21 minute read

Tech Trek Takes RISD Students to the Heart of the Bay Area’s Tech Sector

With donor support and the help of alumni volunteers, RISD students get up close and personal with major players in tech.

Students visiting Meta. Photo by Kate Sawicki.

What are the working habits of creatives who work in tech? What are the company values that shape how decisions are made? What makes a candidate stand out when applying for a job at a major tech company?

These are some of the many questions RISD students hoped to answer by participating in Tech Trek, a weeklong career development program held in late August that provided 20 undergraduate and graduate students with the opportunity to explore the tech industry and culture in the Bay Area. Helping guide them were over 38 RISD alumni—with graduation years ranging from 1979 to 2021— who volunteered their time and resources so students could better understand what it looks like to be a creative in tech.

Alumni including RISD in Tech affinity group co-leaders Jonathan Arena 09 GD, director of design at Patreon, and Mike Neff 04 PH, director of product design at UserTesting, arranged on-site visits for the students at Googleplex, Patreon, Airbnb, Figma, Meta and Y Combinator. They also hosted portfolio reviews, panels with alumni and networking opportunities.

“I don’t think I’ve come across another experience like this where you can get such a broad spectrum of insights,” Arena said, noting that the trip included learning about “some of the largest companies on the planet,” as well as newer, smaller companies.

Tech Trek is offered through a partnership between the RISD Alumni Association, the RISD in Tech alumni affinity group, the RISD Alumni Club of San Francisco and the RISD Career Center. It was powered by a gift from a RISD parent and additional support from donors |that covered all student costs, including travel.

“This unique exposure offers a holistic view of the industry,” said Susan Andersen, associate director of the RISD Career Center. “Students learn what it takes to be successful as a recent graduate in tech, how to engage with these companies for job and internship opportunities and how to develop and grow a network of industry professionals and mentors that will support students’ success as emerging professionals.”

In a recent survey of the top 10 employers of alumni, five were technology firms. Arena said the journey after graduating from RISD can be challenging, and as the tech industry has grown larger and more complex in recent years, Tech Trek offers a way to explore the powerful connection between alumni and students and offer a roadmap that was not available to him as he was starting out.

“Those connections for students can be invaluable and can really give them a head start, information and access to opportunity that continues beyond their RISD experience,” he said. “It can make their entrance into the professional world a lot more hospitable and easier to navigate.”

For Ju Yeon JoAnne Lee 23 TX, getting to know the personality, environment and atmosphere of each company was exciting. While it was fun to see trees growing inside (Meta) or learn about perks like on-site massages (Google), most valuable to Lee was the chance to connect with both alumni and her peers, with whom she would stay up talking until midnight after each day’s programming.

“Most memorable trips or experiences come from the people you meet,” Lee said. “And the fact that we already have this connection of being from RISD, the conversation was just so easy… the alumni were able to understand where I was coming from and give great advice and mentoring that will help me navigate my career.”

For Lee, that included talking with an alumna who develops sustainable textiles for athletic wear about Lee’s own work in that area and what the future may hold for the sector overall. Lee also got advice on the best way to publish—and protect—her research on fabrics that incorporate emerging technologies.

Lee said that like many artists, she has made a habit of sharing her work openly. However, because she is developing novel textiles that incorporate multifunctional fibers, including fibers with wires and chips that enable

“Those connections for students can be invaluable and can really give them a head start, information and access to opportunity that continues beyond. . . [RISD].”

Building a Bridge

Many RISD alumni volunteered their time, energy and resources to make Tech Trek a great experience for students.

Sarah Adeel MIA 09 Carolina Amiguet 06 ID Jonathan Arena 09 GD John Armitage MFA 89 GD Shannon Badiee 06 PR Sonia Baltodano 09 FD Mitchell Benjamin BArch 86 Chetan Dusane MID 21 Shona Dutta 04 GD Joe Gebbia 05 ID/GD HD 17 Suzanne Geneste de Besme 04 PT Amy Gregg 92 GD Angela Guzman 06 ID/MFA 09 GD Arthur Harsuvanakit 09 ID Jennifer Hom 09 IL Nate Kendrick 98 GD Marvin Kim BArch 05 Sungmin Kim-Arena 09 ID Valantyn Koziak 18 SC Nick Kraly 93 IL April Kuo 04 GD Andrew Liebchen MArch 09 Lee Lippert BArch 79 Yomi Matsouka 91 ID Mike Neff 04 PH Mauricio Ortega BArch 88 Brian Park 17 ID Tommy Park 14 ID Herbert Pretel 81 SC Andrew Sawyer 11 GD Beth Soucy 13 ID Erika Tarte MFA 11 GD Jennifer A. Van Der Straaten 96 GD Sylvia Vaquer 05 GD Dino Yoon 14 ID Marilyn Yu 97 SC Roger Zhu MID 12 Jared Zimmerman 06 GD

audio or photo memory storage, the issue of proprietary knowledge and credit is increasingly important. Having an alumna advise on best practices gave her an immediate path forward.

On the trip with Lee was Jon Chen 23 SC, who is pursuing a concentration in Computation, Technology and Culture, where students assess the history and theory of computational platforms and technology and learn how to code, create software and program machines for making works of art and design.

Chen originally was slated to go on Tech Trek in 2020, when the program had to be canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. They took a year off and worked at Google Creative Lab. Chen has also interned with the Research and Development team at The New York Times, exploring how emerging technologies can be applied in service of journalism, and with the creative firm Something Special Studios.

“This year, going on Tech Trek came as a huge surprise and I was fortunate enough to have experienced two and a half years of growth in between [the planned program and the actual trip],” Chen said. In addition to visiting companies and engaging with panels on subjects like artificial intelligence, students were encouraged to ask themselves big questions about their future and their motivation. “Do you want to play a direct role in shaping the software that people use? Do you want to help people imagine the future? Do you want to get involved in the ethics and the psychology of tech? The sooner you learn what you want your place and role to be, the sooner you can realize what your place in the tech industry might be,” Arena said. “This was an opportunity to help students think that through.”

Looking ahead, Chen said they are not sure what path they will take after graduation. “But this trip has given me enough perspective to understand that the future of my work can contain multitudes regardless of the specific journey,” Chen said.

For Arena, Tech Trek is a model not just for tech but for other alumni-student career development programs. “If we keep pushing and keep exploring, what could Tech Trek turn into? That is what I’m most excited about. Tech Trek could evolve into different disciplines,” he said, like fashion, filmmaking or other industries, “and could be really an amazing window into building that strong bridge between RISD alums and the industries that we chooseto work in.”

Lee said that, if she were not graduating in May, she would sign up for Tech Trek again. “Honestly, if someone asked, ‘what was your most memorable RISD experience?’ Tech Trek would be the top,” Lee said.

“Most memorable trips or experiences come from the people you meet,” Lee said. “. . . the alumni were able to understand where I was coming from and give great advice and mentoring that will help me navigate my career.”

How does one arrive at the intersection of textiles and computing, and what happens there?

In the fall semester of her junior year, Ju Yeon JoAnne Lee 23 TX began thinking about her senior show and asked herself what it means to be a textile designer. Lee, who is pursuing a concentration in Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies alongside her textiles major, was keenly aware of textile manufacturing’s negative environmental impact, from microfibers and chemical fabric finishers that pollute water systems to the waste produced each year by garments that do not decompose when discarded.

Thinking about how to make people value clothes more instead of wearing clothes for one season and throwing them out, Lee said she began experimenting with making multifunctional clothing with computing capabilities. If clothing could shapeshift, have architectural properties or perform functions associated with smartphones, that clothing might not be thought of as disposable. Lee took the course “Computing Fabrics,” which RISD is co-developing with MIT, and where fabric materials are considered part of a computational environment.

Now, Lee is a teaching assistant for Yoel Fink, the MIT materials science professor who leads the course. She has worked on fabric that responds to a pneumatic composite and that can “inflate,” and envisions possibilities for textiles with architectural functionality.

Lee is developing a shape-shifting knitted textile that incorporates mechanical engineering principles and computational technology. A pneumatic composite allows the fabric to inflate into a 3-dimensional shape that could potentially replace hard materials and have an architectural function.

Knitted fabric with pneumatic composite by Ju Yeon JoAnne Lee, photos courtesy of the artist.

Everything that RISD does is enhanced by the incredible generosity of the alumni, families, museum patrons and friends who invest in RISD every year.

2,694

TOTAL NUMBER OF DONORS

$13.72M

TOTAL GIVING TO RISD

$5.4M

RAISED FOR FINANCIAL AID

22

NEW MEMBERS OF THE JESSE + HELEN ROWE METCALF SOCIETY

272

NUMBER OF 1877 SOCIETY DONORS

We are pleased to recognize and celebrate those donors who have made leadership commitments to endowment, infrastructure and program funds, to the RISD Fund and to RISD’s legacy through estate and planned gifts in the 2021–2022 fiscal year.

Gifts to Endowment, Infrastructure and Program Funds

The below list recognizes donors who have made gifts of $25,000 or more to endowed and restricted funds between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022.

Anonymous David C. Barclay P 10 T and Chet R. Barclay P 10 ∞ Michael and Pele Bennett Hillary Blumberg 92 FAV T and Alex Ginsburg ∞ J. Scott Burns T M and Cynthia B. Burns ∞ Karen S. Butler Connell MFA 95 PR/PT and Tuey Connell ∞ Norman Chan BArch 85 T M and Susanna Kwok ∞ Joseph A. Chazan MD M Bequest Made In Memory of Helen M.C. Kenny Murray S. Danforth, III and Judith Danforth ∞ Erica Gerard Di Bona P 11 T M and Vin Di Bona P 11 ∞ Susan Dryfoos P 01 ET ∞ Gerald N. Fandetti BArch 68 P 05 and

Charlotte B. Forsythe 67 PT P 05 ∞ Fabian Fondriest P 16 T and

Suzanne Fondriest P 16 ∞ Estate of Anna T. Gardner 61 TX Kim Gassett-Schiller P 14 T and

Philip W. Schiller P 14 ∞ Joan Hall and Mark S. Weil ‡ ∞ Jane Ingle 80 TX ∞ LoveFrom, Henry Luce Foundation The Maxwell/Hanrahan Foundation Stephen A. Metcalf ET M and Ewa Metcalf M ∞ Stacey E. Nicholas P 21 T ∞ Michael Putziger Myrna Putziger Estate of Priscilla Randall Estate of Betty Jean Stroh 55 LA Terra Foundation for American Art Salli Zimmerman 65 AE in Memory of

Jerome Zimmerman ‡ MFA 65 SC ∞

KEY

Trustee Emeriti Trustee Museum Governor Centennial Society Deceased

T

ET

M

1877 Society

Named for the year of our founding, this society honors and recognizes those who make it possible to reach our ambitious goals and respond to the most pressing needs of the college.

The 1877 Society recognizes donors’ cumulative gifts to the RISD Fund received between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022 at the following levels:

Trustees’ Circle: $25,000 or more President’s Circle: $10,000−$24,999 Deans’ Circle: $2,500−$9,999

TRUSTEES’ CIRCLE

Anonymous Bafflin Foundation David C. Barclay P 10 T and Chet R. Barclay P 10 ∞ Estate of Merrill P. Budlong 60 AR Fuyumi Cannon P 19 and Alan G. Cannon P 19 ∞ The Champlin Foundation ∞ Norman Chan BArch 85 T M and Susanna Kwok ∞ Rafael de Cárdenas 96 AP Portia J. Durbin P 21 and Christopher A. Durbin P 21 ∞ Michelle Ebanks T and Gordon A. Ebanks Shepard Fairey 92 IL HD 21 T and Amanda Fairey ∞ Joya Favreau P 24 and Jonathan Favreau P 24 Cheryl Henson P 24 and Edwin Finn, Jr. P 24 Fabian Fondriest P 16 T and Suzanne Fondriest P 16 ∞ Kim Gassett-Schiller P 14 T and Philip W. Schiller P 14 ∞ Joe Gebbia 05 GD/ID HD 17 T ∞ Jacques and Natasha Gelman Foundation Robert W. Glass P 11 T M and Kathleen Glass P 11 ∞ Hasbro Children’s Fund ∞ Jon Kamen P 09 T and Angela Kamen P 09 ∞ David M. K. Lee 00 GD T and Ronit Y. Lee Douglas Lee P 91 ET Camila Pastor and Stephen Maharam ∞ Deborah Mankiw P 23 and N. Gregory Mankiw P 23 ∞ Phoebe Meehan 52* TX ∞ Stephen A. Metcalf ET M and Ewa Metcalf M ∞ Nicole J. Miller 73 AP T M and Kim Taipale ∞ Jake Moritz MID 18 ∞ Stacey E. Nicholas P 21 T ∞ Catherine Oppenheimer P 24 Shuyang Ren Sarah A. Sharpe BGD 94 and John Powley ∞ Target Corporation C.L. Tillinghast Foundation ∞ Garrett Thornburg Rex Wong BArch 03 ∞

Anonymous 1stDibs Martha Armstrong MAE 63 and Alan Armstrong Jessica F. Arner P 11 and Eli Abbe P 11 ∞ Jessika Auerbach, Jonathan Auerbach, and Klara Auerbach 19* IL Deborah L. Berke BArch 77 HD 05 and Peter McCann ∞ Nadine E. Berkowsky 67 TX and Mark A. Berkowsky BArch 69 ∞ Hillary Blumberg 92 FAV T and Alex Ginsburg ∞ Boston Scientific Corporation Sean M. P. Cannon MArch 01 ∞ The Bonnie Cashin Fund, NYCT ∞ Ilene Chaiken 79 GD P 18 T and Louanne Brickhouse Clara M. Dale BArch 75 ET and John D. Dale BArch 75 ∞ Erica Gerard Di Bona P 11 T M and Vin Di Bona P 11 ∞ Robert A. DiMuccio T M and Rena DiMuccio ∞ Walter Henry Freygang Foundation ∞ Dorian Goldman P 08 and Marvin Israelow P 08 ∞ Richard W. Haining, Sr. P 05 T and Catherine D. Haining P 05 ∞ Joan Hall and Mark S. Weil ‡ ∞ Karen Hammond T M and Michael A. Quattromani ∞ Natalia Howe and Michael L. Howe Shefali Khushalani P 22 ∞ Vikram Kirloskar P 12 T and Geetanjali Kirloskar P 12 ∞ Lauren Kogod BArch 85 and David Smiley ∞ Leslie Kramer MFA 76 PR ∞ Ruth E. Lawler P 12 and Christopher P. Lawler P 12 Kyung-Eun Lee 93 AP and Jae P. Park 94 ID Barbara Leland P 22 and Todd Leland P 22 Mary Lovejoy T and John Whistler ∞ Hope A. McCulloch 77 TX Katherine D. Megrue-Smith 88 GD and J. Allen Smith Sonja O’Donnell P 22 and Michael O'Donnell P 22 ∞ Timothy C. Ortman P 22 and Julia A. Stewart P 22 Jae P. Park 94 ID and Kyung-Eun Lee 93 AP Michael Rock MFA 84 GD T and Susan Sellers 89 GD ∞ Elinor Sapp BID 79 ∞ William Schweizer P 19 T and

Alison Martier Schweizer P 19 ∞ Susan Sellers 89 GD and Michael Rock MFA 84 GD T Raymond N. Shick BArch 83 Georgianna Stout 89 GD P 24 and

David D. Weeks 90 PT P 24 ∞ Taunton-South Shore Foundation Inc. ∞ Eduardo D. Terranova MArch 06 ∞ Textron Charitable Trust ∞ David D. Weeks 90 PT P 24 ∞ and Georgianna Stout 89 GD P 24 ∞ Fang Wu P 23 and Runsheng He P 23 ∞

The Centennial Society recognizes over 1,400 loyal donors, who have given to RISD in any amount for three consecutive years or more. These donors, who are also recognized in the following donor lists, are identified with the eternity symbol.

Anonymous Robert Allen Marcia Gloster Ammeen 64 IL and James Ammeen Jeffrey G. Beers BArch 79 and Connie A. Swenie Anthony C. Belluschi BArch 66 P 95 ET and Marti Belluschi P 95 ∞ Bruce A. Bierman BArch 76 and William Secord Guy R. Blais 57 AD ∞ Lindy Bliss-Gaylord BIA 77 and Bill Gaylord BArch 77 Adam R. Bluming 96 GD Jane K. Bohan 79 SC and Jean R. De Segonzac 75 FAV James Bond P 25 Michael C. Booth BArch 83 and Michael Oliva David Brady P 23 Marina K. Brolin 85 GD ∞ Preston Brown P 24 Kenneth Bruce 71 AR and Cecelia (Nash) Bruce 72 PT ∞ Andrea L. Brue BArch 88 and Alan Fried ∞ Gabrielle Bullock BArch 84 T and Rocky Carroll ∞ Simone Bye P 16 and Mark L. Bye P 16 ∞ Lyndsay A. Caleo MFA 06 JM and

Fitzhugh B. Karol MFA 07 CR ∞ Jean Callan King 68 GD and John S. King 68 ID ∞ Francis E. Carlson, Jr. 69 SC ∞ Katharine L. Carroll and Alison H. Rosenthal Carol A. Catalano 80 ID and Thomas P. Catalano BArch 81 Jacinda K. Chew 99 IL ∞ Donald Choi BArch 82 P 07 T and Karen Choi P 07 ∞ Esther J. Chung 97 IL and James Chung Luke E. Cohen BArch 72 Andrew M. Collar 02 GD Rachel B. Cope 03 SC and Nicholas Cope Nancy M. Crasco 64 AE P 91 and

H. Kenneth Crasco 65 LA P 91 ∞ Zara Crowley 96 PT and Steve Crowley ∞ Ryan E. Cunningham 02 FAV ∞ Sandra K. Cushman 84 PT ∞ Chelsea R. Danburg 96 TX and Asher M. Danburg 96 ID ∞ Pamela A. Danesi 77 AP ∞ David B. Daniel BArch 89 and Sally Dunkleberger ∞ Jennifer Davies 68 IL ∞ Elissa S. Della-Piana 64 IL ∞ Jean R. De Segonzac 75 FAV and Jane K. Bohan 79 SC William M. Dieter 89 ID Francis P. DiGregorio BArch 66 and Elizabeth DiGregorio ∞ Ann W. Douden 72 IL ∞ Sarah C. Durham 92 IL and Craig M. Winer 92 ID ∞ Elizabeth C. Durling 84 PT and Dean Durling Samuel S. Emerson BArch 71 and Linda J. Emerson ∞ Robert Emy Ann K. Finkbeiner P 90 ∞ Becky A. Fong Hughes 05 GD and Aaron Hughes ∞ Jonathan D. Friedman 00 ID and Miriam Friedman Nicholas P. Fuhrer 99 SC and Rebecca S. Walsh 00 IL Michael Gabellini BFA 80/BArch 81 and

Kimberly Sheppard BFA 85/BArch 86 ∞ Kyle C. Gaffney BArch 91 P 15 and Shannon M. Rankin P 15 Bill Gaylord BArch 77 and Lindy Bliss-Gaylord BIA 77 Andrea E. Gill 71 PT and John Gill Peter Gill Case MArch 97 and Lucia Gill Case ∞

Joanna D. Golden 79 AP ∞ Carol Goldenberg Rosen 73 IL and James Rosen ∞ Ned Goodnow P 81 ∞ Tracy T. Goodnow 81 PT ∞ Judy Sue Goodwin Sturges 66 IL ∞ Gregory R. Goucher BArch 78 ∞ Amy L. Gould BArch 75 and Matthew Polk ∞ Paula Koffler Granoff HD 10 ET M and Leonard Granoff ∞ Jeffrey C. Hannoosh 00 ID and Catharine Kendall-Hannoosh Amy Held P 24 and Jeffery Held P 24 Kerry Hoffman P 24 and Paul Hoffman P 24 Wendy R. Hollender 76 TX Jenny Holzer MFA 77 PT Jee-Min Hu P 12 and Chih-Tang Chang P 12 Diana Hunt P 23 and Sam Hunt P 23 ∞ Sunwoo Kahng P 23 and Peter Boberg P 23 Alice J. Kang 90 GD and Ohsang Kwon Mark A. Kaplan 01* JM ∞ Fitzhugh B. Karol MFA 07 CR and Lyndsay A. Caleo MFA 06 JM ∞ Steven C. Kellogg 63 IL Helen Kim P 23 and Colin Warwick P 23 ∞ KyungEn Kim MFA 97 SC and Eulho Suh BArch 91 ∞ John S. King 68 ID and Jean Callan King 68 GD ∞ Kent Kleinman ∞ Diana Dyer Knoblauch P 22 and Loring Knoblauch P 22 ∞ Joshua M. Kornfeld 95 ID Jill G. Kraus MFA 77 JM and Peter S. Kraus Michele Krohn P 23 ∞ Elizabeth C. Lakeman 88 GD and Martin Lakeman Kimberly Latham P 22 and Jeffrey Bullwinkel P 22 Robert W. Lepper 58 GD ∞ Claire Levesque P 17 ∞ Alissa A. Levin 92 PT Laura S. Lienhard 87 TX/MFA 95 Terry K. Lin 94 ID Loren Hope Designs, LLC Angus MacLane 97 FAV and Tashana Landray ∞ Susan M. Matthews MAT 98 and James A. Kennedy ∞ Nicholas O. Mazonowicz 01 FAV Julie Mehretu MFA 97 PT/PR Lucy D. Metcalf ∞ Pauline C. Metcalf ET M ∞ Richard H. Michaelson BArch 74 and Karen Karlsson ∞ Irwin S. D. Miller BArch 94 P 24 and Heidi L. Miller P 24 Arno Rafael Minkkinen MFA 74 PH and Sandra Hughes Minkkinen ∞ Antonio Molestina P 22 and Sharon McCarthy P 22 ∞ Clifford W. Moran 81 ID P 12 ∞ Aya Murata P 23 and Michael Charland P 23 ∞ Stuart J. Murphy 64 IL P 96 ET and Nancy Murphy P 96 ∞ Cherry A. Murray P 13 ∞ Dana M. Newbrook 63 AR ET and Nancy C. Newbrook ∞ Krista L. Ninivaggi BArch 02 ∞ Martha B. Nutt 85 TX Starr Ockenga MFA 74 PH Erin L. A. Oda 95 CR/MAT 96 Leigh F. Palmer 66 PT and Phyllis Gay Palmer 66 PT ∞ Xiangjun Pan P 23 ∞ Anthony T. Pannozzo 91 ID and Lorianne Pannozzo ∞ Laura J. Paresky Gould MAT 91 and J. Eric Gould Dominic F. Passeri MArch 00 Thomas Peirce Jennifer Perini P 23 Robin E. Perkins 86 GD and Cliff L. Selbert BLA 75 Shoshana Perry P 25 and Noel Wiggins P 25 Rosalie A. Phipps P 10 and Craig A. Stock ∞ Lisa E. Piasecki 99 GD and Eric Piasecki ∞ Amy V. Quirk P 11 and Michael P. Lehmann P 11 ∞ Ellen G. Reeves Victoria W. Reynolds 85 JM and Thomas H. Reynolds ∞ Sally E. Rigg MArch 95 and David P. Baker ∞ Judi Roaman ∞ Robert Half International, Inc. ∞ Francis M. Roche 60 AR ∞ Alicia Rosauer 99 PH and Robert G. Segal MFA 99 TX ∞ Lisa C. Sachs BArch 80 and John Sachs Luke Sanzone BLA 98 ∞ Stephanie D. Savage BArch 91 P 21 and Michael S. Swischuk P 21 Robert J. Schaeffner BArch 81 and Jennifer Schaeffner Sharon Lee Driscoll Schuur 90 IL and Peter F. Schuur ∞ Carole Segal P 99 and Gordon I. Segal P 99 ∞ Robert G. Segal MFA 99 TX and Alicia Rosauer 99 PH ∞ Cliff L. Selbert BLA 75 and Robin E. Perkins 86 GD Brian P. Selznick 88 IL and David Serlin ∞ Peggy B. Sharpe 53 LA P 94 and Henry D. Sharpe‡ P 94 ∞ Merrill W. Sherman ET ∞ Thomas M. Sieniewicz BArch 83 and Martha Eddison Linda G. Smith 69 GD ∞ Ann L. Solomon-Schwartz 70 IL ∞ Rosanne Somerson 76 ∞ Keum An Son P 23 and Jeong Gu Kang P 23 Mingyuan Song P 22 and Shanming Shi P 22 ∞ Donald R. Stanton and Jeanne Stanton Janet C. Stegman BArch 78 ∞ Supima Cotton Roland V. Sturm P 17 and Terri E. Sturm P 17 ∞ Alexander Y. Suh 96 GD ∞ Eulho Suh BArch 91 and KyungEn Kim MFA 97 SC ∞ Michiko Tanikawa P 22 and Dihua Hu P 22 Ann Taylor P 00 and Carole D. Smith Abigail B. Test 84 PT Harold H. Tittmann, IV BArch 95 Mara Topping P 24 and Munford Topping P 24 ∞ Peter W. Twombly BArch 80 and Jane Franke ∞ Donna B. Tyson P 08 and Alan L. Tyson P 08 ∞ Lida Urban P 93 and Theodore S. Urban P 93 ∞ Tao B. Urban 93 PT ∞ Aundra Urban Tomlins ∞ Kimberly Van Munching P 23 and Christopher Van Munching P 23 ∞ Caroline E. Vary BArch 95 and William C. Lee Rebecca S. Walsh 00 IL and Nicholas P. Fuhrer 99 SC Craig M. Winer 92 ID and Sarah C. Durham 92 IL ∞ Helga S. Warren P 11 and Harry A. Warren P 11 ∞ Jennifer W. White 01 PH and Geoff Duckworth ∞ Patricia A. White 64 IL P 96 ET ∞ Catherine Witherwax P 25 and Robert Witherwax P 25 Judith L. Wolfe 66 PT ∞ Christi Work ∞ James R. Wynn 98 GD and Mandy Wynn Xiaohong Zheng P 24 and Qing Wang P 24