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Transcript of 859 DukeEngp1 - Duke Pratt School of Engineering
dukeng
Edmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering at Duke University | 2015
Studentwritten since 1940
pratt.duke.edu | dukengineer.pratt.duke.edu
I N S I D EFarewell to a Pratt legendTackling our century'sgrand challengesMaking a global impact
Above: Duke members of the OculusMicrogravity Team at the NASA Re
duced Gravity Flight Program Hangarin Ellington Field
(Houston, TX) – June 2014
ineerDuke Motorsportsteam members at
the Parents’Weekend Pratt Engineering BBQ –
October 2014
Below: Pratt students and families celebrated at
the Parents'Weekend BBQ—
October 2014
Celebration snapshotsDuke engineers commemorated the 75thanniversary year of Duke Engineering withcelebratory photos of events throughout 20142015.
Edmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering at Duke University 2015
dukengineerEditorinChief
Justin Yu
Senior EditorWyatt Shields
Associate EditorsAmy Xiong, Efe Aras
Consulting EditorsMinnie Glymph
Ken Kingery
WebmasterMandy Ferguson
DesignerLacey Chylack
phasefivecreative,inc
On the cover:
Duke Engineersfor InternationalDevelopment in
Uganda. See more atpratt.duke.edu/75.
letters2 Meet the Editors
3 From the Dean
4 From the ESG President
5 From the EGSC President
features6 Exploring a Changing Landscape:
New BME Chair Presents Visionfor Department
8 A Chat with Dean Simmons
research10 Cut and Paste: Genome Editing
and Engineering
12 The Next Energy Revolution
global impact14 Testing the Waters with Innovative
Technologies
16 Global Women’s Health Technologies:An Interdisciplinary Approach
extracurriculareducation20 Up and Running with DukeMakers
22 Duke’s iGEM Team Takes Gold in Boston
24 A Decade of DEID
26 New Minor, New Initiative
online28 Digitizing Duke Engineer
alumni news30 Class Notes
33 In Memory
development36 Letter from EAC President
37 Annual Fund Statistics
40 Honor Roll
lighter side56 Pratt 75th Anniversary
pratt.duke.edu
editors
2 dukengineer 2015
Meet the staff
Wyatt Shields is afourthyear biomedical engineering PhDstudent in the research group of GabrielP. Lopez. His research interests includechipbased methods for acoustic bioseparations and the programmed assemblyof anisotropic particles into advanced,hierarchical materials. Wyatt also enjoyshiking, traveling, music and longdistance running.
Justin Yu is a senior majoring inbiomedical engineering. He is a member ofthe Art, Vision and the Brain Bass Connections team, which is organizing an interdisciplinary symposium to examine art from neuroscience and engineering pointsofview. Hehas conducted research at the M.D. AndersonCancer Center, where his work used digitalimage processing to examine the effects of radiation therapy on the brain. In his free time,he enjoys playing basketball, volunteering inthe hospital and trying to cook. He plans toattend medical school in the fall.
Amy Xiong is a sophomorebiomedical and electrical/computer engineering double major who likes to design and create. She was born and raised in Minnesota,and is proud of it—occasionally you mightsee her in flip flops during the "winter" here.Amy is an undergraduate researcher in theLopez Lab at Duke who works with microparticle assembly and is hopeful that her workwill allow her to develop new biomedical applications. She enjoys watching good moviesand traveling to new places.
Efe Aras is a sophomore majoringin ECE/CS with additional course load inphilosophy and mathematics. He also has aninterest in computer security, which he supplements with working in the IT Security Office at Duke. During his spare time, he likesto read Harry Potter and just close his eyesand think.
From the Dean
Dear Friends of Duke Engineering,
Iamwriting this column on my way back from a meeting with President Obama and a group of the 122 deans across the US who havesigned a commitment to create a Grand Challenge Scholars program— similar to the one begun here at Pratt in 2009. As of this
year Pratt will graduate its 100th National Academy of Engineeringrecognized Grand Challenge Scholar, and the deans have committed tograduate 20,000 more Grand Challenge engineers over the next decade.As I explained to the President in a clutch in the Map Room just be
fore the annual White House Science Fair on March 23, what we are trying to do as an engineering community is to ensure that when the brightyoung students at the fair get to college, they have a more empoweringengineering education waiting for them—one that will prepare them notjust to build cool devices but also to create solutions to society’s mostvexing challenges.It is great to see so much enthusiasm for something born from formaliz
ing the rich cocurricular experiences available to our undergraduates andconnecting them to help students develop both the skillset and mindset totake on the Grand Challenges for engineering and society in the 21st cen
tury. As the program grows nationally, I’m also excited about our plans to construct a GrandChallengethemed new building at the end of Science Drive that will support our growth, connect to Physicsand build community among students in the Grand Challenge Scholars and other programs.Our commitment to providing specialized training to brilliant young minds to tackle the Grand
Challenges is only the latest evolution in a long tradition of excellence. Since our beginnings 75 yearsago, Duke Engineering has graduated leaders and problemsolvers, over 13,000 of them (!), whochange the world for the better. Today, we’re able to offer students even more inspiration and evenmore opportunities to excel than ever before. Just consider:
• Duke is among the fastestrising engineering schools in the U.S.News & WorldReport rankings—most recently ranking #18 for undergraduates and #28 forgraduates—both record highs. And we’re ranked in a tie for 10th among U.S.engineering schools in research productivity (Academic Analytics 2014).
• Our total external research funding has more than doubled in the past decade.And, we now have successfully competed for seven major externally fundedresearch centers over the past seven years—a tremendous sign of the growingstrength and impact of our faculty.
• New Dukedeveloped programs like PhD Plus offer students additional opportunities for professional development to complement their research training.
• Total graduate student enrollment increased by nearly 40 percent over the pastfive years. Undergraduate enrollment today totals nearly 2,500 students—andbreaks selectivity records year after year.
At this point in our history, Duke Engineering is on a truly breathtaking upward trajectory—thanks to our incredible students, worldclass faculty, entrepreneurial and interdisciplinary culture,and the support of generous alumni and friends who fuel our success.Here’s to all those who made our first 75 years fantastic. Seeing all the new beginnings, can’t you
just imagine what Pratt will be like at 100?
Tom KatsouleasVinik Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering
2015 dukengineer 3
4 dukengineer 2015
Engineering Student Government (ESG) was excited to start 20142015 off with a bang! Our team of 11very motivated and dedicated executive board membersworked hard this year creating some phenomenal events forall of Pratt.Led by Class of 2017 president Sebastian Baquerizo, a series of ETalks highlighting distinguished faculty research was hosted onEast Campus in the fall. It was a great way to get freshman engaged early in their academic careers with research and spark passion for engineering while never having to leave the comfort ofEast Campus.ESG’s Academic Action Committee also collaborated with the
Duke Student Government’s Academic Affairs Committee andPratt’s Dean’s Office to work on improving advising for all Prattstudents. Now, Pratt is taking an advising “network” approach to
allow students to solicit input from a variety of sources and mentors.March saw a completely sold out EBall at Hope Valley Country Club. Everyone
from freshmen to professors enjoyed the beautiful weather of the outdoor patio and anevening of socializing, relaxation and taking a break from problem sets. Deans Katsouleas and Franzoni couldn’t help but join in the fun—and even Dr. MichaelGustafson was one of the last ones on the dance floor at the end of the night!We also continued the tradition of weekly ESocials every Friday afternoon at a new
time of 4:30 pm. Due to the hard work of Industry Relations Chair Kristin Murray, wehave had a wide variety of ESocial sponsors this year, fromDuke’s chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers to Edwards Life Sciences. We continue to workclosely with EGSC on hosting ESocials, and this year we are beginning to focus onmaking them more sustainable, with new reusable cups to be rolled out in early 2015.The annual traditions of EOktoberfest and EPicnic also continued with record
crowd turnout for both events. These wellloved events (and the associated Tshirts!)continue to be timehonored classics that students look forward to after a long week ofmidterms and studying.Last but not least, ESG is excited to be helping with some of the Pratt 75th anniver
sary celebrations. Spring 2015 will bring a revitalization of some of the “oldschool” engineering competitions while the Pratt Board of Visitors and friends are in town. We'llsee if they can show the youngsters how it’s done or if beginner’s luck holds out.Stay tuned for more great things from ESG in the upcoming years. We hope to con
tinue to improve student life on EQuad, and are always open to new ideas!
Sincerely,Anna KnightExecutive President
Anna Knight is a senior majoring in biomedical engineering and the presidentof the Engineering Student Government.
From the ESG President
From the EGSC President
The Engineering Graduate Student Council (EGSC) isdedicated to representing the interests and concerns ofthe graduate students of the Duke University PrattSchool of Engineering. EGSC works to facilitate theintegration of incoming Pratt graduate students and to
promote social interaction, academic interaction and outreachamongst fellow graduate students.One of this year’s more gratifying events was the 5th Annual
Abhijit Mahato Memorial held in November. In remembranceof Abhijit, a Duke graduate student who was tragically killed in2008, Duke University and Pratt have collaboratively and generously sponsored an annual memorial to celebrate his passionfor the mergence of the visual arts and sciences. Currently in itsfifth year, the event includes an image and photography contest,a keynote speaker, and a cocktail reception. Fanny Besem(EGSC vice president, MEMS) and the Mahato OrganizingCommittee (Hannah Meredith, Lauren Lowman, Tamara Silgerbeit, and Lauren Czaplicki) did an amazing job organizingthe event. Winning images are displayed in the atrium of theFitzpatrick Center for the upcoming year.Another successful EGSC endeavor is the PhD Plus Profes
sional Development Program. PhD Plus is a studentfunded,studentrun program designed to assist engineering PhD students in making effective career decisions and prepare studentsfor the real world. The program includes summer workshops,seminars, networking opportunities and internship resources.PhD Plus Chair Sarah Diringer (CEE) has done a fantastic jobleading this program, and we look forward to more spectacularevents from PhD Plus in the near future.EGSC is also active in improving research support and aca
demic awareness across Pratt. So far, EGSC has organized anexternal funding workshop seminar for graduate students seeking to gain insight from previous fellowship awardees on how toapply and win fellowships. This fall, we also organized two graduate student seminars led by Isvar Cordova (EGSC treasurer,ECE), David Miller (EGSC departmental representative, ECE),Ethan Hada (EGSC departmental representative, MEMS) andLauren Redfern (EGSC secretary, CEE), where Pratt graduatestudents were able to showcase their amazing research effortsamongst their peers.This spring, you are invited to our final two graduate student
seminars of the academic year, led by Cordova, Samagya Banskota (EGSC departmental representative, BME), Jane Cooper(EGSC departmental representative, CEE), and Wankun Zhu(EGSC communications chair, ECE). By encouraging studentsto learn about the work of their Pratt peers, whether throughupcoming qualifying examinations, preliminary examinationsand/or oral conference presentations, we aim to foster the inter
disciplinary collaboration that is not only strong at Duke, butalso important across the world.This year, EGSC has branched out to other engineering grad
uate/professionalbased programs and brought two new members onto the executive board: Ankur Manikandan (Master ofEngineering Program representative) and JonWright (Master ofEngineering Management representative). The MEng programgives an indepth study in a technology field paired with a business leadership and management education. Offered by thePratt School of Engineering with support of Duke’s FuquaSchool of Business and School of Law, the MEM program offers earlycareer engineers a techsavvy alternative to an MBA.We are very glad to have them on our executive board.Socially, EGSC plans activities to allow graduate students to
destress after a long week of research. Every Friday evening,EGSC and the Engineering Student Government (ESG) organize an engineering social (Esocial) hosted by various companies(Edwards Lifesciences, Stryker) and/or oncampus organizations (Society of Women Engineers, Women in Science andEngineering, and American Society of Mechanical Engineers,just to name a few). To help “greenify” our future Esocials,EGSC is collaboratively working with Sustainable Duke to replace the currently used disposable plastic cups with reusabletumblers.Also in celebration of Engineer’s Week, we plan to organize a
graduate field day to promote healthy competition amongst thedifferent departments within Pratt. Finally, we are organizing aDuke basketball watch party for students to be able to meet andgreet with one another. We hope you will join us at some ofthese events.In addition to these academic and social initiatives, EGSC or
ganizes outreach events through organizations such as Habitatfor Humanity and North Carolina Science Olympiad so thatgraduate students can make an impact in their local communities. Over the years, many of our Pratt students have foundthese experiences both rewarding and lifechanging.In my limited time as EGSC President, I have been blessed
with the opportunity to work with a very diverse and excitingexecutive board. I look forward to continuing to bounce ingenious ideas off of one another and disseminating our results tothe Pratt community. The character and class exemplified byour EGSC student leaders is a major reason I not only chose torun for EGSC presidency, but what continues to make Dukesuch a uniquely balanced and wonderful place to be.
Ugonna Ohiri is a secondyear PhD student in electrical and computer engineering and president of the Engineering Graduate Student Council.
2015 dukengineer 5
FeaturesExploring a Changing LandscapeNew BME Chair Presents Vision for DepartmentAn interview with Ashutosh Chilkoti, new chair of the Department of Biomedical Engineering
It is a truth universally acknowledged that today—more thanever—the demand of caring foran aging population, the need ofreacting to changes in healthcare,and the desire to increase the effectiveness of medicine while de
creasing its invasiveness have all led to thecommitment to one thing: biomedicalengineering. In the midst of the field’srapid growth and desire to fulfill themany new demands of healthcare, Dukehas brought forward Ashutosh Chilkoti,PhD, as the newest chair of its biomedical engineering department.With a long and prestigious history of
success, Duke BME has been one of thecrown jewels of the university ever since
Chilkoti has long had a deep affinity forDuke and the varied work of the department. From the start, the program hasprovided unique challenges to overcome,questions to answer and ongoing projectsto move forward as the rapid expansionand maturation of the biomedical industry flourished. In response to the systemthat has helped him develop as both a researcher and a professor, Chilkoti accepted the position of chair in 2014 as a wayto give back.With over 100 programs in the coun
try now dedicated solely to BME, one canno longer consider biomedical engineering as a “boutique department,” saysChilkoti. While this was never the case atDuke, its program must now face very ro
“There is always that push to improve.”the department’s founding. Consistentlyranked as one of the nation’s top undergraduate and graduate programs, biomedical engineering at Duke maintains astrong position in both instruction andinnovation. It is this balance between education and research that Chilkoti nowfinds himself trying to maintain as well aspropagate while reacting to the changinglandscape of the profession.Beginning his career with the depart
ment in 1996 as an assistant professor,
bust programs at schools like Stanford,which only formed its department eightyears ago but now contributes to the fieldin a large way. Similarly, the Universityof Michigan has plans to double its biomedical engineering department and become far more invested with their medical school. And the University of IllinoisUrbanaChampaign recently received$100 million in funding, most of whichwill aid in developing its BME programas well.
“Duke BME remains excited about theexplosion in the field but, at the sametime, incredibly aware of the challenge toremain strong in the face of so many otherprograms,” says Chilkoti. “There is alwaysthat push to improve.”In approaching this new challenge,
Chilkoti speaks to a multifaceted approach: renewing the leadership thatDuke currently holds and moving forwardwith new projects and areas of research. Inthe next few years, Duke BME will look toexpand its presence in genomic engineering, currently represented by the prowessof Charles Gersbach, PhD, among others(see page 10), as well as new faculty members brought on in the past few years.Similarly, the neuroengineering grouphas gained two more members.That effort to push the boundaries of
modern research and develop innovativeapproaches extends to each of the traditional disciplines. For example, Chilkotiwill look to immunology to advance therapeutic treatments and into bigdata analytics as it relates to the brain.With so many changes occurring at the
many nuanced levels of biomedical engineering that has historically covered alitany of interests, a multifaceted approach to the change is truly inevitable.When considering the explosion in bio
medical engineering, we must also remaincognizant of the changing field of health
6 dukengineer 2015
Ashutosh Chilkoti, new chair of the Duke University Department of Biomedical Engineering
care—and the new strain this will place onBME departments everywhere to “increaseefficiency and decrease costs while maintaining quality,” states Chilkoti. “There isa balance to be found.”Indeed, this balance may come in the
form of a new and stronger relationshipwith Duke’s School of Medicine andhealth system to cultivate a “more formalmechanism by which research problemscan be identified and bring together thepeople who would best spearhead thoseprojects.” While crosscollaboration is ongoing, Chilkoti aims to take advantage ofnot only that short commute across Research Drive from the EQuad to theMedical Center, but also the potential to bringtogether the right teams and people to foster problemsolving and innovation.
To better encourage open discourse andideas regarding this time of transition,Chilkoti will be hosting a retreat in thespring of 2015. The group will discuss howto better improve the department’s innovation and response to the changing field—including its role in the classroom.As the field evolves, so too must the
books used to teach it. Therefore, a thorough review of the BME undergraduatecurriculum will begin shortly, looking tohighlight its strengths and improve potential deficiencies. And at the graduate level,the department is reevaluating the emphasis placed on preparation for nonengineering roles. With many BME graduate students finding work in consulting or finance, Chilkoti must assess how best toprepare students for their new roles.
The excitement surrounding the explosion of BME as an industry must overcomeall else. With plans to add 10 new tenuredfaculty in the next four to six years, Chilkotihas wasted no time in adopting a proactiveapproach to his role as chair of BME. Inlooking to maintain Duke BME’s strengthin its existing fields and expanding into newones, considering the undergraduate curriculum and graduate student preparation,and cultivating a new teamcentered approach to the road ahead—whether withinthe department or crossdepartmental collaboration—Chilkoti’s plans all move inone direction: onward, to new heights.
Claudia Dantoin is a sophomore majoring inelectrical engineering and doubleminoringin French and chemistry.
2015 dukengineer 7
A Chat with Dean SimmonsDuke Engineering legend retiring after 37 years of serviceConnie Simmons served as the Associate Dean for Undergraduate Affairs at the Pratt School of Engineering.She started working at Duke University in 1978 and has held various positions over the years. She was hired byAleksandar S. Vesic (dean of engineering from 19741982) and has served under four university presidents andsix deans. After 37 years at Duke, she retired in March 2015. DukEngineer spoke with her about her memoriesand legacy of service to students, faculty and staff.
What do Pratt students come to you to talk about?There are many different reasons students come to me, fromhelp with their class schedules to personal problems or academic difficulties. A common theme is firstyear studentswho are making the transition from high school to college.A lot of the students who come here were at the top of theirclass, making straight As, then they come to Duke and getthat first C and are devastated, because for those studentsgetting a C is like getting an F. So I try to tell them thatthere is a transition period—one C is not going to destroyeverything and they can still graduate with honors.Some students also come here without a habit of studying
because they didn’t need to do so in high school. Othersmight study for an exam but don’t get as good of a grade asthey expected and start wondering if they really belong here.To those students I reaffirm that we wouldn’t admit a student that we thought would not be successful. During thosemoments I just try to build their selfconfidence and advisethem to use all the great resources that are available at theuniversity for personal and academic support.I also see a lot of upperclass students who come to the
office for advice about career planning, study abroad, premedicine or balancing academic work with other endeavors. Often times we have students trying to do too much—for example, two majors plus a minor and/or a certificateand either premedicine and/or studying abroad! Other students who come to me are dealing with personal and psychological issues, or having academic challenges or need tofind summer employment. And some come just to sharetheir excitement about being selected as a Pratt Fellow orinducted into Phi Beta Kappa or receiving a postgraduate
award like a Rhodes, Marshall, Churchill or Fulbright.I hear a little bit of everything!
What should we look for in the next undergraduatedean?I think you need someone who will give sound advice,but is also dependable and caring. A math professor maycall us saying that they haven’t seen this one student for acouple of days and are wondering if something is goingon. You need someone who will contact that student andask “Are you OK? Do you need to come in and see me?”Likewise, if a student is in the hospital, they should visitthem and tell them, “I will email your professor, I willlet them know. You just focus on getting better.” I havealways tried to let students know that I care, and wouldhope that the next upcoming dean will be just as caring.Of course there are times when you have to be a little
firm. Students don’t like to hear the word “no” but thefact of the matter is sometimes you have to say it. For instance, if a deadline has passed, we have to tell the student that we’re sorry but no exception can be made forthem, because in doing so, there are 1,200 other studentsthat would not be able to have the same option. So youhave to have a balance of being concerned and caring butalso fair to all students.
What is your favorite part of your job?I have just really enjoyed working with students. Earlierthis week I talked to an alumna whose son is graduatingfrom Duke this year, and I told her that I am just as hap
THIS IMAGE OF THE DUKE CHAPEL WAS CREATED BY BUD NORTHERN IN RECOGNITION OF THE CAREER OF DEAN CONNIE SIMMONS. THE IMAGE IS MADE UP OF THENAMES OF THE THOUSANDS OF DUKE ENGINEERING STUDENTS WHO GRADUATED FROM PRATT DURING HER CAREER FROM 1978 TO JAN. 2015.YOU CAN SEE THE
FULLSIZE IMAGE ON THE DUKE ENGINEERING FACEBOOK PAGE VIA PRATT.DUKE.EDU/CHAPELTAGAND DON'T FORGET TO "LIKE" US WHILE YOU ARE THERE!
8 dukengineer 2015
py as she is. I see students go through four years of college,and some of these students go through big struggles. At theirgraduation, I am just as happy as the parents because I havebeen there with the students through this time! When yousee a student through four years of college and then 20 or 25years later their son or daughter is here at Duke, that’s veryspecial. Overall, this job is just very rewarding.
What is the biggest change you have observed duringyour time at Duke?Well, Duke has grown so much over the years. I’ve beenhere long enough to see the changes in the outline of thecampus as new buildings were built. I remember whensome of the buildings that I can see from my window hadto be approved by the Trustees!There has been a great increase in the student body. In
2005 when Kristina Johnson was the dean, the enrollmentfor engineering students was increased by about 200. I havealso seen more diversity, with more female and minorityfaculty and students. I still remember when the first femalefaculty member and the first AfricanAmerican facultymember started!The programming for the school has grown as well.
When I first started working here Duke didn’t even haveminors. Now we have so many organizations—HackDuke
Connie Simmons, retired AssociateDean for Undergraduate Affairs
and many more programs that we never use to have. It isexciting to have witnessed all that change over the years.
When you first started working at Duke as a secretarydid you had any idea how far you would go?Definitely not, I had no idea that I would be where I amtoday. When I first started working here I had my degreeand my plan was to work here for about three years. Thesecretarial job was a unique opportunity because I got towork with Associate Dean Marion Shepard. I would talkto students who came in and try to help them out withtheir problems. I took on many different positions overthe years but with all of them I was interacting with students, which I really enjoyed. I had great bosses and mycolleagues here at Pratt are amazing. So it followed thatPratt just became my family. I am very thankful and appreciative for the opportunities that all the deans I haveworked under have given me.
What are you going to miss about Duke the most?I am truly going to miss interacting with and helping students. After 37 years I have a lot of good memories, whichI am grateful for. Also, I will miss the faculty and my colleagues in Pratt and across the university. Did you knowDr. G* was a student when I was here? He was the firststudent to do a double major with electrical and mechanical engineering. So when students ask about double majoring with ECE and ME, I tell them go see Dr. G. Ofcourse it’s not only Dr. G, there are other faculty members who were students when I started working, like Dr.[John] Board, Dr. [Craig] Henriquez and Dr. [Dan]Sorin. Seeing them become graduate students and then goon to become professors is so exciting as I get to witnesstheir growth. That’s just another example of why this hasbeen an amazing journey.
Petek Sener is a firstyear Pratt student and a projected biomedical engineering major.
*Associate professor of the practice Michael Gustafson
2015 dukengineer 9features
ResearchCut and PasteGenome Editing and Engineering
You are the sum of 46 chromosomes, three billion base pairsor six gigabytes of information. Before you are born,your genome determines howyou will look and, to somedegree, how you will act. At
the same time, this means that genetic diseases such as certain muscular dystrophiesare as intrinsic to those affected as theirappearance or personality. There is currently no cure to many genetic diseases,since a cure involves the difficult task ofmodifying our most fundamental programming.A group of researchers led by Charles
Gersbach, professor of biomedical engineering here at Duke’s Pratt School of En
gineering, is tackling this issue using a variety of strategies, one of which is based oncuriously named protein motifs known as zincfingers.These protein subunits have
garnered significant interestsince the early 1990s for theirability to seek out a sequenceof three or four base pairs andgrip to that site of DNA with“fingerlike” structures. Researchers can synthesize chainsof zincfingers that bind to sequences many times longer
for a more specific and targeted approach.These “magic bullet” proteins can be attached to other functional protein domains to build an entire kit of genomicengineering tools. One of the most significant of these tools are zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs)—fusion proteins of zinc fingersand nucleases used to cut DNA at targetsequences.Gersbach seeks to develop this technol
ogy for human gene therapy—the treatment of disease on the genetic level. Previous genetic engineering methods usedZFNs to make cuts at sites of interest inDNA. This would in turn activate the native DNA repair pathways to ligate the cutends, which is an unreliable mechanismthat could introduce errors. However, inhis article Targeted plasmid integration intothe human genome by an engineered zincfinger recombines published in NucleicAcids Research, Gersbach describes a “twostep method for utilizing [zincfinger recombinases] in any cell type at randomlydistributed target site locations.”Recently, Gersbach and his lab has
moved toward a different genetic engineering technology—the CRISPR/Cas9system. Originally found in bacteria,where it was used in a form of acquiredimmunity to cut up foreign DNA, scientists have adapted this system for use inhuman genomic editing. CRISPR/Cas9 is
Model of a zinc finger with the coordinated zinc ion.
10 dukengineer 2015
unique in that, rather than using a proteinsubunit, this system relies on guide RNAto target sequences of DNA. Because it ismuch easier to synthesize RNA than aprotein, CRISPR/Cas9 is more versatileand costeffective compared to zinc fingers. Gersbach’s research has, among other things, involved the evaluation and expansion of the CRISPR/Cas9 “toolkit.” Inone paper, Gersbach’s laboratory engineered CRISPR/Cas9 transcription factors, which use the CRISPR/Cas9 systemto target and activate specific genes.While the discovery of zinc fingers and
CRISPR/Cas9 have been landmarks ingenomic engineering, there is still muchground to be covered before a patient canwalk into a doctor’s office and walk outcured of Duchenne muscular dystrophyor cystic fibrosis. One major unansweredquestion is the specificity that can be
Charles Gersbach, professor of biomedical engineering
achieved by each system. While each system can be engineered to target a certainsequence, there are limits to how long,and therefore how specific, the target sequence is.A ZFN could accidentally cut a site up
stream or downstream with the same sequence, or a CRISPR/Cas9 transcriptionfactor could activate the wrong gene, eachof which can have drastic consequences.Meanwhile, the CRISPR/Cas9 is constrained by the fact that its target DNAmust be followed by a short sequence ofbases with stricter requirements for binding. Nonetheless, this exciting research isthe key to unlocking the genome and thegroundwork for a future of safer, potent,personalized medicine.
Edward Liang is a freshman majoring inbiomedical engineering.
2015 dukengineer 11
The Next Energy
Rev_lutionOur world depends heavily on
energy.We have progressed as asociety through the discovery ofnew, more efficient energy systems. Even before the concept
of energy was fully realized, humans haveused energy to make their lives easier.In the beginning, we relied on various
biomasses—such as wood or peat—to fuel fires as a source of energy to cook foodand provide warmth. Through subsequent energy revolutions, we have powered our way through the industrial revolution with steam engines, created themodern infrastructure of cities withpiped natural gas and fueled our way tothe present with coal and petroleum. Themajority of our energy currently comesfrom these fossil fuels, with growing demands on shifting energy consumptionfrom these unsustainable mainstays to renewable energy sources.Knowing that fossil fuels are limited
and unsustainable at our current rate of consumption,
with their potential applications as solarcells.Solar cells generate electrical energy by
converting the sun’s energy into an electrical current. Mitzi seeks to explore lowcost solar cell materials composed ofearthabundant elements. Such researchwould make it possible for costeffectivesolar energy options to be deployed moreuniversally.One of the materials Mitzi is investi
gating in his lab is called “perovskite,”named after its specific crystal structure.Perovskites can accommodate a widerange of elements, thereby allowing significant opportunity to tailor the properties of the materials. Perovskites showpromise in absorbing sunlight and transporting the charges generated from sunlight, which is crucial for photovoltaics.The power conversion efficiency of so
lar cells is calculated as the ratio of theelectrical output to the input of light en
ergy. The progress in improving the efficiency of perovskite solar cells has beenenormous, soaring from 4 percent to 20percent over just the past five years,which has led it to become the materialwith the most rapidly rising energy efficiency in the industry.Mitzi’s research targets a few areas of
possible improvement in perovskites as asolar cell material. He seeks to delve further into the crystalline structure to increase the efficiency to over 20 percent.As a comparison, the highest efficiencyof currently available commercial solarcells is around 20 percent. Although solar cells have been created with efficiencies almost up to 45 percent, such cellsare not economically viable for largescale application. Alternatively, manufacturing perovskite structures usinglowcost, thinfilm techniques makestheir production more feasible and realistic in terms of cost.
David Mitzi, professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at Duke University, is driven by thoughts ofwhat may be the next energyrevolution. His research focuses on designing new materialsand connecting the structuralproperties of these materials
Above, Professor David Mitzi, Duke University, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science; Right, XRay diffrac
tometer that is used to characterize crystalline materials.
12 dukengineer 2014
These glove boxes create a controlled environment for research.
Another concern besides increasing efficiency is the safety and robustness ofperovskite materials. The best perovskites have thus far contained lead,making toxicity an issue. Another concern for Mitzi is the stability of the material due to its sensitivity to moisture. Anadditional challenge has been the occurrence of anomalous hysteresis in the currentvoltage curves of perovskite solarcells. Hysteresis is when the output of asystem is dependent on not just the input parameters, but also on the pathused to reach the measuring point. Sucha quality creates additional concerns inthe stability of the material—concerns
that Mitzi and his group are activelyworking to solve.“My research seeks to take us to a
place where solar energy can be a mainstreammethod of generating electricity,”said Mitzi. “In our energydefined society, such research in material science andengineering promises an exciting futurewhere solar cell technology will revolutionize our energy dependence and limitations.”Mitzi views these numerous challenges
through a materials perspective—lookingat the interface between material structures and device properties and how onemight model devices with such materials.
In addition to perovskite materials,Mitzi is exploring other options such aschalcogenide materials based on thekesterite crystal structure. Here, the keyis to design a system with little or noatomic disorder, which—when present—can negatively impact device performance.Although the challenges for the design
and refinement of solar cell materials areimmense, Mitzi and his group are leading the charge in engineering materialsthat could lead to an energy revolution.
Grace Ying is a sophomore majoring inbiomedical engineering.
research
global impactTesting the Waterswith Innovative Technologies
Along the coast of California, sewageand fertilizer pollution has resulted inan “acidification hotspot” that extends larger than some U.S. states.
These pollutants cause algae blooms thatraise the acidity of the waters, which in turnhas downwardspiraling effects on all levelsof marine ecosystems. Although the ramifications of ocean acidification can be seen
The members of the Blue Devil Ocean across the globe as one of the deadliestEngineering team. threats to ocean health, few tools exist that
can detect changes in ocean pH. Oceanacidification is poorly documented in high
latitudes, coastal areas and the deep sea,and existing sensors are often expensiveand inaccurate.Fortunately, 13 teams remaining from
an initial 77—with backgrounds rangingfrom surfboard engineers to wellknownnames in the field of oceanography tohigh school rookies—are competing toalleviate this detection problem. TheWendy Schmidt Ocean Health XPRIZEcompetition hopes to improve theworld’s understanding of ocean acidification by challenging teams to develop thebest ocean pH sensing technologies. Twoprizes are available: the $1 million Accuracy award for the most accurate and stable sensors and the $1 million Affordability award for the most precise, yet costefficient sensor. Blue Devil Ocean Engineering, made up of students from thePratt School of Engineering and theNicholas School of the Environment, isone of the 13 teams remaining in this vigorous 22monthlong competition.The competition officially launched in
San Francisco on September 9, 2013, andsince then the Blue Devil Ocean Engineering team has been hard at work designing the most robust and lowcost sensor. The team proposes to use a multimetal electrochemical cell to measureocean pH based on the simple and costeffective technology of soil pH meters.Essentially, both types of sensors involve
14 dukengineer 2015
Various sensors at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute testing tank, where they will measure pH for 77 days in a controlled environment.
simple meters that measure the potentialgenerated by two metals. To address theproblems of fouling and corrosion, andthe possibility of the potentials being sensitive to various chemical potentials besides pH, metal diversity was used intheir prototype sensor. Copper, zinc, aluminum, tungsten carbide, titanium,nickel, brass, 316 stainless steel andbronze rods are arranged into a multimetal pH sensor head, in which the metalpotentials are measured by an amplifiersystem on a microcontroller board. Theoverall sensor form factor is made withPVC, with the sensor package encasedwith epoxy to withstand 3000 meter water depth.Although all teams submitted their pro
totypes in July 2014, the final results ofthe competition will not be revealed untilJuly 2015 due to the intensive lab, coastaland sea trials that take place in the interim.Teams’ sensors that successfully completelaboratory testing move to large saltwatertanks in Monterey Bay, CA, to test accuracy and to test performance in areas of such“acidification hotspots” along the coast ofCalifornia. Evaluation of the sensors continues in Seattle Aquarium—where the
team's sensors are now—to test highly variableconditions from PugetSound. Finally, testingconcludes with the highpressured depths of theopen ocean near Hawaiito test stability.The ultimate objective
of this competition is todevelop the most accurate and affordable pHsensor, but it also seeksto catalyze ocean acidification awareness and research. New sensingtechnologies allow for better knowledgeon the state of ocean acidification, hopefully inspiring industry and the public as awhole to be involved in solving this issue.The innovation of the Blue Devil
Ocean Engineering team toward addressing the problem of ocean acidificationfurther instills hope: any team needs onlyto briefly “test the waters” of a new project before diving right in.
Rachel Yang is a freshman planning onmajoring in biomedical engineering.
The multi metal pH sensor head (left)and the overall sensor form factor
(right). A significant advantage of thedesign of the sensor form factor is that itis robust and capable of surviving both
shallow water and ocean depths.
2015 dukengineer 15
Global Women’s Health
TechnologiesA N I N T E R D I S C I P L I N A R Y A P P R O A C H
Student Mercy Asiedu in the GWHT lab
Duke’s Center for Global Women’sHealth Technologies (GWHT) isan entity that, in the words ofsenior mechanical engineering
major Mikayla Wickman, “refuses to becompartmentalized.” Started in 2013 andled by Nimmi Ramanujam, professor ofbiomedical engineering, global healthand pharmacolocy, GWHT operates atthe intersection of engineering, globalhealth and education. It consists of threestaff members as well as numerous graduate and undergraduate student fellows.
The center’s mission is to increase research, education and training in women’shealth and empowerment on a globalscale. This mission involves a twopronged approach: education and research. According to Marlee Krieger, research project manager in Ramanujam’slaboratory, these two aspects are somewhat loosely separated into the “center”—focused on education and implementation—and the lab—focused ontechnological innovation. GWHT approaches design challenges like these byfirst considering the cultural, economicand political settings in which these solutions are to be implemented. In many cases, standard Western technologies willnot be sustainable. They must be reverseengineered and subsequently reimaginedto be applied in resourcelimited settings.
As GWHT looks to improve thequality of life for women worldwide,
these technologies are developed to bewidely accessible and unobtrusive. An example of one such technology is GWHT’simaging tool for cervical cancer detection.According to the center’s website, over 85percent of cervical cancer deaths occur indeveloping countries because resourcelimitations prevent the regular screeningsand multivisit approach commonly seenin countries such as the United States. Tostreamline the process of cervical cancerscreening, researchers at GWHT developed a transvaginal digital colposcope—an optical device similar in size and shapeto a tampon. This device is inexpensive,accessible to lowresource clinics and mitigates some of the discomfort for womenin developing countries who might beunfamiliar with traditional screeningtools. This technology, which has beenused to examine more than 60 patients,will be deployed in the summer in EastAfrica, India and Peru.
Integral to the mission of GWHT isto engage students in the STEM fields byproviding multidisciplinary learning experiences related to women’s health.GWHT’s goal is to expose students to therewarding possibilities of careers that integrate technology and global health. Thecenter looks to increase educational opportunities in the academic disciplines ofscience, technology, engineering andmath (STEM) for young women aroundthe world.
16 dukengineer 2015
Visit gwht.pratt.duke.edu to read about Global Women’s Health Technologiesstudents’ experiences all around the world.
Integral to the mission of GWHT is to engagestudents in the STEM fields by providingmultidisciplinary learning experiencesrelated to women’s health.
Senior GWHT fellows Mikayla Wick faculty, Ramanujam and GWHT staffman and Kendall Covington traveled to member Christine Mulvey, PhD, to develMuhuru Bay, Kenya, this summer to bring op a curriculum for an engineering club attheir engineering experience and enthusi WISER.asm to the allgirls secondary school start The engineering club worked toed by WISER NGO, which was founded build up science and engineering conby Duke professor Sherryl Broverman, cepts for a culminating project in whichwhose mission is the social empowerment the girls built their own flashlights incorof underprivileged girls. Mikayla, Kendall porating local materials and renewableand GWHT fellow Christine Schindler energy, using mechanical cranks andworked closely with Broverman, WISER squeeze mechanisms to charge a recharge
able battery that powers the flashlight.The GWHT fellows who created the program chose the flashlight after indepthdiscussions with Broverman in part because the resistors and circuit boards thatare commonplace in a Duke lab would benovel and exciting to the girls at WISER.But mostly they chose the project becauseof the need for light at the school usingrenewable energies and because, according to Broverman, access to light is a gender issue in Kenya.
According to Mikayla, the Kenyanclassroom is “characterized by callandresponse,” and she found the students to be“wonderfully competitive and driven,”making it the ideal environment to implement their curriculum. At the end of theflashlight project, Mikayla and Kendall organized a nighttime flashlight scavenger
2015 dukengineer 17
global impact
GWHT’s colposcope with a traditionalspeculum for cervical screening
Engineering club members learn to solder
hunt on WISER’s soccer field. In whatMikayla described as a “lightbulb moment,” it became clear that the flashlightproject was not only an educational tool,but also a practical tool for the WISERgirls: they used them to study duringpower outages, and to provide extra security while walking home at night.
GWHT’s educational efforts are continuously expanding and evolving to reachmore students in new locations. One ofthe latest developments is a collaborationwith DukeEngage. Christine Mulvey, a research scientist in Ramanujam’s laboratory, worked to initiate a partnership with aGirlsInc location in Orange County, CA.GirlsInc runs many summer programs buthas identified a need for more programming related to STEM fields.
Mulvey found this particular locationinteresting because of the socioeconomicdichotomy in the area. Although OrangeCounty is typically thought of as affluent,
this GirlsInc site serves a population inwhich 70 percent of households have annual incomes under $30,000. GWHT will beresponsible for selecting DukeEngage applicants for the Orange County site beginning in the summer of 2015. Participantswill develop a curriculum before arrivingonsite in California, where they will implement it and train volunteers to do thesame. The curriculum will change eachsummer and could potentially be adoptedby GirlsInc on a larger scale. DukeEngageparticipants can continue to work withGWHT once returning to Duke in the fall.The renewable energy flashlight curriculum is also going to be implemented bystudents in Kolkata this summer, by students participating in Professor BaishakiTaylor’s DukeEngage program.
GWHT represents the type of interdisciplinary innovation that is part of the mission here in Pratt. It has been highly successful in inspiring the next generation to
use technology to develop solutions toproblems that are meaningful to them. Evidence of this success can be seen in thecontinuation of the WISER engineeringclub as well as Mikayla and Kendall’s newinitiative calledWorldwide Empowermentof Women Engineers (WEWE, meaning“you” in Swahili), which has raised over$6,500 to provide supplies for a 120flashlight campaign, allowing the local engineering club to start providing “torches” toall of the students in the school. Kendalland Mikayla are also stepping into the labto begin designing a windpowered backup generator for the WISER campus,which will double as an educational tool forfuture Engineering Club activities. Theirefforts create a full circle that embodies theideals of sustainability and interdisciplinarity that lie at the core of GWHT.
Katherine MacAdam is a senior majoring inmechanical engineering
2015 dukengineer 19
Up and Running with
DukeMakers
The makerspace
20 dukengineer 2015
Buying professional prosthetics is no casual decision—certainly not for young children, whose rapid growthnecessitates new replacements every few years. In reality, a single prosthetic de
vice can cost in excess of five thousanddollars. But for Dillon, an elevenyear oldboy from Durham, his reality was that asolution for his underdeveloped hand (apalm, but no fingers) didn’t even existyet. That’s when DukeMakers entered
the picture.One of the youngest stu
dent organizations on campus,DukeMakers was launched inJanuary 2014. Spanning multiple disciplines—includingmathematics, biology, visualarts and engineering—the 30active members of DukeMakers include both undergraduates and graduate studentswho hold strong interest in
3D printing. Together, they form a functioning node of the global Maker Movement—a niche composite of inventors, designers and artists who embrace opensource learning in both the arts and popular technology.Although additive manufacturing (3D
printing’s most basic operational concept) is not new technology, it has successfully captured the imagination of thepublic. Over the last half decade, 3Dprinting has seen large, multifold increases in its accessibility. Today, powerful 3Dmodeling software, like Sketchup, is evenavailable for free. Commercial 3D printers with resolutions of one hundred microns are also now available for around$1,500—a measly fraction of traditionalmanufacturing setup costs. Never beforein the history of manufacturing has rapidprototyping and customized productionbeen more accessible.Reluctant to eschew the vast potential
of 3D printing, DukeMakers has quicklytaken full advantage of the resources
3Dprinted Duke Chapel
made available to it. In just nine months,DukeMakers acquired or built three fullyfunctional 3D printers—and five moreare soon on their way. These five remaining printers are being built by DukeMakers’ organized printer teams, guided notby bare bones, but opensource instructions from the Internet. Members ofthese teams gain handson hardware experience that can go beyond what istaught in ECE courses, imparting aunique sense of ownership to them asthey successfully conclude these demanding endeavors.Although DukeMakers had only exist
ed for a month when Dillon’s friends andfamily asked the organization to find asolution, DukeMakers eagerly acceptedthe challenge. With modifications of preexisting hand designs, juniors OuwenHuang and Suyash Kumar were able toslash the price of a customized functioning prosthetic hand from thousands ofdollars to less than fifty.Having researched preexisting 3D
models of prosthetic hands and resizedtheir components before, Ouwen notes,“The prosthetic can be developed as Dillon grows. When it becomes too small forhim, we can print out a slightly largerversion of the hand, assemble and prepareit, and deliver it to him with ease.”Dillon’s satisfaction with his new
printed wrist had reverberated within theDurham community and more entitieshave reached out to DukeMakers inhopes of partnership ever since.In a similar vein, the Sand for Life So
lutions approached DukeMakers to create the molding parts for a biosand filter.Biosand filters are large concrete filterspacked with sand and gravel that filtercontaminated water into cleaner waterready for drinking, but are normally machined from steel band and cost up to aquarter of a million dollars each. YingWang, an ECE junior and the presidentof DukeMakers, personally modeled andprinted the necessary components of abiosand filter—with processes and mate
Junior Ouwen Huang with Dillon and his new hand
rials summing to less than $200. Withlargescale 3D printers and filament extrusion devices, Ying commented thatthe costs could be reduced to just overfive dollars.With each tenth of a millimeter of plas
tic extruded from their 3D printers,DukeMakers comes one step further thanit did when it started just months ago. Recently, the club brought 20 members in itsvisit to the World Maker Faire in NewYork City, making connections with nextgeneration manufacturing giants likeShapeways. Optimistic about the club’sfuture, senior visual arts and computer science major Rebecca Lai remarks that 3Dprinting could “reshape industries andperhaps the world.” Driven by collaboration, action and the vast lifechanging potential still left unexplored in 3D printing,DukeMakers continues to search for morework and more partners.
Henry Quach is a sophomore majoring inmechanical engineering.
2015 dukengineer 21Education
Duke’s iGEM TeamTakes Gold in BostonT
he International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition is a new kind of science fair. Undergraduates, graduate students, and even some enterprising high school students formteams and represent their schools at an international researchconference, or jamboree.
In November 2014, the Duke iGEM team took part in the annual competition in Boston called the Giant Jamboree, where teams presented on everything from making a touchscreen device with bacteria to eliminating microplastic pollution in water. About 2,500 students from all over the worldparticipated, and at the end of their presentations, teams were awardedbronze, silver or gold medals, depending on the quality of their project.The judges were impressed with Duke’s iGEM team’s novel use of 3D
printing technology and its DNA synthesis protocol, earning the team a goldmedal after months of hard work—the first time the Duke team has wongold, having won silver last year.
Several of the Duke iGEM team at the Boston Jamboree.From left to right: Mike Zhu, Matthew Faw, Delta Ghoshal, and Garima Tomar.
Competing in BostonDuke’s iGEM team attempted to improvethe CRISPR/dCas9 system. CRISPR/Cas9 is a naturally occurring form of defense against viruses. The system uses smallRNA sequences to guide an enzyme (Cas9)to a target sequence of foreign DNA,which the Cas9 protein then degrades.This prevents the foreign, usually viral,DNA from replicating in the bacteriumand eventually harming or killing it.The dCas9 enzyme is a modified ver
sion of the Cas9 protein that does notcleave DNA but instead represses itsreplication process. Scientists have begunto embrace the CRISPR/dCas9 system ofgenome modification due to its ability totarget specific genetic sequences extremely accurately and modify gene expressionwithout actually modifying the gene itself. Its limitation lies in the fact that itcan’t be confined to two discrete levels ofactivity, like being either on or off. Moving past this hurdle would vastly increasethe number of potential uses for the system, allowing scientists to have either traditional or switchlike CRISPR behavior,depending on the needs of the system.Applications of this ultrasensitivity
would be bistability and scalability, i.e.,a biological toggle switch that can bemassproduced. This has useful applications in the emerging field of gene circuitry, especially because the CRISPR/dCas9 system is so sequencespecific.Find out more about the Duke team’s research by visiting the team wiki athttp://2014.igem.org/Team:Duke.
22 dukengineer 2015
The Human SideThe iGEM program places a large focuson exploring how synthetic biology affectsthe public, due to its potential benefitsand its perceived risks. The Duke team setout to answer the question, “How can weimprove access to synthetic biology?”The answer came in three parts.The first problem the team noticed was
the prohibitive cost of lab equipment.The team, specifically Matthew Faw(BME/ECE ‘17), designed and 3Dprinted several prototypes for lab equipment.From a testtube rack to a small rollerdrum, the result was an average price reduction of 98 percent. 3Dprinted toolshave the advantage of customizability—different labs can print different versionsof the same tool to best suit their needs.The Duke team next tried to tackle the
problem of synthetic biology educationwithin Duke University itself. They havedesigned a house course that will be taughtin the spring of 2015 by members of theiGEM team. This course will focus on the
Duke’s iGEM team: First row, fromleft to right: Dr. Nicolas Buchler,Delta Ghoshal, Dr. Charles Gersbach.Middle row: Charlie Cooper, TJ Ciesla,Mike Zhu. Back: Garima Tomar,Matthew Faw, Matthew Farnitano.Not pictured is Janan Zhu.
This 3D printed piece of equipmentis a small roller drum for gently agitating culture tubes. It was printedand attached to a small power supply. Such a device retails for about$2,150, but the Duke iGEM team produced it for a total cost of $85.50—a 96% decrease in cost.
An Eye to the FutureThe team is looking to the futureand welcomes new members.Due to the interdisciplinary nature of engineering and syntheticbiology, iGEM welcomes peoplefrom all academic fields, from science and engineering to publicpolicy and political science. If youare interested in being a part of
Duke iGEM, consider signing up for ourhouse course to be taught in the Spring2015 semester, and watch out for an application to join the team! For more information, please feel free to [email protected].
Delta Ghoshal is a sophomore member ofthe iGEM team, majoring in biomedicalengineering with a certificate in genomescience and policy.
ethics and policies behind synthetic biology to educate Duke students on the controversies, ethics and immense potential ofsynthetic biology.The third aspect of the Duke team’s pol
icy and practices project was to help another iGEM team get their project started.The team assisted a local high school—theNorth Carolina School of Science andMathematics (NCSSM)—in beginningtheir own team and designing their project,which will be presented at next year’s Jamboree. One of the team members, GarimaTomar, a current senior at NCSSM, servesas the liaison between the schools.
2015 dukengineer 23Education
EducationADecade of DEID
DEID Uganda team members working on the classroomblocks in Uganda in 2014
school can offer boarding and educationto women.All because of a Duke engineer.
oday, it takes a student in San Jose Vil
toago, a Brazilian family has reliable accesstime to get to school than it did five yearslanueva, El Salvador, three hours lessTwater, and a Ugandan vocational
Undergraduates in thePratt School of Engineering are engaged, motivated students who are passionate about improvingthe world around themand the lives of people allover the globe. And yet itcan be difficult for students—especially underclassmen with little practical and academic experience—to find opportunities to effect tangible, substantial change in theworld. With an eye toward this challenge, DukeEngineers for International Development (DEID)is a student organizationthat works to provide stu
dents with just that.Now in its 10th year, DEID was born
out of a long and illustrious presence ofengineers on Duke University’s campusworking tirelessly to use their knowledgeand resources to make an impact on theworld. The organization comprising undergraduates from all disciplines aims todesign and implement impactful, engineeringrelated solutions around the
world while developing students’ sensesof civic responsibility, technical skills andintercultural understanding of what itmeans to be a part of a sustainable, globalcommunity.This past summer, DEID sent teams of
about eight students to four different locations: El Salvador, Uganda, Rwandaand Brazil.In El Salvador, DEID constructed a
piping system, 9,000liter water tank andplate settler system in La Estancia. Thiswas DEID’s fifth year working in El Salvador on a variety of projects rangingfrom bridges to rainwater catchment systems. DEID partnered with a nongovernmental organization in Uganda—Bringing Hope to the Family—to construct two 1,800squarefoot classroomblocks for the New Hope VocationalSchool in Kyongera. In Rwanda, DEIDworked with the national nonprofitBridges to Prosperity for the fifth time tobuild a pedestrian footbridge to replacean existing, unsafe log bridge used byhundreds each day. And in Brazil, DEIDcoordinated efforts with students of theUniversidade Federal da Paraíba to buildtwo water tanks and a rainwater collection/distribution system for the community of Santo Amaro.Next year, DEID plans to return to
Brazil and Rwanda where teams will construct a sustainable housing complex anda pedestrian footbridge, respectively, withthe latter being a joint endeavor withBridges to Prosperity. DEID will alsorestart its domestic program by implementing a project in Durham over the
24 dukengineer 2015
The footbridge constructed in 2014 in Rwanda
spring semester. Students will also make While expanding its reach and abilityan assessment trip to Costa Rica to evalu to solve problems internationally, DEIDate potential projects in Gran de Oro, in continues to ensure that its projects createcluding a medical clinic, footbridge and the highest impact and are of the highestwater collection system. quality. In doing so, students are provid
Construction of the rainwater collectionsystem in Brazil in 2014
ed the opportunity to make a real, noticeable change in the world during their undergraduate careers. One of the most remarkable aspects of the organization isthat the students and the communities inwhich they work grow in tandem, eachlearning from the other. Between the personal connections and memories made,students gain much more than just designand engineering experience by participating in DEID.As the group reflects on its past decade
of bringing practical design opportunitiesto undergraduate students and impactfulsolutions to communityexpressed problems all around the world, it is excited toalso consider its potential for growth inthe coming years in its capabilities, responsiveness and reach.To find out more about DEID, or to
make a contribution to the organization,visit sites.duke.edu/deid/ or facebook.com/pratt.deid.
Matt Tobin is a sophomore doublemajoringin mechanical engineering and physics. Heserves on the executive board of DEID asthe vice president of publicity and as a project leader for the Brazil team.
2015 dukengineer 25
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NewMinor, New InitiativeEnergy Engineering at Duke
Over the past several decades,concerns surrounding howenergy is acquired, convertedand expended have grown inimportance and complicatedthe lives of engineers. In
2013, the Pratt School of Engineering responded to these new challenges with theintroduction of the Minor in Energy Engineering. This comprehensive program isintended to give Duke students the appropriate background to handle the complexand evolving issues surrounding the waysenergy is used and produced.
Marc Deshusses, professor of civil andenvironmental engineering and director ofthe Energy Engineering program, says thatthe initiative began when Dean Tom Kat
Faculty Council (EFC), the decision wasmade to create a minor that would be taken in addition to a primary engineeringmajor with the long term goal of creatinga major.
There had already existed a Certificatein Energy and the Environment program,offered through Duke s Gendell Center forEngineering, Energy and the Environment. However, the certificate provides amore general education with less of a focuson the applied sciences. Deshusses explainsthat the Energy Engineering minor is intended to provide a more technical understanding of the subject and is for Pratt students only.
According to a survey Deshusses conducted of alumni and professionals in re
lated fields, there is an overwhelmingdemand for graduates with a techni“Many professionals would have enjoyedcal understanding of energy and energy technologies, an indication thatmore formal courses in the energy field.”the Pratt School of Engineering
souleas formed a committee to look intohow Duke engineering could better prepare its students for a world preoccupiedwith energy matters. The committee recommended the creation of an energy engineering major. Deshusses, whose researchinterests include biofuels and bioremediation, as well as Josiah Knight, professor ofmechanical engineering and co director ofthe Energy and the Environment Certificate, were given the directive to constructa curriculum with the committee. Afterclose consultation with the Engineering
could benefit from an energy engineeringminor. Specifically, Deshusses mentionedthat the survey results indicated, Manyprofessionals would have enjoyed more formal courses in the energy field.
Neil Simmons, a professor of mechanical engineering who also teaches the Special Topics class Energy for the Built Environment, describes Duke as a natural fitfor a focused course of study in energy engineering. As he sees it, Duke has a strongbackground in energy studies due to thework conducted by the Sanford School of
26 dukengineer 2015
The building of a hydroturbine
Public Policy as well as the Fuqua Schoolof Business, the Pratt School of Engineering and other schools. Coupled with theaccelerating societal importance of thesubject and the relative novelty of having aconcentration in energy engineering, itseemed appropriate for Duke to take onthis endeavor and stand out as a leader inthe field.
The academic structure of the minor isas follows: one required core course, fourelectives in two general categories (Generation and Delivery, Conversion and Efficiency), and a capstone design course. As ofSpring 2015, sixteen students have formally declared for the minor. Moving forward,Deshusses notes that the minor will need toincrease course offerings. He and the school
are currently working to expand selectionsto provide a diversity of topics. The expansion of the current curriculum is also due inpart to the overwhelming enthusiasm fromstudents, as some classes have reached theirenrollment caps in the past two semesters.
Another example of how Duke and itssupporters are channeling more resourcestoward energy studies and studies of theenvironment is through the establishmentof the Gendell Center for Engineering, Energy and the Environment. A product ofthe generosity of Duke alumnus JeffreyGendell T’81 and his wife, Martha Gendell, the center was created to provide students with both technical and nontechnical knowledge of the issues facing the environment and consumption of energy. Thecenter’s initiatives range from improvingcourse variety in energy studies to providing a meeting ground for leading academics and professionals in the field.
The Energy Engineering minor is alsosupported by Duke’s Energy Initiative,which is a strong push by the university todevelop research opportunities as well aseducate students on topics concerning energy. With forward thinking from thePratt School of Engineering and the creation of the Gendell Center, Duke and itsgraduates are wellpoised for dealing withfuture challenges in the energy field.
Nicholas von Turkovich is a sophomoremajoring in electrical and computerengineering and computer science.
2015 dukengineer 27Education
onlineDigitizing DukEngineer
With the help of Duke’s Digital Production Center, all 74years of DukEngineer magazine are now available online
The Digital Production Center’s Zeutschelscanning machine can record up to 200
pages an hour of searchable text
When you’re perusing sevendecades’ worth of prose frommostly unguided undergraduateengineers, there are bound to be
a few surprises–as the team at Duke Libraries who digitized the entirety of theDukEngineer’s archives found.
They turned up detailed explanations of how drinkingbird toys work and coverage ofthe latest eggdrop competition;lengthy technical articles on microelectronics and aeroelasticityalongside poems celebratingspring on campus; odes to theslide rule and earnest discussions of the newfangled television; painstaking diagrams ofcomplex systems and cartoonspoking fun at faculty members;jokes in questionable taste (thatwere routinely questioned byadministrators at the time) andeven—for a few misguidedmidcentury years—a Girl ofthe Month feature highlighting“coeds” on campus.One of the longestrunning
student publications at Duke,DukEngineer was founded inMay 1940, during the first academic year of the College ofEngineering, with the hopes (as
its editor put it) that “This publicationwill develop into a record of the progressat the College of Engineering.”It began as a free, mimeographed publi
cation, but rapidly took on a more professional air, asking for a paid subscription of$1.00 per year and then $1.50. Therewere also pages of paid advertisements inthe ‘40s and ‘50s from companies such asIBM, Westinghouse and US Steel. At theheight of its businesslike boom, the post ofmagazine editor was hotly contested, withelection races written up in the campusnewspaper. Over the years, though, theads and paid subscriptions were dropped,and the pace of the issues began to slow.The magazine skipped a year in 1976
1977 with little more than a note in thesubsequent issue about the student volunteers getting refocused and reorganized asan explanation. In the 1980s the publication merged with the engineering alumnimagazine; it is currently mailed free to11,000 alumni and friends once each year.And, of course, it’s still chronicling DukeEngineering from the perspectives of itsstudents.“It’s interesting to see how DukEngi
neer has changed over the years,” saidMelanie Sturgeon, librarian for engineering, physics and computer science. “Itused to be more of a social newsletter, using only people’s first names or nick
28 dukengineer 2015
Covers from the DukEngineer over the years
names, and talking about clubs and societies or who got pinned or engaged. Andthen there were the war years where students dressed in uniform for class and theissues included reports about students whohad been killed overseas.”Sturgeon got a firsthand view of the
publication’s metamorphosis as the lead onthe project, which began when she startedmaking inroads in the Pratt community asthe new engineering librarian. MinnieGlymph, director of communications forPratt, suggested that the Library could helppreserve the history of the school by digitizing the entire DukEngineer collection incelebration of Pratt’s 75th anniversary.Sturgeon jumped on the idea and soon
began rounding up all of the old issues.Most were bound together in the LibraryService Center, but for scanning purposes,loose issues were preferred. Sturgeon hunted for these in the University Archives aswell as in the boxes upon boxes of old issuescollecting dust in the basement of the Teerengineering building.When the idea was first put forth to dig
itize the entire canon of the studentrunDukEngineer magazine, it seemed like astraightforward proposition. The schoolwas celebrating its 75th anniversary, sothere should be roughly 75 issues of a fewdozen pages to scan into the archives.Nobody realized that at different points
in its history, the magazine had publishedup to six times per year. All told, Sturgeonended up with 205 issues comprising9,065 pages of Duke engineering historythat needed scanning. And Duke’s DigitalProduction Center (DPC) was more thanequal to the task.“The digitization of the DukEngineer
wasn’t even all that big of a project for us,”remarked Zeke Graves, a digitization specialist with Duke Libraries. “But it certainly was an interesting one.”After rounding up the issues, Sturgeon
handed the project off to Molly Bragg, aprojects coordinator in DPC, whose digitization team relied on some good oldfashioned German engineering to get theproject completed before spring commencement.The workhorse of the digitization
process was a Zeutschel scanning machine,which looks a bit like a gigantic modernized overhead projector. The technicianmanning the station opens the documentand lays it as square as possible under apiece of glass. A horizontal line of lightquickly scans down the document whilethe overhead camera tracks and images itsprogress. Once the light reaches the bottom, the Zeutschel is ready for the page tobe flipped so the camera can scan back up.The scanner automatically corrects the
white balance and alignment of the docu
ment. It also automatically crops, skewsand splits the pages. When hummingalong smoothly, it can record up to 200pages an hour of searchable text, meaningthat nobody has to scan through 9,065pages to find something specific, they cansimply search for a name or keyword.After a month’s work, the entire collec
tion was scanned and ready to be massagedtogether into a digital collection. DPCchecked that all the metadata was correct,the editions were complete and the scanswere of the best quality they could be.Now all that’s left is for people to read it.
Who knows what other sorts of interestingartifacts are lurking in all those scannedpages?“One of the most interesting articles I
came across was on the collapse of theTacoma Narrows Bridge,” said Sturgeon,speaking of the illfated Washingtonbridge that collapsed in 1940, meremonths after its completion, after havingtwisted and wiggled about like a JellOmold. “I had studied the incident as an undergraduate in engineering, and here wereDuke students in the magazine’s second issue ever analyzing the failure and why ithappened.”It just goes to show that, even 75 years
ago, Pratt students have enjoyed findingpractical solutions to problems. And writing about them—for DukEngineer.
EXPLORE THE COLLECTION AT LIBRARY.DUKE.EDU/DIGITALCOLLECTIONS/DUKENGINEER
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classnotes1940sWilliam H. Wetmore, Jr. E’43, after graduation, served in the US Navy in the European Theatre and was there for the invasion on June 6. After leaving the Navy, hewent to graduate school at Lehigh University. He then went to work for GE onthe first axial flow jet engine (J47), thenin the military space program [director ofthe first military communication satellitesystem (after Telestar)], then went to theNational Science Foundation in basic research, where he was the director of engineering science for 15 years, then to theUniversity of West Virginia as associatedean of engineering. He was on the engineering faculty at both Lehigh andUCLA. Everything he did at Duke andafter Duke has been a challenge, but fun.He has been blessed to have responsibilities that tested the spirit and to work withwonderful people. For the past 20 years,he has been writing a series of books ontheology. Six books have been publishedand two are now with his publisher.Duke has been and will always be a wonderful experience and a great memory.
William B. Gum E’45 and his wife Constance celebrated their 62nd anniversary.They are both very well, active, and enjoying life.
Harold Ornoff E’45 recently celebrated his91st birthday with his two daughters, fivegrandchildren, and seven great grandchildren. He is enjoying life, attending to hishobbies of coin collecting and stamp collecting, and trying to stay active.
John J. Geier E’46 recently participated inan Alzheimer study that was published inthe March 11, 2014, issue of the Democrat and Chronicle (out of Rochester, NY)titled “A Potential Game Changer:Promising UR study might allow earlydetection of Alzheimer’s.”
1950sEdgar C. Fox, Jr. E’51 has a third generationengineer going to Duke—his grandchildCarolina Ayanian. Her mother, AnneAyanian, graduated from Duke with amechanical engineering degree in 1982.
Malcolm G. Murray, Jr. E’52 has continuedwriting articles for various publicationssince retiring from the company nowcalled ExxonMobil in 1982 and sellingand giving away his small business, Murray & Garig Tool Works and Rescue Reflectors, Inc., in 2011.
Harold Richard “Dick” Kessler E’59 is enjoying his 22nd year of retirement playingwith his two grandchildren and buildingstuff for them. He is growing older andbeing amazed at the changes in technology and society. He is watching to see howthe new graduates handle life and thechanges in our world.
1960sJames J. Ebert E’61 retired in 2007 but stillsubstitute teaches in Guilford County.
Robert F. (Sonny) Epps III E’63 remarried onOctober 21, 2012. His wife is the formerCynthia Brazell, who is a deacon in theLutheran Church. He is enjoying livingon Lake Murray and being close to histhree grandsons in Columbia. Their momis the former Amy Lynn Rawl (Duke classof 1993), who is a cardiologist in Lexington, SC.
1970sPaul S. Follansbee E’72 published a booktitled “Fundamentals of Strength – Principles, Experiment and Applications ofan Internal State Variable ConstitutiveFormalism.”
Larry A. Blue E’78, G’84 is now the chief operating officer at Bell and Howell, a leading global provider of customer communications and commerce.
1980sRichard C. Gaskins, Jr. E’80writes, “I am enjoying life as a grandfather and as executivedirector of an environmental nonprofit. Irecently received the Charlotte Sustainability Award for Water and the James S.Dockery award for environmental leadership in the southern United States.”
Stephen M. Hunt E’80 now works for Novetta Solutions as an enterprise data manager.In July 2013, he was appointed to theFairfax County Electoral Board, where heserves as the vice chairman.
Murray R. Snyder E’82 is a professor in themechanical and aerospace engineering department at GeorgeWashington University in Washington, DC. He is also a research professor at the US Naval Academy, where he is principal investigator forthe Center for Air Wake Studies, whichsupports US Navy rotary wing aircraft research and development.
Robert A. Canfield E’83 received the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Multidisciplinary Design Optimization Award at the AIAA AviationConference in Atlanta, GA, on June 19,2014.
John M. McDonald III E’83 is very pleasedand proud to report that his son, John IV,is a rising sophomore at Pratt studying mechanical engineering. The apple does notfall far from the tree.
Mark M. Murray E’86 was promoted to fullprofessor at US Naval Academy’s mechan
30 dukengineer 2015
ical engineering department. He was assigned first program director for the newlyestablished nuclear engineering major.
1990sPatricia M. Barr E’90 has published her firstnovel, a space opera epic called “WYNDE.”
Susan B. Beauchamp E’90, B’97 runs herown business offering project management, strategic leadership, and training using learn six sigma expertise and seniorconsultant experience. She is grateful toDuke for giving her the confidence to useher love for math and science to offer herself career freedom and the opportunity tocreate new services to renew herself and herbusiness over time.
Ronald R. Richardson G’92 was recently appointed deputy program manager for theDefense Health Management SystemModernization Program—a $12 billionprogram to replace the legacy DOD electronic health record with an offtheshelfsolution. The new system will enhance interoperability with the Veteran’s Affairs
(VA) health system and drive health dataexchange standardization initiatives in cooperation with the Office of the NationalCoordinator (ONC).
Nicole Sabine Finger E’93 is a principalconsultant with Daugherty Business Solutions. She lives in Dallas, TX, with herhusband Sam and their son Andrew.
Stephen D. Williams E’93 and Kara Williamsare proud to announce the birth of theirthird child, a beautiful baby girl, TaylorBielle Williams. She was born on August29, 2014, in Waconia, MN, at RidgeviewMedical Center and weighed 7 lb., 8 oz.Mom, dad, and siblings Caroline (6) andDrew (4) are doing great.
John A. Rule E’92, E’94, G’97 is a researchand development leader at Bose Corporation. He recently welcomed a fourthchild, Natalie Anne Rule, with his wifeTiffany T’93 and three sons Parker,Davis, and Chase.
Sara A. GrubeEdwards E’95 and her husband, Keith, would like to announce the
Pratt students and families celebrated DukeEngineering's 75th at the Parents’ WeekendPratt Engineering BBQ – October 2014
birth of their son, Connor Otis Edwards,on February 12, 2014.
Nicholas A. Moraites E’95 and his wife, Ashley, would like to announce the birth oftheir daughter, Penelope Anastasia, onMay 2, 2014.
Robert J. Waldner E’95 is still living in NewYork and working as a lawyer, but the bignews is that he just published his firstnovel, called “Peripheral Involvement.”
Kristine M. Singley E’96, B’07 and her husband, Alec Ras, would like to announcethe birth of their son, Charles AlexanderSingley Ras, on December 14, 2013, at9:47 am. Charlie weighed 8 pounds, 3ounces and was 20 inches long.
William M. Houston E’98 and Lauren Houston are proud to announce the birth oftheir first child, Drew Michael. He wasborn on November 28, 2013, in Philadelphia and weighed 8 lb., 6 oz.
Gerald S. Meyer E’98 and his wife, Gina,are proud to announce the birth of fraternal twin boys, Danny and Drew. Theywere born on January 4, 2014, in Norfolk, VA. Gerald was also recently promoted to vice president, general managerat Legal Resources located in VirginiaBeach, VA.
Lindsay Johnson Chang E’99 and JosephChang are happy to announce their marriage on November 29, 2013.
Riley W. Murdock E’99 and her husband,Jamie, are proud to announce the birth ofa baby girl, Sydney Jean. She was born onApril 4, 2014, in Memphis, TN, andweighed 7 lb., 12 oz.. She joins her bigbrother Robin (2) and arrived just in timefor the family’s move to Virginia Beach,VA.
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classnotes2000sBrianM. Stempel E’00 andKathrynCoulombeStempel T’02 are proud to announce thebirth of a baby boy, Evan James. He wasborn on October 21, 2013, in Raleigh,NC, and weighed 8 lb., 9 oz.
J. Nathaniel Day E’01 and his wife wouldlike to announce the birth of their fourthchild, Peter Wesley Dutton Day, on September 14, 2014, at 2:14 am. He weighed8 lbs. and was 20 ½ inches long. His bigbrother and sisters were thrilled to meethim, and mom and dad are doing great!
Aydin A. Kadaster E’01 and Rainer PoleyT’01 climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania in December 2013.
Mia K. Markey G’02 received her BME PhDin 2002 and is now a respected leader inbreast cancer research. She is a professor ofBME and an engineering foundation endowed faculty fellow at UT Austin, and anadjunct professor of imaging physics atMD Anderson. She has received numerousresearch and teaching awards from theAmerican Medical Informatics Association, American Society for EngineeringEducation, American Cancer Society, andSociety for Women’s Health Research. Sheis a fellow of the American Association forthe Advancement of Science (AAAS) and asenior member of both IEEE and SPIE.
Jamie M. Alders E’04 and his wife, ErikaT’02, would like to announce the birth oftheir son, Marshall Duke Alders, on April19, 2014. He joins his two other siblings,Parker Bennett and Charlotte Carney.
Jeffrey M. Trost E’04 and Julia HamiltonT’05 are happy to announce their marriage on September 7, 2013, on Nantucket Island, MA. They currently reside inSan Francisco, CA.
Pengyu Cheng E’05, X’06, since graduation,has been working in the medical device
industry with Johnson & Johnson(Cordis Corporation) in Miami, FL, andcurrently with Biomet in Parsippany, NJ.He recently obtained his executive MBAdegree from Columbia University in Mayof 2013. He is very glad to share the newswith the Duke community that he and hiswife will be relocating from their residence in West Caldwell, NJ, to the BayArea of northern California as he starts anew job as the global supply managerwith Apple, Inc. He feels that the amazingeducation he received from Duke University strongly helped to lay the foundationof his career and he will forever be gratefulto this wonderful academic institution.He is looking forward to making valuablecontributions to a great organizationstarting in April and representing Dukewell by bringing his enthusiasm, dedication, and leadership to the workplace. It isalso very exciting to know that his futureCEO, Tim Cook, is also a Duke alum.
Sarah Conley Ruffner E’05 and MatthewRuffner are proud to announce the birthof a baby girl, Olivia Meade Ruffner. Shewas born on October 15, 2013, in Atlanta, GA, and weighed 6 lb., 14 oz.
David J. Larado E’06 and Charisse WilliamsT’06 are proud to announce their marriage on November 9, 2013, in Los Angeles, CA. The happy couple currently reside in New York, NY.
Michael S. Humeniuk E’07 and Katie MaryJames would like to announce their marriage on November 2, 2013.
Meredith C. Min E’07 and Warren Y. Minare proud to announce their marriage onNovember 2, 2013.
Addison W. Ferrell E’08 and his wife, JulieMatthews Ferrell T’09, are proud to announce the birth of a baby girl, MarieChristine. She was born on January 7,2014, in Cincinnati, OH, and weighed 7
lb., 8 oz. She was also welcomed by herolder sister Lydia (2).
Holly L. (Hackman) Ohlsson E’08 and Magnus Ohlsson were married on June 7,2014, at the Duke Gardens.
Adam J. Dixon E’09 was awarded a Double’Hoo Research Grant from the Universityof Virginia, which funds pairings of undergraduate and graduate students whocollaborate on research projects. Eachproject is awarded up to $5,000 towardresearch expenses, plus $500 in support toa faculty mentor. This year’s winners wereselected from a pool of 50 applicants.
Kristeena L. Ray E’09 has been appointed tothe position of West Virginia state director of the Nu Omicron chapter of ZetaPhi Beta Sorority, Incorporated. Kristeena has served the sisterhood wellthroughout her Zeta lifespan to includeactive participation in the Nu Omicronchapter and NPHC while at Duke and assecretary of the West Virginia executiveboard. There is no doubt that the state ofWest Virginia will continue to prosperunder Ray’s leadership.
Margaret Hoff Hopkins E’10 and AdamHopkins are happy to announce theirmarriage on October 5, 2013, in Rockford, IL. They currently reside in Brooklyn, NY.
Eric N. L. Thorne E’11 began working as anelectrical/hardware engineer at AngazaDesign, Inc. in January, developing payasyougo finance technology for cleanenergy products—currently solar lamps inKenya and Tanzania. He is happy to begetting closer to his engineering experience as well as back in the internationaldevelopment space—similar to his involvement with Engineers Without Borders (now DEID) while he was at Duke!
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inmemoryDonald M. Bernard, Jr. E’46 passed away onOctober 28, 2013.
James H. Corrigan, Jr. E’47, beloved and devoted husband, father, grandfather, brother, uncle, friend, and teammate, died onMonday, January 6, 2014, at his home atArbor Acres. Jim was born in Buffalo, NY,on March 15, 1926, to Cleta and HenryCorrigan and grew up in Baltimore, MD.He enlisted in the Navy Air Corps in1943, served in Air Intelligence, and wasdischarged as a Lieutenant JG. Jim graduated from Duke University in 1947 with adegree in mechanical engineering and methis wife of 62 years, Barbara, on a blinddate in Atlanta. Following a quickcourtship, they married and lived in Atlanta, where their daughter Ann was born;in Baltimore, where their sons Jim andMike were born; and also Miami, beforemoving to WinstonSalem in 1967, whereJim joined RJR Archer. He was presidentof RJR Archer as well as RJR Foods beforejoining Mebane Packaging Company in1980, where he became president andchairman of the board and retired in 1997.Jim drove to Mebane from WinstonSalem five days a week for 17 years, making the most of his travel time listening tobooks on tape. His community activitiesin WinstonSalem included serving aspresident of the Chamber of Commerce,and heading fundraising campaigns for theUnitedWay and the Arts Council. He wasa founder and director of what is nowNewBridge Bank. He also served on theParish Council and the Finance Commission at St. Leo the Great Catholic Church.Up until recently, Jim was a regular at theStratford Rotary and a devoted Meals onWheels volunteer. Jim was very active withDuke’s Pratt Engineering School, servingas chair and director of its Board of Visitors. He received the School of Engineering’s Distinguished Alumni Award. He also served on the Advisory Board of Duke’sFuqua School of Business. After Jim and
Barbara moved from Glen Echo Trail toArbor Acres, they became involved in theirnew community, with Jim serving on theArbor Acres board, joining the Men’sClub, and singing with the Sharps andFlats. Always welcoming with a big smileand a big heart, Jim loved his family andfriends and kept up with everyone. He wasalways interested in their lives, often serving as counselor and advisor, and alwaysthere at every family event. Jim alwaysshowed up. And he never gave up, no matter how difficult the challenge, injury, orillness. Jim never lost contact with hisArcher and Mebane comrades, attendinglunches and dinners up until recently, aswell as taking annual trips with his SAEfraternity brothers. A tremendous athleteall his life, he played lacrosse and tennis atDuke and was always a devoted golfer. Heand Barbara enjoyed both golf and tennisat the beach at Lichfield and in the mountains at Hound Ears. Jim was also a fulltime sports fan, particularly watching hisgrandchildren’s sports and Duke University’s basketball, football, and lacrosse teamsand all golf tournaments. An avid reader,Jim had a stack of books, magazines, andnewspapers nearby, as well as the dailycrossword puzzle, keeping his mind assharp as ever. His memory, his determination, and his sense of humor never failed.He is survived by his wife, Barbara CronkCorrigan; daughter Ann Hopkins (Gerry)of WinstonSalem; sons Jim of Norfolk,VA, and Mike (Mitzi) of Charlotte, NC;eight grandchildren, Corri, Mary Kate,and Grace Hopkins; Keenan, Cole, andDrew Corrigan; and Abigale and EmmaCorrigan; sisters Peggy Smith Stegman ofFrederick, MD, and Mary D’Ambrogi(Don) of Baltimore, MD; brothers Gene(Lena) of Charlottesville, VA, George(Mary) of Villanova, PA, and Dick (Sally) of Berlin, MD; and numerous godchildren, nieces, and nephews. Jim andBarbara are especially thankful for thededicated and caring people who have
helped care for Jim during the past yearand a half, including the staff at ArborAcres and Hospice. Online condolencesmay be made through www.salemfh.com.
Garnett L. “Jack” Ferguson, Jr. E’47 passedaway in the early morning of January 17,2014, just five days before his 87th birthday. Jack (Papa Bear, Paw Paw, Granddaddy Jack) grew up in Atlanta and wentto Boys High. He was always an avid reader and in high school was active in theROTC. He was proud to enter the Navyafter high school and then continue his education to become an engineer at Emorybefore graduating from Duke. His familywas always the most important thing tohim, and he and his wonderful wife raisedthree beautiful daughters of whom he wasvery proud. He was committed to his wifeLouisa and their 66 years of marriage is atestament to their love. He had several jobsbefore going to work at Lockheed, wherehe remained until his retirement in 1988after 36 years. When he retired, he andLou traveled far and wide around theworld on cruises and across the US by car.When their travel slowed down, he became actively involved in the LockheedRetirees Management Association, theSons of the American Revolution (SAR),and the Old Guard. He became a speakerfor the SAR and wrote and made hundreds of presentations over these last yearsto young and old groups around thesouth. He had a true gift for teaching andled classes in his church on many Sundaymornings.
William T. Henry E’47 passed away onThursday, December 12, 2013.
Edward L. Koffenberger E’47, age 88 years,of Cokesbury Village, died September21, 2014. He was born in Wilmington,DE, on July 4, 1926, the son of ArthurW. Koffenberger and Natalie T. Koffenberger. He graduated from P.S. DuPont
2015 dukengineer 33
inmemoryHigh School in 1944. He graduated fromDuke University’s engineering school in1947 with a BSME. At Duke, he waselected to Omicron Delta Kappa honorary leadership fraternity and Pi Tau Sigma honorary mechanical engineering fraternity. His illustrious athletic career included becoming Duke’s first twotimeAll American in basketball and was also anAll American in lacrosse. He was namedthe outstanding amateur athlete in Northand South Carolina in 1947. He later wasinducted into Duke’s Athletic Hall ofFame and Basketball Wall of Honor aswell as Delaware’s Athletic Hall of Fame.In 2008, he was honored as the first livinglegend by the Delaware Sportswriters andBroadcasters. He enjoyed working withyoung people and spent many hours volunteer coaching and officiating youthsports. He was an active tennis player,winning several Delaware Senior Olympicage group tournaments and participatingin the National Senior Olympics. He retired fromDuPont in 1989 after spending42 years in a variety of Textile Fibersmanagement jobs, first at plants in Richmond, VA, Camden, SC, Washington,VA, and Chattanooga, TN, and then for22 years in Wilmington. He was part ofthe original development team for“Nomex” and retired as worldwide manufacturing manager for “Lyrica.” He andhis wife are members of First PresbyterianChurch of Newark where he was an elder,committee chair, and Sunday schoolteacher. His leadership, wisdom, and generosity will be missed by the church. Hewas also very active in New Castle Presbytery, where he served as treasurer for 14years, as moderator, and on many committees. He was a member of Duke Engineering’s Board of Visitors for 15 years.He received Duke Engineering’s Distinguished Service Award in 2013. He alsoserved on local boards of Pencader Hundred Community Center, PrisonMinistryof Deleware, Master Gardeners, and as adocent at the Delaware Sports Museum
and Hall of Fame. Ed married his highschool sweetheart and they enjoyed 66years of happy marriage together. He willbe greatly missed by his wife, Winnie, histen grandchildren, and his five children:Ed Jr. and his wife Mary Ann; BarbaraChilcoat and her husband Ed; LauraCroom and her husband David; Charlesand his wife Susan; and Carol KoffenbergerJones and her husband Brian.
Billy B. Olive E’48 passed away on December 4, 2014. A Chevalier of the French Legion of Honor, recipient of North Carolina’s Order of the Long Leaf Pine, first andonly awardee of the Triangle IntellectualProperty Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award, recipient of Duke Forest’sClarence F. Korstian award and DukeUniversity’s School of Engineering Distinguished Alumnus award, beloved husband, and cherished father, grandfather,and greatgrandfather, Billy Brown Olivefilled his 93 years with life and love, andleaves a treasured legacy of achievementsand memories for his family, friends, andcolleagues. Mr. Olive was born in FuquaySprings, NC, on November 6, 1921, to B.Ray Olive and Virginia Wood Olive. Heenjoyed Hope Valley elementary and highschool (a protest strike he led is featured inhis music teacher’s memoirs), then enrolled in Duke University’s School of Engineering. World War II intervened andhe entered the Army, first studying andteaching at the War College and thenfighting in France and Germany with the95th Infantry as part of what becameknown as the “Iron Men of Metz.” Mr.Olive’s service and his battle woundsearned a Purple Heart, two Bronze Stars,and other honors from the US as well as aknighthood (Chevalier de la Légiond’honneur) from the French governmentfor his bravery and service in helping toliberate Metz from Nazi occupation. Afterthe war and recovery from his injuries, hereturned to Duke, where he completed hisengineering degree. He then joined West
inghouse’s International Division in NewYork. While working fulltime, he also attended and graduated from St. John’s LawSchool and met and married Denyse Edwards, with whom he had three children.Mr. Olive moved back to North Carolinato become Fieldcrest Mills’ first patent attorney and then, in 1957, returned toDurham and founded the firm that now isOlive & Olive—the first private intellectual property firm in the Triangle and oneof the first in North Carolina. The firmthrived as he protected inventions rangingfrom peanut harvesters and tobacco barnsto knitting machines, sophisticated medical equipment, lasers, electronics, andcomputer technology.No matter how busy, he always made
time for his family and worked to instill inhis children academic curiosity, a loveboth of science and of the liberal arts, andattention to detail. After his wife’s death in1967, he was both mom and dad to histhree teenagers, shepherding themthrough their driving years and into college. He and his family were blessed whenhe found love again with Eve Evans, an architect and eurythmist, to whom he hadbeen happily married for over four decadesat the time of his death. Throughout thistime, his intellectual property practicecontinued to grow, with clients and colleagues around the world on every continent except Antarctica. His oldest daughter joined the firm after graduating fromDuke Law School, ultimately becominghis partner and the other Olive in “Olive& Olive.” That made the firm the first intellectual property firm in the state to havea female partner. A few years later, it alsobecame the first in the state to be raciallyintegrated. His belief that all persons arecreated equal was genuine and practiceddaily. Active in the community, Mr. Oliveserved as president of Duke’s engineeringalumni; taught at the engineering school;wrote Duke’s first patent policy; cofounded the Triangle Land Conservancy (abench in the forest was later dedicated in
34 dukengineer 2014
his honor); founded the North CarolinaBar Association’s intellectual property lawcommittee; fought to integrate the NC BarAssociation; mobilized forces to successfully protect Duke Forest and New HopeCreek from commercial exploitation;worked for preservation of Durham’s blackCrest Street community when construction of NC147 threatened to destroy thathistoric neighborhood; and fought to ensure that environmental factors were notoverlooked in the state’s road planningwork. He also served on the vestry of St.Philip’s Episcopal Church. He and thefirm continued his emphasis on civic responsibility, including support ofDurham’s community soup kitchen andhomeless shelter, Urban Ministries ofDurham, both as founding supporters in1983 and throughout the years since thattime. Mr. Olive is survived by his wife of43 years, Helen Eve Olive, his three children, and their spouses.
Harold M. Jackson II E’49, of Hendersonville, NC, passed away on March 8, 2014.He served in the USAF where he designeddepot test equipment for USAF bombingsystems. He spent his career at Bell Telephone Laboratories working on early missile detection software and computer network technology. He was an avid golfer,computer enthusiast, and community volunteer. He is survived by his wife, Mary,three daughters, one son, and 12 grandchildren.
Hugh L. Stone, Jr. E’49 passed away on November 15, 2013.
Joseph L. Biggs E’50 passed away on October 29, 2013.
Emanuel J. Walker E’51 passed away on October 3, 2013.
David St. Pierre DuBose, Jr. E’54, age 82,passed away Saturday, April 19, 2014 atUNC Hospital.
Charles H. Pingree E’56, of Fort Wayne,IN, died March 1, 2014. Hazen was a truegentleman and a seeker of knowledge.These attributes were reflected in everything he did throughout his life until theday he passed away. Born August 27,1933, in Detroit, MI, he was a son ofGilbert Bissell and Elizabeth Davis Pingree. He was the great grandson of the former progressive Michigan governor andDetroit mayor, Hazen S. Pingree. He attended the Detroit University School andspent his summers sailing with his fatheron their boat the Red Head on the GreatLakes. Hazen went on to win the Canada’sCup, a prominent sailing race, in 1972.He attended Duke University where hewas a member of the Alpha Tau Omegafraternity and majored in mechanical engineering. He furthered his studies as a graduate student at the University of Michigan. Hazen spent his professional life as anengineer until he retired at the age of 70.He finished his career as a sales managerfor the European and Asian regions forTextron, where he pursued his passion fortraveling. As a voracious reader, Hazenread six books a month with no exceptionsthroughout his life. Hazen was fascinatedwith archeology and later studied the subject at Wayne State University. Hazen wasformerly married to Patricia Dockson ofDetroit, MI, with whom he had a daughter, Carolyn Davis Pingree of Englewood,NJ. He married Barbara O’Beirne of Norwood, MA, in 1978. They have twodaughters, Elizabeth Bissell Pingree andCatherine Harrison Pingree, both ofChicago, IL. He lived the last years of hislife with his wife, Barbara, and dog, Annie,in their home in Fort Wayne. He loved tomake biannual drives to the couple’s second home in Cape Cod, MA, where hisbody will return for final resting. Hazenwas a loving husband, dedicated father,and loyal friend. He will be missed dearly.
James W. Vaughan, Jr. E’57, former assistantsecretary of energy for nuclear energy and
an assistant to Adm. Hyman G. Rickoverin the development of naval nuclearpropulsion, died December 4, 2013, atMount Vernon Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Fairfax County. He was77. The cause was brain cancer. Mr.Vaughan was assistant secretary for nuclear energy from 1984 to 1987. He began his federal career in 1957 in the Navalnuclear propulsion program and for 28years reported directly to Rickover, widelyregarded as the father of the nuclear navy.On retiring from federal service in 1987,Mr. Vaughan was president and generalmanager of Halliburton NUS environmental corporation in Gaithersburg until1993 and then for 10 years was a privatetechnical and management consultant.James Willard Vaughan, Jr. was born inDurham, NC. As a youngster, he becamean Eagle Scout, and he was a Boy Scoutleader as an adult. He graduated fromDuke University in 1957 and did postgraduate study in nuclear engineering atGeorge Washington University and theUniversity of Maryland. He was a member of the Senior Executive Service and received awards for distinguished service.He was an Alexandria resident. Survivorsinclude his wife of 56 years, FrancesSmith Vaughan of Alexandria; two sons,Kevin S. Vaughan of Cleveland and KeithA. Vaughan of Washington; a brother;and two grandsons.
Van L. Kenyon III E’58 passed away onMarch 2, 2011.
Karl J. Leupold E’61 passed away on December 9, 2013.
James L. Vincent E’61 passed away on December 5, 2013.
Alan W. Withers E’68 passed away on Saturday, September 7, 2013.
Perry D. Inhofe E’84 passed away on November 10, 2013.
2014 dukengineer 35
From the EAC PresidentDear Fellow and Future Pratt Engineers,
After reading this issue of DukEngineer, you willundoubtedly understand that engineering studentshave some amazing opportunities at Duke. I wouldlike to let you know how the Engineering AlumniAssociation contributes to these opportunities and
the innovation, creativity and growth happening on the Dukecampus.The Engineering Alumni Council (EAC) represents the
broader Engineering Alumni Association (EAA) and consistsof Pratt alumni volunteers, development staff and student representatives. We bring a variety of experiences to our activitiesin support of the Pratt School of Engineering and are fortunateto return to campus at least four times per year to connect withthe school and each other in support of the EAA’s mission. Weare organized into committees that direct and implement ouractivities from year to year. Our local outreach focuses on students and our alumni base, while efforts are focused worldwidethrough our Distinguished Alumni and Service Awards. However, no matter where our efforts are focused, we are united byour commitment to each other and our school and are inspiredby today’s students.Fellow alumni, have you ever wondered why we send you a no
tice each summer requesting your annual engineering dues payment? Well, I would like to share a few (fun?) facts with you:
• The Pratt School of Engineering has more than9,700 alumni, but only 10 percent pay annual duesto the EAA.
• The primary source of income for the EAC is dues.• The EAC is financially independent from otherDuke organizations, including the Duke Alumni Association and the Engineering Annual Fund. This independence ensures that our money stays within thePratt community and goes toward supporting ourmission as an alumni organization.
• The EAC has prioritized spending based on threecore activities:• Supporting extracurricular student projects• Recognizing outstanding alumni• Helping engineering alumni stay engaged
• Some years we can only fund 30 to 40 percent of student project requests.
• All alumni can pay their engineering dues and annualfund donations online at gifts.duke.edu/pratt.
• Each year the EAC reads proposals, listens to presentations and allocates money to enterprising studentgroups. We help teams attend competitions or purchase materials, but cannot fund every worthy activity to the extent we desire. What we consistently canprovide—and always do—is our dedication and willingness to share ideas and experiences.
Hopefully you now see why we need your dues paymentsand how easy it is to contribute. We are also working on additional sources of funding by applying for—and receiving—grants. We have successfully applied for and received grantsfrom the Lord Foundation to help us in our endeavor. In addition, we search out individual and corporate involvement anddevelop relationships within the broader Duke community toimprove our reach and opportunities.To keep connected with the school and each other, we use
Facebook, LinkedIn and other social media. We can supporteach other, on and off the Durham campus, through many avenues, such as the Distinguished Alumnus and DistinguishedYoung Alumnus Awards. We would appreciate more suggestions; all we need is a name and a starting point of reference.And we are always recruiting—seeking alumni willing to
travel to Durham three to four times a year to join the EAC. Ifyou are interested or want more information, visit the Prattalumni website (pratt.duke.edu/alumni) or send me an email([email protected]). For those of you still enjoyingyour time in the Gothic Wonderland, I hope that you will reflect back on your experiences, remember how your alumnifamily has tried to give back to you and become impassionedto keep connected.I am honored to serve as your EAC President this year and
hope that our activities have encouraged you to become or stayinvolved. And don’t forget our annual Engineering AwardsBanquet is on April 25, 2015, at the Nasher Museum. We willbe honoring our Distinguished Alumni Award, Service winners and our outstanding Pratt faculty, and there’s alwaysroom for one more. I hope to see you there!
Forever Duke,
Ershela L. Sims E’[email protected](919) 6846582
PS: Your onestopshop on the web is pratt.duke.edu/alumni.Help us make a difference!
36 dukengineer 2015
Pratt’s Growing Group of
Class AgentsWon’t you take your commitment to Pratt one step further and
join our growing group of Class Agents?Class Agents work on behalf of the Annual Fund and Alumni Rela
tions to encourage class participation. This classmatetoclassmate contact is extremely important to the growth of Pratt’s fundraising efforts,alumni programs such as Reunion Weekend and to the university as awhole. Your willingness to share the importance of giving to the Engineering Annual Fund with your classmates will mean a great deal to thefuture of the school. In addition, you will get an opportunity to “reconnect” with members of your class.
As a contributor to the Engineering Annual Fund, you realize and demonstrate theimportance of making a yearly gift to your alma mater. While total contributed dollarsare clearly vital to the financial health of our school, the number of contributing alumniis equally important.
Last year 40% of Pratt’s graduates supported the school. We are aiming to increase to50% this year for Pratt’s 75th Anniversary.
It takes a lot to raise the participation rate by just one point, but with your help, wecan do it! Classmatetoclassmate contact has proven to be the key element in higherparticipation rates.
And it doesn’t take as much time as you might think. Your signature on a personalletter or a few phone calls to your classmates will get results. Plus you would not do italone! We hope to get several classmates to help.
The Development Office will provide you with all the tools you need to contact yourclassmates. We will print and mail your letters and even help you compose them. Theoffice will provide class lists and help you keep track of your progress. Communicationwill take place through regular mail, email and by phone. You are always welcome tomeet with the Development and Alumni staff on campus, though oncampus meetingsare certainly not a requirement.
It’s as simple as that!We expect most of the Class Agent activity to occur in the spring (April 1 – June 30).Some graduates need to hear from their peers directly about how important even a small
gift of $10 $25 can be. After all, small gifts add up to big dollars and make a real impact.Please consider joining us to promote alumni support and involvement. Please con
tact me if you can help! Together, we can make a meaningful difference in the educational experience for generations to come.
Sincerely,
Giving to Pratt2015 dukengineer 37
Annual Fund Campaign20132014
GOAL Dollars RaisedCLASS 201415 201314 Participation 201314HCC $228,500 $213,126 45%1964 $24,000 $23,749 46%1965 $21,500 $21,025 50%1966 $16,700 $16,500 40%1967 $44,100 $44,038 55%1968 $22,500 $21,395 55%1969 $22,000 $20,310 44%1970 $20,300 $20,190 42%1971 $127,000 $126,704 68%1972 $18,300 $18,285 50%1973 $65,000 $39,275 44%1974 $10,000 $7,520 43%1975 $27,800 $27,714 44%1976 $40,500 $39,750 38%1977 $41,000 $40,985 38%1978 $57,400 $57,376 43%1979 $53,000 $49,863 42%1980 $88,300 $88,274 41%1981 $307,000 $306,956 38%1982 $56,500 $56,226 38%1983 $210,500 $210,388 35%1984 $110,000 $106,575 37%1985 $63,500 $63,491 40%1986 $64,500 $64,360 39%1987 $152,000 $151,984 34%1988 $67,000 $117,990 43%1989 $30,000 $26,807 32%1990 $41,500 $41,012 37%1991 $24,500 $24,392 34%1992 $65,000 $64,781 35%1993 $23,000 $22,822 39%1994 $65,000 $61,511 31%1995 $16,500 $16,438 32%1996 $27,500 $27,165 37%1997 $33,500 $33,378 37%1998 $12,400 $12,119 32%1999 $13,500 $11,379 35%2000 $25,000 $24,768 33%2001 $40,000 $14,822 41%2002 $21,600 $21,548 37%2003 $7,200 $7,144 34%2004 $13,500 $11,382 31%2005 $13,000 $12,826 42%2006 $8,600 $8,678 44%2007 $8,000 $7,152 48%2008 $8,000 $6,616 48%2009 $20,000 $16,740 44%2010 $3,800 $3,524 40%2011 $4,700 $4,375 35%2012 $4,600 $3,406 36%2013 $4,100 $4,314 49%2014 $3,000 $0 0%
Participation Goal 20141545%47%49%40%55%52%46%42%68%50%44%45%44%43%41%43%45%41%39%39%35%40%41%39%35%41%36%37%35%35%39%35%32%38%37%32%38%36%41%37%35%50%42%45%48%48%50%40%35%36%35%50%
Alumni $2,496,400 $2,443,148 40% 41%Parents and Friends $753,600 $987,084TOTAL $3,250,000 $3,430,232
38 dukengineer 2015
Annual Fund Dollars Raised 20132014 (BY CLASS)
Annual Fund Class Participation 20132014 (BY CLASS)
2015 dukengineer 39
Honor RollRecognizing 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 an individual and his/her spouse. Corporate matching gifts counttoward membership if received or verified within the fiscal year.
Gift Club Gift LevelCabinet Members of the President’s Executive Council $50,000+President’s Executive Council $25,000 $49,999President’s Council $10,000 $24,999William Preston Few Association $5,000 $9,999Washington Duke Club Fellows $2,500 $4,999Washington Duke Club Members $1,000 $2,499Washington Duke Club Young Alumni Members $500 $2,499(undergraduate alumni 59 years after graduation)Washington Duke Club Young Alumni Members $250 $2,499(undergraduates and undergraduate alumni up to 4 years after graduation)Washington Duke Club Seniors $100 $2,499
Cabinet Members of the President’s 1984 Mr. James Kelly McGowan 1962 Mr. Cleveland C. Kern Jr.# Ms. Yin YinExecutive Council $50,000+ 1987 Mr. George Nathaniel Mattson II# 1964 Mr. John R. Gabriel# 1995 Mr. Steven Andrew McClelland1962 Dr. William Walter McCutchen, 1989 Mrs. Susan Green Daniel 1968 Mr. Donald H. Turnbull 1996 Mr. James Karl Henry Jr.
Jr.*# Parents and Friends 1970 Mr. John G. Ordway III Mr. Clement David Pappas1971 Mr. John T. Chambers*# Dr. James William Berry G’67 1973 Mr. William Joseph Hanenberg Mr. David Earl Dolby1981 Ms. Martha Lee Monserrate# Mr. and Mrs. James C. Buie P’17 1976 Mr. Jeffrey I. Spiritos Mrs. Liska De Koning Yealland
Mr. John Michael Pearson# Mrs. Karen E. Copeland P’13# 1977 Mrs. Janis J. Rehlaender*# 2001 Mr. William Grant DollensMr. Jeffrey N. Vinik*# Mr. Aaron Scott Daniel T’89 1978 Mr. Herman Cone III Mr. Kevin Edwards
1983 Mr. Daniel McKenzie Dickinson# Mr. David Eklund P’18 1979 Mr. Jonathan Norton 2002 Mrs. Alyssa Fanelli Benza1984 Mr. Kenneth Thomas Schiciano*# Mrs. Suzanne White Fehsenfeld P’16# Mr. Charles A. Tharnstrom Mr. Sahil P. Patel1987 Mr. Lawrence David Lenihan Jr.# Mr. Jeffrey Lund Gendell T’81, P’14*# 1980 Mr. Christopher Martin Relyea Parents and Friends
Mr. Michael George Rhodes# Mrs. Martha Powers Gendell P’16# Mr. David Scott Taylor Ms. Judith L. Anderson1989 Mr. Peter John Perrone Mrs. Sharon Doyle Hawkins P’09, P’12, 1981 Mr. Jeffrey C. Conklin Mrs. Amy Arnold1994 Mr. Michael James Bingle P’14*# Mr. David Ivison Rowland Mrs. Elizabeth Hanna BartonParents and Friends Ms. Kathryn Anne Hollister T’81, P’17*# Mr. Armando Alejandro Tabernilla Ms. Penny A. Bennett P’14, P’16Mrs. Eryn Ament Bingle Mrs. Holly Melissa Laningham Mattson# 1982 Mr. William Burris Gex Mr. and Mrs. D. Theodore Berghorst P’04,Mrs. Elaine Chambers# Dr. and Mrs. Glenn W. Laub P’15 Mr. John Craig Hausman III P’09Mrs. Gina Dickinson P’15# Mrs. Dawn Renee McDonald P’17 1983 Mr. David McDowell Bennett Mrs. Laura F. Bevier T’87Mrs. Irene Lilly McCutchen WC’62, P’86*# Mrs. Mary Nancy McGowan Mr. Jeffrey Kohl Wilkins Mrs. Carolina BranchMr. Herbert Hardinge McDade III T’81, P’13# Dr. Bradley Lewis Miller T’81, P’17*# 1984 Mr. Andrew Murray White Dr. Thomas P. Branch T’77Mrs. Christine S. Pearson N’84, P’15, P’18# Mrs. Karen Marie Natelli P’10# Mrs. Katharyn Mountain White Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Bruno P’16Mrs. Margaret Cobey Perrone T’89 Ms. Mary Massman Rooney P’14, P’18# 1985 Mr. Nelson Elbert Matthews Jr. Mr. Barry Norman Bycoff P’06, P’09Mrs. Maureen Cawley Rhodes# Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Sternberg P’08# 1986 Mr. Scott Jay Arnold Mrs. Cordylia Crook Chapman WC’50
Mrs. Beverly A. Wilkinson P’98, P’00, P’03*# Dr. William M. Ricci Mrs. Donna M. ConePresident’s Executive Council 1987 Mr. Richard H. Bevier Mrs. Teri Kaye Conklin T’82, P’12, P’15$25,000 $49,999 President’s Council Mr. Cameron Harold Fowler Mrs. Barbara C. Corrigan1967 Mr. Jerry C. Wilkinson*# $10,000 $24,999 1989 Mr. Robert Rudolph Wahl Jr. Mr. Joep Rienus Jan de Koning1973 Mr. Fred Mehlert Fehsenfeld Jr.# 1950 Mr. Robert W. Chapman 1990 Mr. Robert L. Seelig Mrs. Karin J. Dell’Antonia1976 Mr. William A. Hawkins III*# 1956 Mr. William John Swartz*# 1992 Dr. Robert James Stets Jr. Ph.D. Mrs. Linda Derrick1980 Mr. James Drury Heerwagen 1960 Mr. James N. Barton# Dr. Seth Alain Watkins Mrs. Ann M. DiMaio
Mr. Timothy Peter Rooney# Mr. Walter A. Johnson 1994 Dr. John Christopher Dries Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Dollens P’011981 Mr. Darryl Wade Copeland Jr.*# 1960 Dr. Alan L. Kaganov*# Mr. Stefan Alexander Dyckerhoff Mrs. Sarah Dollens1982 Mr. Thomas Anthony Natelli# 1961 Mr. John M. Derrick, Jr.# Mrs. Valerie Marx Love# Mrs. Kristen Larsen Dries T’941983 Mr. John Martin McDonald, III Mr. Robert Allen Garda*# Mr. Alan Lee Whitehurst Mrs. Wendy G. Dyckerhoff
40 dukengineer 2015
Dr. Susan L. FehrerSawyer P’16Mr. and Mrs. Elias Petrus Fernandini P’16Mrs. Diane Cheryl Fowler P’14, P’18Mrs. Patricia GabrielMrs. Annie Lewis J. Garda WC’61, P’90,GP’18*#
Mrs. Pamela Miller GerardMrs. Patricia Lister Hanenberg P’04Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lee Harrington P’08Mrs. Terry HausmanMrs. Stephanie Hawley Henry T’96Mrs. Mary English Johnson WC’59, P’86Mrs. Carol M. Kaganov#Mrs. Carol Rogers Kern N’64, P’94#Mr. Steven M. T’74 and Mrs. CynthiaBickerstaff Klebanoff P’15
Mr. Sanjaya G’84, G’86 and Mrs. MonicaKumar P’18
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Lawson P’13Mr. David McLawhorn Love T’94, B’01#Mr. Houjun Lu P’17Mrs. Jennifer R. MatthewsMs. Denise Leslie McCainTharnstrom T’80Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Bernard MeehanP’07, P’10
Mr. Paul L. B’88 and Mrs. Sarah EvansHeartfield Meiring P’14, P’17
Mrs. Lynn Norton P’13Mr. Robert E. and Mrs. Sheryl Lynn OlsonT’84, P’17
Mrs. Marla B. OrdwayMrs. Jean ParkeWahlMr. Pankaj S. PatelMr. and Mrs. Clifford Press P’16Mr. James E. Rehlaender P’07, P’09, P’1*#Mrs. Sarah Estes RelyeaMs. Nancy Margolis Risman P’14, P’15Mr. Michael Stuart Rosenthal T’00Mrs. Suzanne B. Rowland P’14Mr. Edward E. Sawyer P’16Mrs. Rachel Rebbecca Sternand Mr. Alexander Franz Stern T’88
Mrs. Gail Miller StoddartMrs. Dorothy Swartz#Mrs. Holly TabernillaMrs. Marsha Hellard Taylor P’10, P’14, P’16Mrs. Barbara S. TurnbullMs.Liz Wang P’17Mrs. Marion Theresa Rucker Watkins T’96,L’99
Mrs. Jessica Few Whitehurst T’94Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth C. Whitney P’14Mrs. Irene L. WilkinsMs. Kathleen McConnell Williams T’80, P’11
William Preston Few Association$5,000 $9,9991948 Mr. Gordon L. Smith, Jr.1956 Mr. William A. Kumpf1957 Mr. Paul D. Risher1958 Mr. Harold L. Yoh Jr.*#1960 Mr. James H. Frey1961 Mr. Carl E. Rudiger Jr.1963 Mr. Charles L. Grossman1964 Admiral Grant T. Hollett Jr. Retired
Mr. James F. Rabenhorst*#1965 Dr. Douglas A. Cotter
Mr. George P. Kelley1966 Mr. Thomas E. Harrington#
Mr. Randolph K. Repass*#1967 Mr. Stephen C. Coley1967 Mr. George H. Crowell1969 Dr. Robert Charles Marlay1970 Mr. R. Keith Harrison, Jr.#1971 Mr. James L. Stuart ESQ1973 Mr. Ozey Knight Horton Jr.1975 Mr. Mark E. Baldwin
Mr. David F. Cammerzell1976 Mr. Robert Edward Donaho
Mr. Philip J. HawkMr. John Thomas Fearnley Oxaal
1977 Mr. David P. Spearman1978 Dr. Henry Kent Holland M.D.
Mr. Jeffrey D. Ix#Mr. Gregory Scot Wolcott
1979 Mr. Russell C. AlbaneseMrs. Kathleen D. Ix#Mr. James E. KemlerMr. Douglas Allen McGrawMr. Richard Bentley Parran Jr.
1980 Mr. David Robert HughesMr. Andrew Louis KirbyMrs. Cynthia P. Walden
1981 Mr. James Christopher DauesMr. Thomas Beck Robey
1982 Dr. John Willard BartonMr. Christopher Bertrand Cook
1983 Mr. Stephen David BardMr. William J. Florence IIIMr. Steven Craig RosnerMr. Harold Lionel Yoh III#
1984 Ms. Julie Anne KeenanMr. Sam Michael LiangMs. Carolyn O’Hara MolthropMr. Frank Eugene Wierengo
1985 Mr. Stephen Ray BolzeMr. David Lloyd PrattMr. Michael Takashi YamamotoMr. Michael H. Yoh#
1986 Mr. Jonathan Michael GuersterMr. John Carleton Lindgren
1987 Ms. Suzanne M. GregoryMs. Denise Allen Williams
1988 Mr. Carlton Hayes GerberMr. Michael A. HarmanMr. David Paul KirchhoffMrs. Tracy Anne NickelsburgMr. Joseph Anthony Saldutti Jr.Mr. Jeffrey M. Yoh #
1989 Mr. Kyung In HanMr. Stephen Michael NickelsburgMr. Sean Welch O’BrienMr. Scott Edward Telesz
1990 Mr. John J. GlushikMr. Alfred Winborne Mordecai
1991 Dr. Stacy Stansell Gardner Ph.D.1992 Mr. Mahesh Chandrakant
Bhumralkar1994 Mr. Joseph Michael Bollinger, Jr.
Dr. Geoffrey Richard Erickson1997 Mr. Bharet Malhotra
Mr. Theodore Grey PerkinsDr. Bret Alan RogersMr. Malay B. Shah
Mr. Christopher Hilton Young1999 Mrs. Margaret Prestwood Chiou2000 Mr. Sean Everett Delehanty
Mr. Gabriel Ernesto Tsuboyama2002 Mr. Matthew Quinn ChristensenParents and FriendsMrs. Marilyn A. AlbaneseMr. and Mrs. Billy Charles Anderson P’11Ms. Beverley A. BabcockMrs. Betsy O. and Mr. Donald ShepherdBagley II T87, P’16
Mrs. Sally Polsfoot Baldwin P’07, P’08Mr. Rodolfo A. Baquerizo Sr. P’15, P’17Mrs. Lori R. Bard P’13Mrs. Michelle H. BartonMrs. Alicia Ann BolzeMr. Eric Brian Childs T’01Mr. Frankie Chiou T’97Mrs. Jane Cote’Cook T’85, P’16Mrs. Nancy Melzer Crowell P’05, P’08Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Eckersley P’16Mrs. Stephanie E. ElbersDonaho T’78,P’08, P’11
Mrs. Deborah Steinberg Erickson T’01Dr. Sharon A. EssnerPodbela {‘16Mrs. Jacqueline Frey WC’64Mr. Patrick R. Friday P’14Mr. Matthew R. Gardner #Mrs. Kelly Matthews Gerber T’88Mrs. Robyn GlushikThe Honorable and Mrs. David C. GodbeyP’15, P’16
Mrs. Marie C. Grossman WC’63, P’97Mrs. Kimberly Smith GuersterMrs. Mary Palmer Harman B’98Mrs. Marilyn Agnes Harrison WC’71, P’97,P’02, P’06 #
Mrs. Sara Anne Hawk P’16Mr. and Mrs. Merle C. Hazelton P’16Mr. Jesse HermannMrs. Eva M. HollandMrs. Lynn HollettMrs. Barbara B. KelleyMrs. Polly Jo KemlerMrs. Nancy T. Kirby P’09, P’12Mrs. Sandra Smith Kirchhoff T’89Dr. David Kirschenbaum P’15Mr. Bradley R. Krey and Mrs. Mary GorterKrey T’81, P’14
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kritzmacher P’16Ms. Angela Ann Lessuise T’00Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Lewis P’07, P’10Dr. Kelly K. Liang, M.D.Mrs. Crickett Williams Lindgren T’87Dr. Debra M. Loeb P’15Mrs. Elizabeth T. G’77 and Dr. S. SpenceMcCachren, Jr. M’79
Mrs. Marianne B. McGraw N’80, P’07Dr. David Charles Molthrop Jr. T’83, P’14,P’18
Mrs. Victoria Stover Mordecai T’91Mrs. Paula O’BrienMrs. Marjorie R. OxaalMs. Leslie Susan Parran N’79, P’07, P’11,P’13
Mrs. Melissa Ellen PerkinsMr. and Mrs. William E. Peterson T’14
Mrs. Suzanne T. T’80 and Mr. WilliamThomas Plybon P’14
Mr. Joseph W. Podbela P’16Dr. Stephen W. and Dr. Mathis K. PowelsonP’08
Ms. Julie M. Pratt P’14Mrs. Carol S. Rabenhorst#Dr. Theodore F. ReissMrs. Jill G. RobeyMs. Julie W. Rogers T’97, L’04Mrs. Carol Rosner P’18Mrs. Jeanne Kurtzon RudigerMrs. Petra SalduttiMrs. Susan G. Simon#Mrs. Frances S. SmithMrs. Patricia Ann Spearman P’06, P’08, P’11Mr. James J. T’79 and Mrs. Gaye L. StathisP’17
Mr. Steven R. T’76 and Mrs, Lucia B. T’77Steinhilber P’12, P’15
Mrs. Catherine Stuart P’12Ms. Nancy Evelyn Tate P’08Mrs. Susan Lynne TeleszMr. and Mrs. Jimmy Treybig P’16Ms. Priscilla Trinchet P’17Dr. and Mrs. Ashok Vora P’11, P’14Mr. Mark Christopher Walden T’81Mrs. Barbara Valk Wierengo P’13Mr. Brian WilliamsMrs. Nancy B. WolcottMrs. Sharon Crutcher Yoh T’83, P’09, P’17#Mrs. Mary Milus Yoh WC’59, P’83, P’85,P’87, P’88, P’93, GP’09, GP’17*#
Mrs. Suzanne Lee Yoh P’17#Mrs. Josefine Charlotte YoungMrs. Yao YuanMr. Kevin X. Zhang G’94
Washington Duke Club Fellows$2,500 $4,9991947 Mr. Arthur A. Edwards
Mr. Warren J. Meyer1955 Mr. John E. Larsen1956 Mr. George J. Evans1959 Mr. Peter J. Denker#1960 Mr. Edward E. Kaufman1961 Mr. Ernest D. Taylor, Sr.1963 Mr. John C. Orr1966 Ms. Katherine C. Norris P.E.1967 Dr. Robert C. deGroof1968 Mr. Norman A. Cocke III#
Mr. Richard Nathan Wilkerson1969 Mr. Joseph H. Jarboe#1970 Dr. Alan G. Goedde1971 Mr. Brian H. Kennedy1972 Mr. Steven R. Bentson
Mr. Paul Ruffin Scarborough#Mr. Gerald R. Whitt
1973 Dr. Mark Charles Davis Ph.D.1974 Mr. Robert Edward Fraile1976 Ms. Laurie C. Conner
Dr. Neal J. GalinkoMr. Edward T. Stockbridge
1977 Dr. Robert L. Galloway Jr.Mr. David B. Stewart
1978 Mr. Banks Jefferson ClarkMrs. Brenda Harrison Letzler
2015 dukengineer 41
42 dukengineer 2008
Dr. Lisa Schichtel Orton Ph.D.1979 Mr. David B. Dabney
Mr. John Milner Jr.Mr. Stephen R. Spector
1980 Ms. Linda Sue FloydDr. Marla Jane FranksMr. Jeffrey W. Miller
1981 Mr. J. Bradford McIlvainMrs. Caroline S. Schlaseman
1982 Dr. Gunnar W. Zorn III1983 Mr. Farley William Bolwell
Mr. John Thomas Meaney1984 Mrs. Page Ives Lemel
Mr. Bridge D. L. McDowell1985 Mr. Imad Sami Labban
Mrs. Jane Ann S. LabbanMr. Barry Evan SchneirovMs. Ledi S. TrutnaMr. Spencer William White
1986 Mr. Peter W. Flur#Mr. David Scott Lindquist
1987 Mrs. Laura B. GrahamFord1988 Mr. Thomas Alan Burger Jr.
Dr. Salim Farouk Idriss M.D.Ms. Leslie Susan Prescott
1989 Mr. Dwight GalbiMr. Frederick George Springman
1990 Dr. Andrew Steven Feinberg M.D.Mr. Christopher Bret JohnsonMr. Richard Edward Nicholas
1991 Mrs. Tanya Shoenfelt Nizialek1992 Mr. Mark Bernard Williams1994 Mr. Dennis Michael Feenaghty
Dr. Megan Bishop MooreMrs. Anne Sempowski Ward
1995 Mr. David Nathaniel Buza1997 Mr. Andrew John Hoopengardner1998 Mr. Russell Monroe Glass
Mrs. Jessica Beil Hindman1999 Mr. Mark S. McKeag2000 Mr. Daniel Robert Silver2001 Mrs. Sarah Bradley Higgins
Mr. David Richard Mandel2009 Mr. Douglas William BycoffParents and FriendsMr. John W. Bernstein P’15Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bertsch T’65Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J. Boswell P’16Admiral and Mrs. Frank L. Bowman T’66,P’90
Mr. Robert W. Bruce IIIMrs. Mary Kay Burwell Scarborough P’08Dr. Karen E. CampbellDr. Charlotte R. Clark T’79, MEM’83, G’07,P’12
Ms. Carolyn V. CottonMrs. Nancy A. Dabney T’79, P’05Ms. Diana Davenport P’15Mrs. Charron DenkerMs. Caroline Mae Dooley T’95Mrs. Dorlisa King Flur T’87, B’88#Dr. and Mrs. Albert J. Folgueras P’17Mr. Andrew N. FordMrs. Susan Englander FraileDr. and Mrs. Steven P. Friedel P’14Mrs. Robin Cherry Glass T’98Dr. Raymond E. T’57, E’59 and Susan E.G’62 Goodson*#
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Goulart P’17Mrs. Dale GreenbergMr. Roshan B. Gudapati P’17Ms. Julie Guest T’85, P’09Mr. andMrs. Seetharaman Harikrishnan P’16Mr. Matthew HealeyMs. Kristen Piper Hesby T’95Dr. Steven P. Higgins T’98, M’02Dr. Diane HolditchDavis N’73, P’12Mrs. Leigh Hallisey Holt N’84, P’10, P’16Ms. Merrill F. Hoopengardner T’96, L’04Dr. Marilyn M. Idriss T’88, M’92Mrs. Anne Clark Jarboe P’04#Dean Thomas KatsouleasMrs. Lynne M. Kaufman WC’61, P’86Mrs. Barbara T. Kennedy T’73Mr. Henry J. and Mrs. Nancy T’85Leibowitz P’18
Mr. Jonathan Robert Letzler T’78, P’08, P’17Mrs. Dana Wynne Lindquist T’85Dr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Livingston P’15,P’18
Mrs. Rebecca C. Mandel T’03Mrs. Ann P. McDowellMrs. Maura McIlvainMrs. Amy Murnick McKeag T’98, B’06Mr. Colin M. T’77, B’82 and Mrs.Patterson N. McKinnon B’84, P’08, P’11
Ms. Susan Blake Meaney P’14Mrs. Krishnaveni Meka P’17Mrs. Elizabeth R. MillerMrs. Tamara A. MillikenMrs. Kristine B. MilnerMr. Steven David Moore T’93, L’96Mr. Jason Christopher Nizialek T’91Ms. Whitney L. OrmanMr. David Evan Orton G’79Mr. and Mrs. Richard Laurence Parish IIIP’07
Dr. and Mrs. Maurice R. Poplausky P’16Mr. Guy Willis Schlaseman T’79, P’12Mrs. Michelle Pinsky Silver T’0Mrs. Kindra SpectorMrs. Frances M. StewartMrs. M. V. StockbridgeMr. and Mrs. Michael Thomas Traylor T’89Professor George Alexander Truskey andMs. Anna A. Wu P’10Mr. Mark Trutna P’17Mrs. Betty S. WilkersonMrs. Stacey W. WilliamsMs. Julie Suzanne Withers T’78Dr. Pamela M. Zorn T’84, P’15
Washington Duke Club Members$1,000 $2,499 and Young WashingtonDuke Club Members $100 $5001942 Mr. Robert R. Everett1944 Mr. Guilbert L. Brandon1946 Mr. Alvin R. Murphy Jr.1949 Mr. Joseph E. Carson III
Mr. Leon C. Cheek Jr. USMC (Retired)1950 Mr. George A. Lillie1951 Mr. Robert M. Borst
Mr. George L. Otis Jr.Mr. Charles W. Treat
1955 Mr. Ray M. Olds1956 Mr. James A. Cavenaugh, Jr.
Mr. Robert EadieMr. Harold D. Scheid
1957 Mr. John David Peyton1959 Mr. C. Leland Bassett#
Mr. C. Thomas BiggsMr. Anthony W. ClarkMr. John D. Roberts
1959 Mr. Mebane E. Turner Jr.Mr. William K. West Jr.
1960 Dr. William F. Chambers Ph.D.Dr. Jan L. Mize#
1961 Dr. Martin George BuehlerMr. C. Gary Gerst#Dr. Joseph M. Hunt III Ph.D.Mr. John Nelson KerseyMr. Bruce G. LeonardDr. Gerald Ewing Roberts Ph.D.
1962 Mr. Armon DulaMr. Thomas E. GallagherMr. Charles Thomas PaulColonel George P. Summers
1963 Mr. George M. Grills#Mr. Paul Allan Rauschelbach
1964 Mr. Kenneth D. Kennedy Jr.#Captain Michael Nickelsburg USN(Retired)
1965 Mr. Nathanael BrokerMr. William F. Cromartie
1966 Mr. Donald H. Bellman Jr.Mr. Roderick A. MacLeod
1967 Mr. Peter C. BrockettMr. F. Barry McWilliams
1968 Mr. Kenneth Spaulding ChestnutMr. Robert C. PharesMr. Russell L. SchoudtMr. Robert T. Summers
1969 Mr. James D. KempMr. Ferol B. Vernon Jr.Mr. Turner Whitted PHDMr. Thomas M. Woodard#
1970 Mr. Jonathan F. LlewellynMr. Robert K. Smith
1971 Mr. Robert W. AlthausMrs. Janice K. AndersonMr. Robert W. Carr, Jr.*#Mr. Truman D. Donoho III
1971 Mr. David W. ErdmanMr. Donald M. HelferDr. Chun Hung LamMr. Douglas S. PerryMr. Curt A. RawleyMr. George J. White
1972 Dr. Frank BirinyiDr. Edward G. Buckley M.D.Mr. Tedd H. JettMr. Paul Little III
1973 Mr. Robert Ryoichi AndoMr. Walter Jeffrey BishopDr. Glenn D. Jordan Jr.Mr. Scott Anderson McHughDr. Paul A. Vadnais
1974 Mr. Carl Ernest Lehman Jr.Dr. David Mark Upham
1975 Dr. David M. Wheeler1976 Mr. Edward Anapol
Dr. Bayard L. Powell1977 Mr. G. Robert Graham
Mr. W. Russell Scheirman II
1978 Mrs. Victoria Smith BellMs. Rebecca R. LulaMs. Pamela R. MooreMrs. Elizabeth D. Peloso#Mr. Thomas Stuart Jr.
1979 Mr. J. Theodore BalphMr. Richard A. BeckMs. Cynthia Neuberger BrooksMr. Albert N. Gore, IIIMr. Alden S. Hart, Jr.Mrs. Joan Lowe MarksMs. Karen S. MartinMr. Michael T. PlantamuraMr. David Michael SavardDr. R. Davis Webb Jr.
1980 Mr. Pedro Carlos FenjvesMr. David Griffith InmanMr. Jeffrey Warren Reedy
1981 Mr. James P. G. Dalton Jr.Dr. Edward Ferguson HendershotMr. Simon Y. C. LauMr. Keith Douglas Paulsen, Ph.D.Mr. Richard B. PaulsenDr. Richard Walter Pekala
1981 Mr. George Smith Plattenburg Jr.Mr. Craig Jay Soloff
1982 Mrs. Carolyn N. ChaseMs. Catherine Louise IacoboDr. Howard Ira LevyMr. William Randal MendezMr. Thomas Ken SawanoboriMr. Peter Towne Tucker
1983 Mr. Robert Charles BourgMr. James Scott CarterMr. James Arthur Cavenaugh IIIMrs. Allison Haack GlackinMrs. Elizabeth Sill OwenMr. David Ross PitserMs. Kathleen V. RogersMs. Deborah Treash SimpsonMr. Christopher Michael Waters
1984 Mr. John Dailey BarkerMrs. Laura Bond BarkerMr. Benjamin Cabell BonifantMs. Elizabeth Ann CarterMr. Jeffrey Steven EbelingMr. Kevin James FellhoelterDr. Andrew Justin LawsonMrs. Corell Luckhardt MooreMr. Jacinto Andres OliverMr. David Roland Smith
1985 Dr. Anand David KasbekarMrs. Debra Pistorino ParrishMr. Phillip Reaves PickettMr. Richard Joseph PondMr. Kevin Douglas RomerMr. Scott Kenyon Walker
1986 Mr. James E. AlbrightMr. Sam A. GhazalehMrs. Julie Hollander GrillMrs. Amy May NovakMr. Mark Allison PotsdamMr. Michael Lewis Rigsby Jr.Mr. Robert Freeman Shuford, Jr.Dr. Steven Kent Stranne
1987 Mr. Robert Fairchild Brandenburg IIIMr. William Andrew ColavecchioMr. Will Mercer Larkin, Jr.
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Mr. Steven Edward LawsonMr. Thomas Jeffrey WeckMrs. Lisa Miller Willis
1988 Mr. Gregory John AlcornDr. Catherine Canada BetorDr. Jackie T. ChanCommander Richard FrederickHerbst
Mr. David Erik LevineMr. James Robert LowryMr. Manlio A. Valdes
1989 Mr. Thomas Mettrey BetorMr. Thomas William Lattin Jr.Dr. Elizabeth C. TylerKabaraMr. John Loyal Willis
1990 Mr. Steven Thomas BoycanDr. Michael Goodwin CettaMr. Dennis Joseph CourtneyMr. Michael Patrick DierksMr. Bruce L. FaulknerMr. Paul Thomas HertleinLieutenant Colonel AnthonyClarence Leung
Mr. Timothy Lucien ProulxMr. HansPeter TandonMr. Robert David WescottMrs. Cheryl A. WhiteMr. Ross Martin Younger
1991 Mr. Eric Martin FreeMr. Daniel Raymond KingDr. Benjamin Harrel Le BlancDr. Steven H. LinMr. Joseph Croman Peterson Jr.Mr. Craig Alan StraleyMr. Kenneth Scott Weinberg
1992 Mr. Scott Douglas BoothMr. Timothy Rohrer DavisMr. Douglas Alan HardyMr. Jaime Daniel Hobbeheydar
1992 Mr. Jeffrey Scott McVeighMr. James L. PrattDr. John P. RodgersMr. William Tilghman Schlough
1993 Mr. Tiberio Richard AlfonsiMrs. Holly Morris EspyMr. Louis Anthony Falvo IIIMs. Nicole Sabine FingerMr. Gregory P. LissyMr. Jeffrey Kenneth LopezMr. Brian Alex PietrewiczMrs. Margaret Marion RodgersMr. Stephen Dean Williams
1994 Dr. Henry Frederick Butehorn, III, M.D.Mr. Russell Braden CopelandMr. James Arthur GroverDr. Maria A. ManningMs. Heidi PelleranoMrs. Julia Vrany PhillipsMs. Nancy Rose Ryan Donahue
1995 Mr. Scott William DubbelingMr. Richard Edward FinleyDr. Mohammad Belall IsmaelMr. Michael Gregory Sherman
1996 Mr. Ethan Isaac BergerDr. Eric Brian Callaghan
1996 Mr. James Douglas Campbell IIIMr. Andrew Barnard CarverMr. Daniel Vernon Ingram
Mr. David Bruce MortonDr. Suneel Niren Nagda
1997 Mrs. Sara H. FurberDr. Sidney GlasoferMr. Gregory Joseph Anatol MuradMr. Jason Obenshain PicheMs. Anita Marie SuchdeoMr. Patrick Charles Thomasma
1998 Mrs. Amanda Hallet GelberMr. Nicholas Robert GelberMr. Travis M. Troyer
1999 Mr. Sam Hee ChoMr. Young Jae ChoiMr. Vladislav Dimitrov IvanovMr. Anthony LagneseMr. Mark ChungWei LimMrs. Ann Nelson MittelstadtMr. Eric ZenShah Wang
2000 Mr. Grant AllenMr. William Nicholas Camp IIMr. Mehmet Eren ErginMr. John M. Gagliardi, IIIMr. Michael Sergio HernandezSoriaMr. Arnaud Pierre KarsentiMs. Stacy Lynn PinelesMr. Richard Stockton Vandermass
2001 Mr. John Nathaniel DayMrs. Lauren Smetko DieterichMr. Charles ShihHan LinMr. Max Alan McMullenMr. Christopher Andrew Winter
2002 Mr. Dennis RayChuan ChenMrs. Christina Mitchell LuquireMr. Patrick Brigman LuquireMr. John Randolph MeansMr. Matthew Ptak
2003 Mr. Amar K. Tanna2004 Ms. Rose Carol Acoraci
Mr. Isik GungenMatthew RaubachMs. Georgia Ann Richter
2005 Mr. Julius K. Degesys2005 Mr. John Robert Felkins
Mr. Thomas Charles Goltermann Jr.Dr. Andrew B. HolbrookMr. Jeffrey Michael McCormickMr. Paul Stevenson NeslineMr. Kevin Steven ParkerDr. Andrew David Portnoy
2006 Mrs. Omaira Caroline BrightmanMrs. Carolyn Eagan JonesMrs. Kristen Anna LeeMr. Qahir MadhanyMr. Andrew SchmidtMr. Roman Gerald SchwarzMs. Mika Johana TanimotoStroy
2007 Mr. Eric Leigh GellerMr. Jeffrey Charles Herbert
Mrs. Meredith HerbertMr. Ryan C. PertzMr. Noah Sakimura
2008 Mr. John S. ChoiMr. Drew G. RindnerMr. Cleland Ian Michel RobertsonMr. Michael Timothy Schaper
2009 Mr. Daniel Aaron BeelerMs. Molly Rebecca BiermanMr. Benjamin Heidmann SheltonMr. Ibrahim Khaled Toukan
2010 Mr. Frederick Wootton EschMs. Melissa K. MurphyMs. Emily PoplawskiMr. Alex S. Reinstein
2011 Mr. Kaiting ChenMr. Shame ChikoroMr. Jared Alexander DunnmonMr. Charles LevergoodMs. Anjali Serena VoraMr. Jeremy Thomas Walch
2012 Ms. Catherine Walden Ramsey2013 Mr. Frank Chang
Mr. Wei Qian JiangMr. Carl Erik LawsonMr. Howard Clifton Ray III
2014 Mr. Radu DarieMs. Jennifer LiMs. Carly LutzkyMr. James Tucker RismanMs. Rachel Michiko Whitney
Parents and FriendsMr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Acoraci P’04Mrs. Mary AhnerMrs. Kristen E. AlbrightMrs. Karen Rose AlcornMrs. Letitia U. Alfonsi T’92Mrs. Marybeth AlthausMrs. Courtney AltmanMrs. Courtney and Dr. Kenneth WayneAltman G’84, G’88, M’93
Mr. James S. Anderson T’75Mrs. Rosanna AndoMs. Marisa M. Avansino T’01Dr. Michael David Bailey T’93Ms. Evelyn Rebecca Ballard T’04Mr. Alejandro Bascoy T’13Mrs. Rebecca Bostian BassettMrs. Maureen Stabile Beck N’79, P’07, P’17Mr. James R. Bell III T’78Mrs. Betsy Hodges Bernard WC’46Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bernstein P’17Mrs. Mary Golson Biggs WC’62, P’87Mrs. Claudia BloomMr. David Todd Bolno T’00Mrs. Clare M. BonifantMrs. Alyson M. BoothMrs. Mary J. Borromeo Stephens P’16
Mrs. Barbara C. BorstMs. Catherine J. Boyne P’15Mrs. Linda F. Bradley#Professor and Mrs. David J. BradyMr. David Jeffrey Brightman T’06Mrs. Laureen Belle Brockett P’09, P’10Mrs. Carole BrokerMr. Anthony G. BrooksMr. John A. Brunalli P’98Mrs. Marcia L. BuehlerMr. Raul Salvador Buelvas Jr. T’88Mrs. Lori J. ButehornDr. Alison Butler P’14, P’18Ms. Bonnie L. Bycoff P’06, P’09Mr. Lorne V. Bycoff T’06Mr.and Mrs. John Gerard CaccavaleT’81, P’11
Mrs. Emily C. CallaghanMr. and Mrs. William M. Camp P’17Ms. Allyson Nostrand Campa T’87Dr. Jan Caryl CantorHockman T’82, P’13Mrs. Mary E. Caponera P’12Ms. Kimberly J. Carahasen B’99Mrs. Linda Leigh CarpenterDr. Marjorie Barnwell Carr E’92*#Mrs. Jean Bradley Carson WC’54Mrs. Heidi H. Carter T’83, P’08Mrs. Evan T. CavenaughMrs. Denise Schrier Cetta T’90Mrs. Mary D. Chambers G’65, P’91Mr. Eric T. ChaseMrs. Carolyn S. CheekMr. Bojia Chen E’15Mrs. Elizabeth McClure Chen T’00Mr. Lyon W. Chen E’16Mr. Ming Chen P’16Mr. Victor Y. Chen E’17Mr. and Mrs. Lee Chin P’01Mr. and Mrs. Albert K. Choi P’12Mrs. Jenny Soonjoo Choi P’08Mrs. Anthony Wayne Clark WC’58Mr. William Christopher ClarkeMrs. Christine CourtneyMrs. Nancy H. CromartieDr. Susan Amber Cummings P’11Mrs. Maria Alcina Dalton P’17Mrs. Ruth DavisDr. and Mrs. Eugene D. Day, Jr. T’77Mrs. Taylor Christine Day T’00Mr. Ernesto de Losada E’17Ms. Amy DeringMr. and Mrs. Walter John Dex Jr. T’88Mrs. Shuguo Diao P’16Dr. Claire Diep P’17Mr. Christopher W. Dieterich T"01Mr. and Mrs. Mark L. Dinapoli P’17Dr. Nam K. Do and Mrs. Huong T. DaoP’16, P’18
# James B. Duke Society: This symbol recognizes those engineering alumni and friends who have followed the example and generosity of our founder, James B. Duke, by continuing his vision through involvement and cumulative gifts exceeding $100,000 to all areas of Duke University.
* Founders Society: Recognizing engineering benefactors who have distinguished themselves by looking to thefuture of Duke and the School of Engineering, these members have generously established a permanent endowment for the School of Engineering to commemorate their loyalty and support in perpetuity. (active from1980 through 2004)
2015 dukengineer 43
Mr. Jack DonahueMrs. Tilly H. DonohoMr. and Mrs. William R. Dougherty P’16Mrs. Holly DubbelingMrs. Rose M. DulaDr. Preston Dunnmon T’80, M’84, B’02,P’11, P’14
Ms. Eleanor K. Durham P’16Mrs. Susan H. EbelingMr. and Mrs. Mark P. Ellis P’16Dr. Ronald J. G’96 and Mrs. Catherine S.Epstein N’96
Mrs. Lynn Kendr ErdmanMr. Thomas Kleberg Espy T’94Mrs. Ann T. EverettMrs. Tina FalkerMrs. Kristen FalvoMrs. Cherie Fogle FaulknerMr. and Mrs. James C. Faw P’17Dr. Lin Fei P’17Mrs. June Dunn Fenjves P’08 P’18Mr. Sam FingerMrs. Kathleen J. FinleyMrs. Susan S. T’76 and Mr. Charles AveryFisher Jr. P’13
Mrs. Tamara Duncan Free T’93, B’99, JD’99Mr. William James Furber III T’97Mrs. Weimin Gai P’17Mrs. Mary A. GallagherDr. Jane E. and Mr. Peter L. Garrambone,Jr. E’15
Mrs. Ella GelvanMrs. Irene A. GhazalehMrs. Susan W. Gitomer P’07Mr. George B. Glackin III P’12, P’14Mrs. Dina Greenberg Glasofer T’97Mr. and Mrs. Herman Samuel GlaswandP’10, P’15
Mrs. Charlotte Gollobin P’78, P’80Ms. Jeanette GoreMrs. Gloria K. GrahamDr. Warren M. Grill Ph.D.Mrs. Rosalie GrillsDr. Kara Haas T’80, P’11, P’14Ms. Laura Ann Hansen F’88Mrs. Janet E. Harman P’17Mrs. Carolyn C. HartMr. and Mrs. Randell L. Harwood P’17Mrs. Patricia K. HelferMs. Karen K. Herbst T’87, P’14Mrs. Kristina D. HertleinMr. and Mrs. Stephen Phillip HindmanP’00, P’04
Mr. Vincent Paul Hindman T’99Mr. Alexander A. Hockman P’13, P’14Mr. Russell G’97 and Professor Karla F.Holloway L’05
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Hughes P’16Mrs. Annette HuntMr. George W. Huntley III T’64Ms. Suein L. HwangDr. Tadashi Ihara G’90Mrs. Michelle Marie IngramMrs. Alison Giordano Ismael T’96Mrs. Mary B. Jackson
Mrs. Lora Witner JettMr. Marshall G. Jones T’05Mrs. Elizabeth Neal Jordan P’13Dr. Joseph F. KabaraMrs. Rebecca Strassberg Karsenti T’00Mrs. Joyce M. Kasbekar P’18Mr. Richard W. T’01 and Mrs. AndreaRobinson Kells T’99
Mrs. Sally Kemp P’98, P’02Mrs. Sara R. Kennedy #Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Robert KeppelM’85, P’15
Mrs. Delia Chamberlin Kersey WC’62, P’87Mr. Wonseok Kim P’16Mr. David B. Kinney T’76, P’18Mrs. Jacqueline F. T’86 and Mr. Tood J.Koorbusch P’15
Dr. Bryan J. Krol M.D.Mr. and Mrs. Roger A. Krone P’14Mrs. Ji Young Kwon P’16Dr. Meena E. Lagnese T’99Mrs. Irene KanTai LaiChanMrs. Edith Lam P’00Mr. Peter A. Land T’83, P’17Mrs. Elizabeth B. LarkinMrs. Ruth Ann LattinMrs. Annie L. LauMrs. Bing LauDr. Henry Lau G’69, G’73Mrs. Melissa B. LawsonMrs. Erin S. Le BlancMs. Marianne Lee D’17Mrs. Cynthia Richardson Lehman P’15Mrs. Maren Roth LevineMrs. Faith Frankel Levy P’17Mr. Harold Leonard Lewis T’81Mrs. Janis Moss Light T’78, P’15Dr. Xuezhen Ling P’17Ms. Karen S. Lissy T’94Ms. Jing Liu P’15Mrs. Trilby Duncan Llewellyn WC’70, P’95Mrs. Suzanne L. Lowry P’05Mr. Robert B. LueckMr. and Mrs. Jayson L. Lutzky P’14Mrs. Marie P. T’90 and Mr. Henry T. LyonsIII T’90
Mr. S. S. MacLeodMrs. Christina MadhanyMr. Lakshya Madhok T’11Mr. Christopher Nicholas Manning T’95Mr. Justin Paul Markle T’00Dr. Steven Edward Marks T’78, P’11, P’16Mr. Eric Matthys P’14, P’18Ms. Elizabeth Harper McCormick T’06Mr. Howie McDonellDr. Kathleen McGann M.D. P’16Mr. John E. McGrath P’14Mrs. Sharon McHughMs. Mahkayla Mariah McKenzie E’15Mrs. Melissa Theis McVeigh T’92Mrs. Sara Pettes McWilliams WC’68Mrs. Carolyn MendezMs. McKenzie Caroline Middlebrooks E’17Mr. Matthew Wood Mittelstadt T’99Mrs. Linda Greene Mize
Mr. Thurston R. Moore T’11Mrs. Joan P. MurphyMrs. Susan M. Murphy P’09, P’13Mr. and Mrs. William V. Murray P’15Dr. David R. and Dr. Inga H. MusselmanP’17
Mrs. Jennifer R. B. Nagda T’96Mr. and Mrs. Vipin C. Nair P’17Dr. and Mrs. Steven I. Neibart P’16Mrs. Kristin I. N’78 and Mr. Vincent PaulNesline P’05
Mrs. Diann Miller Nickelsburg WC’66Mr. and MRs. Raymond C. Nolte P’14Mr. Ralph M. Novak, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Oettinger P’15, P’17Mrs. Sandra R. OldsMrs. Elizabeth M. Oliver P’15, P’17Mrs. Joanne P. OtisDr. Rodney S. Owen P’14Mr. Oluwasanmi Joshua Oyenuga E’17Mrs. Jacqueline S. Paulsen T’82Mrs. Joan R. PaulsenMrs. Robyn H. Pekala T’81, P’11Mr. Robert A. Peloso P’05, P’06, P’10Mr. and Mrs. James M. Perry P’05, P’06Dr. Sandra V. Pertz T’07Mrs. Jennifer Elaine PetersonMrs. Katherine PeytonMrs. Peggy F. PharesDr. Patrick John Phillips G’96Mrs. Catherine Obenshain Piche T’97Mrs. Andrea Jonas Pickett B’91Mrs. Jennifer PietrewiczDr. Daniel A. Pitt T’71Mrs. Elizabeth N. Plattenburg T’82, P’12Mrs. Maureen Deanna PondMr. Colin Joseph Power E’17Mr. and Mrs. William D. Power P’17Mrs. Susan O’Callahan Pratt T’92Mrs. Melanie Johnson Raubach T’04Mrs. Dorothy Joyce Rauschelbach WC’63Mrs. Kathy RawleyDr. David Wayne Reed G’88, G’92Mrs. Katherine ReedyMr. and Mrs. John E. Reid P’16Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Reilly P’16Ms. Yvonne P. B’89 and Dr. JeffRickabaugh P’17
Dr. Cynthia Karfias Rigsby T’86, M’90Mrs. Barbara M. RobertsMrs. Christina G. Roberts T’88Mr. Mark RobertsMr. M. Weldon Rogers IV T’84Mrs. Guadalupe RojasKrolMrs. Lisajane RomerMr. Bryan RoundsMr. Matthew A. Roy E’15Mr. and Mrs. Sunil Sabharwal P’17Mrs. Johannah Diane Sakimura T’07Mrs. Marcela M. SanchezMrs. Diane M. SawanoboriMrs. Jolyn ScheirmanMrs. Erin K. SchloughMrs. Logan Schmidt T’06Ms. Emily K. Schmitz T’16
Mrs. Mary E. Ramage Schwarz T’06Dr. Jayshree Sethuraman IyerMrs. Sadie ShermanMrs. Lori E. ShufordMr. Gary Michael Simpson P’15Mr. LeRoy SimpsonMrs. Anna L. SmithMrs. Elizabeth Y. Smith N’70Mrs. Dauretta A. Soloff P’13Mr. Dean P. Stephens P’16Mr. and Mrs. Roger Stern P’17Mrs. Carol P. and Dr. Robert F. StevensG’74, G’80
Ms. Elizabeth A. Stivers P’15Mrs. Lara D. StuartDr. Ravi Subrahmanyan G’85, G’88Mrs. Carole SummersMrs. Juanita W. Summers P’04Mrs. Christine I. TandonMrs. Pratbha Tanna P’03Dr. David Y. Tong P’15Dr. James Dimitrious Torosis P’11Mrs. Deborah TracyProulxMrs. Carolyn TuckerMrs. Linda L. TurnerMrs. Karen S. UphamMrs. Susan E. VadnaisMrs. Alene Theresa Valdes P’17Mr. Joseph H. VanAndelMrs. Margaret Rapoport VanAndel T’78Mrs. Lynda S. VickersSmith P’98, P’00Dr. and Mrs. Luis Villa P’00, P’13Ms. Christina Marie Wagner T’92Mrs. Anne Kubale Walker T’85Mrs. Helen C. WatersMr. Richard D. T’51 and Mrs. Anne B.Webb P’79#
Ms. Constance G. WeckMrs. Jessica B. WeinbergMrs. Kristine Atkinson WescottMrs. Anne R. West N’61Mrs. Patricia S. Wheeler T’76Mr. Allen WhiteMrs. Nancy A. White P’02Mrs. Cathleen P. WhittedMrs. Kara Suzanne WilliamsMr. Steven Blair Wilson T’91Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Winterhof P’04,P’14
Mrs. Debra A. WoodardMs. Jenny J. YuMr. Lewis E. Zaretzki B’99Mrs. Jane J. Zhang P’17Professor Pei Zhong P’16Mr. Christopher Zuehlsdorff
44 dukengineer 2015
Pratt School of Engineering Annual Fund 20132014Listed below and on the following pages are those Engineering Alumnithat showed their affinity for the School by supporting the 20132014 Annual Fund Campaign. We are most grateful to those who donated to theSchool because they allowed us to reach 40% participation. Our goal is toreach a 50% participation rate in 20142015. Please don’t let your con
E. Fred Kain (5)Joseph E. Kennedy, Jr. (6)Lincoln D. Kraeuter (12)Forrest E. Nelson (7)Donald H. Rutter (16)F. Williams Sarles (4)William A. Stokes (1)
James F. Proctor (1)Commie W. Riggsbee (2)Harold D. Scheid (7)T. Donald Stiegler (24)W. John Swartz (24)Thomas E. Tabor (20)John C. Williams, III (21)
Bob Gamble (14)James F. Girand (11)Harrison C. Givens III (1)Raymond E. Goodson (1)Ronald L. Helton (4)William K. Hoch (1)Charles H. Hutchison (18)
secutive giving lapse by missing a year! Louis C. Tepe (2) H. Richard Kessler (18)William V. Wright (24) J. Tate Lanning, Jr. (17)To better recognize our consistent donors, their names are denoted in CLASS OF 1957
David A. Lower (21)John H. Bell, Jr. (3)bold for five years of consecutive giving. For those who graduated less CLASS OF 1954 Edwin J. Boothroyd (3) Robert B. McFarland (17)than five years ago, their names will also be in bold if they have given Fred H. McIntyre, Jr. (21)each year since graduation. Finally, to recognize consecutive giving over Louis M. Mogol (15)
Shem K. Blackley, Jr. (24) Robert C. Clifton (2)Robert M. Brown (24) Carlisle F. Cook, Jr. (4)
the years, we are placing the number of years you have supported the George H. Dawson (8) Lawrence D. Decker (24) David A. Page (24)School in parenthesis next to your name. We will update the list each year Marvin C. Decker (20) G. Roy Elmore, Jr. (18) Stephen M. Prevost (24)to continue recognizing our loyal alumni. Lewis T. Fitch (24) Ben M. Frizzell, Jr. (11) Gordon D. Pyle (12)
Joseph H. Healey (11) Robert S. Goudy (1) William A. Reichard (11)Gene L. James (4) Walter E. Greene (24) John D. Roberts (24)THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!! Powell S. Smith (1)Alfred E. Kerby (8) Donald H. Heim (14)
Thomas R. Taylor (21)JohnW.Montgomery, Jr. (24) Joseph W. Little, Jr. (24)Lloyd A. Liatti (19) Sidney G. Lineker, Jr. (21)
Mebane E. Turner, Jr. (16)George A. Lillie (24)HALFCENTURY CLASS OF 1947 Thomas E. Perry II (3) Thomas F. Lowe (12) William K. West, Jr. (17)Harvey H. Stewart, Jr. (24) C. Joseph Wine (4)John C. Bullard (8) Kirvan H. Pierson, Jr. (24) Henry L. Mahns (3)CLUB
James H. Corrigan, Jr. (24) George Trusk (24) Marshall F. Reed, Jr. (8) Donald F. Manning (24) Joseph A. Yura (21)415 Donors/ 887 Class Roll David L. Tubbs (24)Harold L. DeHoff (24) Ronald L. Wilson (5) Howard P. Meredith, Jr. (24)47% Participation Hubert L. Wilson, Jr. (24)Arthur A. Edwards (24) John D. Peyton (24) CLASS OF 1960
George F. Epps (4) William E. Richardson (2) George Bandre III (13)CLASS OF 1955CLASS OF 1937 Garnett L. Ferguson, Jr. (24) CLASS OF 1951 Fred C. Aldridge, Jr. (1) Paul D. Risher (19) James N. Barton (24)Arthur S. Jones, Jr. (2) Thomas F. Foy (2) Robert M. Borst (11) Reef Ruefer (14) Thomas R. Bazemore (22)Dan E. Bellinger (4)
Robert C. Greenwald, Jr. (2) Kenneth F. Cannon, Jr. (24) Parvin M. Russell, Jr. (9) Jack B. Bowman, Jr. (1)Rhett T. George, Jr. (1)CLASS OF 1938 Eugene W. Griffin, Jr. (6) Richard L. Combs (24) Edward A. Hamilton (22) John D. Spanagel (24) William F. Chambers (20)Roland Russo (18) Israel S. Larkin (2) Harvey E. Fiegel (24) Roger W. Tatem (4) T. Chandler Cox (1)Burton E. Hannay (23)
Eugene M. Levin (2) Robert E. Fischell (6) Roger D. Crum (8)Norman J. Hart (6)Edward M. Linker (24) Edgar C. Fox, Jr. (24) Richard P. Dale (3)CLASS OF 1941 Oscar T. Hines, Jr. (8) CLASS OF 1958Warren J. Meyer (24) Clarence A. Johnson, Jr. (2) Rix A. Dieffanbach (4)Arthur M. Alpert (7) Richard J. Kraus (2) Jon C. Bankert, Jr. (15)Robert L. Milone (2) Eugene J. Komlosi (22) Christopher B. Espy (24)Walter G. Smith (2) John E. Larsen (24) William M. Boyer (10)D. Henry O’Neill, Jr. (1) Elwyn H. Lowe (5) F. Paul Fisher (21)Ray M. Olds (16) C. Herbert Chittum (12)Clifford L. Sayre, Jr. (24) William H. Maass (3) James H. Frey (24)Paul W. Pritchard, Jr. (18) Curtis E. Cobb (1)CLASS OF 1942 Ralph G. Simpson, Jr. (5) Arthur W. McConnell (19) James R. Grube, II (17)W. Shelby Reaves (4) Donald Collins (7)Ernest G. Crane, Jr. (24) Albert J. Steele (3) Nichols J. Melton (10) Jerry W. Hillard (24)William Russell (14) William H. Cozart, Jr. (1)Robert R. Everett (24) John W. Vaughan, Sr. (24) Paul J. Miller (24) Elliott P. Hinely (7)John L. Schmitt (26) Robert G. Dawson, Jr. (7)
George L. Otis, Jr. (2) Walter A. Johnson (1)Roddy N. Shingleton (26) Richard L. Goldstein (8)CLASS OF 1943 Eugene D. Pearson (3) Alan L. Kaganov (24)CLASS OF 1948 Charles E. Slater (21) Paul E. Heath, Jr. (15)Richard J. Lynch (2) Beryl A. Baker (1) John D. Rusack (24) John G. Snyder (4) Edward G. Jenkins (24) Edward E. Kaufman (24)Vance B. Martin (24) Wesley H. Shirk, Jr. (2) Walter A. Konefal (21)John L. Knoble, Jr. (24) Peter P. Van Blarcom (8) Leonidas J. Jones II (10)Paul C. Sherertz (2) Edward P. Nickinson, Jr. (5) Richard M. Smith (1) Gerard E. Woodbury (24) KunHa Kim (21) Daniel E. McConnell (5)William H. Wetmore, Jr. (18) Donald H. Townsend (7) J. Samuel McKnight (24)Billy B. Olive (1) Fred R. LePage (6)
Wallace B. Salter (24) Charles W. Treat (24) F. Sherwood Lewis (24) Leland W. Miller (12)CLASS OF 1956CLASS OF 1944 Nicholas J. Tronolone, Jr. (3) Jan L. Mize (24)Gordon L. Smith, Jr. (24) Baron B. Adams, Jr. (9) Charles T. Lindsay, Jr. (3)Charles R. Bayman (8) Joseph A. Sousa (24) Wesley C. Van Buren (7)
Richard G. Amos (24) Lucas R. Lineberry (3) Allyn S. Norton, Jr. (6)Guilbert L. Brandon (24) Robert L. Van Dyck (24) Rudolph W. Oeben (1)Don G. Virgin (7) William D. Beck, Jr. (5) Thomas J. McDermott (5)Bruce E. Hogarth (24) DavidP.Montgomery, Jr. (23) Larry E. Parsons (2)Norman H. Briggs (2)W. Young Johnston (9) George E. Shank (8)CLASS OF 1949 CLASS OF 1952 SterlingM. Brockwell, Jr. (17) Jerry W. Neal, Sr. (3)Robert T. McLaughlin (1) W. E. Ballard (24) Rodney D. Neal (8) George H. C. Shutt, III (21)Richard A. Bugg, Jr. (11) James A. Cavenaugh, Jr. (24)Robert E. Stroupe (2) Joseph E. Carson III (20) Alfred J. Barrett, Jr. (5) James W. Redmond (10) Philip C. Smith (12)R. Reginald Chapman (24)Claude B. Williams, Jr. (21) Leon C. Cheek, Jr. (8) S. Page Butt, Jr. (24) Robert Eadie (1) Thomas C. Stapleford (2) Gerald Strickland (24)
Lindell A. Davidson (7) H. William Collins (19) George J. Evans (24) Gene L. Van Curen (19)CLASS OF 1945 Fred W. Goodman (24) Daniel N. Cote (5) Edgar J. Gunter, Jr. (7) Harold L. Yoh, Jr. (7) CLASS OF 1961
Hubert V. Davis, Jr. (4)William B. Gum (24) Walter P. Hardee, Jr. (24) Herman C. Hambrick, II (24) Michael P. Bell (23)Otto W. Dieffenbach, Jr. (4)Harold Ornoff (24) Harold M. Jackson II (23) James E. Hardin, Sr. (16) CLASS OF 1959 Robert P. Biggers (12)William E. Hankins, Jr. (3)Ralph R. Schneider (20) W. Wallace McMahon (4) George Huling (16) C. Leland Bassett (4) Martin G. Buehler (18)Kenneth R. Johnson (24)Paul M. Smurthwaite, Jr. (1) Irvin G. Speas (2) Paul D. King, Jr. (5) Michael S. Bender (24) Ronald E. Busch (21)Kenneth E. C. Lloyd (20)Julian M. Warren (12) Thomas C. Kirkman, Jr. (18) William J. Best (24) John M. Derrick, Jr. (23)Philip S. McMullan, Jr. (8)CLASS OF 1946 Joseph F. Wells III (2) William A. Kumpf (20) C. Thomas Biggs (8) Carlyn E. Dinkler (1)William D. McRae (24) James J. Ebert (21)Richard E. Bisbe (24) Richard C. Lee (1) R. Wiley Bourne, Jr. (1)Malcolm G. Murray, Jr. (18) Wilson W. Farrell (5)John J. Geier (4) CLASS OF 1950 Norwood G. Long (2) Kim C. Cannon (17)
J. Edward Houseworth (2) Richard K. Best (18) Ralph M. Seeley (4) Richard D. Manuel (24) Anthony W. Clark (19) Robert A. Garda (24)Ralph M. Winters, Jr. (11) C. Gary Gerst (2)Ronald L. Hutchinson (24) Robert W. Chapman (3) Joseph Marchese (14) Ralph H. Clinard, Jr. (21)
Alvin R. Murphy, Jr. (10) Eugene Chesson (1) Robert S. Martin, Jr. (4) Norman W. Dean (23) Charles F. Gibson (11)Richard D. Schwartz (16) William A. Elrod (23) CLASS OF 1953 Harry W. Merz, Jr. (2) Peter J. Denker (24) Larry B. Hester (24)Muriel T. Williams (17) Jack B. Harris (18) Charles Sherfy Jones (15) Charles H. Pingree (21) Archie L. Fitzkee (4) Theodore J. Humphrey II (7)
2015 dukengineer 45
46 dukengineer 2008
Annual FundJoseph M. Hunt, III (20)John N. Kersey (4)Bruce G. Leonard (24)W. Mikell Powell (18)L. Russell Ranson, Jr. (10)Gerry E. Roberts (24)Carl E. Rudiger, Jr. (14)Ralph F. Spinnler (4)Thomas R. Styers, Jr. (1)Ernest D. Taylor, Sr. (18)Kenneth Watov (2)William H. Wheater (9)James F. Whitmore (1)
CLASS OF 1962Albert T. Bowyer (1)Louis B. Bresee (23)Robert M. Burch (1)Douglas M. Chapin (1)Edwin L. Chesnutt (5)Joseph B. Clemmons III (8)David M. Dean, Jr. (16)Armon Dula (23)Thomas E. Gallagher (24)James T. Gobbel, Jr. (13)Richard A. Helwig (3)Randall C. Herring (24)Cleveland C. Kern, Jr. (5)William W. McCutchen (24)Thomas E. Newman (3)Tom Paul (20)W. George Roach (24)Robert W. Ross (23)J. Lee Sammons (24)Howard C. Shaffer III (16)BernardM. Stanton, Jr. (16)George P. Summers (24)John H. Taylor (5)William M. P. Taylor (4)Robert M. Turner (24)Robert Voorhees (15)Robert E. Whitmore (10)Roger M. Williams (23)
CLASS OF 1963George R. Bailey, Jr. (2)David W. Blumfeldt (1)Travis C. Broesche (11)Leon W. Couch II (6)Don A. Dettmering (20)Richard T. DeWitt (15)Robert “Sonny”Epps III (23)Warner W. Freese (12)Martin M. Glesk (3)George M. Grills (3)Charles L. Grossman (23)James P. Hamilton (4)Robert J. Knorr (5)Fred T. Knowles (1)Ted S. Levy (23)William J. Lyren (13)Steven L. Matthews (12)Eugene C. Menne (23)Edwin H. Mumford (11)Sid Nurkin (23)James T. O’Kelley, Jr. (5)John C. Orr (8)Charles M. Poel (3)William W. Price, Jr. (2)Paul A. Rauschelbach (19)
C. Frederick Rolle (7)Edward W. Snyder (7)Roland F. Straten (7)Charles T. Sutherland, Jr. (1)Wilfred J. Vaudreuil, Jr. (20)George J. Wisecarver (10)
CLASS OF 196434 Donors/ 74 Class Roll46% ParticipationSid E. Atkinson (12)Frank Berstein (14)Charles R. Bowman (4)David A. Coolidge (7)Ray L. Cox (4)John R. Gabriel (7)Allan R. Haworth (2)Barry S. Hertslet (5)Grant T. Hollett, Jr. (14)Arthur C. Hutzler (3)Katharine E. Jordan (2)KennethD. Kennedy, Jr. (22)James W. Kinsler (11)Stuart D. Leland (24)Richard C. Linger (6)Richard J. Morris (24)Michael Nickelsburg (24)James F. Rabenhorst (24)John H. Roediger (21)Stuart I. Rutkin (10)Robert A. Sewell (13)J. William Springer (24)Ronald C. Steed (3)Thomas N. Taylor (8)Douglas A. Thomas (24)David W. Trott (5)John A. Wanklyn (12)Samuel H. Williams, Jr. (8)Robert R. Wonsidler (1)G. Toms Yarger (24)
CLASS OF 196533 Donors/ 66 Class Roll50% ParticipationJohn A. Abbott, III (23)Edward F. Baird (5)Nathanael Broker (5)Paul F. Brown, Jr. (16)Robert C. Campbell (11)E. Evans Cayce, Jr. (1)Douglas A. Cotter (23)William F. Cromartie (15)Ronald B. Falciani (3)Edward W. Fishback, Jr. (4)George H. Flowers, III (23)Jerry D. Francis (2)Richard A. Frazer (17)John B. Goody (17)Quincy B. Hocutt (4)George P. Kelley (17)Paul V. Kirby (1)William Lanier (13)Thomas P. Lanning (4)JamesR.Mathewson, Jr. (6)John C. McClain (5)C. Blake McDowell III (17)Walter C. Metz, Jr. (23)Lyman F. Narten II (2)James M. A. Parsley (21)Robert R. Reed (7)
James R. Scuffham, Jr. (3)J. Stephen Simon (23)Terry A. Simpson (3)William A. Simpson (18)Joel B. Stevens III (2)Michael S. Walsh, Jr. (19)Richard B. Woods, Jr. (10)
CLASS OF 196628 Donors/ 72 Class Roll39% ParticipationRobert N. Armstrong (3)Donald H. Bellman, Jr. (5)Jeffrey M. Brick (12)Charles H. Cruse (9)John A. Foltz (8)Harry P. Gray (3)Thomas E. Harrington (6)Grady T. Helms, Jr. (9)Roger W. Hughes (20)Sidney L. Kauffman, Jr. (4)H.T. Lyons, Jr. (11)Roderick A. MacLeod (24)Frank A. Manola (24)William L. McClenahan (5)Roger B. Midura (24)Fred W. Newton, Jr. (1)Judith A. Nicholson (10)Katherine C. Norris (22)William C. Pendleton (3)R. David G. Pyne (1)Randolph K. Repass (10)Charles H. Rogers (22)Hendrik G. M. Sijthoff (11)Rodney O. Stewart (4)Chris Stiles (14)William L. Thomas III (5)Samuel A. Walker, III (24)
CLASS OF 196725 Donors/ 51 Class Roll49% ParticipationThomas S. Allen (2)Donald A. Ashby (5)Kenneth C. Behnken (23)Peter C. Brockett (23)Lewis M. Brodnax (11)Charles G. Browne (17)Stephen C. Coley (23)George H. Crowell (19)J. Harrison Daniel, Jr. (9)Robert C. deGroof (20)Marshall A. Gallop, Jr. (22)Donald S. Gaw (3)Randall A. Henry (4)M. Parrish Hirasaki (13)Nina M. Lord (15)Howard P. McJunkin (11)F. Barry McWilliams (22)Herbert Mumford III (14)Lindsay O. Robinson (5)Frank M. Slater (19)Roger W. Stokes (17)D. Bruce Wiesley, Jr. (7)Jerry C. Wilkinson (23)
CLASS OF 196828 Donors/ 58 Class Roll50% ParticipationKenneth S. Chestnut (5)
CharlesW. Churchman (24)Norman A. Cocke III (24)R. Scott Cross (5)Martin E. Falk (24)Tom Gunn (14)Thomas L. Haas (1)Lee M. Kenna, Jr. (18)Harold H. Lane, Jr. (1)Samuel P. Lapham (7)Charles H. Leach, Jr. (2)James E. Lunson, Jr. (24)Robert B. MacDuff (20)Dennis H. Mathias (18)Eric R. Myers (24)Kenneth T. Page (6)Lee D. Petty, Jr. (11)Robert C. Phares (24)Philip N. Post (1)Richard E. Pribyl (22)Dan G. Robertson (13)Russell L. Schoudt (19)Peter M. Stetler (12)Robert T. Summers (7)Donald H. Turnbull (24)Robert P. Weismantel (24)Richard N. Wilkerson (17)
CLASS OF 196931 Donors/ 71 Class Roll44% ParticipationSharon L. Bonney (22)Thomas W. Brohard (4)Benjamin H. Cooksey III (1)H. Richard Emerick (7)Thomas L. Farquhar (24)William G. Fry (24)Paul A. Gottlieb (24)Ethan D. Grossman (8)Michael D. Harper (7)Henry T. Harris (17)F. Owen Irvine, Jr. (1)James R. Jackson (4)Joseph H. Jarboe (22)James D. Kemp (17)Daniel E. Kincaid (13)James E. Lenz (22)Robert C. Marlay (24)Alvin H. Mayo, Jr. (10)A. Dean Morgan (8)Richard A. Nay (24)Robert A. Phelan (12)Thomas A. Powers (9)Frederic M. Ramsey (10)James T. Riley (22)Brian W. Sheron (11)William T. Tita (1)Ferol B. Vernon, Jr. (24)William C. Webb (8)Turner Whitted (15)Thomas M. Woodard (24)
CLASS OF 197027 Donors/ 62 Class Roll44% ParticipationJonathan Alper (12)Joseph H. Baden (5)Hubert V. Bailey (5)Walter G. Bashaw (17)Kenneth D. Bieber (24)Wendell E. Brown (1)
David S. Crow (14)Edward J. Doyle, Jr. (2)Alan G. Goedde (23)R. Keith Harrison (27)Clifton C. Hickman (5)William R. Impey (1)Richard D. Ireland (8)Raymond J. Kuhlmeier, Jr. (17)Jonathan F. Llewellyn (24)Albert J. Mailman (3)Robert E. Milbourne, II (20)Robert T. Monk, Jr. (3)John G. Ordway III (18)Kenneth H. Pugh (5)David T. Simmons (1)Robert K. Smith (5)Jim Stiegman, Jr. (2)Richard S. Taylor (24)John D. Zegeer (24)
CLASS OF 197152 Donors/ 82 Class Roll63% ParticipationRobert W. Althaus (24)Janice K. Anderson (5)R. Scott Bayles (22)Marion L. Blount (24)Stephen M. Bonwich (19)Robert W. Carr, Jr. (24)John T. Chambers (18)Robert E. Cheney (24)James W. Davis (7)Henry R. Derr (24)Truman D. Donoho, III (24)Arthur L. Downes, Jr. (24)David W. Erdman (24)Ted K. Field (24)Glen M. Gallagher (24)Vance D. Gregory, Jr. (21)J. Bill Hanson (24)R. Reeves Hayter (3)John H. Hebrank (6)Donald M. Helfer (24)Jack C. Holland (2)Michael D. Jones (17)Thomas R. Kagarise (1)Allen J. Kasden (1)John C. Kelley (24)Brian H. Kennedy (5)Chun H. Lam (24)David G. Marcelli (4)John S. Marold (24)Thomas D. Matlock (22)Thomas H. Medlin (24)Hunter Moricle (19)George T. Muller (2)Robert F. Olivere (11)Michael C. Parrott (24)Douglas S. Perry (6)William R. B. Potter (24)Curt A. Rawley (15)James L. Reese (24)Peter R. Romeyn (24)John H. Rudd (24)Charles G. Sandell (17)Charles M. Skinner (10)Duane Southerland, Jr. (24)James L. Stuart (18)Allen F. Suit (24)David C. Swarts (19)
Clarence E. Thomas, Jr. (24)John L. Waldruff (19)Thomas L. Warren (24)George J. White (21)Robert S. Willig (9)
CLASS OF 197232 Donors/ 69 Class Roll46% ParticipationSteven R. Bentson (3)Frank Birinyi (24)Edward G. Buckley (24)Joseph F. Chudecki, Jr. (20)John N. Crowder, Jr. (10)Daniel A. Dell’Osa (20)Thomas M. Dicicco (17)Jack C. Dozier (1)Paul S. Follansbee (7)George D. Graham (5)Samuel M. Grant (24)Joseph A. Harland (18)Tedd H. Jett (24)Timothy W. Joseph (10)Ervin H. Kelman (8)Murray A. Korn (4)Robert Y. Li (5)Paul Little III (24)Stephen D. McCullers (24)Larry W. Mobley (22)William D. Needham (16)John H. Nicholson III (10)Stig. E. Regli (8)Royden P. Saffores (7)E. John Saleeby (17)Paul R. Scarborough (24)Alan D. Sherwood (24)Giles W. Vick III (4)Gerald R. Whitt (5)David M. Word (12)
CLASS OF 197338 Donors/ 85 Class Roll45% ParticipationRobert R. Ando (18)Joseph C. Bates III (24)Henry P. Betz (24)Walter J. Bishop (16)Robert S. Bogan (20)John J. Borgschulte (6)Peter A. Bozick (9)Robert B. Brower (24)George G. Clarke (13)William E. Cowart (15)Mark A. Dale (24)Mark C. Davis (4)John G. Dudley (24)John F. Dunlap (6)Fred M. Fehsenfeld, Jr. (1)Donald W. Goodman (6)William J. Hanenberg (19)Edward R. Harback (1)Charlotte S. Harman (16)Ozey K. Horton, Jr. (24)Glenn D. Jordan, Jr. (4)Stephen B. Knisley (1)James W. Lee (3)Kenneth W. Lumsden (5)Kenneth W. Marinak (3)Scott A. McHugh (18)James B. Nicholas (11)
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Donald R. Riekert (4)John F. Rodenhauser (2)Stephen B. Rogers (24)C. Christopher Ross (1)Blair B. Sanders (12)Joseph H. Schmid (6)Warren B. Shaw (7)James A. Strycharz (1)Michael E. Sullivan (1)Paul A. Vadnais (5)David H. Watts (24)
CLASS OF 197432 Donors / 75 Class Roll43% ParticipationJohn P. Ankrum (2)Dwight S. Aston (22)R. Jack Bowers III (7)Clyde R. Butler, Jr. (4)James D. Collins (1)John M. Cox (2)John W. B. Curtis (13)Robert E. Fraile (23)Jeffrey J. Ginsburg (1)Robert A. Hyde (16)Richard C. Johnson, Sr. (1)Samuel G. Joseph (9)James D. Klein (2)Bruce Klitzman (23)James E. Krekorian (22)Carl E. Lehman, Jr. (18)John M. Logsdon (22)Robert B. Lucas (24)James F. McAlister, Jr. (24)Capers W. McDonald (24)Stephen J. Montgomery (4)Philip W. Thor (23)D. Mark Upham (7)Stephen A. Van Albert (5)Philip H. Vorsatz (7)Samuel S. Waters IV (3)Stephen L. Whiteside (1)J. Erby Wilkinson (10)Blake S. Wilson (24)Ray L. Wooten (24)
CLASS OF 197541 Donors/ 100 Class Roll41% ParticipationAthanasios Aridgides (8)Peggy L. Asplund (18)Mark E. Baldwin (19)Montford W. Bryant (17)David F. Cammerzell (2)Hugh G. Chilton III (4)Wade T. Cooper, Jr. (17)Frank J. Coulter, Jr. (24)Patricia T. Crisenbery (2)Tyler Dawson (3)Donald J. Ennen (24)David A. Ennis (10)David B. Epstein (17)James C. Fausch (1)Ian P. Fetterman (3)William C. Fletcher, Jr. (9)Michael A. Freeman (15)John C. Garvey (7)Frank W. Gayle (15)Michael L. Halladay (24)D. Stephen Harrison (24)
James E. Higgins (7)John A. Hornaday, Jr. (4)R. Thomas Hower (1)Kent C. Hustvedt (11)Martin R. Meyer, Jr. (15)Cory D. Rind (15)Jerry C. Ruddle (3)Alan K. Schuler (17)Malcolm T. Shealy (2)William L. Shoemaker (24)Bruce D. Sterrett (24)R. Gregory Stortstrom (24)David Ullmann (15)Peter W. Waxter (13)David M. Wheeler (24)
CLASS OF 197638 Donors/ 96 Class Roll40% ParticipationEdward Anapol (24)Bruce B. Appleton (18)David G. Boyer (1)Gary T. Brotherson (14)Jan W. Cacheris (18)Lawrence C. Caldwell (16)W. Winn Chatham (5)Laurie C. Conner (14)Peter J. Deutch (4)Robert E. Donaho (23)Neal J. Galinko (24)Philip J. Hawk (23)William A. Hawkins (17)Stuart J. Heyman (24)George A. Irwin (1)Peter M. Johns (1)Dwight T. Kernodle, Jr. (1)Kenneth R. Maples (20)Gordon E. Melville (17)Betsy MillerJones (16)Stockton MillerJones (16)DeWitt A. Nunn, Jr. (22)Margery F. Overton (1)John T. F. Oxaal (1)Curtis M. Pearson (12)Bayard L. Powell (24)Thomas C. Rearick (1)James A. Ritcey (1)William B. Scantland (4)Jeffrey I. Spiritos (7)Edward T. Stockbridge (24)J. David Trotter (1)Dennis M. White (12)Robert K. Willet (24)J. Grafton Withers (4)William A. Worrell (13)
CLASS OF 197740 Donors/ 120 Class Roll33% ParticipationM. Scott Albert (10)Steven C. Bartolutti (20)Jeffrey D. Blauvelt (10)Philip C. Buescher (11)Robert T. Crowder (7)Ana E. Diaz (3)Doug S. Doores (10)Stephen K. Y. Eng (15)Edith W. Fleming (7)Robert L. Galloway, Jr. (24)George D. Gehrett (9)
G. Robert Graham (24)Bruce W. Hoffman (18)Robert T. Hyatt (18)Michael C. Keel (17)Kenneth B. Keels Jr. (11)Robert T Kraemer, Jr. (7)William H. Lamason II (18)Robert G. Leech (24)David H. Llewellyn (11)Mary Z. Martin (24)Christopher R. Mellott (3)George E. Murphy (24)Richard M. Prevatt III (12)Thomas F. Rahlfs (11)Janis J. Rehlaender (24)W. Russell Scheirman II (11)Eliot D. Shook (3)David P. Spearman (24)David B. Stewart (8)Claire M. Van Matre (1)Collier T. Weiner (12)Cliff A. Younger (24)
CLASS OF 197857 Donors/ 139 Class Roll41% ParticipationArthur Astorino, Jr. (2)Elise T. Atkins (24)Scott B. Baden (4)Eric F. Bam (24)Francis H. Beam III (9)Victoria S. Bell (19)Melton C. Bost (6)Gary W. Burchill (2)Martin Cala (22)Banks J. Clark (19)Herman Cone, III (22)Richard O. Deaderick, Jr. (1)John K. Dolph (12)Jonathan P. Eagle (4)David S. Enterline (9)James B. Ferguson III (6)Eric L. Ferraro (4)Brian F. Gaston (5)Erik R. Gillman (12)Ella M. Gipson (11)Michael G. Glover (2)Dale T. Guidry (21)Richard A. Henrikson (13)JosephG. Hitselberger, Jr. (4)Lisa G. Hoffman (19)Henry Kent Holland (13)John G. Hovis (5)Alison Ives (23)Jeffrey D. Ix (24)Joe M. Kellis (4)Robert A. Kilpatrick (1)Robert A. Kusnetz (2)Carolyn C. Leech (24)Brenda H. Letzler (9)James C. Lordeman (24)Rebecca Lula (18)Michael E. McConnell (6)Susan M. Moon (3)Pamela R. Moore (13)F. Wesley Newman, Jr. (12)Lisa S. Orton (13)Elizabeth D. Peloso (24)Ronald L. Sapio (4)Stephen B. Slawson (19)
B. Davison Smith, Jr. (1)Randall T. Smith (13)C. Thomas Stuart, Jr. (19)Thomas S. Tully (4)Jackie Walker (14)Shao F. Wang (7)Richard D. Willis (15)Gregory S. Wolcott (23)Richard G. Wolfe (18)
CLASS OF 197958 Donors/ 143 Class Roll41% ParticipationRussell C. Albanese (4)Michael W. Alston (17)Per K. Aschan (1)J. Theodore Balph (24)Richard A. Beck (24)Sylvanus G. Bent, Jr. (2)Susan O. Berman (1)Cynthia N. Brooks (24)Carol D. Burk (7)Douglas C. Cameron (1)Beth R. Caron (1)Jill S. Cobbs (12)David B. Dabney (1)Nancy DeaconDavis (1)John C. Downing (3)Douglas E. Farst (16)Betsy J. Frauenthal (17)Albert N. Gore III (1)Alden Hart (14)Andy Hemmendinger (21)John N. HodgesCopple (2)James D. Huey (8)Kathleen D. Ix (24)James E. Kemler (24)David J. Kusko (24)Donald K. Lee (21)Richard S. Livingston (11)Michael Lorusso, Jr. (18)Joseph M. Luchetski (24)Joan L. Marks (24)Karen S. Martin (12)Douglas A. McGraw (21)Scott F. Midkiff (4)John Milner, Jr. (24)Jay A. Nadel (19)Jonathan Norton (15)Richard B. Parran, Jr. (17)Michael T. Plantamura (5)John W. Rathke (5)Harry F. Robey III (5)Helen K. Rodman (2)Cristian M. Rodriguez (2)David M. Savard (22)Brad J. Schwartz (1)Elizabeth F. Sechrest (17)Alvin J. Sill III (24)Laurence S. Sloman (11)Stephen R. Spector (24)Julia L. Stevens (4)Charles A. Tharnstrom (5)Jonathan D. Truwit (24)Barbara A. Vogel (11)Howard O. Watkins III (16)Bradley G. Watts (24)R. Davis Webb, Jr. (24)Richard M. West (18)Bryan K. Wheelock (11)
Thomas L. Whitehair (3)Nicholas Zaldastani (2)
CLASS OF 198070 Donors/ 181 Class Roll39% ParticipationNancy E. Alston (17)Katherine Andriole (11)Suzanne M. Beaumont (2)Clinton C. Bennett III (19)John Brandeau (1)Robert K. Brandt (4)Scott A. Brandt (1)Michele M. Carbonell (11)R. Gregg Caro (1)Antoinette M. Cecere (18)Robert S. Conway (10)David O. Cook (24)Frederick P. Fendt (1)Pedro C. Fenjves (20)Lynn T. Flach (12)Thomas H. Flournoy (7)Linda S. Floyd (22)Marla J. Franks (24)Linda J. Gabbard (5)Richard C. Gaskins, Jr. (3)Thomas G. Geldermann (2)Anita G. Gieser (1)John H. Gieser (1)William M. Gilliland (3)David A. Goodwin (4)Margaret L. Gulley (1)James D. Heerwagen (17)John G. Holland (7)David R. Hughes (10)Larry S. Hunt (9)David G. Inman (4)Barbara Kieker (14)Andrew L. Kirby (24)William F. Larson (1)Walter M. Livingston (2)Steven T. Maher (4)Beverly Marson (14)Donald T. McComas (3)Donald B. McGonigle (20)Donald C. Mikush, Jr. (13)Jeffrey W. Miller (12)Paul R. Moulton (24)David Munnikhuysen (16)Gregory S. Nizich (4)Karl G. Ohaus (22)Nancy J. Pelc (15)Eric R. Peterson (1)Jeffrey W. Reedy (19)Christopher M. Relyea (24)Timothy P. Rooney (24)Mack T. Ruffin IV (24)Andrew E. Scherer (24)CharlesW. Stankiewicz (14)Dale R. StantonHoyle (13)Lisa F. Stilwell (5)Douglas B. Strott (6)David S. Taylor (11)Lloyd R. Tripp (2)LarryD.Vandendriessche(17)Alison R. Vuille (5)Cynthia P. Walden (17)Warren R. Weber (11)Marc D. Weinshenker (22)Richard E. Williams (18)
Craig A. Witt (17)Kyle S. Witt (17)
CLASS OF 198166 Donors/175 Class Roll38% ParticipationG. Daniel Adams, Jr. (5)Richard L. Aicher (3)John W. Allison (3)Caryn L. Bacon (1)Amjad A. Bseisu (4)Joel W. Burdick (1)Sara E. Bures (4)Alan R. Cohen (3)Jeffrey C. Conklin (4)Darryl W. Copeland, Jr. (19)James P. G. Dalton, Jr. (1)James C. Daues (10)David L. Drobeck (2)William H. Edinger (19)ThomasenaEllisonClarke (3)Laura S. Foulk (3)Edward J. Grogan (15)Edward F. Hendershot (19)Deborah J. Herts (4)Cynthia D. Kaiser (2)Patrick J. Keegan (24)Mark J. Keister (4)Brian S. Kelleher (3)Simon Y. C. Lau (9)Perry H. Leo (15)Michael W. Lutz (5)Linda W. H. Mackie (24)Anthony M. Marzullo, Jr. (1)Carl E. McCants (15)Martha M. McDade (24)James B. McIlvain (20)Nicholas I. Morgan (8)Laurent Nicolov (7)Laura S. Nystrom (23)Keith D. Paulsen (1)Richard B. Paulsen (9)J. Michael Pearson (6)Richard W. Pekala (24)GeorgeS.Plattenburg, Jr. (20)Edward J. Rapp II (2)Louise C. Riddle (12)Thomas B. Robey (18)Heyward G. Robinson (1)James B. Roseborough (1)David I. Rowland (11)Alan S. Rudnai (1)Caroline S. Schlaseman (24)Janet L. W. Slagle (5)Craig J. Soloff (17)Armando A. Tabernilla (23)Thomas G. Tilden (8)Vestal C. Tutterow (22)Thomas P. Vail (1)Gordon B. Van Dusen (7)Jeffrey N. Vinik (24)Philip B. Wah, Jr. (1)Michael S. Wainer (24)Janet M. Weber (7)Edward H. Wright (5)
CLASS OF 198264 Donors/183 Class Roll35% ParticipationS. James Abert (3)
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Undergraduate students at the Pratt ETeam’s freshman welcome picnic – August 2014
Douglas E. Giordano (2) Vincent L. Deters (1)John C. Glover (3) Kevin A. Dorsey (10)Leonard Ray Goldfarb (12) Richard A. Ferguson (12)Michael S. Good (1) Andrew L. Fox (3)Gregory D. Graflund (8) Scott P. Gatje (24)David J. Gregory (10) Stuart M. Gaynes (18)R. Campbell Hewell, Jr. (1) Bryan C. Gee (17)Antoinette T. Iacobo (2) Jane L. Gerb (15)Anne R. Jacobson (24) Charles A. Gove (13)Robert P Judd, Jr. (1) SarahM. Greifenberger (11)Julie A. Keenan (19) J. Joseph Handley (10)Andrew J. Lawson (16) Tanya J. Johnson (5)Richard B. Lazarus (16) Craig E. Jones (5)Donald H. Leathem, Jr. (24) Anand D. Kasbekar (17)Wah K. Lee (6) Bennett S. King (10)Page I. Lemel (24) Felix D. Klebe (2)Samuel M. Liang (22) William H. Koch (5)Deborah J. MacKay (5) Kenji A. Kojima (1)Alain G. Magro (12) John A. Kollins III (2)Bridge D. L. McDowell (10) Michael A. Korman (13)James K. McGowan (4) Roman M. Kowalchuk (20)Peter F. McIlveen (6) Scott Kresge (3)Carolyn O. Molthrop (8) Imad S. Labban (12)Corell L. Moore (16) Jane A. S. Labban (12)David H. Moore (19) Stuart J. Laidlaw (2)Reginald K. Moore (3) Jean G. Levett (24)Nicolette B. Naso (24) Amy E. Lutz (2)Michael J. Natoli (1) Darren K. Maness (15)Sarah D. Norton (11) Marie L. Marchesseault (1)Jacinto A. Oliver (3) Paul M. Matsumura (22)Prayson W. Pate (22) Nelson E.Matthews, Jr. (11)Michele K. Peel (4) Marybeth McGinn (15)Amy A. Petersen (24) Kevin B. Nace (24)
Anne F. Ayanian (14) Keith S. Novak (4) Angelia W. Heughan (1) Jeffrey K. Wilkins (7) Walter M. Petroll (6) Matthew S. Noell (1)John W. Barton (20) Lisa Z. Olens (20) John A. Horton III (1) Joseph B. Wood, III (18) Dean W. Pletz (7) James R. O’Connell, Jr. (14)Alan R. Blankshain (1) John Ortiz (14) William H. Hulbert (21) Harold L. Yoh, III (24) Jeffrey K. Pollard (1) Frank J. Oliveri (7)Danal A. Blessis (15) Laura L. Philpot (1) Boris I. Ilicic (13) Dawn K. Pratt (24) Debra M. Parrish (7)John A. Board, Jr. (22) Anthony Pines (4) Elizabeth T. Jolly (1) CLASS OF 1984 Raymond R. Rackley (1) John L. Penvenne (7)Robin K. Bochner (3) Jeffrey R. Rehm (1) Linda G. Kaelin (11) 86 Donors/ 218 Class Roll Daniel P. Robertson (6) Timothy D. Pettit (17)J. Jon Brophy (1) Susan B. Ross (9) Stephen K. Kershner (2) 39% participation Scott H. Robinson (6) Phillip R. Pickett (5)Carolyn N. Chase (24) Kenneth G. Sandberg (18) Bart R. Kessler (20) Glenn D. Altchek (1) Charles J. Rogers (23) Sam C. Pointer III (1)Christopher B. Cook (24) Thomas K. Sawanobori (9) Mark Kitchens (14) Bruce J. Andersen (20) Kenneth T. Schiciano (22) Richard J. Pond (12)Damian M. Craig (1) Michael E. Scher (1) David E. Korn (24) John D. Barker (13) Phillip A. Scott (17) David L. Pratt (24)Becky A. Cuthbertson (10) Mitchell J. Shein (8) Anthony J. Lardaro (6) Laura B. Barker (13) Saba Shibberu (3) James P. Rattray (1)Hal A. Davis III (7) Jon M. Silver (2) Scott J. MacEwen (12) Kym T. Bean (19) John B. Sibson, Jr. (5) Douglas S. Rex (3)Scott H. Davis (2) Gregory N. Stock (5) Cynthia L. Manieri (24) Stephen P. Blake (1) Gary J. Smerdon (2) Brian J. Roach (10)Kevin E. Flynn (15) Peter T. Tucker (16) Robert J. McAuliffe (13) Benjamin C. Bonifant (5) David R. Smith (17) David E. Robbins (10)Elizabeth A. H. Fortino (4) Gunnar W. Zorn, III (23) John M. McDonald, III (22) David A. Bouchard (4) Andrew M. White (8) Robert E. Robinson, Jr. (12)Edwin M. Geanes (4) John T. Meaney (12) K. Monroe Bridges (24) Katharyn M. White (8) Kevin D. Romer (5)William B. Gex (13) Philip D. Miller (3)CLASS OF 1983 Andrew M. Brown (6) Frank E. Wierengo (24) Barry E. Schneirov (24)Jane W. Gezon (3) Nicholas J. Naclerio (4)66 Donors/ 194 Class Roll Robert G. Brown (1) Christopher T. Wilde (21) Jeffrey S. Spear (13)Virginia T. Gibbs (4) Alan K. Novick (10)34% participation Pinetta J. BruceBrookes (1) Hugo R. Toledo, Jr. (1)Nancy D. Glaser (4) Stephen D. Bard (1) Elizabeth S. Owen (23) David A. Brumbaugh, Jr. (4) Ledi S. Trutna (21)CLASS OF 1985Scott D. Greenwald (6) David M. Bennett (19) David R. Pitser (24) Marjorie G. Bryen (6) Beth Urdahl (15)82 Donors/ 219 Class RollBradford S. Grob (1) Ivan L. Blinoff (12) Andrew E. Pollard (1) Susan F. Bueti (2) Scott K. Walker (5)37% ParticipationRandolph M. Haldeman (9) David A. Rahdert (9)Farley W. Bolwell (12) Laura G. Bulson (2) Peter W. Waring (5)Matthew D. Bacchetta (15)John C. Hausman III (10) Terrence J. Ransbury, Jr. (15)Robert C. Bourg (19) Elizabeth A. Carter (1) Spencer W. White (16)Belinda A. Bacon (11)Akiko Hayashi (8) Robert A. Canfield (2) Letitia E. Roe (5) John Chae (3) Kemp B. Wills (17)Peter T. Baker (1)Steven P. Hayes (24) James S. Carter (24) Kathleen V. Rogers (1) Robert M. Coleman (19) Roni H. Wolfe (12)Christopher J. Bedell (22)Catherine L. Iacobo (11) Thomas L. Carter (3) Steven C. Rosner (9) Andrew Cowan (15) Michael T. Yamamoto (16)Jeffrey D. Behrens (4)Mark R. Jeffers (17) John L. Russell (4)JamesA. Cavenaugh III (15) David W. Craig (5) Michael H. Yoh (24)Paul G. Bernhard (16)Mark B. Kadonoff (17) Brian J. Savoie (2)Bart R. Combs (4) Stephen C. Davis (1) Mark R. Zilling (5)Stephen R. Bolze (17)Bruce T. Kroeschell (24) Eric J. Schiffer (7)J. Mark Dennis (12) Jose B. De Castro (13) Susan A. Botyrius (1)Howard I. Levy (10) Allan B. Shang (5)Daniel M Dickinson (20) Thomas F. Dziwulski (11) Audrey V. Brown (1) CLASS OF 1986Wayne R. Locke (4) James G. Short III (2)Robert J. Ferrall (7) Jeffrey S. Ebeling (24) Dale L. Brunelle (7) 76 Donors/ 221 Class RollJoel M. Marks (8) Deborah T. Simpson (7)William J. Florence III (1) Kevin J. Fellhoelter (1) Richard G. Bryan (1) 34% ParticipationBarbara C. McCurdy (15) David M. Strickland (24)Jean D. Franke (6) David G. Fernald, Jr. (8) Jeffrey M. Clark (2) Daniel T. Adams (2)Bruce A. McDermott (4) Joseph C. Sussingham (2)Graziano D. Giglio (15) Brian L. Garrison (2) Karen E. Conover (3) James E. Albright (1)Richard A.McDonnell II (5) David W. Swearingen (1)Allison H. Glackin (24) Philip V. Geraffo (1) Cynthia Cooper (6) Thomas L. Antonino (8)William R. Mendez (9) James P. Toomey (6)Daniel J. Griffith (24) Omar Ghattas (8) Michael G. D’Antonio (18) Scott J. Arnold (5)Thomas A. Natelli (9) Christopher M. Waters (1)Cheryl H. Hastings (6) Daniel R. Gilmore (23) Aileen M. De Soto (5) Jun Asai (22)
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Annual FundDeborah R. Behrens (4)Mark R. Benz (18)David P. Boch (24)Elizabeth A. Brosnan (1)Jacqueline E. Brown (4)Heidi A. Cerjan (6)Curt A. Cimei (9)Richard Conway (2)Thomas C. Daily (14)Karen G. Dinicola (2)Lisa L. Dworkin (2)Linda S. Ermides (4)Gregory A. Esses (7)Jon R. Fahs, Jr. (4)Allen H. Farrington (12)Peter W. Flur (24)Gary W. Geck (5)Sam A. Ghazaleh (17)Jon K. Gotow (4)Richard M. Greenwald (15)Julie H. Grill (19)Jonathan M. Guerster (24)Kurt W. Haas (5)Robert J. Harward (5)R. Barton Houck II (3)Aric J. Keller (4)John M. Kuttler (7)Lawrence J. Lang (12)Kenneth B. Lazarus (11)Wayne M. Lefkowitz (3)Carmen S. Lehtinen (2)Robert S. LeVine (24)Evan J. Levy (1)John C. Lindgren (6)David S. Lindquist (3)Jane F. Mashiko (9)Douglas M. McCracken (4)Thomas C. McThenia, Jr. (1)Lucy T. McQuilken (6)Michele H. Miller (24)Mark M. Murray (6)Amy M. Novak (24)Kathleen O. Olsen (5)Roberta G. Oyakawa (5)Anne C. Pappalardo (5)Murry K. Pierce (5)Mark A. Potsdam (24)William M. Ricci (4)Michael Rigsby (14)Laurence Rosenberg (3)Catherine P. Sarrett (4)Judith B. Schmitz (6)Howard A. Shoobe (1)Robert F. Shuford, Jr. (14)Mark W. Sikorski (14)Dee M. Stewart (20)Steven K. Stranne (2)James F. Sweeney (1)Elias J. Torre (24)Billie S. Walden (5)George W. Ward (3)Diana S. Winter (8)
CLASS OF 198759 Donors/ 196 Class Roll30% ParticipationHenrik Bacho (1)Richard H. Bevier (2)Jillian E. Blaschak (1)RobertF.BrandenburgIII (11)Richard C. Brown (18)
Brenton E. Bunn (14)Stephen J. Cahill (1)Patricia E. CampbellSmith(6)Robert G. Carter (4)David Ciaffa (14)William A. Colavecchio (5)Celine J. Crowson (3)James J. Dean (7)Barron C. Fishburne (3)Cameron H. Fowler (21)Kenneth A. Fox (11)Laura B. GrahamFord (8)Charles A. Grandy (7)Suzanne M. Gregory (20)Kenneth J. Heater (9)Barbara Thompson Isaf (8)Will M. Larkin, Jr. (16)Steven E. Lawson (8)Lawrence D. Lenihan, Jr. (1)Court V. Lorenzini (4)Robert P. Maliff (14)David L. Marchese (3)George N. Mattson II (5)Jeffrey P. McCrea (4)Scott I. Merz (15)Gregory A. Murray II (1)Lowell Nelson (14)Roger W. Nightingale (24)Bradley S. Novak (1)John A. Philips III (2)Christopher M. F. Poli (1)David E. Ragnow (3)Frederic S. Resnic (24)Hollace S. Rhodes (12)Michael G. Rhodes (10)William L. Rollins (3)Maureen A. Shaffer (1)Craig R. Stiffler (4)Martin C. Trively (3)JohnKelly C. Warren (7)Yaffa WeaverBrown (15)Thomas J. Weck (3)Denise A. Williams (7)C. Eric Williford (1)Lisa M. Willis (20)Richard A. Wortman (5)Phillip P. Zammataro (2)Joseph S. Zaren (1)
CLASS OF 198871 Donors/ 174 Class Roll41% ParticipationGregory J. Alcorn (15)Gerard W. Appert (20)Catherine C. Betor (2)Richard S. Bloomfeld (1)Rebecca R. Board (22)Douglas S. Bowman (1)Jeffrey W. Bryce (1)Thomas A. Burger, Jr. (14)ChristopherD. Caldwell (15)Pete Campbell (2)Kevin B. Catlin (15)Jackie T. Chan (6)Jess T. Clark (15)Diane T. Crean (1)Steven Daknis (15)Jeffrey M. Dodson (3)Christopher J. English (24)Erik T. Eppers (3)
Kristen A. Fisher (9)Randall J. Fuller (10)Randy Geehr (14)Carlton H. Gerber (2)Thomas A. Godin (1)Robert J. Goebel (7)Richard S. Goldenson (23)Judith S. Gordon (4)Michael A. Harman (10)Richard F. Herbst (12)Jennifer S. Hill (13)Richard K. Hill (13)Gregory O. Hjelmstad (1)Jeffrey W. Hughes (7)Salim F. Idriss (4)Gregory A. Janicik (9)Roger B. Johnson (2)Meredith S. Josephs (11)David P. Kirchoff (12)Conrad V. Langenhagen (1)Sarah E. Levin (24)David E. Levine (13)Thomas S. Lindsay (14)James “J.R.” R. Lowry (20)John M. Meiggs (2)Steven P. Monti (21)Michael Munley (14)David E. Myers (2)Tracy A. Nickelsburg (21)Leslie S. Prescott (24)Randy Redmon (12)Tracey F. Reimann (24)Bartt H. Richards (17)Paul F. Ridgway (20)CharlesM. Roebuck, III (22)William C. Ruotola (9)Richard W. Russell (5)Joseph A. Saldutti, Jr. (13)Gregory L. Slover (9)Lee J. Tiedrich (4)Manlio A. Valdes (3)Kenneth R. Velleman (24)Eric F. Winakur (17)Charles W. Wyble, Jr. (24)Jeffrey M. Yoh (24)
CLASS OF 198961 Donors/ 174 Class Roll35% ParticipationTroy G. Arnold III (7)Jeffrey G. Bassett (15)Steven B. Baumberger (2)Thomas M. Betor (2)Jonathan H. Burdette (1)Mary C. Carlson (3)Susan G. Daniel (1)Frank A. DeFilippis, Jr. (1)Babita L. Deitrich (15)James M. Drozd (11)Christopher L. Eisenbies (2)Jason M. Ettinger (3)Todd C. Farley (1)George Fox, Jr. (17)Dwight Galbi (13)Kyung I. Han (1)Beth F. Hanson (17)Steven R. Harman (3)William F. Herbert, Jr. (16)Laura L. P. Hluck (19)Christine L. Hunter (13)David A. Igel (2)
Linda S. Katz (1)James D. Kolenski (1)Thomas W. Lattin, Jr. (4)Deborah D. Leland (1)Benjamin T. Madden (1)Tracey I. Marks (1)Steven D. Mattesen (1)Brian E. Meyer (4)Charles J. Mullett (1)Mia K. Nadasky (16)StephenM.Nickelsburg (20)Kathryn R. Nightingale (24)Sean W. O’Brien (4)Richard J. Pattinson (24)Joseph A. Paydarfar (5)Peter J. Perrone (5)Krista B. Ridgway (20)Jennifer K. Robinson (23)Brad E. Rosenthal (6)Peter J. Schwaller (6)Vijay M. Shah (20)Frederick G. Springman (3)Scott E. Telesz (24)Stephen G. Tell (18)ElizabethC. TylerKabara (22)Sheila K. VanNederveen (10)Robert R. Wahl, Jr. (12)John L. Willis (20)
CLASS OF 199098 Donors/ 262 Class Roll37% ParticipationJamal Ahmad (13)Sean J. Allburn (5)Eric W. Anderson (14)Phillip A. AyoungChee (1)Patricia M. Barr (1)Alan H. Baydush (7)Susan B. Beauchamp (4)Torsten Berger (5)Katherine Y. Bielefeld (16)Matthew R. Bielefeld (13)Steven T. Boycan (5)Anne E. Brack (16)Ellen K. Brezic (3)George Burgin II (4)Thomas K. Callaway (19)Michael G. Cetta (19)Peter J. Chomyn III (13)KaiI Chung (1)Gregory J. Clary (12)Megan K. Conover (3)Mark S. Conrad (5)Dennis J. Courtney (2)John A. Dickson (3)Michael P. Dierks (22)Jeffrey D. Dinkel (9)Shannon Dreyfuss (14)Christopher G. Duffy (1)Kenneth R. Dugas (24)Kenneth J. Dunleavy (11)Bruce L. Faulkner (22)Andrew S. Feinberg (3)Robert R. Flenniken (2)Christopher V. Forinash (18)Elizabeth K. Forinash (18)Rick Gayle (2)Christopher G. Giusti (5)John J. Glushik (10)Shawn J. Goodier (16)William A. Gutknecht (11)
Daniel S. Hamburger (1)Robert A. Herstein (2)Paul T. Hertlein (18)Michael A. Hughes (3)Michael J. Isman (2)Chris Johnson (14)Douglas E. Johnson (1)Elizabeth S. Joslin (19)Lance M. Kaplan (4)Mary M. Kile (15)Douglas C. Kley (8)Anthony C. Leung (9)Christine C. Lodge (13)Brian J. Mangan (1)Michael M. Marshall (4)David P. Matarazzo (2)Brian T. Maurer (1)John McDonald (1)Thomas E. McMullen (8)Brenda Y. Mirabile (16)Alfred W. Mordecai (22)Karen G. Morris (2)Richard E. Nicholas (24)Kimberly T. Noble (3)Carlos R. Olarte (1)Robert A. Oliver (3)Robert H. Owens (21)Katherine D. Paul (1)Douglas B. Pfaff (18)Timothy L. Proulx (16)Henry C. Purdy (5)John P. Reddy (24)Robert L. Seelig (20)Brenda C. Shepherd (6)Roger L. Shields (2)Anthony J. Sikorski (16)Chalin A. Smith (4)Jerome C. Smith (3)Brian P. Somerday (21)James R. Stalder (9)Paul A. Steffens (15)Samuel J. Stevenson (20)HansPeter Tandon (6)Edward L. Trimble (16)Cheryl D. Vecchio (4)Joseph P. Wedding III (2)Robert D. Wescott (10)James G. Whayne (2)Cheryl A. F. White (24)John C. Wroton (24)
CLASS OF 199158 Donors/ 176 Class Roll33% ParticipationMichael J. M. Arichea (18)Rob Aung (14)Paul M. Barnhart (3)Peter F. Biro (1)Michael W. Broome (1)James L. Chittenden (2)T. Glenn Coleman (7)Thomas A. Corpus (19)Jonathan L. Danielson (19)Steven D. Ertel (16)Richard L. Feliciano (13)Eric J. Felt (9)Eric M. Free (1)Alan D. Friedman (12)Stacy S. Gardner (23)Daniel C. Go II (4)Timothy A. Gosnell (14)
Jon R. Hibschman (16)Robert Ari Hirschfeld (16)Josefina S. Hobbs (6)Brian H. Jenkins (1)Stacey W. Johnson (7)E. Vincent Jolley (1)David C. Kaelber (1)William G. Karpovich (7)Jeong M. Kim (1)Daniel R. King (4)Eric W. Koehler (3)Carla M. Lawson (1)Benjamin H. Le Blanc (15)Michael D. Lee (6)Steven H. Lin (10)Tanya Shoenfel Nizialek (16)Tim Nugent (2)Michael S. O’Leary (21)Scott D. Olson (2)Allen B. Parker (1)John D. Pazienza (16)Christopher H. Pencis (20)Jennifer Boyd Pencis (20)Joseph C. Peterson, Jr. (4)Michael D. Pyle (7)Timothy J. Rade (20)Scott C. Raney (3)Brian C. Reed (1)Thomas C. Robey (8)Barry S. Safier (15)Sheila F. Steele (23)Matthew W. Twiggs (17)Meredith C. Upchurch (2)William D. Webster (13)Kenneth S. Weinberg (13)Dixie T. Wells (22)
CLASS OF 199274 Donors/ 211 Class Roll35% ParticipationVictor S. Adler (3)Derek D. Albert (1)Kristy B. Arbogast (22)Kristen S. Bernhardt (11)Michael S. Bertisch (2)MaheshC. Bhumralkar (15)Scott D. Booth (17)Stephen E. Butler (1)Christopher A. Casper (4)N. Abraham Cohn (15)Jeffrey C. Constantine (3)Gregory W. Council (6)Cyrus K. Dastur (3)Timothy Davis (12)John J. Devaney, Jr. (6)Greg A. Erens (10)Susan M. Eugenis (22)Tricia G. Gilbert (18)John D. Griffin IV (2)John E. Grupp (5)Karen M. Guido (5)Michael L. Guido (5)David B. Hanes (19)Douglas A. Hardy (17)Julie M. Hasenwinkel (2)Lisa M. Hibschman (16)Jaime D. Hobbeheydar (4)Delilah J. Huelsing (3)Charles S. Kim (1)James C. Lacefield (15)Kemper E. Lewis (16)
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Annual FundBrian M. Long (2) CLASS OF 1993 Jeffrey K. Lopez (4) Stewart S. Worrell (7) Kevin M. Hilton (2) Laura V. Hawkins (12)
75 Donors/ 204 Class RollErik Lorscheider (8) Daniel H. Loughlin (19) Robert A. Wyatt (3) Steven C. House (11) Mohammad B. Ismael (19)Jarvis T. Lowndes (8) Brian E. Mackay (6) Brain K. Yamanouchi (21) Warren H. James (5) Michael J. Jurgens (11)37% ParticipationElizabethM. Lutostansky (3) Jay Moller (5) Pamela D. Jobert (3) Benli Kao (16)T. Richard Alfonsi (5)Mark E. Mason (4) Pravene A. Nath (1) Chad R. Johnson (17) Andrew V. Kayes (11)Filip Banovac (2) CLASS OF 1994Dawn D. Matheson (1) Sridevi V. Basavaraju (5) Christine M. Nesbit (8) 84 Donors/ 265 Class Roll John R. Koon (1) Kevin G. Klinedinst (8)Andrew W. McCown (1) BarbaraH. Bodenstein (14) Eric C. Nesbit (8) 32% Participation Mark E. Kraynak (6) David A. Landau (9)Jeffrey S. McVeigh (2) Erik N. Oberg (21) Audra P. Loftman (1) Cristin L. Lawrence (18)Adam W. Cates (21) Stephen C. Abate (17)Dana C. Meltzer (1) Stirling E. Olson (13) Elizabeth G. Mazhari (9) Matthew B. Malchow (1)David P. Chang (1) Sarah C. Abbruzzese (1)Julia J. Nakhleh (21) Gregory M. Organ (3) Shwetal T. Mehta (2) Steven A. McClelland (17)Julie H. Cochran (15) Anthony J. Bellezza (10)Brian J. Nalle (1) Graham A. Orriss (8) Wilson Y. Lee (7) Robert A. McClung (11)B. Cason Coplin (21) Michael J. Bingle (16)Joseph A. Oswald III (2) Jennifer K. Orriss (8) Joseph A. Levitin (16) Joel R. K. Moody (16)Emily A. Crawford (21) Joseph M. Bollinger (18)Ivan P. Parra (1) Abraham D. Palmer (21) David C. Lott (3) Thanh Nguyen (3)Michael L. Davitt (3) Henry F. Butehorn III (1)James L. Pratt (21) Debra M. Parisi (16) Valerie M. Love (20) Naomi A. Oak (19)Ian C. Doiron (3) Chalmers H. Butler (2)Anish D. Rajparia (5) Hong S. Park (4) Maria A. Manning (3) Uche S. Osuji (3)Thomas S. Eppinger (21) James L. Caroland (1)Stephen W. Ridley (1) Joseph C. Parker (8) M. Jonathan Mathers (6) Gregory D. Parker (8)Holly M. Espy (21) Brian S. Clise (11)John P. Rodgers (18) Gillian F. Parton (2) Deanna J. H. Mathews (16) John M. Pearson (1)Louis A. Falvo III (21) Russell B. Copeland (20)Chris Roy (2) Neeraja B. Peterson (2) Megan B. Moore (7) Brian T. Racilla (7)Amy N. Fazio (14) Eric C. Correll (5)Gregory D. Sabin (1) Brian A. Pietrewicz (2) Howard G. Nelson (19) Marshall A. Robers (14)Nicole M. Finger (16) James P. Creighton (12)Nancy D. Sabin (1) W. Stephen Poole (5) Joaquim S. Neto (1) Judge Robinette (7)James F. Fox II (15) Taylor M. Davenport (15)John A. Sartor (2) Richard T. Rhee (16) Matthew L. Pangaro (2) Vineet K. Sarin (14)Michael L. Guhl (1) Patricia L. Davis (1)William T. Schlough (7) Margaret B. Rodgers (18) Heidi R. Pellerano (10) Christophe H. Schilling (2)Michael R. Gustafson II (6) Elizabeth A. Debartolo (20)Peter V. Schroeder (3) Jeffrey A. Hancock (17) Michael K. Ryan (6) Nancy R. Donahue (5) MalcolmW.Peverley, Jr. (12) Michael G. Sherman (13)Elizabeth J. Sciaudone (20) Joseph E. Schafstall (16) Julia V. Phillips (20) Betts S. Slingluff III (5)Thomas W. Hash II (17) Michael J. Donnelly (16)Andrew P. Seamons (8) William J. Scheessele (5) Michael T Prewett (18) Christopher D. Tapia (9)Mustafa M. Haziq (1) RebeccaB. Drabenstott (8)Judd W. Staples (9) Ershela L. Sims (10) Michael L. A. Reams (16) Beverly C. Tyler (2)Grant T. Hollett, IV (16) Richard S. Dreger, Jr. (7)Robert J. Stets, Jr. (22) Jill M. Hudkins (5) David J. Sullivan (5) John C. Dries (13) David A. Roberts (3) Stephen M. Waite (6)Bradley A. Stewart (11) Jon R. Tervo (20) Julie D. Rocherolle (1) Robert J. Waldner (3)Alva S. Huffman III (5) Stefan A. Dyckerhoff (9)Matthew C. Strauss (22) Jeffrey J. Tsai (3) Andrea R. Roddy (15) H. Davis Ward III (7)Stephen S. Huh (16) Jason L. Ekedahl (20)Matthew D. Wade (21) Sheila C. Tsai (7) Christopher R. Salter (5) Judd T. Willmann (11)George W. Jordan III (6) Geoffrey R. Erickson (2)Sharon L. Washington (1) Tracy B. Verhoeven (15) Robert G. Santos (12) James C. Woodring (4)Karl W. Kottke (4) Dennis M. Feenaghty (11)Seth A. Watkins (21) Michael L. Krachon (16) David S. Wasik (17) James A. Grover (18) Dana F. Schneider (8) Fair Leah Yeager (19)Mark B. Williams (5) Devendra T. Kumar (2) David T. Wei (12) Susan H. Guswa (15) Danielle W. Shelley (4)Soren D. Windram (1) Laura L. Lenderman (21) Chaffin L. Wesley, Jr. (1) Halim Habiby (11) Mark V. Slominski (5) CLASS OF 1996David J. Witzel (8) Stephen D. Williams (11) Charles K. Smoak (6)Gregory P. Lissy (13) Dennis J. Hanzlik (12) 76 Donors/ 204 Class RollDarren E. Zinner (6) Jason N. Workman (21) James R. Sokolowski (14)Rickard C. Loftman (1) Brian L. Helm (5) 37% Participation
Andrew T. Vedder (5) Swati Agarwal (8)Romita L. Wallen (6) Sherry M. Altman (7)Anne S. Ward (1) Imron T. Aly (16)Alan L. Whitehurst (15) Andrew J. Armstrong (3)Jonathan M. Williams (14) J. Tucker Bailey (7)Christopher D. Wilson (19) Gary J. Barnhart (18)Sandi F. Worthy (2) Ethan I. Berger (18)Yin Yin (3) German E. Blomeier (4)
Thomas M. Brundage (18)CLASS OF 1995 Frank Bruni (18)58 Donors/ 183 Class Roll Eric B. Callaghan (8)32% Participation Brian K. Campbell (1)Matthew J. Alinger (18) JamesD. Campbell, III (16)Lisa L. AndersonHall (2) Andrew B. Carver (18)Thomas H. Ayala (8) ChuiShan L. Chila (4)Robert R. Bailey (19) Brian J. Chung (18)Jennifer T. Bhojwani (15) Angelo B. Cruz (18)Clifford J. Billings (19) Leslie L. Dickey (11)Jeffrey E. Bischoff (5) Laura B. Feeley (12)David N. Buza (18) Phillip C. Gallagher (1)Michael S. Caines (12) Sunil N. Gandhi (15)Jeffrey A. Chard (16) Geoff K. Gavin (18)Charles D. Choi (18) Brett W. Goudie (1)Allison B. Cleveland (12) Robert J. Haley (18)Jeffrey J. Cook (2) James K. Henry, Jr. (14)Monica D. DelCampo (15) Keren Hilger (2)Mark S. Donnithorne (8) Benjamin M. Holzman (5)Scott W. Dubbeling (19) Catherine N. Hounfodji (9)Richard E. Finley (3) Daniel V. Ingram (3)Elizabeth J. Gaske (12) Andrew K. Johnston (1)David J. Genova (2) Holly C. Kelly (3)C. Kristian Hanby (5) Jason S. Kim (2)Heather A. B. Harries (19) Andrew H. LaVoy (3)Scott E. Harrington (3) David L. Leblond (1)
At Parents' Weekend, October 2014
50 dukengineer 2015
Jeffrey D. Lewis (18)Franklin J. Lin (1)Nathan R. Loomis (1)Mark W. McIntosh (1)Jeffrey M. Milheizler (18)Estela P. Moen (16)Damian E. Monteiro (1)AmandaM.Montgomery (8)David B. Morton (3)Roberto C. Munoz (18)Suneel N. Nagda (7)Drew G. Narayan (3)William R. Overall (15)Clement D. Pappas (10)Robert J. Parsley (17)Estela J. Patron (16)Will J. Peppo (5)Nancy W. Pham (5)Alexander W. Rice (4)Evangelos B. Ringas (18)Christopher T. Sabatino (16)Derek K. Schubert (9)Kevin R. Schwall (15)Maulin V. Shah (13)Scott M. Shimp (18)Kristine M. Singley (3)Joshua B. Skudlarick (12)Daniel J. Sorin (15)Michael D. Swinson (3)Janis M. Taube (3)Shannon O. Thornton (8)Maura G. Tira (18)Joshua M. Unger (1)James S. Walsh (2)Wade Ware (4)Daniel P. Weinstein (16)Christopher D. Willey (10)Elizabeth C. Wong (2)Eric K. Wong (2)
CLASS OF 199774 Donors/ 207 Class Roll36% ParticipationFrank A. Badalamenti (10)L. Ross Baker, Jr. (10)A. Warren Brackin IV (9)Wesley M. Brandon (1)Peter C. Carlone (17)Natasha D. Case (3)Jim Chartier (3)Josiah C. Cocks (4)Amy E. Croot (17)Stacey J. Davis (3)Jeffrey W. Donnithorne (8)Lee Anne Duval (2)Steven W. Fass (8)Francisco J. Fernandez (3)Melissa B. Field (3)Robert P. Flowers (17)Sara H. Furber (1)Sidney Glasofer (2)Daniel A. Godrick (14)Varish Goyal (5)Amara L. Hildebrand (4)Andrew J. Hoopengardner (3)Elaine Y. Hsieh (5)Harris H. Hwang (12)Joseph S. Joson (4)Amy W. Kelly (1)Christopher C. Kelly (3)
Kania H. Kennedy (1)Sarah L. Kieweg (17)Mara E. Kingsley (4)Kurt E. Knaub (3)Brian J. Kott (2)Robert C. Kunz (5)Morgan B. LaRue (11)Melanie J. Licis (11)Bharet Malhotra (5)MiMi L. McCloskey (17)Theron L. Metz (17)Jeffrey K. Mills (13)Kevin E. Moore (1)Maureen L. Mulcahy (2)Gregory J. A. Murad (6)Sangki Oak (2)Abigail L. Pachon (13)Theodore G. Perkins (3)Rebecca L. S. Peterson (17)Jason B. Piche (8)Richard Z. Polidi (11)Bryan S. Rheem (4)Heather Y. Rodin (13)Martina B. Roediger (10)Bret A. Rogers (17)Charles W. Saletta (17)Jill A. Schreifer (10)Stephanie L. Seaman (2)Malay B. Shah (7)Todd A. Spears (17)Dierdre V. Strigenz (17)Anita M. Suchdeo (8)Susan R. Sweeney (1)Marwan K. S. Tabbara (24)Linda M. Thomas (12)Patrick C. Thomasma (6)Lanette Y. Tyler (5)Sanjay K. Vanguri (5)Michael A. Wesley (17)Audrey Williams (1)Ian D. Wood (3)Christopher H. Young (12)Jennifer G. Zawacki (6)Naomi L. Zweben (9)
CLASS OF 199864 Donors/ 217 Class Roll29% ParticipationPaul G. Bamert (14)Kevin E. Bonebrake (4)Rajeev K. Chopra (4)James D. Congdon (16)Christopher A. Daniels (1)Damian V. Dolland (5)Steven J. Drechsler (14)Colton W. Ebersold (1)Alexander H. Feng (9)Samuel C. Fiechter (2)Amanda H. Gelber (13)Nicholas R. Gelber (14)Steven I. Geller (1)Joseph L. Giacobbe (11)Adam M. Giannone (8)Russell M. Glass (10)Sacha N. Goodson (12)Kimberly R. Gordon (15)Russell S. Groves (13)Deborah C. Hartman (9)Julianne M. Hartzell (1)Matthew J. Hasik (3)
Jessica R. B. Hindman (9)Edward B. Houston (3)William M. Houston (8)Faraz Hussain (6)David M. Jordan (16)Robert K. Judge (11)Katherine L. KarazimWalker (3)
Teresa C. Kelley (5)Brian A. Kilpela (5)Julius C. Lai (16)Lawrence P. Lai (16)Marc R. Larochelle (2)Timothy P. Lessek (4)Jason F. Luck (1)Ross Mayo, Jr. (8)Patrick M. McLaughlin (11)Gerald S. Meyer (14)Michelle E. Naggar (6)Sean M. O’Connor (6)Lee Ott IV (1)Yung H. Park (16)Audrey E. Penrose (3)John Perry (2)Jennifer J. Peters (8)Bradley A. Phelps (9)Lucas G. Rugani (14)Rastam H. Samsudin (12)Mark W. Sessoms (13)Pinata H. Sessoms (15)Scott A. Skorupa (8)Neil N. Snyder, IV (16)Cheryl E. Starcher (15)Frederic T. Tenney (8)Travis M. Troyer (15)Jonathan B. Tyler (5)Robert B. Vermillion (2)Jason A. Wiley (4)Jonathan A. Wray (8)
CLASS OF 199965 Donors/186 Class Roll35% ParticipationBrigitteM. C. Addimando (6)Timothy E. Allen (15)Joshua P. Arwood (5)Neil S. Berlin (12)Sarah S. Bernstein (12)Brian R. Bleus (11)Jennifer Brownlie (10)Chadwick L. Campbell (1)Rebecca L. Chesebro (1)Margaret P. Chiou (5)Sam H. Cho (3)Young J. Choi (3)John C. Cocker (2)David M. Cummings (7)Richard T. Curtis (15)Jason G. Darling (5)Anthony T. Debenedet (3)David E. Dolby (2)Harold C. Dunn (4)Megan T. Elfers (14)Jonathan A. Feifs (1)Marco G. Fernandez (5)Karen E. Ginster (2)Angela Y. Giuffrida (9)Kevin P. Golart (1)Andrew W. Gonce (2)Amy M. Goodman (7)
Kathleen R. Grishman (7)Brian G. Guernsey (3)James K. Hsu (1)Vladidslav Ivanov (8)Anthony Lagnese (15)Jeannie Young Lee (15)Mark C. Lim (1)Keri E. Lorincz (7)Matthew H. Lunn (5)Wesley R. McClelland (3)Kevin B. McGowan (15)Mark S. McKeag (3)Ann N. Mittelstadt (13)Riley W. Murdock (15)Eric B. Oishi (7)Laurel B. Passantino (10)William L. Portnoy, Jr. (2)Mia K. Rahn (3)William T. Seddon (4)Jason T. Shibata (1)Nickie Singleton (2)Suneeta S. Sohoni (1)Jordan P. Steinberg (12)Sarah C. Townsley (15)Brian A. Turner (3)Daniel L. Wang (4)Eric Z. Wang (7)James G. Warriner (6)Steven E. Williams (8)James L. Wilson (1)Liska D. Yealland (1)
CLASS OF 200073 Donors/210 Class Roll35% ParticipationMiles D. Alexander (1)Grant R. Allen (1)Jeffrey T. Barber (3)Jeffrey D. Beck (1)Todd E. Behrens (3)Carla W. Benigni (14)Herbert F. Bohnet IV (8)Adam M. Brown (3)William N. Camp II (14)Kevin Cheung (3)Li C. Cheung (3)Matthew A. Cornwell (14)Tate L. Crumbley (13)Sean E. Delehanty (11)E. Keith Donnelly (5)Mehmet E. Ergin (14)Kyle A. Farlow (1)Eugene C. Farng (1)Michael S. Ferrell (6)Brian C. Fox (2)Aaron Y. Fu (5)John M. Gagliardi III (1)Geoff W. Habicht (4)Manish M. Hebbar (3)MichaelHernandezSoria(14)Jeffrey M. Hindman (13)Laura Huang (8)Michael G. Kamas (14)Arnaud P. Karsenti (7)Daniel R. S. Kauffman (5)Sarah A. Knutson (1)Samuel R. Kuo (7)George C. LaVerde (10)Alice H. Lee (11)ChristopherR. Levering (5)
Nana H. Little (4)Daniel C. Lowrie (12)Whitney J. Novak (7)Jason L. O’Meara (6)Nirlep A. Patel (3)Stacy L. Pineles (10)Amrith V. Ram (14)Jeremy B. Ratz (12)Jacquelyn J. Renton (5)Nathan S. Samras (1)Albert J. Schuette, Jr. (3)Paul J. Sebold (4)Heather D. Seeber (5)David S. Shi (1)Cary K. Shiao (2)Daniel R. Silver (14)Rebecca A. Simmons (1)Brian M. Stempel (12)Adam G. Stewart (12)Benjamin I. Strautin (8)Morgan P. Suckow (9)Dennis C. Sumera (9)Yushing E. Sun (2)Joseph S. Tate (3)Andrew P. Tojek (12)Gabriel E. Tsuboyama (7)Paul H. Tzur (9)Justin L. Van Buren (14)Richard S. Vandermass (5)Elizabeth A. Vickerman (8)Peter A. Weld (1)Lauren K. Wisniewski (15)Kristin K. Wolfe (5)
CLASS OF 200170 Donors/185 Class Roll38% ParticipationIngrid L. Abendroth (13)Brian C. Alonso (5)Brian R. Appel (2)Alexis L. Beatty (7)Ashish A. Bhimani (4)Christopher T. Blitz (12)James A. Bryan (11)Ty A. Cashen (5)Christopher C. Chiou (9)Mark R. Contarino (4)Stephanie S. Cook (1)John N. Day (10)Melissa V. Desnoyers (7)Lauren S. Dieterich (11)Emmett J. Doerr III (5)W. Grant Dollens (1)Justin L. Doull (13)Jason B. Dunham (2)Kevin Edwards (1)Andrew S. Exnicios (5)Jessica L. Foley (13)Ethan J. Fricklas (2)Jennifer L. Gardiner (2)Allison H. Gaskins (12)Stephan R. Gaskins (11)John F. Hack III (12)Bryn D. Harder (11)Gregory T. Hasbrouck (13)Alexander T. Hayes (1)Sarah B. Higgins (13)ChristopherB. Highley (11)Judith Jacobson (5)Aydin A. Kadaster (9)
Kerry M. Kidwell (13)Jin S. Kim (6)Paul A. Klenk (13)Jennifer Koh (10)Charles S. Lin (2)Lauren N. Louis (13)David R. Mandel (5)David J. Marquard III (5)Max A. McMullen (1)Thomas M. Meese (13)MaheshR.Narayanaswamy(1)Daniel B. Neill (5)Justin M. Offen (3)Clayton D. Poppe (11)James L. Ruth (6)Sophia T. Santillan (13)Nicole S. Schwartz (13)Nicholas W. Sehn (7)Harsha Setty (2)Amy C. Sharma (13)Navin Sharma (12)kblkblii;ih;ih;iuhliuhlihliuhlihlihlihTheodore C. Shih (1)Harmander Singh (4)Alexander R. Sistla (1)Lauren S. Stienes (12)Emily D. Tzur (9)Daniel S. Wang (1)Ashley A. Weiner (13)Michael E. Weissinger (5)Christopher A. Winter (2)Michael Y. Xia (9)Amol R. Yajnik (9)Kent T. Young (11)
CLASS OF 200263 Donors/174 Class Roll36% ParticipationAdib Abla (2)Benjamin J. Aitken (2)Nader H. Al Ansari (4)Benjamin D. Atkins (9)Jesse L. Atkinson (12)Alyssa F. Benza (5)Benjamin S. Borns (5)Cody Brownell (3)Adam P. Burns (3)Heather R. Byrd (12)Dennis R. Chen (5)John F. Cheng (10)Matthew Q. Christensen (4)Benjamin R. Colgrove (5)Herbert J. Cooper (11)Joshua P. Davis (8)Andrew J. Declercq (1)John A. T. Fath (7)Charles R. Forton (12)Julie K. Furt (12)Tan Gao (8)Marco A. Garcia (8)Christopher M. Grocki (7)Jaclyn E. Hanifen (12)Sunil B. Hari (3)Benjamin M. Harrison (3)Susan Jang (8)Dorlan J. Kimbrough (2)Toni W. Kwan (3)David H. Lake (4)Kristina L. Lundberg (3)Christina M. Luquire (9)
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Duke Engineers for International Development (DEID) team members worked with community partners to construct tworainwater catchment systems in the rural community of Santo Amaro, Brazil. – Summer 2014
Patrick B. Luquire (9) CLASS OF 2003 David H. Logan (5) William O. Bell, Jr. (1) Beum K. Kim (5) Varun R. Baba (1)51 Donors/168 Class RollPaul V. MacWilliams (3) Matthew J. Mailloux (11) Jason Bhardwaj (7) Emily A. Kloeblen (10) Noel Bakhtian (9)
Christopher D. Mailey (1) Margaret F. Mandell (6) Jonathan J. Bittner (10) Tess L. Kretschmann (1) Justin C. Brower (4)John Means (12) Victor S. Mangona (2) Christopher M. Boston (3) Jason B. Laderman (10) Jeffrey D. Burlin (9)
30% ParticipationJoseph G. Baltz (11)
Andrew J. Meyers (3) Paige L. Nelson (1) Jason E. Chatterjee (8) Jeffrey M. Lake (2) Benjamin Burnham (3)Steven R. Meyers (12) Andy T. Ng (12) Udayaditya Chatterjee (7) Cameron V. Levy (2) Jonathan R. Carter (8)
Craig R. Brown (1)Darin H. Buxbaum (11)
Ryan J. Miller (9) Rizwan A. Parvez (9) Meredith M. Cheng (4) Harry B. Marr, Jr. (5) Dennis S. Casey (7)Deepa Mishra (8) Vadim S. Polikov (11) Kengyeh K. Chu (9) Patrick C. Mathias (6) Laura M. Castaing (9)
Stephanie C. Chan (3)Nathan L. Chao (1)
Mary Elizabeth Nebel (1) Zachary M. Robertson (9) Hyun O. Chung (6) Vito F. Mecca (10) Melvin H. Chiang (1)Clark M. O’Niell (11) Daniel J. Roller (3) Patrick R. Colsher (2) Alice H. Meyer (10) Patrick R. Crosby (2)
Ka Y. Chau (8)David Y. Chong (9)Max D. Cohen (11)Sarah A. Park (11) Robert W. Schneider (1) Teresa T. Crowe (9) Michael R. Parsons (8) George A. Crowell (3)Michael L. Desimone (2)Amil A. Patel (3) Elizabeth R. Schwartz (11) James M. Dayton (1) Daminda M. Rajapaksa (5) Michael G. Curcio (9)
Aaron T. Patzer (1) Michael P. Sullivan (3) Jose D. De Ojeda (1) Matthew R. Raubach (4) Danielle M. Davidian (2)David S. Dipietro (8)Matthew P. Ptak (1) Matthew F. Sutherland (2) Christopher J.Dillenbeck(10) Scott W. Reid, Jr. (9) Jeremy R. Davis (9)
Martin A. Elisco (11)Thomas L. Earp (2)
Kyle M. Richardson (2) Mausumi N. Syamal (1) Allison M. Douglas (9) Georgia A. Richter (7) Pierre J. deBoisblanc (2)Stacey L. Richardson (2) Amar K. Tanna (11) Jonathan D. Drillings (8) Christopher J. Sample (10) Julius K. Degesys (9)John P. Gallagher (1)Mark S. Rockwood (4) Noelle A. Trent (3) Joseph T. Elliott (4) Jeremy H. Snook (7) Leahthan Domeshek (2)Charles P. Gelatt (9)James A. Romes (5) Gregory M. Williams (11) Colleen N. Farrell (9) Russell Swagart (10) Casey D. Donahoe (1)
Keith J. Grawert (1)Anthony R. Geonnotti III (3)
Micah A. Rowland (3) Fran L. Wu (11) Matthew P. Farrell (2) Neil G. Terry (1) Kirk Donahoe (2)Maulin V. Shah (6) Mark W. Younger (1) Eric J. Gardner (5) Jennifer L. Thompson (3) Jonathan A. Donahue (8)Elizabeth A. Herbst (9)Laney S. Stoddard (11) Christopher D. Garson (2) Jeremy M. Tucker (6) David R. Dorough (9)Ivan Y. Hsu (1)Stephen T. Thompson (9) Karen C. Hwang (4) CLASS OF 2004 Isik Gungen (2) Andrew R. Tupper (6) Andrew F. Dreher (9)HungWei Tsai (1) Brett A. Hainline (4) Stephen T. Wu (7) Michael N. Economo (7)Derek K. Juang (2) 66 Donors/224 Class RollStacey E. Tylka (2) Erin E. Kaiser (1) 29% Participation Bradley H. Hledik (9) John R. Felkins (9)Clinton D. Walker (12) Robert T. Kazmierski (11) Rose C. Acoraci (1) Calvin M. Hui (1) CLASS OF 2005 Thomas J. Fernandez (4)Michael W. Wick (13) D. Brandon Jones (10) James V. Finchum (6)David R. Kolstein (1) Jamie M. Alders (1) 99 Donors/ 253 Class RollAlfred Wong (3) Jeffrey R. Jones (7) Andrew D. Galanopoulos (1)Mark D. Krasniewski (11) John D. Alexander (10) 39% ParticipationRami D. Zheman (12) Huikai Karol (6) Haven R. Garber (9)Gopind N. Kumar (4) Michael A. Babcock (4) Meredith W. Allin (9)
Jeffrey A. Keeney (2) Emma H. Giamartino (1)Christine T. Lin (9) Megan A. Baldwin (6) Pasquale Arcese IV (9)
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Darwin Goei (2)ThomasC.Goltermann, Jr. (9)Steven A. Gore (7)Michael Guadano (9)Twinkle R. Gupta (1)Charles T. Hagan IV (8)Adam P. Hall (9)Megan Hanson (6)James D. Heaney (8)Stacey Hero (7)Brian R. Hirsh (9)Vy U. Hoang (7)Andrew B. Holbrook (9)Bryan Justice (2)Tushar S. Kirtane (8)Emily M. Kovalchick (9)David Kuban (1)Richard M. Larrey, Jr. (7)Anthony G. Lau (3)Jennifer M. Libling (7)Bo Liu (8)Vincent C. Mao (8)Jeffrey M. McCormick (2)John R. McDowell IV (5)Andrew Meyerson (1)Tiara C. Monroe (4)Douglas G. Mullen (3)Kelly F. Naylor (9)Paul S. Nesline (9)Shaun M. Noonan (9)Yaw A. Nyame (9)Lauren Opoliner (9)Kevin S. Parker (9)Julianna S. Peacock (9)Andrew D. Portnoy (9)Michele E Pugh (9)Larissa W. Quinn (2)Melanie B. Roller (8)Merrill J. Roller (7)Allison B. Rosen (1)Sarah C. Ruffner (1)Michael T. Scott (3)Justin M. Shapiro (2)Nathan S. Sherrard (7)Gary C. Sing (9)Jessica B. Smith (1)Peter A. Smith (2)Tianlu L. Snook (8)Charles B. Soileau (3)Dan W. Southam (1)Isaac E. Specter (6)Daniel Stepner (2)Jason S. Su (3)Joseph P. Tadduni (7)Sean Timpane (5)Andrew L. Walls (8)Adam L. Weinberger (9)Jennifer L. Wilbur (9)Michael D. Zordan (3)
CLASS OF 200696 Donors/ 226 Class Roll42% ParticipationChristian Agudelo (1)Bilal M. Aijazi (3)Taylor E. Apfel (1)Christine N. Armstrong (4)Terry M. Arnold II (6)Alexandru V. Avram (4)Gareth T. Barendse (4)Nasir H. Bhanpuri (7)
Justin D. Bieber (4)Omaira C. Brightman (8)Joseph M. Bruni (2)Lorenna L. Buck (8)Katherine E. Bulgrin (8)Ashley J. Burns (8)Thomas A. Califf (6)John C. Champion (8)Rachel W. Champion (8)Zubair H. Chao (2)Patrick T. Cleary (1)Mark H. Connell (4)Michael D. Cote (6)David R. Crowe (8)Robert R. Demason (5)Roger M. Diebold (7)Eric W. Dooley (5)Edward S. Douglas (1)Adam L. Durity (7)James T. Elkin (8)Stephen C. Felkins (8)Steven W. Gangstead (8)Peter I. Golden (5)Ryan S. Habbley (8)Matthew W. Hawk (8)Melissa Hawk (8)Clare B. Hawthorne (8)Derek R. Hower (8)William L. Hwang (8)Carolyn E. Jones (6)Daniel M. Kaplan (8)Clifton E. Kerr (2)RaymondT.Kozikowski III (7)Steven S. Lake (4)Melissa Latorre (1)Jonathan S. Lee (4)Kristen B. Lee (8)Richard Lee (8)Jun Liu (8)Jesse W. Longoria (4)Christopher H. Lubkert (4)Qahir Madhany (4)Michael R. Mathis (7)Albert G. Moore III (1)J. Cooper Moore (1)ChristopherR.Morecroft (8)Emily M. Mugler (8)Shelby A. Neal (8)Devin C. Odom (4)Sara K. Oliver (8)Courtney L. Olmsted (8)Branon C. Painter (8)Marc J. Palmeri (1)AndreinaC. ParisiAmon (1)Jianling K. Png (7)Brent G. Powers (7)Yupeng Qiu (8)Anna L. RackGomer (8)Brooke L. Rennick (1)Darren P. Rivas (4)David J. Rodriguez (4)Daniel B. Rosenberg (8)Andrew R. Schmidt (8)Erik P. Schmidt (5)Christopher L. Schumann (1)Roman G. Schwarz (4)William B. Senner (8)Sajid Sharif (5)Blake E. Sowerby (4)Andrew M. Stalnecker (4)Peter L. Staver (2)
Kathryn F. Sullivan (8)Mika J. TanimotoStory (8)Kimberly W. Truesdale (1)Margaret White (3)Caroline K. Wray (8)Emily S. Wren (8)Brian C. Yeh (1)Cen Zhang (1)Adam J. Zuckerman (6)
CLASS OF 200793 Donors/ 197 Class Roll47% ParticipationBenjamin S. Abram (1)Byron Alvarez (7)Nicole L. Axelrod (7)Aaron T. Baxter (5)John B. Borofka (7)Elan H. Bresslour (7)Vijay K. Brihmadesam (7)Carlos D. Briseno III (1)Robert A. Buechler (4)Lisa J. Burton (5)Aaron L. Carlson (6)Dennis J. Cattel (7)Keddy A. Chandran (1)Stephanie J. Chiu (4)Matthew D. Clements (5)Todd S. Cobb (2)Frank S. Coleman (7)Wade T. Cooper (7)William L. Cooper III (5)Elizabeth F. Courtney (3)Conlin D. Crow (7)Gregory A. Darland (2)John M. Dayton (5)Nishanth K. Dev (7)Frank M. Dreher (7)Natalie C. Eagleburger (7)David A. Fiedler (2)Arthur C. FischerZernin (4)Claudia Fischmann (1)Andrew A. Fitzpatrick (6)Amanda M. Fuller (6)Peter M. Gebhard (7)Eric L. Geller (4)Shaina M. Gram (1)Kelly F. Greer (1)Daron N. Gunn (3)Cameron A. Harrison (4)Richard C. Harting (7)Lori C. Hennemeier (1)Jeffrey C. Herbert (7)Meredith C. Herbert (6)Clayton S. Hesse (1)David Huie (4)Michael S. Humeniuk (3)Eric C. Hung (4)Bibek Joshi (7)John Kang (7)Turan A. Kayagil (7)David P. Kelley (4)Emily S. Kelley (7)Jeffrey A. Kessler (7)Andrew T. H. Kim (2)Advait A. Kotecha (1)Tobias F. Kraus (7)Gregory B. Larkin (7)TzuoHann Law (7)Brian J. Lewis (7)Andrew J. Longenecker (7)
Adam G. Luchansky (3)Shawn J. Mendonca (7)Meredith C. Min (4)Kristin D. Morgan (5)Lu Morrison (7)Amy R. Motomura (7)Isaac Nagiel (5)Phillip D. Nicholson (1)Wayne C. W. Parker III (4)Ryan C. Pertz (6)Molly M. Rhodes (7)Noah Sakimura (7)John M. Schoenleber (2)Jessica Son (3)Eric M. Spitz (7)Michael H. Stanley (2)Jason Strasser (7)Rachel L. Tzipora (1)Bryan J. Van Dyke (4)Elizabeth A. Vasievich (7)Charles Wang (3)Aida M. Wiebke (5)Rebecca E. Wilusz (7)Wendy Young (4)Xiaoning Yuan (2)Xin Zheng (2)Michael D. Zimmerman (5)
CLASS OF 200893 Donors/ 219 Class Roll42% ParticipationMargaret A. Abernathy (2)Robert C. Allen (3)Nii A. AmpaSowa (6)Timothy D. Antonelli (6)Scott K. Bailey (4)Dennis M. Bartlett (1)Michael E. Bauer (5)Christine M. Bestvina (3)Drew E. Braucht (2)Matthew P. Burke (4)Andrew P. Camacho (4)Matthew F. Campbell (5)Ian L. Cassidy (5)Heidi Y. Chang (6)John S. Choi (1)Priscilla F. Chyn (6)Stephen T. Clark (4)David S. Coccarelli (1)Homero Coronado, Jr. (1)Elizabeth H. Crabtree (6)John A. Crowell (2)Clark L. Daniel (1)William W. Davis (4)Rahul P. Dewal (2)Audrei E. Drummond (2)Audrey J. Gaskins (4)Philip J. Gorman (6)Brandon R. Guard (4)Sara C. Guerrero (6)Holly L. Hackman (6)Benjamin B. Haynes (4)Qinxian He (6)Sara A. Hinds (2)Rachel W. Hoffman (1)William A. Hoffman IV (4)Yuxuan Hu (6)Tiffany Hui (6)Jordan B. Iceton (3)Ngozi L. Kanu (6)John M. Kearney (1)
Michael A. Keel (5)Neha Krishnamohan (6)Steven M. Lattanzio II (2)Sebastian Liska (4)Cristian C. Liu (6)Arjun MadanMohan (4)Alexander N. McKinnon (2)Gregory Meyers (1)Laura K. Moore (3)Arthur Mui (1)Christopher J. Neufeld (2)Eric J. Ojerholm (6)Chinyere T. Okoli (6)Christopher M. Parides (1)Yasin K. Patterson (4)Lee M. Pearson (6)John L. Perkins (2)Lisa M. Richards (3)Drew G. Rindner (4)Cleland I. M. Robertson (2)Robert J. Rodrigez (1)Alyx C. Rosen (5)Daniel L. Ryan (5)Jesse K. Sandberg (3)Michael T. Schaper (5)Jeffrey D. Schwane (6)Craig S. Silverman (3)Geoffrey L. Southmayd (6)Karli A. Spetzler (4)John F. Sullivan (6)Rick A. Szcodronski (4)Megan K. Tooley (4)Melissa Tsuboyama (4)Adam R. Udasin (5)Leslie M. Voorhees (6)David M. Wagner (6)Scott K. Wagoner (2)Terence P. Wallace (6)Andrew S. Waterman (6)Philip J. Wolfe (5)Steven J. Worrell (1)Yvonne J. Yamanaka (6)Timothy D. Zepp (6)Edison M. Zhang (4)Brittany L. Zick (2)
CLASS OF 2009145 Donors/ 274 Class Roll53% ParticipationPeter W. Allen (5)Laura M. Angle (5)Kevin A. Autrey (3)Alexander T. AuWerter (1)Jessica L. Barlow (5)Benjamin J. Barocas (5)Samantha E. Beardsley (1)Matthew G. Beck (1)Daniel A. Beeler (5)Alexander C. Berghorst (5)Molly R. Bierman (5)Alexander T. Brehm (5)Kevin W. Brightly (4)Seth P. Brown (4)Aidan M. Burke (4)Thomas A. Burkland (4)Aneesh R. Butani (1)Douglas W. Bycoff (5)Zachary P. Cancio (4)Laura H. Chavez (2)Woo J. Choi (2)Christal P. Chow (5)
Andrew D. Cook (2)Katharyn Cordero (5)Rafael A. Cordero (3)Amanda J. Daly (5)Kathryn M. Dankovich (1)Ana F. De Matos (2)Adam J. Dixon (5)Yuanlong Du (5)Elana B. Edwards (6)Patrick J. Eibl (5)Arthur J. Everson (3)Caitlin M. Fearing (1)Edmund P. Finley (3)Bryan E. Fleming (5)William G. Gardner (4)Varun S. Gokarn (1)Lucas M. Gong (1)Mikhail Gordin (1)Alexander H. Gorham (5)Benjamin D. Grant (4)Bryan S. Grant (1)Jason P. Greenhut (4)Shi Gu (4)Xin Gu (1)Thomas J. Hadzor (5)Philip S. Harvey (3)Perry B. Haynsworth (5)Antonia R. Helbling (5)Christopher M. Henry (1)Alexander Ho (2)Peter J. Hollender (1)Andrew Hsiao (5)Alexander G. Hunter (3)HyunJoong Kim (1)Ami S. Joshi (2)Shyam R. Joshi (2)Daniel H. Klein (5)Mary Ellen I. Koran (5)David W. Kunz (4)Brian C. Lake (1)Curtis W. Lane (1)Aaron Lee (1)Daniel D. Lee (4)Alex S. Li (2)Hui H. Li (5)Vincent Y. Ling (5)Kassity Y. Liu (5)Amanda R. Magli (4)Tai T. Mai (4)Jenna E. Maloka (5)Eric S. Mansfield (5)Chloe M. Mawer (5)Benjamin T. McConnell (1)Nicholas S. Menchel (4)Irem Mertol (4)Joseph Meyerowitz (1)Nicholas M. Millar (5)Daniel W. Mistarz (5)David J. Mitteness (5)Todd E. Monson (2)James C. Montupet (5)Justin N. Mullen (5)Jessica A. Munn (5)Amy E. Munnelly (4)Kathleen M. Murphy (5)Mhoire L. Murphy (5)Pradyumna Nadakuduty (2)Adam L. Nelson (5)Andrew P. Nelson (1)Andrew Ng (1)Dana R. Nicholson (5)
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Winners of the wind turbine design contest at the fall kickoff meeting for Duke’s chapter of theAmerican Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) – September 2014
Sahil P. Patel (5) Kenneth S. White (1) Stephanie K. Finch (4) Jack Li (4) Amy M. Wen (2) David T. Faurie (1)Preston S. Porter (4) Daniel C. Wolf (5) Andrew D. First (4) Xiao T. Li (4) Jamie F. Wilkie (1) Megan K. Finley (3)Kristeena L. Ray (1) Duo Xu (2) Erin A. Franz (2) Victor C. Lieu (4) Peter C. Williams (4) Christopher R. Finocchi (3)James V. Razick (5) Tianhe Zhang (2) David A. Freed (1) Ping Lin (2) Jordan S. Woodson (2) Jeffrey L. Forte, Jr. (3)Bryan P. Reisch (2) Jiang Zhu (5) William R. Gamerota (4) Emily A. Liu (4) Tianyi Wu (4) Lyndsey M. Fyffe (3)Paul M. Riherd (1) Ian Q. Gao (1) Jamie Lou (2) Patrick P. Ye (4) Benedict J. Gagne (3)Alexander H. Robinson (4) CLASS OF 2010 Kasey C. Geibel (1) Ashley H. Lyerly (5) Rebecca C. Yu (1) Elyse L. Glover (2)Christopher R. Rowland (5)Michael B. Russell (2)James L. Schulhof, Jr. (1)Preeyanka K. Shah (1)Benjamin H. Shelton (2)James O. Shoetan (4)Michael L. Silver (4)Christine V. Smith (5)Todd H. Stamp (1)Scott A. Steinberg (4)Whitney L. Stewart (1)Erik C. Su (1)Caitlin A. Therrien (2)Amanda C. Tong (5)Ibrahim K. Toukan (5)Jessica A. Toy (1)Stephanie L. Tupi (1)Anne Vanderschueren (5)Christopher M. Wade (4)Luke W. Waggoner (1)David W. Wang (1)Yifan Wang (5)Andrew P. Ward (3)
96 Donors/ 245 Class Roll39% ParticipationSandip Agrawal (2)Pongpitch Amatyakul (4)Christopher H. Baker (1)Jason H. Begleiter (1)Nicholas P. Bobrinskoy (4)John M. Burton, Jr. (4)Christopher Y. Caughman(4)
Olivia C. Chang (4)David Chen (1)Brianne F. Connolly (4)Van Q. Dang (4)James V. DiMaiolo (4)Xuan Ding (4)Alex D. Edelsburg (3)David A. Eitel (4)Frederick W. Esch (4)Jason H. R. Ethier (1)Stephanie R. Everett (4)Manuel P. Fanarjian (3)Margaret I. Finch (2)
Douglas M. Giannantonio (4)Samuel C. Gibbs IV (1)Jordan C. Goldstein (4)Lizhi Gong (2)Jing Guo (4)Eric C. Hall (4)Daniel F. Hanks (4)Zachary M. Harvanek (3)Douglas M. Helferich (4)KatherineM. Henderson (4)Pia F. Hoellerbauer (4)Justin S. Hong (1)Margaret A. Hopkins (1)Jason Hsu (1)Elizabeth H. Hwang (2)Paras P. Jhaveri (4)Mathavi Jothimurugesan (4)Brian J. Kim (4)Stephanie M. Korszen (1)Michael J. Kramarz (4)Gustavo Lee (4)George W. Lefelar (4)Jordan A. Lewis (4)
Alexandra K. LyonsSmith (4)Samanthe M. Lyons (4)Michael A. McArthur (1)Clark C. McGehee (2)Matthew T. McKenna (3)Camil A. Mekouar (2)Carson C. Moore (1)Gerard J. Moorman, Jr. (3)Melissa K. Murphy (4)Alaina R. Pleatman (4)Emily Poplawski (4)Ankit Prasad (4)Racquel M. Quarless (1)Jason D. Rehlaender (2)Alex S. Reinstein (4)Samuel J. Reiss (4)Taylor C. Rhyne (3)Kalen J. Riley (4)Kevin C. Story (4)David M. Tainter (1)Jason S. Taylor (2)Michelle A. Torski (4)Kevin B. Wade (1)
CLASS OF 201189 Donors/ 262 Class Roll34% ParticipationParv Aggarwal (3)Joseph K. Ahdoot (4)Pamela G. Anderson (2)Michael T. Bell (3)Rachel L. Belzer (3)Scott T. Brigeman (1)Anna M. Brown (3)Adam W. Caccavale (3)Andrea C. Casanova (1)Bingxin Chen (1)Haoyu Chen (3)Jeffrey Chen (1)Shame Chikoro (3)Brett B. Cook (3)Hatti Cutcliffe (3)Philip A. Danser (1)Matthew T. Davis (2)Hudson H. Duan (3)Jared A. Dunnmon (3)
Ankur B. Gupta (1)Andrew J. Harris (2)Justin M. Haseltine (3)Emtiaz Hassan (3)Ethan G. Hoch (3)Zachary P. Hollander (1)Robert W. Hyberg (3)Sean L. Hyberg (1)Brandon D. Jones (3)GaYoung Joung (3)Alysha P. Kishan (2)Samuel G. Klein (3)Samantha M. Klug (3)Lauren A. Kottis (3)Jeffrey S. Kreutter (3)So Y. Lee (2)Charles R. Levergood (3)Edward Liao (3)Maria C. Lopez (2)James E. Love, IV (3)Trisha K. Lowe (1)Brooke T. Luo (1)Timothy McDowell (2)
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Annual FundDaniel J. Moss (3) Adam D. Kurzrok (2) Neil M. Gallagher (1) Justin A. Amezquita Rebekah L. Johnston Glenn H. RivkeesMaura H. Mulroy (1) Adam C. Lange (2) Christina A. Gancayco (1) Andrew M. Ang Keerthighaan Kana Adam A. RothRalph Nathan (3) Dennis B. Lee (2) Niloy Ghosh (1) Charles A. Arentzen gasegar Kushal SeetharamAlexandra F. Nicoletti (3) Jessica A. Lehigh (2) Jake E. Greenstein (1) Trevor J. Beasty Cameron M. Kim Caroline E. SengSmauel F. Pancoast IV (2) Kimberly P. Leonard (2) Erinn M. P. Grigsby (1) Isabelle A. Brogna Ryan J. H. Kim Anosh P. SethnaHannah Park (3) Ming J. Li (2) Jeremy D. Hockman (1) Jade M. Brown Caroline M. Kiritsy Christopher W. SheilsYeonWoo Park (2) Tian Li (2) Donald V. Husa (1) Stefan J. Cafaro Brady D. Klein Tianyu ShiRichard B. Parran III (3) Kevin M. Lieberman (2) Kevin Jye Jen (1) Tugce Capraz Andrew S. Koff Benjamin P. SnowdonCameron E. Parrish (3) Jared M. Lippell (2) Wei Q. Jiang (1) Abby Chainani Katharine S. Krieger Robert T. SpratleyAndrew T. Pettit (3) Dianna D. Liu (2) Robert C. Lam (1) Jeffrey S. Chen Michael B. Krone Eric B. StachMark W. Pratt (3) Angeline Luong (1) Christine E. Larson (1) Virginia Chen Frank G. Lee Bradley T. StankeyAnita M. Raheja (3) William G. Mackebee (2) Daniel D. Lasowski (1) Deborah Chi Joshua E. Lewis Benjamin A. StoneTravis J. Rapp (2) Benjamin Maimon (1) Joseph A. Lauer, Jr. (1) Alexa M. Choy Alicia X. Li Danping SunTrevor G. Reid (3) Andrew G. Mang (2) Carl E. Lawson (1) Jordan A. Cirocco Jennifer S. Li Nazia TabassumJoseph P. Repp (3) Maurizio Martinovic (1) Cheryl J. Lee (1) Lance O. Co Ting Keh Tammy W. Liaw Christine C. TormeyJohn M. Reynolds (3) Annelise J. Mesler (1) Juliette K. Logan (1) Daniel Concha Jarrett M. Link Emily J. TuckerEmma V. Rovit (3) Margaret E. G. Milby (2) Alexander T.Mariakakis (1) George C. Cuissart de Helio C. Liu Michael J. VogelsongJames M. Royston, Jr. (3) Jennifer L. Molnar (1) Mason H. Meier (1) Grelle III Linde Liu Christopher P. WaybillAlexander J. Safrit (2) Zaki D. Moustafa (2) Jack A. Morris (1) Natalie A. Cybriwsky Carly M. Lutzky Rachel M. WhitneyLaila Sharafi (2) James W. Mullally (2) Jessie A. Nadler (1) Shreyas N. Dahotre Ravi Mahadevan Amber S. WittAnna K. Sleeter (2) Izundu C. ObiOnuoha (2) Brian G. Norton (1) Radu Darie Jaisal K. Mariwala Kristie L. YangMark H. Strom (1) Albert K. Oh (1) Howard C. Ray III (1) Lucy C. Dawson Scott T. Martin Andrew L. YuanEric N. L. Thorne (3) Kartik A. Pawar (2) Michele Reshef (1) Hersh S. Desai Emily S. Mass Maris C. ZahnChenLing C. Tsai (3) Jeffrey W. Peyser (2) Gregory A. Robins (1) Sean D. Dickey Oriane B. Matthys Arlens ZeqollariAnjali S. Vora (3) David K. Piech (1) Michael C. Ross (1) Yuefeng Du Casey E. McGinley Mo ZhouJeremy T. Walch (3) David C. Radford (2) James I. Silber (1) George W. Fan Clinton R. McKelvey Alex Z. ZhuKelly A. Waldman (3) Vijay Ram (1) Emily Sloan (1) Allison T. Finley Joshua S. MillerMatthew M. Wander (3) Catherine W. Ramsey (2) Colette B. Soloff (1) Graham R. Friday Samuel N. MillerXin Wen (1) Jordan H. Rehlaender (2) Evan Strother (1) Halsey R. Friedel Lauren MorrisonAnne Weng (2) Michael R. Rhodes (2) Bennie Su (1) Jayson I. Garmizo Michael J. MosserScott A. Winkleman (1) Andrew G. Rohm (2) John Tran (1) Danielle A. George Anisha P. MukherjeeKa Zhang (3) Roshan K. Sadanani (2) Joshua O. Usoro (1) Dharanish V. Gollamudi Matthew E. NagleScott N. Zhang (3) Steven L. Schlaseman (2) Kala V. Viswanathan (1) Kelsey C. Goon Adam C. NolteMarco Zulliger (2) Aaron D. Schroeder (2) Steven K. Yarmoska (1) Kristina A. Hallam Kevin P. O’Connor
ThomasG. Schuhmann, Jr. (1) Jonathan Zhang (1) Whitney A. Hansen Lauren A. OliveriRobyn N. Schwartzman (2) Allen M. Hawkes Daniel C. Patterson
88 Donors/ 269 Class Roll HanYu Shen (1) CLASS OF 2014 Jennifer E. Hewitt Taylor A. Phillips33% Participation Senior Class Contribution
CLASS OF 2012Lauren E. Shwisberg (2) Kevin T. Hobbs Daniel D. Piao
Vidhan Agrawal (2) 140 Donors/ 276 Class RollAlex B. Sloan (2) Mark A. Hoffman James E. PosenAmy M. Allen (2) 51% ParticipationMartin H. Steren (2) Erica N. Inmacolato Prithvi PrabaharJohn T. Anton (2) Jawad N. AlMasannatMichael S. Sullivan (2) Amay N. Jhaveri Nikhil C. PrakashMegan C. Arias (2) Nils S. AlbertsenRoss K. Taggart (2) Max Z. Jin Lydia RanLaura L. Barnes (2) Ahmed A. S. AlshareefAnna C. Territo (2) Inka E. Johnson James T. RismanAdam J. Bennett (2) Benjamin P. Tuben (1)
David R. Vander Schaaf (1)Melody H. Y. Chan (2)Jarey H. Wang (2)
Michael Chen (2)MengYang Chen (2)
Craig J. Wasilewsky (1)Thomas Q. Xu (2)
Lina A. Colucci (2)Elizabeth R. Cobb (2)
Jiaqi Yan (2)201314 FACULTY SUPPORT
Ross M. Younger (1)Erin L. Convery (2) Faculty gifts to the 201314 Engineering Annual Fund are vital to Duke’s educational mission. WeDavid L. Cunefare, Jr. (1) are very grateful for this expression of their faith in the work of the Pratt School of EngineeringRobert M. Curtis (1) CLASS OF 2013 and Duke University.Kevin M. Deland (1) Senior Class Contribution This year, 39% of our faculty participated in raising over $13,000 dollars for the school.Michael J. Deng (1) 52 Donors/ 291 Class RollDenis S. Didenko (2) 18% Participation Dr. Roger C. Barr Dr. Tomasz Hueckel Dr. J. Jeffrey PeirceRobert J. Dimaiolo (2) Jennifer M. Arnold (1) Dr. John A. Board, Jr. Dr. Kristina Johnson Dr. Henry PetroskiMichael B. Fausone (2) SupriyaM. Balachander (1) Dr. David J. Brady Dr. William T. Joines Dr. Matthew ReynoldsRachel A. Fleming (2) Thomas M. Bierbower (1) Dr. Rachael Brady Dr. Nan Jokerst Dr. Lori SettonCody N. Freeman (2) Ross P. Cahoon (1) Dr. Martin Brooke Dean Tom Katsouleas Dr. Edward J. Shaughnessy, Jr.James C. Gabriel (2) Michael S. Cai (1) Dr. ChuanHua Chen Dr. Jungsang Kim Dr. Dan SorinNicolas S. Gorman (2) Timothy A. Carlon (1) Dr. F. Hadley Cocks Dr. Kam Leong Dr. Gregg TraheyLogan M. Hoy (2) Frank Chang (1) Dr. John Dolbow Dr. Qing Liu Dr. George A. TruskeyJames Hsieh (2) Arune D. Chellaram (1) Dr. Linda Franzoni Dr. Peter Marinos Dr. Olaf van RammEllen C. Huang (2) Chris Dennis (1) Dr. Mort Friedman Dr. Hisham Z. Massoud Dr. Adam P. WaxWilliam O. Hunter (1) Kerri Devine (1) Dr. Devendra Garg Prof. Joseph C. Nadeau Dr. Fan YuanAnkit Jain (2) Derek C. du Plessix (1) Dr. Rhett George Dr. Wanda Krassowska Neu Dr. Pei ZhongCatherine R. Joseph (2) Charles Z. Fang (1) Dr. Warren Grill Dr. Kathryn R. NightingaleJudy K. Jow (1) Robin L. Farrell (1) Dr. Michael R. Gustafson II Dr. Roger W. NightingaleBohyun R. Kim (1) Lee A. Ferber (1) Dr. Heileen HsuKim Dr. Loren NolteSteven J. Kober (2) Matthew S. Fisher (1)
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on the lighter sideTravels of our 75th Anniversary Pennant
Duke Motorsportsteam membersat the Formula
SAE competitionin MichiganMay 2014
56 dukengineer 2015
In El Salvador, theDEID team workedin the community ofLa Estancia to improve the quality ofavailable water,building a 9200liter water tankand a platesettlersystem to reducewater turbidity.– Summer 2014
dukengThe DEID team in Uganda spent eight weeks in the rural village of Kaihuru working with Bringing Hope to the Family
to begin construction on two 20’ by 90’ classroom blocks for the New Hope Vocational School. – Summer 2014
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Nonprofit Org.dukengineer US PostageEdmund T. Pratt, Jr. School of Engineering at Duke University PAIDBox 90271 Durham, NC305 Teer Engineering Building Permit #60Durham, NC 277080271
Duke Engineers showed off the 75thAnniversary pennant while conductingan experiment in NASAs ReducedGravity Education Flight Program,which gives students the opportunityto conduct research on a microgravityC 9 plane.