"Global Place: Practice, Politics and the Polis

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Zain Abuseir, Robert Adams, Michelle Adebayo, Anirban Adhya, Manju Adikesavan, Kanwal Aftab, Jacob Aftergood, Florence Agbenyega,
Sejal Agrawal, Sang Ahn, Gabriel Albarran, Nicole Allen, Peter Allen, Charles Alwakeel, Nora Ames, Amy Anderson, Christina Anderson,
Kymberly Anderson, Leon Andrews, Rajeev Aravapalli, Ken Arbogast-Wilson, Turquoise Archie, Mashawnta Armstrong, Michael Arnold, Catherine
Arreaza, Kevin Azanger, Omar Baghdady, Stephanie Bailey, Piyush Bajpal, Vera Baranova, Joshua Bard, Dane Barnes, Norman E. Barnett, Carlton
Basmajian, James Bassett, Aaron Batsakis, Vandana Baweja, Christopher Beach, Melissa Beams, John Beck, Eric Beckett, Robert Beckley, Beth
Berenter, Aysu Berk, Jason Berryhill, Rachel Betzen, Sara Biederman, Gunnar G. Birkerts, Alexander Block, Sara Blumenstein, Danielle Bober,
Harold Borkin, M. Craig Borum, Mallory Bourdo, Kendal Bowman, T’Chana Bradford, Kurt Brandle, Lucas Branham, Peter Bratt, Stacy
Braverman, Gary Brieschke, William Brodnax, Nicholas Brooks, Derek Brown, Keith A. Brown, Laura Brown, Donald Buaku, Andrey
Budzinskiy, Jerome Buford, Matthew Buhr, Sarah Bulgarelli, Rachel
Bullock, Atsen Bulus, Renee
Burdick, Tom Buresh, Khalilah Burt, Sam Butler, Ashley Byers, Karam
Byun, Hongyi Cai, Leonardo
Caion-Demaestri, Robert Cameron, Scott Campbell, Greogroy Carley, Jason
Carmello, Patrick Carmody,
Andrés Carter, Kathryn Caskey, Sang Yeol Cha, Jeong-WonChae, James Chaffers,
Kenneth Chaklos, Jennifer
Chamberlin, Elizabeth Chan, Anny Chang, Jae Dong Chang, Justin Chang, Katherine
Chang, Nupur Chaudhury,
Lieh-Feng Chen, Xuezhen Chen, Gregory Cheng, Shan Cheng, Nina Cherian, Robin Chhabra, Chang-Yeon Cho, Seong Yun Cho , Hee Jung Choi,
Anne Choike, Shun-Hui Chuang, Jihyun Chung, Aaron Clausen, Caitlyn Clauson, Alexis Coir, Sandro Condori, Caroline Constant, Adam
Constantino, Michael Cooper, Whitney Cooper, Emily Corbett, Angela Corradin, Nondita Correa-Mehrotra, Christopher Coutts, Jennifer Cramer,
J. Sterling Crandall, Kelly Craze, Timothy Cunningham, Michael Dalezman, Geoffrey Dancik, Hemalata Dandekar, Philip D’Anieri, Robert M.
Darvas, Karl Daubmann, Nina David, Kate Davidoff, Ross Davidson, Alexander De Graaf, Kristen Dean, Anthony DeLisi, Kevin Deng,
Lan Deng, Ryan DePersia, Kathryn Detrisac, Lauren DeVerna, Margaret Dewar, Damon Dickerson, James Dimercurio, Austin Dingwall,
Kimiko Doherty, Ellen E. Donnelly, Michael Donohue, Jason Doo, Leann Dreher, Kimberly Dresdner, Mary Anne Drew, Thomas Drew, Katherine
Drotar, Matthew Ducharme-Smith, Eric Dueweke, Richard D. Duke, Enesh Easlick, Leonard Eaton, Nicole Eisenmann, Didem Ekici,
Michelle Elder, Samir Emdanat, Jake Emery, Aimee Epstein, David Epstein, Kevin Erickson, Kadriye Fusun Erkul, Michael Ezban, Sarah
Faruki, Gera Feigon, Lisa Feldmann, Allan G. Feldt, Holly Ferguson, Justin M. Ferguson, Arturo Fernandez, Robert Fishman, Tara Flaningam,
Luke Forrest, Brian Foster, Jeremy Freeman, Morris Freeman, Samara Freemark, Ian Freimuth, Kristopher Fuentes, Osnat Gafni,
Jamie Galimberti, Krystian Gardula, Michael Garramone, Todd Gattie, Carolyn Genualdi, Katayoon Ghobad, Jenna Gibson, Harry Giles, Dawn
Gilpin, Sarah Ginsberg, Glenn Ginter, Christopher Girdwood, Will Glover, Ashley Goe, Zachary Goodwin, Simon Gore, Amanda Goski, Lars
Gräbner, Nathan Gray, Shana Greenstein, Joseph Grengs, Randal Grenier, Mathew Grimes, Linda Groat, Kiersten Grove, Deirdre Groves, Matt
Grynol, Brittany Guercio, Monica Guerra, Sarah Guillou, Nathan Gulash, Levina Gunawan, Orri Gunnarsson, Danelle Guthrie, Thomas Haddock,
Mohammad Hadi, Chris Hadley, Christopher Hainer, Matthew Hall, Loren Halter, Kristopher Hammerberg, Lauren Hammerschmidt,
Chooyon Han, In Kyoung Han, Michael Hance, Mark Hansford, Jennie Hanson, Sarah Haradon, Geoffrey Harker, Siritip Harntaweewongsa,
Elsie Harper-Anderson, A. Melissa Harris, Janice Harvey, Nina Harvey, Jonas Hauptman, Lisa Hauser, William Hautamaki, Thida Heidinger,
Matthew Heins, Deirdre Hennebury, Lauren Hepner, Jennifer Hermsen, Cassia Herron, Andrew Herscher, Matthew Hettler, Stewart Hicks,
Eric Hill, Jeffrey Hoag, Ross Hoekstra, Lucas Holwerda, Seung Wan Hong, Gregory Hoogland, Amy Horvath, Helen Hoskins, Cornelius Hoss,
Adam Hostetler, Sean Houghton, Andrew Houlihan, Kevin Hoyt, Fu-Yang Hsieh, Pai-Kai Huang, Roger Hubeli, Nicholas Hudyma, Syeda
Hussain, Jonathan Imler, Nayara Islam, Alexander Jackson, Shaun Jackson, Jeffrey Jacobson, Daniel Jarcho, William R. Jarratt,
Grant Jeffries, Steven Jelinek, Michael Jen, Kyu Hwan Jhin, Wenyan Ji, Kyung Jin, Jeong Hee Jo, Andrew Johnson, Carl D. Johnson,
Kelsey Johnson, Han Oul Joo, Coleman Jordan, Sung Kwon Jung, Melanie Kaba, Felichism Kabo, Jeffrey Kahan, Kenneth Kalchik,
Victoria Kalkirtz, Benjamin Kanelos,
William Kaplowitz, Ai Kawashima, Charles Kaylor, Ipek
Kaynar, Ryan Keillor, Douglas Kelbaugh,
Phillip Kelleher, Ariya Kelly, Christina Kelly, Kristin Kelly,
Michael Kennedy, Carol Kent, Gauri
Khanna, Louna Khirfan, Bo Na Kim, Daniel Kim, Do Yun
Kim, Eun-Young Kim, Jiae Kim, Jong-Jin
Kim, Juliet Kim, Kwang Min Kim, Kyoung-Hee Kim,
Sun Woo Kim, Sung Ju Kim, Yeo Yong Kim,
Youngchul Kim, Anna Kindt, Tyler Kinley, Sean Kizy,
Kimberly Klanow, Joshua Kleinman, Kristin
Klopfenstein, Dieneke Kniffin, Wan Suk Ko, Islam
Kollcinaku, Douglas Kolozsvari, Kelly
Koss, Henry Kowalewski, Ben Kraft, Mark R. Krecic,
Ann-Germaine Kreger, Amanda Krok, Christian Kroll, Thapawee Kuhakarn, Amy Kulper, Perry Kulper, Tae Jung Kwon, Michael Labellarte,
Rachna Lal, Winnie Lam, Gabriel Lampe, Pai-Chi Lan, Scott Laporte, Fernando Lara, Mika Larrison, Julie Larsen, Larissa Larsen, Beatrice Lau,
John Law, Jerold Lax, Andrea Ledbury, Christie Lee, Gregory Lee, Jae Mi Lee, Jae Min Lee, Jae Seung Lee, Joseph T.A. Lee, Meghan Lee,
Moon Joo Lee, Sang Hee Lee, Wai Nar Lee, Woojin Lee, Yueh-Hung Lee, Christopher Leinberger, Aaron LeMay, Sean Lemecha, Jonathan Levine,
Nicole Lewis, Jesse Lewter, Xinkuang Liao, Juliana Lieu, You Ling Lim, I-Ming Lin, Kelly Lindland, Michael Lindstrom, Kai Liu, Xuan Liu, Kan Lo,
Andrew Loh, Carolyn Loh, Armando Lopez, Andrew Loreman, Kristina M. Luce, Brian Lutenegger, Michael Lydon, John Lytle, Michael Malvitz,
Steven Mankouche, Bill Manspeaker, Robert Marans, Donna Marion, Rebecca Mark, Kingsbury Marzolf, Susan Massey, Megan MassonMinock, Jenifer Masters, Paolo Mastrogiacomo, Alexandria Mathieu, Cherise Mattheson, Yuliya Mazur, Megan McBride, Patrick Jeremy
McCallion, Ryan McCourt, Kit McCullough, Malcolm McCullough, Andrew McGee, Andrew Mcintyre, Kevin McKay, Karen M’Closkey, James
McMurray, Marisa McNee, Erin McWain, Ivan Mechkunov, Rahul Mehrotra, Juan Mercado, Robert C. Metcalf, Emily Meza, Michelle Miller,
Linda M. Mills, Daniel Milz, Jason Minor, Susan Missier, Michael Mitchell, Keith Mitnick, Ting Yan Mok, Derek Molenaar, Janelle Moody,
Jin Woo Moon, Rebecca Morello, Camilla Moretti, Reiji Moroshima, Lisa Morris, Ilir Muho, Piyarat Mullard Nanta, James Munk, Buvana Murali,
Kristen Murphy, Ambreen Musani, Monica Musialowski, Lauren Myers, Lauren Nakles, Nasilele Namakando, Mojtaba Navvab, Nayana Nayak,
Charlotte Nelms, Kristie Nelsen, Allison Newmeyer, Hsin Choa Charles Ng, Kam Yu Ng, Richard Norton, Natasha Nosic, Linda Nubani, Nyal
Nunn, John Nystuen, Timothy O’Dwyer, Alexander Ockerman, Hye Jin Oh, Hyuntak Oh, Jae-Hyun Oh, Samuel Oh, Eric Olsen, Gerhard Olving,
TABLE OF CONTENTS
From the Dean ................................................................................................ 1
Downtown to Techtown ................................................................................ 6
"Global Place: Practice, Politics and the Polis" Provocations
on the Centennial Conference ..................................................................... 9
Global Place and Market Realism ............................................................. 11
Learning the Magical and Universal Language ...................................... 14
Faculty............................................................................................................ 18
Students......................................................................................................... 28
Alumni/ae ...................................................................................................... 34
Class Notes ................................................................................................... 35
Calendar ........................................................................... Inside Back Cover
Early versions of the credits at the end of the film, “The Greater Good: 100 Years of
Architecture and Urban Planning at Michigan” should have included The Cranbrook
Archives which owns a photograph of Eliel Saarinen used in the film. The omission
has been corrected and the credit now appears in later versions.
Photograph by Casey Kelbaugh.
FROM THE DEAN
Here we are at the end of our centennial and a panoramic view
of the college seems timely. With a dozen images and captions,
I hope to show you the state of the college and progress over
the last decade or so.
But first a few facts and updates. This is our first full-color edition of Portico, a modest stretch
given today's lower printing costs. (Let us know if you think it's worth it.) We’ve also adjusted
the inside format a bit. And the front and back covers “reel in the rollicking crew” of all 743
current students, staff, faculty, and living emeritus faculty. It's black and white graphic for
the first time in many years, perhaps perversely, but we thought it would highlight the color contents within. The
magazine’s center is awash with all 7,241 of our living alumni/ae, which will grow by another 245 graduates with this
commencement. We think we've found and printed the names of every living member of our college community.
Let us know if we missed you!
As for academic updates, I’m happy to report that our second Centennial Professor was just approved. Effective fall
term 2007, Mary-Ann Ray will teach for one semester each year (and possibly participate in our Beijing program during
the spring half-term). She is a partner in life and practice with Robert Mangurian in StudioWorks, an award-winning
firm based in Los Angeles, with an outpost in Beijing. Educated at the University of Washington and Princeton, and
winner of the coveted Prix de Rome, she has been on the SCI-Arc faculty for years, and has also taught as a visiting
professor at Rice, Berkeley, UCLA, Yale, Atelier Italia, and Princeton. The first Centennial Professor, officially approved
last term, is June Manning Thomas, who will join the faculty this fall from Michigan State as a tenured professor of
urban planning. She is one of the nation’s leading scholars on issues of social equity and race in urban planning and an
expert on Detroit. A Ph.D. graduate of our college in 1977, she has achieved distinction as an author of several books,
including Redevelopment and Race: Planning a Finer City in Postwar Detroit. We look forward, with enthusiasm, to
both their contributions to our college, university, and community. As I write, the architecture program is in the final
stages of a faculty search in sustainable design, hopefully with good result to report in the next issue.
As a feature of the college’s 100th anniversary, the university elected to hood two honorary doctoral degree recipients
in architecture (our nominee in urban planning, Jane Jacobs, unfortunately died last year.) As mentioned in the last
Portico, in December we honored Ada Louise Huxtable, the country’s first and most accomplished architectural critic
with the New York Times and now the Wall Street Journal. She has received more than two dozen honorary degrees
for her trail-blazing work. This term’s honoree is J. Max Bond, whom the college nominated for his professional and
educational role as America’s leading African-American architect. He was our 2003 Charles Moore Visiting Professor
in Urban Design and twice a team co-leader in our annual Detroit design charrette. After gracing the platform
party with Bill Clinton in Michigan Stadium on Saturday, April 28, Max will deliver a commencement address to our
graduating students on Sunday.
Now for the "Who we are" synopsis of the college:
Who we are:
Microcosm of U-M
Architecture
Urban Planning
Engineering
Urban Design
TCAUP=
Sociology/Psychology
Law
Public Policy
Taubman College is relatively small but broad,
almost a microcosm of the university with faculty
in the arts, humanities, law, engineering, and social
sciences, as well as architecture, urban design and
planning, and landscape architecture.
History
Landscape Architecture
Business
1
Our faculty has grown larger and more diverse in
the last nine years and efforts are continuing to
broaden it. Of the tenured and tenure-track hires
since 1998, 42 percent have been women, 24 percent
minorities, and 12 percent under-represented
minorities (African American, Native American,
Latino, and Pacific Islander). As of fall, there will
be six professors of practice, who are expected to
be more engaged in professional practice. We also
have more short-term and long-term lecturers, both
part- and full-time, who also expose our students
to practice-oriented instruction. They bring fresh
perspectives and facilitate smaller classes. A
decade ago there were far fewer lecturers and no
professor of practice ranks.
It is interesting to see where the fifty or so tenured
and tenure-track faculty have most frequently
earned their undergraduate and graduate degrees.
(This list also includes the six faculty in professor of
practice ranks, but not our 32 lecturers).
Who we are:
Faculty
51 tenure/track faculty
(vs. 42 in 1998)
• 41% tenured (vs. 76% in 1998)
• 36% female (vs. 19% in 1998)
• 23% minority (vs. 17% in 1998)
32 lecturers
• 41% female
• 12% minority
6 Professors of Practice
Who we are:
Faculty
with most frequent degrees from
Domestic
International
University of California- Berkeley (15) Cambridge University (2)
University of Michigan (13)
University Surrey (2)
Harvard (11)
Universidad Fed. De Minas
Gerais (2)
Princeton University (6)
University of Illinois (5)
Cornell University (4)
Massachusetts Institute of Tech (4)
Stanford University (3)
This short list of qualities and modalities attempts
to compare the tendencies in our two major
Who we are: Two and a half Tribes
disciplines. Although it only approximates the two
academic cultures and their ways of knowing and
Urban Planning
Architecture
acting in the world, the chart does show some
• creativity + design
• analysis + policy
distinctive differences (which would tend to be
• qualitative, intuitive
• quantitative, logical
true of this or any school of architecture and urban
• eng'g./humanities/soc.sci
• social science
planning). Our architecture grads tend to work
in private practice, while 60 percent of our urban
Urban Design
planning alums work in the public sector or for nonprofits. Despite these differences in methodology, in
scale of work and in career paths, the two programs
share values and an abiding interest in the built
environment, as well as joint initiatives and degree programs. And our urban design program
helps to bridge the methodological and cultural gap. Although it is not always obvious or easy,
we benefit from the creative friction and frisson between the two basic approaches to the
environment.
2
7,241 Graduates
Who we are:
(and counting)
160
78
15
5
4
15
55
57
5
4
2388
36
102
16
442
114
119
646
12
3
149
22
23
4
29
4
113
South Korea: 91
Canada: 78
Taiwan: 57
Thailand: 57
Hong Kong: 37
India: 29
Japan: 19
Saudi Arabia: 19
Malaysia: 18
England: 12
10
45
89
10
124
59
81
26
4
92
53 153
35
63 Countries
183
359
69
5
5
9
12
79
14
230
25
10
Our graduates populate every state, with major
concentrations in Michigan, California, Illinois
and New York. Our international student body is
reflected in the remarkable spread of alumni/ae
around the world. At this rate, TCAUP will one day
run the world!
2
Who we are:
Student Population
TOTAL (last 3 years)….548-579
ARCHITECTURE
Total Fall 06: 548
600
MSc
Undergraduate...……….....206-213
M.Arch………………………196-219
500
PhD
Doctoral………………………..22-27
MUD
MUP
400
URBAN PLANNING
Although lower than when both the Art and
Landscape Architecture programs were located in
the college on Central Campus, our enrollment has
been growing steadily over the last decade—fast
enough to accommodate increased demand
and slow enough to maintain our selectivity and
academic standards.
Master’s………...……………...84-96
Doctoral………………………..16-18
URBAN DESIGN
300
MArch
200
Master’s..………………………12-15
UG Arch
100
Michigan Resident…………….47%
Female………………………......44%
International…………...............20%
0
99
00
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
Underrepresented Minority.....12%
All Minorities............................21%
Who we are:
7 Degree Programs
7 Degrees, 1 Certificate
ARCHITECTURE
Bachelor of Science
in Architecture
Master of Architecture
Master of Science
The latest programs are the Master of Urban
Design, which annually enrolls 12 –15 students
who have professional degrees in architecture,
urban planning, or landscape architecture, and the
Real Estate Certificate, which has over 60 M.U.P.,
M.B.A., M.Arch., J.D., M.S.Envir., and M. Public
Policy students, with the M.U.P. and M.B.A. students
making up the bulk of the enrollees.
PhD
URBAN + REGIONAL PLANNING
Master of Urban Planning
PhD
URBAN DESIGN
Master of Urban Design
Real Estate Certificate
3
In the 1950s, the college in many ways invented
architectural research, which famously flourished
here for years. The Architectural Research
Laboratory, pictured here, was erected behind
Lorch Hall with Unistrut, a building system
developed by college alumnus Charles Attwood.
After lagging for years, funded research in
architecture and especially urban planning has
started to bounce back. We hope to break $2M in
grants and contracts next year.
Who we are: Rebuilding Research
2003
2004
2005
2006
$670,899
$517,320
$957,486
$1,340,056
TCAUP faculty, students, and staff continue their
long tradition of serving the community in many,
many ways. For example, design-build projects (like
this treehouse for ventilator-dependent children
and this rural construction project), annual Detroit
design charrettes (some of the 80 or so participants
seen here in the city's abandoned central train
station), have become models of outreach and
partnering. There are also many urban planning
summer internships and capstone projects, as well
as research projects and architecture studios set
in Detroit (and Flint). Our Community Design Center
at the UM Detroit Center offers an introductory
architecture class to high school students, as
well as providing pro bono or low-cost design and
planning services to neighborhood and community
organizations.
Here’s a range of our national rankings by different
organizations using different criteria. Many of
these systems utilize questionable methodologies
and out-of-date information. A reasonable
estimate is that we are in the top ten colleges of
architecture and urban planning, with our best
programs closer to the top than the bottom of this
tier.
Who we are:
Serving the Community
Who we are: National Rankings
• Architectureʊ3rd - 15th, average 8th over 8 years
Design Intelligence
• Architectureʊ11th (1997, discontinued thereafter)
US News & World Report
• Architecture undergraduate programʊ6th,
graduate programʊ7th Gourman Report
• Architectureʊ5th Academic Analytics (faculty
productivity)
• Urban Planningʊ11th (1997, discontinued thereafter)
US News & World Report
• Urban Planningʊ11th
Planetizen
• Urban Designʊ4th
New Urban News
4
Who we are:
Endowment
Harvard (579 students)
$359M
70
Yale (199)
Pennsylvania (582)
65
64
Michigan (570)
California – Berkeley (970)
38
25
Texas – Austin (685)
Washington (634)
18
Virginia (524)
14
$60M
$50M
$40M
$30M
$20M
Our college’s endowment has moved upward
briskly, thanks to the generosity of Al Taubman
and many other donors. The university has
invested the principal well, with considerable
growth attributable to recent market increases.
We’ve gained a great deal of ground on our peers,
increasing our ability to compete for top students
and faculty. (There are several healthy Ivy League
schools not on this list, because their endowment
is held centrally or not published.) Thank you for
your help on building our financial foundation!
$10M
$0M
99
00
01
02
03
04
05
06
Who we are: 100 Years
“Global Place: Practice, Politics,
and the Polis” Conference
Honorary Degree Recipients
UM/ULI Forum-Detroit
Centennial Professors
Lorch Column
“TCAUP@100”
book
Campus
Banners
We pulled out the stops this year! We’re glad some
of you were able to join us for several of the events
and exhibits. It’s been a breathless sprint for many
faculty, students, and staff, all of whom deserve
a great deal of thanks. Bravo to all for going the
extra distance!
Exhibits
Gala Centennial
Dinner
Film: “The Greater Good: 100 Years of
Architecture + Planning at Michigan”
Strategic Assessment
“Rewind
<<PAUSE>>
Fast Forward”
Conference
Faculty Retreat + Dinner
I hope this illustrated overview helps you better understand our college, its achievements, its recent history, and its
trajectory and promise. It was fun to assemble and is a source of great pride.
At the close of a very full year, I wish you all a wonderful summer.
PS Because of a shortage of faculty offices and classroom, studio, seminar and research space, the college is
hoping to eventually add some space on the south rooftop of the Art + Architecture Building. The architecture
firm of Miller/Hull from Seattle has been hired to do feasibility and preliminary design studies.
5
COLLEGE
DOWNTOWN TO TECHTOWN
TCAUP FACULTY AND STUDENTS HAVE A LONGSTANDING
RELATIONSHIP WITH THE CITY OF DETROIT AND ITS CITIZENS
through myriad community outreach and service projects—from partnering
with community-based organizations to identify strategies for building stronger
neighborhoods to providing technical assistance to target resources and streamline
processes to facilitate land-banking to designing, building, and installing
wheelchair ramps for disabled Detroit homeowners. In the last year, faculty and
students undertook comprehensive visioning and strategic planning projects for two
important areas of Detroit providing valuable resources for both public and private
entities involved in the revitalization of Detroit's Downtown.
Downtown
By Elizabeth Schuh
AN INTERDISCIPLINARY GROUP OF
STUDENTS FROM URBAN PLANNING,
NATURAL RESOURCES, BUSINESS, AND
REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT RECENTLY
COMPLETED A COLLABORATIVE
MASTER’S PROJECT RESULTING IN A
COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGIC PLANNING
DOCUMENT FOR DOWNTOWN DETROIT.
Their clients were the Downtown
Detroit Partnership and the Detroit
Economic Growth Corporation. Under
the direction of Christopher Leinberger,
director of the Real Estate Certificate
Program and Assistant Professor Larissa
Larsen, students addressed three
areas: visioning, physical mapping, and
market research. The visioning process
included interviews with 50 important
agents for change in downtown Detroit.
The interviewees ranged from Edsel
Ford, scion of a family whose name is
almost synonymous with Detroit’s auto
industry, to up-and-coming restaurateur
Sean Harrington, owner of Centaur.
Students completed an intensive
physical mapping process to provide
an up-to-date base map for downtown.
Key findings here included an
overabundance of surface parking
downtown and a need for future
developments to respect the current
street grid and resist creation of new
“super blocks” within the downtown.
6
Students worked with the Brookings
Institution and Social Compact in
Washington, D.C. to complete an
innovative market research process
for downtown. The drilldown technique
used by the team resulted in defining
aggregate incomes within downtown
that were 29 percent higher than
conventional methods predicted. This
number is vital for attracting new
residential and commercial development
to downtown Detroit. The full market
analysis, Downtown Detroit in Focus:
A Profile of Market Opportunity, is
available on the Brookings website.
(www.brook.edu)
STUDENT TEAM
Jennifer Austin, Beth Baily, Kelly Drake,
Kerry Clare Duggan, Therese Houlahan,
Jeremy McCallion, Elizabeth Schuh
Top: Urban Planning Student Kelly Drake assists Kate
Beebe in drawing her ideas for downtown during the
visioning process. Photo credit: Elizabeth Schuh.
Bottom: Map of all surface and structured parking
downtown. Image credit: Jeremy McCallion.
SPONSORS
C.S. Mott Foundation
Charter One Foundation
Compuware Corporation
Crosswinds Communities Inc.
DTE Energy
Etkin Equities, Inc.
The Farbman Group
Olympia Development LLC
Schostak Brothers & Company
Larson Realty Group
David R. Nelson
Redico
Robertson Brothers
Herb Strather
Taubman Company
Victor Foundation
Walbridge Aldinger Company
5-D Workshop: Adding 3-Dimensions to Downtown Detroit
By Elizabeth Schuh
THE COLLEGE’S NINTH ANNUAL DETROIT DESIGN WORKSHOP (A.K.A. THE DETROIT
DESIGN CHARRETTE) USED BOTH THE STUDENT-CREATED STRATEGIC PLANNING
FOR DOWNTOWN DETROIT AND THE BROOKINGS MARKET STUDY TO PROVIDE
BACKGROUND RESEARCH AND SUGGEST PROMISING CATALYTIC PROJECTS FOR
WORKSHOP TEAMS AS THE BASIS FOR DESIGN PROPOSALS.
Each team focused on one of five downtown parcels, identifying additional catalytic
sites, and creating a variety of innovative strategies to repopulate and reinvigorate
downtown with scenarios for five- and 15-year timelines.
The teams agreed on
several key principles; most
importantly, a moratorium
on the demolition of historic
buildings within downtown.
These buildings provide a
unique, elegant collection
of architecture for Detroit,
which should be treated
as a valuable commodity.
Other common themes
included reduction and
reuse of surface parking
lots, green/sustainable
development methods, as
well as preservation, and in some cases
recreation, of the street grid.
Each team took a different approach
to produce appropriate designs for
their area. The East quadrant team
recommended infill, placing housing in
front of the People Mover to reactivate
the street. The North team created a
new home for the Joe Louis Arena on
Grand River as well as recommending
a new plaza on Woodward and an
entertainment district at Columbus
and Park. The West team dealt with
the largest plots of vacant land and
created new housing and a public
space with its suggestion of Bagley
Square. The team also recommended
reuse of the temporary MGM site by
a national retailer to provide muchneeded shopping downtown and
proposed strategies to better integrate
that building with the street. Finally, the
Central team proposed infill, a return to
residential along the river, a signature
riverfront park and amphitheater,
additional transit routes in the form of
“hop-on” street cars, and the addition
of university buildings and housing
downtown. Complete presentations for
each team and streaming video of the
proceedings are available on the TCAUP
website (www.tcaup.umich.edu/5-d/).
Top left: Map of overall residential, commercial, and
entertainment recommendations for the 5-D central
district. Created by the Central Team.
Bottom left: Infill housing on Beaubien Street wraps
around the People Mover. Image credit: Jae Min Lee
PARTICIPANTS AND VISITING FACULTY
Janet Attarian, City of Chicago
Gerardo Caballero, Max Fisher Visiting Professor UM TCAUP
Brad Cambridge, Quinn Evans Architects, Ann Arbor
Maurice Cox, University of Virginia
Michael Dempsey, Detroit Economic Growth Corporation
Philip Enquist, SOM, Charles Moore Visiting Professor
UM TCAUP
Malik Goodwin, Detroit Economic Growth Corporation
Rainey Hamilton, Hamilton Anderson Architects, Detroit
Douglas Kelbaugh, UM TCAUP
Elisabeth Knibbe, Quinn Evans Architects, Ann Arbor
Kit McCullough, UM TCAUP
Rahul Mehrotra, UM TCAUP
Dorian Moore, Archive DS, Detroit
Mark Nickita, Archive DS, Detroit
Juan Rois, UM TCAUP
Tom Sherry, Hamilton Anderson Architects, Detroit
Tim Smith, Sera Architects, Portland, Oregon
Roy Strickland, UM TCAUP
Pratap Talwar, Thompson Design Group, Boston
Steve Vogel, University of Detroit Mercy
7
Techtown
By Sarah Schafbuch
IF THRIVING CITIES SUCH AS NEW YORK FLOURISH DUE TO THE
VIBRANCY AND INTERACTION OF THE UNIQUE AND DISTINCT
VILLAGES THAT CONSTITUTE THE WHOLE, THEN PERHAPS DETROIT’S
REVITALIZATION MUST BE REALIZED BY THE CAREFUL CULTIVATION OF
ITS SMALL DISTRICTS.
Viewed from Woodward Avenue, the intermodal station and related development.
SPONSORS
Director and professor of the Master of
Urban Design program, and TechTown’s
primary project director, Roy Strickland
worked with an interdisciplinary team
of graduate students to create a
blueprint for one such village. Pocketed between some of Detroit’s
healthiest areas, TechTown comprises 12 city blocks between the
New Center and the University Cultural Center. It contains 100 acres
bordered by Woodward Avenue, the Lodge Freeway, I-94, and the Grand
Trunk Railroad and lies within the New Amsterdam Historic District, a
concentration of early 20th century industrial buildings. TechTown was
founded in 2003 as a partnership between General Motors, Henry Ford
Health Systems (HFHS), and Wayne State University (WSU).
TechTown
Henry Ford Health System
Hudson Webber Foundation
The project generated Vision for TechTown, a three-volume ten-year
development plan that details concepts for programmed activities and
physical improvements to further stimulate economic development in
TechTown. Vision for TechTown will help this area capitalize on a cluster
of economic stimulants that have revived cities such as Philadelphia and
Boston and helped them move into the post-industrial era.
“It (TechTown) has all four agents any good urban development needs
—a medical center (HFHS), education (WSU), culture, and technology,”
Strickland said. These engines, plus the hundreds of millions of
investment dollars they attract, assure sustainability and prime it for
development as Detroit’s new mixed-use research, working and living
destination. Coupled with funding available through its designation as
8
part of the “Michigan Life Sciences Corridor,” TechTown
is positioned to compete as a major player in the
biotechnology industry.
Vision for TechTown capitalizes on the advantages for
technology entrepreneurs who will find a supportive
community and proximity to major research institutions.
The plans forecast that residential developers will
be drawn by the presence of potential tenants
in the high-tech work-force as well as superior
accessibility provided by TechTown’s proximity to major
thoroughfares, freeways, and the Amtrak Station.
With current proposals for a rail connection between
Ann Arbor and Detroit, and the possible introduction
of a high speed intermodal station (linking Detroit to
Chicago) TechTown is ideally situated to promote further
economic growth from out-state Michigan and
the Midwest.
To encourage families to locate in TechTown, plans
call for the creation of up to three new specialty high
schools, including a charter school associated with
Wayne State University, and one geared to training
young people for jobs in the medical and health care
fields.
This plan created by Strickland, graduate student
assistants David Gagnon (M.U.P.), Conrad Kickert
(M.U.D.), and Shao-Ning Yu (M.Arch.), and 14
additional graduate team members, will allow
Techtown to emerge as a new technological,
residential and entrepreneurial force.
Tech Town’s retail extension will attract buyers from Techtown,
Wayne State University, Detroit, and the region.
"GLOBAL PLACE: PRACTICE, POLITICS AND THE POLIS"
JANUARY 4–6, 2007
PROVOCATIONS ON THE CENTENNIAL CONFERENCE
By Robert Fishman, Emil Lorch Professor of Architecture and Urban Planning
I wrote these “provocations” to be
superseded: their real value was to
provoke the invited scholars at our
“Global Place” conference to develop
their own thoughts. Indeed, what is most
important about any conference is not
what is planned but what is unexpected:
the unexpected themes and passions
that only occur when people are brought
together. For example, I certainly did not
foresee the passion over preservation
that Anthony Tung brought to the
conference, and the way that passion
became part of our concept of “global
place.”
That said, I believe my “provocations”
did anticipate many of the major themes
of the conference, and perhaps of the
Taubman College’s next century. I can
see more clearly now what was perhaps
implicit in my text: the overwhelming
crisis of the next century will be the
intersection of mega-city with climate
change and resource exhaustion. The
explosive urbanization of perhaps 3 billion
people over the next fifty years—an
urbanization concentrated in the already
chaotic and overburdened megacities
of the developing world—will demand
massive resources just to provide for
the survival of these billions, no less the
better life that they have a right to expect.
At the same time, the planet’s energy
resources will be dwindling, and the real
costs of using the remaining fossil fuel,
mostly coal, will escalate with global
warming.
This interlinked crisis will be for the next
century what the world wars were for the
previous century: the overwhelming test
for civilization itself.
If the University of Michigan had marked
the founding of the architecture program
here in 1906 with a conference, the
issues discussed would surely have
centered on what we have learned to call
modernism. One hopes the college would
“
THIS INTERLINKED CRISIS
[GLOBAL URBANIZATION
AND CLIMATE CHANGE]
WILL BE FOR THE NEXT
CENTURY WHAT THE WORLD
WARS WERE FOR THE
PREVIOUS CENTURY: THE
OVERWHELMING TEST FOR
CIVILIZATION ITSELF.
”
have recognized the importance of the
young engineer whose factory only forty
miles away on Piquette Avenue in Detroit
was beginning to create the new era of
“Fordism.” Ford and other innovators
from Edison and Marconi to the Wright
brothers and the Lumiere brothers were
already building the new world of mass
production, mass consumption, and mass
media. The “second industrial revolution”
had begun to produce in quantity the
materials—glass, concrete, steel—that
would re-shape the built environment.
And prophetic voices in architecture and
planning from Frank Lloyd Wright and
Jane Addams in Chicago to Albert Kahn in
Detroit to Otto Wagner in Vienna to Peter
Behrens and the young Walter Gropius
in Berlin had already understood that the
question of the “machine age”—the issue
of modernism—would dominate 20th
century design debate.
A century later, the key issues for 21st
century design seem to be encompassed
in the word globalism. Like modernism,
globalism is a cloudy, all-encompassing
word that has nevertheless become
indispensable. Arguably, globalism is
nothing more than Modernism II—the
realization of the potential for shrinking
distance and time that was inherent a
century ago in the new technologies
of the internal combustion engine,
the automobile, the airplane, the
telephone, and the radio. But these
technologies and their more powerful
electronic successors are operating
in a post-colonial world unimagined
in 1906. Globalism in part seems to
mean a universal global economy and
society—at its best a utopian realization
of the Enlightenment dream of a universal
humanity, at its worst a dystopian
universal placelessness dominated by
anonymous global capital. But globalism,
paradoxically, also means that formerly
marginalized and isolated cultures are
no longer necessarily subordinated
to those of the larger nation-states.
Communications and transportation
operate in all directions, so that a local
economy can compete worldwide, a local
look or sound conquer the world. Our
conference title, “Global Place,” seeks to
capture that paradox—the challenge of
creating place in a world dominated by
the forces of placelessness.
At the height of the modern movement’s
heroic self-confidence, Le Corbusier
proclaimed “Architecture or Revolution:
Revolution can be avoided.” We have
learned to mistrust the hubris inherent
in this proclamation, yet the issue of
architecture and urban planning as sites
of action and resistance remains. What
are the responsibilities of architecture
and planning in the global era? That is,
what can architecture and planning
contribute that no other disciplines can
toward the humanizing of a global society
and its built environment? What are our
strengths? Our weaknesses? Our blindspots? Perhaps most importantly, what
must we know to re-shape the world?
ENVIRONMENT AND TECHNOLOGY
Although almost no one in 1906 foresaw
this, the crucial issue for the twentieth
century would be violence: surviving
the World Wars that twice engulfed the
planet and whose scars are still with us
today. Violence remains a crucial issue,
from terrorism to the threat of atomic
warfare, but another issue has come
to seem more pressing in an age of
globalism: ecology. The threat of massive
disruptions and ecological stress brought
on by climate change and resource
9
depletion is more widely recognized today
than the threat of world war was in 1906.
Yet we seem unable to organize a global
effort to combat it, and the paralyzing fear
grows that it might already be too late.
If there is to be a response equal to the
potential ecological disaster, such a
response would clearly involve a radical
redesign and redevelopment of our
built environment. Yet the practice and
pedagogy of architecture, urban design,
and planning have so far only begun
to recognize this overwhelming issue.
“Green” architecture and sustainable
urban planning seem caught between an
incrementalism that seems inadequate
to the problem and an eco-utopianism
divorced from practice. What are the
strategic moves necessary for green
architecture and planning to emerge as
the major force they must become?
Integrally related to the issue of the
environment is the issue of technology. A
century ago Patrick Geddes prophesied
that the nineteenth-century “paleotechnic
era” with its ugly, unhealthy “Coketowns”
would yield to a “neotechnic era” of
technology in the service of sustainable
energy, respect for the natural
environment, and other humane goals.
We are still waiting for the neotechnic
era, despite enormous advances
especially in information technology.
As we accelerate from the personal
computer to the world wide web to the
emerging new world of universal Wi-fi
and “ubiquitous computing,” what are the
implications for community, design, and
building global place? Are “ubiquitous
computing” and related developments
in information technology a step toward
the neotechnic era, or do they reinforce
global placelessness and anomie?
POLITICS A century ago Lenin claimed
that all of politics can be reduced to a
single question: “Who/Whom?” Any
discussion of globalism and the global
built environment must still wrestle
with the basic issues inherent in Lenin’s
question. Who are the “Who”? That
is, who are the people and groups who
possess the power to re-shape the world?
Who are the “Whom”? That is, those who
are the objects of that power? And what
10
is the crucial linkage—the missing verb—
that defines how that power is exercised?
Globalism, almost by definition, seems to
mean the erosion of the nation-state as
a locus of power to reshape the world.
But what is replacing it? The abstraction
of “global capital” must be unpacked
to understand the power relations that
underlie it. As one critic has suggested,
Walmart, by altering its buying policies,
could do more to transform global
working conditions than the concerted
action of virtually all the nation-states
on the planet. But Walmart and every
other multinational corporation work
within the institutional constraints of
market competition that make such
action unlikely or impossible. During
the modern movement, architects and
planners looked to many different sources
of power, from “captains of industry” to
labor cooperatives to bureaucrats and
dictators. Most were disappointed, no
doubt thankfully so. Nevertheless, we
must continue to ask: who has the power
to re-shape the global built environment,
and how can that power be shaped for
humane and just ends?
THE CITY A century ago the great
issue for modernism was the “industrial
metropolis,” the “giant city,” which for
pessimists like Oswalt Spengler promised
the end of civilization, but which Le
Corbusier and others believed could be
transformed into the Radiant City—the
first wholly human and rational city. But
such centers as Berlin, New York, and
Chicago are now dwarfed by the megacities of the developing world. The global
world is rapidly becoming an urban world.
For the first time in history, half the human
population (now over 6 billion) lives
in urbanized areas. As the population
increases to an estimated 9 billion in the
next half-century, almost all that increase
will go to cities— especially the megacities. We are now at the equinox of the
8,000-year history of urbanization on this
planet.
The prospect is not altogether a happy
one. The industrial metropolises of a
century ago were centers of slums
and exploitation, but they were also
the centers of innovation and wealthproduction for the most advanced sectors
of their society. By contrast, the largest
megacities often have a marginal position
within the global economy, and are thus
unable to afford even basic sanitary
infrastructure and utilities that would
sustain their existing population —no less
the millions more that are predicted.
As billions of people are uprooted from
the only life they knew—the life of the
village—and thrust into megacities at
the height of their stress and disorder,
there is the danger that the anger and
fanaticism generated by this chaos will
tear global civilization apart. Not only will
the mega-cities of the developing world
be at risk, but global immigration patterns
will inevitably spread that chaos to the
already-industrialized world.
At the same time, there is the immense
historical experience of immigrant vigor
—the capacity of the first generation
off the farm and village to somehow
make their way under the worst of urban
circumstances and to build a new life for
themselves and for their cities.
PRACTICE From the “starchitects”
crisscrossing the globe in pursuit of major
commissions to the relentless spread of
franchise architecture and standardized
planning, the practice of architecture
and planning from the highest levels to
the most mundane has become global.
For professionals with global practices
or international outsourcing, the benefits
are obvious – but so too are the dangers.
As architecture and planning are more
seamlessly integrated into the massive
international flows of capital that define
the global economy, their role inevitably
becomes more instrumental: to lend a
façade of uniqueness to projects that are
relentlessly generic. Even the starchitect’s
personal touch, however inspired by local
culture and design, becomes just one
more “brand” whose value on the global
marketplace changes rapidly. Although
globalism seems to expand this market for
transnational collaboration and technical
skills, it might at a deeper level signal the
design profession’s final loss of control
over the built environment it attempts to
shape.
Reprinted from the inaugural issue of Agora,
The Planning Journal of the University of Michigan.
AT THE BEGINNING OF THE WINTER
SEMESTER AND MIDWAY THROUGH
ITS CENTENNIAL YEAR, THE COLLEGE
HOSTED LUMINARIES FROM AROUND
THE WORLD TO ASK QUESTIONS, SUCH
AS WHAT ARE THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF
ARCHITECTURE AND PLANNING IN THE
GLOBAL ERA? WHAT CAN ARCHITECTURE
AND PLANNING CONTRIBUTE THAT NO
OTHER DISCIPLINE CAN TOWARD THE
HUMANIZING OF A GLOBAL SOCIETY AND
ITS BUILT ENVIRONMENT? HERE ONE OF
THE GUEST PARTICIPANTS REFLECTS ON
THE PROCEEDINGS.
Days two and three were
held in the new Biomedical
Science Research Building,
designed by Polshek Partners.
GLOBAL PLACE AND MARKET REALISM
By Liane Lefaivre, professor and chair of history and theory of architecture,
University of Applied Art, Austria
Doug Kelbaugh, Liane Lefaivre, Michael Sorkin
Charles Correa, UM B.Arch.'53
Conference sessions were
recorded and can be viewed online:
http://www.tcaup.umich.edu/100/
globalplace/streaming.html
Architecture, like many other academic disciplines, has just come through a
quarter century of largely formal, “autonomous” pursuits. During this time American
architectural schools, in particular Ivy League schools, went from being probably
the most well-rounded and balanced in the world into paragons of lopsidedness.
Only their urban planning colleagues stayed the course on a more comprehensive
approach to the built environment, although they unfortunately lost sight of
physical design.
During this time architecture
successfully managed to re-position
itself and adapt to the realities of newly
dominant supply-side market conditions
favoring high-end architectural goods
like museums, hotels, corporate
headquarters, governmental monuments,
and banks. Of which, architects like
Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid, and Rem
Koolhaas contributed immeasurably in
making cities more beautiful places. But,
on the other hand, the dominance of
aesthetic issues left practically no one
in architecture schools to grapple other
“real world” issues. As a result, much of
the invaluable expertise and know-how,
which had developed during the first half
of the postwar period, was largely lost in
the fog of amnesia and flash of stardom.
Interestingly there were also some
notable figures that went against the tide
and succeeded in shaping the market
themselves by persuasively advancing
a more multi-faceted agenda with their
clients and constituencies, notably in
relation to critical issues of identity,
social quality and sustainability. Among
these are Jaime Lerner, Shigeru Ban,
Dan Solomon, Harrison Fraker, Yung Ho
Chang, Charles Correa, to name a few.
There are many moral, environmental,
social, and political reasons to go
back to the kind of well-balanced
architectural education that took shape
in the postwar years. However, these
motivations don’t usually have much
of an impact when market forces run
in the opposite direction. But now a
new market factor has emerged in the
equation: globalization. If anything will
once more turn architecture into a
well-balanced profession, this is it. New
concepts of globalization imply that the
architecture market place has opened
11
Edward Mazria, David Orr
Teddy Cruz, Saskia Sassen
up to include parts of the world that need
more than luxury architectural goods,
such as India and China, Latin America
and Africa. The reality of global practice
has placed immense pressure on the
need for solutions to both social and
environmental problems. Sound large
scale and small scale urban planning,
housing projects, regional planning, and
the minimization of CO2 emissions have
become urgent priorities.
In principle, American schools are
well positioned to serve these global
market forces fuelled by unprecedented
economic growth. First, because they
tend to be part of good, multidisciplinary
universities that include urban planning
programs. And second because there
are fortunately still some people left after
the 25 year hiatus that have not been
affected by the pervasive amnesia and
myopia. In some cases these people
have simply moved out into specialized
professional offices that have taken on
the task of research and development.
The first school to assume a position
of leadership to meet the challenge of
12
globalization head on appears to
be the University of Michigan’s
Taubman College of Architecture
and Urban Planning. The Global
Place conference, a brainchild
of its dean, Doug Kelbaugh and
his co-organizers, Professors
Robert Fishman and Rahul
Mehrotra, and the conference
organizing committee (Scott
Campbell, Malcolm McCullough,
Will Glover, Lan Deng, and
Fernando Lara), was an explicit
attempt to reverse the trend of
the past quarter century and
reconnect architecture with
other related fields. After two
days of discussions, there was
a realization of the vital role
architects can and must play in
the globalized world.
Participants were invited
from a large knowledge pool.
Emblematic of the scope
of the conference was the
exceptional figure of Charles
Correa (UM B.Arch’53), a “star”
architect practicing today who sees
no contradiction between building the
Indian High Commission in New York on
one hand, and working to provide shelter
for the poorest of the poor in India on the
other. Ken Yeang and Harrison Fraker,
two of the leading architects/educators
in the world devoted to sustainable
design, also presented. Activist architect
Teddy Cruz presented his award winning
community organizing and architectural
projects for the border settlements
between San Diego and Tijuana. Michael
Sorkin argued for a return to
utopian visions of the 1960s.
Saskia Sassen (professor of
sociology at the University of
Chicago), who coined the term
“Global Cities,” described how
effective bottom up political
pressure groups acting in urban
environments can be agents of
change. Dan Solomon, noted
architect/urban and designer/cofounder of Congress for the New
Urbanism and author of Global City
Blues, talked about the important
differences between community
and urbanism and showed some New
Urbanist projects that are compact,
walkable, mixed-use, and transit-friendly.
Homi Bhabha, a literary scholar and
the director of the Humanities Center at
Harvard University, spoke controversially
on the issue of identitarianism in a postcolonial world.
John Thackara, director of the Doors of
Perception and one of the most notable
design and technology gurus of our time,
stressed the importance of sustainability
and social quality in his own practice.
Arguably the most compelling material
of the conference was presented by Ed
Mazria, who provided a scientifically
grounded exposition of the disastrous
global warming scenario of the next
hundred years unless CO2 emissions
are cut. The practicing architect stated
that the majority of scientific evidence
suggests that unless we make radical
changes now we will start hitting
potentially irreversible tipping points in
the natural environment in nine years!
Among the most productive features of
the Global Place conference is that it
was conceived not only as an isolated
event but as an ongoing series of
conferences and actions that will extend
the dialogue even further. This is an
excellent idea that is bound to have an
impact on the research and teaching
program not only at Taubman College but
in other schools as well.
Liane LeFaivre's work and numerous books are devoted
to architectural culture and criticism in the framework of
cognitive history, architectural history, and creativity in
Western culture.
Anthony Tung, Rahul Mehrotra
ANNE SPIRN Professor of landscape
architecture at MIT
GLOBAL PLACE SPEAKERS AND RESPONDENTS
BARBARA ANDERSON Professor of sociology,
research professor at the Population Studies
Center, and a faculty associate at the Center
for Russian and East European Studies at the
UM
LANCE BROWN ACSA Distinguished Professor
at the City College of New York’s (CCNY)
School of Architecture, Urban Design, and
Landscape Architecture
CHARLES CORREA Principal of Charles
Correa Associates in Mumbai, India and the
Farwell Bemis Professor at MIT’s School of
Architecture and Planning
TEDDY CRUZ Principal of Estudio Teddy Cruz
and associate professor of architecture at
Woodbury University
GEOFFREY ELEY The Karl Pohrt Distinguished
University Professor of Contemporary
History and chair, Department of Germanic
Languages and Literatures, and a faculty
associate in the UM Department of Screen
Arts & Cultures.
SUSAN S. FAINSTEIN Professor of urban
planning at the Harvard Design School
HARRISON FRAKER Dean of the College of
Environmental Design at the University of
California, Berkeley
John Habraken
JOHN HABRAKEN Former head of the
Department of Architecture at MIT. He is the
founder of the Department of Architecture,
Building and Planning at Technische
Hogeschool in Eindhoven, the Netherlands
JOHN KING Vice provost for academic
information and professor in the School of
Information at UM
LIANE LEFAIVRE Professor and chair of history
and theory of architecture, University of
Applied Art, Austria and research affiliate
at the Urbanism Department, Technical
University of Delft, the Netherlands
ANN LIN Associate professor of public policy
in the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
at UM
Marilyn Taylor
JOHN THACKARA Director of the Doors of
Perception, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
ANTHONY TOWNSEND Research director,
Institute for the Future, California
ANTHONY TUNG Author, urbanist, and former
New York City Landmarks Preservation
Commissioner
ANNE VERNEZ MOUDON Professor of
urban design and planning and director
of the Urban Form Lab at the University of
Washington
ALEX WALL Professor of urban design at the
University of Karlsruhe, Germany
ED MAZRIA Principal of Mazria, Inc. Odems
Dzurec. He is currently leading the AIA’s
national initiative for carbon-neutral buildings
by 2030
FREDERICK WHERRY Assistant professor
of sociology and a faculty associate at the
Center for Southeast Asian Studies at UM
DAVID ORR The Paul Sears Distinguished
Professor of Environmental Studies and
Politics and chair of the Environmental
Studies Program at Oberlin College, Ohio
KENNETH YEANG Plym Professor at the
University of Illinois, an adjunct professor
at the University of Malaya, University of
Hawaii, and Tongji University in Shanghai.
All photographs for this story by Peter Smith, Smith Photography.
HOMI BHABHA Director of the Humanities
Center and the Anne F. Rothenberg Professor
of English and American Literature and
Language at Harvard University
MARILYN TAYLOR,
FAIA Leads the
urban design
and planning
practice at
SOM (Skidmore,
Owings &
Merrill)
SASKIA SASSEN The Ralph Lewis Professor
of Sociology at the University of Chicago
and the Centennial Visiting Professor at the
London School of Economics
WILLIAM SAUNDERS Editor of Harvard Design
Magazine and assistant dean for external
relations at Harvard Design School
Liane Lefaivre, Lance Brown
DANIEL SOLOMON, FAIA Professor emeritus
of architecture and urban design at the
University of California, Berkeley
Ken Yeang, Mireille Roddier
MICHAEL SORKIN Professor of architecture
and director of the graduate urban design
program at City College of New York
13
LEARNING THE
MAGICAL AND UNIVERSAL
LANGUAGE
by Melissa Harris
Associate Professor of Architecture
LECTURE NUMBER ONE in Basic
Drawing always begins by telling
my students that they are in the
best place they could possibly be.
Each one of you is on a precipice,
I say to them, poised to learn the
magical and universal language
of drawing. And possibly, you
can even develop ways to extend
your life, by conditioning reflexes
which lead to better decisions,
better driving, even to being
better lovers.
Clamshell studies.
14
Okay, I exaggerate. But I believe what
I say. Magic, because we conjure
something from nothing; universal
language, because with a pencil and
paper we talk to anyone who can see
(immensely practical), and finally, if
not extending, then improving life as it
becomes obvious that we both shape
and are shaped by our constantly
changing context.
Some things remain stable in
architecture. It takes matter, hands
to move that matter, and a mind to
imagine its form. Drawing plays a central
role not only in the standard ways
of communication, expression, and
instruction, but more centrally, drawing
is the GLUE between matter and method.
Drawing connects our eyes to our
hands. It spans the distance between
our bodies and their projection into an
imagined space.
Students must be practiced in the art
of maintaining grace as they adapt to
unfolding situations. When leading or
organizing any project or job, the student
must imagine the types of people who
will be best at accomplishing a goal—
publishing a newspaper, designing a
building, or just organizing a huge party.
Deadlines descend and the team captain
must rely upon the agility of those
surrounding to ensure a successful
outcome.
These are precisely the parameters of
facing the whiteness of a blank sheet.
Initial marks begin to form a context,
subsequent additions either contribute to
the visual challenge (getting a clam shell
to appear convex for example) or they
detract. Creation, evaluation, and editing
converge in the flurry of proliferating
options.
My class starts with muscles. Seeking
motor control, drills begin as though the
class is a sports camp. Equipoise, a term
I first heard mentioned with respect to
hitting a baseball at ninety plus miles per
hour, is an essential state for success.
Defined by a balance between relaxation
and concentration, it feels impossible—
how can one relax while concentrating
intensely? The answer is practice.
Intro drawing class students work on their projects in
the main hallway of the Michigan Union.
“Muscles have a memory, you know,”
choreographer Paul Taylor said when
explaining how he handles his often
paralyzing stage fright [Jim Leher News
Hour Feb 07]. Once on the stage and
dancing, he is fine, as if there were no
audience. When they know something
deeply, muscles can lead, taking over
in moments of mental lapse. We aim to
marry motor memory with an ability to
think in the moment—that is securing
a deep enough physical confidence
that one can be open to invention, and
fleeting reactions to everyday objects.
15
I cannot teach drawing without using
my own tools to illustrate what I mean. I
prefer a real chalkboard and soft chalk
that can make lines seem to emerge from
within the slate. Demonstrations provide
hope and a method for channeling
frustration, which can be overwhelming.
Frustrations are often rooted in one of
two stereotypical attitudes: ‘I already
know’ and ‘Tell-me-how-to-do it.’ Those
who achieved early success in drawing
can have the most difficult transition.
No shading, having only lines as their
means, gives some immediate pause.
How will I make it seem round if I cannot
smear my shadow and fade it out? That is
how I have always done it and it worked
then, why not now? But now is not then.
There are the real beginners, strong
in reasoning, but short in experience
and control. Their minds prefer a path
mapped out, something clear for the
hand to follow. Implicit paradoxes tend to
baffle and paralyze—how can drawing
be simultaneously objective and infinite
in possibilities?
What I am after here is a
selection of line and
I CANNOT TEACH DRAWING conscious
lines rather than a mindless
WITHOUT USING MY OWN TOOLS
TO ILLUSTRATE WHAT I MEAN. rendering. I cannot accept
I PREFER A REAL CHALKBOARD drawing rooted in habit rather than
AND SOFT CHALK THAT CAN engagement in and concentration
MAKE LINES SEEM TO EMERGE on what the present situation
demands. This process goes to the
FROM WITHIN THE SLATE.
bare, raw guts of decision-making,
enabling my teaching assistants and me
to speak specifically about choices, the
sinuous, yet structural path a line forms
to connect to another or falls short due to
its abrupt ending.
“
”
16
Our class stresses economy in general
—do not use more than you need. This
initiates a series of questions: when
are you finished, what is enough and
when has a line become expendable?
Concentrating upon finding correct
amounts and proportions defines
the cultivation of an attitude about
sustainability and thinking long term.
Taking yourself seriously. Parallels
abound. It is quite easy to let the mind
wander when drawing a column of
parallel lines. So what if one is slightly
shorter than the one before, or if one
fades out sooner than its successor.
What difference is one light bulb left
on accidentally going to make in the
big scheme of things? The ease with
which we alleviate urges to consider
consequences of our actions or avoid
seeing them altogether presents
concerns especially when considered
cumulatively.
Speaking analogously, we think of
constructing an image almost in the
same way as constructing a building
—line by line, demanding equal respect
for the smallest increment as well as the
totality. The audience should be seduced
to bounce between the whole and each
line. Emphasis is on the ensemble,
an accumulation of slices, sectional
viewing, and the recognition of their
interdependence.
I learned to teach drawing from the
Arthur F. Thurnau Professor Vincent
Castagnacci, in 1992 when we were both
tapped for an experiment to teach art and
architecture students together in their
early years. It was a new collaborative
work program for our separate schools.
Of the many things I owe to this
experience, one of the most profound was
my first encounter with objectifying art,
and drawing in particular, making explicit
why one line was better than another at
its task. I believed it inherently, but had
never actually witnessed its explication
and demonstration. I saw the distance
students traveled when assignments
“
I HOPE STUDENTS LEAVE
MY DRAWING CLASS WITH A
SENSE OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR
CONSEQUENCES.
”
Drawing class
sketching paper bags
in the art + architecture
courtyard.
I hope students leave my
drawing class with a sense of
responsibility for consequences.
If they take themselves seriously
in the production of images, in the
alchemical experience of making
visions come alive, then it may come
more naturally for them to extend this
thinking and become better, more
engaged citizens, understanding
themselves as part of the greater
whole and human world.
Photograph by Peter Smith
related and built upon one another.
I understood the importance of key
lessons for each class. I discovered
that teaching drawing is launching
a foundation of thinking in terms of
relationships.
Perspective study of Rackham Building stairway.
Associate Professor Melissa Harris
teaches courses in design and drawing.
Harris earned her M.Arch from the
University of California at Berkeley.
She has been teaching at the University
of Michigan since 1990, and in this
time has published many articles and
architectural drawings including "The
Influence of Social Dynamics on Built
Form: Design Studio Investigations" and
"Tragic Choices Between Fine Art and
Architectural Drawing." Much of her
work explores the parallels between
architecture and art. In 1999, Harris was
recognized for her work at the university
as a C.I.C. Academic Leadership Fellow.
17
FACULTY
IMAGINE AN ARCHITECTURE
WHERE ELECTRICAL
ENERGY MOVES AS FREELY
AS LIGHT, DATA, AND AIR.
For as long as electricity
has been part of the built
environment, electrical
outlets have been the sole
means of accessing power in
buildings. Appliances large
and small aggregate around
the plastic outlet, sixteen
inches above the surface of
the floor. While revolutionary
changes have occurred
among the other categories
of building infrastructure, the
outlet, originally invented by
Hubbell in 1904, remains little
changed.
PROFESSOR JEAN WINEMAN
was reappointed for a third three-year
term as chair of the Doctoral Program
in Architecture, ending in June 2009.
She has successfully conceptualized
and overseen the consolidation of four
program sub-areas into three, as well
as instituted several changes in the
policies and the core curriculum of the
architecture Ph.D. and master of science
degree programs.
LECTURER IN URBAN PLANNING JEFF KAHAN, in his role as a planner
with the city of Ann Arbor, was the lead planner and principal author
of the “Northeast Area Plan” which won an award from the Michigan
Association of Planning last year. The juried award, “Outstanding
Planning Project Award for a Plan,” is presented to the most
outstanding master plan in Michigan.
18
Muschenheim
Fellow Eric
Olsen is being
recognized
as a finalist
in Metropolis
Magazine’s 2007 Next
Generation Competition for
his development of electroconductive gypsum wallboard.
Electro-conductive gypsum
wallboard is a new building
product that pairs flat-wire
technology with a fire resistant
gypsum core. It provides an
electrified low-voltage surface accessible with a connector
that one pushes into the face of the wall. The electroconductive gypsum wallboard project re-conceptualizes the
way we access electrical energy in buildings. It questions
the dominant paradigm of the conduit linked wall outlet and
imagines the potential of an electrical infrastructure where
energy is on the surface, everywhere around us.
This material has enormous potential to reduce energy
consumption in buildings. The low voltage power supplied
by electro-conductive gypsum wallboard is compatible with
emergent solid-state technologies like liquid crystal displays
and organic light emitting devices (OLED). Point-of-use
electrical transformers are eliminated with electro-conductive
gypsum wallboard creating considerable energy savings.
The benefits go beyond energy efficiency. Like the revolution
in wireless data infrastructure, the conductive surface can
change the way we live in buildings.
THREE FORMER FELLOWS, JUAN ROIS (05–06 WILLARD OBERDICK
FELLOW), ADRIAN BLACKWELL (04–05 WILLIAM MUSCHENHEIM
FELLOW), STEVEN MANKOUCHE (03–04 WILLARD OBERDICK
FELLOW) WERE INCLUDED IN THE “SHRINKING CITIES” EXHIBITION.
“IMPRINT OF PLACE” WAS PRESENTED AT THE PROJECT GALLERY
(ANN ARBOR) IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE SHRINKING CITIES
PUBLIC PROGRAM SERIES, WHICH, ALONG WITH THE SHRINKING
CITIES EXHIBITION AT THE MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART
DETROIT AND CRANBROOK ART MUSEUM, INTRODUCED THE THEME
OF URBAN SHRINKAGE AS A GLOBAL PHENOMENON, SHOWING ITS
EFFECTS ON THE CITIES OF DETROIT, IVANOVO, MANCHESTER AND
LEIPZIG TO PROVIDE INSIGHT INTO POSSIBLE OPTIONS FOR ACTION.
Kevin Aalderink, Suad Aamiry, Susan Aaron, Gabriel Abbott, Elias Abboud, Ahmad Farik Abd Ghaffar, Amr Abdel-Kawi, Ossama Abdou, John Abela, Victor Abla, Michael Abrams, Tawfiq Abu-Ghazzeh, Alexander Acemyan,
Bolkar Acikkol, James Acton, Peter Acuff, Anne Adams, Daniel Adams, John Adams, Max Adams, Michael Adams, Richard Adams, Robert Adams, Steven Adams, Wendi Adams, Daniel Adashie, Susan Addison, Brian
Adelstein, Jacqualyn Adelstein, Golnar Adili, Jesse Adkins, Nicole Adler, Gregory Aerts, Thomas Affeldt, Susan Affleck-Childs, Todd Afflerbaugh, Emad Afifi, Eman Afifi, Afshan Afshar, Farhad Afshari, Fereidoon Afshari, Philip
Agar, Namit Agarwal, Reena Agarwal, Thomas Agius, Elyse Agnello, Laura Agrait, Nathalie Aguinaldo, Devina Agus Sudjito, Charles Ahlstrom, William Ahlstrom, Shamim Ahmadzadegan, Dongjoon Ahn, Grace Ahn, Koonseo
Ahn, Thomas Ahn, Yoonsoo Ahn, Young Kyoo Ahn, Ann Aiken, Jonathan Aiken, Martha Aills, Alton Ainslie, Hadar Aizenman, Stanley Aizinas, Onur Akansel, Alan Akershoek, Roshanak Akhavan, Saima Akhtar, Donald Akira,
Yevgeniy Akkerman, Rene Akre, Nihad Al Amiri, Abdullah Al-Abed, Olumayowa Alabi, Jason Albers, Roy Albert, Raeyd Aldakheel, Robert Alden, E. Wayne Alderman, Adel Al-Dosary, Christopher Alexander, Eman Al-Farah,
Sabato Alfieri, Mark Alger, Abdulrehman Al-Harkan, Mohammed Al-Hussayen, Abir Ali, Matthew Aliberti, Zafar Alikhan, Mohammad Al-Jared, Ibraheem Al-Jowair, Barbara Allan, James Allan, Christopher Allen, Donovan
Allen, Jarod Allen, Marcia Allen, Mark Allen, Maurice Allen, Richard Allen, Scott Allen, Jessie Allen-Young, Michael Aller, Mark Allison, Markku Allison, John Allread, Timothy Allspach, Khalid Al-Megren, Abdul Aziz AlMogren, Amy Alper, Phineas Alpers, Baqer Al-Ramadan, Natheer Al-Rawi, Abdul-Aziz Al-Saati, Mohammed Al-Shamsi, Tarik Al-Soliman, Ann Alspaugh, Abdulrahman Altassan, Abdulrahman Al-Tassan, Rebecca Alter,
Gregory Altland, Ross Altman, Efrain Alvarez, Hussain Alzoubi, Rosalinda Amato, Glenda Amayo, Andrew Amor, Robert Amor, Robert Amor, William Amor, Dana Amore, Susan Amrhein, Jeeyong An, Rujiroj Anambutr, Ashok
Anand, Anahita Anandam, George Ananich, Sheryl Ananich, Nalinee Anantakul, Sebastian Anapolsky, Peter Anders, Norman Andersen, Amy Anderson, Arthur Anderson, David Anderson, Eric Anderson, Gunnar Anderson,
Melinda Anderson, Myron Anderson, Portia Anderson, Robert Anderson, Robert Anderson, Sally Anderson, Simeon Anderson, Willis Anderson, Zane Anderson, Otto Andert, Avyerinos Andonyadis, Esperanza Andrade, Susan
Andrade, Eric Andreasen, Charles Andrews, Gregory Andrews, Kevin Andrews, Willis Andrews, Nicole Andriani, Gordon Andringa, Robert Andrus, Brandon Andrzejczak, Suny Angat, Andres Angel, Amanda Angeli, James
Angoff, Cihan Anisoglu, Dorothy Anisoglu, John Annand, Jill Annarino, Gretchen Anthony, Julie Antill, Joseph Antis, Catherine Antonakos, Vance Antoniou, Carlos Antunes, Christine Apicella, Jennifer Apostol, Brett Appel,
Joseph Appelt, Amy Apple, Wayne Appleyard, Christian Arandel, Kasem Araya-Nimitskul, Ryan Archer, Pacha Areepipatkul, Robert Areklett, Robert Arens, Dominick Argumedo, Jal Aria, Mohamad Ariffin, Maria Arisso, John
Arms, Wilfred Armster, Colleen Armstrong, Mara Armstrong, Mashawnta Armstrong, Kristen Armstrong-Matz, Robert Arndt, Andrew Arnesen, Alissa Arnold, Christopher Arnold, Denise Arnold, Jeffrey Arnold, Matthew Aro,
Francisco Arola-Coronas, Tina Aronson, Mukul Arora, Anne Arrazola, David Arsenault, Zainab Arshad, Ogun Arslan, Tom Arsovski, Robert Arthur, John Arzarian, Neil Asaoka, Greg Ascroft, Angela Aseltine, Shakil Asgharali,
Sameer Ashi, Paul Ashley, John Asselin, George Aster, Kenneth Astrein, Daniel Atilano, Thomas Atkins, Douglas Atkinson, Janet Attarian, Mark Attwood, David Au, James Aubuchon, Christopher Auffrey, Paul Augusten,
Franklin Aukeman, James Ausberger, Andrew Austin, John Austin, Patrick Austin, Morris Autry, William Awodey, Laura Ayers, Mark Ayers, Linda Aylward, Casey Babcock, Leo Babcock, April Bacchus, Molly Bachelor,
Heather Bacon, Larry Badler, Motunrayo Badru, Jae Do Bae, Jae Hyung Bae, Junghyun Bae, Patrick Baechle, Arthur Baer, Richard Baer, Omar Baghdadi, Ali Bahammam, Norsophia Bahar, Jill Bahm, Luay Bahoora, David
Bailey, Linda Bailey, Margaret Bailey, Nancy Bailey, Richard Bailey, Robert Bailey, Jeffrey Baily, Anthony Bair, Robert Bair, Elizabeth Baird, Charles Bajnai, Henry Baker, Henry Baker, Martha Baker, Christopher Bakkila, Robbie
Balan, Clifton Balch, Brian Baldwin, Bruce Baldwin, Donald Baldwin, Gary Baldwin, John Baldwin, Kourtney Baldwin, Michelle Baldwin, Peter Baldwin, Theodore Baldyga, Lisa Balian, Karen Ballor, Russell Baltimore, Robert
Banach, Terrence Banbury, Margaret Baniukiewicz, Kip Banks, Ryan Bannister, Maria Barahona Israel, John Baran, Mojdeh Baratloo, Richard Barber, Lawrence Barcroft, Jason Barish, Kevin Barker, Amanda Barker
Tremblay, Sewa Barmi, Rhonda Barnat, Gregory Barnell, Dane Barnes, Douglas Barnes, Janice Barnes, Susan Barnes, Karen Barney, Mark Barnikow, Barbara Barnow, Elizabeth Baron, Linda Baron, Vasilios Baros, Larry Barr,
Carol Barrett, James Barretta, John Barrie, Daniel Barry, Donald Barry, William Barsan, Aimee Barth, Richard Bartkowski, Jonathan Bartleson, Francis Bartlett, Japhy Bartlett, Keith Bartlett, Richard Bartley, Audra Bartley
Dye, Donna Bartolotti, Gregory Barton, Henry Bartosik, Roger Basmajian, Doris Bassett, Kenneth Bassett, Steven Bassett, Robert Basso, Aparajita Basu, Ashish Basu, Miranda Bateschell, Matthew Battin, Elizabeth Battison,
Dina Battisto, Linda Baudhuin, James Bauer, John Bauer, Jon Bauer, Robert Bauer, Donald Bauman, Neale Bauman, John Baumann, Corinne Bautista, Rasa Bauza, Vandana Baweja, Benjamin Baxt, Susan Baxt, Samuel
Bayne, Eric Beale, Alan Bean, Arthur Bean, James Bean, Lori Beard, Andrew Beaton, Robert Beatty, Terry Beaubois, Thomas Beaver, Nora Beck, Kimberly Becker, John Beckett, George Beckman, Anat Beck-Nachtigal,
Michael Bednar, James Beebe, Katherine Beebe, Reuben Beebe, Stanley Beebe, Lyle Beecher, Edward Beeler, John Beeson, Brian Begg, Ellen Beggs, Robert Begle, H. Jack Begrow, Victoria Behner, Mary Beierwaltes,
Andrew Beilfuss, Dennis Bekken, Roy Belco, Barbara Bell, David Bell, Howard Bell, Joshua Bell, Kevin Bell, Stanley Bell, Stephanie Bell, Anne Belleau-Mills, John Bencher, Dalila Bendali-Amor, Redha Bendali-Amor, Brooke
Benfield, Kevin Benham, Daryl Benish, Jose Benitez, Scott Benjamin, Karl Benkert, Mohamed Benkhedda, Michael Ben-Meir, Brett Bennett, David Bennett, James Bennett, Jeffrey Bennett, Sarah Bennett, Renita Benson,
Lisa Bentahar, Toufik Bentahar, Dennis Beougher, Beth Beranbaum, Roger Berent, Christine Berg, Jeremy Berg, Karl Berg, Andrew Bergang, Russ Berger, William Berger, Todd Berghorst, Donald Bergsma, Ralph Bergsma,
Jon Bergstrom, Adam Berkelhamer, Angela Berkelhamer, Marlene Berkoff, Alan Berkshire, Nancy Berla, Barbara Berlin, Joseph Berlinghieri, Daniel Berman, Lawrence Berman, Miguel Bermudez, Stephanie Bernadette,
Robert Bernard, Anne Bernardini, Aimee Bernard Shimasaki, Julie Berreth, Harry Berry, Jodee Berry, Matthew Berry, Richard Berry, James Bershof, Charles Bertram, Margaret Bessette, Suzanne Bessette, Rebecca Bessey,
Kevin Bessolo, Stephen Best, Jessica Betel, Hugo Beteta, Ronald Betts, Vassiliki Betts, Margit Beutel, Todd Beyerlein, Robert Beythan, Amit Bhargava, Nandini Bhaskara Rao, Kaninika Bhatnagar, Latika Bhide, Nehal Bhojak,
Anthony Bialecki, William Bialosky, Wayne Bickel, Emily Bidegain, Robert Bidlingmeyer, Melinda Bieber, Stephanie Bien, Matthew Bieszczat, Matthew Biglin, Richard Bilden, Thomas Bilich, Terrence Bills, Gordon Binder,
Bonita Bingham, Benya Binnun, Gordon Bird, Erica Birkmeier, William Birney, George Birrell, David Bisbee, David Bisbee, Nina Bisbee, Peter Bishin, Michael Bissonette, Sharnae Bivens, Robert Bjerre, Elmer Bjerregaard,
Lynn Bjorkman, David Black, Duncan Black, William Black, Timothy Blackburn, Norman Blackie, Charles Blacklock, Charles Blackmer, Kate Blacquiere, James Blain, Christopher Blair, James Blair, Leslie Blair, Ellen Blanch,
David Blanchard, Ryan Blanchard, Joseph Blanchfield, Kelli Blank, Michael Blankenburg, Phillip Blase, Max Blechman, Harry Blecker, Michael Blied, Samuel Blimling, Peter Blinn, Cynthia Block, Mark Blomquist, Lloyd Bloom,
Gayle Bloomingdale, Maureen Blossfeld, Stephen Bluestone, Ari Blumenthal, Jeffrey Boberg, Janis Bobrin, Mary Bockstahler, Daniel Bode, Kirk Bodick, Albert Bodinger, Andrew Bodley, David Bodley, Gerald Bodziak,
Alexander Boedy, Norman Boegner, Jake Boehm, Robert Boerema, Anne Boersma, Jennifer Boezwinkle, Ronald Boezwinkle, Xander Bogaerts, Carol Bogin, Matthew Bohde, Stanley Bohinc, Frederick Bohl, Kathleen Bohl,
Thaddeus Bohlen, Richard Bohn, Beth Boji-Kelly, Peter Boland, Daniel Bollman, Joseph Bologna, David Bolt, Bonnie Bona, Emily Bonato, Bruce Bond, Kathryn Bond, Richard Bond, Todd Bond, Wilson Bond, John Bongort,
Larry Bongort, Michael Bonick, Max Bonnefil, Paul Bonnette, Richard Bonneville, Angela Bookout, Richard Boone, Pantuda Boonlualohr, Pornchai Boonsom, Soontorn Boonyatikarn, Graham Booth, Harvey Booth, Byron
Bordt, Sherry Borener, C. Richard Borgeson, Mark Borgman, Michael Borgos, Richard Bories, Rodel Borja, Harold Borkin, Thomas Born, William Borner, Carol Borowski, Amy Borst, Mark Borys, Richard Bos, Shelley Boschan,
Timothy Bosma, Lauren Bostic, Lynette Boswell, Gary Bottomley, Katie Bouchard, Brion Boucher, Michael Bouey, Charles Boulard, Jeffrey Bouldin, William Bourassa, Gerald Bourdage, Sarah Bourgeois, Abigail Bourque,
David Bouwsma, Thomas Bowe, Bruce Bower, Jonathan Bowerman, James Bowers, Scott Bowers, Lawrence Bowman, Dorothy Bowne, W. Calvin Bowne, Kara Boyd, Walter Boyd, Nancy Boyer, Alison Boyles, Teddy Boys,
Laura Bozgo, Christopher Bozzelli, Frederick Brace, Thomas Brademas, Carl Bradley, Howard Bradsher-Fredrick, Brian Brady, Jennifer Brady, R. Holland Brady, Sarah Brady, Christy Bragunier, Jason Braidwood, Susan Brain,
Suzanne Braley, Sandra Brand, David Brandt, Zachary Branigan, William Branyan, Ruth Brashear, Mara Braspenninx, Charles Braun, Russell Braun, Ryan Brayak, Alexander Brebner, Robert Brecht, Wayne Bredvik, Michael
Brehmer, Stephen Breinling, Matthew Breisch, Jennifer Breitmoser, Donald Brennan, Chantelle Brewer, Gary Brewer, Floyd Brezavar, Thomas Bridgewater, Jonathan Brier, Holly Briggeman, Mark Briggs, Steven Brill, David
Brininstool, Frederick Brink, Lawrence Brink, Alexander Briseno, Andrew Brix, Robert Broad, Paul Brock, Brenda Brockett, Erika Brockman, Adrienne Brockwell, Robert Brodie, Charles Broecker, Jason Broene, Richard
Broene, Charles Broff, Catherine Broh, Jonathan Broh, Mark Bromley, Brita Brookes, James Brookman, Amy Brooks, Ann Brooks, Christopher Brooks, Rachel Brooks, Robert Brooks, William Brooks, George Brotherton, Ryan
Brouwer, Kenneth Brouwers, Daniel Brower, Kenneth Brower, Timothy Brower, Bryan Brown, C. Elizabeth Brown, Connie Brown, Daniel Brown, David Brown, Gary Brown, Gina Brown, James Brown, James Brown, Jeffrey
Brown, Joshua Brown, Kami Brown, Keith Brown, Larry Brown, Lawrence Brown, Mark Brown, Melissa Brown, Patricia Brown, Rhonda Brown, Richard Brown, Robert Brown, Thomas Brown, Walter Brown, Kenneth
Browne, Cheryl Brownell, Bruce Browning, Pamela Brubaker, Andrea Bruce, Dayna Bruce, Gary Bruder, Robert Bruehl, Shawn Bruins, Cecil Brumley, Paul Brummund, Christian Brun, Marion Brundage, Michael Bruner,
Gordon Brunner, William Brunner, Wynell Brush, Christopher Bryant, Dale Bryant, Vernon Bryant, Wilson Bryce, Patrick Bryck, R. James Bryden, Trevor Brydon, Kevin Bryon, Jennifer Brzezinski, Brian Buchalski, Edward
Buchanan, Dutch Buchele, Kathleen Buck, William Buckhannan, Sarah Buckley, Ann Buckman, Vanderbilt Buckner, Mark Buday, James Budd, Helene Buell, Richard Buell, Darin Bufkin, Owen Bugnaski, Gordon Buitendorp,
Michael Buitendorp, John Bulick, Mark Bulmash, Jon Bulthuis, Steven Bulthuis, Bradley Bunce, Arnold Bunkley, William Bunting, Dana Buntrock, Melissa Burchett, Juliet Burdelski, Jeffrey Burdick, Norman Burdick, Barbara
Bures-Barnes, John Burgess, John Burhenn, Barney Burke, Daniel Burke, Jenifer Burke, Mary Burke, Shannon Burke, Sharon Burke-Polana, Michael Burns, Tamara Burns, Thomas Burns, William Burris, Robert Burroughs,
Kristen Burton, Joseph Burzinski, David Bus, George Busby, William Busch, Zeke Busch, Dennis Bush, Kenneth Bush, Robert Bush, Christopher Bushell, Alice Bushong, Scott Busse, Brijesh Butala, Jenny Butler, Susan Butler,
William Buursma, Victor Buzard, Paul Bykowski, David Byl, D. Angeline Bynum, Michael Byrd, Donald Byrer, Erin Byrne, Lynne Byrne, Kelly Byrnes, Mariano Cadiz, Medardo Cadiz, Beth Cady, Kathleen Cady, Sidney Cady,
Darsie Cahall, Stacy Cahill, Hongyi Cai, Wang Cai, Caitlin Cain, Richard Cain, Robert Cain, Deidre Calarco, J. Paul Calderon, David Calef, Carolou Calissi, Richard Callinan, Frank Callis, Douglas Calo, Gabriela Camarillo, Bradley
Cambridge, Robert Cameron, Theresa Cameron, Beth Camilleri-Cowie, Douglas Campbell, Emily Campbell, Malcolm Campbell, Mary Campbell, Michael Campbell, Paul Campbell, Regina Ann Campbell, Ronald Campbell, Scot
Campbell, Scot Campbell, William Campbell, Nancy Canestaro, Richard Canfield, Anselmo Canfora, Gary Canner, Brendan Canning, Hope Canning, Michael Cannizzo, Sean Cannon, Christina Capili, James Caple, Diane
Carbone, Samuel Carbone, Frederick Carcich, Timothy Card, Victor Cardona, Charles Care, Frank Carenza, Lance Carlile, Brie Carlson, Cynthia Carlson, Dennis Carlson, George Carlson, Suzanne Carlson, Timothy Carlson,
Matthew Carlton, Samantha Carlton, Bruce Carmichael, Brian Carney, Ann Carpenter, David Carpenter, Matthew Carpenter, Tobey Carpenter, Mark Carrabbio, Gordon Carrier, Robert Carrigan, Gene Carroll, Jerri Carroll, Kevin
Carroll, Robert Carroll, Holly Carson, Daryl Carter, Kevin Carter, William Carter, Emanuel Cartsonis, Wendy Carty-Saxon, Timothy Casai, Lauren Casanova, Jazmin Casas, Alfredo Casati, Randy Case, Betty Casey, Julie Cash,
Pietro Cassinadri, Robert Cassway, Andrew Castelli, Christopher Castle, Mary Catalano, Paul Cathcart, Ray Cato, Daniel Caudy, Esperanza Cayco, Patrick Cayen, Robert Celmer, Peter Celovsky, Juan Carlos Cervantes, Judson
Cervenak, Raymond Ceton, Asli Cevikce, Volodymyr Chaban, Cynthia Chaconas, Mark Chadwick, Richard Chadwick, James Chaffers, Mohammad Chaichian, Angkana Chairatananon, Yingsawad Chaiyakul, Jeffrey Chamberlain,
Brian Chambers, David Chamness, Robert Champagne, Don Champney, Alexander Chan, Elsa Chan, Godfrey Chan, Joon-Yi Chan, Kirby Chan, Raymond Chan, Robert Chan, Robert Chan, Serlene Chan, Simon Chan, Siu Kee
Chan, Sophia Chan, Wan-Ming Chan, Wattie Chan, Robert Chance, Avery Chandler, Irene Chandler, Arthur Chang, Candice Chang, Chi-Sey Chang, Grace Chang, Hsun-Yao Chang, Huey-Ru Chang, Jae Chang, Ji-Wook Chang,
Joseph Chang, Jui-Pin Chang, Martin Chang, Nai-Ying Chang, Yuchang Chang, Satanan Chanowanna, Rattawut Chansritrakul, Santi Chantavilasvong, Ya-Lin Chao, Frederick Chapla, Donald Chapman, Wyatt Chapman, James
Chaput, Danielle Char, Maurice Charbonneau, Julianne Chard, Nan Ruth Chardoul, John Charles, Edward Chase, Nicholas Chatas, Sanyogita Chavan, Drew Chavinson, Jacqueline Chavis, Abraham Chayes, Dahlia Chazan,
Ann Chen, Chao-Ying Chen, Chinshui Chen, Eh Chen, Eric Chen, Guan-Ren Chen, Hui-Cheng Chen, Hung-Wei Chen, I-Ming Chen, Ing-Tse Chen, Jo-Ching Chen, Lawrence Chen, Li-Wei Chen, Pei-Yu Chen, Peter Chen, Peter
Chen, SenTai Chen, Viviane Chen, Wei-Chi Chen, Yeong-Fuh Chen, Ying-Huei Chen, Yuh-Mei Chen, Chih-Yuan Cheng, Francis Cheng, Hung-Ming Cheng, Renee Cheng, Kai Cheong, Matthew Cherry, Devon Chester, Jr-Gang
Chi, Kavin Chiamudom, Ghassan Chibli, David Chicoine, Michelle Chien, Raymond Chien, Robert Chihade, Monty Childs, William Childs, Donald Chin, Jonathan Chin, Onwadee Chindaladdha, Li Min Ching, Julie Chinn, Cady
Chintis, Thana Chirapiwat, Chih-Yung Chiu, Henry Chiu, Emily Chmielewski, Chang-Yeon Cho, Christine Cho, Eun Joo Cho, Jong Cho, Mi-Sung Cho, Moon Cho, So Cho, Su-Shien Cho, Yong-Joon Cho, Yong Joon Cho, Youngin
Cho, Bernard Choden, Theresa Choe, Ahyeon Choi, Cheong Choi, Hackjong Choi, Hyeon Choi, Ronald Choi, Seokwoo Choi, Stephen Chong, Wooi-Cheng Choong, Kai Chou, Lulu Chou, Wei Chou, Ruchi Choudhary, Joanne Chow,
Ken Chow, Kenneth Chow, Michael Chow, Nancy Chow, Pamela Chow, Raymond Chow, Sau-Ling Chow, Sandra Choy, John Christensen, Christopher Christian, Amanda Christianson, Daniel Christiansen, Mary Christie, Teresa
Christman-Boyd, Mark Christopher, Leigh Christy, Alexander Chu, Leigh Chu, Virginia Chu, Seeyuen Chuang, Eai Chul Chun, Eugene Chun, Do Chung, Dong-Ha Chung, Eun Ee Chung, Harvey Chung, Jack Chung, Jae Chung,
Jae Chung, Sheng-Young Chung, Taeyong Chung, Yueh-Chih Chung, Egsak Chungpanich, Laura Church, Linda Ciaccia, Gina Cicero, Benjamin Cien, Todd Ciesielski, Ela Cil, Todd Cirillo, Christopher Clancy, Adam Clark, E. Terry
Clark, Gerald Clark, Jeffrey Clark, Jeffrey Clark, Kathy Clark, Michael Clark, Robert Clark, Robert Clark, Tarenia Clark, Catherine Clarke, Michael Clarke, Thomas Clarke, Shelley Clark-Glidewell, R. Curtis Clauser, Caleb Clauset,
Gregory Claxton, Carisa Clay, Patrick Cleary, Robert Cliffe, Constance Clifton, John Cline, Robert Cline, Christopher Clinton, Kathleen Clippert, Denise Close, James Clough, Adam Clous, Megan Clous, Andrew Cocagne, Frank
Cochran, John Cochran, Michael Cogley, Alan Cohen, Dale Cohen, Marc Cohen, Maurice Cohen, Rachel Cohen, Sara Cohen, Stephen Cohen, Uriel Cohen, Harvey Cohn, Julian Cohn, Robert Cohon, Alma Coindreau, Donald
Cok, James Colbert, Zelman Colbert, Kathryn Colburn, Amy Cole, Charles Cole, John Cole, Robert Cole, Roddie Cole, Stanley Cole, Adam Coles, Katherine Collier, Brian Collins, Demetria Collins, Malcolm Collins, Robert Collins,
James Colson, John Comazzi, Robert Comet, Mary Ellen Comisso, Steven Comisso, Mindala Commins, Benjamin Compton, John Compton, Joseph Compton, Jessica Conaway, Cynthia Conklin, Beth Conley, John Conley,
Nathan Conn, David Connally, Elsie Connell, Ryan Connell, A.J. Conner, Brian Conner, Megan Conner, Charles Connerly, Hyatt Connors, Barbara Conrey, Brett Conway, Brian Conway, Kevin Conway, Charles Cook, Gary Cook,
Gary Cook, Peter Cook, Richard Cook, Steven Cook, William Cook, Suzanne Cooke, Patrick Cooleybeck, Louis Coon, Timothy Coon, James Cooper, Lindsay Cooper, Sunny Cooper, Erika Cooper-Phillips, James Cope, Kyra
Copeland, Dawn Copley, Elizabeth Copley, Christine Coppolino, Rex Copsey, Howard Corbin, Kimberly Corbin, Michael Corby, Carl Cornilsen, Ramon Corpuz, Paul Corrado, Charles Correa, Nondita Correa-Mehrotra, Andres
Cortes, Anne Cosgrove, Donald Cosgrove, Jon Cosner, Derek Coss, John Costa, James Costlow, Duane Cote, Amy Cotter, Gerald Couch, Amy Courage, Amy Courtright, Gerald Coutant, Christopher Coutts, Paul Couture, George
Covalle, Jason Covalle, Christopher Covault, Nicholas Cowan, C. Robert Cowell, Anne Cox, Elaine Cox, John Cox, Michele Coyer, Brian Craig, Christopher Craig, Richard Craig, Lewis Craine, J. Sterling Crandall, Thomas
Crandell, Jonathan Crane, David Craven, George Craven, Carrie Crawford, W. Dickson Crawford, Michael Creaser, Ronald Creswell, James Cripps, Leslie Cripps, Andrew Crisan, Sharon Crispin, Catherine Crist, Laura
Cronenwett, Dinella Crosby, Melvin Cross, John Crouse, Erin Crowe, Anne Crowley, Kevin Crowley, Stacey Crowley, Kenneth Crutcher, James Cruthis, Donald Cuatt, Karen Cuff, Carla Culbertson, Jan Culbertson, Jeffrey Culp,
Harold Cunningham, Kenneth Cunningham, Charles Cunov, Tyson Curcio, Timothy Currey, David Currie, Michail Curro, Nancy Cutler, Robert Cutler, Nancy Cutter, Danielle Cuyuch, Karol Czyrka, Michael Czyrka, Surabhi Dabir,
Rebecca Daczka, Wassef Dagher, Sisia Daglian, Darin Daguanno, David Daining, Jonathan Dale, Lynne Dale, Christine D’Alecy, Richard Dalessandro, Michael Dalezman, Jonathan Dalin, Nielsen Dalley, Donald Dalponte, Peter
Dalva, Lyle Daly, Matthew Dalzell, Histas Damania, Alison D’Amico, Jill D’Amico-Brandt, Susan Damone, Pamela Danckaert, Thomas Danckaert, Hemalata Dandekar, Nadine Danenberg, Tuyet Dang, Brie Daniel, Philip
D’Anieri, Gideon Danilowitz, Paul Danna, Paul Dannels, Sarawut Danudomkij, Douglas Danzig, Paul Darling, Richard Darr, Robert Darr, Craig Datema, Joseph Datema, Robert Datson, Elke Daugherty, Frank Davenport, Robert
Daverman, Juan David, Mojahid David, Neal David, Elijah Davidian, John Davids, Arthur Davis, Bradford Davis, Christopher Davis, Clark Davis, Dominique Davis, Florence Davis, George Davis, Howard Davis, Jeanetta Davis,
Jonathan Davis, Karen Davis, Marian Davis, Marjorie Davis, Mark Davis, Mary Davis, Philip Davis, Robert Davis, Ryan Davis, S.B. Davis, Theodore Davis, Timothy Davis, Cariann Davitt, Frederick Dawe, Jeffrey Dawkins, John
Dawson, Kevin Day, Donna Daykin, Carlos De La Parra, Jessica De Wit, Christian Dean, Daryl Dean, Kristen Dean, Heidi Deaver, Mary DeBacker, James DeBard, Tristan Debarros, Kent DeBoer, Richard DeBoer, Jack DeBruin,
Corinne Debski, Maria DeCasalduc, Kenneth DeCorte, Keirsten Deegan, Dwane Deem, Andrew Deer, Drew Deering, A. DeEulio, Diane DeForest, Laura De Fouw, Sean Degen, Theodore Degenhardt, John DeGraaf, Kimberly
DeGraaf, Peter Deininger, Christiane deJong, Jacob DeJong, Dana Dejonge, Heather DeKorte, Scott DeKorte, Dean DeKryger, Nathaniel Delafield, Everett DeLano, Eric DeLaRosa, James Delcamp, Jacob DeLeeuw, Jeremy
DeLeon, Lily DeLeon, Elizabeth Delgado, Francesco Della Sala, Russel Delombard, Dawn Delong, Elizabeth Delong, Ellen Delonis, Wesley Delprete, Francisco Del Toro, Kirk Delzer, Lisa Demankowski, William Demiene, Louis
Deming, Michael Dempsey, Debra Demski, Anne Denes, Elaine Dennehy, Elisa Dennis, James Dennis, Leigha Dennis, Daniel Dennison, Joseph Dennison, Mervat Denno, John Dent, Annette Dentel, J. Deputy, Donald
Derezinski, Earl Derienzo, Randall Derifield, Carol Derks, James Derks, Elisabeth DeRonne, Kenneth Derr, Gautam Desai, Kartik Desai, Floyd DeShane, Lisa DeShano, Randal Deshazo, Gary Desmond, Marsha Desormeaux,
Carrie Dessertine, Kim DeStigter, Paul Detke, Robert Detman, Carolyn Dettmer, Janet Detwiler, Piyalada Devakula, Thomas Devanney, Marjorie Devereux, Alain Devergie, Michael Devine, Gary DeVleer, Lee Devore, Darryl
DeVries, Mary Devries, Nicolaas DeVries, Robert DeVries, George Dewell, Jill Dewey, Marvin DeWinter, Samuel Deyo, Sanjay Dhar, Ami Dhruva, Enrique Diaz, Patrick DiBartolomeo, Anson Dible, Frederick Dice, David Dickens,
Lewis Dickens, Geoffrey Dickinson, Paul Dickinson, Jonathan Dickson, William Diefenbach, Nathaniel Diego, H. Scott Diels, Jeffrey Diemer, Jacqueline Diesing, Kerry Dietz, Leo DiGiulio, Glenn Dik, Porter Dillard, Thomas
Dillenbeck, Anna DiMambro, Carol Dimitroff, Robert Dincecco, John Dingens, Austin Dingwall, Sinh Dinh, Christiaan Dinkeloo, Derek Dinkeloo, Keely Dinse, Zaire Dinzey Flores, Peter Diune, Manuel Divino, Gary Dixner, Glorias
Dixon, Kenneth Dixon, Russell Dixon, Theodore Dixon, Catherine Dizillo, Mduduzi Dlamini, Andrew Doane, Lawrence Doane, Louis Dobday, Guy Dobies, Kathryn Dobija, Christopher Dobosz, Thomas Dobson, William Dobson,
Lisa Docter, Kirk Dodge, Timothy Dodson, David Doezema, Daisuke Doi, Yma Doitteau-Cofresi, Michael Dolecki, Beverly Dolson, David Dombroski, Paul Dombrowski, James Dome, Melissa Dominiak, Paul Domino, Clifford
Domke, Courtney Donahue, William Donakowski, Gary Donaldson, Roger Donaldson, George Dondero, Steven Donoghue, Ron Donohue, Jeremiah Doornbos, Robert Doornbos, A. Samuel Dorchen, Dragan Dordeski, Darci
Dore, Eric Doucette, Brian Dougherty, John Dougherty, Russell Douglas, Steven Douglas, David Dow, Thomas Dowds, Michael Downes, Scott Downie, Eric Downing, Dennis Doxtater, Daniel Doyle, Kevin Doyle, Kathleen Doyle
Haapala, Philip Doza, Richard Dozier, Edwin Drabkowski, Richard Drake, Patience Drake-Rosenbaum, Kevin Draper, Richard Draxler, Paul Drayer, Kelly Dreger, Agnieszka Drelich, Michelle Dresden, Kimberly Dresdner, Tammy
Drezner, Bree Dribbon, Elaine Driker, David Driscoll, Stanley Driskell, Richard Drnevich, Christopher Drobney, Craig Droz, Diane Drutowski, Dennis Dryer, Arthur Dubin, William DuBose, James Dudzinski, Ronald Due, Donald
Duff, Kathleen Duffy, Melina Duggal, Pankaj Duggal, Martin Duggan, Jacob Dugopolski, Lynda Duke, Nicholas Dunaske, Brian Dunbar, Joan Duncan, Brooks Dunn, Suzanne Dunn, David Dunneback, M. Kate Dunworth, Denise
Dupree, Angela Duquette, Andrew Duran, Thomas Duranceau, Earl Durand, Jennifer Durham, Joyce Durham, Nicholas Durrie, Constance Durst, Daniel Dworsky, David Dye, John Dye, Michael Dyke, Bryan Dykema, Peter
Dykema, Peter Dykema, John Dyksterhouse, Brent Dykstra, Gregory Dykstra, Gary Dysert, Thomas Dzon, Christopher Eamon, Tara Earnest, Orus Eash, Shannon Easter, Thomas Eaton, Marcel Eberle, Claire Eberwein, Kevin
Ebner, Yumna Ebrahim, Andrew Eckert, Jeffery Eckert, Jack Edelstein, Myrna Edgar, Donald Edge, Thomas Edge, Ronald Edgerton, Beryl Edwards, Bruce Edwards, David Edwards, Jonathan Eggert, Ina Egnater, Mark Ehgotz,
Daniel Ehmann, Dale Ehresman, Scott Ehrhardt, Barbara Eichmuller, James Eichstedt, Mark Eidelson, Ingrid Eidnes, Kenneth Eilers, Buthayna Eilouti, Eric Einhorn, Rosemarie Eisenberg, Beth Eisenfeld, John Eisenhart, Jessica
Eisenman, Nicole Eisenmann, Mark Ejnes, Ildze Ejups, Kamran Elahi-Shirazi, Michelle Elder, Steven Eldersveld, Azza Eleishe, Mohamad El-Fassih, David Elisberg, Daniel Elkins, James Elkins, Christina Eller, William Eller, Bristol
Ellington, David Ellinwood, Bruce Elliott, Lisa Elliott, Howard Ellman, Ronald Ellman, Moshira El-Rafey, Rawia Elsadek, Samir El Sadek, Nagla Elsayed, Gamal Elzoghby, Bryan El-Zoghby, Perrin Emanuel, Guy Emberton, Samir
Emdanat, Kyle Emery, Lauren Emes, Martin DePorres Emmanuel, George Emmert, Daniel Emperor, Tyler Emrick, Anton Endres, R. Dean Enell, Gim Eng, Lynne Engelskirchen, Lynn Engle, Mark English, Martin Engstrom, Scott
Engstrom, Rebecca Enyia, Cynthia Enzer, Richard Eppy, David Epstein, Gary Epstein, Joel Epstein, Kadriye Erkul, Deanna Erkut, Robert Erman, Michael Ernemann, David Ernst, Robert Erskine, Phil Eschtruth, Carlos Espinosa,
Julio Espinosamanriquez, Judith Essenson, John Esterline, Jeffrey Etelamaki, Michael Ethridge, Alison Ettel, John Eugenides, Roy Euker, Darden Eure, Fred Eurich, Kurt Evans, Timothy Evans, Susan Everett, John Exell, Caroline
Eyo, E. Edet N. Eyo, Jennifer Ezrow, Jackson Faber, Amy Fadler, Sven Fagerstrom, Jonathan Fahling, Abdelaziz Fahmy, Sharon Faier, Thomas Fair, Elizabeth Fairbanks, Karen Fairbanks, Ryan Faist, Gary Faitler, Daniar Fajans,
Robert Fajardo, W. McCabe Fake, Mark Falanga, Sandy Fales, Norman Falk, Kathryn Fallat, Clarence Falstad, Douglas Falzon, Jeffrey Falzon, Michael Fanshel, Ali Faramawy, Diana Farina-Borlase, Deborah Faris, Yousif Farjo,
Dale Farland, John Farley, June Farnham, Claude Faro, Douglas Farr, Robert Farr, William Farrand, David Farrell, Lee Farren, Kenneth Faulkner, Sue Faust, Jerry Fawcett, Harley Faxon, Jason Federbush, Elizabeth Fedesna,
Alexander Fedirko, Mark Fedorowicz, Michele Fedorowicz, Thomas Fegan, Joel Feigenbaum, Bradley Feinberg, Joseph Feirer, Jacob Feit, Suzanne Fejes, Curtis Felch, Dallas Felder, Mary Felgenhauer, Barbara Felix, David
Fellers, Michael Fellows, Robert Fenderson, Jin Feng, Michael Feng, Brian Fenlon, Paul Fenner, Peter Fenner, Peter Fergin, Bronwen Ferguson, David Ferguson, Justin Ferguson, Kelly Ferguson, Robert Ferguson, Neville
Fernandes, Christin Fernandez, Jonathan Ferrari, Gene Ferrell, Brian Ferriby, Dennis Ferris, Matthew Fettig, James Fidler, James Fiedorek, Kenneth Field, Michael Field, Jodie Fielding, Robert Fierro, Frances Figg, Mohamed
Fikry, Joseph Filip, Kristin Filipi, Michele Filipiak, Keith Fineberg, Morris Finisy, David Fink, Mary Fink, Amy Finlayson, Donald Finlayson, Dawn Finley, Nathaniel Finley, Shannon Finley, Justin Finnicum, Fabiano Fiocca, Robert F
Thomas Fitzpatrick, Thomas Fitzsimmons, Paul Fitzsimons, Rosie Fivian, Marvin Flam, Tara Flaningam, Carrie Flaspohler, David Flaspohler, Mark Fleckenstein, Brian Fleer, Gary Fleischauer, Angela Fleming, John Fleming, Willia
Fong, Joshua Fonger, Thomas Foos, G.H. Forbes, Peter Forbes, Tesia Forbes-Hogle, Daniel Ford, Gisele Ford, Janet Ford, Kent Ford, Robin Ford, Stephen Foren, Cheryl Forgacs, Michael Forgacs, Daniel Forgensi, James Fors
Foussianes, Anthony Foust, Lonnie Fouty, A. Daniel Fowler, Bonnie Fox, James Fox, Jerrold Fox, Kathy Fox, Nancy Fox, Sara Fox, Frank Fraga, Robert Fraley, Luigi Franceschina, John Francey, Andrea Frank, Larry Frank, Richard
Jennifer Frey, Robert Frey, Laurie Frey Borer, Steven Fridsma, Daniel Friedman, Jack Friedman, J. Lawrence Friedman, Donald Fritz, William Fritz, Marina Fromm, James Frost, M. Alan Frost, Richard Fry, Ken Fryar, George Fu, G
Gaffney, James Gaffney, Osnat Gafni, Ronald Gagliardi, David Gagnon, Cassie Gaines, Jeffrey Gaines, Shital Galani, Louisa Galassini, Michael Gale, Sonja Gale, Donald Gallagher, Frederick Gallagher, Michael Gallagher, Leslie
Gargarello, Charles Garner, Edward Garnett, Denis Garriepy, Gerald Garrison, Denise Garthwaite, Andrew Gaspard, Craig Gates, Roger Gaudette, DeVeaux Gauger, William Gauger, Aimee Gauthier, Michael Gaviglio, C. Dino G
Robert Genova, David Genson, Kurt Gensterblum, Richard Genthe, Elizabeth George, Mark George, Nicholas Georgiou, Brent Gephart, Joseph Gerak, Gary Gerber, Stoyan Gerganoff, Robert Gerometta, Steven Gerrard, Christ
Gibbs, Ryan Giblin, James Gibson, Kris Gifford, Peter Gikas, Meghna Gilani, Gary Gilbar, Christina Gilbert, James Gilbert, James Gilbert, Michael Gilfilen, Brian Gill, Constance Gill, Terry Gill, Susan Gilleran, John Gillespie, Tyro
Daniel Glasson, Louis Glazer, Thomas Glendening, Michael Glick, Matthew Glover, Benjamin Glowiak, Robert Gloyeske, Steven Gloyeske, James Glueck, Peter Gmiter, Jason Gnich, Teresa Go, Rebecca Gobeille, Zeynep Gocm
Goldman, Pamela Goldman, Donald Goldsmith, Aviva Goldstein, Betty Golomb, Khaled Gomaa, Alexander Gomoll, Ricardo Gonzalez-Casanova, Donald Goo, Kenneth Good, David Goodale, Pamela Goodman, Anne Goodrich, Sc
Gore, Melissa Goris, Chelsea Gorkiewicz, Jay Gorman, Thomas Gormley, Frederick Gorree, Alan Goschka, Todd Goss, Abbey Gothard, Jonathan Gotianse, Jill Gotthelf, Katie Gottschall, Michael Gouda, Martin Gougeon, Richa
Grant, Stephanie Grant-Miller, Amy Graves, Colleen Graves, Jonathan Graves, Larry Graves, Arthur Gray, Donald Gray, James Gray, Jeffrey Gray, Lyn Graziani, Robert Greager, Joseph Greco, Charles Green, David Green, Eller
Gretkierewicz, Mandeep Grewal, Genevieve Griffin, Timothy Griffin, Carl Griffiths, Jeff Grill, Joseph Grillo, Laurie Grimmelsman, William Grindatti, Donald Griner, David Grinnell, Alan Grinsfelder, James Grisolano, Benjamin Gr
Guenther, Robin Guenther, Terry Guitar, Niels Guldager, Christopher Gulock, Howard Gunderson, Yasemin Guney, Thomas Gunn, Michael Gunter, Janelle Gunther, Mahesh Gupta, Sadhna Gupta, Michael Gurchak, Sally Guregia
Hackley, Ziad Haddad, Peter Haddix, Stacie Hadeed, Hadjira Hadjeres, Karen Hadsall, Joseph Haezebrouck, Lynn Haffey, Anneke Hagen, Russell Hagen, Beth Hagenlocker, Daniel Hagerman, Patrick Hagerty, Sima Haghpassan
Hall, Jason Hall, Michael Hall, Robert Hall, R. John Hallberg, Joyce Ham, Pilsun Ham, Norman Hamann, Norman Hamann, Christopher Hamilton, Craig Hamilton, David Hamilton, Jeffrey Hamilton, Karen Hamilton, R. Lennon Ham
Chris Hanlin, Douglas Hanna, Marsha Hanna, David Hanoute, Bjorn Hansen, Dennis Hansen, Eric Hansen, Lynne Hansen, Rechelle Hansknecht, Gregory Hanson, William Hanson, Jeffrey Hanthorn, Katarina Hapsari, Garrett
Harlston, John Harmala, Andrew Harmon, Ann-Marie Harmon, Daniel Harmon, Jennifer Harmon, John Haro, Lesley Harper, Anthony Harrington, Brian Harrington, Edwin Harrington, Anthony Harris, Clinton Harris, Ellen Harris
William Hartman, Paul Hartmann, David Hartt, Donald Hartwick, Christopher Hartz, Eric Hartz, Lois Hartz, Patrick Harvey, Stanford Harvey, William Harvey, Paul Haselhuhn, Mary Hasell, Matthew Haseltine, Erfan Hashem, Mou
Gregg Hauser, Kathryn Hauserman, Robert Hausler, Jeffrey Hausman, Samuel Havis, David Hawkins, Donald Hawley, John Haymaker, Frances Hays, Cynthia Hayward-Pleitner, Felipe Hazard, Jeffrey Hazekamp, Paul Hazelton, D
Thomas Held, Helen, Christine Helgesen, Carl Heller, Julius Heller, Earl Hemmeke, Douglas Henderson, Janice Henderson, Thomas Hendricks, Einar Hendrickson, Peter Hendrickson, Richard Henes, James Henley, Mark Hen
Herrerias, Kevin Herrick, Shelley Herrington, George Herrity, Julia Herschelman, Steven Herzberg, Barbara Hess, Leonard Hess, Richard Hess, Brock Hesselsweet, James Hestand, J. Scott Hester, Andrew Hetletvedt, James
Hicks, Hans Hiedemann, Robert Hieger, Margaret Higdon, Helen Higgins, Emily Hikade, John Hilberry, Ann Hildebrandt, Grant Hildebrand, Priscilla Hildebrandt, Daniel Hill, Dean Hill, Jack Hill, James Hill, Makita Hill, Rita Hill, Tim
Hirons, Oliver Hirt, Sonia Hirt, Bernard Ho, Yun Ho, Joseph Hoadley, Jeffrey Hoag, Karl Hoalst, David Hobbs, William Hobbs, Michele Hoben, Joseph Hochendoner, Maria Hochendoner, Colman Hochman, Stephen Hocquard,
Hoffman, Saul Hoffman, Michael Hofmann, Sumaya Hoggard, Troy Hoggard, Kristen Hogue, Jacqueline Hoist, Lynn Holevinski, Anne Holic, Cecil Holland, Kevin Holland, Sherman Hollander, Steven Hollar, William Hollenkamp, S
George Hong, Jason Hong, Kwang-Keun Hong, Qiang Hong, Kristin Hoogenboom, Kenneth Hooker, Kim Hooker, Edward Hoover, Andrew Hope, Ralph Hope, Eugene Hopkins, John Hopkins, Wayde Hoppe, Jonathan Hopwood, C
Howard, Derek Howard, Irene Howard, Jon Howder, Alan Howe, Thomas Howe, Llewellyn Howell, Donald Howick, Lewis Howie, Trevor Howie, George Howlett, Carl Hribar, Jodie Hruby, Sun- Hsiao, Tony Hsiao, Guanyao Hsieh
Hudson, Nicholas Hudyma, Karl Huebner, Wayne Huebner, Jenifer Huestis, Carl Hueter, Victoria Hueter, Amy Huff, Marcus Huff, George Hug, Michael Hug, Eric Hugger, Gordon Hughes, Mark Hughes, Laurie Hughet, Samuel
Yu-Cheng Hung, Yuh-Hwa Hung, Van Hunsberger, Gregory Hunt, Michael Hunt, Roger Hunt, Chang-Sheng Huo, Scott Hurley, Sarah Huskins, Ahmad Hussain, Gary Hussar, Christopher Hussey, Attila Huth, Annie Hwang, Calvin H
Im, Yujun Im, Marlene Imirzian, Mehlika Inanici, Dustin Infante, Man Ing, Michelle Ingalls, Paul Ingman, Dennis Ingram, James Inloes, Nancy Innes, Minoru Inouye, Therasuk Intaraprasong, George Intsiful, Debra Inwald, Jona
Calvin Jackson, Ed Jackson, Elizabeth Jackson, John Jackson, Kevin Jackson, Shaun Jackson, Wallace Jackson, Leslie Jackson-Carroll, Daniel Jacobs, Michael Jacobs, Michael Jacobs, Randall Jacobs, Steven Jacobs, St
William James, Gregory Jancarik, Keith Janda, Heonju Jang, Jinwoo Jang, Min Jang, Sanjay Jani, Stephen Janick, Amber Janssen, Erik Jansson, Wesley Janz, Christian Jardis, David Jarl, William Jarratt, William Jarratt, Jam
Jenkins, Patricia Jenkins, Nancy Jenkins-Frye, Douglas Jennings, Curtis Jensch, Dennis Jensen, Diane Jensen, Gary Jensen, Herbert Jensen, James Jensen, Jin Auh Jeon, Sih-Young Jeon, Dokyoon Jeong, Euiseok Jeong, B
Joe, Lars Johansson, Barry Johns, Richard Johns, Anne Johnson, Charles Johnson, Clarence Johnson, Daniel Johnson, David Johnson, David Johnson,
David
Johnson,
Denis
Joh
Johnson, Robert Johnson, Robin Johnson, Ronald Johnson, Scott Johnson, Seth Johnson, Sharon Johnson, Susan Johnson, Theodore Johnson, Tiffany
Johnson,
Valerie
Jones, Gregory Jones, Hinton Jones, James Jones, Jennifer Jones, Jocelyn Jones, Joe Jones, Kevin Jones, Louise Jones, Patrick Jones, Phillip
Jones, Raymond
Sharon Jordan, Tawkiyah Jordan, Carlos Jorge, Lee Jorgensen, Andrew Jose, James Josef, Robin Joseph, Steven Joseph, Richard Josephson,
Bakul
Joshi,
Judge, Jay Juergensen, Lloyd Jukkola, Stephanie Julien, Henry Jung, Namji Jung, Sung Kwon Jung, Sunghoon Jung, Brian Junge, Marta
Kabalin,
Jeffrey Kahan, Joseph Kahn, Julius Kahn, Dean Kahremanis, Duraiswamy Kailasam, Andrew Kainass, Basel Kais, Kenneth Kaji, Jerome
Kalisz,
Kalt, Jeanne Kalteissen, Nancy Kalter, Barry Kamel, Edgard Kamel, Ervin Kamp, Martin Kamph, Kevin Kamradt, Serene Kanaan, Leila Kanar,
Patrick
Kang, Ju Kang, Miyun Kang, SeonWoo Kang, Louise Kao, Shan-Cheng Kao, Robert Kapala, Jason Kaplan, Jo-Anne Kaplan, Karen
Kaplan,
Karczewski, Michael Kareti, Brooke Karius, Warren Kark, Kenneth Karkau, David Karle, Gregory Karmazin, Carolynn Karp, Howard
Kasman, Mark Kastner, Johanna Kasubowski,Theodore Katz, Catherine Kaufman, Martin Kaufman, John Kavanagh, Reza Kavoussi,
Thaddeus Kazmer, Jennifer Kearney, Valerie Keartes, Karen Keating, Daniel Kebede, John Keelean, Laurel Keene-Bermudez, Janet
Kelly, Dennis Kelly, Donald Kelly, Edward Kelly, J. Claibourne Kelly, Keith Kelly, Lisa Raskin Kelly, Michael Kelso, Nicole Kemeny, Carl
Kemp, Dale
Terri Kennedy, Daniel Kennelly, Robert Ken-Po Yeh, Michael Kent, Richard Kent, Steven Kent, Ann Kenyon, Leslie Kenyon, Joshua
K e o u g h ,
Keslacy, Beth Kessler, Mitchell Ketai, Matthew Ketchum, Bruce Keuneke, Sunchai Keuysuvan, Glenn Keyes, David Keyser, Diana
Khadr,
Meghna
Jung Kil, Shannon Kile, James Kilgore, Louis Kilgore, Ed Killingsworth, Jeffrey Kilmer, Anne Kilponen, Benjamin Kim, Byungsoo Kim, Dong-Jin
Kim, Duk Kim, DukHyung Il Kim, Il-Kyu Kim, Jeannie Kim, Jeong Kim, Je-Uk Kim, Jihun Kim, Jin Kim, Jin Kim, Jong-Ho Kim, Joochul Kim, Joon-young Kim, Joongsub
Kim, Joong Kim,
Kim, Soyoung Kim, Stephen Kim, Sue Kim, Sung-Jung Kim, Sung Ryong Kim, Sunghoon Kim, Tarin Kim, Uk Kim, Yangsung Kim, Youn Kim, Young Jin
Kim, Yujin Kim, David
Kimura, Robert Kindig, Scott Kindra, Barbara Kinek, Cathryn King, Dennis King, Isaiah King, Joseph King, Laura King, Lawrence King, Lorraine King,
Robert King, Robert
Kirkpatrick, Eric Kirton, Joel Kirzner, Stephen Kissinger, Stewart Kissinger, Thanit Kittiampon, Mark Kivela, Robert Klann, Sarah Klann, Kimberly
Klanow, Peter Klear,
Kline, Mark Kline, Robert Kline, Kathleen Kline-Hudson, Kevin Klinger, Karin Klinkajorn, Jules Kliot, Michael Kloian, Gary Klompmaker, William
Kloosterman,
James Klosterman, David Kluge, Jeffrey Klum, Philip Klump, Christopher Knapp, Deward Knapp, Elisabeth Knibbe, Randall Knight, Jack Knol,
Paul Knopf, Richard
Knowles, Kenneth Knuckles, Carl Knutson, Bill Ko, Yik-To Ko, Young Ah Ko, Patrick Koby, John Koch, Scott Koch, Alfred Kochanowski, David Kochen,
Bryan Koehn, Lisa
Kolflat, Napathan Komarapajkul, June Komisar, Slobodan Kondic, George Konidis, Yuko Konishi, Han Sung Koo, Ja-Yong Koo, Kook-Jin Koo, Jennifer
Koone, Steven Koop,
Brian Korte, Karen Kortesoja, Moriah Kosch-Miller, John Kosich, Cynthia Kosik, Julie Kosik-Shick, David Koskela, Gregory Koss,Eric Kostamo,
Silvana Kostenbaum,
Kovacs, Sharon Kovalsky, Henry Kowalewski, Jennifer Kowalewski, Jerrod Kowalewski, Mary Ellen Kowalewski, Paul Kowalewski, Karl Kowalske,
Edmund Kowalski,
Dale Kraker, Adam Kral, George Kral, David Kramer, Ellen Kramer, Susan Kramer, James Kranig, Bryan Krannitz, John Krasinkiewicz, Robert Kraska,
Frank Kratky, Diane
Kretovic, Gary Krewson, Elizabeth Krieble, Teri Kriege, John Krieger, Joan Kripke, Christian Kroll, Karla Kross, Andrea Krueger, John Krueger,
Kenneth
Krueger,
Kuche, David Kuckuk, Deborah Kuehn, Scott Kuehn, Robert Kuehne, Scott Kuehne, Rebecca Kuepers, Santosh Kugunnavar, Howard Kuhl, Etienne
Kuhn, Kay Kuhne,
Matthew Kunath, Kendal Kuneman, Susan Kunimatsu, Stephen Kunselman, Chi-Jui Kuo, Chung-Lun Kuo, Chyi-Gang Kuo, Huai-wen Kuo, Lihsing
Kuo, Shih Kuo, Hideo
Kurz, Joan Kus, James Kuschel, Ellen Kushner, Steven Kushner, Abdi Kusow, Peter Kuttner, Lee Kvarnberg, Hwa-San Kwan, Brian Kwekel, Byoung
Kweon,
Eugenia
Labardini, Vincent Labiano-Abello, Ronald Labonte, Michelle Laboy, Melissa Lacasse, Jonathan Lachance, Richard LaCombe, Lucila
L a c r e t a ,
Lago, Zachary Lahrman,Vinh Lai, Douglas Laing, Curtis Laitinen, Garfield Laity, Jeremy Lake, Nannette Lake, Amy Lam, Amy Lam,
D a v i d
Brice Lambrix, Vaughn Lamer, Lisa Lamkin, Robert Lamkin, Roger Lamp, Christopher Lanave, David Lancor, Ken Land, Susan Land,
W i l l i a m
Amy Landau, Joyce Lander, Earl Landesman, Charles Landey, Robert Landman, Cassandra Landry, Donald Landry, Douglas Landry, Richard
L a n e ,
Katherine Lanyi, Christopher Lanzisera, Daniel LaPan, Glenn Lapin, John Lapins, Anthony Lapinski, Robert Lapinsky, John LaPorte, Brooks Lapp,
Laraway, Nicholas Lardas, Dennis Larkin, Carter Larson, David Larson, Douglas Larson, Gerald Larson, Keith Larson, Peter Larson, Scott Larson,
Latimer, Damir Latinovic, Robert Latsko, Joseph Lau, William Lau, Eric Laube, Brian Laubenthal, Charles Lauer, Eugene Lauer, Kurt Lauer, Virginia
Albert Law, Betty Law, Marie Law, Djohan Lawer, David Lawrence, Janet Lawrence, Jessica Lawrence, Marcia Lawrence, Michael Lawrence,
Ledger, Anderson Lee, Arlene Lee, Caroline Lee, Catherine Lee, Chan Lee, Chang Ho Lee, Chin Lee, Ching-Chih Lee, Christopher Lee, Connie Lee,
Hyunho Lee, Hyunseok Lee, Hyunwoo Lee, In-Ho Lee, Jaeho Lee, Jaewon Lee, Jeong-Ho Lee, Jonathan Lee, Joseph Lee, Junghee Lee, Junhee
L e e ,
Lee, Robert Lee, Rosa Lee, Sai Kit Lee, Sangwoo Lee, Shan Lee, Shing Lee, Sonya Lee, Soong-Yong Lee, Sung Hyun Lee, Sung Whan Lee, Sung Lee,
Sungjae
Jaan Lee, Bradley Leech, Stephanie Leedom, Laura Leenhouts, Michael LeFevre, Katherine Leggett, Emily Lehman, George Lehner, Harvey Leibin,
Seung-Hee
Apichoke Lekagul, Yelena Lembersky, Sean Lemecha, Lauren Leney, Kara Lennard, Ronald Lentz, Timothy Leonard, Jeffrey Leong-Poi, David
Leopold,
Charles Levin, Elissa Levin, Barry Levine, Joyce Levine, Seymour Levine, David Levy, Gary Levy, Jared Levy, Connie Lew, Jai Lew, Kee Lew, Bridget
Lewakowski,
An-Tai Li, Chat Li, Chung-Min Li, Emily Li, Lawrence Li, Xiou Li, Ezra Liang, Liang Liang, Ken-Hui Liao, Steven Libbey, Alexander Libbrecht, Daniel
Lichauco, Donna Lidsky,
Da
Lilly, Byeong-Yul Lim, Choon Wee Lim, Francelle Lim, Jungmoon Lim, Tresna Lim, Tania Lima, Catalina Lin, Chao-Chih Lin, Chia-Chia Lin, Chun-Ling Lin, Huan-Chih Lin, Paul Lin, Pershing Lin, Shu-Hua Lin, Shuo-Wei Lin, Yu-Hwa L
Shuenn-Ren Liou, Larry Lipa, Scott Lipinski, Morris Lippens, Anne Lipsey, Peter Lipson, Charles Lisle, Steven List, Marc L’Italien, Kristen Little, Kurt Little, Sidney Little, Benjamin Littrell, Kenneth Litwin, Anping Liu, Chun-Chao Liu
Patricia Loheed, Philip Loheed, Vern Lohman, Toni Loiacano, Thomas Lollini, Edmund London, Jordan London, David Long, Joshua Long, Walter Long, Jason Longo, Laurie Longo, Susan Lonnett, Kai Looi, William Looney, Denv
Lovett, Vivian Low, William Low, Reed Lowden, John Lowe, David Lowenschuss, Thomas Lowing, Ethan Lu, Yun-Jen Lu, Kim Lua, David Lubin, Hillary Lubin, Jaron Lubin, Jay Lubow, Hai Luc, Kristina Luce, Carl Luckenbach, Meli
Lunghamer, John Luscombe, Ruth Lusher, Anne Lusk, Phillip Luth, Mark Luther, Brian Lutz, Keith Lutz, Kirk Lutz, William Lyman, Debra Lynch, Edward Lynch, Robert Lynch, Mark Lynden, Carrie Lynn-Pike Johnson, Adrienne Ly
MacDonald, Matthew Mach, Patricia Machemer, Daniel Machesky, Anthony Machowski, Kenneth MacIntosh, Michelle Mack, Christopher MacKechnie, Stephen MacKenzie, Chris Mackey, Jeanne MacLeamy, Richard MacM
Mahdavi, Mohd Mahfar, Yasser Mahgoub, Ahmed Mahious, Baber Mahmood, Saba Mahmood, Frederick Mahoney, Jennifer Maigret, Carol Maise, William Maitland, Erik Majcher, Brian Majeski, Jan-Cheung Mak, Monica M
Malloy, Sadashiv Mallya, William Malvitz, Corey Malyszka, Lisa Manardo, Elizabeth Mancini-Koto, Mark Mancuso, Seymour Mandell, Victoria Mandell-Klein, Veena Mandrekar, Vassiliki Mangana, Mark Mangapora, Douglas
Yvonne Marchand, David Marchetti, Michael Marcin, William Marcotte, Stacy Marcus, Mark Mardirosian, Michael Margerum, Ann Marin, Gregory Marinelli, Eric Maring, Ira Mark, Richard Markel, Eric Marken, Charles Marks
Dorcas Martin, Ellen Martin, Frank Martin, Gina Martin, Mary Martin, Rochelle Martin, Scott Martin, Vincent Martorello, Isaac Marwil, Robert Marx, Kingsbury Marzolf, Frank Mason, Glenn Mason, Lindsay Mason, Wendell M
Mathur, Daniel Matsch, George Matsuda, Brian Mattei, Jack Matthews, Lala-Rukh Matties, Scott Matties, Richard Mattingly, Philip Matton, Bradley Matuzak, Jeffrey Matzek, Margaret Mauger, Catherine Maurer, Kathleen M
Meghan Mayville, Kemba Mazloomian, Peter McNally, Natalie Mc Namara, John Mc Adow, Patrick McAlinden, Robert McAllen, Russell McArthur, Matthew McCafferty, Nichole McCall, Brian McCann, Dion McCarthy, Eileen M
David McDade, Colin McDermott, Charles McDonald, Alison McDonnell, Brian McDonnell, Kimberly McElhenie, Scott McElrath, Mark McFadden, Ryan McGee, Peter McGeorge, Patricia McGirr, Ralph McGivern, Robert Mc
Thomas McKercher, Gregory McLane, Fredric McLaughlin, Meredith McLellan, Andrew McLeod, Marianne McLoughlin, Christopher McMahon, Joseph McManus, Tracey McManus, Debra McMillan, Philip McMullan, Andrew
James Meacham, Robert Meacham, Robert Meacham, Donna Mears, Martin Measel, Martin Mechtenberg, Paul Mecomber, James Medendorp, Thomas Medendorp, Adam Meeker, Richard Meernik, Andrew Meese, Robert
Mele, Megan Melinat, Kurt Melinn, Joanne Melis, Pedro Melis, Katherine Mellon, Daniel Melnik, Maria Melo Rivera, James Melstrom, Cooper Melton, W. Jacarl Melton, Mark Melzer, Jonathan Mendel, Linda Mendelson, Ge
Heather Merrill, John Merrill, Gordon Merritt, Gordon Merritt, Lynn Merritt, John Merten, Mohamed Messadi, Richard Messenger, Peter Messina, Robert Metcalf, Stephanie Metz, David Metzger, David Mexico, Loren Meyer, S
Mickelson, Jane Middleton, Steven Middleton, William Midgley, Jay Miedema, Stephen Mielke, Pedro Mier, Lindsay Migoski, Eric Migrin, Tracy Migrin, Sarah Mikkelsen-Krick, Arnold Mikon, Peter Mildner, Alan Miller, Brian
Miller, Robert Miller, Robert Miller, Teresa Miller, Van Miller, W. Miller, Mark Millich, A. Nicole Milliff, Thomas Million, Richard Millman, Kevin Mills, Natalie Mills, Roger Mills, Amy Milobowski, Hyung Min, Si-Yeon Min, John Mi
Michael Mitterhuber, Keith Mixer, Taiji Miyasaka, Keiichi Miyashita, Keyan Mizani, David Mlodzik, Shefali Modi, Steven Moe, Deborah Moelis, Peter Moerland, Peter Moes, Elizabeth Moggio, Vidhya Mohankumar, Douglas Moh
Janet Monroe, Stanley Monroe, Susan Monroe, Caitlin Montague, Harry Montague, Kimberly Montague, Ruth Montague, Jack Monteith, Kenneth Montgomery, Sandra Montgomery, An Li Montilla, C. David Moody, David Moon
Moore, Randall Moreland, Camilla Moretti, Daryl Morey, John Morey, Amy Morgan, Dennis Morgan, Kevin Morgan, Jennifer Morgenstern, Atsuko Mori, Makito Mori, Joseph Moriarty, Stuart Morkun, Michelle Morlan, Dougla
Sara Moss, John Mouat, Thomas Moulton, Ralph Moxley, Se Moy, Eric Moyer, John Moynihan, Eugene Mrowka, Derrick Mroz, Timothy Mrozowski, William Mudloff, Timothy Mueller, Rolf Muenter, John Mufarreh, Rainer Mu
Murillo-Montesdeoca, Naomichi Murooka, Deanna Murphy, Eric Murphy, Erin Murphy, John Murphy, Nancy Murphy, Nicole Murphy, Richard Murphy, Richard Murphy, Stacey Murphy, Thomas Murphy, Barry Murray, Robert M
George Myers, Jason Myers, Judy Myers, Rodney Myers, John Myhre, Heather Mylod, Kevin Myshock, Patrick Mysliwy, Kiarazm Naficy, Pracheeti Nagarkar, Jann Nagato, Valerie Nagel, James Nagy, Satoshi Nakamura, Ja
Nashed, Mohamed Nasir, Ahsan Nasratullah, Christine Nass, Zachary Nathan, Matthew Nathanson, Stefan Natzke, Gustavo Navarro, Lawrence Navin, Mojtaba Navvab, Zoe Neaderland, Brian Neal, Jaela Neal, Marcia Nee
Nelson, Karl Nelson, Richard Nelson, Stephen Nelson, Timothy Nelson, William Nelson, Yumiko Nelson, David Nemens, Basil Nemer, Mary Nemerov, Leopold Nenning, Gary Nesbitt, Flint Nesmith, Thomas Netzer, Karin Neub
Newingham, Paola Newman, Allison Newmeyer, Harry Newton, Alexandra Neyman-Shane, Alec Ng, Dennis Ng, Dang Nguyen, Toan Nguyen, Craig Nicely, Nicholas Nicholas, Kenneth Nicholls, David Nichols, Deborah Nichols
Ralph Nimtz, Nancy Nishikawa, Gregory Nishimura, Chawalit Nitaya, Wairimu Njuguna, Daniel Nobbe, Andrew Noble, Christopher Nogoy, Makoto Noguchi, Ji Yeon Noh, Adrian Noordhoek, Revaree Nophaket, Catherine Nord
Novotny, William Nowysz, Linda Nubani, Wilmar Nuechterlein, Enyinnaya Nwabara, Ijeoma Nwankpa, Adiele Nwankwo, Carey Nyberg, Kenneth Nye, George Oakley, Roberta Oakley, Olusegun Obasanjo, William Oberling, Alvin
Daniel O’Donnell, Kathleen O’Donnell, Robert Oelkers, David Oeming, James Offenhauer, Henry Ofiara, Justin Ogle, Chang-Gwon Oh, Gi Young Oh, Kyoodong Oh, SaeWon Oh, Soo Oh, Deborah O’Hara-Welby, Satoshi Ohashi, M
Olive-McKenzie, Barbara Oliver, Bonnie Oliver, John Oliver, Michele Oliver, Lauren Olivier, Kurt Olmsted, Stephen Olmsted, Joann Olsen, Craig Olson, Gary Olson, Kirsten Olson, Lawrence Olson, Robert Olson, John Olszewski,
Orlowski, Benjamin Orman, Steven O’Rourke, Lida Orta-Anes, Francisco Javier Ortiz, Jaime Ortiz-Arango, Sujin Osatarayakul, Itohan Osayimwese, Stephen Osborn, Ronda Osga, Francis O’Shea, Arvid Osterberg, Kevin Osterh
Overhiser, Travis Overton, Gary Owen, John Owen, Ronald Owen, Warren Owen, Ashlyn Owens, James Owens, Justin Owens, Kristen Owens, Filiz Ozel, Dale Paape, Al Paas, Mary Paas, Richard Pace, Michael Pacheco, Elizabe
Dolores Palma, Donnally Palmer, Erin Palmer, Christopher Palms, Edward Paloucek, James Panella, Curtis Panizzoli, Nishant Panjiyar, Mandakini Pant, C. Milagros Panta de Nelson, Deborah Panush, Anthony Papalas, Antho
Chansik Park, Christopher Park, Danny Park, Gi-Young Park, Hoon-Keun Park, Hung-Kyun Park, Hyeonsoo Park, Jae-Pyo Park, James Park, Jesung Park, Jongbeom Park, Joseph Park, Junseok Park, Ki Hyuck Park, Kyong Par
Parks, Vern Parks, Michael Parlett, Frank Parrello, Mark Parrish, Joyce Parrott, Shawn Parshall, Howard Parsons, Gregory Parston, Mark Parston, Felino Pascual, Mark Paskanik, Douglas Pasma, Donald Passman, Bharat Pate
Russell Peabody, Richard Peacock, Barbara Pearce, Stan Pearson, Thomas Pearson, Charlotte Pease, Danny Pease, Randolph Pease, Jesse Pedersen, Roy Pedersen, Sharon Pedersen, Marcia Pederson, James Pedler, Thom
Percich, Benjamin Perdok, Harm Perdok, Erin Perdu, Elsa Pereira, Sandra Pereira Pires, Donn Perez, Jorge Perez, Margarita Perez, Maria Perez De Serrano, Gamaliel Perez-Santaella, Bridget Perino, Kenneth Perkins, Elisabet
Peterson, Eric Peterson, Jessica Peterson, Richard Peterson, Richard Peterson, Danielle Peto, Casey Petoskey, Damian Petrescu, Matthew Petrie, Ross Petrie, John Petro, Ivan Petrovich, Undine Petrulis, Adriana Petryna, Tim
Douglas Phillips, Larry Phillips, Louis Phillips, Ronald Phillips, Ted Phillips, Brandon Philpot, Prapanant Phungchittisarn, Frank Piatkowski, Adrian Piccolo, Catherine Piche, Michael Piche, Larry Pickel, Emily Pickren, Nathan P
John Pinnell, Gregory Pinter, David Piontek, Emilie Piontek, Iwonka Piotrowska, Craig Piotrowski, Craig Piper, Mark Piquette, Davin Pirkola, Homayoon Pirooz, Carl Pirscher, Carl Pirscher, Fred Pitman, Michael Pitman, Donald P
Krzys Polak, Julia Polcyn, Robert Polens, Amy Polk, Timothy Polk, Ronald Polniaszek, Joseph Polowczuk, Barry Polzin, Mark Pomnitz, Josef Pongratz, Jeffrey Ponitz, Jessyca Poole, Anne Poon, Nancy Poon, Brian Poor, Charles
Potter, Mark Potter, Patricia Potter, Robert Potthoff, Brian Pounds, John Powell, Kelly Powell, Matthew Powell, Robert Powell, Anne Power, Janis Powers, Cynthia Pozolo, Daryl Prater, Eric Pratt, Richard Pratt, Chutiman Prayoo
Eleni Primikiri, Richard Prince, William Prine, David Probst, Charlene Proctor, Stephen Propst, Patrick Pruchnik, Elgin Pruder, Jeffrey Prussack, Gary Przepiora, Gregory Ptucha, James Puckhaber, Brett Pudik, Michael Pukszta,
Linda Pyke, Shana Pyle, Tarek Qaddumi, Bo Qin, Judit Quasney, Adam Quigley, Giovana Quigley, Guy Quigley, Kaleena Quinn, Michael Quinn, Jenna Quirk, Grace Quiroga, Charles Quist, Leah Raab, Rashid Rab, Sarah Rabe, Ell
Rahimian, Naazneen Rahman, Rachid Rahme, David Raider, Kacy Rainaldo, Cheryl Raleigh, Francis Ralls, Alice Ralph, Umayal Ramanathan, Francisco Ramirez, Wendy Rampson-Gage, William Ramsey, Larry Ramseyer, Greg
Rasher, Eric Ratkowski, Stefanie Ratliff, Timothy Rauh, Rebecca Raup, Yolita Rausche, David Ravin, Joel Ravitz, Laura Rawlins-Blum, Erin Ray, Gregory Raye, Richard Raymer, Larry Raymond, Natasha Raymond, Robert Raymon
Ree, Sean Reed, Thomas Reed, Earl Reeder, Randy Reeves, Mary Reich, Rick Reichman, James Reid, John Reid, Robert Reid, Jason Reiffer, Peter Reiger, Lisa Reiher, Roger Reik, Mark Reile, Amy Reineri, Jacobo Reines, Micha
John Reno, Ronald Reno, Jeffrey Renterghem, Maria Rentz, Luis Restrepo, Elizabeth Rettenmaier, Danna Reyes, Otto Reyes-Casanova, Rafael Reynal, Jason Reynolds, Eon Rhee, Jaeryung Rhee, Eric Rhodehamel, Erin Rhodes
Jason Richardson, Julie Richardson, Kyle Richardson, Max Richardson, Samuel Richelew, Eric Richelson, Chad Richert, Stanford Richins, Brian Richmond, Kurt Richwerger, Jessica Rickert, William Ridder, Paige Ridley, Paul R
Fiorita, Paul Fischburg, Emily Fischer, Pamela Fischer, Jeffrey Fischvogt, Sanford Fish, Grant Fisher, Mary Fisher, P. Barry Fisher, Robert Fisher, Ely Fishkin, Richard Fitts, Daniela Fitzgerald, Jane Fitzpatrick, Jennifer Fitzpatrick,
am Flinn, Anna Flintoft, Odell Flood, Douglas Florance, Scott Floria, Craig Flowerday, Dwight Flowers, Denise Flynn, George Flynn, Lisa Fodrocy, David Foerster, Randall Fogelman, Bernard Foju, John Foley, Michael Folk, Jason
slund, Lyn Forster, Richard Forsythe, Jill Fortuna, Jeffrey Forward, Celia Foster, Daniel Foster, Derrick Foster, Elizabeth Foster, Jeffrey Foster, William Foster, Douglas Foulke, William Foulks, Rochelle Foushee-Wynn, Nicholas
Frank, Natasha Franke, John Frankhouser, Peter Frantz, Thomas Franzinger, Mauro Franzoni, Robert Frasca, Salomon Frausto, Earl Frazier, Deborah Freedman, Tom Freeman, David French, Mark Freudenwald, Christine Freundl,
Gabriel Fuentes-Benejam, Tomoko Fukuzawa, Michael Fuller, Carrie Fulp, Edwin Fung, Kenneth Fung, Khai Fung, Adam Fure, Paul Furlong, Melora Furman, Jonathan Furr, Craig Furuta, Ludovic Gabaron, Robert Gaede, Geraldine
Gallay, W. Cory Gallo, Christopher Galow, Deta Gamble, Gary Gamperling, Bernie Gandras, Mark Gannon, Roger Gantz, Aram Garbooshian, Charles Garcia, Laura Garcia, Sheena Garcia, Andrea Gardner, John Gardner, Samuel
Gavras, Gary Gavulic, Jacob Gay, Jessica Gay, John Gay, Dean Gayon, John Gazall, Forrest Gearhart, Jordon Gearhart, David Gebhardt, Stephen Gedert, Martin Gehner, Gordon Geis, Eric Geiser, Lloyd Geisinger, Dana Gelick,
topher Gerrick, Eric Gerstner, John Gerts, Burton Gewalt, Ali Ghalamfarsa, Steve Ghannam, Christopher Ghatak, Simone Ghetti, Joseph Giannola, Marcy Giannunzio, Megan Gibb, Claryce Gibbons-Allen, David Gibbs, Gerard
ne Gillespie, James Gillett, R. Gilliam, Donald Gilman, Stephanie Gilman, Carl Gilmore, Clare Ginger, Gary Gingras, Kanola Gist, Scott Gitler, Alfred Gittleman, Nathan Gladstone, Steven Glashower, Elaine Glass, Irvin Glassman,
en, Daniel Goddard, Thomas Goddeeris, Jennifer Godden, Culver Godfrey, David Godfroy, Ritu Goel, Mary Goeldel, Keith Golan, Mark Golan, Donna Gold, Philip Gold, James Goldammer, James Goldberg, Janet Goldie, Howard
cott Goodsell, James Goodspeed, Ethel Goodstein, Gordon Goodwin, Malik Goodwin, Sarah Goralewski, Diane Gordon, Donald Gordon, John Gordon, Michael Gordon, Michael Gordon, Susan Gordon-Castle, Daniel Gore, Fred
ard Gould, William Gould, Jeffrey Goulette, Stephen Grabow, Kenneth Grabowski, Thomas Grace, Andrew Graef, Jan Graf, Richard Graham, Larry Gramlich, Joanne Graney, Terry Granger, Heath Grannis, Donald Grant, Robert
ry Green, Marcia Green, Joseph Greenan, Andrew Greenberg, Sylvia Greenberg, Collace Greene, Jane Greene, Matthew Greene, Donald Greenhalgh, Bonnie Greenspoon, Alan Gregerman, Fabio Grego, Christine Greig, Eydie
robe, Joseph Grochowalski, Frank Grocki, Paul Grocoff, Jeffrey Grose, David Gross, Marc Grossman, Benjamin Grostic, Kristi Gruessing, Patricia Gruits, David Grummon, Gunars Gruzdins, Xiaoxi Guan, Kris Guccione, James
an, William Gustafson, Michael Guthrie, Nan Gutterman, Jessica Gutwein, Edward Gwathmey, Kurt Haapala, Arthur Haas, Jacob Haas, Tina Haas, Nadia Habash, Dana Habel, James Hackenberger, Larry Hackenberg, Thomas
d, Kristine Haglund, Jong Hahn, Vanessa Haight, Jeff Haines, John Haischer, Christopher Haite, David Hakamaki, Matthew Hake, James Hakes, Howard Hakken, John Halada, Nathan Hale, Marc Halevi, Charles Hall, C. Richard
ilton, John Hammer, Kristopher Hammerberg, Robert Hammerschmidt, Donald Hammond, Jon Hammond, Scott Hammond, Thomas Hampson, Jin-Taek Han, Leekyung Han, Seung-Hoon Han, Ying Han, Taufik Hanafi, Gail Handy,
t Harabedian, Gerald Harburn, Brian Harcourt, Lindsay-Jean Hard, E. Randall Harder, Kristin Harding, Laine Hardy, William Hardy, Salah Hariri, Geoffrey Harker, Briant Harkiewicz, Joseph Harlan, Michael Harlock, YaVaughn
s, Lois Harris, Ralph Harris, Raynal Harris, Theresa Harris, Bruce Harrison, Naomi Harrison, Timothy Harrison, Alexander Harrow, Liz Harrow, Jay Harshe, Jani Hart, Karen Hart, Todd Hart, Thomas Hartley, Lawrence Hartman,
una Hashem, Robert Haslett, Edward Hass, Saud Hassan, Jill Hassberger, Mark Hassett, Steven Hassevoort, Ray Hatch, Sara Hathaway, Matthew Hathorne, Vincen Hatlen, Dennis Haugen, Wilfrid Haughey, Andrew Hauptman,
Donald Heaton, Howard Hecht, Gerald Heckendorn, Nevin Hedlund, Christian Hedrick, Christine Heiden, Conrad Heiderer, Walter Heim, Jason Heinbeck, David Heinlein, Michael Heitman, Fawaz Hejazi, Arthur Held, Royer Held,
nnig, Danny Henrickson, Irene Henry, Ronald Henry, Harry Henshaw, Justin Henshell, Ana Henton, Kenneth Herbart, Jeffery Herberholz, Darrell Herbruck, Dwight Herdrich, Glen Herglotz, Faris Hermiz, Angel Herrerias, Jesus
s Hetley, Steven Heuss, Bridgett Hewitt, Kathleen Hewitt, Roger Hewitt, Christina Heximer, William Heyd, Scott Heywood, Charles Hibbard, Elizabeth Hibner, Edmond Hickey, Pamela Hickey, Camden Hicks, Kay Hicks, Stewart
mothy Hill, Christopher Hillegas, Arthur Hills, Thomas Hilmer, Gerald Hilton, Thomas Hindert, Daimian Hines, Jennifer Hinesman, Russell Hinkle, Russell Hinkle, John Hinkley, Anne Hinsman, Brian Hirami, Tsunetada Hirobe, Mark
, Travis Hodges, Elizabeth Hodgins, Timothy Hodgkinson, Kristine Hoehn, Timothy Hoehn, Heather Hoeksema, Elisa Hoekwater, Vincent Hoenigman, Craig Hoernschemeyer, Kevin Hoezee, Carla Hoffman, John Hoffman, Mark
Sarah Hollis, Dennis Holloway, Katherine Holloway, Gretchen Hollrah, Brent Holly, Annie Holmes, Donald Holstege, John Holt, Timothy Holt, Dawn Holtrop, Joel Holtrop, Virginia Holtry, Shawn Holyoak, Peter Holz, Jack Honderd,
Christopher Horger, James Horman, Joan Horn, Charles Hornbach, Larry Horning, Rudolph Horowitz, Jeffrey Hoseth, Lawrence Hoskin, Mathew Hotujac, Gregory Houghtaling, Amin Houry, Michael House, Wayne Hovey, Brian
h, Lisa Hsieh, Shou-Jen Hsiung, Cheng-Min Hsu, Chieh-Bin Hsu, Fay Hsu, Hao-Che Hsu, Nancy Hsu, Wei-Chung Hsu, Meng-Chi Hsueh, Wei Hu, Ralph Hubbard, Elizabeth Huck, Mark Huck, Ruth Hucke, Todd Huddlestun, Russell
Hui, Yau Shun Hui, David Huizenga, Anjali Hulbanni, Kyle Hulewat, Christopher Hull, John Hull, Lakisha Hull, Robert Humbert, Mark Humitz, Roger Hummel, Donald Humphrey, James Humphrey, Harry Hunderman, Amy Hung,
Hwang, Hyoseok Hwang, Juin-Pu Hwang, Heather Hyatt, Young-Shin Hyun, Yuntaek Hyun, David Iannuzzi, Jennie Ickes, In Ieong, John Ihns, Jun Ikawa, Ugochukwu Ikemba, Shahin Ikezawa, Richard Iler, Ivan Ilyashov, Gye-Ho
athan Ippel, Lili Iravani, Kenneth Irelan, Ellwood Irish, Suzanne Irwin, Yasufumi Iseki, Ross Ishikawa, William Ishmael, Tom Ittner, Priya Iyer, Seema Iyer, Dana Jaasund, Wassim Jabi, Andrew Jack, Sheila Jack, Arlova Jackson,
even Jacobson, Violeta Jacobson, Michael Jacques, Marc Jaffee, Beth Jagnow, Richard Jahnke, Matthew Jaimes, Geeta Jain, Shailesh Jain, Juliet Jakobowski, Hina Jamelle, Fallon James, Jeffrey James, Kimberly James,
mes Jarvis, Moon-Lin Jau, Shimul Javeri Kadri, Jihan Jawad, Manish Jayanth, Bradford Jayne, Christiana Jedele, Gloria Jeff, Jacquline Jeffery, Jon Jeffries, Elizabeth Jellema, Calvin Jen, Chi-Kuang Jen, Jack Jenkins, Jeffrey
yung-Chul Jeoung, Frank Jesse, Alvenia Jeter, John Jickling, Somsak Jidmon, Sorim Jie, Robert Jillson, Jason Jimenez, Wei Jin, Manus Jirasetpatana, Seadhar Jirawattnotai, Michael Jischke, Jean-Marie Joassin, Keuk-Rae
nson, Donald Johnson, Frank Johnson, Kelly
Johnson, Kent Johnson, Marc Johnson, Matthew Johnson, Megan Johnson, Michael Johnson, Nancy Johnson, Paul Johnson, Raymond Johnson, Robert
Johnson, Andrew Johnston, Charles
Johnston, Christopher Johnston, Jean Joichi, Ronald Jona, Alan Jones, Archille Jones, Brenda Jones, Casey Jones, Dennis Jones, Emily Jones, Gregg
Jones, Robert Jones, Ross
Jones, Steven Jones, Stanley Joniec, Duane Jonlin, Maggi Jonsson, Yoohyung Joo, Adrianna Jordan, Kathleen Jordan, Marvin Jordan, Paul Jordan,
Ketan Joshi, Erik
Jostock, JaeHoon Joung, John Jourden, Ana Jovanovic, Fernando Juarez, Heather Judge, Margaret
R h o n d a
Kabcenell, Felichism Kabo, Philip Kabza, George Kacan, Robert Kacel, George Kachadoorian, Rahul Kadri, Abraham Kadushin, Gerald Kagan,
Evangelo
Kalmantis, Mary Kalmes, Trista Kalous, Bankim Kalra, Wendall Kalsow, Richard
Kanary,
Abraham Kandathil, Deborah Kander, Anne Kane, Bridgett Kane, Damon Kane, Harold Kane, Jaejoung Kang, Jee Eun Kang, Jimmy
Linda
Kaplan, Lori Kaplan, RossKaplan, Susan Kaplan, Roopali Kapoor, Marcy Kaptur, Olga Karabinech, Panagiotis Karamitsanis, James
Karp, Burton Karpay, Frank Karpowicz,Michael Karr, Zaenudin Kartadiwiria, Carol Kartje, Richard Kasemsarn, Jason Kasler, Murray
Ryu Kawai, Takumi Kawai, Charles Kaylor, James Kaylor, Ipek Kaynar,
Kelenson, Janet Keller, Ann Kelley, Kevin Kelley, Steven Kelley, Andrew Kelly, Ann Kelly, Ashley Kelly, Carey Kelly, Christina
Kemp, Thomas
Kemp, Aviva Kempner, Lane Kendig, Brittany Kennedy, Christine Kennedy, Kimberly Kennedy, Matthew Kennedy, Michael Kennedy,
Kelly
KerlinRopposch, John Kern, Charles Kerner, Colin Kerr, Richard Kerr, Richard Kerschbaum, Michael Kerschen, Leonard Kersey, Elizabeth
Khanna,
Abeer
Khatib, Swati Khimesra, Lintletse Khoapa, Abdulrahman Khogeer, LeRoy Kiefer, Ralph Kiefer, Judith Kieffer, Stephen Kiehl, Min
Su Kim, Esther Kim,
Euisoo Kim, Eun-Young Kim, Hae-Sun Kim, Han-Joon Kim, Hee-Yun Kim, Heungsoo Kim, Hun Kim, Hwan Kim,
Jung Kim, Junho
Kim, Jun Taek Kim, Ki-Joon Kim, Kyoung-Hee Kim, Kyungsu Kim, Meehyun Kim, Sang-Beom Kim, Sang-Sik Kim, Sohui Kim, Soo-Young
Kimble, L. Denise
Kimbrough, Curtis Kime, George Kimmerle, Marie Kimmey, J. Windom Kimsey, Go
King, Karl Kinkema,
William Kinsell, Carolyn Kinsler, Bria Kinter, Julia Kious, Daniel Kirby, James Kirk, Sarah Kirk, Stephen Kirk, John Kirkbride, Teddy
Steven Kleiff, George
Klein, Robert Klein, Steven Klein, Suzanne Klein, Thomas Kleist, Michael Klement, Loren Klevering, Anna Klima, Donald Klimmek, John
Nicolas
Klopp,
Knopf,
Reed
Koelewyn, Gregory
Koenig, Douglas Koepsell, Daniel Kohler, John Kohler, Wesley Kohn, Suzanne Kohrs Miller, Anna Kokesch, Markus Kolb, A.
Kendall Koopman,
Michael Kopp, James Korbein, James Korf, Kenneth Korman, Rebecca Korson, Andrea Korte,
Donald
Koster,
Andrew Kotchen, Michael Koteles, Roopak Kothari, Komal Kotwal, Karina Kou, Paul Kouri, William
Thomas Kowalski,
Katherine Kozarek, Loukas Kozonis, Daniel Krachon, Maureen Kraemer, Robert Kraemer, Heather Krafka, Patrick Kraft, Timothy Kraft,
Kraus, Paul Kraus,
Whitney Kraus, Karl Krauss, Marie Krawczyk, David Kreisman, Jack Kremers, James Kressbach, James Kretchmar, Christopher
Lloyd Krueger, Paul
Krueger, George Kruer, Michael Krug, Monica Kruszka, Michelle Kruzel, Edward Krzeminski, Zhan Kuang, David Kubany, Martina
Jason Kuhnle, Kitti
Kukulprasong, Edmund Kulikowski, Lisa Kulisek, Thomas Kuljurgis, Sucheta Kulkarni, Trupti Kulkarni, Deborah Kully, James Kumon,
Kuramitsu, James
Kurko, Arnold Kurmin, Michael Kurtzman, Ashley
Kwok, Justin Kwok,
William Kwolek, Hyo-Soon Kwon, Paul Kwon, Jo Kwong-Echard, Sahba La’al, Shahab Laal, Barbara
Constantine
Ladas, Douglas Laferle, Matthew Lafferty, Lawrence LaFontaine, Dale Laforest, Harry Lagerbom, Peter Lagerwey,Timothy
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Kei Lam, Ullman Lam, Jean Lamarche, Charles Lamb, Timothy Lamb, Deepanjali Lamba, Timothy Lambert, Daniel Lamble,
L a n d ,
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Lane, Roger Lang, William Langdon, Naomi Langer, Steven Langworthy, Daniel Lanning, Ronny Lansky, DavidLantrip,
Jacob Lappan, Paula Lappas, Fredrick Lappin, Fernando Lara, Francisco Lara-Valencia, W. Frank
Anna Larsson, Pamela Lary, Timothy Lasher, Drew Laszlo, Abhinand Lath, Maurice Lathers, Marceia Lathou, Sidney Lathrop, Hugh
Laukka, Kristi Laundra, Edwin Laupmanis, Anna Lauri, Charles Lauzon, Emile Lauzzana, Amy Laverty, Sarah Lavigne, Jennifer Lavorel,
David
Layman, Ronald Leach, Jeffrey Leahy, Joseph Lear, Michael Leaveck, Rosemary Lebowitz, Mark Ledford, Matthew
David Lee,
David Lee, Donald Lee, Du-Un Lee, Eon Gu Lee, Gyeong-Hoon Lee, Hwa Lee, Hyeyun Lee, Hyunchul Lee,
Kay
Lee,
Kenneth Lee, Lina Lee, Linda Lee, Li-Wen Lee, Loren Lee, Lorrin Lee, Margaret Lee, Mee Lee, Michael Lee, Philip Lee, Po Sze Lee, Rachel
Lee, SungWon
Lee, Susan Lee, Tunney Lee, Ung-Joo Lee, William Lee, Woojin Lee, Wu-Tung Lee, Yee-Chaur Lee, Youn-Kyoung Lee, Young-Jo Lee, YungLeigh, Seung-Bok
Leigh, Michael Leinweber, Jessica Leiter, Richard Leithauser,
Jeremy Lepard, Courtney
Lepene, David Lepo, Aaron Leppanen, Janice Lerg, James Lerner, Nicholas Lesko, Diane Lessien, Howard Leung, Philip Leung, Wai-Yin Leung,
Kenneth Lewandowski, Garland
Lewis, Geoffrey Lewis, Harry Lewis, Heather Lewis, James Lewis, Lance Lewis, Philip Lewis, Sean Lewis, Stephen Lewis, Robert Leys, Jeri Lezovich,
avid Lieber, Indulis Liepins, Julianna Lieu,
Jennifer Lifshay, Shannon Liggett, Todd Liggett, Bryan Lijewski, Karen Lillard, Willis Lillard, Robert Lillich, Linda Lilly, Randal
Lin, Mark Linch, Ronald Lincoln, Arthur Lindauer, Meghan Lindberg, Sean Lindblade, Andrew Lindblom, Aivars Linde, David Lindemulder, Piet Lindhout, William Lindhout, John Lindquist, Michael Linker, John Linn, Domenico Lio,
u, Alex Lo, Bonnie Man Wai Lo, Kenneth Lo, Shirley Lo, Abigail Lobas, Gregory Lobdell, Frederick Loceff, Alan Locke, Robert Lockhart, Donald Lococo, Robert Loeper, Karl Loescher, Henry Logan, Carolyn Loh, Cathrine Lohanata,
ver Loper, James Lord, MaryBeth Lord, Carl Lorenz, Steven Lorey, Richard Loring, John Loss, Artur Losse, Valdemar Losse, George Lott, Lesley Lott, Michael Lovato, Eleanor Love, James Love, James Love, Kirk Loveall, Buford
issa Lucksinger, Thomas Lueer, Monique Lugo, Frederick Lui, Wai-Hong Luk, Richard Lukens, Jeffrey Luker, Gregory Lukonic, Kevin Lum, Susan Lum, Sharon Lumbantobing, Johan Lumenta, Patrick Lun, Phillip Lundwall, Joseph
on, Kenneth Lyon, Sidney Lyons, Ann Ma, Henry Ma, Steven Ma, Winnie Ma, Jon Maass, Lorissa MacAllister, Matthew MacDonagh-Dumler, Andrew Macdonald, Donald MacDonald, Eric MacDonald, John MacDonald, Todd
Math, Nancy MacMillan, Stephen MacMillan, Donald MacMullan, Robert MacPherson, Benjamin Maddalena, Michael Madden, Jayanthi Madhavan, Nick Madias, Alisa Madigan, Sharon Madison Polk, Da-Mi Maeng, Mamar
Makarczyk, Nadir Makhlouf, Geoffrey Makstutis, Simeon Maleh, Lawrence Malek, Anthony Malik, Nadeem Malik, Lauren Malinoff, Michael Malinowski, Adrienne Malley, Michael Mallon, James Malloure, Joan Malloy, Ryan
s Mann, Douglas Mann, Raju Mann, William Manning, Carolyn Mano, Stamatia Manolakas, Alan Manschesky, Eric Mansuy, Olga Mantilla, Keith Manuel, Praveen Manyam, Samar Maqusi, Robert Marans, Alexis Marcarello,
s, Lloyd Marks, Melissa Marks, David Marotti, William Marquez, Mary Marre, John Marrow, Joseph Marrow, John Marsden, Frandel Marsh, Colin Marshall, Jessica Marshall, Michael Marsich, Raymond Marter, Brian Martin,
Mason, Megan Masson-Minock, Donald Masternak, Nicolette Mastrangelo, Elizabeth Mathew, Christie Mathews, Kelly Mathews, Kyle Mathews, William Mathewson, Renee Mathieu, Evan Mathison, Thomas Mathison, Guru
Maurer, Eugene Maurice, Steven Maurice, G. Allison Maxwell-White, Christopher May, Keenan May, Peter May, Sean May, Lisa Maycroft, Ashish Mayer, Catherine Mayhew, Patricia Mayle, Deborah Maylie, Steven Maynard,
McCarthy, James McCarthy, Bruce McCarty, Kieran McCaughey, Arthur McClellan, Andrew McCloskey, Julia McCray, Talia McCray, Dorrance McCullen, A. Philip McCullough, Bruce McCullough, Mardelle McCuskey-Shepley,
Graw, William McGrew, Margaret McInnis, Craig McInroy, John McIntosh, Patricia McIntosh, Donald McIntyre, Kimberly McIntyre, Robbert McKay, Martin McKee, Michael McKelvey, Patrick McKelvey, Gregory McKenzie,
w McMullen, Brett McMullen, Robert McNutt, Mark McPartlin, Daniel McPeak, Allison McPhail, Heather McPhail, Kari McPhillips, James McQuiston, Patrick McVicar, Walter McVicker, Monica McWilliams, Mohd Md Kassim,
Mehall, Priya Mehendale, Michael Mehr, Michael Mehringer, Nishtha Mehta, Parini Mehta, Sanjay Mehta, Urmee Mehta, Mark Meier, William Meier, Robyn Meindertsma, Dana Meisner, Philip Melcher, Mark Melchi, Dennis
eorge Mendez, Donald Meneghini, James Meneghini, Daniel Meneguzzi, Paul Meneilly, Joseph Meng, Joseph Meppelink, James Mercado, Robert Merchant, Neil Meredith, Susan Meredith, Barry Merenoff, Maurice Merlau,
Stephen Meyer, Jason Meyering, Daniel Meyers, Emily Meyerson, Carl Mezoff, Robert Micek, Bruce Michael, Noel Michaels, Patricia Michaels, Andrew Michajlenko, Thomas Michalski, Zachary Michels, Robert Michlin, Keith
Miller, Charles Miller, Debra Miller, Elaine Miller, Elizabeth Miller, Francis Miller, Glenn Miller, Jaye Miller, John Miller, Jonathan Miller, Katherine Miller, Katie Miller, Kyle Miller, Leroy Miller, Lisa Miller, Mark Miller, Meredith
near, Alan Miner, Susan Miner, Jason Minock, Mary Minor, Jennifer Misiak, Jeffrey Missad, Daniel Mitchell, Lauren Mitchell, Mark Mitchell, Paula Mitchell, Reginald Mitchell, Richard Mitchell, Rowland Mitchell, Gopal Mitra,
hnke, Mani Mohtasham, Sahar Moin, Tracy Moir-MacLean, Andrew Moiseev, T. Noorshahrani Mokhtar, Raymond Moldenhauer, Jeremy Mollison, Carol Molloy, James Molloy, Gertrude Moloney, Martin Mondejar, Larry Money,
n, Glen Moon, Jin Woo Moon, Sarah Moon, Bruce Moore, Delton Moore, Dorian Moore, Dorothy Moore, Ernest Moore, J Moore, Maria Moore, Paul Moore, Reginal Moore, Roderick Moore, Sarah Moore, Sherrill Moore, Tiffani
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gory Randall, Michael Randall, Lawrence Randolph, Marion Ranftl, Vinitha Ranganathan, Stephanie Rankin, Jennifer Ranville, Srikanth Rao, Ralph Rapson, Metee RasameevijiTpisal, J. David Rasche, Robert Rasche, Gregory
nd, Kauser Razvi, Randal Reackhof, Michael Reagan, Richard Reaume, Thomas Reay, Brian Rebain, Tamara Redburn, Mark Redden, Mark Reddie, Christopher Redding, Jody Redeker, Daniel Redstone, Eliel Redstone, Yong-Rag
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Verderber, Aaron Vermeulen, Marc Versluis, Kreshnik Verzivolli, Nancy Vettorello, Tonino Vicari, Amando Vicario Morales, Barbara Vicory, Rocio Vidal, Sanjeev Vidyarthi, Amy Vignaroli, Brandon Vince, Peter Vincent, Richard
Vincent, Chalitpakorn Virabalin, Victoria Viskantas, Kari Viste, Donald Vitek, Thomas Vitous, Claire Vlach, Kasey Vliet, Thuan Vo, Anthony Vogel, Christopher Vogelheim, Andrew Volckens, Joseph Volk, Dale Volkening, Jay
Volkers, Ryan VonDrehle, Norma VonBrock, Michele Vonk, Richard Von Luhrte, David von Oeyen, Donna Voronovich, Hratch Voskertchian, David Voss, Donald Vroom, Barbara Vukits, Emily Vun, Alok Vyas, Rajlaxmi Vyas, Scott
Vyn, Peter Vyverberg, Robert Wacker, Douglas Wackerle, John Wacksmuth, Leanne Wade, Richard Wade, Carla Waehneldt, William Waffle, Daniel Wagenmaker, Amy Wagner, John Wagner, Sarah Wagner, Charles Wagoner,
Justin Wagoner, Sherif Wahdan, Charles Wahl, Lindsay Wai, Rikako Wakabayashi, Robert Wakely, William Walcott, Yael Waldman, Lee Waldrep, John Waldrop, John Walewski, Larry Walker, Maria Walker, Max Walker,
Michael Walker, Robert Walker, Sarah Walker, Derk Walkotten, George Wallace, Joanne Walle, Leon Waller, Karen Wallsten, Julianne Walsh, Meghan Walsh, Patrick Walsh, Bruce Walter, F. Jon Walter, Susan Walter, Robert
Walters, Mona Walz, Chien-Kuo Wan, Sheldon Wander, Chien-Chien Wang, Chih-Yu Wang, David Wang, David Wang, Gary Wang, Peter Wang, Shih-Wen Wang, Xiaoguang Wang, Xuan Wang, Ya Wang, Yu Wang, Ray
Wankmiller, Ritesh Warade, Eric Ward, Hui Ward, Sally Ward, Milton Warden, Donna Ware, Glenn Ware, Laurie Wargelin, Philip Wargelin, Julian Wargo, Matthew Warner, Michael Warner, Paul Warner, Lee Warnick, Jay
Waronker, Lisa Warren, Nancy Warren, Peter Warren, Roderick Warren, Roderick Warren, Douglas Wasama, Stephanie Wascha, Monique Washington, Kurt Wassenaar, Robert Wassenaar, Clarence Waters, William
Waterston, Kenneth Watkins, Gregory Wattier, Donald Watts, Lilianna Wawrzyniak, Gary Waymire, Robert Wear, Robert Weatherill, Colton Weatherston, Carolyn Weaver, Elizabeth Weaver, Howard Weaver, Robert Weaver,
Todd Webb, Paul Webber, Robert Webber, Marianne Weber, Thomas Weber, Anita Weber Fawaz, Jonathan Webster, Timothy Wedel, Richard Wedge, Robert Wedge, Lai Wee, Aldermann Weekes, Brian Weeldreyer, Peter
Wege, Kelly Weger, Joseph Wehrer, Kuan-Chu Wei, Theodore Wei, Brandon Weidenfeller, Kurt Weigle, Keith Weiland, William Weimar, David Weingarten, Craig Weise, David Weisman, Gerald Weisman, Earle Weiss, John
Weiss, Ty Weiss, Al Weisz, Miriam Weixel, Danny Welch, Donald Welch, Kenneth Welch, Lisa Welch, James Welkenbach, Jason Welker, Paul Weller, David Welliver, Gregory Wells, Nancy Wells, Peter Wells, Victoria Wells,
Rudolf Welter, Ashley Welton, Simon Wen, Ashley Wendela, Kuo-Chin Weng, Jocelyn Wenk, Frederick Werder, Valerie Werfelmann, William Werner, Audrey Werthan, Mark Wesley, Frederick Wesolowski, Byron West, Daniel
West, David West, Robert West, Laura Westberg, Patrick Westerlund, William Westmaas, Mark Weston, Kirk Westphal, Katherine Westrick, Nathan Wetzel, John Weyl, Richard Whedon, Bradley Wheeler, Randall Whinnery,
Whitney Whinnery, Daniel Whipple, Daniel Whisler, Steven Whitcraft, Alana White, Hubert White, Jerome White, Kristina White, Linda White, Norman White, Pamela White, Peter White, Raymond White, Thomas White, David
Whiteford, Kathryn Whiteman, Ellen Whitemore, Lawrence Whiteside, Timothy Whiting, Thomas Whitmore, Jonathan Whitney, Faye Whittemore, Hal Whittemore, David Wiarda, Tracy Wick, Lyn Widmyer, Hans Wiemer, Ross
Wienert, Edwin Wier, Christopher Wierda, Paul Wiers, Lisa Wiersma, Kermit Wies, Zachery Wiese, Richard Wiggins, Sena Wijesinha, Emily Wilbrandt, Bradley Wilburn, Thomas Wilcox, James Wild, Daniel Wildberger, David
Wilder, Madelyn Wilder, Noelle Wilhite, Andy Wilianto, David Wilkins, Gretchen Wilkins, Weston Wilkins, Claire Wilks, Nancy Wilks, James Willard, Guy Willey, Benjamin Williams, Brian Williams, Calvin Williams, Carol
Williams, Charles Williams, Christine Williams, David Williams, David Williams, Debra Williams, Ferdie Williams, James Williams, Jeffrey Williams, Jennifer Williams, John Williams, John Williams, Justin Williams, Katherine
Williams, Lanette Williams, Melvin Williams, Riley Williams, Robert Williams, Ruth Williams, Stuart Williams, Thomas Williams, Todd Williams, Travis Williams, James Williamson, Regina Willis, Tonya Willis-Blanchard, Stephen
Willison, Rex Willoughby, Michael Wills, Francis Willsey, Amy Willson, A. Wilson, Aaron Wilson, Bonnita Wilson, Calder Wilson, Carrie Wilson, Christopher Wilson, Consuelo Wilson, Crystal Wilson, Darren Wilson, James
Wilson, John Wilson, Kyle Wilson, Robert Wilson, Ryan Wilson, Scott Wilson, Stephen Wilson, Teresa Wilson, Verner Wilson, Wallace Wilson, Mitchell Wimbish, Peter Winch, Robert Wine, Kristina Winegar, Jean Wineman,
Marleen Winer, Kenneth Winfield, Adam Winig, Scott Winkler, Antoinette Winkler Prins, Kelly Winters, Kenneth Winters, Walter Winters, James Winton, Douglas Wipperman, Ilianto Wirawan, Robert Wirgau, Donna Wirt,
Katie Wirtz, Jason Wise, Mandi Wise, Serene Wise, Daniel Wismer, Andrew Wisniewski, George Wisniewski, John Wisniewski, William Witt, Susan Wittenberg, Gregory Wittkopp, Alexis Wittman, Steven Wittry, Steven
Wohlford, Robert Wojcik, Suzanne Wolcott, Tony Wolf, Patricia Wolfe, Troy Wolffis, Michael Wolk, Amy Wolkwitz, Lisa Wolterink, Kyung Won, Andrea Wong, Danny Wong, Franklin Wong, Ignaz Wong, James Wong, Kwan-Lam
Wong, Kwok Wong, Paul Wong, Therese Wong, Timothy Wong, William Wong, Winifred Wong, Lalida Wongnirund, Pichai Wongwaisayawan, Kai Woo, Kim Woo, Seung Woo, Nicholas Wood, Scott Wood, Thomas Wood,
Jeannette Woodard, Tyson Woodby, Kimball Woodrow, Martin Woodrow, Matthew Woods, William Woodworth, Richard Wordell, Carla Worsham, Ronald Wortman, Andrew Wright, Edward Wright, Jerry Wright, Sarahanne
Wright, Steven Wright, Stuart Wright, Teri Wright, Alexander Wu, Edwin Wu, Hofu Wu, Kuei-Kang Wu, Robert Wu, Tse-Hsin Wu, Tze-Rong Wu, Wailan Wu, Yung-Hui Wu, Yvette Wu, Thomas Wuelpern, Richard Wuorenmaa,
Douglas Wurster, Jordan Wyatt, Bruce Wyckoff, Richard Wycoff, Walter Wyderko, Glenn Wynn, Katherine Wyrosdick, Maureen Xatts, Jixiang Xiang, Ying Xu, Ryuichiro Yabe, Richard Yaffe, Mark Yagerlener,
Samira Yaghmai, Kiyoshi Yamaoka, Matthew Yamasaki, Keven Yan, Xiaoying Yan, Walter Yanagita, Emilie Yane, Heebum Yang, James Yang, Min-Hwan Yang, Steven Yang, Yea Yang, Yu Yang, Nelson Yarbrough, Ronald
Yarrington, Richard Yaste, Keiko Yasuda, Michael Yates, Nisan Yaubyan, Bruce Yeager, Thomas Yee, Rafael YeeMelgar, Allison Yeh, George Yeh, George Yeh, Nahjeong Yeh, Sungjen Yeh, Brian Yeley, Chia Yen, Shih-Jing Yen,
Chris Yeo, In-Kook Yeo, John Yeostros, H. Kenneth Yeung, Wing-Tong Yeung, Sung Ze Yi, Youngjae Yi, Athanasios Yiaslas, Seockjae Yim, Cyrus Yoakam, Robert Yoder, Christine Yogiaman, Arthur Yohannan, Benjamin Yonce,
Veronica Yono-Hindo, Brian Yoo, Charles Yoo, Boseul Yoon, Byung Yoon, Carrie Yoon, Johanna Yoon, Soo-Hyun Yoon, Sung Hoon Yoon, Yongkeun Yoon, Lulu You, Clifford Young, David Young, Jessica Young, Linda Young, Mariah
Young, Paula Young, Ryan Young, Ryan Young, Terence Young, Todd Young, Kristine Youngblood, Kristin Younggren, David Younglove, Hytham Younis, Angela Yu, Hoon Yu, Hsin-Yu Yu, Hye-Jung Yu, James Yu, Jason Yu, Seokjae
Yu, Simon Yu, Donna Yuen, Marion Yuhn, Vera Yu-LaPorte, Michael Yung, Robert Yvon, Peter Zabawa, Robert Zabowski, Luis Zacarias, Julie Zacha, Harvey Zachem, William Zahn, Nabil Zahrah, Sami Zailae, Karen Zak, Nancy
Zak, Michael Zaleski, Alejandra Zamora, Charles Zandbergen, Lazaros Zaoussis, Nicolas Zapata, Floyd Zarbock, Blanca Zavala, Darren Zebari, Sally Zeff, Craig Zehnder, Fredrick Zeidman, Jeremy Zeigler, Philip Zeigler, Lisa
Zeimer, Jennifer Zelazny-Jones, Krystyna Zelenay, Arthur Zelinsky, Bethany Zelinsky, Samuel Zeller, Moira Zellner, Genevieve Zemke, Kyle Zepernick, Adam Zettel, Amos Zezmer, Jessica Zgobis,
Shu Zhang, May Zhen, Yiqun Zhou, Paul Zider, Norman Ziegelman, Robert Ziegelman, Shelly Ziegelman, Joy Ziegeweid, Richard Ziegler, Scott Ziegler, David Ziemer, Susan Ziff, Raynor Zillgitt, Frank Zilm, Natan Zimand,
Anne Zimmerman, Donald Zinger, Joseph Zinke, Frank Zinn, David Zipf, Christopher Zirk, Ioannis Zissis, Natasa Zizic, Andre Zoldan, Michael Zollner, Charles Zonicle, Elizabeth Zorza, Paul Zozula,
Fred Zrmack, Roger Zucchet, Thomas Zuiderveld, Suzanne Zukowski, Thomas Zung, Brandon Zwagerman, Amy Zwas, Ronald Zweedyk, Joel Zwier, Edward Zwolensky, Brian Zybura, David Zylstra=7,241
Sojourner Truth Visiting Professor Kelly Quinn will present a
paper, “Mapping Africanamerican Modernism: Hilyard Robinson’s
Understanding of Modern Architecture in Europe and the United
States” at the Collegium for African American Research (CAAR)
in Madrid Spain in April 2007. In February, she participated
on a panel about African American town planning traditions in conjunction
with the University of Michigan Museum of Art’s exhibition titled, Embracing
Eatonville, about the hometown in central Florida of the acclaimed writer and
anthropologist, Zora Neale Hurston. She has invited a number of guests to
campus including Anu Yadav who performed her one woman show, “Capers”
to get planning, architecture, and urban design students to think about issues
related to gentrification. Quinn teamed with Assistant Professor of Art & Design
Nick Tobier and Mark Tucker, arts coordinator for the Lloyd Hall Scholars
Program to host Alex Kahn and Sophia Michahelles of Superior Concept
Monsters. These visiting artists led students in a week-long workshop to create
large scale papier mâché puppets culminating in participation in the FestiFools
Parade on Main Street in Ann Arbor. The project aimed to build community and
to experience urbanism in a different way.
Robert Fishman, the Emil Lorch Professor of Architecture and
Planning, served as Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the College
of Architecture, Art, and Planning of Cornell University in March
2007, where he delivered the keynote lecture for an exhibit on
“global garden cities” and led a faculty/student seminar on
the international garden city/new towns movement. In March he lectured at
Columbia University on “Robert Moses and his critics,” part of the controversial
set of exhibits and conferences intended to re-evaluate New York’s famed
‘power broker.’ He also defended his re-interpretation of Moses at a program
on at the Museum of the City of New York, and contributed a chapter on Moses
and his critics to the book that accompanies the exhibit, Robert Moses and the
Modern City.
Associate Professor of Architecture Mojtaba Navvab attended the American
Solar Energy Society (ASES) Conference—Solar 2006 in Denver, Colorado,
August, 2006 and presented two papers: “Efficiency of Building-Integrated
Photovoltaic System” and “Thermal Performance of a Double Skin Facade
Building Using Full Scale Testing and Computer Simulation.” Navvab also
attended the second Expert Symposium on Lighting and Health in October
2006 organized by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) in Ottawa,
Canada and presented two papers: “Application of S/P, C/P and C/S Ratios
as Indices for Healthy Lighting Working Environment” and “Application and
Evaluation of Light Therapy Boxes Used in Working and Living Environment for
SAD Conditions.”
Navvab provided daylighting design, lighting control for energy saving, and
building energy performance analysis for several high schools on the west
side of Michigan: Lakeview High School, Battle Creek; Sparta High, Sparta;
and Orchard View, Muskegon; all for Beta Design Group, Inc. of Grand Rapids,
Michigan. He also consulted on lighting/daylighting systems, glazing systems,
and glare control for the Cook-Devos Center for Health Sciences at the Grand
Rapids campus of Grand Valley State University designed by Design Plus Inc.,
Grand Rapids.
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ARCHITECTURE
STEVEN MANKOUCHE and design partner
Abigail Murray were selected by the Museum
of Contemporary Art in Detroit (MOCAD) to
design and construct their new Museum Shop
as well as a series of furniture pieces. The
project is scheduled to open in May 2007.
PETER VON BUELOW,
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
OF ARCHITECTURE,
delivered two papers
at the IASS 8th Asian
Pacific Conference on New Shell and Spatial
Structures, in Beijing, China in October 2006—
“Following a Thread: A tree column for a tree
house” and “Breeding Bridges: Genetic based
form exploration” and “Mutate and Repair:
Special operators for topology evolution of
trusses” at the International Workshop on
Computational Morphogenesis in fall 2006 in
Nagoya, Japan.
ELIEL SAARINEN
VISITING PROFESSOR
FALL 06 AARON BETSKY
WINTER 07 LARRY SCARPA
MAX FISHER VISITING PROFESSOR
FALL 06 SULAN KOLATAN
WINTER 07 GERARDO CABALLERO
CHARLES MOORE
VISITING PROFESSOR
WINTER 07 PHILIP ENQUIST
COLIN CLIPSON VISITING FELLOW
ANNE VERNEZ MOUDON
23
FACULTY
2006 B.A.S.E. studio at the Beijing
Olympic Stadium a.k.a. The Bird’s Nest
designed by Herzog & deMouron and
Beijing artist Ai Wei Wei.
In November Assistant Professor Robert Adams presented
a paper and screened his video, Double Export, at Image
Flux: China, an international conference for new media
and video artists held in Guangzhou, People’s Republic of
China. In October, Adams and Associate Professor Jason
Young presented papers at the annual American Studies
Association conference, The United States from Inside
and Out: Transnational American Studies held in Oakland,
California. Again this year, Adams, in collaboration with Beijing
Architectural Studio Enterprise, A Global Partner Alliance
Academy and Practice for the Furtherance of Architecture,
Design, and Engineering Advancements and Dialogue codirectors Robert Mangurian and Mary-Ann Ray, [TCAUP
Saarinen Visiting Professors 2005], will conduct a graduate
studio and seminar in Beijing, one of the world’s most rapidly
changing metropolitan regions.
Assistant Professor of Architecture Andrew Herscher
published “What’s New in ‘New Prishtina’?” in Volume
(no. 10) and will publish “Warchitecture” and “World Bank
Cities” in Volume (no. 11), along with an interview on violence,
destruction and international law. He also published “Urbicide
and Urbanism: Destruction in Modernist Kosovo” in Theory and
Event and an interview with the Serbian human rights activist,
Natasa Kandic, in the Journal of the International Institute. In
March he lectured on modernist urbanism in Central Europe at
Harvard’s Graduate School of Design and in April he lectured
on the end(s) of modernism at the University of Illinois. In April
he presented a paper on violence, memorials and memory at
the annual meeting of the Society of Architectural Historians.
Lecturer in Architecture Craig L. Wilkins's new book examines
how and why African Americans have been excluded from
the study and practice of architecture. The Aesthetics of
Equity: Notes on Race, Space, Architecture, and Music,
proposes that the discipline of architecture has a resistance
to African Americans at every level, from the startlingly
small number of architecture students to the paltry number
of registered architects in the United States today. Wilkins
places his concerns in a historical context, and also offers
practical solutions to address them. In doing so, he reveals
new possibilities for an architecture that acknowledges its
current shortcomings and replies to the needs of multicultural
constituencies. The book, scheduled to be available in August
2007, is being published by the University of Minnesota Press.
Dean Douglas Kelbaugh was voted one of the six top educators
of the year in a national survey of architectural educators
and practitioners conducted by Design Intelligence. He
was also invited to become a board member for the Metro
Detroit Airport Master Plan, Congress for the New Urbanism,
Michigan Memorial Phoenix Institute of Energy (UM), Graham
Environmental Sustainability Institute (UM), and Golden Spike,
a regional organization promoting transit-oriented design. He
also serves on university-city committee that proposed plans
for the former Pfizer site in Ann Arbor. In March he was invited
to attend the joint AIA/ACSA meeting on sustainability in
architectural education and was on the urban design panel at
ACSA’s annual meeting in March and two panels on Detroit at
CNU XV, both in Philadelphia in May.
Assistant Professor of Architecture Coleman Jordan’s review,
“Confronting Inequality” of the book Structural Inequality:
Black Architects in the United States by Victoria Kaplan
appeared in The Architectural Review, in the February 2007
issue. The Journal of Architectural Education (JAE) accepted
Jordan’s article titled, “Rhizomorphics of Race and Space:
Ghana’s Slave Castles and the Roots of African Diaspora
Identity.” It is scheduled to published in the May issue of JAE.
24
THE WORK OF THE FIRM
MITNICK RODDIER HICKS,
This long-standing
competition each year
selects 20 garden installations
whose principals are
for display on the grounds of
assistant professors Keith
Mitnick and Mireille Roddier the Château de Chaumont.
This year’s theme was
and lecturer in architecture
“Mobility.” (The Château
Stewart Hicks, was selected
de Chaumont was the first
from 200 proposals for the
château at Chaumont-surannual ChaumontLoire, Loir-et-Cher, France.
sur-Loire Garden Festival.
Originating in the 11th
century, the castle became the property of Catherine de’Medici
who entertained numerous astrologers there, including
Nostradamus.)
Mitnick Roddier Hicks created a transportable horizon
produced by two opposing mirrors to form an endless allée
of trees, a mise-en-abîme, sitting along a narrow and dense
strip of greenery arranged to produce a new landscape
among a purposely bare, placeless and indeterminate terrain.
The project embodies two opposing attitudes towards the
arrangement of garden space: the formal geometry of the
infinite allée and the loosely arranged, and very tactile,
plantings of the stroll garden through which one passes before
viewing the immaterial and limitless garden that exists between
the reflective walls. Nature is constructed though multiple
frames, images and reflections collaged together to produce a
new form of contemplative garden experience. Although it is an
international competition, Mitnick Roddier Hicks was the only
American entrant to be included this year. The installations will
be open to the public from the end of April through mid October.
PROFESSOR OF PRACTICE ERIC J. HILL, PHD,
FAIA, LEED AP recently passed the Leadership
in Energy and Environmental Design exam
administered by the U.S. Green Building Council
and is now a LEED certified professional.
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF
URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING
GAVIN SHATKIN’S book, Collective Action and Urban
Poverty Alleviation: Community Organizations and
the Struggle for Shelter in Manila was published by
Ashgate: Aldershot, Hampshire, UK. 2007.
PROFESSOR JONATHAN LEVINE’S ACCESSIBILITY RESEARCH,
“METROPOLITAN ACCESSIBILITY AND TRANSPORTATION
SUSTAINABILITY: COMPARATIVE INDICATORS FOR POLICY REFORM”
HAS BEEN AWARDED A GESI GRANT ON ACCESSIBILITY TO MATCH THE
RECENT 3-YEAR EPA GRANT. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR JOE GRENGS
AND LECTURER IN URBAN PLANNING SUSAN ZIELINSKI ARE MEMBERS
OF THE RESEARCH TEAM. THIS RESEARCH WAS ONE OF FIVE UM
GRAHAM ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY INSTITUTE (GESI)
INAUGURAL RECIPIENTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
MULTIDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH TEAM (ESMRT) GRANTS.
25
Lecturers in Architecture Anca Trandafirescu and Glenn
Wilcox are principals of area.architecture which just won
3rd prize in the “St. Louis Follies Ideas Competition” with
the entry, Mediascape. The aim of this competition was to
generate ideas to energize St. Louis as a cutting-edge place
inviting interactive, creative multimedia industries to the
area and region. Each Folly was required to energize Market
Street using flexible multi-media open space exhibition
infastructures, provide an interplay between the physical and
the virtual, incorporate emerging technologies, as well as a
gateway promoting awareness, and using architecture as the
whimsical mediator between nature, architecture, leisure and
culture. Mediascape is an immersive media environment that
explores the line between landscape, building, and media.
The project begins with one simple move that creates two
different types of media viewing spaces—an open-air cinema
on the upper level and an immersive media environment below.
Taking advantage of the western sloping surface of the site,
Mediascape rises as the site drops in elevation and gestures
towards the arch monument culminating in a two sided
projection screen. The screen is both a response to the scale
of the arch and the adjacency of the highway creating a visual
draw for the greater Market Street zone. Utilizing monocoque
construction methodology, Mediascape tapers to a thin line at
its edges—masking its depth, thus playing a visual game with
the spectator. The elliptical forms on ground level house light
controlled galleries in addition to serving as vertical structure
and access between levels. Wilcox and Trandafirescu also
won a Design Merit award for their house entry in the Decatur
Modern Design Challenge competition.
Mediascape.
26
Double Jeopardy: TCAUP student lounges.
Assistant Professor Karen M’Closkey and Lecturer in
Architecture Keith VanDerSys are principals of PEG office
of landscape + architecture with collaborating partner Jeff
Sharpe. PEG was the featured design firm in ArchRecord2 in
February 2007 begging the question, “Ann Arbor, Michigan, a
breeding ground for talented young architects?” ArchRecord2
introduced PLY Architecture + Design in August 2002, whose
principals are faculty members Craig Borum and Karl Daubman
and named Mitnick Roddier Hicks (see p. 25) a record Design
Vanguard firm in 2005.
PEG office of landscape + architecture, which received an
Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA)
Design Presentation Award for Double Jeopardy—the TCAUP
student lounge design and construction. Each year, the
ACSA honors faculty who have demonstrated excellence by
providing a venue for work that advances the reflective nature
of practice and teaching by recognizing and encouraging
outstanding work in architecture and related environmental
design fields as a theoretical endeavor. PEG has been named
a 2007 Contract Magazine Interiors Award winner in the
Education category for the University of Michigan, TCAUP
student lounges. The project was featured in Contract’s
annual awards issue in January. PEG won first prizes for
Double Jeopardy and Mies Van der Rohe Plaza (designed in
collaboration with PLY Architecture) in the 2006 Pan-American
Biennial. The projects were exhibited as part of the biennial
and will be in a forthcoming publication of the event.
TCAUP'S
Marble Fairbanks
$17.95
Everyday Urbanism
Crawford vs. Speaks
New Urbanism
Calthorpe vs. Lerup
$17.95
$17.95
Post Urbanism
Eisenman vs.
Littenberg/Peterson
$17.95
Order these titles online at:
www.tcaup.umich.edu/
publications/
Lindy Roy
Diller + Scofidio
Rafael Moneo
Françoise-Hélène Jourda
$16.50
$17.95
$11.50
$11.50
OUNT
C
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IAL
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SE PRI
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FF THE
O
%
0
OF 2
Gigon / Guyer
$16.50
Shelter
Michael Benedikt
$11.50
Megaform as
Urban Landscape
Kenneth Frampton
Will Bruder
$11.50
$11.50
The Spaces of
Democracy
Richard Sennett
$11.50
Studio Granda
Enrique Norten
$11.50
$16.50
Traffic in Democracy
Michael Sorkin
$11.50
STUDENTS
SPRING BREAK
INTERNSHIP
PROGRAM 2007
ABOUT SPRING BREAK INTERNSHIPS
TCAUP is committed to preparing
architecture, urban planning, urban
design, and real estate students for
their careers by helping them gain
professional experience. The college
places students interested in learning
more about their intended profession
in a one-week unpaid internship
during spring break. Students spend
the week observing and working with
professionals to experience a typical
week on the job.
“
THE WHOLE EXPERIENCE
WAS GREAT! PARTICIPATING
IN INTERNATIONAL AS WELL
AS LOCAL PROJECTS WAS
VERY EYE-OPENING.
”
GROWTH OF THE PROGRAM
“
I LIKED EXPERIENCING
LIFE IN A FIRM AND SEEING
WHAT I’VE LEARNED
IN SCHOOL APPLIED TO
THE REAL WORLD.
”
This year’s participating students
responded enthusiastically to having
a working spring break. Since 2002 the
program has more than tripled in size.
From 44 participating firms in 2002 to
a remarkable 137 firms in 2007. The
program has continued to grow through
recent alumni/ae who recall their own
spring break internship as a memorable
experience.
THANKYOU!
Thanks to the firms
listed to the right for
participating in the spring
break internship program
this year. Involvement
from the participating
firms who contribute to
the student’s experiences
is what continues to
make this program a
success.
“
I WAS ABLE TO WORK IN
CLOSE COLLABORATION
WITH A GROUP ON ONE
OF THEIR PROJECTS.
IT WAS AN IMPORTANT
ROLE THAT COULDN’T BE
FILLED BY ANYONE ELSE
IN THEIR OFFICE.
”
28
If you are interested in participating
in the 2008 spring break internship
program, please contact Beth Berenter
at (734) 764-1301 or berenter@umich.edu
THIS INTERNSHIP
“ALLOWED
ME TO SEE
AND PARTICIPATE IN
SO MANY FACETS OF
THE PRACTICE WITHIN
A VERY SHORT PERIOD
OF TIME.
”
PHOENIX [AZ]
Marlene Imirzian &
Associates
SAVANNAH [GA]
Dawson Wissmach
Architects
LOS ANGELES [CA]
Cannon Design
NBBJ
CO Architects
ROTO Architects
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca
RNL Design
Cuningham Group
Architecture
Behnisch Architects
CHICAGO [IL]
Group A Architects
Built Form Architecture
Harding Partners
Gibbons, Fortman & Weber
HOK
Murphy/Jahn
STL Architects
Solomon Cordwell Buenz
Koo and Associates
RTKL Associates
Brininstool + Lynch,
Architects
VOA Associates
Valerio Dewalt Train
Associates, Inc.
Zoka Zola Architecture
Ghafari Associates
SmithGroup
John Ronan Architect
Kruek + Sexton Architects
SMNG-A
Studio/Gang/Architects
Garofalo Architects
Farr Associates
Hammond Beeby Rupert
Ainge
Worn Jerabek Architects
Skidmore Owings & Merrill
Eckenhoff Saunders
Architects
Perkins & Will
M.A. Mortenson
Myefski Cook Architects,
Inc.
SAN FRANCISCO [CA]
Perkins & Will
Page + Turnbull
SmithGroup
Esherick Homsey Dodge
& Davis
Hart Howerton
Kuth Ranieri
Walker/Warner Architects
Anderson Anderson
Architecture
Acme Scenery Company
FT. COLLINS [CO]
Gwathmey Pratt Schultz
DENVER [CO]
RNL Design
VAIL [CO]
Aller Lingle Architects
WASHINGTON [DC]
Skidmore Owings & Merrill
Cunningham + Quill
Architects
Quinn Evans
Wnuk Spurlock
Architecture
BOSTON [MA]
Kennedy Violich
Office dA, Inc.
Payette Associates
Machado & Silvetti
Cambridge Seven
Associates
KlingStubbins
Maryann Thompson
Architects
Moshe Safdie
ANN ARBOR/DETROIT [MI]
Lord Aeck & Sargent
Hobbs & Black
Quinn Evans
David Milling &
Associates/Architects
Angelini & Associates
Ann Arbor Architects
Collaborative
Integrated Architecture
DSA Architects
TMP Associates
SmithGroup
Hamilton Anderson
Gensler
Van Tine Guthrie Studio
French Associates
Rossetti Associates
GRAND RAPIDS [MI]
Design Plus
Progressive AE
AMDG
Tower Pinkster Titus
MUSKEGON [MI]
Hooker DeJong Architects
MINNEAPOLIS [MN]
James Dayton Design
LAS VEGAS [NV]
Tate Snyder Kimsey
ALBANY [NY]
Harris A. Sanders
Architects
ITHACA [NY]
The Thomas Group
PORTLAND [OR]
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca
NEW YORK CITY [NY]
Studio SUMO
Ronnette Riley Architect
Baxt/Ingui Architects, PC
Lewis Tsurumaki Lewis
RUR Architecture PC
Alexander Gorlin
Architects
Kohn Pedersen Fox
Architects
Spector Group
Guenther5 Architects
Eisenman Architects
Rockwell Group
Meltzer/Mandl Architects
G Tects
Dean/Wolf Architects
Brezavar & Brezavar
Vandeberg Architects
Perkins Eastman
Vollmer Associates
Gluckman Mayner
Architects
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson,
Architects
Marble Fairbanks
Architects
Swanke Hayden Connell
Architects
Tod Williams Billie Tsien
Architects
Platt Byard Dovell White
Architects
PHILADELPHIA [PA]
Kieran Timberlake
ROCHESTER [NY]
Clark Patterson Design
Professionals
COLUMBUS [OH]
NBBJ
CHARLESTON [SC]
Byers Design Group
HOUSTON [TX]
HOK
SEATTLE [WA]
Freiheit & Ho
Mithun
Olson Sundberg Kundig
Allen Architects
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca
Miller Hull Partnership
Mahlum Architecture
MADISON [WI]
Kahler Slater
URBAN PLANNING
PLACEMENTS
Port of Seattle [WA]
Urban Collage [GA]
Carrier Johnson [CA]
SWestern Pennsylvania
Commission [PA]
Detroit Economic Growth
Corp. [MI]
SEMCOG [MI]
New Orleans Downtown
Develop. Dist. [LA]
The Lakota Group [IL]
Bay Area Rapid Transit
District [CA]
Gruen Associates [CA]
The Planning Center [AZ]
CB Richard Ellis [MI]
147 STUDENTS, 137 FIRMS, 23 CITIES
29
STUDENTS
SAMUEL MUHLFELDER, 1982–2006
STUDENT FACED ILLNESS WITH WIT, ENERGY
SAMMY MUHLFELDER entered the University of
Michigan graduate program in architecture in
summer 2005. This bright, talented, young man
pursued his education with passion and vigor, joy
and optimism. His warmth and good humor endeared
him to classmates, faculty, and staff at the college.
Last November, barely halfway through his course of
study, Sammy died from scleroderma. The following is
an obituary that appeared in the Boston Globe.
Sammy, third from left with the incoming 3G class, summer 2005.
Full of plans and brimming with scampish humor and charm, Sammy Muhlfelder wrote a personal note several months
ago while applying to renew a scholarship at the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture. Though
he had been ill about a year, it wasn’t his nature to concede a day of the future. “Upon leaving Michigan, well, who
knows? I’m twenty-three now and I’ll be twenty-five-plus then; time to find a wife in Spain, Italy or Israel—all three
architecturally sound options,” he wrote. “My only foreseeable hope is that, wherever I do land, I stay true to the design
ethic raised in these three-plus years of education. The real world kills many an idea and many a designer. The real
world will not kill me, and it better not destroy the inspiration currently within.”
“Sammy was brilliant; he was a true visionary,” Carolyn
Centeno, a college friend from the University of Michigan,
wrote in an email to his parents. “He had a poetic soul, a
humor only he could get away with, a sense of levity with
everything in life. . . . I remember how quickly he would
come up with ideas. He would be in the studio till all hours,
and his drawings were always beautiful, his ideas genius.”
WHEREVER I DO LAND, I STAY
“RAISED
TRUE TO THE DESIGN ETHIC
IN THESE THREE-PLUS
YEARS OF EDUCATION
”
After Mr. Muhlfelder died,
friends from across the
country and around the
world wrote to his parents
offering anecdotes,
memories, and tributes, together creating a biography of a
brief life lived well. Some had been close for years, others
measured their best times with him in semesters, months,
or a spring break sojourn. They wrote of how he inspired by
example with compassion, love of life, and a sense of humor
that was as disarming as it was offbeat.
“He seemed to always be amused by life,” Matt Levy,
another friend, wrote in an email. “Even when he was the
unfortunate star of his own stories, he laughed just the
same. Though he laughed at everything and everyone, he
scorned nothing and no one.”
“When we traveled, he liked to show up with no guidebook,
no place to stay, and no real plan,” Levy wrote. “And it
always worked out for him. He talked us into packed hotels
late at night, into private birthday parties and crowded
restaurants. And everywhere we went he made friends,
switching from English to Italian to Spanish and charming
equally in every language.”
30
Walking the streets of Ferrara, Italy, with him was no
different than strolling through Newton (Mass.) or his
college town in Vermont. Mr. Muhlfelder, Levy wrote,
“seemed to greet everyone, from the German students
to the middle-aged women at the cafeteria.”
“Not cocky or brash, Sammy was simply happy being
Sammy,” Paul Rome, a friend since childhood wrote.
“He radiated happiness, energy, and optimism.”
Mr. Muhlfelder graduated from Middlebury College,
where he majored in art history and architectural
studies and minored in Italian. Then came to Taubman
College, where he was in his second year as a graduate
architecture student.
First diagnosed with Raynaud’s disease in April 2005,
Mr. Muhlfelder was neither interested in sympathy nor
willing to let illness define his life. “I remember speaking
with him about his disease, and he never was fearful,”
Centeno wrote. “He didn’t want people to pity him. He
didn’t want to be the sick kid...and he never was. He
never gave in.”
Sammy came home from Michigan just before
Thanksgiving, intending to return after being treated
in Boston. To the end, his ardor for creating designs
remained undimmed. In the note with his scholarship
application, he had concluded with two sentences,
setting them apart on the page as if they were a couplet.
BRING ON ARCHITECTURE. BUT, PLEASE,
“KEEP
BRINGING THE INSPIRATION.
”
By Bryan Marquard, the Boston Globe. Reprinted with
permission and edited for length.
PERIMETER PROJECTS
STUDIO AWARDS
Scott Laporte
Robert Adams Studio
Alumni jurors Tom Lollini, FAIA B.S.’72, M.Arch.’75; Craig Hamilton, B.S.’75, M.Arch.’77
Chooyon Han
Malcolm McCullough Studio
ANNUAL STUDENT SHOW AWARDS
Kaleena Quinn
Fernando Lara Studio
Melanie Kaba
Danelle Guthrie Studio
Jordan Wilday
Jim Bassett Studio
Allison Newmeyer
Glenn Wilcox Studio
Ryan DePersia
Juan Rois Studio
WILLEKE PORTFOLIO
COMPETITION AWARDS
WILLEKE PORTFOLIO COMPETITION JURY
Craig Hamilton, B.S.’75, M.Arch.’77;
Tom Lollini, FAIA, B.S.’72, M.Arch.’75;
Phil Lundwall, FAIA, B.Arch.’63,
M.Arch.’64; John Myefski, B.S.’84,
M.Arch.’86; David Neuman, FAIA,
B.Arch.’70; Catherine Seavitt Nordensen
AIA, B.S.’91; Don Vitek, B.S.’87;
Assistant Professor Fernando Lara, and
Assistant Professor Steven Mankouche
UNDERGRADUATE AWARDS
Matthew Hettler
Lars Gräbner UG1 Studio
GRADUATE HONOR AWARDS
You Ling Lim
Perry Kulper 2G3/3G6 Studio
Hattie Stroud
Julie Larsen UG1 Studio
Melanie Kaba
Danelle Guthrie 2G1/3G4 Studio
Ryan McCourt
Nondita Correa UG1 Studio
GRADUATE MERIT AWARDS
Dongjun Seo
Robert Adams 2G1/3G4Studio
Michelle Miller
Sophia Psarra UG3 Studio
Allison Newmeyer
Glenn Wilcox 2G1/3G4 Studio
Jordan Wilday
Jim Bassett 2G1/3G4 Studio
Tanakorn Pokaratsiri
Sulan Kolatan/Robert Cervellione 2G3/
3G6 Studio
Timothy Szal
Craig Borum 3G2 Studio
Photographs by Peter Smith, Smith Photography.
HONORABLE MENTION
Megan Ruettinger
Juan Mercado
GRADUATE AWARDS JURY
Craig Hamilton, B.S.’75, M.Arch.’77; Tom
Lollini, FAIA B.S.’72, M.Arch.’75; Phil
Lundwall, FAIA B.Arch.’63, M.Arch.’64;
David Neuman, FAIA B.Arch.’70;
Assistant Professor Coleman Jordan,
and Associate Professor Jason Young
Juan Mercado
Anca Trandafirescu UG3 Studio
FIRST PLACE
Alexis Coir
$9,000
SECOND PLACE
Zain Abu-Seir
$6,000
UNDERGRADUATE AWARDS JURY
Ben Baxt, B.Arch.’67; Randy Derifield
M.U.P.’77; Catherine Seavitt Nordensen
AIA B.S.’91; Mike Quinn, FAIA
M.Arch.’74; Don Vitek B.S.’87; Assistant
Professor Karen M’Closkey, Assistant
Professor Gretchen Wilkins
31
STUDENTS
SINCE 2003, THE URBAN PLANNING DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. (UP-MLK) SYMPOSIUM
COMMITTEE HAS CELEBRATED THE LIFE AND LEGACY OF DR. KING BY EXAMINING THE
INTERSECTION OF RACE, SOCIAL JUSTICE, AND URBAN PLANNING. STUDENTS HAVE
EXPLORED TOPICS SUCH AS SPATIAL SEGREGATION, RACE RELATIONS AMONG HIGH SCHOOL
STUDENTS, AND LINKAGES BETWEEN RACE AND ACCESS TO PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION.
This year the University of Michigan observed the 20th anniversary of the first
campus-wide Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium. The UP-MLK
Symposium Committee hosted two programs related to this year’s theme, “Building
the Beloved Community.”
The first, “Why Are You in My Space? Reflections on Interdisciplinary Relations in
TCAUP” examined the extent to which building design and layout within the Art &
Architecture Building promotes or stifles interdisciplinary collaboration. TCAUP
faculty, staff, and students, identified their “departmental zone,” documented their
various pathways through the building, and brain-stormed design improvements that
could foster a more social and collaborative academic community.
The second program, entitled “Why Are You in My Space? A Conversation about
Race, New Urbanism and Public Housing,” consisted of a moderated panel
discussion regarding the U.S. Housing and Urban Development Departmentsponsored HOPE VI housing redevelopment initiative, a multi-media montage of public
housing residents’ perspectives, and a presentation by Chris Leinberger, director
of the real estate certificate program, about the role of real estate developers in
creating affordable and diverse communities. The evening ended with Dean Douglas
Kelbaugh moderating a lively discussion among community members, TCAUP faculty,
staff, students, and guests from the School of Social Work, Ross School of Business
and Ford School of Public Policy.
Panel members included Robert Fishman, Dr. Emily Talen, associate professor of
urban and regional planning at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and
Micheal Kelly, executive director, District of Columbia Housing Authority.
Members of the 2007 UP-MLK Symposium Committee included co-chairs, Cassia
Herron and Khalilah Burt, Eric Beckett, T’Chana Bradford, Kimiko Doherty, Monica
Guerra, Mark Hansford, Syeda Hussein, Kelly Koss, and Rachel Wells. The committee
was advised by urban planning faculty members Elsie Harper-Anderson, Joe Grengs,
and Kelly Quinn.
MOJTABA NAVVAB AND DOCTORAL
CANDIDATE IN ARCHITECTURE JATUWAT
VARODOMPUN, ATTENDED THE EPIC 2006
AIVC CONFERENCE IN LYON, FRANCE
IN DECEMBER 2006 AND PRESENTED
TWO PAPERS “PEDESTRIANS’ COMFORT
INDEX IN URBAN SETTLEMENTS USING
CFD ANALYSIS” AND “VENTILATION
PERFORMANCES OF MIXING,
DISPLACEMENT AND IMPINGING SYSTEM
UNDER DIFFERENT HVAC SCENARIOS.”
THESE PAPERS ARE PUBLISHED IN
THEIR RELATED JOURNALS.
32
Neha Sami, an urban and regional
planning doctoral student was
awarded the prestigious Barbour
Fellowship for 2007–2008.
Urban and regional planning
student Kalilah Burt and graduate
architecture student Bona Kim were
awarded scholarships from the
Center for the Education for Women
T-SQUARE
SOCIETY
Inspired by a roster found in the college’s
centennial pictorial history, a group of
students has resurrected the T-Square
Society.
The T-Square Society was an
association of UM female architecture
and engineering students active in the
early 20th century, a time when women
in these fields were a rarity. The revived
society seeks to promote awareness
of alternate points of view within
architecture, including issues of gender,
sexuality, and diversity.
The society hosted 2007 Walter Sanders
Fellow Despina Stratigakos as a guest
speaker at its inaugural meeting.
Stratigakos delivered a talk titled, “The
Power of Images, or Rethinking Architect
Barbie.” Stratigakos posed questions
about perception and asked ‘in what
ways do popular images influence
how we project ourselves into a
professional future?’ She described how,
in 2002, Mattel Inc. proposed creating
an Architect Barbie, but eventually
abandoned the idea because they
believed the doll would not appeal to
little girls. Had she been manufactured,
Architect Barbie undoubtedly would
have become a vehicle for fantasizing
about a future professional self.
Stratigakos challenged the students
to design a Mattel prototype, for either
Barbie or Ken. The Architect Barbies
created by T-Square Society members
and TCAUP faculty were on view in the
College Gallery as part of the annual
Fellows’ Exhibition during April.
PH.D. NEWS
COMPETITIONS
LECTURE SERIES
A RECENT AGREEMENT WITH THE RACKHAM
SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES NEGOTIATED
BY DOUG KELBAUGH, JEAN WINEMAN AND
JONATHAN LEVINE WILL BRING ANOTHER
$800,000 MORE OVER THE NEXT FIVE
YEARS TO OUR DOCTORAL STUDENTS IN
ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING. THIS
IS ONE OF THE BIGGEST FUNDING INCREASES
TAUBMAN COLLEGE HAS EVER RECEIVED
FROM THE UNIVERSITY AND WILL ENABLE
THE COLLEGE TO OFFER COMPETITIVE
FOUR-YEAR PACKAGES, INCLUDING TUITION,
STIPEND, AND HEALTHCARE, TO ALL
INCOMING DOCTORAL STUDENTS.
Assistant Professor
Fernando Lara’s
competition-winning
entry for renovation
of a late 19th century
beaux-art building
located in the main
public square in Belo
Horizonte, Brazil.
COMPETITIONS LECTURE SERIES
Julie Larsen + Roger Hubeli
Karl Daubman
Mitnick Roddier Hicks
Fernando Lara
Juan Rois
Doug Kelbaugh
Keith VanDerSys + Karen M’Closkey
Anca Trandafirescu + Glenn Wilcox
Sophia Psarra
Undergraduates Sean Kizy and Lisa Feldmann,
members of the AIAS Professional Development
Committee, created an in-house lecture series to
showcase this competition work, past and present.
Architecture faculty have entered competitions
to design everything from elementary schools,
museum installations, government buildings, portfolio
competitions, landscape proposals, and many more
that spread across the globe. Winning competition projects by faculty are being built from
Belo Horizonte, Brazil to Paris, France. The Competitions Lecture Series provides faculty a
venue to present their work and brings professors and students into a less formal lecture
setting where there is opportunity to engage in dialogue outside the architecture studio
and lecture hall. It has been extremely exciting to see the diversity of approaches and to
have students get to know their professors’ work as the professors know their own. The
series started modestly with one lecture in the fall semester and built a large following
and members of the faculty asking to present their work.
Agora n. A place
of congregation,
originally a
marketplace or public
square; the Agora,
the chief marketplace
of Athens, center of
the city’s civic life.
Agora is also the title of the new
planning journal of the University of
Michigan which was launched on March
30, 2007. This student-initiated journal
will be a forum for students in urban
planning and planning-related programs
to publish their work. The Agora
Planning Board hopes the annual journal will foster cross-disciplinary respect and
communication. The planning board includes doctoral and master's degree students
in urban planning, urban design, and real estate certificate program: Kelsey Johnson,
Thomas Skuzinski, Deirdra Stockmann, Nathan Gray, Benjamin Kraft, Michael
Lydon, Carolyn Pivirotto, Neha Sami, Sam Butler, Caitlyn Clausen, James McMurray,
Kimberly Dresdner, Ross Davison, Kelly Koss, and Elizabeth Schuh.
33
ALUMNI/AE
Professor James Chaffers and William
Diefenbach will be among 76 members
of the American Institute of Architects
who will receive their Fellowship medal during the Investiture of
Fellows Ceremony at the AIA 2007 National Convention and Design
Expo in San Antonio, Texas on May 4, 2007.
Professor James Chaffers, FAIA, M.Arch.’69,
D.Arch.’71 has a well-deserved reputation
as a scholar, teacher, designer, and social
activist. His commitment to diversity is not
simply about creating equal opportunities for
representatives of disadvantaged groups; it
is a diversity that translates into creating a genuine community
composed of diverse groups of people. He has served as
advisor to the Organization of African American Students in
Art, Architecture and Planning, as a member of the executive
committee of the Center for African American and African
Studies, as a member of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Diversity
Day Committee, as a committee member for the Program in
Scholarly Research for Urban/Minority High School Seniors
as well as the Educational Task Force for Handicapped and
Disabled to name just a few. Most recently, Jim’s trail-blazing
work in starting the college's student and faculty exchange
with Ghana has been critical to the success of this exemplary
program. It’s one of the first architectural study programs in
sub-Saharan Africa. On the community level, his service is no
less prolific. For a third of a century, he has been a member of
the Detroit Housing Workshop, of which he is also a founder,
and has served other community groups. Significantly, he
was selected as the sole academic to serve on a 17-member
committee of nationally-known design professionals,
educators, museum curators and historians, which generated
the design criteria and made the site selection for a Martin
Luther King, Jr. Memorial on the Mall in Washington.
William L. Diefenbach, FAIA, LEED AP,
B.Arch.'72, is a leader of the SmithGroup’s
National Science and Technology practice
and located at the firm’s San Francisco
office, where he is studio leader for
research and academic. Long recognized
for his expertise in research lab planning and architectural
design, he is currently working on several key SmithGroup
projects, including the University of California Berkeley’s
Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest
of Society (CITRIS) headquarters, the University of California
San Francisco Cardio Vascular Research Institute, and the
$70 million Helios project at the Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, which will develop transformational energy
alternatives to our current reliance on fossil fuels.
PLEASE JOIN YOUR FELLOW ALUMNI/AE
FOR A M ICHIGAN RE CE PT ION
AT THE AIA NATIONAL CONVENTION IN SAN ANTONIO
FROM 6:00–7:30 P.M., THURSDAY, MAY 3,
AT THE HOTEL CONTESSA. (SEE CALENDAR FOR DETAILS)
CELEBRATE THE ELEVATION OF ALUMNI PROFESSOR
JAMES CHAFFERS, FAIA, M.ARCH.’69, D.ARCH.’71 AND
WILLIAM L. DIEFENBACH, FAIA, LEED AP TO FELLOWSHIP IN THE AIA.
LAST FALL ALUMNI/AE SHOULD HAVE RECEIVED A
PICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE COLLEGE. IF YOU DID
NOT RECEIVE ONE AND WOULD LIKE TO, PLEASE
EMAIL TCAUP100@UMICH.EDU.
34
CLASS NOTES
1950
Robert L. Cassway
M.ARCH.’59
continues to work full time as vice
president of SPG3 in Philadelphia,
but is spending more time working on
his other love, fine art photography.
The above photo just won first prize
at the juried show at The South
Jersey Council for the Arts. It is
one of a series of photographs for a
forthcoming book, The Disappearing
West. The book will include photos of
ghost towns, abandoned homesteads,
and grain elevators, as well as other
images of fast disappearing rural
culture.
1960
Jeanne MacLeamy
B.ARCH.’68
is mayor of Novato, in Northern
California’s Marin County. Among
her priorities, is the restoration of the
Novato City Hall, a project that has
had numerous false starts over the
past 20 years. Her experience as an
architect has enabled her to proceed
along an aggressive project timeline.
Terry Beaubois (Terry Bobo), AIA
B.S.’72, M.ARCH.’73
is teaching a course at Montana State
University School of Architecture.
Using Second Life (secondlife.com) a
web site that provides an immersive
3D environment, Terry can visit with
students and monitor their projects.
This allows him to teach remotely as
necessary from his base in California.
He also facilitates Montana State’s
Creative Research Lab which is
engaged in researching technologies
in CAD, Google Earth/SketchUP and
Second Life and their applications
to architectural education and
architectural practice. Terry’s work
was outlined in “Tech Briefs” in the
January 2007 issue of Architectural
Record.
Peter Kuttner, FAIA
B.S.’73, M.ARCH.’74
principal of Cambridge Seven
Associates in Boston, has been elected
to the national AIA board of directors
as a New England representative.
1970
Terrance Sargent, AIA
B.S.’71, M.U.P.’73
is a principal of Lord, Aeck & Sargent
Architecture. The firm recently
received the “Award for Excellence
in Professional Continuing Education”
from the American Institute of
Architects. The award recognizes
architectural and engineering firms
and their commitment to an overall
system of developing high-quality
professional continuing education
programs.
Gene Hopkins, FAIA
B.S.’74, M.ARCH.’75
was presented the Gold Medal by AIA
Detroit in November 2006. Gene is
senior vice president at SmithGroup,
Inc., and is a nationally-recognized
leader in historic preservation
architecture,
with
extensive
experience in the restoration
and rehabilitation of hundreds of
structures that are National Historic
Landmarks and listed on the National
Register of Historic Places. As 2004
president of the American Institute of
Architects, he helped lead efforts to
renew the AIA/National Park Service/
Library of Congress partnership; save
the Farnsworth House; advance the
integration of historic preservation
principles into the architectural
curriculum of colleges and universities.
In addition, during his tenure as
president, he spoke with architects
around the country and internationally
advocating the importance of design
values in advancing quality of life
issues. Gene has been the recipient of
AIA Michigan Young Architect of the
Year award (1992), the Robert Hastings
FAIA award from AIA Michigan (2002),
and was elevated to the College of
Fellows for design excellence (1997).
Gene served in leadership positions,
including vice president (1987) and
president (1988) of the AIA Huron
Valley component. Subsequently, he
was president (1994) of AIA Michigan
after having served as vice president,
treasurer, and secretary.
R. K. Stewart, FAIA
M.ARCH.’75
is a principal at Gensler, a leading
global architecture, design and
strategic planning firm, and was
inaugurated as the incoming president
of the National American Institute
of Architects on December 8, 2006,
at a ceremony in Washington, D.C.
As 83rd AIA president, R.K. plans
to move the organization’s ongoing
focus on sustainability, diversity, and
the development of emerging design
professionals from a strategic to
tactical plane, emphasizing action
and measurable results on grassroots
to government levels. R.K. will play a
key role in this year’s landmark 150th
anniversary AIA convention, themed
Russell Perry’s carbon-neutral “Arena of the Future”
“Going Beyond Green,” to underscore
the AIA’s focus on broad sustainability
issues. Former Vice President Al Gore,
the author of Earth in the Balance and
the force behind the documentary
An Inconvenient Truth, will be the
keynote speaker. R.K. was inducted
into the American Institute of
Architects’ College of Fellows in 2001.
Recognition for his contributions to
the profession include the Octavius
Morgan Distinguished Service Award,
the Preservation Design Award, the
U.S. Institute of Theater Technology
Award, and First Place in the 18th
Interiors Magazine Awards for Public
Spaces & Entertainment.
Jorge Perez
M.U.P.’76
received
the
2006
Lifetime
Achievement Award from the ULI
Southeast Florida/Caribbean. Jorge
is founder, chairman, and CEO of The
Related Group of Florida, a premier
real estate and luxury condominium
development company headquartered
in Miami.
Elisabeth Knibbe
B.S.’76, M.ARCH./M.U.P.’78
was featured in a series of
training workshops on Michigan’s
Rehabilitation Code for Existing
Buildings. She is principal of Quinn
Evans Architects and resides in
Ypsilanti, Michigan.
Russell Perry
M.ARCH.’77
directs the sustainable building
efforts for SmithGroup nationally and
was asked to design a self-sustaining,
carbon-neutral “Arena of the Future”
for Sports Illustrated magazine. His
scheme for a sports facility appeared
in a two-page spread in the March
12, 2007 issue of the magazine. The
17.4 acre development will be served
by public transportation and includes
a hotel, an elevated park, streetlevel retail, and a 20,000-seat green
arena. Built with environmentally
35
1980
“The beauty of Michigan is that it creates incentives
and opportunities for people to become engaged in
more than one area. I give to support these remarkable
interdisciplinary possibilities.”
— Robert W. Marans
Professor Emeritus, A. Alfred Taubman College of
Architecture + Urban Planning; Research Professor,
Institute for Social Research
The Heart of the
Michigan Difference
Gifts of all sizes make the difference.
Faculty and staff, learn more about
The Michigan Difference at www.
giving.umich.edu/facultystaff, or
call University Development at
734-647-6000.
Judy and Robert Marans
friendly and reusable materials, the
complex is powered through both
passive and active solar and wind
energy. Rainwater is captured for
use in sewage conveyance and the
resulting sewage is first mined for
nutrients to be used in fertilizer with
the small remaining wastewater
cleaned of pollutants and returned to
the groundwater.
Medardo Cadiz
B.S.’79, M.ARCH.’80
is CEO of Cadiz International
Architects and has just won four new
commissions, two in Dubai, United
Arab Emirates (UAE) and two in
Tbilisi in the former Soviet republic of
Georgia. In Dubai, the firm is working
on the design of a 60,000 square foot
residence for Juma Al Ghurair, the
chairman of Al Manal Development
group and a development called the
Crown City which will have 8,000
condominium units in eight clusters
(each with its own club house and
swimming facility) and a town centre
near a lake where retail will be
located. In Tbilisi, Cadiz International
is involved in a large mixed use
development consisting of two hotels,
two office towers, a condominium
tower, and a 1 million square foot
shopping mall; and, also in Tbilisi a
master plan development for a new
mountain township for up to 15,000
new homes with a golf course, parks,
and three town centers. The projects
are being designed between Cadiz
offices in Dubai, Manila, and Brisbane.
They align with other international
design-partners to deliver a complete
design package to include landscape
architecture, interior design, lighting
and environmental graphics and
signage working from concept design
through design development. Local
architects and engineers carry out
the rest of the design work stages
from construction documentation
through tender and hand-over.
Currently Cadiz has projects in eight
countries. Today, Medardo Cadiz
uses Dubai as his base which, he
says, is the perfect place to ground
oneself after traveling for weeks
all over the world. Medardo writes,
“It is an invigorating place to come
home to.” He invites his classmates
to visit his company’s website:
www.cadizinternational.com.
Douglas McIntosh
B.S.’84
who died in July 2006, was awarded
a 2006 AIA Detroit Honor Award for
his restoration of the Julius Melchers
Residence and Carriage House
located in Detroit’s Indian Village. The
house was originally commissioned
by painter Gari Melchers for his
father, Julius T. Melchers the sculptor.
It was designed by Donaldson and
Meier in 1896. The senior Melchers
carved the elaborate gable-end
of the large central dormer. The
restoration, designed by McIntosh
Poris Associates of Birmingham,
was primarily executed by Doug and
co-owner and partner Scotty James.
They made extensive use of salvaged
materials. The arched front entry
came from a 1906 Albert Kahn Grosse
Pointe mansion.
Russell W. Hinkle
B.S.’85, M.ARCH.’88
has accepted a position at
SmithGroup as a level IV architect
for its historic preservation practice
at its Detroit office. Russ is a LEEDaccredited professional and a certified
construction specifier. His previous
position was with Design Plus, Grand
Rapids, Michigan as a specification
writer and quality assurance
coordinator. Russ lives in Pinckney,
Michigan.
Julius Melchers Residence and Carriage House.
Harold Tanenbaum, AIA
M.ARCH.’81
was recently named a senior associate
in the firm of Fullerton Diaz Architects
in Coral Gables, Florida.
Eric Geiser
B.S.’82, M.ARCH.’84
was recently promoted from principal
to vice president at TMP Associates,
Inc., Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
TMP a full-service architectural and
engineering firm focused on planning
of education-institutional projects.
Patrick Miller
PH.D.’84
has been named associate dean for
graduate studies and outreach at
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University College of Architecture
and Urban Studies. Patrick lives in
Blacksburg, Virginia.
Cadiz tower project.
36
James Turissini
M.ARCH.’84
was promoted to vice president of
business development at Skanska
USA in Southfield, Michigan. He
resides in Maumee, Ohio, with his
wife Renee and children Alexia and
Gregory. He has traveled extensively,
lived in Brazil, and studied architecture
in Italy. His hobbies include water and
snow skiing, soccer, and art glass.
Kimberly Nelson Montague
B.S.’87, M.ARCH.89
was promoted to vice president and
director of marketing and business
development from principal at Albert
Kahn Associates, Detroit.
Dana Buntrock
M.ARCH.’88, M.U.P.’88
is in Japan on a nine month Fulbright
Research Fellowship (much less
common than teaching fellowships
awarded by the Fulbright Foundation).
Her proposal addresses concepts
of time in contemporary Japanese
architecture,
everything
from
acknowledging historical events to
the use of materials that rapidly age,
asking questions such as “When is
corrosion desired? When is it not
corrosion, but a patina?” This work is
influenced by theories on alternative
forms of modernism developed by Dr.
Terunobu Fujimori. Dana is associated
with his research laboratory at
the University of Tokyo Institute of
Industrial Science. This is the same lab
with which she was associated during
TEAM OF ALUMS AT
DMA WINS DESIGN
COMPETITION FOR
THE MICHIGAN LAW
ENFORCEMENT
OFFICERS MEMORIAL
In describing the design, DMA
wrote“This memorial honors
those who have fallen in the line
of duty. It is comprised of twentyone sentinels—engraved glass
panels—standing vigil over the
memories of those lost. Mounted
adjacent to the sidewalk along Allegan Street, the sentinels—4’ wide by 8’
high by 6” thick—march west to east, beginning where a new six-foot high
wall would enclose existing electrical equipment. Because these regrettable
killings will not cease, this is not a static monument. At the eastern side of
the site, there would be some empty panels, initially, and the sentinels can be
continued eastward in the future. Names would be engraved into the surface
chronologically, beginning at the west, and the panels would be lit from below.
The transparency of the sentinels allows for security/visibility of the site,
visibility of the Vietnam Memorial from Allegan Street, and a sense of strength
and stability due to their scale.” This monument will celebrate and honor the
her 1998 National Science Foundation
Postdoctoral Fellowship. Her goal is to
publish this work as her second book,
which will include works by Fujimori,
Fumihiko Maki, Kengo Kuma, Jun
Aoki, Ryoji Suzuki, and others. Before
joining the faculty at the University of
California, Berkeley, Dana was often
published as both a photographer and
author in architectural magazines,
and she is still frequently published
as a photographer in books in
Japan. This book will feature her
photography and that of her husband,
LeRoy Howard. She is working with
a conventional EOS D1 system with
parallax-correcting lenses, but LeRoy
uses a wooden 11 x 14 film camera
which definitely stops all surrounding
activity on construction sites! Dana
writes that they bring as much gear
to building sites as many of the
craftsmen.
Matthew C. Petrie, AIA
B.S.’89
was a member of the jury for
Architectural Record’s 2006 Products
Report which annually reviews the
most interesting and innovative
new building products available to
architects, designers, and specifiers.
Matt has been an associate
principal at ADD Inc. in Cambridge,
Massachusetts since 2004. Previously
he worked for Richard Meier and
Partners in New York City and Paris
and for Leers Weinzapfel Associates
Architects in Boston.
1990
lives of 529 law enforcement officers
who have died in the line of duty
while serving the citizens of the state
of Michigan. The DMA collaborative
design team for the Michigan Law Enforcement Officers Monument included
six Taubman College grads along with principal David Milling, AIA, LEED AP
who has served as a jury critic at the college. TCAUP grads: Claude Faro,
AIA, M.Arch.’03; Bonnie Greenspoon, AIA, LEED AP, M.Arch.’92; Eric Hartz,
LEED AP, B.S.’00; Melissa Marks, LEED AP, B.S.’05; Natalie Rupert, AIA, LEED
AP, M.Arch.’01; Eric Ward, AIA, B.S.’84.
He was one of the 40 chosen from
244 entrants. All 40 excel in their
professional roles as architects,
engineers, contractors, and designers
while giving back to their communities
and professional societies. Jim works
in the Atlanta office of Lord, Aeck &
Sargent. Tony Aeck, FAIA, the firm’s
managing principal said, “All of us at
Lord, Aeck & Sargent are thrilled about
this well-deserved honor. Jim serves
as our foremost sustainable ‘spiritual
leader’ and brings his knowledge and
expertise to bear on all of our projects,
either directly or indirectly.” Jim lives
in Kalamazoo, Michigan with his wife
Amy and their two children.
Heather H. Taylor, AIA, LEED
B.S.’90
has been named a principal at Einhorn
Yaffee Prescott, Cambridge, Mass.
Patrick Cooleybeck, AIA, LEED
B.S.’88, M.ARCH.’92
has rejoined the office of Chan
Krieger Sieniewicz in Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
Barbara Potter
B.S.’88, M.ARCH.’90
was named an associate at A3C
Collaborative Architecture in Ann
Arbor, remaining as project manager.
Leila R. Kamal
B.S.’89, M.ARCH.’91
has been named a principal at Einhorn
Yaffee Prescott in Cambridge, Mass.
James Nicolow
B.S.’91, M.ARCH.’95
has been named one of Building
Design & Construction magazine’s
“40 Under 40” up-and-comers. He
and the other winners are profiled in
the magazine’s January 2007 issue.
Tom Gormley
M.ARCH.’92
is in his 11th year at GBBN Architects
in Cincinnati, where he has been
named principal and partner. His
main focus has been on collaborative
projects with emphasis on design
development and project delivery.
He has collaborated on projects with
Leers Weinzapfel in Boston, LMN
Architects in Seattle, Daniel Libeskind
in New York, and EHDD Architecture in
San Francisco. He is currently working
on a new patient care facility at the
University of Kentucky, in collaboration
with Ellerbe Becket in Minnesota.
Recently he built a new home in North
Bend, Ohio. Tom has been married
to his wife Ellen for eight years and
they have two children, Maura and
Patrick. He would love to hear from
former classmates—his email is
tgormley@gbbn.com.
Kelly D. Powell, AIA, FAAR
B.S.’95
has finally fulfilled her dream of
moving to and working in New York
City. Currently she is a senior architect
and project manager at Davis
Brody Bond Architects + Planners.
Her current projects range from a
ground up research laboratory for
StonyBrook University to a mixeduse development project for the
Abyssinian Development Corporation
in Harlem. This past fall, Kelly became
a registered architect in the state of
Michigan and is awaiting reciprocity
in New York and Washington, D.C.
David Sisson
B.S.’95
and his spouse Ito are now living in
Seattle. He is working for Zimmer
Gunsul Frasca.
Brian Stackable
M.ARCH.’95
is director of planning and design for
the St. Joe Company, a real estate
operating company that develops
town, resort, commercial, and
industrial properties. Brian manages
37
Alex Chu
M.ARCH.’06
and
Leigh Stewart
M.ARCH.’06
were married on September 30, 2006 in Leigh’s home town
of Denver, Colorado. Some of their fellow Wolverines were in
attendance. In the photo, from left to right: Cory Zeller, Sam
Zeller, M.Arch.’06; Yasmine Haener, Nadeem Malik, M.Arch.’06;
Abbey Bourque, M.Arch.’06; Nathalie Aguinaldo, M.Arch.’06;
Alex and Leigh; Peter Stavenger, M.Arch.’06; Lauren Stavenger,
Chris Thibodeau, M.Arch.’06; Margaret Judge, M.Arch.’06;
Mark Davis, M.Arch.’06; and Michael Brehmer, M.Arch.’06.
They are now living in NYC and both working for Kaehler-Moore
Architects in Greenwich, Connecticut.
the architecture review board for
various communities, including
WaterColor,
WaterSound,
and
WindMark Beach. He also manages
the entire design team on projects
for 12 planned New Urbanism
communities in various stages of
development in northwest Florida.
Zafar Alikhan
M.U.P.’96
is currently the transit planning
practice lead for Parsons International
in the Middle East. His market area
includes Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, United
Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia,
and Egypt. He resides in Dubai,
UAE with his wife Vanessa. They
are both enjoying the multi-cultural
environment and being a part of
the colossal development projects
throughout the region.
M. Susana Arisso, AICP
B.S.’96
is a senior designer in the Washington,
D.C. office of Skidmore, Owings &
Merrill [SOM], and recently became a
member of the American Institute of
Certified Planners.
Dina Battisto
M.S.’96, PH.D.’04
teaches at Clemson University and
was recently promoted to associate
professor. She teaches and conducts
research and outreach through
Clemson’s renowned architecture
and health program with which she
has been associated for the past six
years.
38
Brenda Rigdon, LEED
M.ARCH.’97
recently joined SmithGroup. Brenda
brings over 10 years of historic
preservation design experience to
her new position. Prior to joining
SmithGroup, Brenda was a project
architect for Quinn Evans/Architects
(QEA) in Ann Arbor, and prior to
QEA, a project architect for Elisabeth
Knibbe Architects (EKA) in Ypsilanti,
Michigan. During her time at EKA,
Brenda was appointed to the Ypsilanti
Historic District Commission (YHDC).
Other affiliated organizations include
the National Trust for Historic
Preservation (NTHP), the American
Institute of Architects (AIA) and the
Construction Specifications Institute
(CSI). As a registered architect, with
historic preservation experience in the
state of Michigan, Brenda has played
a significant role in the revitalization
and preservation of the southwest
community of Detroit. Brenda lives
with her husband in Ypsilanti.
John Comazzi
M.ARCH.’98, M.S.’99
presented a paper—“Hardly Stable
and Never Complete: Detroit’s
Midway Urbanism”—at the ACSA
West regional conference and at
the ACSA National Conference in
Philadelphia. The paper looks at new
forms of urbanism in Detroit that
orbit around large-scale events and
event structures. John also had an
essay entitled “(re)Moving History,”
published in the Magazine on Urbanism
(MONU), in Germany. The essay
details the issues of urbanism and
monumentality in Budapest, Hungary
following the dismemberment of the
former Soviet Union. John recently
received a grant-in-aid of research,
artistry, and scholarship award for the
development of a manuscript on the
career and work of Balthazar Korab,
one of the most prolific photographers
of 20th century architecture. The
grant will assist him in travel for
interviews and the assembly of work
spanning 50+ years of photography
from around the world. John is an
assistant professor at the University
of Minnesota College of Design.
Jake Spruit
B.S.’98, M.ARCH.’00
is working at an 85-year-old firm in
Dublin, Ireland—Robinson Keefe
Devane Architects. He is in the main
office with about 45 others in a nice
older home between the embassies of
Czech Republic and Italy. The firm also
has smaller offices in Cork (the second
biggest city in Ireland) and Belfast,
Northern Ireland. He has been doing
schematic and design development
on a large project in Dublin along
with a Danish firm —which means
frequent trips to Copenhagen. Jake
is living in a cozy terrace house with
a garden and says he spends a lot of
time riding his bike, and a fair amount
of time trying out new pubs!
2000
Neil Meredith
B.S.’00, M.ARCH.’04
after teaching at both Taubman
College and Lawrence Technological
University, and working at M1DTW in
Detroit, is headed to the Netherlands
for a three-month artist-in-residency
at the European Ceramic Workcentre
(ekwc).
Alex Wu
M.ARCH.’00
completed the ARE in 2006 and is now
a licensed architect as well as a LEED
accredited professional. Green design
and environmental stewardship are
important core competencies at his
firm Perkins + Will. Alex is working
in the Atlanta office of Perkins + Will
and is also serving on the AIA Atlanta
board of directors as the elected
director of continuing education
2007.
Yumiko Aoki Nelson
M.ARCH.’01, M.S.’02
lives and works in Oregon with her
husband. Their daughter Naomi was
born last year. In addition to being a
new mom, she is working on getting
her architecture license. Her passions
are cleaning, playing tennis with her
accountant husband, and baking
cookies. She teaches architecture
at the University of Oregon, taking
students to Japan every summer.
She
also
teaches calligraphy
and an introduction to architecture
and engineering class to youth in
the community where she lives.
She and her sister started a very
small business and website
(www.BlueTreeArts.com)
doing
Japanese/Chinese calligraphy.
Christopher Dobosz
B.S.’01
was a member of the project team for
’62 Center for Theatre and Dance at
Williams College in Williamstown,
Massachusetts by Boston firm William
Rawn Associates. The project received
an honor award from Architecture
Boston in the interior architecture
category. The ’62 Center for Theatre
and Dance includes four major venues
and supports the theatre and dance
departments during the academic
year and houses the Williamstown
Theatre Festival in the summer. Chris
is currently a student in the graduate
architecture program in the College
of Environmental Design at the
University of California Berkeley.
Sung Won Lee, LEED AP
M.ARCH.’02
is a senior designer and recently
named associate at Hillier, which
celebrated its 40th anniversary in
2006. He is currently designing the
Alexandra Hospital at Yishun, the
Rawasi Tower in Dubai and the LG
Electronics R&D Campus in Seoul,
Korea. He holds a bachelor’s degree in
architectural engineering from Yonsei
University in Seoul, Korea. Sung has
won numerous honors and resides in
Secaucus, New Jersey.
Jaron Lubin
B.S.’02
was named associate at Moshe
Safdie and Associates in Somerville,
Massachusetts. Jaron helped lead
the successful bid for the Marina Bay
Sands Integrated Resort project in
Singapore, and is currently working
toward its opening in 2009. He is also
teaching at the Boston Architectural
College. His current studio, “Jack
and Beanstalk,” explores tall tower
design, intensive botanical research,
and giants. In November, Jaron was
invited to speak at Talk20, a Pecha
Kucha-like event at the Harvard
Graduate School of Design.
Gina Cicero
M.ARCH.’03
and
Danny Welch
M.ARCH.’03
became engaged in July 2006 in
Hawaii. They will be getting married in
July 2007 in Palos Verdes, California.
Gina works for Cuningham Group
Architecture in Marina del Ray and
Danny for AHT Architects in Santa
Monica.
Adam Fure
B.S.’03
recently received his master of
architecture degree from UCLA, and
was selected by the faculty to receive
the Alpha Rho Chi Medal. Adam is
working for Greg Lynn Form in Venice,
California.
Jason Kaplan
M.U.P.’03
recently moved to Columbus, Ohio
and started as a planner with The
Ohio State University’s Department
of Planning & Real Estate. He will
be working on long-term campus
planning projects, new building
and/or renovation feasibility studies,
and space utilization studies for the
colleges and schools on campus.
Jason says that it is an adjustment
living in Buckeye country, but that it
is a great place to work and use his
education.
Brooke Karius
B.S.’03
recently moved to Washington,
D.C. and is working with Sorg and
Associates.
Abhinand Lath
M.ARCH.’03
is the creator of SensiTile™ which was
recently recognized by Architectural
Record magazine’s 2006 Products
Reports in the ‘Openings’ category.
SensiTile is a surface material that
responds to the movement around it
by reconfiguring the shadows that fall
on it or redirecting and scattering any
oncoming light. SensiTile has received
numerous awards including the iF
Gold Design Award 2005 in Hanover,
Germany for the best new material;
the ICFF Editors Choice Award in 2005;
and the Materialica Design Award
2004. Abhi received the RAWaward
for Best New Talent in 2004.
Damian Petrescu
M.ARCH.’03
and
Sarah Hollis
M.U.P.’03
have moved from Los Angeles to
Chicago and have a new addition to
their family, a son, Teddy born last fall.
Damian is working for a small firm in
the loop, Koo and Associates.
Nicolette Mastrangelo
B.S.’03
left her job at Skidmore, Owings
& Merrill in Chicago, and is now a
dual degree (architecture and city
planning) student at the College of
Environmental Design, University of
California-Berkeley.
Jeffrey J. Missad, AIA, LEED
M.ARCH.’03
recently accepted a position with the
Chicago office of VOA Associates,
Inc. Previously he was employed
at Matthei & Colin Associates
(M&CA).
Stacey (Segowski) Murphy
M.ARCH.’03
and her husband Nathan are living
and working in New York City. Stacey
is working for Marble Fairbanks
where she has worked on a Tenrikyo
Church, a community center in the
Bronx, a house in Palm Springs, and
an addition to the journalism school
at Columbia. She also was involved
in a project for the Glen Oaks Public
Library which won an AIA award this
year and was featured in an exhibit
on public projects at the Center for
Architecture. Outside of the office,
her collaboration with an artist,
a mathematician, a writer, and a
musician was published this past
summer as a hard cover book called
Dust to Dust accompanied by a CD.
Ryan Wilson: hewn experiments.
Ryan Wilson
B.S.’04
studied and designed architectural
acoustics with John Malek of Ann
Arbor Audio from September 2005
until September 2006. During that
time he produced design solutions
and drawings for a number of spiritual
and educational institutions, including
the new Brighton Christian Church,
Wayne State University, and the
University of Michigan. Ryan also
worked as an acoustical consultant
for Constantine George Pappas
AIA Architecure/Planning in Troy,
Michigan. He recently established peal
design in Los Angeles, which focuses
on
environmentally/economically
conscious acoustical/architectural/
sound design. Currently in production
is an acoustical analysis for the First
Congregational Church of Rochester,
Michigan. Other studies in production
by peal design: hewn experiments with
everyday, often discarded, materials
through methods of reprocessing,
sculpture and design.
Alex Logan Libbrecht
B.S.’06
is working as a structural engineer
at Leslie E. Robinson Associates
(LERA) in New York City. He recently
participated in the firm’s entry into
Canstruction, a yearly event (www.
canstruction.org) to help local food
banks. In cities across the nation
such as New York, Washington, D.C.,
local firms, mostly architecture and
structural engineering firms, donate
food to a local food bank in the
form of a sculpture in a competitive
environment. There were 42 firms that
entered the New York competition
this year. Alex’s firm won “best use
of labels.” Other categories include
“best overall,” “best structure,” and
“best meal.” Alex designed the flames
and layout and used stainless steel
rebar tie wire for the construction
technique/structure. It took the fiveperson team twelve hours to build.
He found this project a great way to
get to know some of the people in his
office and let them know he means
business. It was the first time in six
years of competition that LERA took
home a prize. They were awarded a
few bottles of wine and a 500-piece
Prismacolor marker set that the team
presented to one of the principals.
Alex has recently been involved with
the Horizen Tower by Carlos Zappata,
for which he designed the columns
and slabs of this intricate building
Alex Libbrecht and the LERA Canstruction team with their entry.
39
that has columns that aren’t vertical,
but are inclined with bifurcations as
the plan changes from floor to floor.
The inclined columns presented some
significant issues with punching
shear, and Alex came up with a new
analytical procedure to design the slab
column interface to accommodate
tensile horizontal resultant forces in
the slab that reduce shear capacity.
Sarah Rabe
B.S.’06
spent last summer on an archaeological dig in Tel Kedesh,
Israel—just south of the Lebanese
border in the Upper Galilee. She
spent nine weeks doing hand and
computer drawings of almost every
architectural stone found in the
remains of the Hellenistic building on
the site. She flew back to the United
States on the July 22, about a week
after the bombing started. Everyone in
her group got home safely. Sarah then
packed up everything and moved to
Nevada. She now lives in Henderson
and works at Perlman Design Group in
Las Vegas.
DEATHS
Melvin W. Vorel
B.ARCH.’69
January 1, 1985
Edmond Hume Hoben
B.S.L.A.’27
December 1, 1990
Robert E. Buchner
B.S.ARCH.A.’39
June 1, 2005, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Bob worked at architecture firms in Boston,
New York, and Kansas City before opening his own firm in Tulsa in 1950.
He was actively involved with the Tulsa Foundation for Architecture, the
American Institute of Architects, and was a founding member of AIA, Eastern
Oklahoma Chapter.
Charles C. Higbie, AIA
B.ARCH.’51, M.ARCH.’52
December 28, 2005, Fort Myers, Florida. A resident of White Plains, New
York for 44 years, Charles worked at Perkins + Will in New York for 25 years
and retired from The Geddis Partnership in Stamford, Connecticut in 2000. He
was in the Navy Civil Engineers Corp. He is survived by his wife, Jane of Fort
Myers, his son Chuck and two grandsons of Key West, and two brothers.
John E. Phelps
B.S.ARCH.A.E.’40
October 24, 2006
Donald Earl Ward
B.ARCH.’53
October 27, 2006, Bradenton, Florida
John R. Gray
B.S.ARCH.A.’32
December 29, 2006, Saint Augustine, Florida
Paul Gordon Windley
M.ARCH.’70, D.ARCH.’72
Moscow, Idaho, January 27, 2007, after a year-long battle with
myelodysplastic syndrome and subsequent leukemia. As a graduate student
he was invited to testify about his work before Frank Church’s National
Congressional Committee on Aging in Washington, D.C. Paul was a pioneer
in the field of environmental gerontology. He spent much of his career
showing the power of the designed (or “built”) environment to harm as well
as to help older adults. In recognition of his significant research and service
contributions to international gerontology, in 1984 he was named a Fellow of
the Gerontological Society of America. Paul was a faculty member at Kansas
State University in Manhattan, Kansas for 20 years (1972–1992). He came to
Moscow, Idaho in 1992 as dean of the University of Idaho College of Art and
Architecture, returning to the faculty in 2001 and retiring in 2006.
40
Frederick H. Graham
B.S.ARCH.A.’37
February 3, 2007, Muncie, Indiana. Fred was an apprentice with Alden
Dow, architect, in Midland, Michigan following graduation. He received
his architect license in Indiana in 1938 and was employed with Houck
and Hamilton architects in Muncie from 1938 until 1940. Fred formed a
partnership with C.E. Hamilton in 1941. Mr. Graham was instrumental in the
designing of many churches, schools, businesses and hospitals in the area,
as well as throughout Indiana, Illinois and Ohio including many buildings
at Ball State University. Fred retired from Graham, Love and Graham
architectural partnership in 1986.
M. Pamela Stump
B.DES.’51, M.DES.’51
February 19, 2007, Grosse Ile, Michigan. After graduation she apprenticed
under sculptor Marshall Fredericks. She founded the sculpture program
for girls at Kingswood in 1969 and continued there as an award-winning
teacher until her retirement in 1990. Her bronze sculptures can be seen in
public spaces throughout Michigan and around the world. Many others are
in private collections. She also taught all mediums of art to students of all
ages through the Saginaw Museum and countless other special programs.
She was an advocate for civil rights and peace, and a champion for women’s
rights. During the Detroit riots she opened her home as a refuge for African
American students at Oakland University.
William H. Vanderbout
B.ARCH.’52
March 3, 2007, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Bill served for four years in the Army
Engineer Corps where his last assignment was in MacArthur’s headquarters
near Tokyo. He helped hand-letter the documents of surrender which Japan
signed to end WWII. With the help of the G.I. Bill, he earned his Bachelor of
Architecture from the University of Michigan; and then spent 40 productive
years as an architect. His legacy includes a variety of projects such as private
homes, schools and churches, trucking terminals, correctional facilities,
large industrial buildings, corporate offices, and high-rise hotels and
condominiums. Bill was project manager on the Gerald R. Ford Museum;
and project architect for each of the two tallest buildings in the Grand Rapids
skyline: the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel and the Eastbank/Courtyard Hotel
by Marriott.
CALENDAR
University Graduate Exercises
April 27
University Commencement
April 28
College Commencement
April 29
AIA National Convention
May 3–May 5
San Antonio, Texas
Michigan Reception
AIA National Convention
May 3
6:00–7:30 pm
Hotel Contessa on the Riverwalk
San Antonio
UM Urban Land Institute Golf Outing
August 13
University of Michigan Golf Course
Ann Arbor
Fall Semester Begins
September 4
All-school Picnic
September 7
University-Wide Recent Graduate
Reunion Weekend
September 7–8
Wallenberg Lecture
Bill McKibben
October 3
Alumni Society Board
of Governors Meeting
October 12–13
Alumni Awards Presentations
and Reception
October 12
Auditorium, Art + Architecture Building
Homecoming
October 13
Michigan versus Purdue
Scholars and Patrons Dinner
October 13
Rackham Assembly Hall
21st Annual UM/ULI Real Estate Forum
November 7–8
Connecting the Dots: Linking Suburban
and Urban Town Centers Via Transit
Management Education Center,
Troy, Michigan
LODGING FOR UM TCAUP
ALUMNI WEEKEND
Holiday Inn
Near the University of Michigan
3600 Plymouth Road
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
(734) 769-9800
(800) 800-5560
www.hiannarbor.com
Please ask for “UM Taubman
College Alumni Weekend” to
receive the group rate. Minimum
two night reservations required.
Reservations accepted until
August 30.
Microtel Inns & Suites
3610 Plymouth Road
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
(734) 997-9100
Please ask for “Taubman College
Alumni Weekend” to receive
the group rate. Minimum two
night reservation required.
Reservations accepted until
September 13.
PORTICO
A. Alfred Taubman College of
Architecture + Urban Planning
The University of Michigan
2000 Bonisteel Boulevard
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2069
Phone: (734) 764-1300
Fax: (734) 763-2322
Email: tcaup@umich.edu
Website: http://www.tcaup.umich.edu/
Portico is published three times
annually—spring, fall, and winter—for
alumni and friends of Taubman College.
Alumni news, letters, and comments
are always welcome, and may be
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Douglas S. Kelbaugh FAIA
Dean
Don F. Taylor
Director of Development
Tom J. Buresh
Chair, Architecture Program
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
Mary Anne Drew
Janice Harvey (Editor)
Development and Alumni Relations
Jonathan Levine
Chair, Urban + Regional Planning Program
Ken Arbogast-Wilson
Designer
Jean Wineman
Chair, Doctoral Program in Architecture
Associate Dean for Research
The Regents of the University of Michigan
Julia Donovan Darlow, Ann Arbor
Laurence B. Deitch, Bingham Farms
Olivia P. Maynard, Goodrich
Rebecca McGowan, Ann Arbor
Andrea Fischer Newman, Ann Arbor
Andrew C. Richner, Grosse Pointe Park
S. Martin Taylor, Grosse Pointe Farms
Katherine E. White, Ann Arbor
Mary Sue Coleman (ex officio)
Roy J. Strickland
Director, Master of Urban Design Program
Christopher B. Leinberger
Director, Real Estate Development Program
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