Robert J. Dimaiolo (3)Runbin Dong (1)Nabil M. Enayet (1)Rachel A. Fleming (3)Cody N. Freeman (3)Michael J. Fritz (1)James C. Gabriel (3)Justin C. Goldsmith (1)Nicolas S. Gorman (3)Daniel M. Haughton (1)John A. Hodge II (1)Logan M. Hoy (3)James Hsieh (3)Ellen C. Huang (3)Bradley R. Jacobs (1)Ankit Jain (3)Catherine R. Joseph (3)Judy K. Jow (2)Noelle E. Kelly (1)Justin C. Klaassen (1)John T. Kline (1)Steven J. Kober (3)Lindsay A. Kubasik (1)Adam D. Kurzrok (3)Adam C. Lange (3)Jessica A. Lehigh (3)Kimberly P. Leonard (3)Ming J. Li (3)Tian Li (3)Jared M. Lippell (3)Dianna D. Liu (3)Dianhao Luo (1)William G. Mackebee (3)Benjamin Maimon (2)Andrew G. Mang (3)

68 2016 dukengineer

Annual FundMichael R. TomainoBrian A. TongNoel A. Vera-GonzalezMikayla M. WickmanZachary WienerCaroline WilliamsJessie A. WilsonPeter K. YomElder M. Yoshida

FACULTY SUPPORTFaculty gifts to the 2014-15 Engineering Annual Fund are vital to Duke’s Educational mission. We are very grateful for this expression of their faith in the work of the Pratt School of Engineering and Duke University.

This year, 41% of our faculty participated in raising over $17,000 for the school.

Dr. Roger C. BarrDr. John A. Board, Jr.Dr. Martin BrookeDr. Ashutosh ChilkotiDr. F. Hadley CocksDr. Richard FairDr. Sina FarsiuDr. Linda FranzoniDr. Devendra GargDr. Henri GavinDr. Rhett GeorgeDr. Warren GrillDr. Michael R. Gustafson IIDr. Kenneth HallDr. Heileen Hsu-KimDr. Kristina JohnsonDr. William T. JonesDr. Nan JokerstDr. Tom KatsouleasDr. Jungsang KimDr. Qing LiuDr. Peter MarinosDr. Hisham Z. MassoudDr. Joseph C. NadeauDr. Wanda Neu-KrassowskaDr. Kathryn R. NightingaleDr. Roger W. NightingaleDr. Loren NolteDr. J. Jeffrey Peirce

Dr. Henry PetroskiDr. Edward J. Shaughnessy, Jr.Dr. W. Neal SimmonsDr. Dan SorinDr. George A. TruskeyDr. Olaf Von Ramm Dr. Adam P. WaxDr. Mark WiesnerDr. Patrick WolfDr. Stefan ZauscherDr. Pei Zhong GRADUATE ALUMNI GIVING 1960Hsueh-Chien Fu

1961Yavuz BirturkWilliam T. Joines

1962James N. Brown, Jr.Carl D. Parker

1963Jimmy P. BalsaraE. Towson Moore

1964Roger C. BarrMayrant Simons, Jr.

1965Chang ChenHarry O. Lindstrom, Jr.Norman L. Owsley George J. Titus

1966David T. KaoPaul D. ShelorJohn O. Woods, Jr.

1967James F. BowmanYuan Yu

1968Leonardo CruzDong-Shan Wu

1969Terence J. Gosciniak

1970Tze-Jer ChuangRichard O. Martin

1971Kul Bhushan

1972Jean M. Audibert

1973Yakir J. HasitJohn E. StittJoseph E. SutherlandMichael G. ThomasonOlaf T. Von Ramm

1974Barbara A. BuzunWilliam D. SmithRobert F. Stevens

1975Ram S. KrishnanJohn R. SearleNorman C. Strole

1976Mukul KumarCharles D. Pratt

1978Paul L. Spence

1979William S. JohnsonDavid E. Orton

1980Wanda K. GassCary LaxerRoy K. Samras

1981Jeffery P. Sellers

1982Sayed M. SayedWilson E. SmithDale E. Webster

1983Peter J. CarratoWayne B. Grabowski

1984Kenneth W. AltmanJohn J. MastrototaroThomas A. PeelJohn A. Wilkes

1985Peter B. HeifetzJan-Erik O. KallhammerMichael L. MandaJamal NajmJonathan E. SnyderRavi Subrahmanyan

1986Valerie M. Day

1987Heather D. DionneThomas C. FountainMichael F. HuntWanda Krassowska

Robert J. Lisanke, Jr.Pedro A. LitsekThomas S. RellingSrinivasa R. Shankar

1988Dean L. DerfusLinda FranzoniDonald N. JensenDonna B. RichardsonReed F. Young

1989David H. ApplegateRichard K. BowenJames D. DodrillJeffrey S. Lu

1990Tadashi IharaZoi-Heleni MichalopoulouGichuru K. MuchaneAnthony M. Richardson

1991Xiaowei S. HeShaofeng Yu

1992Mark T. EverettThomas B. GivensMark W. RoweRandy R. Van BurenPatrick D. Wolf

1993Thomas M. BestMichele M. DupreWilliam A. E. KarunaratneYu LiuTun-Wen PaiHenry G. Pavy, Jr.

1994Arun BalakrishnanRichard L. GoldbergSubhash M. JoshiKevin X. Zhang

1995Gustavo A. LedezmaThomas E. Plowman

1996Craig V. BaltimoreYi-Pin ChangRonald J. EpsteinPatrick J. PhillipsChristopher M. ShustStacy L. TantumGeri T. Zollinger

1997Loriann R. DavidseRichard E. Davidsen

Traian V. Dogaru

1998Chetan GoyalKaren J. KarvazyAdam L. Muzikant

1999Alex L. De GrootMudit K. JainAjit Shanware

2000Whitney C. Blackburn-LynchJie DingQing GanJiangqi HeJunhua Wu

2001Beth G. FerriRuhi SarikayaW. Neal SimmonsJason M. Zara

2002Mia K. Markey

2003Emil V. ArdeleanMu ChenColin R. CrossmanJulie A. Thurston

2005Wenyi Hu

2006Kidon ChoWoo K. Lee

2008Bryce W. DickinsonWeiwei JianChanglong WuYayuan Zhang

2009Carl D. HerickhoffBrian R. PiazzaLisa A. S. CarnellWei Zhong

2010Gabriel P. Howles-Banerji Carolyn M. Nohejl

2011Brian R. BiglerFelipe G. Quiroz

2012Torre M. BydlonWilliam J. Eldridge

2013Rachel M. Noek

makerspaceKyle Imatani, a student in the Masters of Engineering program,

draws inspiring words on the windows of his space in The Foundry earmarked for translating ideas conjured in Duke

clinics into innovative biomedical devices to treat patients.

Martin Brooke, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, shows

off the Ocean XPRIZE group’s pH sensor.

ineerEdmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering at Duke UniversityBox 90271305 Teer Engineering BuildingDurham, NC 27708-0271

Non-profit Org.US Postage

PAIDDurham,NCPermit #60

dukengineer

One of the rooms in The Foundry —fully loaded with a garage door and loading bay—houses the Duke Electric Vehicles club, which placed 2nd in the battery electric prototype category at the Shell Ecomarathon last year.