
The SEA Council consists of over 40 alumni representing all engineering academic departments, geographic areas, and graduating classes. Two students are also members of the Council. The Council meets annually, coinciding with the University Alumni Council annual meeting. Ten committees have been formed, six of which provide alumni programming in various regions across the country. Meetings of engineering alumni have evolved in numerous areas from Princeton, NJ to San Francisco and Atlanta and Detroit. The other four standing committees work toward various goals such as establishing student summer internships, increasing the annual giving for the School of Engineering, and developing research collaborations with alumni and faculty members.
New membership to be posted the week after the council meeting.
Raquel M. Silverberg ’92
Jacqueline M. Akinpelu, Ph.D. ’80
Christopher Aldrich ’96
Judith Batenburg ’86
James L. Beauchamp ’66
Christopher D. Brown ’97
Richard H. Buckholz, Jr., Ph.D. ’79
Robert S. Buxbaum ’51, ’53
Catherine M. Connell ’92
Anthony F. Debella ’96, ’98
Richard E. Edwards ’53, ’56
R. Bruce Fisher III ’65, ’68
John P. Fisher ’95
Charles J. Frank, P.E. ’49
Nicholas J. Gianaris, Ph.D., P.E. ’92, ’96
Steven J. Gitomer, Ph.D. ’64, ’66
Serena J. Gondek, J.D. ’99
Eugene C. Harvey, P.E. ’60
John C. Hass ’52
Richard C. Hine ’59
Jeffrey W. Holmes, M.D., Ph.D. ’89
Timothy M. Hsieh, Ph.D. ’83, ’85, ’89
Richard C. Hu ’58
Johna Till Johnson ’86
Tara L. Johnson ’02
Charles T. Johnson-Bey ’89
James P. Krawczyk ’81
Theodore J. Lewandowski ’59, ’78
David C. C. Mao ’00
Christopher J. Mengler ’86
Marybeth Miceli Newton ’99
S. Murray Miller, P.E. ’53, ’61
G. Paul Neitzel, Ph.D. ’74, ’79
Harry T. Reynolds, P.E. ’62
Melvin W. Richter ’54, ’61, ’79
Patricia L. Rosenfield, Ph.D. ’75
Sruti (Maya) Sathyanadhan ’06, ’07
Earle A. Sugar ’87
David H. Terry ’87, ’89, ’93
Daniel E. Touchette ’06
John A. Zappone ’86
"Our team wants to break surgical procedures down to simple gestures" Greg Hager says, "that can be represented mathematically by computer software." By doing so, researchers will be able to recognize how well individual surgeries are performed and improve the quality and outcomes of surgical procedures.