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C O L L E G E O F E N G I N E E R I N G 2 0 1 3 A N N U A L R E P O R T
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Year Our CAREER
C O L L E G E O F E N G I N E E R I N G 2 0 1 3 A N N U A L R E P O R T
Year
U M A S S A M H E R S T
Dean Tim Anderson
O U R D O N O R S
In order to be good stewards of the gi f ts you have given, and in support of our campus-wide effort to encourage green environmental pract ices, the Col lege of Engineer ing now publ ishes i ts Honor Rol l of Donors onl ine at
College SCORES a “Golden Sombrero”
In soccer, there are several colorful terms for players scoring four times in one game. A Texas Hat Trick. A Double Brace. Then there’s the vaunted 4 Goal Haul. Hockey fans simply dub the feat a Grub Golden Sombrero. Whatever you call the phenomenon, we did it. For the first year in the rich history of the college, four of its talented young researchers pulled in grants from the prestigious National Science Foundation (NSF) Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program. Fiscal Year 2013 turned out to be a CAREER year in the College of Engineering. Literally!
The much sought-after grants were received by PAUL DAUENHAUER of the Chemical Engineering Department, DAVID IRWIN and QIANGFEI XIA of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, and HARI BALASUBRAMANIAN of the Mechanical and Industrial Engineering Department. Nearly one-third of all faculty members at the college have now won the esteemed NSF awards.
All four of our new CAREER projects attempt to resolve key issues in 21st-century society: making renewable biofuels competitive with unsustainable fossil fuels; creating energy efficient homes and buildings; perfecting nanoelectronic devices that are viable alternatives to transistors; and streamlining primary healthcare.
Our CAREER year occurred just in time for the arrival in March of our highly decorated new dean, TIM ANDERSON, who came to us from the University of Florida as a Distinguished Professor in the Chemical Engineering Department. Dean Anderson holds nine U.S. patents, and two other patents are pending. He has received 24 national awards and/or honors for his teaching and research, including election to Fellow in both the American Institute of Chemical Engineers and the American Society of Engineering Education. The college is proud to have Professor Anderson take the helm.
www.engineer ing.umass.edu/donor l ist .
This e lectronic l i s t recognizes those who have given generous ly to the col lege in f isca l year 2013.Check out the Col lege of Engineer ing website at
www.engineer ing.umass.edu.
U M A S S A M H E R S T
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OUR RECORD-BREAKING AWARD WINNERSPictured on the cover from left to right are Paul Dauenhauer, Qiangfei Xia, Hari Balasubramanian, and David Irwin.(cover photo by Ben Barnhart)
MISSING LINK TO RENEWABLE BIOFUELS
A $400,000 grant from the NSF CAREER Program will support the pioneering research of PAUL DAUENHAUER. Dauenhauer’s project will resolve the top challenge for converting sustainable biomass such as trees, grasses, and
non-food plants into green gasoline and hundreds of key products in the chemical industry. The NSF funding will sup-port Dauenhauer’s groundbreaking research into his novel experimental technique known as “Pulsed-Film Pyrolysis.”
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Engineer Attacks Breast Cancer in a BRAND NEW WAY
Engineer Attacks Breast Cancer in a BRAND NEW WAY
Engineer Attacks Breast Cancer in a BRAND NEW WAY
THE CRUCIAL AND POTENTIALLY FATAL PROBLEM with breast cancer has remained a mystery for more than a century: Why do different kinds of breast cancer cells tend to spread to specific organs, such as the brain, bone, or lungs? That’s the killer. Now the NSF has given SHELLY PEYTON of our Chemical Engineering (ChE) Department a mandate to address this key problem in a totally new way by awarding her a $590,000 grant.
Peyton actually engineers authentic replicas of brain, bone, lung, and other tissues in her lab and will use them to develop patient-specific drugs to block breast cancer from spreading. Her lab is the only one in the world employing this promising new method.
“What we’re trying to understand is why breast cancer doesn’t spread randomly,” explains Peyton. “It almost always ends up in a few areas of your body, and that’s what makes it so deadly. Ninety percent of breast cancer deaths are due to metastasis.”
Basically, what Peyton is doing in her lab is manufacturing disease models outside the body. By using biomaterials to build brain, bone, lung, or other tissues, she can then introduce various kinds of breast cancer cells to test how they interact. With this kind of highly controlled experimentation, the lab can then record all the results in a complex data set and feed it into a computer model, similar to the kind used in population statistics. For her work, Peyton was selected to receive the college’s DR. BAHRAM “BARRY” and MRS. AFSANEH SIADAT Early Career Faculty Development Award. Peyton is also one of 22 researchers nationwide who have been named Pew Scholars in the Biomedical Sciences by The Pew Charitable Trusts. In addition, Peyton received a three-year $198,000 grant from the American Heart Association.
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“Pu l sed -F i lm Pyrolysis is the last missing tool in our efforts to make sustainable biofuels economically com- petitive with unsus-tainable fossil fuels,” says Dauenhauer. “This component we will add to the biofu-els reaction process is what I think has been missing for 30 years. That’s why I’m so excited about it!”
For the first time Pulsed-Film Pyrolysis will give biofuels re- searchers the ability to test speeds in hundreds of chemical
reactions that occur inside a fast-pyrolysis reactor, when it converts biomass into the chemicals that make up green fuels and other products. Those speeds represent the critical factor required for calculating the rate of formation for all the chemical products created by numerous reactions occurring in a fast- pyrolysis process.
Dauenhauer considers his technique for computing crucial
Paul Dauenhauer
Chris Inglis
data about speed and rates of formation in all these chemical pathways as the missing link for producing the highest possible grade of bio-oil and biochemicals. These improved biomass processes will broadly impact the country by producing high-er quality biofuels at a lower cost, along with all the resulting environmental benefits.
Dauenhauer was also on the research team of ChE colleague WEI FAN that discovered a new chemical process to make p-xylene, an important ingredient in many common plastics. The 90 percent yield from lignocellulosic biomass is the highest yield achieved to date. In addition, Dauenhauer received recognition for scientific innovation from the 2013 DuPont Young Professors Program, and will receive $75,000 to continue perfecting his p-xylene process.
Elsewhere in the department, SUSAN ROBERTS assumed the half-time position of associate dean of the Graduate School on July 1. Roberts is also director of the Institute for Cellular Engineering, where she coordinates an NSF-sponsored Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship pro-gram, which funds and trains graduate students for a range of careers in the emerging field of cellular engineering.
The Web of Science notes that a landmark paper written by H. HENNING WINTER, a Distinguished University Professor of Chemical Engineering, has reached the cele-brated 1,000-citation mark. Winter’s milestone paper is titled “Analysis of Linear Viscoelasticity of a Crosslinking Polymer at the Gel Point” and was published in 1986 in the Journal of Rheology. Collectively, Winter’s papers have now been cited at least 8,581 times.
CRIB ROCKS WITH STUDENTS
For many years the ChE communal student work center was so cramped, dark, and uninviting that it was nicknamed “The Cave.” Its primitive conditions recalled the famous remark of Thomas Hobbes that life is “nasty, brutish, and short.” Not any-more! In the past year the ChE department has moved its student work area into a light and commodious space on the first floor of Goessmann Lab and transformed it into a high-tech, student-friendly, cheerful hub known as “The CRIB.” That’s short for ChE Research & Innovation Base. The transforma-tion is thanks to a group of visionary donors. Now the CRIB is a student work space worthy of the department’s 29th ranking (out of 120 departments nationwide) recently issued by U.S. News and World Report.
In other student news, UMass chemical engineering major CHRIS INGLIS won the gold medal in the 200-yard freestyle at the Atlantic 10 Swimming Championships by bettering his own A-10 and UMass records with a blistering 1:36.80 time. Even more importantly, Inglis was also named to the
Atlantic 10 Swimming and Diving Academic All-Conference Team. At this writing, Inglis had earned a cumulative GPA of 3.723.
STEPHANIE POLGAR, a senior and president of the UMass Amherst student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical En-gineers (AIChE), was cho-sen as the AIChE national Student of the Month for March.
At the College of Engineering third annual Outstanding Alumni Awards Luncheon, the ChE de-partment presented its Outstanding Junior Alumni Award to BORISLAVA KOSTOVA, Ph.D.‘06, and its Outstanding Senior Alumni Award to BARRY SIADAT, M.S.‘77.
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SAFER STRONGER STRUCTURES
In 2007, the Interstate-35 West Bridge over the Mississippi River in Minneapolis abruptly collapsed, killing 13 people and injuring 145. This collapse is just one of many infrastructure failures that illustrate the significance of the new ROBERT B. BRACK Structural Testing Facility, dedicated in October 2013. Among other purposes, the facility will allow research-ers in the CEE department to contribute future designs that improve the durability and safety of our highway infrastruc-ture and produce longer-lasting buildings. The sophisticated, large-scale, testing facility will enable researchers to test the
actual performance of full-size structural elements, such as beams, girders, or walls.
“The I-35 collapse and other failures, such as the Big Dig roof panel collapse in 2006 or less catastrophic but costly failures, exhibit the importance of addressing infra-structure needs,” says SCOTT CIVJAN of the CEE Structural Engineering and Mechanics Group. “Testing programs at the new facility have the goal of improving the durability, safety, and sustainability of structures.”
The testing facility contains a “strong floor” and a
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John Collura
ON JANUARY 14, JOHN COLLURA, A PROFESSOR in the Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE) Department and director at the University of Massachusetts Amherst Transportation Center, was awarded the American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s (ARTBA) prestigious S.S. Steinberg Award. According to the ARTBA, Dr. Collura has established himself as a leader in the transportation profession by integrating research and technology transfer practices into teaching. Serving over 36 years in the industry, he has been heralded as a top-notch educator and mentor, spurring the development of the next generation of researchers and practitioners.
The ARTBA added that Collura has played a pivotal role on workforce development issues and in identifying strategies to promote transportation as a career path. He served as co-chair for the National Transportation Workforce Summit last April, is spearheading the Council of University Transportation Centers Workforce Development Taskforce, and chairs the Intelligent Transportation Society of America Forum on Research, Integration, Training, and Education.
A TRANSPORTATION LEADER for 36 Years
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bridge-crane system to allow on-site experimental testing of large-scale structural elements in bridges and buildings. The strong floor is a concrete slab with 30- by 60-foot dimensions, which is highly reinforced with steel and has tie-down points every five feet capable of resisting vertical forces of up to 200,000 pounds each, offering an almost limitless variety of test setups. The bridge-crane system has a 30-ton capacity, with a 20-foot lifting height.
“In general, we’ll be able to test full-scale components of bridges and structural elements of buildings,” says SERGIO BREÑA, the coordinator of the Structural Engineering and Mechanics Group. “For example, in a building frame you can test full-sized beams, columns, or walls. Another example would be testing beams of a bridge that’s being decommissioned; or a new beam that is now being fabricated because of new trends
in bridge engineering so that we can test what the performance would be.”
More than 60 gifts from alumni and friends of the college made the structural testing facility possible. The major donors who spearheaded the funding were Brack ’60, EDWARD C. GRAY ’73, ERNEST AND RAE SELIG, and J. F. WHITE CONTRACTING COMPANY.
Elsewhere in CEE, several faculty members earned col-lege awards. MICHAEL KNODLER was named the College of Engineering Outstanding Teacher of the Year. CASEY BROWN received a BARBARA H. AND JOSEPH J. GOLDSTEIN Outstanding Junior Faculty Award. CEE departmental awards for faculty included JOHN TOBIASON as the Outstanding Researcher, SCOTT CIVJAN as the Outstanding Teacher, and DAVID AHLFELD as the Tighe Award winner.
Pumping clean water from EWB borehole (photo by Leslie Johnson)
Jessica Boakye
SAFE WATER FOR THOUSANDS OF KENYANS
In January, a team of seven students and one faculty member from the campus Engineers Without Borders (EWB) chapter spent two weeks in Kenya, the eighth trip since EWB’s Namawa-nga project began in March 2006, providing safe drinking water for several thousand rural Kenyans. The focus of the trip was largely to monitor past projects and assess future action, in addition to replacing parts of the hand pump installed on the EWB-UMass-funded borehole drilled in 2009.
In other student news, junior JESSICA BOAKYE was one of 10 students nationwide selected by the American Society
of Civil Engineers (ASCE) as New Faces of Civil Engineer-ing in the College Edition of the ASCE News. The top-10 students were chosen from approximately 20,000 members of ASCE student chapters.
The CEE department had two Fulbright Scholars this year. RADHAMERIS GOMEZ is pursuing her doctorate in Trans-portation Engineering. As part of her dissertation work study-ing highway-rail grade cross-ings, she will perform a study examining the engineering and policy measures taken by Spain
throughout its rail system to accommodate the safe movement of road users at these crossings. She will be hosted by faculty from the University of Castille-La Mancha in conjunction with BB&J Consult in Madrid.
ALEC BERNSTEIN received a Fulbright to do research in India. “I will partner with the Bengal Engineering and Science University in Kolkata, India, to analyze the monitor-ing and evaluation frameworks for water supply and sanitation facilities set up by NGOs and other aid organizations in the region,” he explains. “I am trying to work on analyzing different
frameworks for developing and monitoring and come to some conclusions that will allow these organizations to partner with communities in a sustainable way, so projects have a higher chance of success.”
CEE majors ZACHARY BEMIS and TIMOTHY LIGHT were among the 11 graduating seniors at UMass Amherst named 21st Century Leaders and honored for far-ranging achieve-ment, initiative, and social awareness. Meanwhile, PHILIP MACCLELLAN was one of four Jack Welch Scholars, recog-nized for their leadership and executive ability. JOHN KLINGA received a Senior Leadership Award.
Winner of the 2013 Outstanding Senior Alumni Award for the CEE department was ROBERTO LEON, B.S.‘78. Winner of the CEE Outstanding Junior Alumni Award was SHAWN P. KELLEY, B.S.‘94, M.S.‘97, Ph.D.‘03.
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SMARTER Than Your Average House!SMARTER Than Your Average House!SMARTER Than Your Average House!
BEYOND MOORE’S LAW
QIANGFEI XIA has been issued a $400,000 grant from the NSF CAREER Program to develop emerging nanoelectronic devices to complement transistors. The title of his project is “CAREER: Scaling of Memristive Nanodevices and Arrays.” Xia’s NSF research addresses the biggest obstacle for the continued operation of Moore’s Law, which states that the
number of transistors on integrated circuits doubles approxi-mately every two years. “It worked perfectly for more than 40 years, but now we’re reaching its fundamental limit, due to the quantum effects related to electron flow,” says Xia. “So we absolutely need new devices that can do a better job than transistors.”
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IS YOUR HOUSE SMART ENOUGH to cut your electricity bill by a fifth? DAVID IRWIN might make it so. Irwin of the Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) Department is yet another College of Engineering academic to receive a grant from the NSF CAREER Program. The grant of more than $400,000 will support Irwin’s research for boosting energy efficiency in houses and buildings, which represent the largest segment of society’s energy usage. The title of Irwin’s project is “Model-based Energy Management for Sustainable Buildings.”
“The purpose of my research is to make a home or building as smart as possible in terms of monitoring and controlling energy efficiency,” explains Irwin. “By employing the methods I’m researching, consumers could save an estimated 15 to 20 percent on their electricity bills, while also reducing their carbon footprint.”
By extension, that percentage of savings in a large building such as a skyscraper would translate to an enormous amount in money, electricity, and environmental impact.
First, Irwin will create a “Wikipedia-styled” website to use as a repository for electricity usage data from thousands of specific brands and models of appliances; an interactive site in which visitors can either use data or add data about their own appliances. “Our hypothesis is that a comprehensive repository of detailed models that describe how specific devices use power provides a foundation for programming and managing energy usage in buildings,” Irwin explains.
Then Irwin will introduce a new line of research that uses models of these devices to develop software that can automatically identify wasted electricity in a building, track energy consumption, and program electrical devices to go off or on, according to need.
Irwin did the preliminary work for his NSF proposal by making his own home much smarter than your average house. “Currently, I can control about 80 plugs, switches, or appliances in my home from anywhere in the world.”
David Irwin
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Xia’s memristive devices, or resistive switches, are two-terminal, passive, electronic devices that use high and low resis-tance states instead of charge storage to represent logic 1’s and 0’s. They are promising for applications in non-volatile memory, non-volatile logic, reconfigurable circuits, and neuromorphic networks.
“Basically, the goals of my CAREER research will be to fabricate these new memristive nanodevices, test them, and understand them at a scale that is yet to be achieved,” says Xia. “Ultimately, the research promises to advance transformative device technologies for the integrated circuit industry, sustain-ing U.S. competitiveness in high-technology areas.”
In other faculty news, LIXIN GAO has been selected as a Fellow of the Association of Computing Machinery (ACM),
an honor achieved by only one percent of that organization. She was cited by the ACM “for contributions to network proto-cols and internet routing.” Gao now becomes the first faculty member in the ECE department to earn selection as a Fellow of both the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and the ACM.
The NSF, National Weather Service, and the City of Fort Worth have given the Engineering Research Center for Collaborative Adaptive Sensing of the Atmosphere (CASA) a two-year, $1.34-million grant designed to accelerate the application of CASA’s revolutionary weather-tracking radar system, now being tested in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. This year CASA radars were installed at the University of Texas at Arlington and the University of North Texas.
AURA GANZ has been awarded a $1.6-million grant from the National Institutes of Health to continue the research on her life-saving, disaster-management software known as DIORAMA II. It can quickly organize chaotic, mass-casualty disaster scenes, such as airliner, bus, and train wrecks, and cut the evacuation time of survivors in half.
NEAL ANDERSON was awarded first place for the Best Oral Conference Paper at the 12th annual IEEE International Conference on Nanotechnology.
M I C H A E L ZINK is the co-principal investigator for an $867,040 grant f rom the NSF to equip the campus with a high-bandwidth optical data network, de- dicated to handling computational re- search information.
BEST CYBER SECURITY SOLUTION
ECE doctoral student GEORG T. BECKER was the winner of the Best Cyber Security Solution at the Advanced Cyber Security Center.
RAFAEL D. GUZMAN (B.S.’88), the president and CEO of RM Technologies, Inc. of Lawrence, Massachusetts, spearhead-ed his company’s new RM Technologies, Inc. Award in the Col-lege of Engineering. The first recipient of the award was fresh-man ERICK APONTE of Lawrence.
Doctoral students AKSHAYA SHANMUGAM of the ECE department and JALIL JOHNSON from the School of Nursing were named the 2012-2013 Hluchyj Fellows. The Hluchyj Graduate Fellowship was started by DR. MICHAEL HLUCHYJ,
a 1979 alumnus of the ECE department, and his wife, THERESA “TERRY” HLUCHYJ, a 1977 alumna from the School of Nursing.
DR. ELLEN J. FERRARO (B.S.’89, Ph.D.’94), the director of the Systems Architecture Design and Integration Directorate for Integrated Defense Systems at Raytheon in Waltham, Massachusetts, delivered the 13th annual Tang Lecture on campus.
The recipient of the College of Engineering Outstand-ing Senior Alumni Award in the ECE department was NAJMI JARWALA, M.S.‘86, Ph.D.‘88. The recipient of the College of Engineering Outstanding Junior Alumni Award was JOEL VOLDMAN, B.S.‘95, M.S.‘77.
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Qiangfei Xia
Aura Ganz
STREAMLINING Primary HealthcareSTREAMLINING Primary Healthcare
OF BATS, BIOLOGY, AND THE BOEING 777
IAN GROSSE, director of the Intelligent Modeling, Analysis, and Design Laboratory, has been named a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). According to ASME, “The Fellows Grade is the highest elect-ed grade of membership within ASME, the attainment of
which recognizes exceptional engineering achievements and contributions to the engineering profession.”
As Grosse says, “For over 25 years I have been en-gaged in research in the area of finite element analysis and engineering design. Much of my research has focused on im-
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Hari Balasubramanian (left) with Dr. Katherine Atkinson (right), director of the Atkinson Family Practice, and Office Manager Thomas Ptaszkiewicz, who have been applying Balasubramanian’s NSF research in their office.
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ANYONE WHO HAS EVER HAD TO WAIT for an hour or more for a doctor’s appointment would applaud the research of HARI BALASUBRAMANIAN from the Mechanical and Industrial Engineering (MIE) Department. Balasubramanian was the fourth young researcher in the College of Engineering to earn a $400,000 grant from the NSF CAREER Program. The title of Balasubramanian’s NSF project is “Stochastic Models for Designing the Patient Centered Medical Home in Primary Care.” In essence, the project will streamline the delivery of primary healthcare to patients.
“My long-term research goal,” Balasubramanian says, “is to establish the quantitative and optimization frameworks that underpin the operational aspects of healthcare delivery.”
Balasubramanian intends to create new mathematical models that quantify the dynamics of patient demand and the avai-lability of provider care in a medical practice. Using these models, practices can ensure that patients receive primary care as soon as possible, see their own personal care teams, and have their primary care physicians manage all aspects of their care.
“As the first point of contact, primary care is the backbone of any health system,” Balasubramanian explains. “Evidence shows that when health systems emphasize primary care, patients realize improved outcomes at lower cost…Streamlined primary care access has been shown to lead to improved population health outcomes, reduced emergency department visits and hospitalizations, and significantly reduced system-wide costs.”
He also notes that a report by the American College of Physicians stated that primary care faces a crisis due to a “dysfunctional financing and delivery system.” And yet primary care is being strained by mushrooming demand: by 2015, an estimated 150-million Americans will have at least one chronic condition.
proving the ability of engineers to effectively use finite element analysis as a design tool, and more recently using it to help understand the evolution of biological systems from a mechanical perspective.”
Finite element analysis is a computer-based analysis technique widely used by engineers to predict how engineered products perform. Now biologists are beginning to use finite element modeling to understand the biomechanical behavior of biological organs, tissues, and even cells in both living and ex-tinct organisms. In recent years, Grosse worked with ELIZABETH DUMONT of the UMass Biology Department on a $1,016,038 grant from the NSF to develop a web-based digital repository of resources called “Biomesh” to enable biologists to take the same computer modeling technique employed for designing the Boeing 777 and use it for modeling animals.
During his quarter-century career at UMass Amherst, Grosse has secured over $5 million of research funding from federal
institutions and industry, published 110 refereed journal and conference articles, and taught more than 75 separate courses.
Grosse has also served as a site director for the Center for e-Design, an NSF-supported Industry/University Coopera-tive Research Center involving a number of high-technology companies as well as several universities.
In other news about the Center for e-Design, SUNDAR KRISHNAMURTY, an MIE professor and site director, leads a multidisciplinary team that received a 2012 NSF Innovation Corps award, the first such grant ever given to UMass Amherst. The project funded by the NSF builds upon a fundamental new way of thinking about innovation, called an “Innovation Accelerator,” developed by postdoctoral researcher TONY MCCAFFREY. The Center for e-Design also received an in-kind software grant from Siemens PLM Software with a com-mercial value of nearly $2.3 million. The grant continues a long association between the center and Vistagy, Inc., which was purchased in the fall of 2011 by Siemens PLM Software. Vistagy was co-founded by university alumni STEVE LUBY (B.S.‘84, M.S.‘86) and RALPH VERRILLI (B.S.‘85, M.S.‘87).
The UMass IGERT Offshore Wind Energy Program, started by Principal Investigator ERIN BAKER with a $3.2-million grant from the NSF in August of 2011, is now spinning at full speed as it generates an interdisciplinary graduate program in offshore wind energy engineering, environmental science, and policy. The goal of the program is to create a community of research-ers who understand the technological challenges, environmental implications, and socioeconomic and regulatory hurdles of off-shore wind farms. The program will eventually train 24 doctoral students over the course of five years.
Distractology 101, an interactive driving simulator program developed by the Arbella Insurance Human Performance Labo-ratory and its director, MIE Department Head DONALD FISHER, has now trained at least 3,600 new drivers about the dangers of distracted driving since it began touring the Northeast in 2010.
Jessica Townsend
SUPERMILEAGE CAR GETS A COOL 1,010 MPH
The UMass Amherst Supermileage Team finished in fourth place at the Society of Automotive Engineers Supermileage® competition, held at the Eaton Corporation Proving Grounds in Marshall, Michigan. The UMass team’s streamlined car finished the course with a tight-fisted 1,010 miles per gallon!
Doctoral student RACHEL KOH was the first recipient of the KENNETH A. LLOYD Fellowship. Lloyd ’73 is currently the vice president and general manager of Electro Switch Corporation in Weymouth, Massachusetts.
CHARLES PETERS and KAREN PETERS ’87 have made a large pledge over four years to be divided evenly between the College of Engineering and the Isenberg School of Management. In the College of Engineering, this gift will support the Career Planning and Student Development Center and the Diversity Programs Office, enabling both programs to provide workshops, net-working, and experiential learning for undergraduate engineering students.
The winner of the Outstanding Senior Alumni Award from the MIE department was F. MICHAEL MAHONEY, B.S.‘83, CE, M.S.‘85, ME. The winner of the Outstanding Junior Alumni Award was JESSICA TOWNSEND, B.S.‘94.
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Ian Grosse
Jessica Townsend
THE NUMBERS
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◼ Current Gifts 3%
◼ Fee Income/Misc. Revenue 3%
◼ Industry/Private/Other Grants 9%
◼ Federal/State/Local Grants 47%
◼ State/GOF/RTF 38%
◼ Federal 55%
◼ Industrial 15%
◼ State & Local 15%
◼ Other 15%
TOTAL COLLEGE REVENUE SOURCES FY13 ($46.6M)
FUNDING SOURCES ($26.4M) RESEARCH EXPENDITURES FY13
COLLEGE NUMBERSFACULTY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT 1,744
GRADUATE ENROLLMENT . . . . . . . . 520
B.S. DEGREES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 356
M.S. DEGREES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
PH.D. DEGREES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
RESEARCH EXPENDITURES BY DEPARTMENTCHE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,849,543
CEE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6,404,695
ECE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $10,557,473
MIE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,555,611
DEAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $67,990
TOTAL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $26,435,312
◼ Information Technology 1%
◼ Equipment/Leases 3.5%
◼ Supplies/Maintenance 3.5%
◼ Admin/Tvl/Postage 5%
◼ Scholarships/Fellowships 6%
◼ Overhead 12%
◼ Student Support 13%
◼ Salaries/Fringe 56%
TOTAL COLLEGE EXPENDITURES FY13 ($46.6M)
PRODUCTION: Writing: Charlie Creekmore • Design: Joanne Mackiewicz • Photography: John Solem and others • UMass Branding & Creative Communications 13-517
THE NUMBERS
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ALL THE ACCOMPLISHMENTS
inside this annual report show our engineers hard at work, fundamentally changing the world.
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C O L L E G E O F E N G I N E E R I N G 2 0 1 3 A N N U A L R E P O R T
Our CAREER
Year
Thank You
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Ronald J. Bartos ‘80 $
Nicholas N. Boraski ‘50,’91HD +++$
Nicholas S. Bowen ‘92Ph.D. $
Nilesh Shah ‘85Ph.D. ++ $ & Jean Brady ‘87Ph.D. ++ $
James E. Chaney ‘79
Marina (Morbeck) Chaney ‘81
William C. Conner, Jr. > & Nancy L. Conner
John M. Cryan ‘58 +
Paul B. Ferraro ‘89,’92MS $ & Ellen (Martin) Ferraro ‘89,’94Ph.D.$
Joshua M. Golder ‘05
Dev V. Gupta ‘77Ph.D. % & Linda A. Gupta * %
David M. Hankowski ‘66 & Mary (Desmond) Hankowski ‘66 ++
Raymond E. Laplante, Jr. ‘87 ++ $ & Marie (Swiatlowski) Laplante ‘87 ++$
Thomas J. Lyden ‘72,’73MS & Denyse A. Lyden ++ $
Mark J. Notkin ‘86 +
Janice (Rittenburg) Rossbach ‘49 ++$
Ernest T. Selig > & Rae N. Selig +
Ting-wei Tang > & Shirley S. Tang ++
H. Brian Thompson ‘60 ++
John F. Welch, Jr. ‘57,’82HD & Suzanne R. Welch ++
Kenneth D. Allen ‘81 & Susan Barber Allen ‘81 ++
Dennis M. Bushe ‘65 ++ $
Joseph A. Carnevale ‘71 & Mary C. Carnevale ++
Philmore H. Colburn II ‘86MBA +
Margot Gizienski
Robert M. Gorman ‘63 +
David C. Jeanes ‘73 +
Marshall G. Jones ‘72MS,’74Ph.D. & Annie Jones ‘73MBA ++ $
Steven C. Luby ‘84,’86MS
Michael F. Malone ‘79Ph.D. > & Christine A. Lau ++
Thomas J. Mathews ‘76 & Linnea L. Koons
Kendall G. Miller ‘79 + $ & Carla (Ray) Miller ‘82,’85MS + $
Robert A. Mionis ‘85
Madhu S. Murthy ‘74MS
Francis A. Petrangelo, Jr. ‘88
Frederick J. Pevey, Jr. ‘72,’82MBA +
Edward S. Price ‘90
Gary W. Pritchard ‘80 + & Christine (Mahoney) Pritchard ‘79 +
Patrick J. Quinlan ‘82 +
Frank B. Riordan ‘91
Michael S. Sarli ‘75 > ++ $
Marvin O. Schlanger ‘72MS + & Eva (Listman) Schlanger ‘70MA +
James H. Sexton ‘74,’79MS & Marcia (Wiechert) Sexton ‘76 ++
Gregory S. Sherowski ‘70 + $
Edwin L. Thomas ‘69 % +
John H. Underwood ‘62 +
Karen Utgoff +Robert D. Vanasse ‘68 & Maureen (Leach) Vanasse ‘67
Paul C. Washburn III ‘81,’84MBA & Elizabeth (Baker) Washburn ‘84 +++
David R. White ‘77,’78MS + $ & Shirley Scuderi ‘97 +
William M. Stein ‘91MS
Paul C. Washburn III ‘81,’84MBA & Elizabeth (Baker) Washburn ‘84 +++
Edward S. Andrews, Jr. ‘85 $
Leadership Circle Advocates $5,000-$9,999
Individual donors who made leadership gifts totaling $1,000 or more to the University of Massachusetts Amherst in fiscal year 2013 are recognized in the Leadership Giving Circle.
The College of Engineering wishes to recognize members of the Leadership Giving Circle who have elected to designate their gifts, or a portion thereof, to the College, its departments and programs, during the time period July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013.
Leadership Giving Circle
Roberto Padovani ‘83MS,’85Ph.D. + $ & Colleen (Mclevedge) Padovani “75S,’82 +
$Unattributed ++
Leadership Circle Partners $25,000-$49,999
Leadership Circle Pacesetters $50,000-$99,999
Leadership Circle Pioneers $100,000+
Robert B. Brack ‘60 & Janet Bailey ‘67,’77Ed.D. +++
Michael G. Hluchyj ‘76 & Theresa (Murphy) Hluchyj ‘77 ++
Charles J. Peters, Jr. ‘88 % ++ & Karen (Holland) Peters ‘87 % ++
Krikor Ermonian ‘52 +++
Kenneth A. Lloyd ‘73 % & Sylvia Loran % +
Barry Siadat ‘77MS,’79Ph.D. & Afsaneh Siadat
Edwin V. Sisson ‘68
James M. Smith ‘67,’07HD ++
Ralph J. Verrilli ‘85,’87MS
* Deceased
+ 5 to 9 years of consecutive giving
++ 10 to 24 years of consecutive giving
+++ 25 or more years of consecutive giving
$ Matching gift or claim
% Parent
> Current faculty, staff or emeritus faculty
HD Honorary Degree Recipient
HA Honorary Alumnus or Alumna
S Stockbridge Alumnus or Alumna
This report recognizes contributions received during Fiscal Year 2013.
Leadership Circle Associates $2,500-$4,999
Daniel N. Adams ‘86,’88MS $
Paul J. Banks ‘81 % & Nancy (Macdonald) Banks ‘80 %
David P. Barry ‘73 & Nancy (Walsh) Barry ‘73
Steven P. Carlson ‘80 + $
Jay A. Catelli ‘05 + $
Carl R. Christenson ‘82,’84MS + & Kimberlee B. Christenson +
Frank J. Consoli ‘75 +
Paul J. Donahue $
Christopher J. Fontaine ‘79 +
Charles D. Gordon ‘63 & Ruth E. Gordon
R. Paul Hirt ‘81 & Lynn Campana ‘81 ++
Gordon Hutchins, Jr. ‘70 +
Raymond J. Kaleda ‘66 & Laurel V. Kaleda ++ $
Paul W. Kamienski ‘69 + $
Albert F. Kasper IV ‘88MBA
John P. Keenan ‘72 & Dagmar (Schorkhuber) Keenan ‘73 +
Kevin J. Kelley ‘61 & Lee Kelley +
Paul W. Kelley ‘67 ++
Alvin T. Kho ‘94,’96MS,’00Ph.D.
Joan Lowe
Anthony T. Megaro
Adam S. Miller ‘93
Mara A. Motherway ++
Sally D. Motherway ++
William D. Motherway ‘87 ++ $
Basant Nanda ‘92MS $
Cuneyt L. Oge ‘80MS & Margo T. Oge
Evan F. Quarton ‘58
Marcel E. Ricciardelli ‘90 $
Peter J. Riley ‘71MS,’75Ph.D. & Louise (Auclair) Riley ‘73 $
William J. Riordan ‘79 & Patricia (Donaldson) Riordan ‘79
Linda Scott ‘83MS,’86Ph.D. > +++ & Rebecca Sherer ‘87 +++
James G. Shields ‘60 & Marilynn (Kolazyk) Shields ‘61 ++ $
Richard G. Smith ‘78
Ian M. Striffler ‘97 + $
Daniel J. Sullivan ‘65 +
Marcel D. Veilleux ‘81 +
William E. Woodburn, Jr. ‘56
Richard P. Wynn ‘50 ++
Guy E. Yeager ‘96MS + $
Leadership Circle Members $1,000-$2,499
Reginald H. Achilles ‘91
Donald Andres ‘85 +++ $ & Amanda (Ellis) Andres ‘85 +++ $
Kelvin F. Cross ‘75,’77MS ++ & Caren Arnstein ‘77 ++
Souheil Asmar ‘76
Andrew C. Bail ‘02 ++
Pamela Beaubien +
Hal M. Berman ‘77MS +
John G. Bestgen, Jr. ‘55 +
Donald M. Boettger ‘85
David A. Bohn ‘78,’79MS & Marlene Bohn ‘84
Paul M. Carlin ‘66 $
John A. Carriere ‘75 ++
Jeffrey D. Catlin ‘87 & Andrea Tulenko-Catlin ‘87
Hsinyung Chin ‘90MS,’93Ph.D.
Edward E. Clark ‘70Ph.D.
Alan S. Cohen ‘66 & Natalie K. Cohen
Stephen A. Collins ‘81 & Amy (Ostanek) Collins ‘87
Heidi (Donahue) Connelly ‘82 % & Michael Connelly %
Helen Connelly-Crouse ‘86MS
Kevin M. Cronin ‘98
Stephen P. Daniel ‘81 +
Seren Z. Derin % +
Bronislaw K. Dichter & Patricia M. Dichter %
Theodore E. Djaferis ‘74 % > & Mary Djaferis ‘03MS %
Robert C. Doiron ‘76 $ & Mary-Frances (Sullivan) Doiron ‘75 $
Alfred H. Drewes ‘78
Brian E. Dunleavy ‘66 & Margaret (Barrett) Dunleavy ‘66 ++ $
Richard B. Fairbanks ‘67,’69MS +
Sharon (Brown) Forbes ‘83
Stephen J. Forde III ‘81,’89MS & Dawn (Kalinen) Forde ‘80
Charles G. Fredette ‘70,’74MS ++
Jacob R. Freeman ‘04
Michael M. Frerker ‘96MS
David R. Gaboury ‘76 & Mary E. Gaboury +
Kumar N. Ganapathy ‘90MS
Matthew H. Garber ‘08
Gary R. Gardinier ‘69 & Arleen (Ruder) Gardinier ‘69MED $
Ronald R. Gerace ‘84 % ++ & Juliane (Sicard) Gerace ‘85 % ++
Donald L. Gibavic ‘72 + & Nancy (Suprenant) Gibavic ‘78 +
Joseph I. Goldstein > & Barbara H. Goldstein ++
Ronald R. Gould ‘69 ++ $
Paul H. Grazewski ‘77 %
Richard J. Gregory ‘86Ph.D. ++ & Gillian (Norman) Gregory ‘82MS,’86Ph.D. ++
Mark B. Hackenberry ‘83
Robert A. Henry ‘70 ++
Lawrence G. Herman ‘73
Phyllis Heronemus
Barbara Howard ‘78 ++
Najmi T. Jarwala ‘86MS,’88Ph.D. & Madhuri Jarwala ‘87MS
Wayne C. Jones ‘66 ++
Gareth A. Keith ‘58 ++
James M. Lavelle ‘87,’93MBA % $ & Elizabeth (Quirk) Lavelle ‘86 % $
Steven M. Lee ‘96 + $ & Martha C. Lee + $
Roberto T. Leon ‘78
Wenkway Liang ‘90MS & Jenyeng Cheah ‘90MS +
Karl E. Liebich ‘80 ++ $
Tucuong Lien ‘70 & Jennifer (Chen) Lien ‘71 + $
Mark D. Lincoln ‘71 + $
Michael J. MacDonald ‘91 ++ $ & Jane MacDonald ++ $
Charles D. Machlin ‘82
John F. Magnani ‘81 +
Paul M. Masterson ‘75
Mari-Kate McEntee ‘07 $
Timothy J. McGrath ‘98Ph.D. +
Richard L. McManus ‘90 $
Spyros Michail ‘88MS,’91MS + $ & Yazmin (Alvarez) Michail ‘89 + $
Brian J. Milewski ‘84 % + & Diane (Gardner) Milewski ‘83,’85MA % +
Edward W. Millette III ‘86 ++ $
James L. Milton ‘70MS,’73Ph.D. & Martha (Sailor) Milton ‘74 ++
John T. Murphy ‘65 +
William D. O’Neill ‘60 & Carol (Mentor) O’Neill ‘61
Richard N. Palmer % > & Elaine S. Palmer %
Lee A. Pearlmutter ‘66,’73MS
Greg G. Peters ‘76 ++ $
Thomas K. Philips ‘83MS,’86Ph.D. & Marina Philips ‘86MS
Russell J. Powers ‘66 +
David M. Pozar > & Judith A. Pozar >
Harold J. Publicover ‘49 +++
C O L L E G E O F E N G I N E E R I N G 2 0 1 3 A N N U A L R E P O R T U M A S S A M H E R S T
Donald A. Robinson ‘66,’84Ph.D. % > & Sara (Laclaire) Robinson ‘66,’79MED,’86Ed.D. %
David H. Rosen ‘59 % +
Mark Rovelli ‘79 ++ $
David M. Salem ‘85
Scott A. Sandler ‘83 ++
Scott Scheibner
Manfred J. Schindler ‘82MS
Brian D. Semle ‘86 % & Susan (Bova) Semle ‘88 % ++
Steven L. Shray ‘79 +
George A. Smith, Jr. ‘55 & Linda Smith ++
Howard R. Smith ‘75 + $
Brycen L. Spencer ‘10 $
Gary E. Stanitis ‘80 % & Judith (Bell) Stanitis ‘80 %
Thomas J. Stanley ‘79 $
Jane (Isgur) Stein ‘82MS % & Peter B. Stein % ++
Ivan L. Stokes ‘81 ++
John D. Stuart
Calvin T. Swift > & Joanne T. Swift ++
James A. Tauras ‘62
Ann Testarmata ‘77
Scott D. Thomas ‘92Ph.D. $ & Cristina (Urdaneta) Thomas ‘92Ph.D. $
William J. Thomas ‘08 $
Nancy (Gage) Torrey ‘73 & Philip B. Torrey +++
Louis G. Tortoriello ‘68MS $
Chorfan Tsang ‘77MS +
Jay E. Turnberg ‘78,’79MS % + & Ann (Muri) Turnberg ‘77 % +
Matthew T. Valade ‘93,’95MS
William H. Wachter III ‘80 & Jill WachterMary (Martin) Warner ‘44
Paul W. Young ‘68MS ++
Richard S. Zajchowski ‘85
Leadership Circle Members $1,000-$2,499 (cont.)
Leadership Circle Affiliate Recent Alums
Jessica Abbott ‘03
Trevor A. Beck ‘11 $
Gregory L. Brooks & Cheryl L. Brooks ‘15Ed.D. >
Jeannine Coburn ‘06
Matthew W. Heath ‘04Ph.D. $
Maxwell P. Leabo ‘10
Andrew E. Pepyne ‘08 $
Panagiotes M. Petrakis ‘08
Wei Qi ‘10Ph.D.
$500 - $999 Donors to the College of Engineering
Thomas L. Anderson ‘80 ++
Joseph P. Ausikaitis ‘71
David B. Bain ‘90 + $
Dennis C. Bak ‘79 +
David C. Bartlett ‘53,’57MS +++
Paul Bazanchuk
Robert C. Beck ‘69 % & Gail W. Beck % $
Neoma M. Berger ++
James E. Brown ‘74 ++ $
Robert C. Calafell II ‘92 & Judith C. Calafell
Richard E. Campagnoni ‘57 ++ $
Michael W. Canary ‘85 ++
William J. Carter, Jr. ‘67 % ++ $
David M. Catallozzi ‘81 ++ $
Michael J. Chajes ‘84 +
Yih-Herng Chuang ‘85MS
John R. Corsi, Jr. ‘61
James Costantino ‘58 +
Christopher A. Cove ‘87 % ++
Jon W. Dietrich ‘69,’74MS % +
Jeffrey S. Dirk ‘91 % & Melissa C. Dirk % ++
Robert T. Duffy ‘73MS + $
Donald L. Fisher >
Frederick A. Fresh ‘88Ph.D.
Louis R. Glinka ‘55 ++ $
Thomas A. Gray ‘87
Kazimierz T. Grzeslak ‘88,’91MS + $
Gary J. Hagopian ‘62
Robert F. Heisler, Jr. ‘79 $
Rene W. Hemond %
Brian W. Hill ‘69 % & Susan C. Hill +
Mark A. Howards ‘81
Kenneth B. Howe, Sr. ‘50 +++
Elmer H. Hsu ‘67Ph.D. + $
Edward G. Hudson ‘80
Laurence A. Hughes ‘58
William J. Hurney ‘84,’86MS $
Scott C. Hyney ‘81 + $
Brett E. Jenkins ‘92 & Laura (Calkin) Jenkins ‘92,’96MM
Robert F. Kearns ‘58 $
John A. Kerrigan ‘83 & Nancy (Marks) Kerrigan ‘83
Robert L. Klein ‘58 & Elizabeth (Spencer) Ivey ‘76Ph.D. ++
Rajeev S. Koodli ‘93MS,’98Ph.D. & Vidya Raichur ‘97MS $
Albert V. Laakso ‘58 +
Neil F. Lacey ‘90 ++ $
John P. Lambert ‘86 +++
Karen Laptas ‘87
Mitchell J. Liro, Jr. ‘65 & Sandra (Goddard) Liro ‘63 +++
Xin Liu ‘00MS +
Donald P. MacClellan ‘78 % & Judith (Levasseur) MacClellan ‘79 % ++ $
Michael Mahoney ‘83,’85MS + $
John P. McGlynn ‘78 ++
Anne (Potvin) McIntosh ‘70,’76MED %
Robert C. Merrill ‘71 + $
Alan S. Natter ‘74MS ++
Lawrence M. Nugent ‘56 & Elizabeth A. Nugent ++
Carolynn Nuttelman ‘69 $
Todd W. Paro ‘82 ++
John Perra ‘92 ++
Norman G. Phillibert ‘85MS +++ $
Gifts of all levels to the College of Engineering are critically important and gratefully acknowledged. The following donors have each generously contributed between $100 and $999 to the College of Engineering, its departments and programs, during the time period July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013.
Individual Donor
DECEASED
$500 - $999 Donors to the College of Engineering (cont.)
John W. Philpott ‘63,’77MBA ++
Thomas H. Proctor ‘79 % & Deborah Proctor % $
Paul H. Queeney ‘80
Frederick H. Reinhart >
Stanley E. Rotkiewicz ‘79 % & Katherine (Callan) Rotkiewicz ‘79 %
Jonathan C. Russell ‘95Ph.D. + $
Terence E. Ryan ‘01
Stanley A. Sablak “65S & Sandra (Kamienski) Sablak ‘68
Rodney A. Sassaman ‘82 & Anne (Banas) Sassaman ‘83 ++ $
John R. Sharland ‘70 $
Gretchen (Dittfach) Shubrooks ‘69 ++
Richard H. Sioui ‘68Ph.D. +
Neil P. Sirota ‘88
Harsh Soni ‘92MS $
Paula L. Sturdevant Rees >
Steven P. Sullivan ‘87 +
Ralph R. Veseli ‘95MS $
Aaron L. Wagner ‘94 +
James E. Walsh ‘77Ph.D.
Lawrence R. Whiting ‘76
H. Algernon Whitworth ‘75 ++
Sujanto Widjaja ‘94MS,’98Ph.D. $
William Will ‘73,’79MS
Richard H. Williams, Jr. ‘61
Anlu Yan ‘92MS,’98Ph.D. + $
$250 - $499 Donors to the College of Engineering
Carol Anderson ‘84 ++ $
Doris Atkinson ‘87MS,’87 +
Carl A. Avila ‘78
Andrew D. Baker ‘74 & Marie (Kimtis) Baker ‘75
Robert G. Bartlett ‘80 & Marie Bartlett
Marjorie C. Bennett
David J. Bodendorf ‘64 % & Joan (Janik) Bodendorf ‘65 ++ $
David W. Bott, Sr. ‘59
Bruce A. Bouton ‘72 % & Dale C. Miller-Bouton %
Cheryl (Doherty) Braulik ‘83 ++
Thomas E. Brennan ‘85
David C. Brown ‘62
Virginia Buhler
David T. Burnett ‘91,’00MS & Claire (Fugardi) Burnett ‘90 +
Jeffrey M. Byrne ‘77 +
Raul Castillo-Garcia ‘87MS
Douglas J. Chabinsky ‘75 % & Martha Chabinsky % ++
E. Jacob Chacko ‘73MS ++ $
Charles N. Cheatwood ‘02MS $
Po-Shang Chen ‘86MS,’88Ph.D. & Shan-Lee Liu ‘89MED,’94Ed.D.
Julie (Mcdyer) Chirumbole ‘82
Alok N. Choudhary ‘86MS
Thomas J. Chwalek ‘83
John F. Coman ‘65 ++
Karen Connerney ‘98 $
Dorothy Constantine %
Frederick E. Corn ‘85
Matthew J. Cortelli ‘92 +
Edward H. Cowern ‘59 & Irene (Kowalczyk) Cowern ‘59 +++
Melvin C. Crain ‘50 +++
Dennis J. Dahlen ‘78 ++ $
Arnold M. Daniels ‘66 % +
Adil M. Daruwala ‘88MS
Nancy (Anderson) Dasilva ‘82
Lester G. Deotte ‘68 & Patricia B. Deotte ++
Stephen A. Descoteaux ‘77MS ++
Patricia (Adamopoulos) DiOrio ‘90 ++
John J. Donahue ‘71,’78MS +
Michael J. Donati ‘93 & Lauren Dechayne-Donati ‘94 ++ $
James A. Donovan % > & Patricia R. Donovan
William J. Donovan ‘78MS ++
Michael H. Dorgan ‘84 & Kin Chow ‘84
Thomas W. Dube % & Patricia R. Dube % +
Bingfeng Fan ‘03Ph.D. +
Brian M. Fiegel ‘98 & Jennifer (Bourque) Fiegel ‘98
Alvin R. Finkelstein ‘54 ++
Peter Frazier % & Anna M. Frazier %
Jonathan R. Freedman ‘82
Vito A. Giannelli ‘72 & Marjorie (Berg) Giannelli ‘74 ++ $
Lance A. Glasser ‘74 & Wendy (Joseph) Glasser ‘75 ++
Steven H. Greenfield ‘76MS +
Joseph M. Griffin ‘51
Einar P. Gudjohnsen ‘79MS
Roy D. Hegedus ‘85Ph.D.
Ronald E. Higby ‘58 +
Michael R. Hopkins ‘81,’85MS & Nancy (Bouthiller) Hopkins ‘83
Thomas K. Jewell ‘75MS,’80Ph.D.
James E. Johnson ‘60 & Beverly A. Johnson ++
Barkev H. Kaligian ‘56 +++
Thomas W. Kelly ‘81
Paul E. Kirby % & Lynn A. Kirby %
Steven S. Knisely ‘80
Richard P. Komosky ‘76 ++
Konstantinos A. Konstantinides ‘80MS $
Borislava Kostova ‘06Ph.D.
Thomas M. Kuzeja ‘85 % & Jennifer (Priestley) Kuzeja ‘85,’88MS %
James D. Laing % & Roberta Laing % + $
Beth Larkin ‘81 ++
Judith (Clark) LaRocca ‘88
Roland A. Lavallee ‘77MS & Billie J. Lavallee
Michael L. Lewis ‘83MS $
Scott J. Lewis ‘99MS $
Richard MacAleese % & Cynthia MacAleese %
Michael J. Mazzu ‘89 +
J. Craig McLanahan ‘92Ph.D. & Janet McLanahan ‘92Ed.D. ++
Brian R. McMorrow ‘79 +
Lee T. McNeil ‘73,’75MS +
Cheryl (Stubbs) Mendrala ‘91 ++ $
Leroy E. Mentor ‘50 ++ $
Mark S. Michalski ‘81 % ++
Leland P. Miner ‘61 & Jo (Bell) Miner ‘59 +++
Steven A. Minkwitz ‘71,’75MS ++
Kenneth A. Moser ‘53
Triantafillos J. Mountziaris >
David R. O’Toole ‘68 +
Halil Padir ‘87Ph.D. & Karen M. Tegan Padir
Norman L. Page ‘71
Richard E. Park, Jr. ‘83 ++
Brian R. Penman ‘75
David J. Pernitsky ‘01Ph.D. + $
Stephen J. Perry ‘79
Allan L. Pitcher ‘50 +++
Kenneth J. Plourde ‘86 +++
Anthony M. Puntin ‘92 & Beverly (Nace) Puntin ‘90 +
James D. Quinty ‘80
Paul J. Quirnbach ‘81 ++
James J. Reid ‘80 +
R. Louis Reinemann, Jr. ‘87
* Deceased
+ 5 to 9 years of consecutive giving
++ 10 to 24 years of consecutive giving
+++ 25 or more years of consecutive giving
$ Matching gift or claim
% Parent
> Current faculty, staff or emeritus faculty
HD Honorary Degree Recipient
HA Honorary Alumnus or Alumna
S Stockbridge Alumnus or Alumna
This report recognizes contributions received during Fiscal Year 2013.
C O L L E G E O F E N G I N E E R I N G 2 0 1 3 A N N U A L R E P O R T U M A S S A M H E R S T
$100 to $249 Donors to the College of Engineering
Paul R. Richard ‘78
William A. Richardson ‘74 & Judith (Stanley) Richardson ‘73 ++
Randy A. Robertson % + $
Valentino Rubinaccio ‘81
Sameer P. Rupani ‘93
Paula (Clifford) Sakey ‘88 > & Robert Sakey +
Jia-Jye Shen ‘88MS
Mary (Marconi) Shutte ‘85
David J. Silbermann ‘93
Thomas F. Simeone ‘84 ++
William A. Sirois ‘70
Earl A. Small ‘85
Michael E. St. Lawrence ‘82
Ronald J. Stirling ‘56 ++
Joseph C. Strzegowski, Jr. ‘67,’69MS % ++
John M. Sullivan, Jr. ‘74
John J. Swana ‘53 +++ $
David P. Torpey ‘89
Jessica Townsend ‘94
Theodore J. Twarog, Jr. ‘62 %
David K. Veleta ‘04 ++
Arun Venkataraman ‘98MS $
Bernard E. Volz ‘83 $
Robert A. Weimar ‘72
Edward L. Weist ‘88Ph.D.
& Annemarie (Ott) Weist ‘86 $
Brian Whicher %
Craig R. Willis ‘90 & Stephanie (Davis) Willis ‘90 + $
Mark F. Witcher ‘77Ph.D. & Margaret A. Bush ++
Kwan C. Wong ‘76Ph.D. & Kam-May Wong “74S
$250 - $499 Donors to the College of Engineering (cont.)
Brian J. Abbott ‘72 ++
AbduBrian J. Abbott ‘72 ++
Abdul Ashik Abdul Waheed ‘08MS
David P. Ahlfeld >
Maroof Ahmed % & Tahera Ahmed %
Leon Aksionczyk ‘63
Carl S. Albro ‘70 & Donna (Hamblett) Albro ‘70
Cleo Alexander ‘88MS
Christopher T. Allwell ‘01,’08MBA
Chris J. Altomare ‘81MS +
Eric R. Amato ‘09
Douglas S. Ambos ‘83,’85MS +
Andrew G. Anderson ‘84,’87MS & Jamie Anderson ‘83,’87MS
Edwin N. Anderson, Jr. ‘58,’64MS
John M. Anderson ‘58 +++
Leonard T. Anderson ‘86 % & Linda A. Anderson % ++
Cornelius W. Andres ‘87,’91MS ++
Robert K. Andrew ‘77
Robert G. Andrews, Jr. ‘69,’70MS,’86 +
Doug Ansuini ‘97MS +
Nancy (Cianciolo) Antonietti ‘91
Michael R. Antunes ‘93 ++
Richard D. Aquadro ‘83 ++
James M. Averback ‘78
Robert M. Averne
Edward P. Babinski ‘81 ++
Jonathan A. Bachman ‘82
Michael D. Bagge ‘82
John A. Bakaj ‘77
Arvind S. Baliga ‘91MS,’95Ph.D.
Marlon R. Banta ‘96
Gang Bao ‘94Ph.D.
Michael A. Barillaro ‘90 ++
Robert J. Barnini ‘58 +++
Robert S. Barron ‘90 +
Arthur W. Barstow ‘51 & Marilyn (Moser) Barstow ‘49 $
Eileen Bartley ‘81 & Kenneth Horton + $
Jennifer (Kinzler) Basile ‘89 & Paul S. Basile $
Alvan T. Bazer ‘51MS ++
Edward R. Beaupre ‘61
Justine Belisle ‘11
Paul V. Bernard ‘69
Joseph Berry % & Kathleen Berry %
Paul F. Bidgood ‘82 % & Patricia J. Bidgood %
Michael E. Billa ‘88MS % & Winifred J. Wood %
David S. Billips ‘95 ++
Maciej L. Biskup ‘09
Mark E. Biskup ‘97
Thomas L. Blackmon % & Linda Ennis-Blackmon % $
Judy Blair ‘89
Paul S. Blecharczyk ‘73 ++ $
David G. Blundell ‘73 & Elizabeth (Whalen) Blundell ‘74 $
Gregory S. Boudreau, Sr % & Michelle Boudreau %
Richard W. Boyle ‘57,’60MS ++
James E. Braun ‘76 +
Leonard G. Bugel ‘66,’68MS +
Donald A. Burgess ‘64
Edward H. Burns III ‘74 +
Eric P. Cagnard ‘11
John F. Cain ‘61 +++
Kristina Cairns ‘86 ++
Margaret Campbell ‘82
Mark A. Campbell ‘90
Anthony J. Caputo ‘69
Brian D. Caraker ‘89
Antonio A. Cardoso ‘04
Frederick A. Carivan ‘69 +
Gerald F. Caron ‘83
James A. Carter ‘86,’92MS +
Charles S. Cawlina ‘73
Richard P. Cetti ‘70 +
Mark A. Chafin ‘83
Siu-Kau Chan ‘86MS,’91Ph.D. +
Siu-Ki Chan ‘83MS,’90MS
Joseph Chandler ‘85,’87MS
Richard D. Chandler ‘67,’70MS ++
John E. Chapman, Jr. ‘86
Margaret Chapman * %
Laurie (Oneglia) Charleton ‘89 & William J. Charleton ++
Timothy D. Chase ‘71 +
David P. Chastain ‘75 & Patricia (Brown) Chastain ‘74 +
Russell J. Chateauneuf ‘76
Ming Chen ‘00MS,’01MS & Ying Liu ‘01MS
Bing Cheng ‘92Ph.D.
Ashok S. Chetty ‘90Ph.D. ++
Shyue-Wei Chiang ‘93MS
Ying H. Cho ‘85 +
Alexander S. Chuang ‘64MS,’74Ph.D. +
Gregory A. Cigal ‘69,’71MS ++ $
William A. Cleary ‘73 +
David R. Cochrane ‘72MS & Ella (Rowe) Cochrane ‘70MED
Mark J. Cohen ‘87 % & Susan M. Cohen % $
Ronald L. Cole ‘66 & Sharon (Stowell) Cole ‘66 ++
John J. Collins ‘63MS +++
William R. Colton ‘51
Lorraine Conroy ‘81
Stephen M. Constantine ‘06Ph.D. *
Adam M. Conway ‘06
David S. Cooke ‘79,’81MS ++
Barry D. Cooper ‘76
Perry A. Cooper ‘62
Anthony L. Copas ‘80Ph.D. & Judith Mroz ‘77
James J. Coronella ‘88 & Sarah (Leiby) Coronella ‘88
Nelson L. Correa % & Bernardita P. Calinao %
Charles F. Costa ‘61
Benjamin J. Crellin ‘04,’07MS
Edward J. Cronin ‘61 & Jeanne (Faucette) Cronin ‘60 +
Elizabeth (Lupien) Crory ‘54 %
Matthew T. Cross ‘10
Paul R. Curley ‘62
Russell J. Cyr ‘85,’88MS % & Renee M. Cyr %
Steven L. Cyr ‘78 $
Nicholas E. D’Eramo ‘11,’11 $
Joseph M. Daly ‘86MS +
Sean P. Daly ‘09,’11MS
James E. Dellea ‘43 & Rosemary Dellea +++ $
Edwin C. Demara ‘81 $
Allen R. Demers & Heather K. Demers >
Robert J. Dermody ‘86 +
* Deceased
+ 5 to 9 years of consecutive giving
++ 10 to 24 years of consecutive giving
+++ 25 or more years of consecutive giving
$ Matching gift or claim
% Parent
> Current faculty, staff or emeritus faculty
HD Honorary Degree Recipient
HA Honorary Alumnus or Alumna
S Stockbridge Alumnus or Alumna
This report recognizes contributions received during Fiscal Year 2013.
Paul A. Dickie ‘77 +
James P. Dokoozian ‘75 & Dency Dokoozian %
C. Wayne Dore ‘78MS
John R. Dorgan ‘86
Paul A. Douglas ‘80 % & Janet L. Douglas % ++
Richard P. Driscoll % & Pennie K. Driscoll %
David R. Drumm ‘60 ++ $
Rene L. Dube ‘59
William A. Dugger ‘80 % & Rosemary (Walsh) Dugger ‘82 % +
Stratos G. Dukakis ‘55 % +
David A. Dulitz ‘87 +
Wilrose M. Duquette ‘66 ++
William A. Dvorak ‘79,’81MS & Amy Green-Dvorak ‘81
Aditya V. Dwivedula ‘03 +
Ernest J. Dwork ‘82 % & Rosemary A. Dwork % +
Trevor G. Elkins ‘13
William B. Ellis % & Elaine A. Ellis %
Eric A. Enge ‘87MS
Paul W. Ernest % & Carmelia G. Ernest %
Stephen Eustis % & Deborah Eustis %
Steven B. Feinberg ‘82 & Amy (Kwan) Feinberg ‘81
Frank Feist ‘93MS
Erich S. Fiedler ‘09MS
Paul G. Filios ‘79
David E. Filkins, Jr. ‘85 % & Kathleen (Ellis) Filkins ‘86 % ++
Mark M. Finneran ‘87
Christopher J. Fisher ‘81 $
Robert G. Fitzgerald ‘58 ++ $
Francis P. Fitzpatrick ‘65
Chester G. Flahive ‘81 % & Eileen (Joyce) Flahive ‘80 %
Carl G. Flygare III ‘80
Mario H. Fontana ‘55
Clifford J. Forster, Jr. ‘51 ++
Scott A. Foster ‘03,’06MS
Maureen (Bagge) Fowler ‘89 +
Michael B. Fox ‘90MS ++
James E. Fredette ‘69 ++
Robert A. Freeman ‘90MS
Mark H. Freise % + $
Gary M. Furman ‘79 +++
Joseph D. Gagne ‘80 +++
James E. Gagnon ‘74 % ++
James H. Gapp ‘90
Martha Garske ‘91Ph.D. ++
David W. Gauthier ‘88 +++ $
Carlos E. Gautier ‘84
Sharon (Day) Gell ‘72 +
Thomas G. Gennis % & Aida A. Gennis %
Rick A. Gentile, Jr ‘87
Raymond L. George ‘60
John W. Gettens ‘80 ++
Robert B. Gibb ‘56 +
Beth (Ehrenberg) Ginsberg ‘86
Jenny (Symmes) Giolas ‘97 +
Joseph J. Giordano ‘77MS ++
Peter E. Gluckler, Jr ‘94MS % & Maria E. Beltran % ++
Kathleen Goetzman Rubin ‘88MED > & Richard J. Rubin >
Martha (Dunn) Goldstein ‘92MS
Kui Gong ‘92MS & Xiao Feng Qi +
George L. Goodridge III ‘01 +
Stephen F. Gorman ‘82 ++
James G. Gradziel ‘75 +++
Leo F. Gray ‘82 +
Robyn (Bari) Graziano ‘88 ++
Daniel G. Greene ‘11
Philip D. Greene ‘84 & Linda Chichester ‘84
Marcel J. Grenier ‘50 +++ $
Andrew M. Grodin ‘85
Robert J. Guerin ‘62
Paul H. Gusciora ‘78 +
Eric T. Gustafson ‘81 & Karen M. Gustafson +
William Guttrich % & Katrina Guttrich %
Stephen J. Haddad ‘96
Samuel M. Hall ‘85
Paul R. Hallet ‘65 +
Douglas W. Hanks ‘83 % & Cynthia (St. george) Martowski ‘83 ++ $
Jay T. Hansen
Bruce L. Hanson % & Rosalie I. Hanson % ++
William A. Harrison ‘80
John N. Hart ‘84
Edward J. Harvey, Jr. ‘70 % +
Richmond W. Hathaway ‘52 ++
Dwight H. Havens ‘79 ++
Catherine (Cullinan) Haynes ‘81 +
Arthur R. Hazelton ‘66 +
Russell P. Heard ‘80 & Elizabeth McConnell ‘80 +
Pirjo A. Heels %
Karen S. Hickey %
Robert F. Hickey ‘87Ph.D. +
Priscilla Hill ‘96Ph.D. ++
Hung C. Ho % & Hua Sun %
Richard J. Hoar ‘73,’75MS +
Jerry M. Hodges ‘86 % & Rhonda (Carbone) Hodges ‘86 % + $
Charles P. Hollis % & Rosa P. Hollis %
Christopher Hollot >
Jayne Hollows ‘89 +++
Kevin A. Horgan ‘99,’04MS
Michael J. Hornbrook ‘79 ++
David S. Horton ‘02 & Suzanne (Sposato) Horton ‘02
George A. Howe ‘04 ++
Chiu L. Huang ‘93
Rohinton K. Irani ‘86MS,’89Ph.D. & Priti R. Irani + $
Charles W. Jack, Jr. ‘69 & Carolyn (Connors) Jack ‘71 ++
Laura (Smith) Jackson ‘88
Katherine (Dittfach) Jacobson ‘71
Joel C. Janovsky ‘87 ++
David Jasinski ‘03MS +
John A. Jasperse ‘82 ++
Vincent J. Javier ‘79
Bruce L. Johnson ‘74 & Beverly (Mchugh) Johnson ‘74 ++
Carl W. Johnson ‘81 & Anna (Mathieu) Johnson ‘85 + $
Francis M. Johnson % & Diane M. Johnson %
Jonathan A. Johnson ‘95
Bruce H. Johnston ‘74
Joseph Johnston % & Kathleen Johnston %
Robert T. Jones ‘60,’72MS % & Susan C. Jones % ++
Christine A. Jordan %
Richard A. Jubinville ‘70,’74MS +
Nicholas P. Julian ‘95 & Brigette M. Julian ++
Edward S. Kaczenski, Jr. ‘75MS % & Karen Kaczenski % ++
Christopher K. Kaijala ‘80
Edward H. Kalajian ‘71Ph.D. & Priscilla (Winquist) Kalajian ‘68 ++
Mark F. Kanter ‘85MS +++
Wen-Shen Kao ‘85MS ++
John P. Karpuk ‘50 ++
Barry D. Kaufman ‘87,’88MS +
Leonard E. Kay ‘91Ph.D.
Ali Kazemi ‘95MS
Robert J. Keighley ‘72 & Diane M. Keighley +
Shawn P. Kelley ‘94,’97MS,’03Ph.D. +
Thomas A. Kennedy % & Elaine M. Kennedy % $
Ronald J. Keohane % & Diana R. Keohane %
Rakesh C. Keswani ‘95 +
Minhajuddin A. Kirmani ‘76Ph.D.
David I. Knox ‘80
Thomas E. Kopec ‘80,’85MS +
$100 to $249 Donors to the College of Engineering (cont.)
C O L L E G E O F E N G I N E E R I N G 2 0 1 3 A N N U A L R E P O R T U M A S S A M H E R S T
Brian R. Kraft ‘94MS & Julie (Rodrigues) Kraft ‘93,’95MS +
Louis W. Krampetz, Jr. ‘76 +
Howard S. Kravitz ‘70
Steven A. Krol ‘77 +
Naga K. Krothapalli ‘03Ph.D. $
Stewart M. Krug ‘72
Stanley J. Ktorides ‘71 & Anne (Lalikos) Ktorides ‘77 +++
Frank S. Kulas ‘50 +++
Gary J. Kushner ‘78
Wilson W. Kwok ‘02
Ronald L. LaBarre ‘73
James F. Laffan ‘79 ++
Gary A. LaFrance ‘79
Zhiguo Lai ‘07Ph.D.
Wei E. Lam ‘97
Lauren Lamere ‘11
John J. Lane ‘85
Maura Lane-Warner ‘91
Lawrence H. Larrivee ‘62
John J. Lawler ‘50 ++
Charles H. Learoyd ‘73,’76MS ++
Robert T. Leet ‘89,’95MS ++
Robert L. Levesque ‘55 +++
Deborah Levin ‘76 % & Alan Levin III % +
Dana L. Levy ‘86 & Denise Furlong ‘86
Dominic W. Li ‘74,’76MS
Wu-Ji Li ‘88MS,’93Ph.D.
Harold J. Liberty, Jr. ‘59 +
I. Chang Lin ‘76MS & Ching-Ying (Wang) Lin ‘77MS +
Alma Lincoln ‘07
Brett S. Loosian ‘89 +
John E. Losh % & Lisa M. Losh % $
Robert W. Lovell ‘97MS $
Qi Lu ‘94MS
Diana (Ritner) Lubow ‘81 $
Robert W. Lyford ‘67 ++
David P. Lynch ‘82
Willard S. MacDonald ‘94,’96MS
William A. MacDonald ‘91
David E. Mackintosh ‘94,’01 +
Michael J. Mahony ‘92MS +
Kevin M. Maloney ‘83
Christopher M. Malsch ‘11
Prashant N. Mandare ‘07Ph.D.
Louis J. Manfredi ‘78MS & Joanne Carroll ‘81,’83MS
Suresh Mani ‘89MS,’92Ph.D.
Vinod I. Marken ‘80 & Mary (Cook) Marken ‘83
David S. Markson ‘87 ++
J. Edward Maroney, Jr. ‘70 & Roseanne Maroney
James D. Martin % & Louann K. Martin %
Michele Martin ‘88,’90MS % & William R. Martin
William F. Martin ‘64 +++
Todd P. Marut ‘75 $
Eliot P. Mayer ‘77 ++
Steven R. Mazzarelli ‘09
Michael W. McGlynn ‘94
Thomas D. McLay ‘50 ++
Rodrick B. McLean ‘86
James B. Mead ‘90Ph.D.
William E. Meese ‘84 ++ $
Fereshteh Mehman Doost ‘95,’98MS +
Dave Meierdiercks % & Janice Meierdiercks % + $
Stephen R. Mellin ‘83 % & Thelma Mellin % +
Dennis N. Menard ‘75
Richard D. Menard ‘84
Ronald A. Merino ‘11
Ronald A. Michalski ‘68 +
Alwin K. Milch, Jr. ‘56 ++
Gerald A. Miller ‘94Ph.D. +
Melton M. Miller, Jr. % ++
R. Gerry Miller ‘68MS ++
David S. Mitchell ‘68
Michael T. Mitchell ‘97,’99MS & Rebecca (Glass) Mitchell ‘94,’99MS
Bhasker R. Mittal ‘91MS & Veena (Rao) Mittal ‘91 $
Stephen M. Miu ‘89 & Katherine (King) Miu ‘88 ++
James E. Moes >
Nicholas J. Molloy ‘82 % & Lynne C. Molloy % ++
Chris R. Montoya ‘06
Geoffrey D. Moodie ‘94
Robert J. Moore ‘02
Mehdi S. Moussa
Vanessa Mukania ‘12
Gary J. Mullett ‘70,’72MS % & Robin Mullett ‘98 % +++
John M. Mulvihill ‘68
Laurence E. Murch ‘72Ph.D. > & Diane F. Murch %
Leon A. Murphy ‘50
Jeffrey J. Murray ‘61 ++
Donald R. Muzyka ‘60 +
Debashish Nag ‘90MS +
Sudarshan Narayanan ‘08MS,’12Ph.D.
Carl W. Nawrocki ‘71 +++
John R. Nelson ‘50
Frank Ngo % & Kien Ngo % + $
Ryan T. Nichols ‘06,’09MS & Heather (Flynn) Nichols ‘06
Robin Noble ‘78 ++ $
David W. Noon ‘63 ++
James F. Norton ‘78MS
Eric F. Nusbaum ‘97Ph.D. +
Conrad C. Nuthmann ‘83
Peter R. O’Coin ‘70 +++
James P. O’Donnell ‘80
Charles F. O’Neil ‘75,’76MS ++
Francis J. O’Neil ‘65,’68MS %
Daniel O’Quinn ‘12
Terrance P. O’Regan ‘02,’04MS,’08Ph.D.
William J. Ohley ‘70,’72MS
Nancy E. Olson-King %
Anthony M. Omobono % & Judith A. Omobono % +
Mark A. Omobono ‘10 $
Peter H. Ordway ‘67 +
Peter Orlando % & Marie Orlando %
Richard V. Orlando ‘80
Steven Ostrosky % & Judith A. Ostrosky % +
George E. Oulundsen III ‘99Ph.D. ++
Samuel Owusu-Ababio ‘89MS,’92Ph.D. +
William J. Palmer, Jr. ‘89MS ++
Bruce Papazian ‘76,’85Ph.D. % & Jan C. Rockwood %
Paul J. Paquin % & Jeanne M. Paquin % +
Kannan Parmeshwar ‘80MS
Allen G. Parsons ‘65 +
Walter J. Pasko, Jr. ‘67,’73Ph.D.
Scott A. Pearson ‘87 +
Ronald F. Peracchio ‘85
Sean W. Peterfreund ‘03
Daniel J. Peterson ‘80 % & Joy (Gould) Peterson ‘81 %
Peter R. Peterson ‘78
Andrew A. Piccus ‘84 & Megan (Gilbert) Piccus ‘85 ++
Thomas S. Piecuch ‘72 +++ $
David W. Pierce ‘67 & Ruth (Pazsit) Pierce ‘70
Daniel Pires % & Patricia E. Pires % +
Edward G. Pisinski ‘67
Stephen E. Pollack & Annette T. Pollack
Vadim Popovichenko ‘11
Randolph P. Porter ‘71
George Pothering %
James E. Poulin ‘66
Stephen J. Powers ‘83
Thomas L. Prew ‘80 & Ericka (Smith) Prew ‘86 >
David D. Primmer ‘59 % +
Christopher B. Prum ‘84
Duncan Pyle % & Polly Pyle %
Vincent J. Raby ‘80 + $
Stephen D. Rafferty ‘77
Michael Raimondi % & Patricia Raimondi %
Robert F. Rainville, Jr. ‘68 & Nancy (Salo) Rainville ‘69 ++
Ramesh Ramakrishnan ‘92MS,’96Ph.D.
Sridhar Ramaswamy ‘92MS
Jeremy N. Rapoza ‘95 ++
Manish V. Rathi ‘04 & Meghana Rathi ‘04
Arunachalam Ravindran ‘74Ph.D.
Rajeswaran C. Ravindran ‘12MS
Gregory Reed % & Christine Reed %
Brian P. Richardson ‘64 & Marsha Richardson ‘70
David R. Riese ‘86 + $
Kenneth P. Rispoli ‘88MS +
Brian M. Roberts ‘98MS
Mark D. Robinson ‘83 +++
Nelson I. Rojas %
Matthew R. Romoser ‘08Ph.D. & Elizabeth Elam ‘86 +
David I. Rosen % & Shelly Georgia %
Dana T. Rossi ‘97 + $
$100 to $249 Donors to the College of Engineering (cont.)
* Deceased
+ 5 to 9 years of consecutive giving
++ 10 to 24 years of consecutive giving
+++ 25 or more years of consecutive giving
$ Matching gift or claim
% Parent
> Current faculty, staff or emeritus faculty
HD Honorary Degree Recipient
HA Honorary Alumnus or Alumna
S Stockbridge Alumnus or Alumna
This report recognizes contributions received during Fiscal Year 2013.
Richard K. Rossini % & Lorraine W. Rossini % $
Thomas J. Roughan ‘82
Robert A. Roy ‘87
David F. Ruschmann ‘74 ++
Julie Russell Stanaszek ‘76
Christopher Ryan ‘79
Robert M. Ryan ‘99,’11MS
Scott H. Ryder ‘70 +
Laurie Sablak
Harold E. Safarik ‘73 ++
John P. Salsgiver, Jr. ‘86 ++
Carl R. Sanger ‘80 +
Louis M. Santoro ‘67 & Linda (Lewis) Santoro ‘68 +
Melissa (Conner) Saunders ‘89 ++ $
Ratan S. Sawant ‘73MS & Sharon (Smeedy) Sawant ‘75 +
Bernard K. Saydlowski ‘54 +
Edward A. Schmidt ‘64 +
Judith Schonhoff ‘97 + $
Howard E. Schulien ‘50 ++
William L. Schweber ‘74MS & Susan (Baer) Schweber ‘74 +
Alika P. Seki ‘04
Sudhan Sadanand Selwyn Samraj ‘11MS
John G. Shagoury ‘67 $
Ajay B. Shah ‘83MS
Subramanian N. Sharma ‘87Ph.D.
Wayne M. Shelburne ‘96MS,’01Ph.D.
Glen C. Shepherd ‘88 +
William W. Shrader ‘55
David W. Sibor, Jr. ‘77 & Dawn (Carmen) Sibor ‘76 ++
Adam H. Slutsky ‘89MS
Andrew B. Smith ‘06
David R. Smith ‘69 $
Frederick J. Smith ‘59 ++
George L. Smith ‘67 +
Gary R. Spongberg ‘66
Charles G. Sposato III ‘75 % +
Joshua J. Stacey ‘11
Paul S. Stachowicz ‘74
Mircea R. Stan ‘94MS,’96Ph.D. ++
Jonathan E. Starr ‘92
Daniel B. Start ‘97
Fred T. Stetson, Jr. ‘62 ++
David B. Sullivan ‘88,’01,’03MS
Kevin M. Sullivan ‘79,’83,’85MS & Jo Sullivan +
Ning Sun ‘98MS $
Steven E. Sundquist ‘89
Gary P. Surette % & Kathleen M. Surette %
Craig M. Suyematsu % & Elisabeth Oppenheim %
Theodore F. Tabloski, Jr. ‘68 +
Maurice P. Talbot, Jr. ‘63 +
George R. Tanguay ‘58 ++
David A. Tattersall % & Shelly M. Tattersall %
Sai N. Tenneti ‘11
David C. Thibodeau ‘82 %
John C. Thomas ‘85MS ++ $
Liam A. Thompson ‘10
Dan Timberlake % & Robyn S. Timberlake %
Hanna G. Timberlake ‘13
Frederic S. Topor ‘59
Andrew R. Touchette ‘89 & Wendy (Tolpa) Touchette ‘93 ++
Majdouline Touil ‘12 $
Edward P. Trider ‘58 +
Pei Tsao ‘80MS
Anastasia Tsitos %
Demetrios L. Tsitos
Colin R. Tuohey ‘02
Brian G. Turner ‘80 & Ruth (Suchodolski) Turner ‘86 ++
Edward V. Twardus ‘52
Matthew J. Twarog ‘98 & Jesse (Rutherford) Twarog ‘97 ++
Nitin H. Vaidya ‘91MS,’93Ph.D. & Ashwini (Jog) Vaidya ‘92MS ++
James M. Valentine ‘75,’77MS
Arnold E. Van Doren ‘87 & Kelly (Stange) Van Doren ‘85,’87MBA
Istvan S. Varga ‘71Ph.D.
Roy L. Vercollone ‘71 % & Leslie J. Mason % ++
Suzanne P. Verrengia %
Richard A. Verville ‘60
Joseph S. Vogel ‘81 +
Paul N. Votze ‘85
Ronaldo Wagner ‘86,’90MS + $
William E. Walker ‘57 ++
Mack B. Wallace ‘03
Alfred K. Walter ‘67 +
Changting Wang ‘01Ph.D. & Yunqing Wang ‘02MS $
Donald E. Warren ‘65 +
Nigel G. Watson ‘82MS
James E. Webb ‘95Ph.D. ++ $
Thomas G. Weil ‘76MS & Diane (Soini) Weil ‘76
Michael A. Weinstein ‘88,’90MS
David L. Welsh ‘71 & Beverly (Bennett) Welsh ‘72 +++
Douglas M. White ‘92 & Julia (Sabol) White ‘92,’00MED
Jonathan A. White ‘93,’96MS & Wendy L. White + $
Thomas E. Whittington ‘90
Steven M. Wieners ‘04
Andrew F. Wilkie ‘80 +
Kimberly Williams ‘90
Samuel R. Williston ‘84,’11MBA $
Paul B. Wohler ‘82 ++
Steven I. Wolkenbreit ‘73 & Janis (Hinden) Wolkenbreit ‘73 ++
James C. Wong ‘57
Charles E. Woodin, Jr ‘84MS % & Laurie L. Woodin %
Brian W. Woodward ‘01
Bruce K. Wylie ‘66,’68MS,’71Ph.D.
King L. Yee ‘81 ++
Sontra Yim ‘97
Chii-Ren Young ‘83MS
I-Chung Young ‘94MS & Eliza (Rivai) Young ‘95
Xin Yuan ‘10MS
John F. Yunger ‘66
Thomas M. Zappula ‘66 ++
Yu K. Zhang ‘06
$100 to $249 Donors to the College of Engineering (cont.)
C O L L E G E O F E N G I N E E R I N G 2 0 1 3 A N N U A L R E P O R T U M A S S A M H E R S T
Organizational Contributors
Organizations listed below generously designated support of $1,000 or more toward the College of Engineering, its departments and programs, during the time period July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013.
c ACI Foundation +
Agilent Technologies Inc.
All States Material Group Headquarters
Alpha Omega Electromagnetics, LLC +
Altera Corporation +
Altra Industrial Motion Inc.
Ansys Incorporated +
Arbella Insurance Group Charitable Fdn.
Ayco Charitable Foundation ++
B-Pro Safeguard
B2Q Associates
Barker Steel Company LLC
Barr & Barr, Inc.
Baystate Health, Inc. ++
Black Island Wind Turbines
BOND Brothers, Inc.
Boraski Family Foundation, Ruth P. & Nicholas ++
Brad Thompson Company
Brandeis University
Calvin T. Swift Trust
Cantor Colburn LLP +
CH2M Hill, Inc.
Cisco Systems Inc. Main Corporate Headquarters +
Competitive Innovation LLC +
Computer-Aided Products, Inc.
CRSI Education and Research Foundation
Cryan Revocable Trust, John M. +
CSP Technologies
Dayton Superior Corporation
Digilent, Inc.
Dynamic Motion Control Inc.
EMD Millipore Corporation +
Energy & Resource Solutions
Entact Solutions, Inc. +
ETRI
Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fnd ++
Gates Foundation, Bill & Melinda
General Motors Corporation Corporate Headquarters
Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund ++
Hluchyj Fund, Michael & Theresa
Intel Corporation Corporate Headquarters ++
ISN Education, LLC
ISO New England, Inc. +
L-3 KEO +
Liberty Mutual Research Institute
Marin Community Foundation +
Measurement Computing Corp.
Millitech Inc. +
Narus Incorporated
National Grid USA Service Co. Inc. Corporate Headquarters +
NCW Charitable Foundation +
NetPFGA
New England Wire Products +
Newlans, Inc. +
Notkin Family Fund +
NSTAR +
Parametric Technology Corporation +
PCI Synthesis
Phoenix Integration
Prima ElectroPrima Electro
ProSensing, Inc. +
Raytheon CompanyHeadquarters ++
RM Technologies, Inc
Saint-Gobain High Performance Materials +
Savage Arms, Inc.
Schlanger Family Foundation, The Eva & Marvin +
Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving ++
Sensata Technologies, Inc.
7x24 Exchange International NE Chapter
Shaw Group, Inc., TheCorporate Headquarters
Shray Family Fund +
Siemens PLM Software Inc.
Skanska USA Building Inc.
StandardAero +
Stantec Consulting, Inc.
Steinkopff
Sunovion Pharmaceuticals
3M Corporate Headquarters
Tighe & Bond, Inc. Corporate Headquarters ++
U.S. Charitable Gift Trust +
Vanasse & Associates, Inc., Robert D. +
Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program ++
Verizon Communications Corporate Headquarters +
VISTAGY, Inc. +
Weyerhaeuser Company Foundation
White Contracting Co., J.F. +
Wolf Greenfield, P.C. +
Xilinx, Inc. +
* Deceased
+ 5 to 9 years of consecutive giving
++ 10 to 24 years of consecutive giving
+++ 25 or more years of consecutive giving
$ Matching gift or claim
% Parent
> Current faculty, staff or emeritus faculty
HD Honorary Degree Recipient
HA Honorary Alumnus or Alumna
S Stockbridge Alumnus or Alumna
This report recognizes contributions received during Fiscal Year 2013.
Matching Gifts
Corporations listed below thoughtfully matched employee giving to the College of Engineering at the University of Massachusetts Amherst during the time period July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013.
cDolby Laboratories, Inc.
3M Foundation, Inc.
Abbott Fund
Aetna Foundation
Agilent Technologies
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.
Albemarle Foundation
Allied World Assurance (U.S.) Inc.
Amgen Foundation, Inc.
AT&T Foundation
BAE Systems
Bank of America
Bechtel Foundation
Campbell Soup Foundation
Chevron Texaco
ConocoPhillips
Constellation Energy Group
Corning Incorporated Foundation
Dell Corporation
Deloitte Foundation
eBay
ExxonMobil Foundation
Fidelity Investments
FM Global Foundation
General Electric Foundation
Global Impact
Google Incorporated
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters
Hanover Insurance Group, The
Harte-Hanks Communication
IBM International Foundation
IMS Health
Intel Corporation
Invensys Systems, Inc.
ISO New England
Jacobs Associates
Juniper Networks
JustGive
KBR Incorporated
Marathon Petroleum Corporation
MassDevelopment
Merck Company Foundation
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
Microsoft Corporation
Millipore Foundation, The
Nokia Employee Matching Gift Program
Northeast Utilities System
Oracle Corporation
Owens-Corning Foundation Inc.
Parker Hannifin Foundation
Pfizer Foundation, The
PG&E Corporation
Philips Electronics North America Corporation
PPG Industries Foundation
Procter & Gamble Company
Prudential Foundation, The
QUALCOMM Inc.
Raytheon Company
Rexam Foundations
Rexnord Inc.
Rogers Corporation
Saint-Gobain Corporation Foundation
Siemens Corporation, GSS North America
Solvay Advanced Polymers, L.L.C.
Suncor Energy
Tyco
United Technologies
UNUM Group
Verizon Foundation
Wells Fargo Foundation
Xerox Corporation U.S.A.
This listing recognizes contributions received during fiscal year 2013. Every care is taken to avoid errors in the lists, but if any have occurred, please call them to our attention by contacting:
Paula Sakey
Director of Development
College of Engineering
University of Massachusetts Amherst
140 Marston Hall
Amherst, MA 01003
413.545.6396
Thank YouDONORS
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERINGUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst130 Natural Resources RoadAmherst, MA 01003Phone 413.545.0300Fax 413.545.0724
www.engineering.umass.edu
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED in learning about giving
opportunities within the College of Engineering,
please contact Paula Sakey, Director of Development
413.545.6396 or [email protected].