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Page 1: Alumni news - CORE
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UNIVERSITY OFILLINOIS LIBRARY

AT URBANAXHAMPAIGM"1^

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Digitized by the Internet Archive

in 2011 with funding from

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

http://www.archive.org/details/alumninews13univ

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n3a..13

D ALUMNI NEWS1986

Department of

Urban and Regional PlanningUniversity of Illinois

at Urbana - Champaign

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University of Illinois Department of urban- - , ^1 . ^nd Regional Planning

at Urbana-Cnampaign1003 West Nevada Street 217 333-3890UrbanaIllinois 61801

Dear Friends:

Many changes have taken place in the Department since you received the

last Alumni News in the Summer of 1983. Carl Patton stepped up to

become Dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Planning, University

of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, and Michael Romanes went to Ohio to becomeDirector of the School of Planning, University of Cincinnati.

Lewis Hopkins traveUed across campus from the Department of LandscapeArchitecture to become Head of our Department in Fall 1984 and Lewis L.

Osborne duly joined us from the Institute of Environmental Studies to teach

environmental land use planning and natural science courses in Fall 1983.

To complete the "family," we were happy to welcome Gill-Chin Lim to the

Department. He taught previously at Princeton and Northwestern. Here,

in addition to working with Ph.D. students, he will be taking over the UP101 course from me which I have been handling since 1979.

The editorial responsibility for this issue was preliminarily assumed by LockBlair, but on his departure for sabbatical leave I was asked to take on this

task, which I am most happy to do. The success of any news documentdepends so much on the quantity and quality of news items that are

received from the field. So please keep in touch - notify us of any changes

of address - and remember to advise us of any interesting projects in whichyou are involved, or of any job opportunities available both for our students

and other alums.

Later, in this volume, you will see an aU-too-long list of our feUow alums,

whom we have "lost." TTiis, to us, is regrettable, and we hope that if youknow any of their whereabouts you wUI let us know posthaste. You will be

doing us - and them - a real service!

Cordially,

Eric

Editor

ECF:dm

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Tell me, I forget

Show me, I remember

Involve me, I understand.

Anoient Chinese Proverb

Edited by Eric C. Freund

Sketches by Mohammed Nazri Mohd-Noordin

Produced by June Hansen, Dyanna Mortenson,

Eleanor Penn and Jane Terry

Many thanks for contributions from aU faculty and staff as well as assistance fromgraduate students, Kevin Grace, Philip Anderson, and Linda Bastyr (editorial assistant).

Special thanks are due to Lachlan Blair and Louis Wetmore for invaluable inputs.

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ALUMNI NEWSDepartment of Urban and Regional PlanningUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champfiign

Summer 1986No. 13

Departmental Activities

Our New Department Head 1

Anniversary Celebration 3

Research Activities 4

CPLA Library 7

International Activities 8

Faculty and Staff

1003 West Nevada , 11

1001 West Nevada 13

909 West Nevada 16

907 West Nevada 20

901 West lUinois 22

Elsewhere 22

The Armory 24

Student Activities

SPO 27

Awards 28

Internships 29

PhD 30

MUP 32

BAUP 37

"nie AlumniGeographic Distribution 41

Alumni Roster 50

Alumni News 69

List of "Lost Alums" and Incomplete Addresses 104

AppendixPublications available from the

Bureau of Urban and Regional Planning Research 109Publications Order Form Ill

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Dept. Actiuities

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DEPARTMENTAL ACTIVITIES

Our New Department Head: A Two Year Report

There are several exciting things about this department that attracted me to agree to be

Department Head. It is one of the few planning departments in the country that offers

bachelor's, master's, and Ph.D. degrees. This range makes possible a large student body

and faculty that can provide the diverse knowledge and skills necessary for a first-rate

planning program. The department provides professional education and generates

significant research. Our programs address problems of human settlements from social

science as well as natural science perspectives and use qualitative as weU as quantitative

methods. I sensed that I would fit this department and could have fun helping to sustain

its established high quality. After two years I am still excited and I am very comfortable

professionally with the range of activities the department is pursuing.

In order to administer our three degree programs, we have delegated responsibilities for

admissions and oversight of student advising in each. Lock Blair has coordinated the

BAUP for several years. Beginning in FaU 1986, Gill Lim, who joined the faculty last

fall, will coordinate the BAUP. Clyde Forrest is coordinator for the MUP. Len Heumannacts as Chief Advisor for the Ph.D. program, which is administered by this departmentfor an interdepartmental program faculty. We are working hard at recruiting the best

students and have produced new student recruitment materials. The BAUP program has

grown to over 100 students, with a strong contingent of pre-law students. The Ph.D.

program now has eight students in its third full year of operation. Our first PhD, HelenBriassoulis, graduated in October, 1985.

Lock Blair continues as Associate Head with responsibilities for placement, internships

and many other activities. Clyde Forrest has been appointed Associate Head for

Professional Development with responsibility for Continuing Education and working with

AICP in professional development. We staged a workshop on negotiation and mediation

in early May. An AICP exam review course was presented on campus in April.

One of our most exciting opportunities this year has been the recruiting of a faculty

member to help launch the Ph.D. program as well as to teach in all three departmentdegree programs. We are proud that Dr. Gill Lim, who taught previously at Princeton,

joined the faculty. In addition to working with PhD students, he will be teaching UP 101.

The budget situation can best be described as "not as bad as it has sometimes been."

With the state economy recovering, the university is no longer in a doomsday mood.Much of our budget, however, now comes from our own efforts. This year our faculty are

involved in over one half million dollars of contracts and grants, most of which are

described elsewhere in this issue of the News. Our annual grants and contracts nowexceed our state funded budget. With these grants and contracts we have been able to

give almost all graduate students some form of aid and to buy new computing and wordprocessing equipment.

Computing is where the action is at the University of Illinois in the mid 1980's. You mayhave read that the university is one of four nationally that has received funding to install

a supercomputer. At the department level we have five word processors for the clerical

staff and now have eight microcomputers available to students with more on the way.The department microcomputer lab has been moved to new quarters with at least three

times as much space.

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We are currently implementing a fine tuning of the MUP curriculum so as to make best

use of our faculty resources and to ensure that all students get a thorough grounding in

core areas of urban and regional planning. We have adjusted not only the sequencing of

courses, but the content of each core course. The revised curriculum will not only

provide a better master's education, but will also fit together with both the BAUP andthe Ph.D. so that we can educate planners of exceptional breadth and depth. We are also

revising the BAUP to require more work in analytical methods and to firm up required

courses.

Our physical space and location continues to be a key concern. Under the leadership of

Lock Blair, funds were obtained for remodeling to create the new computer lab, a lab for

Lew Osborne, and additional space for Ph.D. students. We are seeking longer termsolutions that will provide us higher quality, permanent space, including adequate space

for the library. Although our presentation to the campus administration in January 1985

did not achieve its short run objective of consolidating the department in a single

remodeled campus building, it did succeed in emphasizing our space needs to the

administration. New initiatives are now underway to use innovative public/private

sector-funding for a new building. We welcome your ideas.

In keeping with the university's increasing efforts in active involvement of alumni and in

raising of private funds, we have reconstituted the department's Planning Council. It

serves not only as one of our major links to practicing professionals, but also as a meansof student recruiting and fundraising. The group met here in November 1985 for anenthusiastic exchange of professional experience and initiated exciting new efforts to

solve the department's space needs. You will be hearing more about these efforts soon.

We hope each of you wiU participate.

Lewis D. Hopkins(

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L Anniuersary Celebration

The efforts of a faculty committee (Blair, Guttenberg, Heumann, Patton, Ravenhall,

Wetmore) during 1982 and 1983 were brought to fruition in the exhibits and conferenceactivities on campus in the Fall of 1983 and at the APA conference in Minneapolis in the

Spring of 1984. Papers on the history of the planning program at Illinois were delivered

by Guttenberg, Heumann, and Ravenhall at both conferences. Exhibits were organized onthe history of the program by Professor Blair and on the library by Professor Ravenhall.

Celebration of the 70th anniversary of the appointment of Charles Mulford Robinson at

Illinois as the first planning professor in the United States had been proposed by CarlPatton in 1981. After Patton left the department in 1983, Lachlan Blair, Acting Head,assumed major responsibility for the program. Many students contributed time and skills

to setting up the exhibits and organizing the archival materials. Sandra Stiles and MaryBuckley conducted searches in the archives and organized the bulging references of

documents, photographs and slides. Emeritus Professor Wetmore chaired the anniversarycommittee and contributed to the papers and exhibit materials. He identified materials

in the University Archives essential to the record being made, and arranged for keymaterials to be added to the archives for those who will organize the 100th AnniversaryCelebration in 2013.

Among materials added by the work of the committee are tape recordings of interviewswith alumni, of meetings of the committee, of telephone interviews with faculty of thefounding schools across the country, and of two in-depth interviews with HarlandBartholomew, Visiting Professor from 1919 to 1956. The 21 exhibit panels will now beused regularly as part of the orientation program for those entering the department, andare now on rotating display in our five buildings.

Louis B. Wetmore

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Research Actiuities

Many of the faculty are now participating in funded research and contract work. Thereare currently several large funded projects involving department faculty as outlined in

the table below. The Environmental Technical Information System and associated workfunded by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; the Illinois Streams Information Systemfunded by the Illinois Department of Conservation; land use and water quality

investigations funded by the Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources; and aninvestigation on urban transportation modeling funded by the National ScienceFoundation. The Bureau of Urban and Regional Planning Research continues to be the

home of some of the research activity in the department, in particular the work for the

Corps of Engineers. Lew Hopkins is serving as Director of the Bureau.

Recent Major Sponsored Research

TOPIC FACULTY DATES PnNDIH

Houdng

Illinois Housing NeedsAnalysis

lleumann 1983- 1995 $62,000

Cost Comparison for

Congregate and Long TermCare Elderly Mousing

Ileumann 198S- $34,000

Informatioa Systems

Ollnols StreamsInformation System

Hopkins, HUey (LA)'Osborne, Kester (LA)»

1981- $730,000

Environmental TechnicalInformation System

Forrest and others 1982 - $750,000

Experimental Evaluation ofModeling to GenerateAlternatives

Hopkins, BrIU (CE)',Flack (Psych)'

1985 - 1987 $45,000

Planning Decision

Support SystemHopkins and others 1985-1987 $100,000

Recreation Facilities

Inventory and InformationSystem

Hopkins, Orland (LA)',Burdgo (lES)',

Kesler (LA)'

1985- 1988 $210,000

Illinois Houalng Development Authority

tlllnoLs Housing Development Authority

Illinois Dept. or Conservation

U.S. Army Construction EngineeringResearch Lab

National Science Foundation:Decision and Management Sciences

IBM and University of Ulinois

Illinois Dept. of Conservation

Land Um And Tnnaportation UodeUng

Test of a Land UseTransportation Model

Kim 1984 1936 $45,000

Land Use And Wate^Quality

Water Quality Law Forrest 19B2 $25,000

Land Use Cover and

Water Quality

(Jsborne, Wiley (INHS)', 1384

Singh (SWS)', FoUmcr (SGS)'

1986 $85,000

Models for Instream PlowAnalysis

Wiley (INKS)', Ostxjrnc 1984Urimoro (INHS)'

1986 $420,00

National Science Foundation:

Regional Science

Illinois Environmental Protection Agency

Illinois Dept. of Energy and NaturalResources

Illinois Dept. of Conservation andU.S. Fish iind Wildlife Service

•LA = Landscape Architecture, CE = Civil Engineering, Psych = Psychology, lES = Institute for Environmental Studies,

INHS = Illinois Natural History Survey, SWS = State Water Survey, SGS = State Geological Survey

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ETIS Contracts

Clyde Forrest is the Principal Investigator for the Environmental Technical InformationSystem (ETIS), and its related projects. These include CELDS, the Computer-aidedEnvironmental Legislative Data System containing a data base of abstracted federal andstate legislation pertaining to the environment, as well as an information center knownas the "Environmental Information Connection." Most ETIS activities are located in our

907 West Nevada building, described more fully in the section on Faculty and Staff

Activities.

ISIS Program

The Illinois Streams Information System (ISIS) is nov>i in its fourth year of developmentand implementation. It is a decision support system to aid in the classification of Illinois

streams for water quality and recreation management and in the reviewing of permits for

construction and development adjacent to streams. Planning reports are being producedfor each major basin of Illinois. Lew Hopkins continues as Project Director and LewOsborne has joined the project to provide expertise in fisheries, water quality, andhydrology. The project is currently supporting 20 research assistants from planning andlandscape architecture. Although the project's primary purpose is to provide a useable

system for the Department of Conservation, the innovations developed in the design of

the system were presented recently at a conference on automated cartography in

Washington, DC.

Illinois Recreation Facilities Inventory

This inventory, also funded by the Department of Conservation is conducting a mail

survey of recreation sites and developing a decision support system to assist state

agencies in allocating recreation program grant funds. Lewis Hopkins, Brian Orland(Landscape Architecture), Rabel Burdge (Institute for Environmental Studies), and GaryKesler (Landscape Architecture) are the project investigators.

NSF Project

T. John Kim is Principal Investigator for an NSF-funded project, "Testing a ThreeDimensional Urban Activities Model: Combined Input-Output and Spatial Interaction

Approaches." It is currently in the stage of developing a solution algorithm for a large-

scale, non-linear programming problem before analyzing the socio-economic activities of

the Chicago region. A Ph.D. candidate, Mr. Jeong Hyun Rho, is the Research Assistant.

The Chicago Area Transportation Study (CATS) has generously agreed to provide bothdata and computing facilities for the project.

Natural Science Projects

Three major natural science research efforts are underway with Lew Osborne as

Principal Investigator. On two of them, he shares that role with colleagues on the staff

of the Illinois State Natural History Survey based here on campus. Each project supportsone or more graduate students.

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USA-CERL has been in the process of developing a wildlife guild database for use in

monitoring and assessment of environmental and natural resources of Army training lands

and Army Corps recreation projects. Dr. Osborne has recently acquired a grant to

evaluate integrated software systems for support of the guild-based system for

environmental analyses on the IBM-PC/AT. This grant is supporting a graduate researchassistant.

The Illinois Department of Conservation and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are

supporting a study by Osborne and two Co-Principal Investigators for the Illinois NaturalHistory Survey of the concepts and techniques for examining critical flow requirementsof Illinois stream fisheries. This involves revision of existing analytical stream modelsand improved methods for data collection and implementation of stream flow regulation

planning.

A two-year study of the linkages between land and water habitats is getting underwaywith Osborne and a scientist from each of the three State Surveys (Natural History,

Water and Geology), assisted by a half-time Ph.D. candidate. The geomorphological,hydrological, and biological dynamics of the Vermilion basin will be examined with a viewto contributing to the theoretical and empirical bases for basinwide management of our

aquatic resources. The Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources is

supporting the study.

Experimental Evaluation of Modeling to Generate Alternatives

A small set of very different alternatives may help in discovering the range of

alternatives for a problem. The use of optimization models to generate alternatives as

an aid in exploring incompletely defined problems is being evaluated experimentally. Anexperimental design suitable for evaluating such methods has been developed, andsoftware is being developed to conduct the experiments. E. Downey Brill, Lewis D.

Hopkins and John Flack have received funding for this project from the National ScienceFoundation, Decision and Management Science Program.

Planning Decision Support System: Implementation in Workshop Courses

Lewis D. Hopkins and other faculty have received funding from IBM and the University of

Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to implement a planning decision support system for use in

a new course, Planning Problems and Cases. The system will make it possible for

students to work on four problems in one semester by providing a rich set of data,

models, and graphics. Students are encouraged to consider problems from several

perspectives and to use several methods in order to develop better and more persuasive

proposals. The system includes a geographic information system and presentationgraphics. It is being implemented on locally networked microcomputers.

Educational Research

Celebration of our 70th anniversary as a department offering courses in urban planning in

1984 led to a study of the history of course offerings. We found that the studio/workshophas been offered throughout the program's history and has undergone several unique andimportant changes. These changes in professional education seem often to anticipate or

even predispose changes in the profession itself. Professors Heumann and Wetmoreconducted a telephone survey of leading workshop faculty at the ten oldest schools of

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planning to determine if the workshop changes observed at Illinois were replicated

elsewhere. This survey established the workshop as a unique course in planning, different

from related studios, internships, or field study courses found in other disciplines.

However, we found different patterns in the workshop evolution, and then felt we should

expand the analysis. A mail survey to all 70 accredited schools of planning in 1984

covered the longitudinal history of planning workshop changes at all the schools. Withfunds from the Graduate College and the Department, another mail survey was sent in

1984-85 to 500 planning faculty in the U.S. and Canada, soliciting faculty use and opinion

of the workshop.

An article appeared in the Journal of Planning Education and Research and apresentation has been made to the ACSP 1984 and 1985 Annual Conferences. There has

been a 75% response rate to the survey of planning schools, and a 50% response rate to

the survey of planning faculty. Data is now prepared for computer analysis. Look for a

series of articles on the subject and perhaps even a book on the history of planning

education resulting from this and related research initiated by faculty interest in our70th anniversary.

Leonard F. Heumann

CPLK Librar/

The City Planning and Landscape Architecture Library was featured in conjunction with

a number of the department's Anniversary Celebration activities. Mary Ravenhall, CPLALibrarian, prepared an exhibit entitled "The Illinois Contribution to City Planning:

Education and Professional Practice," which was on view in the Main Library in October -

November, 1983, and again in January - February, 1984. Books and reports, drawn fromthe Library's collection, illustrated both the development of the city planning movementin America and the contribution to planning education and practice made by Illinois

faculty and students. Dr. Ravenhall also read papers on the history of the CPLA Library

to the Illinois Chapter of the American Planning Association in November, 1983, and to

the Annual Conference of the Council of Planning Librarians at Minneapolis in May,1984.

The big news at the CPLA Library for 1985 has been the introduction of an on-line

catalog for the University Library system. Students and faculty can now search not only

the holdings in 203 Mumford HaU but also those of the main library and the 36 other

departmental libraries from public terminals located around campus or from their ownoffices by way of dial-up access.

The City Planning and Landscape Architecture Library sponsored an exhibit in the MainLibrary in September 1985, entitled "From the Elephant to Mumford Hall: the

Development of the Landscape Architecture Collection at the University of Ulinois at

Urbana-Champaign." The exhibit was timed to coincide with the annual conference of

the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture held in Urbana this fall, and featuredrare and unusual books acquired by the Library between 1867 and 1924.

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The staff at the CPLA Library was increased in 1985 by the addition of a half-time

graduate assistant to aid in both cataloging and reference services.

The collection has been enhanced not only by purchases with regular library funds but

also by gifts from alumni and faculty. Especially noteworthy is a substantial collection

from the office of Harland Bartholomew Associates in St. Louis.

International Activities

T. John Kim is now serving half-time as the university's Liaison Officer to the

Midwestern Universities Consortium for International Activities, Inc. (MUCIA). MUCIAhas been involved in projects in more than 100 countries and with 800 faculty memberssince its establishment in 1964. Professor Kim is also Associate Director of the Office

of International Programs and Studies at the UIUC campus. He is perpetual motionpersonified!

He was appointed as Special Advisor to the Governor of Illinois on International Affairs

and accompanied Governor Thompson in his trade mission to Korea and Japan in January1986. T. John Kim also received a Fulbright Grant for the Program on Educational

Experts in Germany.

He visited a dozen universities and participated in seminars on international education in

Germany April 8 to April 30, 1986.

The Department is negotiating with Tongji University, Shanghai, China in establishing a

summer program there. T. John Kim visited Tongji University in August 1985 anddiscussed terms of the proposed new program and will be visiting again in August 1986.

Greek Summer Program

The Department continues to offer the summer program in comparative planning in

Greece. Beginning with summer 1985, the program has been offered jointly with the

University of Cincinnati, where Michael Romanes is now Director of the School of

Planning. In the summer of 1984 Lew Hopkins joined Michael Romanos to instruct 12

students from six universities. Two projects were completed: an implementation plan for

the Panagia historic district and a system for evaluating industrial park locations for the

Hellenic Industrial Development Bank. Students also visited planners in Bulgaria andYugoslavia and visited industrial sites throughout Greece.

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Swiss Summer Program

Work is progressing on a project that would establish a summer seminar in Switzerland.

Located in a conference facility next door to the U.N. in Geneva the seminar would drawon the resources of U.N. international experts for comparative planning topics.

Professor Forrest is leading in this effort planned for Summer 1987.

British Summer Program

Professor Freund has explored the potential for and has structured a two-month Summerprogram for our students to be based at the School of Environmental Sciences of the

University of East Anglia where he spent sabbatical time in 1984.

China Program

A program for China is also under consideration.

Study Abroad

In 1983-84, three undergraduates spent part or all of their senior year in England:

Christopher Rediehs and Susan Mea in London and Joanne Hoagland in Newcastle.

January 1985 BAUP graduates Anthony Fenner and Beth Eiseman traveled and studied in

India and Israel, respectively, before tackling their graduate studies. Russell Forrest

studied at the University of East Anglia in England in the Fall of 1985.

Planning Council

The Planning Council serves as a sounding board of active professionals to ensure

communication between the department and the profession, both in the State of Illinois

and nationally. The council also serves as an important link to our alumni, which includes

setting the tone for fund raising efforts. The members of the council provide an imageof the profession to our students and an image of the department to the profession. Thecouncil assists and advises on the department's efforts to maintain contact with its

alumni nationally, and to increase its resources through fundraising efforts. The council

helps us create exciting images of the department's future and assist in finding the meansto achieve them.

The council consists of members representative of our alumni from coast to coast, andfrom the private and public sector. One member is nominated by the Illinois chapter of

the American Planning Association. The others are selected by the Department Head in

consultation with the faculty. Each council member serves for three years and we try to

bring the council together on campus each year. The council meets with faculty andstudents to discuss the department's programs, problems, and accomplishments. This

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gathering also gives students a chance to meet alumni who have taken a wide range of

successful career paths, building on a degree in planning. Current members of the

Planning Council are:

Joseph H. Abel (BSCP 1959) Wheaton, Illinois

Michael A. Carroll (MUP 1968) Indianapolis, Indiana

M. Walter D'Alessio, Jr. (MSCP 1960) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Vernon E. George (BSCP 1961) Silver Spring, MarylandJoy G.A. Mee (MUP 1970) Phoenix, ArizonaDiane M. Porter (MUP 1969) Brooklyn, New York

The entire Council gathered on campus in November 1985 for an exciting and stimulating

two days of discussions and presentations.

The Placement Office

Please keep in mind that the Department continues to operate its own job placementoffice. Any alumnus who is job-hunting is welcome to use this office. You will be asked

to fill out a placement worksheet and to provide a current resume to give the PlacementCoordinator an indication of the kind of job which you are seeking. You wiU be sent

notices of all employment opportunities which may of interest to you.

Remember that we are anxious to hear of any available employment opportunities in the

planning field. Students, recent graduates, and alumni are always seeking planning

positions — from internships to entry-level to advanced level. Any employmentinformation you can send us will be greatly appreciated.

If you have any questions or comments concerning the Department Placement Office,

please send them to the following address:

Placement CoordinatorDepartment of Urban and Regional Planning

University of Illinois

1003 West Nevada Street

Urbana, Illinois 61801

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y\

Faculty & Staff

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11

FACULTY AND STAFF

This year we are presenting notes on faculty and staff activities in a non-alphabetical

order. You will sense our department's complex geography by reading about us at our

work locations. We are scattered in five old gray houses, four of which are on NevadaStreet, and a few other outposts. Recent alumni are quite familiar with this situation,

but changes will be evident to those who have been away from the campus for a while.

1003 West Nevada

Distinguished by a brown-shingled upper story and some elegant stained-glass windows,"1003" houses the administrative offices of the department, comprising a conference

room, student mailboxes and lounge, graduate assistants in the attic, and doctoral

candidates in the basement, along with the placement and undergrad advising offices.

Lachlan F. Blair (Professor and Associate Head)

I have to count my year as Acting Head in 1983-84 as a substantial success, in that the

department sagely and deliberately chose Lew Hopkins to pick up the reins. 1 think 1

helped hold us together in budgetarily uncertain times, with relatively modestinnovations. Patricia MiUer, then a fellow member of the State Historic Sites Advisory

Council, stepped in to teach my UP320 Historic Preservation Planning course. Carefully

selected grad assistants picked up many of the undergraduate advising duties.

The 1984-85 academic year went quite smoothly, thanks to Lew's being a fast learner.

My fall courses included UP320 and a preservation workshop focused on ResourceProtection in Champaign County. The Spring preservation methods class and a secondoffering of our sophomore-level planning practice seminar were both rewarding in termsof student reaction and productivity.

Last Fall had me teaching in three courses: Preservation Planning (with Pat MiUer),

Urban Design (on my own) and Neighborhood Planning (led by Earl Jones), where the

students did a quick study of the Lincoln Park area of Chicago. This Spring I was readyfor a sabbatical which has given me time for contemplation on where preservation

planning is and should be going, as well as to look ahead toward new ways for delivery of

planning consulting services (see Louis Wetmore's entry for more on this).

The Auditorium Restoration has helped spark some av^rareness of preservation needs oncampus. The University administration is helping to fund a historic architectural

inventory by our local Preservation and Conservation Association, and 1 have just beenappointed to chair a campus-wide Committee on Historic Sites.

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12

My good wife, Mary was recognized in 1985 with a Feminism Award by N.O.W., for her

dedicated work on behalf of the League of Women Voters. Our hydrologist daughterMarilyn is now enjoying the outdoors with the Washington State Department of ecology,

and our radio announcer son Doug can now be heard on WMET-FM, Chicago, when he is

not monitoring the four computers in his music programming service or our three

galloping grandchildren, now 12, 8 and 6.

Lewis D. Hopkins (Professor and Department Head)

Having moved only one block down the street from Landscape Architecture, I was a little

surprised to find how much 1 did not know about the department. 1 was right, however, in

thinking I would feel more comfortable professionally in a planning department. I amenjoying most of my new duties, though, as wiser persons warned me, I have put moreballs in the air than 1 can juggle effectively. Faculty, staff, and students have stepped in

to keep things from being dropped.

Having spent the summer of 1984 living with my family in two rooms in Greece and the

winter of 1985 living in two rooms of our house while the rest was remodeled andexpanded, we are enjoying spreading out. The beaches provided an escape in Greece andthe remodeled house has a Greek size balcony to hide on.

Gracye Baker (Administrative Secretary)

I joined the Department of Urban and Regional Planning in January 1986. I have 25 yearsof experience on the campus of the University of Illinois in the Departments of ChemicalEngineering, Food Technology, Chemistry, and Anthropology, and in the GraduateCollege and the College of Law.

I am a Champaign native who moved to a farm for twenty years, but have now returnedto the "city" and live in Urbana. 1 have two sons. My oldest son, Mike, is 26, married,

and lives on a farm. His wife, Tracey, will graduate from the University of Illinois in

August of this year and plans to teach math at the high school level. My youngest son,

Dan, is 16 and attends Urbana High School. 1 have an English setter named Jake. I enjoypeople, arts and crafts, traveling, gardening, reading and cooking, but not necessarily in

that order.

Dyanna Mortenson (Clerk Typist)

I have been at DURP almost 3 years now and have enjoyed almost every minute of it!!!

When George (my word processor) and I are not hard at work, I enjoy working out,

jogging, and spending time with my family (not necessarily in that order). 1 always try to

work hard and play hard! Matt, Rhiannon (my husband and 3 year-old daughter), and I

live in Pesotum for now. We are in the process of trying to sell our home and move to

"who knows where!" We are also expecting another child the first of January!

Jane Terry (Admissions and Records Officer)

One of the biggest events that has happened to me over the last several months is the

reclassification of my position to Admissions and Records Officer. 1 wiU continue to

handle the department's student records and admissions paperwork, but I have been able

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13

to expand my job responsibilities with our new Ph.D. program. I am working now directly

with the faculty members who are responsible for each degree program and student

admissions. My office is in the same place at 1003 West Nevada. In June 1986 1 will

have completed 15 years in Urban and Regional Planning and with the arrival of LewHopkins, I have now worked with four department heads.

On a personal note, my son Michael graduated from Urbana High School in May of 1984

and is continuing his education at Southern Illinois University. My daughter MicheUe,

whom everyone knows as "Punkin", is in the fifth grade and starting to become a young

lady.

If you are ever on campus, be sure to stop by and say hello or give us a call. And let meknow when you change your address so we can keep in touch throughout the year! I look

forward to seeing many of you in the coming months.

1001 West Nevada

Our major classroom where most Urban Planning core courses meet fills the western half

of "1001", a large, stucco, bungalow-type building built originally in 1918. The classroom

ceiling was reinforced last summer to permit heavy use of the room above as our

computer laboratory. Offices for faculty, graduate assistants, secretary and a small

ecology "wet lab" fiU the two floors.

Eric C. Freund (Professor)

Several summers have rushed by since I was last able to talk to you, and the next is

already on the horizon, promising to be just as full of interest and accomplishment as the

others. As a "flashback" to July, 1983, I duly represented the United States at the Izaak

Walton tricentenary celebrations in Winchester, England. There I inspected the

restoration works in progress to the 17th century house in the cathedral close whereIzaak Walton died. That afternoon, I attended a garden party in a lovely Georgian manorhouse where the supply of food and wine would, I am sure, have satisfied amply the

gourmet tastes of Walton, had he been there - and who is to stay that he was not there -

in spirit at least - while he was being toasted? In the evening a memorial service in

Winchester Cathedral was followed by a formal dinner. When I was caUed upon to speak,

I am not sure who was the more surprised, me for being asked, or the audience at hearing

the representative of the United States addressing them in an obviously British accent!

A few days after that episode, I was atop the scaffolding surrounding the Erechtheum onthe Acropolis in Athens, Greece, and also inside the Parthenon, inspecting the works in

progress. Later, after an unforgettable ten-hour bus ride, I visited Kavala, to take part

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14

in the Department's summer program there. In October, I was up at Lake Simeoe,Ontario, where I addressed the Annual Conference of the Association of Ontario LandEconomists.

January, 1984, found me on sabbatical leave at the University of East Anglia, Norwich,England, where I was Visiting Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences. In

addition to doing some teaching, I carried out a research project on British Enterprise

Zones, aided by a grant. Returning in July, 1 was appointed to the Steering Committee of

ATAM (the Graduate College Program on Ancient Technologies and ArhaeologicalMaterials) which is steadily getting more active and well-known worldwide.

In 1985, apart from my teaching activities and involvement with committees and withthe Izaak Walton League and the American Institute of Architects, I examined the results

of my British Enterprise Zones Project which I presented to the APA Annual Conferencein Montreal. In late August, I also addressed the International Conference of the

Atlantic Economic Society in Washington, DC. During the summer months I visited

Harborplace in Baltimore, and then, in New York, I was fortunate enough to get aninvitation to climb the scaffolding surrounding the Statue of Liberty to examine, at first-

hand, the restoration works in progress there and also on Ellis Island. I also visited

Columbia, Maryland, after an absence of several years, to catch up with progress.

Two weeks later I visited Britain, where I re-interviewed many of the enterprise zonemanagers that I had seen previously in 1984, but most importantly, spent much time at

the University of East Anglia, in Norwich, structuring a two-month planning course for

our students, to be run in the summer of 1986, or as soon as feasible.

An activity which brings together the professional skiUs of planners, architects,

engineers and economists, is the redevelopment of the many derelict dock complexesaround Britain, particularly in the Liverpool, Salford, London, and Chatham (Kent)

areas. These projects, which I have been monitoring for some time, but particularly in

summer 1985 and January, 1986, are of major importance, socially, economically, andenvironmentally, and many innovative schemes are now underway. Several of the docksare important historically: for instance, Liverpool possesses the largest number of GradeI listed buildings in Britain, while Chatham has been the site of the Royal NavalDockyard for some 400 years.

This former naval base is being redeveloped as a new community called ChathamMaritime, one of the most exciting waterside developments in Europe. Since Henry VIII's

reign, the Dockyard has been steeped in history. Sir Francis Drake, Lord Nelson, andCharles Dickens have aU walked here, the latter immortalizing the area in his manynovels. The project is scheduled to be completed in about nine years.

With work stiU proceeding on the Mesa Verde research project, and continuing

commitments as Chair of AUerton Park Improvements Committee, Secretary of the

Committee on Aerial Photography and Remote Sensing, and member of the Steering

Committee of ATAM, there seems little fear that 1 will be idle in the coming year. Tomake sure that I an[i able to fill in any odd gaps that appear, the Dean has again asked meto head up the United way Fund drive for the College, and I can always fall back on myduties as Secretary-Treasurer of the Department's Alumni Association, and as Editor of

the Alumni News!

If I seem to be busy, my activities pale into insignificance compared to those of my son,

Adrian, of whom, as you know, I always speak with due fatherly pride. As you will see in

his news, he has left Madison, Wisconsin, for the warmer climes of Austin, Texas, where

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15

he has been entrusted with protection of the environment in that burgeoning city - a

gargantuan job in itself. However, not content with that, he has taken on the

responsibility of being £)URP Constituent Alumni Association's representative on the

University of Illinois Alumni Association, and has also recently been elected to the Boardof Directors of AICP. I salute his boundless energy and enthusiasm!

Earl R. Jones (Assistant Professor)

Enterprise Zone research is continuing, and has been expanded to Decatur, Illinois. In the

faU of 1986, the Neighborhood Planning class wiU conduct a study of gentrification-

induced displacement in Chicago for the Lincoln Park Conservation Association, This

short workshop-type report is a direct result of our earlier "Neighborhood Profile" which

was prepared by the Neighborhood Planning class in the fall of 1985. We anticipate

continuing with this type of urban neighborhood program.

T. John Kim (Professor)

Some of my official activities are listed in the previous section under research andinternational programs. "Muddling-through" may be the right term for these days. With

aU the work at both offices. Urban and Regional Planning and International Programs andStudies, I have managed to publish five papers, and I have found efficient ways to write

papers on the airplanes!

Lewis L. Osborne (Assistant Professor)

When not working, I try to spend time with my children, Charlie (6 1/2) and Megan (5)

who are growing very quickly. My wife (whose age it is best not to divulge) and I are also

active in the local western square dance club where we dance one to two nights a weekaround eastern Illinois and serve as club secretary. I am also a newly elected member of

the board of directors of the Champaign County Izaak Walton League and have beenasked to serve on the Regional Planning Commission's Task Force to examine proposedchanges in subdivision ordinances. Fortunately, they asked me to represent the

environmental perspective, so I happily agreed.

Besides the above activities, I am happily continuing my association with the UrbanaPark District. Following completion of the Crystal Lake workshop, which by the way led

to a $650,000 lake restoration project, we were asked to conduct a feasibility study onthe development of a local park within the Myra Ridge subdivision. The class did anexcellent job and the recommendations were accepted by the park district. It is great to

have capable students to do good work!

This past year has been very busy and relatively successful. With the help of DeannaGlosser, my Ph.D. student, I was able to complete a research contract for CERL on the

empirical relations between land use and water quality. The results of this research werepresented at the ACSP Conference in Atlanta and convinces me even more that planners

have to examine the potential impact of local land use modifications on regional

environmental quality.

Once again, Len Heumann and I had a successful workshop on the recreational

alternatives for the Urbana landfill. This project received much attention in the local

press. Last year's workshop report on the feasibility of converting the Myra Ridge

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16

retention cell to a park site received honorable mention in the 1986 APA competition.

In the following years I hope to maintain my research endeavors and continue to

implement the results into a more comprehensive environmental planning educational

framework.

With all of this I am still active in aquatic science research as an Assistant Research

Scientist with the Illinois State Natural History Survey. In this position, I continue myfirst love, working with stream organisms. I have also begun to build wood furniture this

winter and am working on developing new outdoor cooking recipes. Oh yes! I have

settled into the department and enjoy working with the diverse faculty and students.

Stop by sometime.

Eleanor Penn (Clerk Stenographer)

1 am stiU here. Not only here, but still at 1001. j^have not changed too much but 1001

certainly has! The old "Pepsi Room" in back now has a laboratory — complete with sink

— built into part of it for use by our environmental planning students. Eric Freund's

former office upstairs now houses our Computer Lab, complete with 7 personal

computers and a few printers. Several professors now have their own PCs.

I now have a very sophisticated word processor that not only fits very well into my tiny

office, but also lends an air of class and quiet efficiency around here. What a boon!

Please stop by and say "Hello" when you are in town

909 West Nevada^m^^

The main department offices used to be in "909" during the early 1970s, followed later by

the Research Bureau offices after we moved out of the West California buildings. This

old house is now used by six faculty, a secretary or two, and as many graduate assistants

as we can crowd in.

Clyde W. Forrest (Professor)

Professor Forrest has been appointed Masters Program Coordinator. He reports that

with that title he is required to do a lot of paper work. He has also been appointed

Associate Head for Professional Development and Public Service. This represents a

departmental commitment to strengthen its continuing education and public service

effort. Alums will be hearing from Forrest as he organizes programs. If you wish to be

added to the list of potential speakers, hosts, writers, or attendees drop him a note at the

department.

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17

In addition, he is serving as Principal Investigator on the Environmental Technical

Information Systems Project (ETIS), which is funded by the U.S. Army at over $450,000

and he also directs 28 other smaller grants from $5,000 to $68,000.

His work with the Illinois Legislature has produced two new Acts, dealing with LandResources Management and Hearing Officers.

The tradeoff for the titles and administrative tasks is the reduction of Forrest's teaching

load to one course per semester. Law and Planning Implementation survives as the GPAwrecker of the department. Housing Law and Environmental Law will alternate on a

semester basis.

There are three Forrests in Urban and Regional Planning in 1986. Clyde is joined by his

freshman daughter, Amy, and senior son, Russ, wiU graduate in 1986.

William 1. Goodman (Professor)

I continued my studies of planning management, developing a paper entitled, Federal

Contributions to Local Planning Management. It was presented to the annual meeting of

the Association of CoUegiate Schools of Planning in Atlanta during October.

I served as a panelist on the Future of Planning Education Conference held at MIT in

ApriL

Albert Z. Guttenberg (Professor)

Planners are keepers of the ancient ideal of the good city, which is another name for the

good society (lately, the good environment). This ideal dies hard. Suppressed in oneplace, it "rears its lovely head" in another. I was delighted to catch sight of it in a

recent British book by Cliff Hague caUed, The Development of Planning Thought. Hewrites:

Concentrated study of how to do things has allowed the

human race to dominate its environment in an unprecedentedmanner. It has also created an unprecedented potential for

the destruction of that environment and for the domination of

the people who live within it. . . . The struggle ... is to re-

discover the ethical and moral questions in the creation of

environments.

Speaking of ideal environments. Mariella and I have been spending a part of our summersin Italy, so 1 have been boning up on Italian and this has taken me into Italian literature,

including Dante's Inferno. I was astonished to find a kind of ideal city there, too. Thelayout is concentric (as in most ideal city plans) with Lucifer at the center. Sort of anamphitheatre. Every concentric zone is the abode of one kind or another of damned soul

and has its particular climate, topography, etc. Dante's report is not exclusively aboutinfernal land use. He gives a few indications of land use at the surface. More aboutthese matters in future editions.

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Leonard F. Heumann (Professor)

In the Fall of 1984 I was appointed Ph.D. Program Advisor and have, with the help of

several excellent committees, initiated changes that clarify and improve the operation of

the program. Personal research has included a Major Housing Needs Analysis of Illinois

for the Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) which has identified the critical

housing needs and "need trends" in the state. The report has been widely applauded andseems to have had some positive influence on state housing planning and funding

priorities for which 1 am very pleased. I have also completed another research grant

from the IHDA involving a comparative cost analysis between congregate housing for the

elderly and nursing homes. This has also been widely publicized and is having someinfluence on program design and funding for congregate housing. Under the "AnniversaryCelebration," reported elsewhere in the report, is the description of a major survey andanalysis I am conducting with Louis VVetmore on the history of the planning workshops. I

have over the last year written articles on rural migration, planning study abroad, the

potential impact of rent vouchers on the elderly, and the workshop history. As part of

the research for this book 1 have received a grant from three state agencies in Illinois to

study elderly "at risk" of premature transfer to long term care institutions. Surveys are

going out to 12,000 elderly residents and 78 managers of subsidized housing facilities for

the independent elderly.

The most exciting piece of news relative to my research is my upcoming sabbatical in

Israel, FaU 1986. I received a Fulbright Research Grant which I recently accepted and a

Lady Davis Fellowship which I had to decline due to conflict with the Fulbright. I will be

studying management of sheltered housing for the elderly in Israel, both in purpose built

facilities and on the Kibbutsim. I will be stationed at the Hebrew University in

Jerusalem, Department of Geography, Center for Urban and Regional Planning, and at

the Brookdale Institute on Social Gerontology.

On the home front my daughter has entered the University of Illinois in Urban Planning.

This is the type of bench mark in time that one looks forward to with hope and pride, but

then is shocked when it occurs - stunned by the rapid flight of time. Wasn't it last year I

was reporting to you on her first year in school or her first ballet performance? My sons

are now ages 14 and 6, and both doing well. Since they have not extended the family

frontiers, they will be relegated to less print space. Their mommy is still an OBGYNnurse for a private practice doctor. Her view from the baby production trenches (so to

speak) has led her to expand her efforts in sex education. She recently taught a very

explicit Sunday School Class on the subject!

Gill-Chin Lim (Associate Professor)

"Planning is unique among contemporary professions in its attempt to solve complexdecision making problems with a comprehensive outlook for the human future. ... Achallenge to the profession lies in its willingness and ability to extend its knowledge andvision for action."

A leading expert in the field of comparative urban development and planning theory.

Professor Lim combines a wide range of experience in research, teaching, and practice,

he has conducted research and served as an advisor to a number of national and

international organizations such as the World Bank, U.S. Agency for International

Development, U.S. Department of Transportation, U.S. Department of Defense, andKorea Research Institute for Human Settlements. He has taught at Northwesternunivresity and Princeton University. His research and teaching deals with comparative

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19

and multi-disciplianry aspects of planning and public policy in both developed anddeveloping countries, he has published widely on the topics of comparative urbandevelopment and planning theory. Most recently he has been concerned with seeking a

new methodological framework for substantive as well as procedural theories of planning.

Peter V. Schaeffer (Assistant Professor)

The year 1985 has given me some interesting opportunities to keep in touch with planning

practice. In January I joined the Urbana Plan Commission. It has been a positive

experience, and I certainly got to know the community better. In summer the

Community Information and Education System of the University of Illinois asked me if I

would prepare a narrated slide show on the "The Role of Elected Public Officials in

Promoting Economic Development." The slide show is aimed at officials from smaUcommunities (less than 10,000 inhabitants). Producing the script for this show has been a

real challenge.

I have been actively looking for funding to continue my migration research. One of mygoals is to provide better information for a national immigration policy. The formulationof a new immigration policy is one of the most important planning issues, not only in the

United States, but in all industrialized countries.

Debbie Curtin (Clerk Typist)

I began work at the University in January of 1984 as a Clerk Typist in and I came to the

Department of Urban and Regional Planning in December of 1984. Prior to this I taughtfor two years, grades 5/6 and 3/4 respectively in the Urbana School District. I obtainedmy BS in Elementary Education here at the University of Illinois in 1980. I have recentlyreturned to school part time as a graduate student in the School of Social Work.

On the personal level I am married and have a 5 year old son who wiU be attendingkindergarten this FaU. Although I am an Urbana native, my family and I wiU be movingto Mahomet, Illinois this Summer.

June Hansen (Clerk Typist)

I came to work for the Department of Urban and Regional Planning in March of this yearand have worked for the University for over four years. I share an office with DebbieCurtin at 909 W. Nevada. My husband, David and I live in Champaign with our 5-monthold son, Tyler. We are also expecting another child in late December.

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907 West Nevada

Fourth in the Nevada Street row is "907", a rather plain, aluminum-sided house virtually

filled with staff and equipment for the ETIS and related contracts.

Lynn A. Engelman (ETIS Project Coordinator)

The big news from the past year is that the ETIS Program stayed at the Department.Last summer the Department had to rebid on the ETIS contract. We were able to comein as the low bid and received a new contract to run the ETIS Program for another year,

with a renewal option for a second year. Most of the activity has been focused on

operation of the Program and improving the user related materials. We had a session at

the 1986 Institute on Planning and Zoning in April.

On a personal note, this year's plans include a two week vacation canoeing 149 miles of

the Missouri River in Montana, retracing part of the Lewis and Clark Historic Trail.

After that it is back to work and an ETIS Training Workshop in September.

Environmental Information Connection

During 1984 a contract was awarded to the Department from the U.S. Army Construction

Engineering Research Laboratory for the operation of the Environmental Information

Connection. The office was funded to provide service to the Corps of Engineers

personnel and others engaged in civil works environmental planning and management.

The Environmental Information Connection functions as a center for the location of data

and bibliographic information, with a focus on automated and institutional sources.

Hundreds of databases, produced by federal and state governments and the private

sector, have been identified and many have been accessed. Sample information requests

have included the, location of bibliographic references on coral reef managment,degradation rates of PCBs, and mitigation of impacts on fish and wildlife of water

resources projects. Investigative reports have included a summary of environmental data

for a Kentucky county, a review of automated sources of aquatic toxicity information,

and an assessment of the Nature Conservancy's Natural Heritage Program.

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21

Others

Other personnel working at 907 include several graduate assistants and the following

specialists:

J. Wayne Hamilton (Research Data Analyst)

In 1976, 1 started working for Andrew Isserman as a research programmer working on

population projections and economic models. As a result of consulting work Andy did for

CERL, I joined the department in 1978 to build the economic analysis components of

ETIS. 1 continue to do software development for the Corps of Engineers.

In addition to computers, my interests include books, motorcycles, and airplanes. I am a

member of the Association of Computing Machinery, American Association for the

Advancement of Science, and the U.S. Parachute Association.

Mary Beth Allen (EIC Project Coordinator)

Now in its second year of operation, the Environmental Information Connection wasestablished as a unit of the ETIS program, to enhance usage of automated and

institutional sources of environmental information by personnel in the Army Corps of

Engineers and the Army Environmental Office. The EIC maintains a database of

environmental databases for internal reference purposes; the file currently represents

350 databases pertaining to the environment in its broadest sense. UPDATE, the

newsletter of the project, is mailed to over 600 personnel; this newsletter provides a

mechanism for frequent, informal communication with the clients of the office and

promotes information sharing among offices with similar concerns. Fulfilling

information requests is the EIC's primary service activity; this typicaUy involves

investigating and searching bibliographic or numeric databases, identifying institutions

and individuals with expertise, and consulting print sources. Since the inception of the

project in May 1984, 111 responses have been written to information requests and 65

online search evaluations have been prepared.

I joined the department as Project Coordinator in October 1985. My educational

background combines Sociology, Teaching English as a Second Language, and Library andInformation Science; my work experience has included teaching English to international

students, teaching Rhetoric and Composition to freshmen at the University of Illinois,

and serving as Reference Librarian in the Undergraduate Library at Purdue University.

Cathi Saunders (Clerk Typist)

In November 1985 I joined Urban and Regional Planning as ETIS Program Secretary

(Clerk Typist III). Previously, 1 was a Word Processing Operator at the College of

Medicine, following study at Parkland CoUege. Aside from career-oriented courses, mystudies included French and music.

My outside interests are quite varied. Previous activities include stage crew member in

Krannert's Opera Department, performer in the Assembly Hall's production "Fanfare1985," and Farm-Aid Volunteer. Presently I am attending a series of workshops in

"Advanced Community Programming Production" at the local Cablevision studio;

assisting with production of live and tape-delay programs.

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22

901 West Illinois

This aluminum-sided residence was inherited three years ago from the Department of

Dance. It now houses a large first floor classroom often used for planning workshops.The second floor has offices for the UPlOl TA staff and other hardworking gradassistants.

IBI?i(W«»'

(RSiiiv"

Elsewhere

The Department has many related people not mentioned above by their locations in our

scattered buildings. These include our Emeritus, Adjunct and Visiting faculty members,as well as personnel on various projects.

Mary Ravenhall (CPLA Librarian)

Professor Ravenhall has just completed the first year of a three year term as President

of the Council of Planning Librarians. She served as coordinator for the 27th AnnualConference of CPL, held in Los Angeles in April 1986, in conjunction with APA. Herannotated bibliography and index to the Council of Planning Libraries bibliography series

was published as CPL Bibliography 150 in March 1985.

Scott Keyes (Professor Emeritus)

Scott continues to divide his time between Champaign and San Antonio, where he wisely

spends the winter months. He has recently published the eighth in his series of annual

volumes of light verse or serious poetry. The 25 poems in this volume, titled Look to the

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23

Horizon, deal with the theme of "the recent escalation of war and preparations of warthroughout the world, and the recent redoubling of efforts by people everywhere who are

working for peace." Scott reports that the ninth volume - in somewhat lighter vein - is

nearly ready to go to press, and the tenth volume is in progress.

He recently received an award for creative peace making at the Kingston, Ontario,

Festival for Peace Making in the Arts. One of his poems will also be included in aninternational anthology of verse titled "Poets for Africa," the proceeds for which will beused for African famine relief. Other notable contributors include Steve Allen, RedSkelton, Jim Henson (of the Muppets fame), Donald McLeod, and Peter Yarrow. He tells

us that he has also entered several other poetry contests. . .so who knows? We may havenurtured a Poet Laureate in the Department!

Louis B. Wetmore (Professor Emeritus)

Since 1984 my attention has been centered on workshops.

Leonard Heumann and I are in the third year of a survey and analysis of the present andhistorical use of workshops at recognized planning schools across the United States.

Two papers on the variety of requirements and of educational objectives for workshopshave been presented at ACSP conferences. We are currently working on a third paperbased on a survey of planning faculty which determined their views on workshop policy.

In 1985-86 the Department initiated a set of core courses required for all enteringgraduate students. This Spring, I have been supporting Professors Hopkins and Heumannin the new "Planning Problems and Cases" core course. Designing a set of problems toachieve the broad range of course objectives has been a real challenge, and has allowedus to build in policies and procedures derived from the national surveys.

At least six schools have established, or are now establishing, similar introductoryproblems/workshops for entering graduate students.

Blair/Wetmore and The URBANA Group

In April 1986 Lachlan Blair and I set up an urban and regional planning consulting firm,

the URBANA Group, Incorporated. Many DURP faculty members will be Associates,bringing their expertise to bear on specific projects.

With Associates from DURP, and the other outstanding scientific and professional talentsof Champaign-Urbana, consulting services will be available in a wide range of fields,

including Housing, Community Development, Economic Development, PreservationPlanning, Resource Protection, Floodplain Management, and Urban Design.

For each assignment, a team of specialists will be drawn from among the Group'sPrincipals and Associates, supported by permanent staff and student assistants. TheGroup will offer opportunities for professional experience for students and facultycomparable to the campus agencies that assist faculty and students to undertakeresearch activity.

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Lock and I have worked together off and on for nearly forty years, and now begin a joint

venture that we believe will be rewarding to us and to the students and faculty of

DURP. Our joint experience leads us to take a comprehensive planning approach which

has been effective in advising professional planning staffs on the review and formulation

of planning programs, major projects, and comprehensive plans.

ms^^- armory

CELDS (A Component of the ETIS Project)

Located across campus on the third floor of the Armory is the Computer-aidedEnvironmental Legislative Data System, a data base of abstracted federal and state

legislation on the environment. Included in CELDS are regulations for air and waterquality, hazardous and solid wastes, pesticides, oil and gas, coastal zones, erosion,

radiation, transportation of hazardous materials, noise, and endangered and threatenedspecies.

The present CELDS staff includes Sandra C. Broda (Project Coordinator) Kim Bennie(Information Specialist) and Donna J. Schell (Information Specialist). Supported by the

Corps of Engineers, the system serves both military and civilian users.

Sandra Broda (Project Coordinator)

I began working for the CELDS Project in March 1984, as an Information Specialist. I

became Project Coordinator in October 1985, following Judith Kamin's resignation. I

moved to Champaign in 1984 from Bloomington, Indiana, where I attended Indiana

University. I have a M.L.S. in Library and Information Science and B.A.s in English andPolitical Science. I also earned a Certificate in Urban Studies from the School of Public

and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University. Currently I live in a little house on the

prairie in Urbana with my husband and two guinea pigs.

The CELDS staff consists of two other full-time employees, Donna Schell and KimBennie, and two graduate students with half-time assistantships.

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Currently regulations are available on CELDS for the following subject areas: air

pollution, water pollution, hazardous waste management, solid waste, leakingunderground storage tanks, pesticides, oil and gas well management, nose pollution,

transportation of hazardous materials, coastal zone management and wetlands,endangered species, pcbs, radiation and land use. Staff members specialize in specific

areas. My area of specialization is water pollution.

This year we are able to offer users a new, improved CELDS. We have replaced theoutdated thesaurus we have used in the past with a new, far more comprehensivethesaurus. The new thesaurus includes many terms which, while in common use, were notavailable in the old thesaurus. The new thesaurus is available online, making it easy to

locate relevant keywords to ensure a successful search. The software for CELDS hasbeen redesigned, and the new system went up in early February of this year. The newsoftware is easier to use, yet it is far more sophisticated than the old system and offersmore powerful searching capabilities. We will concentrate in teaching users how to usethe new system at the ETIS workshops this spring and autumn.

Kim Bennie (Information Specialist)

I am the most recent full-time addition to the CELDS staff. I am from Canton, Illinois

and received my M.S. in Library and Information Science from the University of Illinois

last year. I will be married on May 24, at which time I will move to nearby Camargo,Illinois in order to live with my husband-to-be, Chris Etcheson, who is the Administratorof the Douglas County Health Department. My areas of responsibility at CELDS aresolid and hazardous waste, underground injection contol and underground storage tanks.

Donna Schell (Information Specialist)

I have been a member of the CELDS staff since March 1984. On a daily basis I index andabstract state and federal regulations concerning air pollution, noise pollution,pesticides, and oil and gas well management. I have lived in Urbana for the past 6

years. During this time I completed my B.A. in Political Science, specializing in SovietStudies, and my M.S. in Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois.

Outside of work I enjoy participating in a variety of church-related activities, bicycling,and ballroom dancing.

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r^D

Student Actiuities

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27

STUDENT ACTIVITIES

r^

Student Planning Organization

In the 1985-86 year, the Student Planning Organization (SPO) undertook varied andnumerous activities. These activities all feU within SPO's three functions of social,

academic, and professional planning.

The traditional Illini Meadows picnic successfully launched the faU semester of 1985.

The weekly colloquium series, which was initiated last year, continued to provideinteresting and useful information to both students and faculty alike. APA regional

conferences were held in St. Louis in September and Chicago in October. Both of these

events were attended by SPO members. Fall Ball, held at the Five Star Inn, was a

rousing success with hors d'oeuvres, cocktails and entertainment aiding the festivities.

Phil, the DURP intramural football team established a precedent by qualifying for the

playoffs. And, of course, weekly happy hours and various parties assured that DURPstudents had the opportunity to unwind.

Spring semester 1986 started with a Super Bowl party with the students BEARly able to

control themselves (sorry about that). Perhaps the biggest event of the year was theAPA National Conference in Los Angeles in April. This conference was attended byeight DURP students and several professors. Spring Fling went off in mid-May with abang and as usual a good time was had by all. A competition for the best pair of legs wasparticularly popular, won, of course, by one of the fair sex, followed closely by a male -

which is aU as it should be! E.Z., the DURP intramural basketball team, followed the

precedent of Phil and went undefeated to qualify for the playoffs. A basketball gamebetween the graduate students and the undergrads is being planned. Another precedentwas established with the election of an undergrad (BiU Rice) to the position of SPOPresident.

Dave Seglin

SPO Officers 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87

President

Vice President

Secretary

TreasurerAPA RepForeign Student RepFirst-Year Grad RepUndergrad Reps

Chris WashburnPaula Hirsh

Mary Buckley

Mary BuckleyJohn KehoScott ThompsonErynn BrighamOtha TrimmTony FennerBarb Dickerson

Dave Seglin

Erynn BrighamShauna Francissen

Julie RennickKevin GraceChris RediehsMack ChoiDeno Perdiou

Walt Fluegel

Chris Meehan

BiU RiceJulie RennickKathy Dolewski

Jeanne WildmanDeno PerdiouZaki OmarTo be determinedLorna HrustekPam Nevin

Faculty Advisor Lachlan Blair Earl Jones

Page 44: Alumni news - CORE

28

Awards

Student Awards 1984 1985 1986

AICP Planning Student AwardGraduate Helen Briassoulis

Undergraduate Elyse Skolniek

Karl B. Lohmann AwardGraduateUndergraduate

Michael DuncanChris Rediehs

Robert 8. Surplice Memorial AwardAnthony Fenner

Mary BuckleyBeth Eiseman

Mack ChoiWilliam Rice

Linda Raymon Chris RediehsBarbara Dickerson Karen Sommerland

Nazri Mohammed-Noordin

Lorna Hrustek

Louis B. Wetmore AwardKim Bloomquist Mary Buckley Dave Tazik

American Institute of Certified Planners Awards; An annual award of $50 to a

graduating senior and to an MUP candidate in recognition of outstanding ability andachievement.

Karl Baptiste Lohmann Awards; Presented annually to a graduating senior and a

graduate student in recognition of outstanding scholarly performance and exceptional

professional promise. $50 stipend.

Robert B. Surplice Memorial Award; Given to an outstanding junior in the BAUPprogram. The $100 award recognizes academic achievement and initiative.

Louis B. Wetmore Award; Presented to a continuing student in the MUP program whohas attended the university for at least one year. Rewards academic excellence,

professional promise, and planning-related extracurricular activities. Awarded annually

by the Illinois Chapter of the American Planning Association. $1,000 stipend.

1986 Awards

AICP 1986 Student Project Awards - Honorable MentionFall 1984 UP 377/347 workshop class - "An Evaluation of Park Alternatives for

the Proposed Myra Ridge Dedication."

Page 45: Alumni news - CORE

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APA Intergovernmental Affairs AwardWes Wheeler

Presidential Intern Finalist

Erynn BrighamHonors

Susan Mary Barkulis Honors January 1984

Miriam Dawn HeUerElyse Maria Skolnick

HonorsHighest Honors

May 1984May 1984

Christopher Robert Rediehs High Honors August 1984

Beth Karen Eiseman High Honors January 1985

Deborah Jane Keith

Julie Laura RennickHonorsHonors

May 1985

May 1985

'L^ j:? Internships

Internships are valuable to students because they provide hands-on experience in the field

of planning. Each summer we try to make internships available for aU interested

students, but in recent years supported internships have been down in number. Anyoutside assistance from alumni in securing internships for our students would be greatly

appreciated.

UP 290 Planning Internships

Paul Cudecki, Department of Planning, City of Chicago, Illinois

Anthony Ross Fenner, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, Illinois

Jennifer L. Head, Brinkoetter-Martin Development Corporation, Decatur, Illinois

Pamela Hoskins, Department of Planning, Chicago, Illinois

Julie L. Rennick, Tri-County Urban League, Peoria, Illinois

Robert J. Segal, Rogers Park Tenants Committee, Chicago, Illinois

Kenneth A. Spitz, Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District, Urbana, Illinois

UP 490 Professional Internships

Cecily Ahern, Economics Research Associates, Chicago, Illinois

ClaudeU C. Baker, Community Development Division, City of Urbana, Illinois

Michael H. Blue, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, and Department of

Community Development, Village of WiUmette, Illinois

Erynn L. Brigham, City Planning Department, Phoenix, Arizona

Page 46: Alumni news - CORE

30

Mary V. Buckley, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, Washington,DC

Kenneth R. Busse, Planning Department, City of Chicago, Illinois

Manroop K. Chawla, Department of Community Development Services, Urbana, Illinois

Teresa C. Evans, Champaign-Urbana mass Transit District, Urbana, Illinois

Darwin E. Fields, Champaign County Regional Planning Commission, Urbana, Illinois

Kevin Grace, Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District, Urbana, Illinois

James M. Hogue, DuPage County Regional Planning Commission, Wheaton, Illinois

Michael L. Johnston, City Planning Department, New York City, New YorkJohn H. Keho, City Planning Department, Lubbock, TexasFranz P. Kraintz, Illinois Department of Transportation, Chicago, Illinois

Craig R. Milkint, VTvlS Realty, Inc., Chicago, Illinois

Richard M. Noeller, Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District, Urbana, Illinois

Mary E. Prisco, Department of Community Development Services, City of Urbana,Illinois

Julie L. Rennick, Peoria County Zoning and Planning Department, Peoria, Illinois

Karen E. Seggerman, DuPage County Regional Planning Commission, Wheaton, Illinois

David J. Tazik, U.S. Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratory, Champaign,Illinois

Douglas Scott Thompson, Ontario Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, Toronto,Canada

Irving W. Wheeler, Jr., Champaign County Regional Planning Commission, Urbana,lUinols

PhD

The Program for the Doctor of Philosophy in Regional Planning has completed two full

years of education. Twelve students have been admitted and began course work, eight

are currently in residence, and one has already graduated. We anticipate admitting four

more students next year, two in the Fall and two in the Spring. Work is underway to

modify the curriculum so there are two tracks, one in environmental sciences and one in

social sciences.

The presence of this growing core of Ph.D. students has had a very positive effect on the

department. They have been integrated with masters students, are active in departmentactivities and bring both a new level of enthusiasm and stability to the department. Theyare around slightly longer than masters students, and have generally a much keenerinterest in planning education and research than do the practitioner oriented masterscandidates.

The program is already well established despite its young age. Applications outstrip

admissions 5 to 1 and over 200 inquiries to the program are made each year. As a result,

the quality of the students is outstanding and we look forward to the future graduatesjoining the ranks of distinguished alumni. Any alumni interested in receiving a brochureor application material for the Ph.D. should write to Leonard Heumann, ProgramAdvisor, in care of the Department.

Page 47: Alumni news - CORE

31

Name

Helen Briassoulis

Deanna Glosser

Shih-Kung Lai

Man-Hyung Lee

John Mount

Vasilis Patsilaras

Jeong Rho

Siddhartha Sen

Sunduck Suh

Ph.D. Students

University and Degree

University of Illinois,

Ph.D. Regional Planning

Illinois State University,

BS, Anthropology

Ohio State, MUP

Seoul National University,

Korea, MCP, City Planning

University of Illinois,

M.A., Public Administration

University of Salonika,

Greece, MS, Urban Planning

Korea University, Seoul

ME, Industrial Engineering

Georgia Technology,M.U.P

Seoul National University,

MSE, Civil Engineering

UI Specialty

Economic andEnvironmentalPlanning

EnvironmentalPlanning

Planning Decision

Making

Planning Theory andUrban Economic LandPolicy

Land DevelopmentPlanning

Land Use,

Economics

Transportation

ComparativePlanning in

DevelopingCountries

Transportation

1985

Helen Briassoulis

PhD Degree Awarded

Page 48: Alumni news - CORE

32

MUP

The Masters of Urban Planning degree program continues to attract excellent candidates

that include a handful of our own undergraduates. Applications and enroUment are

steady. Financial aid for graduate students is still very good. The competition for

anyone with microcomputer skills is strong to ferocious.

Revisions in the MUP curriculum have expanded the core to six units in planning. A newcourse, Planning Problems and Cases, will now be part of the core. Work in an advancedworkshop that produces an individual product may now be used in lieu of thesis or

project. This change should help with the continuing difficulty in completing the

degree. Employment prior to completing the thesis or project stiU seems to be a "nice"

problem for students. (Any of you out there in that category should contact Professor

Forrest.)

Student

1984Ramla Bandele

Helen Briassoulis

Kevin H. Breck

Masters Projects auid Theses Completed

Project TitleMaster's Project or Thesis

The Underdevelopment of Black Towns

Evaluation of the Use of the GravityShopping Models from a Planning Viewpoint

Financing Transit Services and the NewFederalism

T

T

Ian E. Cordwell

Steven G. Douglas

Kathryn A. Ginsbach

Laying the Foundation for the ResourceProtection Planning Process in Illinois

Evaluating The Role of Energy Consumptionin "More" and "Less" Developed Countries:

Using Casual Modeling and Path Analysis

The Effects of Airline Hubbing Operationson the Level of Schedule Convenience for

Business Passengers within Short HaulMarkets

MP

Catherine Harned The Effective Inventory: Building

A Preservation Base

Thomas J. Hazelton Paratransit in Medium-Size Cities

Page 49: Alumni news - CORE

33

Janice McRae

Rolda V. Nedd

Olutoyin A. Oduwole

James Peters

Linda M. Raymon

Andrew D. Swenson

Matthew V. Trujillo

An Assessment of the Need For Minor HomeRepair Programs for The Elderly in

Champaign County

Improvement of Squatter Settlements:A Policy Analysis with Implications

For Trinidad and Tobago

Linking Elderly and Non-Elderly In

Subsidized Housing

After the Fair: The Residuals of

U.S. Expositions

Solid Waste Planning In Champaign-Urbana: An Evaluation of Two Disposal

Practices

The Concept of Auto Restricted Zones:

A Proposal For the Town of Kavala, Greece

Encouraging Small Business ThroughEconomic Development Efforts

MP

MP

1985Robert D. Anders

Mary E. Blackstone

Kim M. Bloomquist

Thomas Brimberry

Mary Virginia Buckley

Marilyn F. Cohen

Bruce A. Colbert

Alice Marilyn Edwards

Growth Management Policies and MPRegulations of Green Bay, Wisconsin

Guiding Principles for Restoring TLiveability to Distressed Neighborhoods

A Technique for Defining Regions of TInfluence For Use in SocioeconomicImpact Analysis

Critique and Recommendations On Central TIllinois Agency on Aging, Inc. NeedsAssessment Survey

Cultural Resource Planning for TNational Parks

Regional Onshore Impacts From MPOffshore Oil and Natural Gas Drilling

Support Facility Development in the

State of Rhode Island

The Panagia Transfer of Development TRights Plan

The Expansion of Partnerships: TCertified Local Governments

Page 50: Alumni news - CORE

34

Robert K, Foertsch

Shauna P. Francissen

Mark K. HiU

William J. Hinsman

John Hutchinson Keho

Franz P. Kraintz

Craig R. Milkint

Bruce Walden

Irving W. Wheeler

An Application of the Cohort-ComponentMethod of Population Projection

Wickenburg Historic Resource Survey

A Recreation Needs Analysis For TheVillage of Schiller Park

Reducing The Agricultural Impact OnWater Quality in Illinois

The Urban University and NeighborhoodImpacts

An Assessment of the Retail Potential

In Downtown Champaign, Illinois

A Guide to Preservation Planning

For the Greek System

A Planner Guide to Tax IncrementFinancing in Illinois

Municipal Extraterritorial LandDevelopment in Illinois

MP

MP

MP

T

T

T

1986Erynn L. Brigham

Mack J. Choi

J. Kevin Grace

James M. Hogue

Christopher Rediehs

David C. Seglin

David J. Tazik

Salem: Plan for Quality Growth MP

Optimal Lot Size with Zoning Constraints T

Salem: Plan for Quality Growth MP

Integrated Hazardous Waste Management: TAn Alternative to Landfilling

Churches, Planning, and Population Growth T

Salem: Plan for Quality Growth MP

Environmental Impact Prediction, TAssessment, and Monitoring

Page 51: Alumni news - CORE

35

Cecily Ahern

William F. Allison*

Ali I. Aznan

Phillip E. Anderson

Claudell Baker

Thomas M. Bartlett

Linda D. Bastyr

Kim M. Bloomquist

Erynn Brighan

Manroop Chawla

Mack Joong Choi

David C. Courtney

Brian A. Desatnik

Frank C. Dinovo

Kay Divine

Kathleen A. Dolewski

Judy C. Douglas

Robert Duboe

Darwin Fields

Eileen T. Figel

Dorothy Filusch

Shauna Francissen

Kevin J. Grace

James E. Halverson

John Hall+

Sang-Yun Han

Abdulhadi Harmanshah

Inge Herfort

Lori E. Heringa

James M. Hogue

Catherine Huff

Wendy L. Jayne

MUP StudentsFaU/Sprlng 1985-1986

Urban Planning

Math/Economics

Geography

Rhetoric

Political Science

Geography

Advertising

Geography M.S.

History

Biology

Urban Planning

Resource Dev.

Computer Science

Environmental Planning

Public Admin. M.A.P.A.

Urban Studies

Pol. Sci/Urban Plan.

Urban Planning

Industrial Technology

Management Science

Urban Planning

Housing &c Env. Design

Geography

Political Science

Architectural Studies

Pol. Sci./Economics

Geography

Urban Planning

Psychology

Public Affairs

Sociology/Political Sci.

Regional Planning

University of Illinois

?/Iavalester CoUege

Indiana University

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

Indiana University

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

Illinois State University

Elmhurst College

Seoul National University

Michigan State University

University of Illinois

Governors State University

University of Illinois

University of Wisconsin,

Green Bay

Indiana State University

University of Illinois

Eastern Illinois University

University of California,

San Diego

University of Illinois

Illinois State University

West. Kentucky University

University of Wisconsin,

LaCrosse

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

Indiana University

University of Illinois

Kutztown University, PA

Indiana University

Northland College, WI

Iowa State University

Page 52: Alumni news - CORE

36

Mark A. Kennedy

Marlyna Maros

Mary V. Martin

Melisa M. McLean

Craig Milkint

Nazri Mohd. Noordin

Stuart Nachbar

Mohd. Zaki Omar

Deno Perdiou

Hrissoula Petritsie

Catherine Powers

Dana L. Pratt

Mary Prisco

Christopher Rediehs

Julie L. Rennick

Gary J. Reschke

J. Ernest Saunders

Karen Seggerman

David Seglin

Michael J. Shiffer

Joe Simeo+

Kevin D. Stanciel

Bruce R. Stoffel

Dennis J. Swinford

David J. Tazik

D. Scott Thompson

Steven W. Topp

Christine Washburn

Irving Wheeler

Jeanne M. Wildman*

*Joint MUP/JD+Joint MUP/ARCH

Political Science

Geography

Urban Planning

Geology

Urban Planning

Urban Planning

Political Science

Urban Planning

Geography

Architecture

Geography

Anthropology

Economics

Urban Planning

Urban Planning

Public Policy M.S.

Health Care Services

Urban Planning

Geography

Geography

Architectural Studies

History

Urban Planning

Landscape Architecture

Biology M.S.

Environmental Planning

Urban Planning

Urban Planning

Political Science

English

Drew University

Indiana University

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

Rutgers University

University of Illinois

University of Iowa

University of Thessaloniki

Southern Illinois University

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

University of Wisconsin,

Madison

Southern Illinois University

University of Illinois

Cent. Michigan University

DePaul University

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

Clarion State College

University of Waterloo

University of Illinois

University of Illinois

Florida State University

Carleton College

Page 53: Alumni news - CORE

37

BAUP

The Bachelor of Arts in Urban Planning degree program continues to attract an ever

increasing number of students. Since re-implementation of a four-year program in 1981,

there are now more than twice as many undergraduate planners as in that year.

BAUP Degrees Awarded

1984 1985 1986

Susan M. Barkulis

Robert L. BegoikaMichael H. Blue

Robert N. DuBoeKathleen M. GuineyMiriam D. Heller

Susan M. MeaChristopher R. RediehsAnn E. RupprechtKaren E. SeggermanElyse M. Skolnick

Kenneth A. Spitz

Christine Washburn

Cecily P. AhernKaren M. CarrerasJacob B. DaabBarbara L. DickersonBeth K. EisemanAnthony R. FennerDeborah J. KeithJulie L. RennickJoanne L. SchwartJo Ellen ThornleyOtha A. Trimm

Christine E. BennettJennifer L. HeadNazri Mohd-NoordinMohd Zaki OmarCarolyn C. Rossi

Michael L. Yazbec

Tentative

Barbara C. AuhUKaryn A. BeUPaul K. Britt

J. Christopher DalyRussell W. Forrest

James P. KozikStephanie A. Ritter

Robert J. Segal

Karen G. SommerladJeff B. StevensonJames M. SutphenJoseph L. Zollner

Page 54: Alumni news - CORE

38

Seniors

Barbara C. AuhUChristine E. Bennett

Karen Bell

Paul K. Britt

Taeseong ChoWilliam J. CooneyJ. Christopher DalyEric L. Dillow

Walter G. Fluegel

Russell W. Forrest

Jennifer L. HeadStephanie A. Ritter

Carolyn C. Rossi

Robert J. Segal

Karen G. SommerladJeff B. StevensonJames M, SutphenMark S. TagartPatricia J. WebberJoseph L. Zollner

SophomoresJeffrey G. ArgerSteven J. Bernstein

Vincent P. Bilotta

Julie A. Borgsmiller

Christopher L. BrunetteSarah A. BurnerDavid A. CostanzaPhilip J. Favorite

Edwin Gausselin III

Susan M. GreenanEdward F. GuzikEric S. HaakeCharlton P. HamerJennifer L. HeinenSusan M. HendersonRichard J. Hills

Pamela Hoskins

Jesse A. Klingbeil

Steve A. KreminskiRobert S. LiebermanChristian A. LuthyBrendan J. McKeough

Juniors

Todd D. AveryGordon S. BrownPaul C. CudeckiAlec R. GibsonRobert S. HenryMichael J. HoodPamela Hoskins

Lorna HrustekPatricia K. Ingels

Joyce A. Jaskulski

Daniel Lundquist

John J. Hotchkiss

James P. KozikChristopher S. MeehanTimothy E. MitcheUMax M. MoranYukio Nishida

Leslie A. Parshall

William M. Rice

Vincent W. RychtanekRenee B. Sawicki

John Frank Sobol

John D. SweeneyMary M. TanoPaul M. Tonietto

Joseph Yim

FreshmenHerbert V. AdamsMary V. AverySharon P. BarnesCarolyn E. BaughanPatrick F. BeachHillel Seth Berlin

Robert Boglin, Jr.

David S. CorsoJoseph M. CunnaneChristine CunningtonAnna Sue DoetchKristin R. DrewRosa Eliades

Michelle S. FeldmanAmy R. Forrest

Anne L. GoreckiEriek V. Grahn

Page 55: Alumni news - CORE

the alumni

Page 56: Alumni news - CORE
Page 57: Alumni news - CORE

39

SophomoresJames B. MiklasSherri L. MiyagiPamela J. NevenKrista Sue O'Brien

Patrick J. O'HaraScott B. PaulRobert L. PerbixScott A. Phillips

Kenneth E. RickertTod Andrew RuxtonDiane M. SaadPeter L. TochetDavid G. ToussaintKristina A. TroikeSara Van MeterMatthew A. WardStuart L. WassermanJames F. Young

FreshmanLaura A. HayesSarena A. HeumannMarva L. HurdJulie A. JohnstonTae Hong KimDavid E. KovalAdam LaveyDavid E. Litt

Tina W. Liu

Joseph P. LyonsJennifer A. MalloyMichael J. MarsagliaCatherine A. MartinWilliam E. MayesMichael D. MoranPeter J. O'BrienGer P. O'DonnellTyler M. PrinceLoren J. RappaportJulie B. RecklesJean A. ReynoldsDavid A. RizzoErin M. Schertler

William C. SchoofLisa M. ShauingerTimothy J. SheehanLisa B. SmithDaniel R. Stih

Jay J. Strauss

Anne G. TogherMylinda E. UrbanGregory T. VanekJohn C. WagnerJeffrey M. WiednerTraeey L. WindleLaryssa Wynnychenko

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41

GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION

ALABAMASmith, F.

Cordwell, I

ALASKADavis, P.

HoUey, P.

ARIZONABeatty, J.

Bobotek, W.Hatmaker, J.

Hatmaker, M.Mee, J.

Mee, W.Miura, H.

Scheme, K.

Tessar, P.

Wilk, P.

Zeisel, M.

ARKANSASAult, J.

Conner, J.

Potter, D.

Rice, J.

Smart, C.

Tompkins, C.

CALIFORNIABagby, D.

Bauer, J.

Bjornnson, H.

Boaz, M.Bookwalter, J.

Campbell, M,Chan, B.

Clement, D.

Coibion, W.Coleman, R.

Curtis, K.

Dai, D.

Davidson, E.

Edminster, R.

Ellis, F.

Faulstick, M.

Gawain, H.

Gennaro, R.

Getzel, P.

Groves J.

Hamilton, C.

Kato, R.

Kocian, L.

Kreines, E.

Leinberger, P.

Lester, E.

Levin, D.

Lew, L.

Macris, D.

Maines, P.

Majors, K.

McCullough, D.

Meays, B.

MiUer, B.

Moore, L,

Moscovich, J.

Nicholas, M.Nielsen, C.

Oneal, C.

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42

Paris, E.

Perlman, S.

Pool, J.

Powers, W.Priestley, T.

Rampke, C.

Redell, R.

Robbins, G.

Sjurgen, N.

Sulzer, K.

Thornbury, G.

Urycki, R.

Ward, N.

Watt, P.

WideU, C.

Wiggins, J.

Williams, E.

Wingate, I.

COLORADOBasten, R.

Blewitt, C.

Brinkman, C.

Carpenter, J.

Davis, D.

Dinatale, A.

Douglas, S.

Durham, J.

Frank, J.

Gassman, A.

Giltner, R.

Gordon, S.

Houston, D.

Houston, R.

HoweU, D.

Huddleston, S.

Kieffer, M.Lamont, W.McDonough, M.

O'Donnell, R.

Ringe, J.

Ruppeck, M.Solomon, L.

Turner, M.Urbonas, J.

CONNECTICUTBeeble, '79

Cox, '56

Donohue, W.Johanson, A.

Levesque, L.

Malinowski, J.

Musto, V.

O'DonnellSchneidermeyer, M.Stimpson, D,

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIABolan, L.

Canzoneri, S.

Cooper, F.

Dice, S.

Dietrich, R.

Eiseman, B.

Elkus, M.Ericsson, S.

Feldman, J.

Fondersmith, J.

Hock, J.

Hough, J.

Knupp, P.

Kriviskey, B.

Lewis, C.

Lienesch, W.Mabley, R.

Mattheis, R.

Messenger, K.

Nedd, R.

Porter, D.

Rees, S.

Rocker, L.

Wallace, B.

Wasmann, J.

Wise, J.

FLORIDAAnders, R.

Auker, J.

Cannon, T.

Carlson, C.

Cautero, V.

Daroszewski, A.

Fallon, R.

Flatley, R.

Harned, C.

Harwood, C.

Joachim, G.

Juengling, C.

KotuUa, D.

LaPlant, S.

Leuchs, E.

McDaniel G.

Phillips, Y.

Poupard, C.

Poupard, T.

Stapelton, K.

Szunyog, J.

Thompson, W.Titsworth, A.

Wack, R.

Wilson, S.

Zimmerman, C.

GEORGIAAdams, E.

Aguar, C.

Ball, T.

Edidin, N.

Ficht, T.

Hayes, T.

Holland, M.Kelman, P.

Lewis, A.

Robinson, F.

Weir, M.

HAWAflChee, W.Fuke, S.

Hay, G.

Koyama, G.

LoCicero, D.

IDAHOZielinski, D.

ILLINOISAbel, J.

Ahlberg, R.

Ahern, C.

Albert, F.

Allwood, A.

Anderson, J.

Andreasen, J.

Babbitt, J.

Bammi, D.

Bandele, R.

Bannon, L.

Beal, F.

Begolka, R.

Bell, A.

Bender, L.

Bennett, C.

Benoit, E.

Berkhout, T.

Page 61: Alumni news - CORE

43

Berman, M.Bernas, P.

Bertram, D.

Bhat, S.

Blue, M.Bodnar, R.

Bozinovich, L.

Brett, D.

Briassoulis, H.

Brimberry, T.

Bromwell-Cain, K.

Brook, J.

Brown, L.

Brown, M.Brown, T.

Bruninga, B.

Buckley, T.

Burch, A.

Burns, C.

Burridge, G.

Buschmann, D.

Busse, K.

Campbell, A.

Campbell, C.

Carreras, K.

Carmody, D.

Chidichimo, A.

Chu, D.

Clark, S.

Colbert, B.

Coleman, J.

Cumby, C.

Daab, J.

Davis, L.

Dawson, R.

Dean, W.Debb, L.

DeBelle, D.

Dehner, V.

Devitt, J.

Dickerson, B.

Dimit, J.

Dimit, M.Dirks, H.

Donaldson, C.

Doolen, J.

Dougan, D.

Doyle, M.Drayer, R.

Drumtra, J.

DuBoe, R.

Duker, A.

Dyke, T.

Ediger, C.

Eicher, G.

Eissman, M.EUis, J.

Engelman, L.

Ewbank, S.

Farmer, C.

Fallstich, M.Fenner, T.

Ferrone, D.

Filusch, D.

Foertch, R.

Francissen, S.

Freund, E.

Fritz, K.

FuU, D.

Gallagher, D.

Garcia, A.

Gayles, L.

Gedwill, A.

Getz, L.

Glithero, P.

Goldfarb, E.

Griffin, C.

Grimes, J.

Groner, G.Guderley, S.

Guiney, K.

Gunderson, N.

Hall, S.

HaUock, P.

Harder, D.

Harris, A.

Hartigan, L.

Hazelton, H.

Hazelton, T.

Head, J.

Heller, M.Herrmann, K.

Higgins, M.Hill, G.

Hill, M.Hinsman, L.

Hinsman, W.Hlavacek, K.

Holland, S.

Holt, D.

Hopkins, R.

Horten, E.

Hoskote, N.

Howard, L.

Howe, K.

Jacobson, B.

Jarross-Arbise, J.

Jenkins, H.

Johnson, A.

Johnson, E.

Johnson, M.Jones, W.Jordon, V.

Jung, L.

Justice, L.

Katsaros, E.

Katz, B.

Katz, N.

Keith, D.

Kazlo, F.

Killion, A.

Klatt, B.

Klein, M.Koenig, T.

Kraintz, F.

Kron, N.

Kubiesa, J.

Kueltzo, C.

Lager, D.

Larson, K.

Lauber, D.

Lenski, W.Levenshon, M.Lieberman, J.

Lindsey, G.

Luthi, W.Lyman, J.

Maczka, M.Mariner, R.

Marlatt, R.

Marshall, R.

Martin, M.Mathewson, D.

Maynard, P.

Mazzetta, T.

McGuire, C.

McKown, B.

Mea, S.

Merkin, L.

Mierswa, T.

Milkint, C.

MiUer, P.

Mohdnoordin, N.

Montarzino, A.

Moore, A.

Myers, R.

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44

Nanetti, R.

Naphin, R.

Nardi, P.

Nellans, C.

NeviUe, D.

O'Donnell, M.

Omar, M.O'Shaughnessy, D.

Otto, J.

Palmquist, J.

Papke, G.

Park, S.

Parkin, R.

Parsons, S.

PauU, S.

Payne, T.

Pearce, B.

Pecucci, T.

Perry, G.Pescitelli, D.

Peters, J.

Petrie, P.

Pettigrew, J.

Peyer, P.

Piernas-Davenport, G.

Pollock, L.

Powell, D.

Powers, J.

Powers, W.Pratt, G.

Price, T.

Przypyszny, K.

Pulliam, P.

Putnam, J.

Raymon, L.,

Rediehs, C.

Richter, R.

Rimavicius, L.

Ridgers, J.

Rogier, D.

Rosen, M.Rottman, D.

Sands, C.

Sawislak, D.

Scheck, C.

Schleicher, B.

Schneider, J. ^

Schrader, J.

Schubert, M.Schwart, J.

Scott, L.

Seelig, J.

Seermon, L.

Seggerman, K.

Sheade, G.

Singh, M.Singley, Y.

Syanbade, A.

Skolnick, E.

Smaniotto, A.

Smith, J.

Smith, M.Smith, T.

Soler, N.

Soprych, S.

Sperotto, S.

Spitz, K.

Steele, M.Stenstrom, L.

Sterk, L.

Stern, R.

Stoffel, B.

Strong, J.

Stuart, D.

Summers, G.

Sundell, R.

Swislow, M.Szerszen, C.

Talkington, L.

Tarr, J.

Taylor, Y.

Teska, R.

Thornley, J.

Tick, M.Tock, J.

Trimarco, G.

Trimm, O.

Trompka, W.Tucker, D.

Unwin, R.

VanTreeck, R.

Verburg, R.

Walden, B.

Walthius, S.

Ward, L.

Washburn, C.

Weatherspoon, W.

Weeks, S.

Weil, D.

Weiss, P.

West, K.

Westervelt, J.

Westlake, K.

Wheeler, W.

Wilbrandt, L.

Williams, J.

Winter, M.Wong, B.

Wood, G.

Yap, C.

Yazbec, M.Ziegler, S.

INDIANAAugustyn, K.

Behr, D.

Bernardin, V.

Carley, D.

Carroll, M.Depew, W.Dory, W.Freebairn, C.

Gleissner, R.

Gerard, D.

Huff, R.

Isley, D.

Neal, W.Reller, S.

Robling, R.

Stafford, J.

Swenson, A.

Vogelgesang, F.

IOWALewis, D.

Page, J.

Skov, M.

KANSASMichie, S.

Spiese, S.

KENTUCKYBerg, C.

Martin, D.

LOUISIANAHaar, H.

MARYLANDBuckley, M.Caiazzo, G.

Cooper, F.

Galloway, K.

George, V.

Gucker, R.

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45

Harriss, L.

Hershberger, B.

Kaminsky, J.

Kolste, L.

Linsenmeyer, B.

Monk, W.Nixon, R.

PauU, E.

Pigo, E.

Puzio, R.

MASSACHUSETTSBegg, R.

Hack, G.

Lucibella, F.

Mandel, R.

McCabe, K.

MiUer, B.

Poyant, D.

Schmidt, A.

MICfflGANBailey, D.

Barclay, S.

Breck, K.

Castilla, J.

Chase, J.

Harris, J.

McRae, J.

MiUs, R.

Moore, D.

Nelson, J.

Okafor, W.Yonkers, K.

MINNESOTABlackman, S.

Campbell, C.

Chelseth, R.

Dale, C.

Durward, M.Einsweiler, R.

Isberg, G.

Kaliszewski, R.

Loraas, R.

Nevitt, R.

Schenk, C.

Sethi, V.

Stabler, K.

Turner, E.

MISSISSIPPI

Irwin, D.

Kotecki, L.

MISSOURIBlake-Harris, V.

Bowman, D.

Chipman, D.

Connor, P.

Duncan, M.Fleming, B.

Floore, C.

Goeddel, L.

Goetz, R.

Hillal, B.

Hoffman, T.

Hunsaker, D.

Leitner, M.Lovelace, E.

Mendelson, R.

Mreen, R.

Munshaw, N.

Okuwole, O.

Person, J.

Pomeroy, M.Prem, C.

Reed, C.

Richter, A.

Ruder, F.

Simonds, R.

Tintera, J.

Wagner, H.

Wilding, T.

Wood, J.

MONTANAPeck, M.

NEBRASKABrogden, D.

Scholz, G.

NEVADAOntiveros, R.

Regnier, E.

NEW HAMPSHIREJohnson, R.

McLaughlin, J.

Minnoch, J.

Olson, G.

NEW JERSEY

AUen, W.Dresdner, A.

Moore, T.

Stalzer

Stern, D.

Stiles, S.

Strassler, L.

Sully, J.

NEW MEXICONeimann, D.

Mathien, J.

Trujillo, M.

NEW YORKAncar, R.

Brown, C.

Chazen, C.

Chin, Q.Erikson, M.Heron, K.

Kitney, K.

Kurtz, K.

LiUyquist, A.

Luensman, J.

McClish, A.

O'Donnell, P.

Pandolfi, T.

Parnes, L.

Porter, D.

Preissner, R.

Rabb, G.

Roaks, R.

Simon, D.

Stone, C.

VonProtz, C.

Warren, N.

Wood, A.

NORTH CAROLINAAnderson, D.

Boaz, M.Dickerson, B.

Hansen, T.

Hauersperger, R.

Holdredge, A.

Ingrish, K.

Lefstein, L.

Strassenburg, C.

OHIOBoyle, P.

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46

Foegler, T.

Gresham, S.

Horan, P.

King, T.

Neale, C.Niebling, M.Pour, I.

Pour, S.

Robinson, R.

Shane, D.

Tiedt, J.

TurboV, M.Wald, S.

OREGONCahiU, W.Gillespie, R.

PENNSYLVANIAAdegboro, C.

D'Alessio, M.

Geubtner, E.

Gilchrist, M.Glance, A.

Hess, D.

Krawczel, T.

Laird, D.

Olanipekun, O.

Suddleson, R.

Walker, R.

Zabel, D.

SOUTH CAROLINABerkesch, M.Berkesch, T.

Chinn, K.

Goble, R.

Hoefer, L.

Issel, W.Rodgers, E.

Zaidi, H.

RHODE ISLANDCohen, M.

TENNESSEEFloyd, C.

Harris, P.

Hatcher, H.

Moeller, J.

Moore, A.

Scheibe, J.

Weaver, R.

TEXASBraun, J.

Cross, P.

EUifrit, R.

Elsden, J.

Entress, J.

Freund, A.

Ginsbach, K.

Goetsch, E.

GroU, M.

Hwang, A.

Jordan, B.

Keho, J.

Kops, D.

Lambert, M.Langford, M.

Lin, C.

Moeller, A.

Page, J.

Powell, D.

Proctor, E.

Raycraft, R.

Rupprecht, A.

Russelmann, A.

Scherer, D.

Spore, J.

Suessenbach, S.

Taylor, B.

Wibowo, H.

Womack, E.

Wright, W.

UTAHOakes, K.

VIRGINIAArms, R.

Benjamin, C.

Branigan, D.

Brown, W.

Canestaro, J.

Dunkle, G.

Freemen, E.

Jentsch, R.

Johnson, T.

Levy, M.McVeigh, T.

Milliner, W.Pickard, J.

Reed, W.

Singer, W.Stefen, D.

WASHINGTONByrne, G.

Daniel, R.

Eckel, W.Hooper, R.

Johnson, S.

Kahn, S.

Leonard, M.McGuire, E.

McGuire, S.

MitcheU, K.

Silberg, N.

WEST VIRGINIABeckett, R.

Isserman, E.

Zyskowski, R.

WISCONSINBader, M.Bareta, A.

Cantrell, B.

Coe, R.

Devitt, M.Habben, R.

Heck, J.

HoUowell, C.

Homuth, L.

Hopkins, E.

Lynch, C.

Nelson, W.Patton, C.

Rosenbrook, D.

Shane, D.

Tabaka, C.

Youngman, R.

ZaneUo, A.

AUSTRALIAThomas, G.

CANADAAsabere, P.

Bake, M.Lynch, M.Simon, C.

EQUADORMoriera-Pareja, L.

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47

EGYPTGhareb, M.Saber, A.

ENGLANDMiller, M.Muscovitch, A.

Roberts, P.

FRANCEPriestley, T,

GERMANYLoch, R.

ICELANDJohannesson, B.

INDIAAichbhaumik, D.

Kanhere, G.

Mewada, H.

ISRAELFresko, D.

MALAYSIAAnnuar

SAUDI ARABIARahmaan, A.

SINGAPORESun, Y.

SWEDENHermansson, G.

THAILANDSiyaprapasiri, N.

WEST GERMANYLock, R.

McClish, A.

MAJOR METROPOLITANAREAS

Chicago AreaAbel, J.

Ahlberg, R.

Albert, F.

Bammi, D.Bandele, R.

Bannon, L.

Beal, F.

Begolka, R.

Bell, A.

Bender, L.

Benoit, E.

Berkhout, T.

Berman, M.Bernas, P.

Bhat, S.

Blue, M.Bodnar, R.Bozinovich, L.

Brett, D.

Brook, J.

Brown, L.

Bruninga, B.

Buckley, T.

Chidichimo, A.

Clark, S.

Coleman, J.

Davis, L.

Dean, W.Debb, L.

DeBelle, D.

Dehner, V.

Devitt, J.

Doolen, J.

Drumtra, J.

Duker, A.

Dyke, T.

Ewbank, S.

Farmer, C.

Fenner, T.

Ferrone, D.

Fritz, K.

Gallagher, D.

Garcia, A.

Gayles, L.

Goldfarb, E.

Guderley, S.

Harder, D.

Hartigan, L.

Herrmann, K.

Higgins, M.Hill, G.

Hill, M.Hoskote, N.

Howard, J.

Jacobson, B.

Jenkins, H.

Johnson, M.Jones, W.Jordon, V.

Katsaros, E.

Katz, N.

Kazlo, F.

Klein, M.Koenig, T.

Kron, N.

Kubiesa, J.

Kueltzo, C.Lager, D.

Larson, K.

Lauber, D.

Lenski, W.Levenshon, M.Lindsey, G.Lyman, J.

Maczka, M.Mariner, R.

Martin, M.Mazzetta, T.

Merkin, L.

Milkint, C.Miller, P.

Nanetti, R.Naphin, R.

Nardi, P.

Nellans, C.

O'Shaughnessy, D.Palmquist, J.

Papke, G.Park, S.

Paull, S.

Payne, T.

Pecucci, T.

Pettigrew, J.

Peyer, P.

Piernas-Davenport, G.PoUock, L.

Powell, D.

Powers, W.Price, T.

Przypyszny, K.

Richter, R,

Rimavicius, L.

Rottman, D.

Sawislak, D.

Scheck, C.

Schleichner, B.

Page 66: Alumni news - CORE

48

Schneider, J.

Schrader, J.

Schubert, M.

Seelig, J.

Seermon, L.

Sheade, G.

Singh, M.Skolnick, E.

Smaniotto, A.

Smith, J.

Smith, M.Soler, N.

Sterk, L.

Stern, R.

Stuart, D.

Summers, G.

Sundell, R.

Swislow, M.Talkington, L.

Tarr, J.

Taylor, Y.

Teska, R.

Trimarco, G.

Trompka, W.Tucker, D.

Unwin, R.

VanTreeck, R.

Verburg, R.

Walthius, S.

Washburn, C.

Westlake, K.

Williams, J.

Winter, M.Wood, G.

Yap, C.

Ziegler, S.

Denver AreaBrinkman, C.

Carpenter, J.

Davis, D.

Dinatale, A.

Durham, J.

Giltner, R.

Gordon, S.

Houston, D.

Houston, R.

HoweU, D.

Huddleston, D.

Kieffer, M.Lamont, W.McDonough, M

O'Donnell, R.

Ruppeck, M.Solomon, L.

Turner, M.Urbonas, J.

Los Armeies AreaBoaz, M.Bjornnson, H.

Campbell, M.Gennaro, R.

Hamilton, C.

Maines, P.

McCullough, D.

Meays, B.

Moore, L.

Nielsen, C.

RedeU, R.

Robbins, G.

New York City AreaAUen, W.Erikson, M.Kurtz, K.

Montarzino, A.

Moore, T.

O'Donnell, P.

Parnes, L.

Porter, D.

Preissner, R.

Strassler, L.

Warren, N.

Wood, A.

St. Louis AreaBlake-Harris, V.

Bowman, D.

Chipman, D.

Duncan, M.Fleming, B.

Floore, C.

Goeddel, L.

Goetz, R.

HiUal, B.

Hoffman, T.

Holt, D.

Hunsacker, D.

Lovelace, E.

Meldelson, R.

Mreen, R.

Oduwole, O.

Person, J.

Pomeroy, M.Richter, A.

Ruder, F.

Sperotto, S.

Wilding, T.

San Francisco AreaCoibion, W.Edminster, R.

Faulstich, M.Groves, J.

Kocian, L.

Kreines, E.

Leinberger, P.

Levin, D.

Lew, L.

Maoris, D.

Majors, K.

Miller, B.

Nicholas, M.Powers, W.Priestley, T.

Thornbury, G.

Urycki, R.

Watt, P.

Wiggins, J.

Williams, E.

Seattle AreaByrne, G.

Daniel, R.

Eckel, W.FuU, D.

Hooper, R.

Johnson, S.

Kahn, B.

Leonard, M.McGuire, E.

McGuire, S.

MitcheU, K.

Silberg, N.

Springfield, IL AreaBurns, C.

Cromwell-Cain, K.

Dimit, M.Grimes, J.

Groner, G.

Hinsman, L.

Hinsman, W.Johnson, E.

Lieberman, J.

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49

Parsons, S.

Pescitelli, D.

Singley, Y.

Washington. DC/Baltimore AreaArms R.

Bolan, L.

Branigan, D.

Caiazzo, G.

Canzoneri, S.

Cooper, F.

Dice, S.

Dietrich, R.

Eiseman, B.

Elkus, M.Ericsson, S.

Feldman, J.

Fondersmith, J.

Galloway, K.

George, V.

Gucker, R.

Harriss, L.

Hershberger, B.

Hock, J.

Hough, J.

Johnson, T.

Kaminsky, J.

Knupp, P.

Kolste, L.

Kriviskey, B.

Lewis, C.

Lienesch, W.Linsenmeyer, B.

Mabley, R.

Mattheis, R.

McVeigh, T.

Messenger, K.

Monk, W.Nixon, R.PauU, E.

Pickard, J.

Pigo, E.

Porter, D.

Puzio, R.

Rees, S.

Rocker, L.

Stefen, D.

WaUace, B.

Wasmann, J.

Wise, J.

Page 68: Alumni news - CORE

ALUMNI ROSTER 50

ABEL. Joseph H. 59 BSCPDi rectorDuPage County RegionalPlanning CoaBisslonCourthouse412 North County Far» RoadWhuaton. IL 60187

200 ForestGlen Elyn, IL 60137

ADAMS. F.dwln C. 63 MSCPDirector of Community AffairsDivisionDepartaent of ComnunltyDevelopment(Retired as of 1982)

1292 Hanpton Hall Drive. NEAtlanta. GA 30319

ADEGBORO. Coker 79 HUP

c/o Sunday Oyetlmeln6649 tt. 16th St.

Philadelphia. PA 19126-2725

ACUAR. Charles E. 49/50[IFAl.A/MSCP

Associate ProfessorSchool of EnvironmentalDes Ign

University of GeorgiaAthens. GA 30602

AllERN. Cecily Pauline 85

BAUP713 S. 6lh. «203Ch.mpalgn. IL 61820

10232 S. OakleyChicago. IL 60643

AHLBERG. Robert B. 77 BUPZoning PlannerCity of EvnnstonCivic Center2100 Ridge AvenueEvanston. IL 60204

1012 Dobson AvenueEvanston. IL 60202

AICHBHAUMIK. Dobajyotl 60

MSCP31 Hlndusthan RoadCalcutta 29. India

2 Pandltea PI

.

Calcutta 29. India

ALBERT. Franklynn B. 63/64BSCP/MSCPDirector of PlanningChicago Regional Port District12800 Butlor DriveChicago. IL

808 Western AvenueJollet. IL 60435

ALLWOOD. Susan Ann 75 BUP

160 Falrbank Rd.

Riverside. IL 60546

ANCAR. Robert Peter 82 MUPTransportation Analyst

New York State Department ofTransportationState Policy .tnd SystemsPI annl ng Sect 1 onBui lillng 4. Room 2121220 Washington AvenueAlbany. NV 12232

3119 Wllghl R.irtd. RI) «2

Cambridge. NY 12810

ANDERS. Robert Daniel 05MUPAlachua Coiuity Departmentof Planning and Development10 SW Second Ave.

2nd FloorGaln(-svi 1 le. FL 32R01

4925 NW 33rd PlaceGainesville. VI 32606-5982

ANDERSON. DeWayne H. 6G

HUPPr inclpalAnderson. Benton. Holmes.Inc .

P.O. Box 21

Winston-Salem. NO 27102

801 Oakl.iwn Ave.Wlnston-Salem. NC 27104

ANDERSON. James Robert 72

MUPAssociate ProfessorHousing Research andDevelopmentUniversity of IllinoisUrbann. IL 61801

1802 ShndowlawnChampaign. IL 61820

ANNUAR BIN HA'ARUF 76 HUP

23. Jnlan SS 3/86Taman SeaportPeta I lug .Jaya

SelangorHalays la

ARBISE. Janet .Jaross 81

MUPResearch AssociateLandscape Architecture214 Humford Hall1301 W, GregoryUrbana. IL 61801

2104 Country SquireUrbana. IL 61801

ARHS. Richard E. 50 HSCPPrincipalArms and Associates4253 N. 25th StreetArlington, VA 22207

ASABERK. Paul 77 HUPAssistant Professor of

FinanceSt. Hary's UniversityHalifax Nova ScotiaCanada B3H3C3

AUGUSTYN. Kevin Gerard 80

BAUP

Land Use PlannerHammond Department of

Planning and Development7324 Indianapolis Blvd.

Hammond. IN 46324

7034 Birch Avenuell.immond. IN 46324

AUKER. John Edward Jr. 81

BAUP

43G0 Colnmnn Rd.

Jakcsonville. FL 32223

AULT, John W. 51 HSCP

Consul t ant

P.O. Box 562Bcntonville. AR 72712

RAHRITT. Jean Hancock 73

BUP

708 E. Thrush Ave.

Peoria. IL 61603-2606

BADER. Miriam Hel ler 84

BAUPUniversity of Wisconsin -

Hadlson518 W. Main. Apt. «9Hadlson, WI 53703

618 Sumae RoadHighland Park. IL 60035

BACBY. D. Gordon 64 BSCP

330 E. Cordova. »148Pasadena. CA 91101

BAILEY, Donald E. 63 HSCP

329 Wl Idwood DriveEast Lansing, HI 48823

BALL. Terry E. 79 MUPInternational Systems , Mnc.Box PHBAllajlta. GA 30315

BAHHI. Dallp 71 MUPAssistant DirectorDePage County RegionalPlanning Commission412 North County Farm RoadWheaton. IL 60187

1586 Burning TrailWheaton. IL 60187

BANDELE. Kami a 84 MUP

7050 South Pax ton

Chicago. IL 60617

BANNON. Lauren Kay Benninger79 BAUPDirector Corporate andCommunication OperationsChicago Area RunnersAssociation708 N. DearbornChicago. U 60610

2705 B N. RacineChicago. 11. 60614

BARCLAY. Susan 0. 78 Mil'

PlannerMlchlKan Ave.Connunity OrganizationDrUiilt. HI 4 8210

1547 GrangerAnn Arbor. HI 4 810-1

BAKETA. Anthony S. 65 MI'P

Broker AssociateMooney and Assnclatirs LTD400 S. Executive DriveSuite 101

Brookfield. WI 53085

1247 N. 85th StreetWauwatusa. WI 53226

BASTEN. Raymond Francis 60

BSCPProject PlannerHlgglnbotham Associates21 E. Monument StreetColorado Springs. CO 80903

4325 Nonchalant Circle. N.

Colorado Springs. CO 80917

BAUER. .Joanne Linda 73

BUPFinancial ConsultantMerrill Lynch. Pierce.Fenner and Smith15 Carmel CenterCarmel. CA 93022

89-D Springs Valley RoadLa Selva Beach. CA 95076

BEAI. , Frank lyn II. 68 HUPManager/Raw Materialsliiland STcel Co.

30 W. MonroeChicago. IL 60603

5319 South DnrchrstiTChicago. 11, 60615

BKATTV. John W. 40 BKAIA

4631 E. Mulberry Dr.

Phoenix. AE 85018

BKEBLE. Timothy R. 79 HUPPrograi ManagerNeighborhood PreservationOffice429 At lafitic St .

Stamford. CT 06905

63 Grassy Plain Rd.

Bethel, CT 06801

BEnn, Robert B. 77 MUPDirector. Planning Servicefor ChildrenHassachtise 1 1 s Department of

Hental Health160 North Washington St.

Boston. MA 02114

BEGOLKA. Robert 84 BAl.'P

Commission on ChicagoLandmarksRoom 516

Page 69: Alumni news - CORE

51

320 North Clark St.

Chicago. IL 60610

BEIIR. David Brian 77 BUP

Hotladay Corporation227 S. Main StreetSouth Dend. IN 46601

16165 Anberley Lane

South Bend. IN 46637

BELL. Adrlenne Lynn 75 BUP

2129 West 82rid Place

Chicago, IL 60620

BENDER. Lynn C. 67 HUPUniversity PlannerOffice of Physical Planningand ConstructionThe University of Chicago5555 South Ellis Ave.

Chicago. IL 60637

5537 S. Dorchester Ave.

Chicago. IL 60637

BENJAMIN. Claudia 73 MUP

Chief Hunan Resources PlannerSouthea.stern Virginia PlanningDistrict CoBUlsslon16 Koger Executive CenterNorfolk. VA 23502

1501 Longwood Dr.

Norfolk, VA 23508

BENNETT. Christine Elizabeth86 BAUP

2805 W. Green. A27Urbana. IL 61801

BERG. Carl Edward 29 BSLA

2235 Mlllvale RoadLouisville. KY 40205

BENOIT. Elizabeth Ann 79

BAUPPlanning. Zoning andEnvl ronnenlal Quality18 North Country StreetWaukegan. IL 60085

333 S. WarinstonDes Plaines. IL 60016

BERKESCH. Martha CatherineDade 74 HUP

105 Knollwood LaneGreenville. SC 29607

BERKESCH. TUothy J. 74

MUPInvestnent BrokerJ. C. Bradford & Co.

220 North Main St.

Greenville. SC 29601

105 Knollwood LaneGreenville. SC 29607

BERKHOUT. Therese Ann 72

BUPAssistant Director of Planning

City of St. Charles2 East Main St.

St. Charles. IL 60174

1050 North Tliird Ave.

St. Cliarlcs, IL 60174

BKKMAN, Myli-s D. "Mush" 79

MUPAttorney at Law

Altheimer and Gray333 W. Wiicki?r Drive, Suite2600Clilcago, IL 60606

5414 North KimballChicago. IL 60625

BERNARDIN. Vincent L. 75

MUPPrincipalBeriiardin. Lochmucller &

Assoc . . Inc

.

Hulman BuildingSuite 606

Evansvllle. IN 47708

2909 E. Oak St.

Evansvllle. IN -17714

BERNAS. Pamela .) . 79 BAUPInformation Center ConsultantFirst Chicago Coi-poral ion

1 First National Plaza.

Suite 0034

Chicago. IL 60670

3458 N. Pacific AvenueChicago, IL 60634

BEKNSKN. Julio Brook 82

BAUP

333 E. Ontario. «1606BClllcago, IL 60611

BERTRAM. David H. 78 BAUPTraffic Manager. SpecialProjectsSweetener TransportationA.E. Staley ManufacturingCo.

2200 E. Eldorado St.

Decatur. IL 62.'-.25

166 Elder l.ane

Decatur. IL 62.*>22

BHAT. S. Srlnlvasa 7U MUP

303 Des Plaines Ave.

Apt. 405

Forest Park. IL 60130

BJORNNSON. Hans Chris ter

74 MUPDept. of Civil EngineeringUniv. of Southern CaliforniaUniversity ParkLos Angeles, CA 90007

Klyfterascn 52

S-42700 Bllldal

Swetlen

BLACKMAN. Susan Lynn 80

BAUP

3953 Bryant Ave. S. «1

Hlnneapolls. MN 55409

BLACKSTONE. Mary 83 MUP

2104 Orchard St. , »302Urbana. IL 61801

111 AKE-IIARRIS. VirginiaLouise 67 HUPPlailn(;r II

Bl-State Developmeiit Agency411 N. 7th St. nth FloorSt. Louis. MO 63101

556 OakhavenSt. Louis. MO 63141

III.KWITT. Craig Roberts 83

MUPPI annerColorado Springs PlanningDivisionP.O. Box 1575Colorado Springs, CO 80901

2805 Illinois Ave.

Colorado Springs. CO 80907

BLUE. Michael 84 BAUPAssociateCamiros. Ltd.173 West MadisonChicago. II, 60202

1825 Madison StreetEvnnston, IL 60202

BOAZ. Mark Richard 75 MUPManagerCommuter ComputerPlanning and DevelopmentDl vi slon3550 Wllshlre Blvd., Suite

300Los Angeles. CA 90010

400 S. Harvard Blvd., Apt.

f 112

Los Angeles, CA 90010

BODOTEK. Walter 57 MSCPDirector. Planning *

DevelopmentCity of Chandler200 East CommonwealthChandler. AZ 85224

1102 W. El PradoChandler. AZ 85224

BODNAR. Raymond J. 66

BSCPManagerEnvironmental AffairsIllinois State Chamber of

Commerce20 North Wacker Dr.

Chicago. IL 60606

BOLAN. Lewis 67 MUP

Managing DirectorLegga and McCall Advisors

Inc.

1090 Vermont Avenue. NWWashington. DC 20005

726 1/2 nth Street. SE

Washington. DC 20003

DOOKWAl.TKR. Jack E. 69

BUP

Planner III

Sonona County PlanningDepartmentRoo» 105-A575 Administration DriveSanta Rosa. CA 95401

515 Beaver StreetSanta Rosa. CA 95404

BOWMAN. Diane Violet 83

BAUPPlannerHarland Bartholomew and

Assoc la tes

7745 CarondeletSt. Louis. MO 6310.1

802 Lrtkeshore DriveO'Kallon. IL 62269

BOYLE. Philip Norman 55

BKALA/BSLO

140 Chippewa Dr.

Lancaster. Oil 43130

BOZINOVICH. Luba Violet 76

BUPSystem Support Aiuilyst

Illinois Central GulfRal 1 road233 N. MichiganClllcago. II, 60601

1406 W. Jonc|Ul 1 Terr.

Unit 2

Chicago. IL 60626

BRANIGAN. Daniel Shelling82 MUP

2317 North Kentucky St.

Arlington. VA 22205

BRAUN. Jeffrey Dakin 82

BAUPAssistant to City Man-iger

City of OrangeP.O. Box 520Orange. TX 77630

3330 Ridgemonl. J!

I

Orange. TX 77630

BRECK. Kevin 85 MUPLaw ClerkOakland County CircuitCourt1200 N. TelegraphPontlac. MI

1779 CrayfleldDiritiinnliam. MI 48008

BRETT. Deborah Lee Lieber72 MUPVice PresidentReal Estate ResearchCorporat ion

72 West AdamsChicago. II. 60603

515 lllh StreetWllmctte. IL 60091

BHIASSOULIS. Helen 84 Mtll'

1976 A Orchard St.

Url.ana. II. 6 1801

Page 70: Alumni news - CORE

52

BRIMBERRY, Jaaea Thoaas 85

MUPCentral Illinois Agency on

Aglne. Inc.

700 Hamilton Blvd.

Peoria, IL 61603

7015 Southport Rd., R2Peoria, IL 61615

DRINKMAN, Charles L. Jr. 61

MSCPEnvl ron»ental ProtectionAgencyi860 Lincoln St.

Suite 600Denver. CO 80295

6800 E. Tennessee Ave.. »432Denver, CO 80224

BROCDEN. Douglas E. 41

BFAI.A

City Planning Commission555 S. 10th St.

Lincoln, N8 68508

BROWN, Charles 0. 60 MFALADirector of PlanningTown of AmherstTown Hall5583 Main St.

Wllllamsvllle, NY 14221

Carl L. Gardner andAssociates, Inc.

P.O. Box 408320Chicago, IL 60640

916 Castlewood TerraceChicago, IL 60640

BURNS. Craig Edward 78BAUPFinancial AnalystSpringfield - City, W.iter,

Light & Power207 Municlp.il BIdg.

Springfield, IL 62757

BURKIDGE, George S. 48

BFALABuirldge A.ssociates

nil West Park Ave.Llbertyvllle. IL 60048

BUSCllMANN, David .Joseph 83

BAUP

2657 Reese St.

Evanston. IL 60201

BUSSE, Kenneth Rohert 83

BAUP

2500 Robin LaneRolling Meadows, IL 60008

1515 Oak St. , «36South Pasadena, CA 91030

CANESTARO, James Carmen 73

Mill'

Pres IdentP.O. Box 104

nlacksburg, VA 24060

2823 Chelsea CourtBlacksliurg. VA 24060

CANNON, Timothy Peter 80UAUPAsst. City PlannerPlanning Dept.Boynton Beach City Hall120 N.E. 2nd Av. 4 SeacrestBlvd.Bnynlon Beach, FL 33435

758 South County Rd.

Palm Deach, FL 33480

CANTRELL, Bradley Alan 75

nupAssociate Planner II

City of Janesvllle18 North Jackson StreetJanesvllle, WI 53545

4922 Cottage Crove RoadMadison, WI 53717

3045 E, 132nd Ave,Thornton, C) 80241

CARRERAS, Karen M.

BAUP

529 Barnsdale Rd

.

LaGraiige Park. IL 6052S

CARROLL, Michael A. 68HUPDirector of Comm . DevelopmentLilly Endowment Inc.

2801 N. Meridian St.

Indianapolis, IN 46208

3412 W. 42nd St

.

Indianapolis, IN 46208

CASriLIA, John A. 81 HIPProject Management SpecialistElectronic Data SystemsTroy, MI 48099

P.O. Box 99261Troy, Ml 48099

CAUTKRO, Vincent An I bony82 MUPSenior PlannerCitrus County Division of

P] anni ng1300 S. Lecanto HighwayLecanto. FL 32661

BROWN, Lee M. 77 BUPSenior AssociateTeska Associates627 Grove St.

Evanston. IL 60201

1013 Atlantic. Apt. B

Waukegan, IL 60085

BROWN, Michael John 83

BAUPWill County Land Use Department501 Ella AvenueJollel, IL 60433

63 W. 64th Street. «304

Hestuont, IL 60559

BROWN, Thomas H. 72 MUPDeputy RegistrarAdmissions and RecordsUniversity of Illinois108 Administration BuildingUrbana, IL 61801

BROWN, William Franklyn 69

MUPManagerBusch Corporate Center100 Kingsmill RoadWilliamsburg, VA 23185

112 Tutters Neck RoadWilliamsburg, VA 23185

BUCKLEY. Mary 85 MUP

6631 Hlllondale RoadChevy Case, MD 20815

BUCKLEY, Thomas J, 57 BSCPPresident

BYRNE. Grace Eleanor 72

BUPPuget Sound Council ofGovernmentsGrand Central on the Park216 First Avenue SouthSeattle. WA 98104

4321 SW StevensSeattle. WA 98116

CAHILL, Will Inn Dean 79

MUP

906 NW 30th St,

Corvallis, OR 97330

CAIAZ/.n. Giietun A. 68 MUPPrincipalSuite 719American City BuildingColumbia, Ml) 21044

CAMPBELL, Ann 79 MUP

803 South Elm Blvd.Champaign, IL 61820

CAMPBELL, Candace D. 79

BAUPResearch CoordinatorCooperative CommunityDevelopment Pi-ogram

Hubert H. Humphrey Instituteof Public Affairs301 19th Ave. SouthMinneapolis, HN 55455

1908 Cedar Lake ParkwayMinneapolis. MN 55416

CAMPBELL, Miriam WhiteSchmltt 47/55 BS DSSWV/HSCP

CANZONERI , Sarah E. 76

MUPAttorneyOffice of General CounselHUD. Room 10278Washington. DC 20009

1702 llobart St. NW

Washington. DC 20009

CAKI.EY, David E. 70 MUPDirectorDept. of MetropolitanDt'velopment1860 City-County Blvd.

Indianapolis, IN 46204

8748 Flynn RoadIndianapolis, IN 46241

CARLSON, Mary Catherine(Jones) 82 MUPCity PlannerMiami Planning Dept

.

275 N.W. 2nd StreetMiami, FL 33128

9611 S.W. 77th Ave.

Unit 303AMiami, FL 33158

CARMODY, Daniel Sheahan 77

BUPPres lder>t

Mississippi Bi-ewing Co.

P.O. Box 942Rock Island. IL 61201

2809 12th Ave. «203

Rock Island. IL 61201

CARPENTER, John F. 71 BUPEconomic Development DirectorCity of Thornton8992 N. WashingtonThornton. CO 80229

1241 N. Egret Pt.

Crystal River. FL 32629 ,

CHAN. Bill Ming Yini; 83

MUP I

System AdministratorChaparral Communications

{

2360 Bering Or.j

S.in Jose, CA 95131,

3160 Grand Lake Dr.

Fremont, CA 94.')36'

CHI;K. WI Ibert C. F. 71 ;

Blip

OwnerWI 1 chee PlanningH K BuildingSuite 620820 Ml I 1 lani St.

Honolulu, HI 96813

833 Waika PlaceHonolulu, HI 96825

CHELSETH, Robert Stephen73 BUPPrincipal Planner/OwnerPlanning and DevelopmentServices, Inc.

Suite 535

Sexton Building529 S. 7th StreetMinneapolis, MN 55415

210 W. Grant Street. «327

Minneapolis, MN 55403

CHIDICHIMO, August Carl 63

BSCPDirector of CommunityPlannl ngDepartmjit of Planning, Cityand Community Development500 South Racine Ave.

Chicago. IL 60607

Page 71: Alumni news - CORE

53

2921 W. Fargo Ave.

Chicago, IL 60645

CHINN, Karen Leah 82 MUP

63 Logan St.

Charleston. SC 29401

CHIN. Quentln Chuck 76 BUPStaff AnalystCity of New YorkDept. of Generol ServicesDivision of Municipal Supplies1 Centre St

.

.New York. NY 10007

50 Third StreetBrooklyn. NY 11231

CHIPMAN. Denlse Rencher 78

BAUPAssistant TransportationPlannerEast-West Gateway CoordinatingCouncilPierce BuildingSuite 1200112 North Fourth StreetSt. Louis. MO 63102

CHU. Dahtzen 83 MUPGeneral EngineerUSA-CEKLP.O. Box 4005Champaign. IL 61820

717 Ashton SouthChaapaign. IL 61820

CLARK, Sherwin Daryle 73

BUPPrograaner/AnalystIL Dept. of E». Sec.

5711 S. WolcotlChicago, IL 60636

COE. Rocky L. 72 BUP

3873 N. Sherean Blvd.

Milwaukee, HI 53216

COIBION, WiUlaa Hampton 47

BFALAVice President » Director ofPlanningLeo A. Daly Co.45 Maiden LaneSan Francisco. CA 94108

818 BarnesonSan Mateo, CA 94402

COLEMAN, Richard Howard 48BFALA

Director of ConaunltyDevelopmentSan Mateo, CA 94402

328 36th Ave.San Mateo. CA 94403

CONNER. James B. 65 MUPMarketing DirectorCarver 4 Garver. Inc.

P.O. Box C-50Little Rock, AR 72203

17 Sunset DriveLittle Rock, Ar 72207

CONNER, Preston Lop K?

Research & Planning ManagerBusiness Development Dept.U.S. Hispanic Chamber ofCommerce82'J Southwest Blvd.Kansas City. MO 64108

3901 E. Bannister RoadKansas City. MO 61137

COOK, Wiirron .lay .Jr. 80MUP

6119 MarlowPortage, Ml 49081

COOPER, Frcdrlc 73 HUPProgram OfficerEnti'rpriae Foundation505 American City Bldg.Columbia. Ml) 21044

2107 Westvlew TerraceSilver Spring. HD 20910

CORDWELL. Ian 84 MUPPreservation PlannerAlabama Historical Commtssion725 Monroe StreetMontgomery. AL 36130

3932 Ced^ir Ave.

MontKomci-y. AL 36109

COX. Robert Lou 5B BSilSSWV

P. 0. Box 386Branford. CT 06405

CROSS. Paul llarlman 81

HUPSchuerenberg. Grimes 4

GlaspyAttorney at LawAllied First National Bank120 West MainHesquite. TX 75149

2709 FranklinApt. 322Hesquite, TX 75150

CUHDY, Charles C. Jr.

79/74 MUP/BUPDeputy City Managor/Complrol 1 or

CI ty of Peoria419 Fulton St.

City HnJl Room 204

Peoria, IL 61602

1115 N. Bourland Ave.

Peoria, IL 61606

DAAB, Jacob B. 85 BAUPCrossroads Assoc.Two Crossroads of CommerceSuite 150

Rolling Meadows. IL 60008

3416 BellwoodGlenviow. IL 60025

DAI, David T. 78 MUPBechtel Power Corp.12400 E. Imperial HighwayNorwalk. CA 90650

860 Greenway TerraceLa Habra. CA 90631DAKE, Maartcn W. 59 BSCP

12 bucklnghan AvenueToronto, OntarioCanada CN M4N-1R2

DALE. Carl Robert 56 BSDSSWVPi'os identDesign I'iannlng Assoc. Inc.7105 Wlndgate Kd

.

Woodbury. MN 55119

D'AI.KSSH). M. W.ilter. Jr.BO MSCPPresidentLatimer & Duck Inc.

121 S. Brood St.Philadelphia. PA 19107

580 Klgard Ave.

Pliiladelphia. PA 19128

DANIEL, Robert Earl 69MUP

2008 5th Avenue NorthSeattle, WA 98109

DAROSZEWSKI . Albert 79

RUP

Capital Facilities201 S. Rosal Ind Ave.

Orlando. FL 32801

1020 Rlmwood St.. Apt. »6

Oilando. FL 32801

DAVIDSON, Edward J. 68

BUP

55 S. 6th St. . «311

San Jose, CA 95112

DAVIS, Dean Allen 54 MSCPDepartment of Housing12320 East BatesAurora. CO 80014

DAVIS. Lillian Lyons 77

BUP

c/o Thomas Lyons2318 W. 109th St.

Chicago. IL 60643

DAVIS. Paul Thomas 66 HUPChiropractor9099 Glacier HighwayJuneau. AK 99803

DAKSUN, Robert F. 82 BAUP

1106 Silver St.

Urbana, IL 61801

DEAN, William Alfred 35

BFALA

1512 Tyrell Ave,

Park Ridge, IL 600G8

DKDB, Lawrence A. 77 BUPProperty Concerns, Ltd.

5522 Alabama

Clarendon Hills. IL 60514

5522 AlabamaClarendon Hills. IL 60514

DeBELLE. Donlse 76 BUP

374B N. L.ikrwood

Chicago. IL 60BI3

DEHNEK, Valeria .leanne 83MUPDepartment of PinnnlngDrvel (ipmi^nt

7324 Indianapolis Blvd.

Hammond. IN 4(>324

11329 South LangleyChicago. IL 60628

DEPEW. Wayne Calvert Jr.

49/50 BS DSSWV/MSCPAssistant AdministratorDepartment of Met roi)oI i Ian

DevelopmentCity-County BuildingIndianapolis. IN 46204

DEVITT. Judith Ann 78

BAUPindustrial Rese;irch AnalystEconomic Development Com.

20 N. Clark St.

Chicago, IL 60602

7422 N. HarlemCliicago, IL 60018

DEVITT. Mary L. 81 MUP

721 W. MonroviaGlcndale, Wl 53217

DICE, Stephen Robert 69

BUPUKS International. Inc.

1730 M. Street N.W.

Suite 701

Washington. DC 20836

9642 Bl ingoe CourtBurke. VA 22015

DICKERSON. Barbara L. 85

BAUP

309 H Bargate Dr.

Cardinax Woods Apts.Cary. NC 27511

DIETRICH. Rnbbl Rice 78

MUPLegislative Asst .

U.S. Rep. Beryl Anthony.Jr.

1117 Lnngworth MobWashington. DC 20515

DIMIT, John H. 71 BUPChampaign County Region. il

Planning CommissionP.O. Box 339UrbaoH. II, Olflni

4 1 W . nil no I a

Urhan.-i. IL 6 inni

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54

DIMIT. Mnry G. 80 HUPEnergy Conservation ManagerCity Water. Light i Power100 Municipal BuildingSpringfield, IL 627D7

950 S. Lincoln Ave. . »10Spl Ingfleld. IL 62701

DINATALE. Achllle Nicholas76 Blip

Water Resources EngineerCity of WestBlnstt'r3031 W. 76thWestminster, CO 80030

DIRKS. Herman 59 BFALACity ManagerCity of BInonlngton109 E. OliveBlooiilngton. IL 61701

305 Hillside LaneBlooalngton. IL 61701

DONALDSON. Carlos Franklin.Sr. 79 BAIIP

Supervisor, Canpus MallDistribution810 S. Sixth St.

Champaign. IL 61820

406 E. Biookcns Dr.

Urbana. IL 61801

DONOHUE. Will Ian R. 69 MUPAssistant Vice PresidentC-E Maguire. Inc.

1 Court StreetNew Britain. CT 06051

360 Hartford Ave.

Wethersfleld. CT 06109

DOOLEN. John Gilbert 58

BSCPEnvironmental ProtectionSpec lal is

t

Air Programs BranchRegion V. USEPA230 S. Dearborn St.

Chicago. IL 60604

5415 N. Sheridan Rd.

Chicago, IL 60640

DORY. KiillBm Adiim. Jr. 83MUPProject ManagerMain Street Creencastle.Inc

.

Heritage Preservation Societyof Putman County14 S. Indiana StreetCreencastle. IN 46135

629 East WalnutCreencastle. IN 46135

DOUGAN. Denise Dean 75 BUP

3424 Maple LaneHazel Crest, IL 60429

DOUGLAS. Steve 85Pueblo County CourthouseDept. of Planning & Developmentloth « Main StreetsPueblo. CO 81003

1339 CarteretPueblo, CO 81004

DOYLE. Michael C. 78 BAUP

307 S. Race St.Urbana. IL GIBOl

ORAVER. Robin 83 DAUP

3930 W. Esli-s

Lini'oliiwoiMl, IL 60645

DRESDNKR, Alll'n Jay 50

BSCPPresidentDresdner Assoc.880 Bergen Ave.Jersey City, NJ 07306

23 Edgnmont Ave.Summit. NJ 07901

DRUHTRA. Jeff H. 78 DAUP

170 S. HiltonGlen Ellyn. IL 60137

DUDOE. Robert 84 BAUP110 S, Gregory »1

Urbana. IL 61801

9401 N. Merrill AvenueMorton Grove. IL 60053

DUNCAN. Michael 85 .MUP

1400 McCausland Ave.St. Louis. MO 63117

DUNKI.E. Glenn Morris 37

BSLA

7616 Cherokee Rd

.

Richmond. VA 23225

DURHAM. John C. 75 MUPBramhll & Associates1626 W.Tshlngton

Denver. CO 80218

74 W. Byers PlaneDenver, CO 80223

DURWARD, Mary Desore 74

BUPSenior PlannerArrowhi'ad Regional DevelopmentCommiss ion

200 Arrowhead PlaceDuluth. MN 55802

Star RouteKelsy. MN 55755

DYKE, Thompson Alfred 56

BSCPThompson Dyke & Assoc..Ltd.

3701 Commi'rcial Ave. »3

Northbrook. IL 60062

1326 Larrabee LaneNorthbrook. IL 60062

ECKEL. Willlnm Joseph 74

MUPKing County PlaruUng Division719 Alaska Blilg.

Seattle. WA 98104

3057 N.W. 62nd StreetSeattle. WA 98107

EDIDIN. Nina J. 77 MUPMiflrofair Housing Services1879 ColumbiaDecatur. GA 30032

2841 Royal Path Ct

.

Decatur. GA 30030

EDIGER. Cynthia Su7,anne 82MUPDept. of Civil EngineeringUniversity of Illinois2120 Newmark CivilEnglrteering LabUrb.inn, IL 61801

601 W. Springfield. Apt. AChampaign. IL 61820

EDMINSTER. Richard D. 77

MUPPlanner 1 1 I

County of Alameda399 Elmhurst St.

Hayward. CA 94544

P.O. Bo.\ 6234Hayward. CA 94544

EICHER. Glen 0. 59 BFALACounty Board OfficeCourthouse Room 302A7 N. VermilionDanville. IL 61832

428 MontclalreDanville. IL 61832

EINSWEILFR, Robert C. 58MSCPProfessor and DirectorPlanning ProgramHumphrey InstituteUniversity of MinnesotaMinneapolis. HN 55455

1226 W. Minnehaha ParkwayMinneapolis. MN 55419

EISEMAN. Beth Karen 85BAUP20A 7th Street. SEWashington, DC 20003

6543 N. FairfieldChicago. IL 60645

EISSMAN, Mark Paul 80BAUP

7051 HamlinLincolnwood, IL 60645

ELI, I FRIT, Ralph S. 32

DSLA

5305 Pine Forest Rd.

Houston, TX 77027

ELLIS, Franklin. Jr. 62MSCPThe Gate SchoolCasitas Pass RoadCarpinttrria. CA 93013

ELMS. John. Jr. 81 BAUP

Champaign. IL 61820

ELSDEN. John 85 MUPCity of Galveston PlanningDept .

P.O. Do.x 779Galveston. TX 77553

3102 Cove View Hlvd. N 202Galveston, TX 77551

ENGELMAN, Lynji Anne 81

MUPKTIS Program CoordinatorBureau of Urban artd RegionalPlanning ResearchUniversity of Illinois907 W. Nevada StreetUrbana, IL 61801

308 E. KerrUrbana. IL 61801

ENTRESS. .loseph W. . .Jr. 70

BUP

1533 Chrlsta LaneSouth Houston, TX 77587

ERICSSON. Sally Claire 76

BUPLegislative AnalystDemocratic Steering andPolicy CommitteeU.S. House of RepresentativesWashington. DC 20.';i5

1805 Monroe Street NWWashington. DC 20010

EWBANK. Scott C. 82 BAUP

2404 Prospect Ave.Evanston. IL 60201

FAI.LON. Roscmarle Conte 76

MUP

708 Lyndhurst St.. Apt. 226

Dunedln. FL 33528

FARMER, Christine Moore 73

MUPCommunity DevelopmentPi annerDepartment of Developmentand Planning121 North I.aSallo St . . Room1000Chicago, IL 60002

FAULSTICH. Mary Etta 82

BAUPPeat Marwlck3 Embarcadero Ctr.

San Francisco. CA 94111

64 1 Baker St.

San Francisco. CA 94117

PENNFR. Anthony Ross 85

BAUPCommunity Outreach WorkerWicker Park NeighborhoodCourici 1

1502 N. HoyneChicago. IL 60622

2104 Rebecca

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55

711 WesleyEvanston. IL 60202

FERRONE. Daniel Joseph 38

BSI.A

Director. Cook County Dept

.

of Planning and DovclupmentRoun 824 County Bldg.

118 N. Clark St.

Chicago, a 60602

FICHT. Tho»as A. 59 BFADirector. Prog. Mgt. Dlv.Office of CPD (HLIO)

75 Spring St. . SW

Atlanta. GA 30303

1721 Woodcllff Drive. NE

Atlanta. GA 30329

FILUSCH. Dorothy Yvonne 83

BAUP

ni 1/2 Bell Ave.Montlcello. IL

FLATI.EY. Robert Francis 71

.MUP

Assistant City ManagerP.O. Box 2207Hollywood. PL 33022

1901 North Park RoadHollywood. FL 33021

FLEMING. Beverly Ann 79

MUP

1420 A. PenroseSt. Louis. MO 63107

FLOVD, Charles R. 72 MUPDirector. Dept. of CoasunltyDevelopaent160 Second Street. NECleveland. TN 37311

343 Centenary Ave.

Cleveland. TN 37311

FOEGLER. Terry D. 76 MUPDirector, Departaent ofPlanning & Coanunlty OevelopaentLebanon City BuildingMain at BroadwayLebanon. OH 45036

501 Huntley Ct

.

Lebanon. OH 45036

FOERTSCH. Robert Kenneth 85MUP

35 W. 770 Park LaneSt. Charles, IL 60174

FRANK. Joe 76 HUPCommunity DevelopmentCity of Ft. Coll Ins

P.O. Biix 580Ft. Collins. CO 8052.''.

2408 StoverFt. Collins. CO 80525

FREEBAIRN. Cathelne Thayer74 HUPPlannerDivision of Economic 4

Housing DevelopmentDeparlmrnt of MetropolitanDevelopment148 Market St.

Indianapolis. IN 46204

4555 N. Delaw.ire St.

IniUanapolls. IN 46205

FREEMAN. Erjiesl 73 MUPDl rectorDeparlmtMlt of City Planning801 Crawford St.

Portsmouth. VA 23704

138 Yorkshire Rd.

Portsmouth. VA 23701

FRESKO. David 70 MUPDeputy DirectorIsrael Institute forTransportation Planning &

ResearchNahal Ayalon St. 7

Telavlv, Israel

Dvora Baron 12

Hishon Lezion. Israel75224

FREUNn. Adrian P. 72 BUP

12001. Elfcroft Dr.

Austin. T.X 78758

413 EllsChampaign. IL 61820

FONDERSMITH. John 63 MSCPChief. Downtown SectionMunicipal Planning OfficeSixth Floor - Munsey Building1329 E. Street, NWWashington, DC 20004

1761 R. Street. NW. »4

Washington. DC 20009

FRANCISSEN. Shauna P. 86HUP

Executive DirectorAurora Presenvatlon ComaisstonCity of AuroraAurora. IL 60307

FREUND. Eric Conrad 63MSCPProfessorDepartment of Urban andRegional PlanningUnlversl ty of 111 Inois1003 W. Nevada St.

Urbajia. IL 61801

2101 Cureton Dr.

Urbana. IL 61B01

FRITZ. Kenneth H. GO DSCPDirector of CommunityDevelopmentVillage of Mount Prospect100 S. EmersonMount Prospect. IL 60056

570 Coolidge Ave.

Glen Ellyn. IL 60137

FUKE. Sidney M. 71 MUPSidney Fuke 4 Assoc.

100 Pauall StreetHllo. HI 06720

152 Akea StreetHllo. HI 9G720

CALLOWAY. Kaye Bruce 65/08BSCP/MUP

612 Rnndell Rd.

Severna Park. MD 21146

OASSMAN, Arnold E. 54 orS5

Director of Comm. DevelopmentI CAST Inc.

245 N. Pine St.

Colorado Springs. CO 80905

GAWAlN. Helen ElizabethMiller 41 BFALA

P.O. Box 377Mill Valley. CA 94941

GAYLES. Llndsey Jr. 76

nupCity PlannerDepartmtrnt of Developmentand Pl.ituiing

121 North LaSalle St., Room1000Chicago, II. 60602

6751 S. Oglesby. »1AChicago. IL 60649

GEDKILL. Anthony Joseph 75

BUP

7559 S Roberts Rd.Brldgevlew. IL 60455

GENNARO. Rebecca Ann 77

Blip

1506 LaVlta St.

Pomona. CA 91768

GEORGE. Vernon Edward 61

BSCPHammer Slier George Assoc.nil Bonlfant St.

Silver Spring. HD 20910

1038 Dead Run DriveMcLean. VA 22101

GERARD. David G. 75 MUPExecutive DirectorEvansville Urban TransportationStudyRoom 312, Civic CenterComplexEvansville. IN 47708

4500 Sweetser Ave.

Evansville. IN 47715

GETZ. Linda K. 82 BAUP

2523 W. GilbertPeoria. IL 61604

GETZEL. Patricia M. 73

MUPExecutive DirectorNormal HeightsCommunity Dev. Corp.4619 llawley Blvd.

San Diego. CA 92103

4121 Randolph St.

San Diego. CA 92103

CEUBTNER. Eilwnrd F. 66

BSCPCity PlannerMull In A Lonergan Assoc.

Inc.

4620 Longshore Ave.Philadelphia. PA 19135

559 Cedarbrook RoadSouthampton. PA 18966

GIIAREB. Moliaaed Noshy 7 1

MUPSabbour Associates20 LottI Hassoon.i St.

Dokkl-Calro. Egypt

20 Gaber Ebn. Hayyan St.

Dokkl-Calro. Egypt

GILCHRIST. Martin Charles66 MUPPres Ident

Urban Research and DevelopmentCorpora t ion

26 Broad Street PlazaBethlehem. PA 18018

303 Carver DriveDethelehea. PA 18017

GILLESPIE. Robert H. . Jr.

76 HUP

4075 Cooper Cfen Ct . SESalem. OR 97302

GILTNER. Robert Eugene54/58 BFALA/HSCPPrincipal A TreasurerTIIK Assocs . . Inc.

40 Inverness Or . E

.

Englewood. CO 80112

4550 West lllff Ave.

Denver. CO 80219

GINSBACH. Kale 84 MUPAnalyst. Macro ForecastsAmerican AirlinesP.O. Box 61616Dallas-Ft. Worth Airport.TX 75261

1905 Summer Ray Circle *177Alllngton. TX 76011

GLANCE. A. Richard 73 HUPPresidentGlance 4 Assoc.82 PI Igrim RoadCarneKie. PA 15106

GLEISSNER. Robert L 80

HUP

907 Washington Ave.

Mlshawaka. IN 46544

CI.ITMERO. Patrick Jay 75

ML!!'

Dl rectorLogan County RegionalPlanning Commission529 .South McLean StreetLincoln. IL 62656

128 23rd StreetLincoln. IL 626.'-.6

GORl.E, Robert T. 71 HCPPrincipalCarter-Goble Associates.I nc

.

Box 11287Columbia. SC 29211

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56

110 Hunters Blind DriveColuabla. SC 29210

COEDDEL. Lee Edward 76 BUPDirector of Hunan ReaourceaHospital Assoc, of Metro.St. Louis720 Olive St.

St. Louis. .MO 63101

6451 Devonsiilre

St. Louis. MO 63109

COETSCH, Earl Charles 49/50BS DDSWV/MSCPSenior City Planner302 South Shore] ine

Corpus Chrlsti. TX 78408

P.O. Box 9277Corpus Chrlsti. TX 78408

GOETZ. Robert E. 47 BFALAPresidentRobert E. Goetz 4 Assoc.

34 N. CoreSt. Louis. MO 63119

909 S. CoreSt. Louis. MO 63119

GOLDPARB. Eugene L. 74 HUPPrograB AnalystUSDHUD300 S. Wacker DriveChicaeo. IL 60645

900 Ridge RoadHighland Park, IL 60035

GORDON. Stephen D. 75 HUPHead. Housing & EcononlcDevelopnent SectionDenver Planning Office1445 Cleveland Place, Roon

400Denver. CO 80202

1059 S. York St.

Denver. CO 80209

GRESHAM. Samuel Jr. 74 BUPU.S. Dept. of Housing i

Urban DevelopaentZOO N. High St.

Colunbus. OH 43215

1631 Rosevlew Dr.

Coiuabus. OH 43209

GRIMES. James Joseph 71/73

BUP/MUPConmunicat ions Instr.

Capital AreaVocational Center2201 Toronto RoadSpringfield, IL 62707-8645

704 EvergreenChathaB. IL 62629

GROLL. Mary C. 81 BAUPAssociate PlannerWilbur Smith and Assoc.1535 w. Loop SouthHouston. TX 77027

CRONER. Guy Howard 76/78BUP/MUPManagement Systems SpecialistIL Dept. of Energy 4 Natural

Resources325 West Adams

Springfield. IL 62706

32 GlcnalreSpringfield, IL 62703

GROVES. John David 78BAUPSystems AnalystNational Semiconductor2900 Semiconductor DriveSanta Clara. CA

3652 Haven Court Ave.Fremont, CA 94538

GUCKER, Richard Arnold51/55 DFALA/MSCPDirector, Local and RegionalAffairsMaryland Dopartraent of

State Planning301 W. Preston St.

Baltimore. MU 21201

1808 Mil 1 ridge Ct

.

Annapolis, MD 21401

CUDERLEy. Susan Gall 75

BUPAssociate PlannerLake County Department of

Planning. Zoning &

Environmental Duality18 N. County St.

Suite 803-AWaukegan. IL 60085

GUINEY. Kathleen 84 BAUP

946 Sheffield Ct.

Crystal Lake, IL 60014

HAAR. Herbert R. , Jr. 64

MSCPAssistant DirectorPort of New OrleansP.O. Bo.\ 60016New Orleans. LA 70160

933 Vintage DriveKenner. LA

HABBEN. Rudolph Bernart 59

BSCP

713 Morningstar LaneMadison. WI 53704

HACK. Gary A. 67 MUPDepartment of Urban Studiesand Plantiing

Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyRoom 10-485Cambrlilgc, MA 02130

57 Ridge AvenueNewton Centre, HA 02159

HALL, Stuart Craig 61

BSCP

6050 Brynwood Dr.

Suite 203Rockford, IL 61111HALLOCK, Peter H, 77 MUPAssistant PlannerBl-State Planning1504 Third Ave.

Rock Island. IL 61201

HAMILTON. Calvin Sargent49 BFALA

Director of PlanningDepartment of City Planning200 Spring StreetLos Angeles. CA 90012

6298 Warner DriveLos Angeles. CA 90048

HANSEN. Timothy Allen 74

MUPllighlnnd Books409 N. Broad St.

Ilrevnrd. NC 28712

120 Frnnkl in St.

Brevard, NC 28712

HARDER, Dennis A. 67 MUPPrincipal AssociateTrkla. Pettigrew. Allen 4

PayneSuite 1200123 W. MadisonChicago. IL 60602

829 LindenWllmette. IL 60091

HARNED, Catherine 84 MUPHistoric Pensacola PreservationBoard205 E. Zaragoza StreetPensacola, FL 32501

HARRIS, Arnold 76 MUPProgram ManagerEconomic Development Commission401 West Stale St.

Rockford. IL 61101

3427 County Highway "P"

Route 1, Box 181-CMount Horeb, WI 53572

HARRIS, Joseph Ellis 69

BUPDirectorHeridinn Township Departmentof Develomcnt Control5151 March RoadOkemos, MI 48U64

1974 Lac Du Mont Drivellaslctt, MI 48840

HARRIS. Paul C. 64 MSCPChief PlannerTennessee State PlanningOffice540 McCallle Ave. , Suite700Chattanooga, TN 37402

4519 Cloverdale Loopllixson. TN 37443

HARRISS, Lynn MerriamFroebel 31 BSLA

10301 Garden WayPotomac. MU 20854

HARTIGAN. Luke Patrick 83

BAUPChicago Area TransportationStudy300 W. AdamsChicago. IL

603 Washington StreetElmhurst, IL 60126

HARWOOD. Charles L. 67/71BUP/MUPExecutive DirectorWi Ihlacoochee RegionalPlanning Council1241 S.W. Tenth StreetOcnin. FL 32674-2798

15)2 S.E. 43rd AvenueOcala, FL 32671

HATCHER, Harris D., Jr. 65

MUPBarge, Waggoner. Sirmner 4

CannonEngineers 4 Planners404 .lames Robertson ParkwayNashville, TN 37219

HATMAKER, Jaiiine M. 78

HUPPlanner I

Planning DepartmentCity of Phoenix251 W, WashingtonPhoenix. AZ 85003

2815 N. 4 2nd Way

Phoenix. AZ 85008

HATMAKKR. Mlrliael L. 77

MUPSenior Planning AnalystCorporate Planning DepartmentSalt River ProjectP. 0. Box 1980

Phoenix. AZ 85001

2815 N. 42nri WayPhoenix, AZ 85008

llAUERSPF.RfiER, Richard C.

62 MSCPLand Development Asst.

Charlotte-MecklenburgPlanning Commission301 South McDowell StreetCharlotte, NC 28204

5836 Gate Po.st KoadCharlotte, NC 28211

HAY, r.crnld Porter 76 BUPPlanner I

25 Aupnnl St

.

Hilo. HI 90720

R. R. 1 , Box 69

Monee. II. 60449

HAYKS, Thomas Michael 78

BAUPSales Hep.

R. R. Donnelley100 Colony Stiuare

<14081175 Peachlree St.

Atlanta, CA 30361

7')07 Capwood Ave.

Tampa. FL 33617

IIAZKl.TON. Ill Illy LynnnKlngma 83 MUP

1623 W. UniversityChamiMlgn, IL 61821

IIAZELTON, Thomas Joseph 81

MUP

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57

HWANG. Al-Ll 78 MUP

10123 Swirling WindHouston. TX 77086

INGRISH. Kathleen Rae 76

BUPPlanning Director311 E. Franklin St.

Rocklnghan. NC 28379

Rt. 4. Box )48-JRockinghaK. NC 28379

IRVIN. Donald L. 54 BSCP

Planning Consultant1012 Brlarfleld Rd.

Jackaon. MS 39211

ISBERC. Gunnar C. 66 BUPPlanning ConsultantPlanning & DevelopaentServices. Inc.

tS3S Sexton Bldg.

529 7th St. SouthHlnneapolls. HN SS41S

ISLEY. David Lee 76 MUPPlanner II

Bernardin, Lochiaueller &

Assoc. , Inc.

Huiaan Bldg. . Roob 606

Evansvllle. IN 47708

JENTSCH. Robert W. 60MSCPSenior PlannerFairfax County Office ofCompreliensi ve PlanningFairfax. VA 22030

8370 Greensboro Dr.

McLean. VA 22102«517

1131 SuffolkWestchester, IL 60153

ISSEL. Williac Edgar 64

MSCPDirectoriJept. of Planning & Inspections40 Palnetto ParkwayHilton Head Island, SC29928

17 Oeerfleld Rd.

Hilton Head Island. SC

29928

ISSERMAN. Ellen Lise Jacobscn

140 Whitman St.Morgantown, WV 26505511 N. HighMorgantown, WV 26506

JACOBSON. Ronnie Deborah81/83 BAUP/MAUPAssoc iate

EconoBics Research Associates140 S. DearbornSuite 1512Chicago. IL 60603

1818 N. Halsted. >204Chicago. IL 60614

JAROSS-ARBISE. Janet 81

MUPResearch AssociateUniversity of IllinoisDept. of Landscape Architecture214 Muaford Hall

Urbana. IL 61801

2104 Country SquireUrbana. IL 81801

JENKINS. Harold W, . Jr. 79BUP

627 E. 88th PlaceChicago. IL 60619

JOACHIM, fiiiorgu M. 69 DUPPres IdentThe Distributors Source10301 N.W. 50th St,

Sunrise. KL 33321

4221 N.W, 103 DriveCoral Springs. PL 33065

JOHANNESSON, BJorki 83MUP

TJarnarbraut 19

220 Hafnarf jordurIceland

JOHANSON. Allan R. 69 BL'P

Assistant DirectorOffice of Policy A ManagemontEnergy Division80 WashiriKton StreetHartford, CT 06115

824 Long Hill RoadMiddletown. CT 06457

JOHNSON. April Ccraldean83 BAUP

4475 ProvincetownCountry Club Hills. II,

60477

JOHNSON. Elizabeth A. 78

BAUPResource PlannerIlllnnis Uept, of Energyand Natural Resources325 Wf-st AdnmsSprinRfleid. IL 62706

850 N. BroadCarllnvllle. IL 62626

JOHNSON. Martin Harry72/74 BIIP/MUP

Man.iilur. C.Tplto] Drvc 1 iipmcnt

Chicago Transit AuthoiltyP.O. Unx 3555Chicago, !L 60654

5139 S. Ellis, »3

Chicago. IL 60615

JOHNSON. Rhonda Kay 83

MUPAviation PlannerHoyle, Tanner A Assoc.One Technology ParkLondonderry, NH 03053

189 Beacon St.

Apt. 4F

Boston, MA 02116

JOHNSON. Stephen Paine 68

BUP

6853 21st N.E.Seattle. WA 081 15

JOHNSON, Theodore R. 72

MUP

7100 WhetstoneAlexandria. VA 22306

JONES. Willla« M. 70 BUPPresidentAshley M. Developers, Inc.

1505 N. Wleland St.

Chicago. IL 60610

1505 N. Wieland St.

Chicago, IL 60610

JORDON, Vallmer 63 MUP

9342 S. BishopChicago. IL 60620

JUENGLING, Charles E. 66.

HUPPresidentSwire Properties. Inc.

2905 First Financial TowerTampa. FL 33602

10924 Junlperus PlaceTampa. FL 33618

JUSTICE, Larry Douglas 75

BUP

729 Forestvlew Ave.

Park Ridge. IL 60068

KAIIN, Beth 77 BUPPlanner I

Bellevue Planning Uept.

P.O. Box 1768

Dellcvue, WA 98009

1100 E. KopsblieSeattle. WA 98112

KALISZEWSKI, Ronald E. 61

MSCPGrants AdministratorDevelopmental DisabilitiesProgramDept. of Energy, Planning.A Development550 N. Cedar, Room 201

St. Paul. MN 55101

309 W, Floral DriveSlioreview, HN 55112

KAMINSKY. Jacob 64 MSCPBaltimore Regional PlanningCommi ss i on

9446 Macomber LaneColumbia. HD 21045

KANIIEKE. Copal Krishna 63

MSCPProfessor & Head of TownPlanning Dept.College of EngineeringPoena, India

c/o Mr. Krlshnaja Vi.shnu

KanhereDwarka Building Shastrl

Hall

Tardeo RoadBombay 7. India

KATO. Roy Toru 63 BSCPCity PlannerCity of Gardena1700 W. 162nd St.

Gardena, CA 90217

KATZ, Boris I. 70 Hl'P

Civil EngineerUniversity of Illinois

4 M DivisionChampainn. IL 61820

2002 Burliscm DriveUrbana, IL 6 1 BO]

KATZ. Norman 75 MUPExecutive Vice PresidentHKSrORP Development7 S. Dearborn St.

Suite 116

Chicago, IL 60603

5421 S. Cornel 1

Chicago, IL 6061.'>

KAZLO. Fred Henri 49/51BS/HSCP

6825 N. OsceolaChicago. IL 60631

KEHO. John llutclilnson 85

MUPPi.inner I

City of CarrolltonPlanning IJeparlment

P.O. Box 110535

Carrollton. TX 75006

2050 Kelli-r Springs. «I821

Carrollton. T.X 75000

KEITH. Deborah Jane 85

BAUP

83 BrantwoodElk Grove Village, IL

60007

KELHAN, Paul B. 71 MUPDirectorGwinnett County PlanningDept.280 South Perry St

.

LawrencevI 1 le. GA 30245

2130 Creencrest Drive, N.E.Atlanta. CiA 30345

KIEFKKH, Mark Edward 80BAUPTown PlannerTown of ParkerP.O. Box 667Parker. CO 80104

2570 S. SteeleDenver. CO 80210

KII.LION, Avon Taliaferro79 BAUP

1204 Ellis DriveUrbana, II. 61801

KING. Thomas Eugene 81 .Mi;P

City Planner 1 1

1

Dept. of Planning and UrbanDevelopmentCity of AkronCommunity Planning Division166 S. Hii:h StreetAkron. OH 44308

99 Corson Ave.

Akron. Oil 44302

KITNKY. K.iren El len Blume70 HUPSUCPA Board

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58

HWANG. Al-Ll 78 MUP

10123 Swlrllne WindHouston. TX 77086

INGRISH. Kathleen Rae 78BUPPlanning Director31 I E. franklin St.

Rocklnghan. NC 28379

Rt. 4. Box 148-JKucklneham. NC 28379

IRVIN. Donald L. 54 BSCPPlanning Consultant1012 Brlarfleld Rd.

Jackson. MS 39211

IS8ERG, Gunnar C. 66 BUPPlanning ConsultantPlanning & DevelopmentServices. Inc.

»535 Sexton Bldg.

529 7th St. SouthMinneapolis. MN 55415

ISLEY. David Lee 76 MUPPlanner II

Bernardln. Lochmueller &

Assoc . . Inc.

Hulaan Bldg. . Room 606EvansvJlle. IN 47708

1131 SuffolkWestchester, IL 60153

ISSEL. WllUaa Edgar 64

MSCPDirectorDept . of Planning & Inspections40 Palsetto ParkwayHilton Head Island, SC29928

17 Deerfleld Rd.

Hilton Head Island. SC29928

ISSERMAN. Ellen LIso J.icobsi.'n

140 Whitman St.Morgantown, WV 26505511 N. HighMorgantown, WV 26606

JACOB.SON. Bonnie Deborah81/83 BAUP/MAUPAssociateEconomics Research Associates140 S. DearbornSuite 1512

Chicago, IL 60003

1818 N. Halsted. <204

Chicago. IL 60614

JAROSS-ARBISE. Janet 81

MUPResearch AssociateUniversity of IllinoisDept. of Landscape Architecture214 Munford Hall

Urbana. IL 61801

2104 Country SquireUrbana, IL 61801

JENKINS, Harold W.. Jr. 79

DUP

627 E. 88th PlaceChicago. IL 60619

JENTSCH. Robert W. 60MSCPSenior PlannerFairfax County Office ofComprehensive PlanningFairfax. VA 22030

8370 Greensboro Dr.. »517McLean. VA 22HI2

JOACHIM. George M. 69 BUPPrcs identThe Distributors Source10301 N.W. 50th St.

Sunrise. KL 33321

4221 N.W. 103 DriveCoral Springs. FL 33065

JOHANNESSON. UJorki 83

MUP

TJarnarbraut 19

220 Hafnarf JordurIceland

JOHANSON. Allan R. 69 BUPAssistant DirectorOffice of Policy A ManagementEnergy Division80 Washington StreetHartford, CT 06115

824 Long Hill RoadHlddletown. CT 06457

JOHNSON. April Geraldean83 BAUP

4475 ProvincetownCountry Club Hills. IL

60477

JOHNSON, Elizabeth A. 78

BAUPResource PlannerIllinois Dept. of Energyand Natural Resources325 West AdamsSpringfield. IL 02706

850 N. BroadCarlliiville. IL 62626

JOHNSON. Maitin Harry72/74 DllP/MIIP

Man.iger. Capitol Dcve h)pm(rn t

Clllcago Transit AuthorityP.O. Box 3555

Chicago. IL 60654

5139 S. Ellis. »3

Chicago, IL 60G15

JOHNSON, Rhonda Kay 83

MUPAviation PlannerHoyle, Tanner 4 Assoc.One Technology ParkLondonderry, NH 03053

189 Beacon St.

Apt. 4FBoston, MA 02116

JOHNSON, Stephen Paine 68

BUP

6853 21st N.K.Seattle, WA 98115

JOHNSON. Theodore R. 72

MUP

7100 WhetstoneAlexandria. VA 22306

J0Nl;S, WlllJam M. 70 BUPPresidentAshley M. Developers, Inc.1505 N. Wleland St.

Chicago, IL 60610

1505 N. Wleland St.

Chicago, IL 60610

JORDON. Vallmer 83 HUP

934 2 S. BishopChicago. IL 60620

JUENGLINO. Charles E. 66.

MUl'

PresidentSwire Properties. Inc.

2905 Flist Financial TowerTampa, FL 33602

10924 Juniperus PlaceTampa. FL 33618

JUSTICE. Larry Douglas 75

BUP

729 Forestview Ave.

Park Ridge. IL 60068

KAHN, Beth 77 BUP

Planner I

Bellevue Pl.innlng Dept.P.O. Box 1768Bellevue. WA 98009

1400 E. KopsblleSeattle. WA 98112

KALISZEWSKI, Ronald E. 61

MSCPGrants AdministratorDevelopmental DisabilitiesProgramDept. of Energy. Planning,& Development550 N. Cedar, Room 201

St. Paul. MN 55101

309 W. Floral DriveShoreview. MN 55112

KAMINSKV. .Jacob 64 MSCPllaltimore Regional PlanningCommlss ion

9446 Macomher LaneColumbia. MU 21045

KANIIERE. Gopal Krishna 63

MSCPProfessor & Head of TownPlanning Dept.

College of EngineeringPoona . India

c/o Mr. Krishnaja VishnuKanliere

Owarka Building ShastrlHall

Tardeo RoadBombay 7, India

KATO. Roy Toru 63 BSCPCity PlannerCity of Gardena1700 W. 162nd St.

Gardena. CA 9024 7

KATZ, Boris I. 70 MUP

Civil EngineerUniversity of Illinois

& M DivisionChampaign. H. GI820

2002 Burl Isiin DriveUrbana. IL 61801

KATZ. Norman 75 MUPExecutive Vice PresidentKESCORP Development7 S. Dearborn St.

Suite 116

Chicago. IL 60603

54 21 S. CornellChicago. IL 60615

KA7.L0. Fre<l Henri 49/51BS/MSCP

6825 N. OsceolaChicago. IL f.0631

KEHO, John Hutchinson 85

HUPPlanner I

City of Carrol Iton

Planning DepartmentP.O. Box 110535

Carrol Iton. TX 75006

2050 KelliT Springs, »I824Carrol iton, TX 75006

KEITH, Deborah Jane 85

BAUP

83 BrantwoodElk Grove Village, IL

60007

KELMAN, Paul B. 71 MUPDi rectorGwinnett County PlanningDept

.

280 South Perry St

.

Lawrencevi 1 le. GA 30245

2130 Greencrest Drive. N.E.

Atlanta. GA 30345

KIEFFKK. Hark Edward 80

BAUPTown PlannerTown of ParkerP.O. Ilox 667Parker. CO 80104

2570 S. SteeleDenver. CO 80210

KII.LION. Avon Taliaferro79 BAUP

1204 Ellis DriveUrbana. 11, 61801

KING. Thomas Eugene 81 HUP

City Planner 1 i

I

Uept. of Planning and UrbanD(?velopmen t

City of AkronCommunity Planning Dlvisioit

166 S. Hii;h StreetAkron. OH 44308

99 Corson Ave.

Akron, oil 4 4 302

KITNEY. Karen Ellen Dlume70 MUPSUCPA Board

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59

1100 civic CenterSyracuse. NY 13202

300 StrathBore DriveSyracuse. NY 13207

KI.ATT. Willi an Robert 51

BFALAExecutive DirectorRock Island Econonlc GrowthCorp.

329 18th StreetKock Island. I[. fil201

R. R. 1 . Box 2eA

Moscow. lA 52760

KLEIN. Matthew Morris 77

BUPLaw ClerkCook County States AttorneyOfficeChlcaeo. IL

374 LarchEluhurst. IL 60126

KNUPP. Patricia JoAnne 76

BUPPlannerDeLeuw. Cather & Co.

1201 Connecticut Ave. NW

Washington. DC 20036

307 9th St. NE. Apt. 1

Washington. DC 20002

KOCIAN. Lois Jane Koch 67

BUP

1849 Drake Dr.

Oakland. CA 94611

KOENIG. Thomas Charles 77

BUPSenior PlannerVillage of Schaumberg101 Schaumberg Ct.

Schaumberg. IL 60193

KOLSTE. LaMonte E. 65 HUPChief. Urban Design Program.Maryland-National CapitalPark and Planning Commission14741 Governor OdenBowie Or.

Upper Marlboro. MD 20870

9561 Longlook LaneColumbia. MD 21045

KOTECKI. Leon Thomas 64/67BSCP/MUPDirector. Planning andCommunity DevelopmentCi ty of GrenadaCity Hall

Grenada. MS 38901

KOTULLA. n.mlcl Edward 68BUP

Director of Urban PlanningDel Ray Beach. PL

KOYAMA. Glen Toshlmi 75

MUPPlannerBelt. Collins i Assoc. Ltd.745 Fort Street. 1514Honolulu. HI 96813

253 Kauaakanl St.

Honolulu. HI 96825

KRAINT7.. Franz Petcrlln 85MUPTransportation PlannerSouthwestern IllinoisHeti'op(»l I tJin & KeglonaiPlanning Comnilssiun

203 W, Huln St.

ColUnsvl lie. IL 62234

2 Bauer Dr.

Caseyville. U, 62232

KRAHCZEL. Timothy .loseph

75 MUPDeputy DirectorBedford County PlanningCommiss ion

Russ<<ll Building Annex No.

3

203 S. Juliana St.

Bedford, PA 15522

10103 Kensington I'arkway

Kensington. MD 20795

KREINKS. Edward D. 60

BSCPPresidentKrelnes & Krelnes58 Paseo MlrasnlTlburon. CA 94920

KRIVISKEV. Bruce M. 67

MUPDirectorRegional/Urban DesignAssistance Team Progr-im

The American Institute of

Architects1735 New York Ave. . NWWashington. DC 20006

KUDIESA. James Waller 75

BUPProperty ManagerCentre Properties Ltd.

180 North l.uSalle StreetSvllte 2107Chicago. IL 60601

KIJELTZO. Carl Nils 65 BUPSenior Land Use PlannerMetropolitan Sanitary Dlst.

of Greater Chicago666 N. Lakeshore DriveChicago. IL 60611

222 S. EdgewoodLaGrange Park. IL 60525

KURTZ. Kenneth Bruce 77

BUP

Planning Budget CoordinatorPort Authority on NY/NJ1 WTC. G8ENew York. NY 10048

71 Lexington Ave.. «5

New York. NY 10010

LAMONT. William Jr. 59

MSCPPrincipalMurray and Lament. Inc.

2855 Valmont RoadBoulder. CO 80301

1250 Humbolt. »1503Dejiver. CO 80218

LANGFORD. Michael Carson74 MUP

2217 W. Rosedale So.

Fort Worth. T.X 76110

I.aPI.ANT. Suzanne Johnson74 MUPChief. Service ManagemontyMetrobus3300 NW 32nd Ave.

Miami. FL 33152

4130 Lybyer Ave.

Miami. FL 33133

LARSON. Keith Russell 79BAUP

R36 Lakeside DriveHinsdale. IL 60521

LAUBER. Daniel Mitchell 72HUPPlanning/CommunicationsVillage of Oak Park1 Village IlaJl PlazaOak Park. U, 60302

LEFSTEIN. Lori Ruth 80

BAUP16-A University LakeCarrboro. NC 27510

3312 34th Ave. Ct.

Kock Island. IL 61201

LEINHERGER. Paul D. 70/71BUP/MUPDirector of PlanningFinance & AdministrationCorporate Comm. AffairsLeni-Strauss 4 Co.

San Francisco. CA 94120

1333 Hopkins St.

Berkeley. CA 94702

LEITNER. Martin L. 69 MUPAttorneyHerrlck. Felnstein4635 Wyandotte. «2iOKansas City. MO

12209 WenongaLeawood. KS 66209

LKNSKI. William Ross 77/81

BUP/HUPPlanning AnalystIDOT-DPT310 S. Michigan Ave.

Chicago. IL 60604

620 Wi How LaneGeneva. IL 60134

LEONARD. Hary Ann 75 BUP

Construction Program Hgr.

Seattle Housing Authority120 6th Ave. N.4Seattle. WA 98109

2205 Bigelow Ave. N. . «4

Seattle. WA 90109

I.KUCMS. Edward C. 72 BUPExecutive DirectorApalachcc Regional PlanningCouncI

1

P.O. Box 428Calhoun Courthousenluunlslown. Fl. 32424

LEVENSHON. Myreen Star 77

UUP

1349 West EstesChicago. IL 60626

LEVESQUE. Larry P. 78 HIPAssistant CorporationCounselOffice of CorporationCounselCity of HartfordS.'iO Main StreetHartford. CT 06103

73 Humphrey St

.

Hartford. CT 06106

LEVIN. David 79

555 Umbarger Ave. «inoSan Jose. CA 951 1

1

LEVY. Michael Vincent 68

HUPIntake Coordinator - CASP325 21st StreetNorfolk. VA 23507

230 East 40thNorfolk. VA 23504

LEW. Lawrence 76 MUPAssistant PlannerCity of PleasantonPlartnlng Department200 Bernal AvenuePleasanton. CA 94566

3800 Vineyard Ave.

Apt . B

Pleasanton. CA 94566

LEWIS. AI Ice Edwards 85

MUP

1190 Briarcl Iff Kd . . NE «1

Atlanta. CA 30306

LEWIS. CImrles K. 65 MUPCommunity PlannerHeadquartersU.S. Air Force Engi nret j ng4 ServicesWashington. DC 20332

10119 Sriioolhouse Wo^dsBurke. VA 22015

LEWIS. Darrell Lee Roy 75

BUPDirector of Planning ServicesYnggy Associates. Inc.

Mason City. lA 50401

2000 12 St. NK

Mason City. lA 50101

LIEIIERMAN. Judith Rulh 82

MUPLegislative Staff Inlein

Senate Democratic StaffCapitol Bldg.. Room 533Springfield. IL 6270B

930 S. LincolnSpringfield. IL 62704

LIENKSCH. William C. 72

MUPDirector of Federal Activities

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60

National Parks and Cons.

Assoc

.

170J 18th Street NV

Washington. DC 20009

238 10th Street SE

Washington, DC 20003

LILLYQUIST. Alan C. 70 HUPCoastal Resources SpecialistDepartaent of State, CoastalMannge«ent Program162 Washington Ave.Albany. .NY 12231

401 HaJillton St.

Albany. NY 12210

LIN. Chlng-Fung 78 HUPSnlth Locke Asakura Inc.

770 South Post Oak LaneSuite 350Houston. TX 77056

6438 Grandvale DriveHouston. TX 77027

LINUSEY. Greg Howard 77

BUPEnvironmental Consulting233 Third StreetCrystal Lake, IL 60014

1114 W. Ardrtore

Chicago, IL 60660

LINSENHEYER. Bernard Francis,III 75 BUPLand Surveyor Party ChiefHead Engineers and SurveysBaltlaore, MO

2608 Taylor Ave.

BaltlBore. MD 21234

LOCH. Roland 69 MUPHead. AED-SUDIM Cacl Uenbusch 6

5309 Mechenhel*Fed. Rep. of Gemany

LORAAS. Richard C. 67 MUP

Dl rectorDepartfient of Planning 4

Deve lopment

409 City Hall

Duluth. MN 55802

2113 E. Second St.

Duluth. MN 55812

LOVELACE, Eldrldge Hirst 35

BFALASenior PartnerHarland Bartholonew & Assoc.

7745 CarondcletSt. Louis. MO 63105

5 Brookslde Lane

St. Louis, MO 63124

LUCIBELLA, Frank A. 75 MUPSenior Budget AnalystSenate Ways A Means CommitteeStatehouse, Beacon Hill

Boston. MA 02133

LUENSHAN. John Robert 54

BSLO/BFALADirector

Chautauqua County Dept . ofPlanning & DevelopmentCourthouse AdditionHayvllle, NY 14757

11 Oak StreetHayvllle, NY 14757

LYMAN, James Howard 80

BAUPPlannerDonald Kane Associates,Inc.

327 S. LnSallc. Suite 900Chlcngo. IL 60604

54 1 Wrlghtwood t2W

Chicago. II. 60611

LYNCH. Cynthia Uurko 70

HUP6326 W. WisconsinWauwatosa. WI 53213

LYNCH. Mary Margaret 74

HUPExecutive DirectorDuriMil of HtiliiclpHl Reseal-ch

73 Richmond W. , »404

Toi'onto. OntHi'io

Canada H5H 2AI

591 Church St. . Apt. 2

Toronto. OntarioCanada M4Y 1N4

HACRIS. Dean Louis 58

HSCPDirector of PlanningDept. of City l'Iani\Inc

Snn Francisco. CA 94102

2040 Laguna St. . «202

San Francisco. CA 94115

HACZKA, Michael J. 79

BAUPInvestment AnalystMi'tro Financial Group20 N. Michigan Ave.

Chicago. IL 60602

4510 N. MozartChicago, IL 60625

HAINES, Penelope Deborah73 BUPVI ce-Preslderit

Security Pacific NationalBank333 S. Hope St. 1142-13

Los Angeles, Ca 90071

545 E. Cypress Ave.. Unit E

Burbank. CA 91501

MAJORS, Karen L. 77 MUPRedevelopment PlannerCity of San Pablo*1 Alvarado SquareSan Pablo. CA 94806

1039 Vi Ilage OaksMartinez. CA 94553

MALINOWSKI. Joanne 76 BUPDeputy Controller -

AdministrationOffice of the Controller200 Orange StreetNew Haven. CT 06510

461 Whalley Ave. . «204

New Haven, CT 06511

HANDEL, Robert Gordon 81

HUP

104 Chapman St.

Watertown. HA 02172

MARINER. Richard Dean 68

MUP

645 W. Sheridan Rd. «1

Chicago. IL 60613

HARLATT. Richard Harvln82/04 BAUP/MUPUSA - CERLP.O. Box 4005Champaign, IL 61820

902 - 7 Beck Dr.

Urbana. IL fiiooi

MARSHALL, Roger G. 82 HUPTransportation PlannerChampaign County RegionalPlanning CommissionP.O. Ilox 339

Urbana. IL 61801

1634 Valley Rd.

Champaign. IL 61820

MARTIN. Donald Stephen 81

BAUP

P.O. Box 298

LlviiiKSton. KY 40445

MARTIN, Mary V. 82 BAUP

846 E. Baldwin RoadPalatine, IL 60067

HATH I EN, James A. 81 HUPExecutive Dil'ector

Gallup DowntownDevelopment GroupCity HallP.O. Box 1270

Gallup. NM 87301

220 Nizhoni, «27

Gallup, NH 87301

MATTIIEIS. Robert Fred 57

BSCPActing. Chief. SpecialProjects BranchOffice of Space Planningand Hanagemetit

Public Buildings Service,CSA19lh and E Streets, N.W.

Washington, DC 20405

3400 N. Geo. Mason Dr.

Arlington. VA 22207

HAYNARD. Paul Freedman 76

BUP

1120 PennsylvaniaWindsor. IL 61957

MAZZETTA, Thomas John 77

nup1004 Sussex DriveNorthbrook. IL 60062

McCABE. Kathleen Ann 75

BUP

592 BeechRosllndale. HA 02131

McCULI.nUGH, Davlil R. 60

MSCP

7843 BairnsdaleDowney. CA 90240

McDANIEI.. Gregory Edward77/81 BUP/HUP

3511 Del Lago CircleApt. 194

Tampa. FL 33614

HcDONOUGH. Michael B. 76

HUPDeputy City Manager ForCommunity Ueve lo|>m('nt

Civic Center Complexl.ongmont, CO 80501

1201 Autumn CourtLongmont, CO 80501

McGUIRE, Carol Lynn Hoffm.iu

81 BAUP

R. R. «2

Maroa, IL 61756

McGUIRE. Edward G. 75 MUPWashington State EnergyOfficeion E. UnionOlympla, Wa 98507

4502 N. 10th St

.

Tacoma. WA 90406

McGUIRE. Susan K. Moyer 75

MUP

PI annerWllsey 4 Ham. Inc.

4218 S. Steele St.

Tacoma. WA 98406

4502 N. 10th St.

Tacoma, WA 98406

McKOWN, Rette Furgang 73

MUPPlanning CoordinatorCity of Champaign102 N. Neil St.

Cliampalgn. IL 61820

1320 AlmsChnmpaign. IL 61820

Mclaughlin. James Francis67/68 BUP/MUPOffice of ComprehensiveP I ann 1 ngSlate House Annex26 Pleasant St

.

Concord. NH 03301

2 1/2 Deacon St

.

Concord. NH 03301

HcRAE. Janice 85

4040 ElmhurstDetroit. MI 48204

HrVEIGH. Thomas A.. Jr. 70

MUPDirector of Finance &

PlanningAmerican Youth Hostels. Inc.

Delaplane, VA 22025

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61

1514 Buena Vlata Ave.

McLean, VA 22101

MEA, Susan 84 BAUP

401 E. ChalaersApt. 417

Chaapaltrn, IL 61820

MEAYS, Barton Richards SB

BSCP

9303 Marina Pacirica Drive

NorthLong Deach, CA 90803

MEE, Joy Greenslade Akin 70

MIJP

Assistant Planning Director

City of PhoenixPlanning Department125 E. WashingtonPhoenix, AZ 85004

2550 E. Denton Lane

Phoenix. AZ 85016

MEE, Wllllaa R. , Jr. 70

MUPPlanner III

Planning Department251 V. WashingtonRoo> 601

Phoenix, AZ 85003

2550 E. Denton Lane

Phoenix, AZ 85018

MENDELSON, Robert Eugene 66

MUP

7532 OxfordClayton. MO 63105

MERKIN. Laura S. 81 MUPCity PlannerCity of ChicagoDept. of Public WorksBureau of TransportationPlanning & PrniiraBmlng320 N. Clark. Room 411

Chicago. IL 60610

446 W. Arlington Place «3

Chicago. IL 60614

MESSENGER, Katharine Anne72 MUPMortgage AnalystDRG Financial Corp.1909 K St. NWWashington. DC 20006

MEWADA. Hargovlnd K. 50

MSCPChief Town Planner 4 SpecialSecretaryPanchayatsHousing & Urban DevelopmentDepartmentBloom No. 11, SachlvalayaGANDHINAGAR 382010Gujarat, India

18, Saurabh SocietyNr. St. Xavler's H. SchoolMemnager RoadNavrangpura. AHMEDABAD 380009

MICHIE. Scott A. 78 MUPPersonnel DirectorAdmlnlitrotlve Aiit

.

City of NewtonP.O. Box 426Newton. KS 67114

916 S. PineNewton, KS 67114

MILKINT. Craig R. 83/B6BAUP/MUPReal Estate AnalystVMS Realty. Inc.

8700 W. Br-yn MawrChicago. IL 60631

2824 N. Orchard »2FChicago. IL 60657

MILLER. Barry Jay 81 DAUPAssociate Planner II

Sedway - Cooke Assoc.350 Pacific Ave.

3rd FloorSan Francisco, CA 94111

2410 OakBerkeley, CA 94708

MILLER, Brian Joel 80 MUPEconomist PlannerNew England Regional Commission141 Milk St.

Boston. MA 02109

MILLINER, Walter T. 59

MSCP

P.O. Box 178

Gloucester Point, VA 23062

MILLS, Raymond William 40

BFALARaymond W. Mills & Assoc.

2515 Ashman St.

Midland. MI 48640

3212 W. Nelson St.

Midland. MI 48640

MINNOCH, James Edward 57

MSCPDirector of CommunityPlanningState of New Hampshire2 1/2 Beacon St.

Concord. NH 03301

1 354 Hall St.

Manchester. NY 03104

MITCHELL, Keith Vincent 80

MUP

P.O. Box 21426Seattle. WA 98111

MIURA. Howard 59 BSCPDirector of Planning. Land

Development and SalesP.O. Drawer HH

Page, AZ 86040

P.O. Box 2768

Page, AZ 86040

MOELLER, Anne Marie Schacffcr75 BUP

5514 Long Forest Dr,

Houston, TX 77088

MOEI.LER. John Robert 66

BSCPRegional DirectorLocal Planning Office

Dept. of Econ 4 CommunityDevelopment540 McCalUe AveSuite 700Chattanooga. TN 37402

3529 Dell TrailChattanooga. TN 37411

MOHD-NOORDIN. MD , Na7rl 86

BAUP

1105 W. Main »3

Urbana. IL 61801

HONK. William Patrick74/75 BUP/MUPLand Use Planning andZoning ConsultantP.O. Box 114 15

Baltimore. MD 21239

25 Stoneridite Ct.

Baltimore. MD 21239

MONTARZINO. Alicia 82 HUP204 Humford HallUrbana. IL 61801

307 E. Armory. Apt. 301

Champaign. IL 61820

.MOORE. Alan Wesley 68 BUP

1008 W. GreenChampaign. IL 61820

MOORE. Andrew J. 71 BUPMechanicRich's Small EnginesHighway 13 NorthWaynesboro. TN 38485

Route 3. Box 265AWaynesboro, TN 38485

MOORE. Daniel Warren 49

BFAI.A

PartnerLesllif R. Crlpps 4 Assoc.

Rt. 2. Box 374

Berrien Springs. Ml 49103

3329 Rldgewood TrailBerrien Springs, MI 49103

MOORE. Lawrence Bucher 62

BSCPConsul tantBeecher Development Co.

Newport Beach. CA 92660

1U33 Port Bishop PlaceNewport Beach. CA 92660

MOORK. Thomas Eldon 50/51

BFALA/MSCPCity Planning Consultant246 Mulberry PlaceRldgewood. N.) 07jriO

Two Rector St.

New York. NY 10006

MOREIRA-PAREJA. Luis 76

MUP

Caslllu 2014 (U)

Guayaquil. Ecuador

MOSCOVICH. Jose Luis 83

HAUP

c/o Hilton Wicks280 Lee StreetOakland. CA 94610

MREEN. Robert Anthony 76

BUP

319 Wood StreetO'Fallon, MO 63366-2826

MUNSHAW. Nancy Clare 79

MUPCommunity DevelopmentSupervisorCity of Webster Groves4 E. LockwoodWebster Groves, MO 631 lU

394U RussellSt. Louis, .MO 63110

MUSCOVITCH, Arthur Sol 66

MUl'

102 Haverstock HillHampstead NW 3

London. England

MYEKS. Roger E. 68 BUPAssociate PlannerCity of Galesbiirg161 S. Cherry St

.

Calesburg. IL 61401

960 N. Cherry St.

Calesburg. IL 61401

NANETTI . Raffaella Y. 70

MUPAssistant ProfessorUniversity of Illinois at

Chicago CircleSchool of Urban PlanningBox 4348Chicago. IL 60680

2617 North WayneChicago. IL 60614

NAPIIIN. Rosem.iry llrlnid 74

MUP732 HinmanEvanston. IL 60202

210 Broadway Ave.WIlmeltQ. IL 60091

NARDI, Patrick J. 66 lisrp

The Hoffman Gi-oup

1070 Roselle Rd

.

noffman Estates. IL 60195

7108 N. Kedvale St

.

Lincolnwciod. IL 60646

NEAL. Wl I 1 lam R. 73 HUPMarshall County PlanningComm i ss ion

Room 302 County Building1 12 W. Jefferson SI reel

Plymouth. IN 4 6563

P.O. Box 42

Bourbon. IN 46504

NEALE. Cliarles A. 79 MUPProject M.(nager

Pflum, Kl.iusmeler & Wagner7125 Reading RoadCincinnati, OH 45237

3775 Hyde Park Ave.

Cincinnati , Oil 45209

Page 80: Alumni news - CORE

NEDD. Rolda 84 HUP

630 Rock Cr. Church Rd..KM

Washington, DC 20010

NELLANS. Charles J. 79 HUP

Business Mnnager

Evanston Public Library

n03 OrrlnctonEvanston. I L 60201

NELSON. Julia A. Chase 75

MUPCoMunlty nevelopm.-nt

Genesee County Planning

Co»»lsslon1101 Beach St.

Flint. Ml 48502

2314 Mountain Ave.

Flint. Ml 48503

NELSON. WlUla. L. '18

BFALAPresidentNelson & Associates. Inc.

1733 N. Farwell Ave.

Milwaukee. WI 53202

3018 Interlaken Dr.

Ocononowoc. Wl 53066

NEVILLE. Donald C. 60 MSCP

42226 N. Deep Lake Road

Ant loch, IL 60002

NEVITT. Robert Merrltt 80

BAUP

3312 HuBboldt Ave. S.

Minneapolis. HN 55408

NICHOLAS. Hilton J. 69 HUP

Vice-President

Mehus Const. .Inc.

629 N. Santa Cruz Ave.

Los Galos. CA 95030

240 Verba Santa Ave.

LOS Altos. CA 94022

NIELSEN. Christopher E«ll

75 BUP

1536 LeMoyne. »fl

LOS Angeles, CA 90026

NIEMANN, Donald T. 78 MUP

Raton/Colfax County Planner

P.O. Box 910

Raton. NM 87740

NIXON. Reginald Todd 77

MUP

2800 Rt. 32

K. Friendship. MD 21794

CAKES, Kevin Donald 83 MUP

Assoc. Planner

sandy City. Utah

8731 Gladiator Way

Sandy. Utah 84070

O'DONNELL, Michael J. 79

MUPPlanner Manager

East Central Illinois Area

Agency on Aging

1003 Maple Hill Rd.

Blooillngton. IL 61701

912 W. Oakland Ave.

Bloonlngton. IL 61701

O'DONNELL. Patricia 82/B5

MLA/MUPAssociateWalmsley & Company. Inc.

462 Bromlway

5th Floor

New York. NY 10013

40 Woodslde Ave.

Wcstport. CT 00880

O'DONNELL. Robert Merrill

38 BFAI.A

Chalrxan Emeritus

IIOII Assoc. Inc.

4100 E. Miss. Ave.

Denver, CO 80222

2552 E. Alameda «55

Denver. CO 80209

ODUWOLE. Oluloyln A. 84

HUP

p 0. Box 16873

St. Louis. MO 63105

OKAFOR. Wilfred Ike 83

HUPUTEPuniversity of Michigan

218 Carver Bldg.

Ann Arbor. Ml 48109

OLANIPEKUN. Olaylnra A. 79

MUPResearch Analyst

Delaware Valley Reglnoal

Plannint: Commlson

The Bourge Bldg.

21 South 5th Street

Philadelphia. PA 19106

Unlv of Pennsylvania

Dept. of Civil Englneerlni;

113 Towne Bldg. D3

Philadelphia. PA 19104

OLSON. George N. 67 HUP

Executive Director

Kocklnghai, Planning Comm.

1 Water Street

Exeter, Nil 038.33

18 Oak Street

Exeter. NH 03S33

OMAR. Hohd Zakl 86 BAUP

1105 W. Main. «3

Urbana. IL 61801

ONEAL. Claire Elno 26

BSLAlandscape Coordinator

Avco Community Developers

16770 W. Bernardo Dr.

San Diego, CA 92127

O'SIIAUCHNESSY. Daniel 82

BAUP

919 Elmwood Ave.

Wllmelte. IL 60091

PAGE. Job" Michael 77 HUP

Chief/Environmental Planning

PDUC001 Pacific Ave.

Dallas, TX 75202

509 Sundown Circle

Piano. TX 75023

PAGE. John Scott 79 HUP

Zoning Administrator

Dept. of Community Development

217 Washington

Cedar Falls. lA 50613

1603 Iowa St

.

Cedar Falls. lA 50613

PALHQUIST. Jeffrey David

81 BAUP

c/o Kenneth E. Palmqulst

1209 Ottawa Avenue

Aurora. IL 60506

PANDOI.FI. Terrl Ann 83

BAUP

296 Winding Road South

Ardsley. NY 10504

PAPKE. Gary R. 75 MUP

Consultant

Shlaes * Co.

20 N. Michigan

Chicago. IL 60602

215 S. Grove

Oak Park. IL 60302

PARIS. Ella Isabel Flores

63 BSCP

Senior Planner

City of San Dlcgo

202 C Street

sun Diego. CA 92101

1477 La Playa Ave.

San Diego. CA 92109

PARK. Stephen Michael 73

BUPVillage Planner

100 S. Emerson

m. Prospect. IL 60056

411 mini Dr.

Carol Stream. IL 60188

Oi

540-4 Main St.

Roosevelt Island. NY 10044

PARSONS. Stanley Steve 74

HUP_ ,

Land Pollution Division

Illinois Environmental

Protect ion Ai;eii(:y

2200 ChurchI II Rd-

Sprlngrield. II. 62702

PATTON. Car! Vernon. Jl'.

69 HUP

Dean,

School of Architecture and

Urban Planning

University of Wisconsin

p 0. Box 413

Milwaukee. WI 53201

4477 N. Prospect

Shorewood. Wl 53211

PAULL. Edward Evans 73 HUP

Principal Planner

Baltimore City Planning

Dept.222 E. Saratoga St.

Baltimore. HD 21202

2825 Guilford

Baltimore, HD 21218

PAULL, Sandra Jean 77 BUP

National College of Education

2840 Sheridan Rd.

Evanston. IL 60201

1752 Hacloan Ct

.

Glenvlew. IL 60025

PAYNE. Thomas Owen 73 HUP

Principal

Trkla. Petllgrcw. Allen «

Payne123 W. Hadison

Suite 1200

Chicago. IL 60602

775 S Greenbay Rd.

Lake Forrest. IL 60045

PEARCE. Brian Emery 83

BAUP

2130 Prentiss Dr. »R-207

Downers Grove. IL 6051G

PECK. Hary Catherine 81

HUP

616 S. Grand. Apt. A

Bozeman. HT 59715

PECUCCI. Thomas F. 83 BAUP

17484 - 180 Plaza del

Curtldor

San Diego. CA 92128

ONTIVEROS. Raymond A. 75

MUP

465 Rockwell Blvd.

Sparks, NV 89431

PARKIN. Roy Arthur 76 BUP

Director ot Planning and

Environmental Servlcew

City of Galesburg

161 S. Cherry St.

P.O. Box 1387

Galesburg. IL 61401

873 Bateman St

.

Galesburg. IL 61401

PARNES. Laurence C. 69 HUP

Assistant Executive Director

Department of City Planning

2 Lafayette St.

New York. NY 10007

3645 N. Pontiac

Chicago. IL 60634

PERLHAN. Steven David 68

BUPVice President

Wencal Management. Inc.

5528 Everglades St.

Suite A

Ventura. CA 93003

768 Elko Ave.

Ventura. CA 93004

PERRY. Gregg Ellis 80 MUP

Assistant to the Director

Page 81: Alumni news - CORE

63

Office of Adalsslons &

RecordsUniversity of IJiinols506 S. Wright10 Adulnlstratlon Bldg.Uriiana. IL 61801

Pox 2965. Station A

Chnapniifn, IL 61820

PFRSON. Jeffrey David 80

BAUPAccountantRubin, Brown. Gornsteln &

Co.

230 S. Be«lston Ave.

St. Louis. «0 63105

P.O. Box 50048

St. Louis. MO 63105

PESCITELLI. Dennis Robert

74 MUPTranaportat ion/EnvlronaentalCoordinatorDept . of Transportation2300 S. Dlrkscn ParkwaySpringfield, IL 62764

2112 N. 21st St.

Sprlnefield. IL 62702

PETERS. E. Ja»es 84 MUP

65 S. May St.

Aurora. IL 60506

PETRIE. Patricia Donahoe 83

MUP

503 S. ChicagoChaapalgn, IL 61821

PETTIGREW, John C. 80 BSCPTrkla. Pettlgrew, Allen »

Payne123 West Madison St.

Suite 1200Chicago. IL 60602

PEYER. Peter V. 79 MUPSenior Planner/Cable CoordinatorVillage of Skokle5121 Oakton St.

Skokle. IL 60077

2655 N. Landen DriveMelrose Park. IL 60164

PHILLIPS, York Lee 69 BUPDirector of Planning &

DevelopaentDept. of Management A

Developaent10 SW Second Ave.

Gainesville. FL 32601

6002 NW 33rd St.

Gainesville. FL 32608

PICKARO. John Grahaa 69

MUP

PrincipalHi les-Plckard Assoc.11484 Washington Plaza WestReston. VA 22090

4305 38th Street. NWWashington. DC 20007PIFRNAS-DAVENPORT. GallBlanche 73 BUPAdalnlatratlve Assistant

Amer. Assoc, of SchoolLibrarians50 E. Huron St.

Chicago. IL 60011

22400 Butterflcld Dr. »5I4Rlrhton Piitk. II. 60471

Pinn. Kilw.ird A. 71 HUPDl rectorOffice of Pliiimlng

Maryland Dept. of Healthand MriUal Hygiene201 W. Preston St.

Baltimore. HI) 21201

9263 Red Cart Ct

.

Colunbla, MD 21045

POLLOCK. Leslie S. 68 MUPPrincipal ConsultantCamlros Ltd.

173 W. MadisonChicago, IL 60602

104 9thWllBiette, IL 60091

POMEKOy. Myles E. 72 HUPHead of Neighborhood PlanningSt. Louis Community DevelopmentAgency317 N. Eleventh St

.

St. Louis, MO 63101

4472 McPherson Ave.

St. Louis. HO 63108

POOL. Jeffrey William 81

BAUPStudent InternSouthern California RapidTrnnait District425 S. MainLos Angeles, CA 90013

PORTER, Diane Harle 69

MUPCongressman Ed Townes Staff

429 CI inton Ave.

Brooklyn. NY 11238

PORTER. Douglas R. 60

MSCPDirector. Growth PolicyResearchUrban Land Institute1090 Vermont Ave. NW

Washington. DC 20005

5406 Trent St.

Chevy Chase. MD 20815

POUPARD, Clare Z. 82 MUPStaff CoordinatorFairfax County4100 Chain Bridge Road

Fairfax. VA 22030

11685 Charter Oak Ct. »201

Reaton. VA 220U0

POUPARD, Thomas Ronan 82

MUPPrincipal PlannerTown of LeosbufgP.O. Box 88

Leesburg. VA 22075

11685 Charter Onk Ct . »20I

Reston. VA 220<I0

POUR, Ivan M. 75 MUPExecutive DirectorCambridge MetropolitanHousing Authority145 West Btli StreetCambridge. Oil 43725

204 Knneland Hd

.

New Haven, CT 06512

POUR. Sarah Susan Doros 74

MUPDirectorCommunity DevelopmentCity of Cambridge1 131 SteubenvU le Ave.

Cambridge, OH 43725

294 Kneeland Rd.

New Haven. Ct 06512

POWELL. Delmer H. . Jr. 79

MUPDirectorPlanning A ProgrammingLake County Highway Dept.

P.O. Box 220Winchester RoadLlbcrtyville. IL 60048

348 Margaret TerraceGary. IL 60013

POWELL, Douglas S. 82

BAUP

613 W. 8thAustin. TX 78701

POWERS, James E. 71 BUP

2009 Sharon Ave.

Hockford. IL 61103

POWERS. William P. 62

HSCPSan Mateo County PlanningDept

.

County Government CenterRedwood City, CA 94063

POWERS. William N. 79 MUPIllinois Department ofTransportat ion

Division of Water Resources300 North StateRoom 1010

Chicago. IL 60610

765 Hickory LaneCarol Stream. IL 60188

POYANT. Ucnlse Marie 82

MUP

39 Rldgewood Rd

.

New Bedford, MA 02745

PRATT, Genevieve Jeanne 74

Mill'

c/o Penelope Mulconrey1119 State St.

Beardstown. IL 62618

130 RainesWillie Hall . II, 62092

PREISSNER, Robert 69 MUPSperial Assistant to Reg.

AdministratorU.S. Department of Housingan<I Urban Development26 Federal Plaza

Room 3543New York, NY 10007

77 West 85th St.New York. NV 10024

PKKM. Clyile El lot H3 HUPTransportation PlannerHld-Amerlca Regional ("iiuniil

20 West Ninth StreetSuite 700

Kansas City. HO 64105 9900

4957 BoothWestwnod. KS 66205

PRICE. Tryner Lloyd 80

BAUP

415 Fullerton ParkwayApt. 201

Chicago, IL 60614

PRIESTLEY. Thomas Justin69 BUPDept. of Landscape Architecture202 Wurster HallUniversity of CaliforniaBerkeley. CA 94720

3330 Wisconsin St.

Oakland. CA 94602

PROCTOR. Edward W. 35

BFALAProctor Bowers & Assoc.3003 Carlisle St.

Dallas. TX 75204

9129 Villa Park CircleDallas. TX 75225

PHZYPYSZNY. Karen Ann 82

MUPCity Planner I

City of ChicagoDepartment of HousingResidential Renewal Div.31« S. Michigan Ave.

Chicago. IL 60604

6723 HiawathaClllcago. IL 60646

PUI.LIAM. Paul E. 47 BFARegistered ArchitectDeWitl Amdal t Assoc.263 South ParkDecatur. IL 62523

91 Rldgeway DriveDecatur. IL 62521

PUTMAN. Jennifer Klein 76

BUPDeputy AssessorCunningham Township2C,'> 1/2 w. Green St.

Urbana. IL 61801

1006 W. ClarkUrbana. IL 61801

PUZIO. Raymond Joseph 65

BUI'

Chiefphysical and EnvironmentalResource Planning.Mnrylajid Di-parlment of

Slate Planning301 W Prosinn St

.

n.iitimore. MD 21201

Page 82: Alumni news - CORE

64

5551 Phelps Luck DriveColuabla. NO 2104S

RABB. Gregory P. 78 MUP

142 Playter St.

Buffalo. NY 14212

RAHMAAN, Anls-Ur 61/76MSCP/Ph.DCoordinatorUrban and Regional PlanningProjectsc/o United Nations Dev.

ProgranP.O. B0!( 558

RIYADH 11421Saudi Arabia

53 Tor RoadWapplnger Falls. NY 12590

RAMPKE. Cheryl Mildred 76

BUP1435 Marlbarough Lane

Los Altos. CA 94022

417 Evergreen Ave.

Waukegan. IL 60085

RAYCRAFT. Rita Irene 81

BAUP

15815 Locust Crove Dr.

Houston. TX 77095

RAYHON. Linda 85 HUPEnvironaental ProtectionSpecial 1st

Illinois EPADivision of Water PollutionContro

1

Planning Section2600 Churchill Rd.

Springfield. IL 62706

6 Redwood LaneSpringfield. IL 62704

REDELL. Richard George 34

BKALA

12115 San Vicente Blvd. #107

Los Angeles. CA 90049

HEDIEHS. Christopher Robert

84 BAUP

URH Sherman. <230Chaapalgn. IL 61820

REED. Carlton Charles 59

BSCPDeputy DirectorCity Developnent Departaent

15th Floor, City Hall

Kansas City, HO 64106

2510 Grand Ave.

Apt. 1503Kansas City, MO 64108

REED. Wallace E. 61 MSCPAssociate ProfessorDepartment of EnvlronmentakSciencesUniversity of VirginiaCharlottesville. VA 22903

REEDER. Klrsten R. 78 MUP

823 Randolph CourtSprlngfleJd, IL 62700

REES. Susan Elizabeth 78

MUP

1733 20th St. NWWashington. DC 20009

REGNIER. Emily Catherine72/77 nilP/MIIP

Property M.iruiger

Airport Authority of WashoeCountyP.O. Box 12490Rend. NV 81)510

912 7th St.

Sparks. NV 89431

RELLER. Stuart 71 HUPAssociateCorporate AffairsEll Lilly & Co.

Indianapolis, IN 46220

5B45 Carrol Hon Ave.

IndlanpoUs. IN 46220

RENNICK. Julie Laura 85

BAUP

305 N. Lincoln #3058Urbana. IL 01801

RICHTER. Alan C. 63 HSCPSenior Vice PresidentUnited Van LinesFcnton. HO 63026

61 RldjTcmoorr

Clayton, MO 63105

RICHTER. Robert W. 02

MSCPProject ManagerByrd. Tall amy. MacDonaldand Lewis675 E. Irving ParkKoselle. IL 60172

22 W. 551 TamarackGlen El lyn. II. 60137

RIMAVICIUS. Lucia Egle 83

MUPAssociateTeska Assoc . . Inc.

627 Grove St.

Evanston. IL 61801

4102 S. Montgomery Ave.

Chicago. IL 60632

RINGE. James D. 60 BSCPDirector of CommunityDevelopmentCity of Colorado SpringsBox 1575 City Hall

Colorado Springs. CO 80901

614 Park TerraceColorado Springs. CO 80903

ROAKS. Ronald L. 70 MUPCommunity DevelopmentCoordintor1300 Civic Center41 I Montgomery St.

Syracuse. NY 13202

323 Barrlngton Rd.

Syracuse. NY 13214

ROBBINS. Gerald M. 71 MUP

ManagerMission VIeJo Co.

HIsslon VIcJo, CA 92690

ROBERTS, Patricia Button68 MUPSenior LecturerDijpnrtment of Town PlanningPolytechnic of South HankWandsworth RoadLondon SW 8

ENGLAND

2. Sumburgh RoadLondon SW 12

ENGLAND

ROBINSON. Frederic McGeorge3fi BFALA

509 Bouldercrest Dr.

Marietta. GA 30064

ROBINSON. Raymond C. , Jr.

63 MSCPDirector of Planning andOeve lopmeilt

Stow Municipal Building3760 Darrow RoadStow. OH 44224

4413 S. Main St.

Akron. OH 44319

ROBI.ING. Robert Michael 71

HUPDeputy DirectorDepartment of MetropolitanDevelopment327 Civic Center ComplexEvansvllle. IN 47708

CIS Washington Ave.Evansvllle. IN 47713

ROCKER. Lois C. 78/81BAUP/MUPProgram SpecialistFederal Insurance Admin.

500 C Street. SW

Washington. DC 20472

2801 Quebec St. . NW

Apt. 530Washington. DC 20008

RODGERS, Edwin B. 70 HUPArchitectGarner. HIcks & Browner,

Inc.

33 Orleans PlazaHilton Head Island, SC

29928

48 SqulresgateHilton Head Island, SC

29928

ROGIER. David Allan 57

BFALADirector of PlanningBazzell-Phl 1 1 Ips & Assoc.Inc.

1305 S. MattIs Ave.

Champaign. IL 61820

ROSEN. Marianna Eve 80

BAUPCommunity DevelopmentSprclal is

t

Village of BellwoodCommunity Relations Dept.

3200 Washington Blvd.Bellwood, IL 60104

4309 St. Charles Rd.

Bellwood, IL 60104

ROSENMKOOK, Donald E. 67

MUPExecutive DirectorSouthwestern WisconsinRegional Planning Cumm.

426 Karmand UrbanyPlattevllle. WI 53818

1230 Sunset DrivePlattevllle, WI 53818

ROTTMAN, David B. 71 BUP

6718 N, SeelcyChicago, IL 60645

RUDER, Frank Kenneth 50

BFALAPGAV10 Stadium PlazaSt. Louis. MO 63102

7118 Grant Village DriveSt. Louis. .HO 63123

RIIPPF.CK. Max P. 70 HUPSenior Associate/PlanningCarl A. WorthlrigtonPartnership1309 Si)ruce

Doulder. CO 80302

3477 Iris Ct.

Boulder. CO 80302

RUPPRECHT. Ann 84 BAUPCity ClerkTown of AnthonyP.O. Box 1269

Anthony. T.\ 88021

RUSSELHANN. Anita H. 79

HUPChief PlannerCity of Garland

]

P.O. Box 469002 (

Garland. TX 75046-9002 '

860 Lilac DriveGarland. TX 75040 '

SADER. Abdelaziz Mohamd 5R

MSCPHeadPlanning DepartmentAlexandria GnvornrateAlexandria, Egypt

34, Avenue of 23rd of July

Alexandria, Egypt

SANDS, Carolyn H. 78 MUP1205 W. Church St . , «3

Champaign, IL 61820

308 S. EllenHomer. IL 61849

SAWISLAK, Daniel Robert B3

BAUP

8146 KllbournSkokin, IL 60076

SCJIECK, Cliarles S. 65 MUP

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65

village Planner Director6101 CapuUna Ave.

Morton Grove, IL 60053

9306 North LotusSkokle, IL 60077

SCHELLIE. Kenneth Laxrcnce30 BSLA

5701 E. Glenn St. , «21

Tuscon. AZ 85712

SCHENK. Carl J. 63 MSCPEnvironmental PlannerMetropolitan Council300 Metro Square Bldg.

St. Paul, MN 55101

1705 Nokoils CourtMinneapolis, MN 55417

SCHERER, Dale Robert 47/48BFALA/MSCP

c/o W. G. Scherer4002 Canyonwood Dr.

Austin. TX 78735

SCHLEICHER. Barbara A. 75

MUPDirectorDept. of Neighborhood ServicesCity of Aurora44 E. Downer PI.

Aurora, IL 60505

123 Grace Ct.

Aurora, IL 60505

SCHMIDT. Allan H. 63 MSCPLaboratory for Coiiputer

Graphics and Spatial AnalysisHarvard University520 Gund Hall

48 Quincy St

.

Caabridge. MA 02138

19S Caabrldge TurnpikeConcord. MA 01742

SCHNEIDER, Judy Beth 81

BAUP

870 Ballantrae Dr.

Northbrook. IL 60062

SCHNEIDERMEYER. Melvln J.

63/66 BSCP/MUPDirector of EnvironaentalAffairsUnited Technologies Corp.1 Financial PlazaUTC BuildingHartford. CT 06101

108 Woodfleld Rd.

Southington, CT 06489

SCHOLZ. Gordon P. 71 MUPAssociate ProfjessorArchitecture A Coaaunlty ARegional Planning208 Former Law BuildingUniversity of NebraskaLincoln. NE 68588-0105

743 South I3th St.

Lincoln. NE 88508

SCHRADER. Ja»es C. 60 DSCP467 Forestway Dr.Buffalo Grove, IL 80090

SCHUBERT. Michael F. 75

MUPAssociate DirectorNeighborhood Housing Servicesof Chicago. Inc.

123 N. Jefferson. 4tli FloorChicago. IL 60606

2144 W. CortlandChicago. II. 60647

SCIIWART, Jonnne L. 85BAUP

c/o 1007 Sunnycrest Dr.

Urbana. IL 61801

SCOTT, Laurie ileth 80BAUPMain Street Project Manager302 N. MainMt. Carroll. IL 61053

732 S. JacksonMount Carrol 1 . IL 61053

SEELIG. Jerome M. 71 BUPPresidentPine Wood Securites208 S. LaSalle <I460Chicago. IL 60604

2755 EastwoodEvanston, IL 60201

SEGGERMAN. Karen 84 DAUP305 N. Lincoln »3058Urbana. IL 61801

519 W. Reynolds St.

Pontlac, IL 61764

SETHI, Vljay K. 75 MUPCounty AdministratorClay County Courtliouse

Moorhead. MN 56560

1703 S. 19th St.

Moorhead. MN 56560

SHANE. Donald A. 78 MUP

738 Elkhart Lake Dr.

Elkhart Lake, Wl 53020

SHEAUE, Clna Lynn Nntarus75 BUP

1802 N. BeechMt. Prospect. IL 60056

SILBERG. Nancy Jean 72

MUP

1506 22nd Ave. EastSeattle. WA 98112

SIMON. Charles H. 65 MUPCharles Simon/Henry Scheffer.Architects/Planning Consul tan ts

42 Wei lingtori St. EastToronto. OntarioCannda M5E 1C7

The Mill Main StreetEden Ml lis (intnrio

Canada NOB 1 1'O

SIMON, David Paul 78 HUPTransportation PlannerGenesee Trnnsportat Ion

Council

65 W. Broad St.

Rochester. NY 14618

237 Greystone LaneApt. 10Rochester. NY 14618

SIMONDS. Robert C. 57nscpExecutive DirectorMid-Missouri Council ofGovernments830 East lllch StreetJefferson City. MO 55101

1807 llayselton DriveJefferson City. HO 65101

SINGER. Wenda Goodhart 73

HUP

1147 Joliette RoadRichmond. VA 23235

SINGH, Margaret L. H. Duer72 MUPArgctnne National Laboratory9700 S. Cass Ave.ArKonne, IL 60439

4125 Forest Ave.Downers Grove. IL 60515

SINGLEY, Yvonne Jean 74

MUPAssistant DirectorIllinois Board of HigherEduca t Ion

4 West Old Capitol SquareSpringfield, IL 62701

2301 Noble Ave.

Springfield. IL 62704

SIVAPRAPASIRI. NuntanaSuwanamallk 78 MUPInstructorFaculty of ArchitectureKing Mongkut's Institute ofTechnologyL<td Krabaiig

Bangkok. Thailand

106/1 Sukapiban 1 RoadKlong Kufn. Uangkaplnangkok 24. Thailand

S.JURSEN. Nancy 83 HUPAssociate PlannerThe Planning GroupBo 54 4

10030 Church St.

Truckee, CA 95734

Provedenos Mine RoadNevada City. CA 95959

SKOLNICK, Elyse 84 BAUPLaw StudentNorthwestern University

850 N. Lakeshore Dr.. »715

Chicago. IL eonii

SKCiV, Mitchell McCormick83 MUPP J annerNorthwest Iowa

Planning & DevelopmentComn 1 ss Ion

1710 1/2 GrandSpencer. lA 51301

SMANIOTTO. Anthony G. 79

BAUPInvestment Sales Spec.Coldwell Banker Comn.200 E. Randolph. »6509Chicago. IL 60601

421B Soutli TaylorOak Park. IL 60302

SMART. Clifton Murray. Jr.

60 MSCPDeanSchool of ArchitectureUniversity of ArkansasFayettevl lie. AK 72701

858 WoodlawnFayettevl lie. AK 72701

SMITH. Furlonla 78 MUPParalegalLegal Services Corp. ofAlabama1114 Church St.

P.O. Box 954

Selma. AL 36701

715 Packman Ave.Selma. AL 36701

SMITH. James Bruce 68/70BUP/HUPAssistant ProfessorUrban & Regional Planning1 1

1

inois Inst i tute of

Technol ogyChicago. IL 60616

2735 N. Magnol la

Chicago, IL 60G14

SMITH, Mehl in Byrarit B5

BUP

12315 eist Ave.

Palos Park, IL 60464

SMITH. Tracy 72 BUPPres IdentOffice Automation. Inc.

811 W. JohnChampaign. IL 61820

SOLER. Nllda M. 69 MUP

1629 W. Belle Plainn Ave.

Chicago. IL 60613

SOLO.MON. Lisa J. 80 BAUPEconomic PlannerCity of L.ikewond

44 Union Blvd.

Lakcwood. CO 80228

2570 S. SteeleDenver, CO 80210

SOPRYCH. Steven Walter 80

BAUI'

7719 S. Mc.ide

Burliank. IL 60459

SPKISK. Stevi-n Al.in 7.S

MUPOlathe City Hal I

lathe. KS f.fior.l

600 S. Harrison. t35

Ol.itlie. KS 6fi061

Page 84: Alumni news - CORE

66

SPEROTTO. Steven B. 77 BUP

PrO£ra» CoordinatorUniversity CenterBon 1174

SIUEdwardsvllle, IL 62026

11078 Dunklin Dr.

Apt. «302St. Louis. NO 6313B

SPITZ. Kenneth A. 84 BAUP

412 K. ChurchChaapalgn. IL 61820

SPORE, Ja«es Knox 67/69BUP/.MUP

City ManagerCity Hall200 N. 5th St.Garland. TX 75046

6318 Scottsboro LaneGarland. TX 75040

STABLER. Kenneth E. 77 MUPSenior PlannerMinnesota WasteManagement Board7323 58th Ave. N.

Crystal. MN 55428

3540 Hennepin Ave. S.. »319Minneapolis. .MN 55408

STAFFORD. John Robert 73

MUPDeputy DirectorAllen County Plan CoanlsslonCity/County Building, Roob630Fort Wayne. IN 46802

3712 S. Webster St.

Fort Wayne, IN 46807

STALZER, Elizabeth J. 84

BAUP

102 Llpplncott Ave.

Morrestown, NJ 08057

STAPLETON. Kenneth Charles83 MUPAdministrative PlanningCoordinatorCity of PalB Beach Gardens10500 N. Military TrailPal« Beach Gardens. FL

33410

1615 16th LanePain Beach Gardens. FL

33418305/626-3129

STEELE. Michael A. 81 MUPDirectorPlanning 4 Development100 S. Main St.

East Peoria. IL 61611

109 Blacl<haHk CourtEast Peoria. IL 61611

STEFEN. Dorothea L. 74 HUPAssistant SuperintendentDivision of Land AcquisitionFairfax County Park Authority4030 Hu»er RoadAnnandale. VA 22003

5652 N. 7th .St.

Annandale, VA 22003

STKNSTROM, I.yiin Elizabeth81 BAUP

c/o Pnlricia M. Stenstroe213 1/2 W. Ill InolsUrbana. IL 61801

STERN. Dnvld Allcfn 79 HUPTechnology PlannerOHB DIv. of Planning28 W. State St.

Trenton. NJ 08625

124 Woodbrldge Ave.

Metuchen. NJ 08840

STERN. Richard Bennett 72

BUPBalcor Property Mnndgeiiipnt

Inc.

Vice President/DemographicConstructionThe Balcor CompanyThe Balcor Building10024 Skokic Blvd.Skokle. IL 60077

4136 Walnut Ave.

Arlington Heights. IL

60004

STILES. Sandra Larson 83

MUP

104 Arlington Ave.

Llnwood. NJ 08221

STIMPSON, Donna C. 78 HUPPlanning AnalystState Dept. of Human Resources1049 Asylum Ave.

Hartford. CT 06105

22 Woodrldge Ur

.

Cheshire. CT 06410

STOFFEL. Bruce R. 79 BAUP

1005 S. Mattis «2BChampaign. IL 61820

STONE, Cathy Chaznn 71

MUPConsul tant12 N. London HeightsLondonvUle, NV 12211

STRASSENBURG. Clifford G.

63 BSCP

1622 Van Buren Ave.

Fayettevll le. NC 28303

STRASSLER. Louis 47/48 BS

DSSWV/MSCPExecutive DirectorPassaic RedevelopmentAgency657 Main Ave. , Room 411Passaic. N.I 07055

35 Crescent Ave.

Passaic. NJ 07055

STRONG. James Thorud 73

MUPStrong Associates209 W. Clark St.

Champaign. IL 61820

810 W. Ayrshire Dr.

Champaign. IL 61820

STUART. Darwyn G. 65 MUPChicago Transit AuthorityMerchandise Mart PlazaRoom 704

P.O. Box 3555ChicuKO. IL 60654

1506 Grove St.

Evanslon. IL 60202

SUDDLESON. Roger L. 63

MSCPPresidentRoger L. Suddleson, RA,

AICP1717 Green Valley Rd.

H.ivertown. PA 19083

SUESSENBACII. Sonja C. 72

,MUP

Director of FinancialPlanning SystemUniv. of Houston4600 Gulf FreewayHouston. TX 77023

4633 Wild IndigoHouston. TX 77027

SULLY. John Arthur 72 MUPAsst. DirectorMiddlesex County PlanningBoard40 Livingston Ave.

New Brunswick. NJ 08540

96 Coppermine Rd . . RD »1

Princeton. NJ 08540

SULZEK. KennPth E. 62 MSCPDeputy Executive DirectorSan Dlogo Assoc, of Governments1200 Third Ave,. Suite 524

San Dirgo. CA 92101

2134 David WayDel Mar. CA 92014

SUMMERS. Guy Farrell 75

BUP

1400 E. 55th PlaceChicago, IL 60637

SUN, Vu-Ll 74 MUPLeo DesignersRoom 312-3143rd Floor, Shaw HouseOrchard RoadSingapore 0923

42-A Nassira MansionNassim 111 I 1

Sinapore 1025

SUNDKLL, Ronald C. 78 MUPAssistant EnvironmentalScientistAgronne National Laboraotry9700 S. Cass Ave.

EIS DlvlsonBuilding 10

Argonne, IL 60439

870 N. Columbia Ave.

Napervllle. II. 60540

SWENSON. Andrew 84 MUPTransportation PlannerCity of Indianapolis

2622 Timbcrly Dr.

Apt. lA

Indianapolis. IN 46220

SWISLOW. Mark L. 78 BAUP

fl827 ForestvlewEvans ton. II. 60203

SZUNYOG. John Michael 69

MUPCity ManagerCity Hall PlazaPort St. Lucie. FL 33452

573 Brookside TerracePort St. Lucie. FL 33452

TABAKA. Carroll M. 51

BFAl.A

Director of Land Use PlanningDane CountyRegional Planning Comm.Clly-County Bldg.Room 312Madison. Wl 53709

1110 Gilbert Rd.

Madison. Wl 53711

TALKINGTON. Laurel 84 HUPHousing PlannerCity of Evanston2100 RidgeEvanston. IL 60204

2118 Ashury ,

Evanston. IL 60201 ',

TARR. Julio Elaine 82 MUP !

238 Lee St. Apt. D-1

Evanston. IL 60202

TAYLOR. Yvonne Lisa 76

BUP

9225 South Harper Ave.

Chlc.ip.o, IL 60619

TAYLOR, Bradley Bennett51/52 BS DSSWWBSLAAssistant Director ofPlanningCity of Fort WorthMunicipal Building1000 Tlirockmorton StreetPI. Worth. TX 7B102

6508 Wilton Drive

Ft. Worth. TX 76133

TESKA. Robert B. 61 MSCPPros Iden t

Robert B. Treska Ass<i(:ialos.

Inc.

627 Grove St

.

Evanston. IL 60201

8! 1 CI Inton PlaceEvanston. IL 60201

TESSAR. Paul Allen 74 MUP

Stale Land Development1624 West AdamsPhoenix. AZ 85007

824 E. HaywardPhoenix, AZ 85021

THOMAS. Gai('th B. 68 MUP

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67

HeadDept. of Building and QuantitySurveyQueensland Institute ofTechnologySchool of the Built EnvlronaentP. 0. Box 2434

Brisbane, Queensland 4001

AUSTRALIA

THOMPSEN, WllUaa E. 80BAUP

1000 Douglas Ave.

Apt. «156Altaaonte Springs, FL 32714

THORNBURY. Gregory Hyron 78

MUPPlanning AnalystLand DepartmentPacific Gas and ElectricCompany77 Beale St.

San Francisco, CA 94106

3622 Chestnut St. , B

Lafayette, CA 94549

THORNLEY, JoEUen 85 BAUP

1179 Hobson Mills Ave.

Napervllle. IL 60540

TICK, Marvin J. 78 HUPOperations ManagerKelly Pood ProductsBox 1569

Decatur, IL 62525

3892 Greenrldge Dr.

Decatur. IL 62526

TIEDT. Jill Deborah 74 MUPAviation Planning Assoc.421 Arch St.

Cincinnati, OH 45202

2444 Madison Rd.. Apt. 602BCincinnati, Oil 45208

TINTERA, Julie Mary 83 HUPPlanner IntermediateSt. Louis CountyDept. of Planning41 S. Central Ave.

Clayton, MO 63105

7355 Llndell , Apt. 102

University City. MO 63130

TITSWORTH, Allan R. 72 HUP

207 Nestlebranch Dr.

Clearwater. FL 33519-7813

TOCK, Jeffrey Wayne 75 MUPAttorney136 H. Main St.

Urtana, IL 61801

105 H. OregonUrbana, IL 61801

TOMPKINS. Charles Larry 58BSCP1701 Old Wire RoadFayettevllle, AR 72701

TRIMARCO, Glna M. 79 BAUPTransportation PlannerMtTRA547 w. JacksonChicago. IL eoeoe

2348 N. CambridgeApt. 330ChicaKO, IL 60614

TRIMH, Otha Alonzo 85BAUP

1 1 524 S. M.iy

C1UC07.O, 11. 60643

TROMPKA. Walter John 79

BAUP

8509 Wilson Ave.Chicago, IL 60656

TRUJILLO, Matthew 84 MUP

211 Sycamore HE

Albuquerque, NH 87106

TURBOV. MIndy W. 78 BAUPDlerctorCleveland OfficeHcCormack Baron 4 Assoc.211 Colonial ArcadeCleveland, Oil 44115

2515 E. I24th St.

Cleveland. Oil 44120

TURNER, Evelyn HaiKliret 76

BUPAssociate Plannercity of Coon RapidsCoon Rapids, MN 55433

319 Washburn Ave. N,

Minneapolis, MN 55405

TURNER, Michael 71 MUPVice PresidentRocky Mountain Recruiters1430 Larimer t201

Denver, CO 80202

7766 S. Pierce WayLittleton, CO 80123

UNWIN, Richard 68 BUPDirector of CommunityDevelopmentVillage of Hoffman Estates1200 Gannon DriveHoffman Estates, II. fiorj6

317 Bramble LaneSchaumburg, IL 60193

URBONAS, James f. . 69 MI!P

Westplan Partnership1309 Spruce St

.

Boulder. CO 80302

430 S. 45lli St.

Boulder, CO 80303

URYCKl , Richard R. 80

BAUPAccount ExecutiveCSX3000 Citrus Circle, »114

Walnut Creek. CA 94598

2779 Broadmore Ave.

Concord. CA

VANTREECK, Robert J. 57

BSCP

17606 Rosewood Lane F

Tlnley Pnik, IL 60477

VERBURG, Ronald Arthur 76

BUPPlanning TechnicianNortheastern IllinoisPlanning Commission400 West MadisonChicago, IL 60606

8409 Moraine Ave.

Monster, IN 46321

VOGELGESANG. Ferdinand Ross49 BFALASpecial Assistant to DirectorDepartment of MetropolitanDevelopment2021 City-County BuildingIndianapolis, IN 46204

5262 Channlng CourtIndianapolis, !N 46226

WACK, Richard George 72

BUP

Rt. 2, Box 503Orlando, FL 32810

WAGNER. Hermann Francis 47

BFALA

5.12 Dougherty Ferry RoadKlrkwood. MO 63122

WAI.OEN. Bruce Keith 77/84BUP/HIIP

Administrator of CommunityDevelopment ServicesCity of Urbana400 s. Vine St.

Urbana, IL 61801

609 W. IndianaUrbana, IL 61801

WALKER, Robert Edward 73

MUPPlanner IV

ChiTster County PlanningComm

.

235 West Market St.

West Chester. PA 19382

1657 Carlisle LaneDownlngtown, PA 19335

WALLACE. Barbara 71 MUPCentaur Associates. Inc,

1400 I Street NW

Suite 700Washington. DC 20036

4450 S. Park Ave. . «I117Chevy Case, HD 20815

WAl.TlllUS. Scott P. 78 BAUP

233 North Elm St.

Hinsdale. IL 60521

WARD. Lori Michelle 83

BAUP

1916 David DriveChampaign. IL 61821

WARREN. Nancy Lee Kuclch71 BUP

1430 Woolworth St

.

Elmont. NY 11003

WASHBURN. Christine 84

BAUP

7100 N. Sheridan «n-3Chicago. IL 60625

WASHANN. Jean C. 65 MUPDepartment of Housing and

Urbuna Uevelopmi-nl

Washington. DC 20410

WATT. Paul Calvert 49

BFALA

80 Rol 1 Ijlg Giecn Way

Pleasant Hill. CA 94523

WEATHERSPOON, Wenila L. 73

BUP

4)1 E. EurekaChampaign. IL 61820

WEAVER. Robert I.. 66 MUPPlanner I

Metropolitan Planning Comra

.

730 S. 2nd Ave.

Nashville. TN 37203

46 Vaughns Gap Rd.

Nashville. TN 37205

WEEKS, Stephen Curtis 74

BUPDl rectorLivingston County RegionalPlanning Comm.

CourthousePonliac, IL 61764

WEIL. Douglas Al len 83

BAUP

318 Oak CircleWilmette, 11. 60091

WEIR. Marl lee Lombaril 83

MUP

576-B Pine St.

Robins AFIl. GA 31098

WEST. Kathleen C. Frllsrh73 BUPDommor-muth. Brestal. CoMtieand West. Ltd.

124 S. Washington SI .

Post Office Box 565Napervllle. IL 60566

858 N. Columl.ia St.

Napervllle. IL 60540

WESTERVELT. James D. 81

HUP

809 W. JohnChampaign. IL 61820

WESTI.AKE. Kenneth Alan 82

HUPGrants Spec ial ist

U.S. Environ. Prot. Agency230 S. DearbornChicago, IL 60604

1202 GreenwoodMt. Prospect. IL 600.16

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68

WHEELER. Irving "Hes" 85

HUPAssistant PlannerC.C.R.P.C.1303 N. Cunnlnghaa Ave.

Urbana, IL 61801

2011 A. Melrose Dr.

Chanpalgn. IL 61820

HIBOWO. Herbasukl 79 MUPc/o Dcpt . of Urban & RegionalPlanningTexas A A M UniversityCollege Station. TX 77843

WIDELL. Charles Donald 72

MUP

P.O. Box 3441Escondldo. CA 92025

WIGGINS. JeroBC 72 DUP

AC TransitMember. Board of Directors508 16th St.

Oakland. CA 94612

c/o Christina G. Wiggins110-35 196th St.

Jaaaica. NY 11412

WILBRANDT, Laurence Arthur74 BUPLaw ClarkRobert A. Wllbrandt. Ltd.

65 S. Vlrgl.nla St.

Crystal Lake. IL 60014

311 Edwards Ave.

West Dundee. IL 60118

WILDING. Theodore C. 62.

MSCPDeputy DirectorSt. Louis County Dept. of

Planning41 S. CentralClayton. MO 63011

675 Rustic Val ley Dr.

Ballwln. HO 63011

WILK. Paula N. 72 HUPUniversity of ArizonaAdalnlstratlon Building,#503Tuscon. AZ 85721

2811 E. Sixth St. . Apt. C

Tuscon. AZ 85716

WILLIAMS, Jonathan B. 82

BAUP

8728 S. DorchesterChicago. IL 60619

WILSON, Scott Douglas 67/70BUP/MUPDirector, Public AffairsPeoples Gas SysteaP.O. Box 2562Taapa, FL 33601

16107 6th St. EastRcdlngton Beach. FL 33708

WINCATE. Ivy Poncher 82

BAUP

P.O. Box 8092LaJolla, CA 92038

WINTER, Margaret A. 77MUPGrants M,iiMge»cnt SupervisorMayor's Office of Employment4 Training180 N. l.aSalle

Chicago. IL 00601

6452 N. Glenwood, Apt. 1

Chicago, IL 60626

WISE. Judith K. Kleplnger59 BSCP

1259 4th St. SWWashington, DC 20024

WOMACK, Edward P. 65 HUPSenior Project ManagerCarter & Burgess Inc.

3500 Maple St.

Dallas. TX 75219

WONG. Betsy Pendleton 71

BUPPhebus Tiimmelson Ury^n &

KnoxAttorney136 W. Main St.

Urbana. IL 61801

1222 W. ArmoryChampaign, IL 61821

WOOD. Anthony C. 78 MUPProgram OfficerThe J. M. Kaplan Fund330 Madison Ave.

New York City, NY 10017

301 E. 91st St . . Apt. 2E

New York. NY 10128

WOOD. Gary Lee 75 BUPLeasing Agent & Fountlalion

AdministratorThe Luric Comjiany

120 S. LnSal le

Chicago, n. 60603

542 LymanOak Park. IL 60304

WOOD. Jack H. 48 DFAI.A

Senath. MO 6387B

WRIGHT. Wesley Edd 77 BUP

4620 Thousand Oaks Blvd.

»915San Antonio, TX 78233

525 Washington PlaceEast St. Louis. IL 62205

YAZBEC. Michael Louis 86

BAUP1180 PomonaChampaign. IL 61821

2217 RockPeru, IL 61354

YONKERS, Kenneth S. , Jr.

74 MUP

3756 Jennings Dr.

Kalamazoo. MI 49001

YOUNG. Vivian 82 HUP

1000 Sharer Court, «62

Tallahasse, FL 32312

YOUNCMAN. Robert P. 69

MUPFinancial PlannerIDS

Milwaukee. WI

709 Arthur AvenueRacine, WI 53405

ZABEL, Diane M.W. 80/82MUP/HASAssistant LibrarianGeneral ReferencePattee LibraryPcnn. State Univ.

University Park. PA 16802

no E. Foster Ave.. Apt. 402

State College. PA 16801

ZAIDI . Hassan J. 77 MUPPlanner II

Daniel Internatinal Corp.Daniel BuildingGrci'nville, SC 29602

c/o Stal lingsGreer, SC 29651

ZANELLO. Alexander Philip74 BUP

1014 GllsonMadison, WI 53715

ZEISEL, Hard Lyn 77 BUPPlannerArizona State Land Dept.

1624 W. Adams St.

Phoenix, AZ 85007

5911 N. 83rd St.

Scottsdale. AZ 85253

ZIECLER. Scott W. 79 BAUPAssociateCamiros, Ltd.

17.1 W. Mlldlson

Chicago, IL 60602

018 Warwick Rd.

Deerfield. IL 60015

ZlEI.INSKl, David D. 75 HUPPrincipal PlannerAda County Highway District318 E. 37thBoise, ID 83704

6211 Tahoe Dr.

Boise. ID 83709

ZYSKOWSKI . Ronald P. 70

BUPDeputy Exec. DirectorKYOVA Interstate PlanningComm

.

1221 Sixth Ave.

P.O. Box 939

Huntington. WV 25712

2213 Avlncll DriveMilton. WV 25541

KOEMIG, Russel BSLA

212 South DouglasBronson, Ml 49028

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69

ALUMNI ACTIVmES

ADAMS, Edwin C. (Tex) (MSCP '63): Since retirement from state government in 1982,have traveled extensively Stateside and to Europe—enjoying my wife and my favoritepastime, golf and sightseeing.

AHERN, CecUy P. (BUP '85): Currently a grad student here concentrating in

Preservation and Economic Development. I hope to graduate next year.

ANCAR, Robert (MUP '82): After working for the Nassau County Planning Departmentfor 3 V2 years, I recently transferred to the New York State Department ofTransportation in Albany, NY. With the transfer, I have taken a 180-degree turn fromworking on various highway and accident safety studies to working in the field of aviationplanning. Specifically, I am working on forecasting methodology for use in aviationsystem planning studies, developing a NYSDOTAocal program for navigation as needsassessment and implementation, and examining and quantifying the nature of state-widehelicopter operations and helipad facilities. What I have found most interesting is

interacting with pilots, helicopter owners, and airport managers who are nothing less

than excited about working in an industry that is rapidly changing. By far, it's an exoticapplication of one's planning skills. On the personal side, I am how living on an 118-acrenon-functioning dairy farm in the remote boondocks on the NYS/ Vermont border,renovating an early 1800's Federal style farmhouse, and enjoying country living.

ANDERS, Robert D. (MUP '85): Finally completed my Master's Project last Spring—fouryears after leaving the University of Illinois. With degree in hand, we (Linda and threedaughters—Adrienne, Ursula, and Erika) left the frozen tundra of Green Bay, Wisconsin(July 1985), where I had worked since leaving the U of I, and migrated to that fun-in-the-sun planners-paradise known as Florida. I'm currently employed as the Chief of PlanningServices (Principal Planner) with the Alachua County Department of Planning andDevelopment (Gainesville). The constant onslaught of local planning issues due to our 2%annual growth rate, along with the State's emphasis on growthmanagement/comprehensive planning, will be keeping us overworked for some time to

come. Fortunately, we're not growing as fast as the resort areas of Florida.

ARMS, Richard E. (MSCP '50): A keen awareness of communication/transportationopportunities resulted from an avocation: Co-founder (1970), Officer, Director (nowTrustee) of ARTEC which won franchises, designed, built, operated and sold (1983) theArlington, VA, cable television system. I currently offer to local planning programs aconsultant overview—for those who feel they may be getting a little too close to thetrees. I have few answers, but interesting questions.

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AULT, John (MSCP '51): Although I have retired, I am still active. My latest project,

with Harry Smith, a former Rogers (Arkansas) mayor, and chair of CORE (the Committeeof Retired Executives) was to inventory, measure, and evaluate trees planted on public

property and on rights of way. I started this project by organizing the program,establishing goals, and planning for future growth. As chair of the Tree Committee of

CORE, I have been writing a program that will cover tree development for the next 10

years. Harry Smith and I have prepared a Shade Tree Ordinance which is presently

before Rogers City council. Our labors have already borne fruit, for Rogers has beennamed a "Tree City U.S.A." by the Arbor Day Foundation of Nebraska City, Nebraska.

There are many things to think of in formulating a tree program, including the type of

soil, the tap root system, trunk strength, canopy of fall or spring color, longevity,

maintenance required, immunity to pollution, height in regard to power lines, and the

water source. Trees also should not produce messy fruits or sap, and should have small,

rather than large leaves. It is also important not to plant too many trees of one species

to lessen widespread damage due to disease. It has been a lot of work, but has been very

enjoyable and truly a labor of love.

BADER, Miriam Heller (BAUP '84): After graduating with my Bachelor's degree in May1984, 1 began studying at Hebrew University as a visiting graduate student, in Urban andRegional Studies and Geography. The language of instruction was Hebrew. 1 met myhusband, Joel Bader, there—an American from Connecticut. He, too, was studying at

Hebrew University for his Master's. We got married in the states on September 8, 1985.

In January, 1986, we began studying at the University of Wisconsin to finish our Master's

degrees. His in Zoology, mine in Urban and Regional Planning.

BANNON, Lauren Benninger (BAUP '79): After three years practicing law at the firm of

Chapman and Cutler in Chicago, 1 decided to try something very different. I accepted a

position with Chicago Area Runners Association, a not-for-profit organization whichpromotes running and fitness. As Director of Corporate and Community Operations, 1

solicit and maintain corporate sponsorship for CARA's programs and events and plan

community service projects such as those part of our Disabled Athletes Program.

BARETA, Anthony S. (MUP '65): After 25 years in the public sector (and 12 years of

service as Planning Director for Milwaukee County), I have changed hats and joined the

ranks of the private entrepreneur. The switch has been great and rewarding. Mooneyand Associates, Ltd, located at 400 South Executive Drove, Brookfield, Wl 53005, is a

real estate brokerage and development firm specializing in commercial, industrial andinvestment properties. Our activity occurs mostly in Wisconsin, although we have taken

on some regional, national and international marketing corporations to local, regional and

state government. No one said we could have this much fun!!!

BASTEN, Raymond F. (BSCP '60): Left municipal planning after 25 years with various

county, city and village positions in the Chicago metropolitan area. Have begun workwith an architectural and planning office which specializes in master planning for United

States military bases, both here and abroad. Very pleased with the move to Colorado-scenery is spectacular! Family loves it.

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BEHR, David B. (BUP '77): Recently accepted a job at the HoUaday Corporation of

South Bend. HoUaday Corporation is headquartered in Washington, D.C. and is involved

in the development of commercial, industrial, and multi-family projects. Myresponsibility is the development of a 14o-acre planned development called the National

Center for Senior Living, a center for diagnostic care, research, headquarters facilities

and residential living aU geared to serve the elderly. My wife Chris and I have twodaughters now, Brittany is 4 and Ashley Marie is 6 months.

HERMAN, Myles D. (MUP '79): I am nearing the completion of my third year with

Altheimer & Gray, a 90-lawyer Chicago-based law firm with a national commercialpractice. I spend most of my time in the substantive areas of corporate, real estate, andenvironmental law. I'm also a member of the firm's Hiring Committee and Co-Chair our

"Summer Associate Program," in which we hire and train law students for the summer,with a mutual eye toward full-time employment. Lawyering continues to exceed myexpectations. In August of 1984, I joined the D.U.R.P. as a Visiting Assistant Professor

of Urban Planning, teaching one course (State and Local Government Law, and a

Negotiation course) for each of the past two faU semesters. It has been delightful to be

back on the Urbana Campus, even if only for one day a week. At times, it feels a little

odd to be "on the other side of the barbed wire," but teaching has been a real learning

experience for me. On October 19, 1985, I married the incomparable Patti Garcia. Patis finishing the second of four years in an obstetric and gynecological residency at the U.

of I Hospital in Chicago. We have no little goobers of our own yet. ..but we're starting to

give the subject some thought.

BERTRAM, David M. (BAUP '78): Life in Decatur continues to provide a variety of

activities for me and my family. Dad and the kids are aU playing soccer and enjoying it

except for the bumps and bruises. SheUey has made a job change, leaving the DecaturMental Health Center for the position of Child Development Specialist with ProgressResources Center. Also, this past year, I was joined by Marvin Tick as a feUow memberof the Decatur City Plan Commission. We now have two citizen planners. P.S.: Hello to

Leo and Jackie Stark and family.

BLUE, Michael (BAUP '84): I've been working at Camiros since last October. Work hasbeen keeping me very busy, as have my attempts at various thesis deadlines. I'm nowclose to finishing, and hope to have it completed soon. It's been difficult to concentrateon both work and thesis. Work has been better than I expected. I enjoy both where I

work and what I do. What more can anyone want?

BOLAN, Lewis (MUP '67): After 13 years with Real Estate Research Corporation, left

that firm in May of 1985 to become Managing Director of Leggat McCall Advisors, Inc.,

a nationwide real estate consulting firm specializing in the areas of strategic anddevelopment planning for corporations, developers, financial institutions, propertyowners and users. Actually, this isn't as far afield from urban planning as it might sound,since much of my work involves planning, and nearly all of it involves coordination withthe planning community. Am currently serving as an advisor to several governmentagencies here and abroad, primarily in the area of development planning and economicfeasibility. Am currently serving on task forces looking at the utilization of federal

space, and having to do with the economic impact of the arts community.

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BOWMAN, Diane (BAUP '83): I was just hired by Harland Bartholomew & Associates,

and look forward to starting my new job. I had been working for the City of St. Louis in

the Heritage & Urban Design Division but the budget was cut in half this year. I wouldhave been out of a job if I had not landed the position with Harland Bartholomew.

BRAUN, Jeff (BAUP '82): Currently, I am the Assistant to the City Manager for the

City of Orange, Texas. In addition to general management duties, I am also responsible

for the overall administration and supervision of the Planning and CommunityDevelopment Department. Orange is a city of 23,000 located along the Gulf Coast in

Southeast Texas. My Department is involved in many activities including planning,

building inspection, housing rehabilitation, rental rehabilitation, and general CDBGprogram administration. However, as time allows, 1 am also involved with the

preparation of the city budget, collective bargaining negotiations, and personnel

matters. Needless to say—rarely a dull moment.

BRECK, Kevin H, (MUP '85): Hi Gang! After leaving DURP in January of 1983, I

worked for a COG in Daytona Beach, Florida, as the Transportation Planner. Anne and 1

stayed in Florida until October 1984, when we moved back to Michigan. Our son, Ian wasborn in August 1984. I worked as a Transportation Planner for the Michigan Departmentof Transportation for about 6 months. Presently, I am working as a Law Clerk in the

Oakland County Circuit Court, and going to law school at night. I hope that all of youare happy and well.

BRETT, Deborah (MUP '72): For about a year I've been working part-time at RealEstate Research Corporation in order to spend more time with my kids. I'm not traveling

much, so most of my work involves real estate or planning/policy issues in the Chicagoarea. I've been doing a lot of work on apartment projects, especially for senior citizens.

BRIMBERRY, Tom (MUP '86): Yahoo!—finally graduated! Been working at Agency onAging planning services to keep older persons independent in the community for almostfive years. Recently had job title changed from Planner to Director of ProgramDevelopment to reflect poor—Gramm-Rudman emphasis. Moved to a farmhouse built in

1880, complete with barn, cows, horses, cats and a dog, on the outskirts of Peoria.

Greenacres is where I'll be for a while. When in central Illinois come and visit.

BROOK, Julie Bernsen (BAUP '82): At the present time I am completing my MBA at

UIC and awating the birth of my first child. Previous to returning to school, I was anAcquisitions Analyst for a number of real estate syndicators. The work was very exciting

and I found my BAUP helped considerably on analytical problems. The past summer I

also had the opportunity to do some management consulting for the government. Myresponsibilities included site selection for a new office building and all real estate-

related analyses. Again, I cannot stress enough how my BAUP helped when faced with

many planning-type decisions. NOTE: My husband and I are moving to Cincinnati, Ohio,

in July 1986, and our address will be: 5408 Kingsway West, Cincinnati, Ohio 45215.

BROWN, Lee M. (BUP '77): I am continuing to work for a very fine private planningconsulting firm. My clients include both municipalities and private sector developmentcompanies. The planning profession remains a challenge and worth pursuing.

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BROWN, William F. (MUP '69): I have been involved in business park and planning

community development for the real estate subsidiary of Anheuser-Busch. Two years ago

1 was elected to our County Board of Supervisors (County Commission), and am serving as

Chairman this year. The last two years I also served on the Planning Commission. With

my former stint as Planning Director, having written the comprehensive plan and zoning

ordinance, and developed land under it for 8 years, 1 can now argue all sides of the issue

with myself.

CAMPBELL, Ann Ellis (MUP '79): Since the birth of our second son, John, in June 1984,

I have been in "retirement" from the U of I Housing Research and Development. Lately,

1 was thinking since he is nearly 2 and David is 4 that 1 would go back to work. However,we have just found out that number three is due in November, so my return to the

workplace will be delayed a little longer. While I often miss the hurly burly of proposals,

grants, reports, data, statistics, deadlines, etc., 1 know that 1 can't be "supermum," so 1

am allowing myself the luxury and job satisfaction of raising the children on a full time

basis. 1 try to keep in touch and feel confident I will be able to spring back into the

outside workplace when the time comes.

CANESTARO, James C. (MUP '73): It seems that my training in real estate and planning

have finally come full circle and merged. Our company is now in the process of

producing a real estate software package, which calculates the investment value

resulting from zoning and planning decisions. We hope that this program will give

planners the ability to finally determine the true value, to the developer, of enhancedzoning privileges.

CARLEY, David E. (MUP '70): The last year and a half have been the best of times andthe worst of times for Development in Indianapolis. A general obligation bond of $45

million for nineteen development projects was defeated in a petition drive after a 28-1

City Council vote in favor. That left us trying to finance those same projects without

cash. Three have started construction, two will break ground within the next sixty days,

and we are still trying to finance the others. All of this is to spruce up the entire townby August, 1987, when Indianapolis hosts the Tenth Pan American Games. Within the last

year, Stuart Keller (MUP '71) has joined us as head of our City-County Planning Division

after a stint with the Eli Lilly Company headquartered here in town. Personally

speaking, two small children, excessive working hours and farm prices convinced us to

get out of the active grain farming so we now only rent out our farm. We do continue to

raise sheep because they are consistently profitable. In 1970, when 1 left the U. of I for

Indianapolis, 1 couldn't even dream of the things in the City that can be generatedlocally, or the personal satisfaction that all this brings.

CARLSON,Catherine "Katy" (MUP '82): I was married to fellow planning classmateWalter Carlson in 1983 and have worked for the New Orleans City Planning Commissionas an Associate City Planner for the past three years. In April, I began work with the

Miami Planning Department as a city planner. I will work in land development, capital

budgeting and information management systems. My husband Wally has been working as

a planning analyst for the Port of New Orleans for the past four years and will bepursuing a career with one of the Miami area ports.

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CASTILIA, John (MUP '81): After six years as a public sector environmental planner

(City of Chicago and HUD), I had become dissatisfied with the career potential. Private

sector planning wasn't responsive to my overtures. After a few false starts, 1 decided

upon evening classes in data processing to augment a few graduate courses I had taken.

My employment search ended with Electronic Data Systems, the Texas data processing

firm recently purchased by G.M. Now I'm being trained in project management to utilize

state-of-the-art software and the latest management techniques. Complementing mycorporate employment is my involvement with a regional environmental activist group.

A myriad of land use and environmental issues are present here in heavUy industrialized

southeast Michigan. _^

CAUTERO, Accent A. (MUP '82): 1 accepted a position with Citrus County in August,

1985. Aside from the fringe benefits of living in Florida, planning is dynamic due to the

vast amount of legislation mandating comprehensive planning and land development

regulations. I'm currently supervising our implemention process for the comprehensive

plan and special project. In 1986, 150 new planning positions are estimated, mostly in

communities that do not have staff at present. J[f you enjoy warm weather and are

looking for a change of scenery, read Job Mart for openings in Florida .

CHAN, Bill M. (MUP '81): After my graduation, I moved to San Francisco and continued

my education in a different field. I got my degree in Information Science in 1983. Myfirst permanent job was a computer operator at Senony, Inc. Unfortunately, I was laid

off one and a half years later because of lack of sales. One month later, I was hired by

Chaparral Communications as a systems operator. One year later I was promoted to

System Administrator. Recently, my boss told me that he was going to promote me to

System Manager.

CHELSETH, Robert S. (BUP '73): Forever balancing the "interests" of work with the

multitude of other pleasures available in life. My planning consulting business has

steadily evolved into a concentration on economic market analyses. This has lead to a

close relationship with the Cincinnati firm of Public Demographics, Inc., with whom I amcompleting commercial, residential and industrial market studies. I have neither seen

nor heard from any of my undergraduate contemporaries for several years—what's

happening, folks???

CHU, Dahtzen (MUP '83): z\fter finishing my UP courses in '81, I took a semester off

and then decided to go for another Master's in Civil Engineering. I finally finished myrequirements for the MUP in "83, and followed with an MS in CE a year later. Right

now, I'm approaching my second year with the Corps of Engineers Construction

Engineering Research Lab where my work involves trying to find more effective means

of building energy-efficient army buildings.

CLARK, Sherwin (BUP '73): No longer using my urban planning skills.

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COLBERT, Bruce A. (MUP '85): I recently accepted a development planner position with

the South Suburban Mayors' and Managers' Association in Homewood, Illinois. My initial

projects include a business retention and expansion program, a South Suburban profile,

capital improvements planning, and data base development. The Association is giving mefree rein, so the experience should be both exciting and rewarding. If the snow holds, Vmlooking forward to skiing in Wisconsin on Memorial Day.

CONNER, James B. (MUP 65): Still plugging along with the engineering company as its

Marketing Director. Family is growing and well with children spread from Boston to

Tokyo. All classmates are welcome to share the good life with us in Arkansas. Where's

Tom Davis?

CONNER, Preston L. (BAUP '82): As the Manager of Research and Planning for the U.S.

Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, I am responsible for the information tracking systemand computerization, the Hispanic Business Resource Center and data base, business

forecasting, national convention workshop's content and design, telecommunications, andeconomic and public policy issues research on Hispanic enterprise. To date, mypublications have been used to inform the White House, Congress, government majorcorporations, media, and more on the growing contributions of Hispanic Business to the

U.S. economy. My employment with the USHCC began in July 1983 as a research

assistant. After graduating, 1 worked as a program coordinator for Summer YouthEmployment Program, City of Kansas City, MO, plus interned in the Kansas City,

Missouri City Development Department. I also became a certified part-time instructor

in neighborhood development and management with the metro community college

system. Aside from USHCC responsibilities and family corporate obligations, I play the

piano and travel to booksales to collect non-fiction books.

CORDWELL, Ian (MUP '84): So many years of college and we're still being tested. I

have been trying to harness the comprehensive preservation planning process in Alabamafor two years. Fortunately, people around the state are very willing to help.

Unfortunately, they want money. Even more unfortunately, we don't have any. As a

state historic preservation office, we're keeping an eye on impending budget cuts.

?vleanwhile, I'm learning to type. The landscape design firm that Kathy (B.A. in

Education, '82) manages has changed names and hands twice in two years. However,thanks to Kathy, the firm's outlook is great. We've kept our spirits up by designing (and

continually working on) our own house, and by dressing the dogs up as Chief Illiniwek. Wemiss Illinois.

CUMBY, Charles C, Jr. (BUP '74, MUP '79): Maggie and I continue to live comfortablyin our house once owned by Fibber McGee and Molley. We have two daughters, Elizabeth

(5) and Danielle (2). Maggie has been taking some business courses and hopes to enter

Bradley University this fall enroUed in its business program. 1 received my M.B.A. in

1984. In September, I will have completed nine years with the City of Peoria. Havingheld several positions (Downtown Redevelopment Coordinator, Budget Officer, Assistant

City Manager, Deputy City Manager/Comptroller), 1 can say that I have enjoyed mytenure thus far. My greatest sense of fulfillment has been the City's ability to retain its

"AA" bond rating in 1985 because it was based on a strong foundation of planning effort.

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DAAB, Jake (BAUP '85): I am currently employed as Assistant Leasing/Project

Coordinator for Crossroads of Commerce, a 500,000 square foot office complex in

Rolling Meadows, Illinois. This position entails negotiating leases with existing and

prospective tenants and coordinating the construction of tenant spaces. Not wanting to

put my planning education to waste, I also periodically do economic and demographic

analyses of our market area. The company 1 work for is also undertaking some large

residential developments which, hopefully, I will participate in. Fd like to hear from

some of my fellow planning grads.

DAROSZEWSKI, Albert (BUP '79): I'm still at Orange County and am working on impact

fees. The growth in Orange County is tremendous so the impact fees help pay for the

infrastructure needs associated with this growth. I enjoy working with computers and the

variety. The weather is also great.

DeBELLE, Denise (BUP '76): I began law school full-time in August 1985 at IIT Chicago

Kent Law School. I feel I made the right choice of a professional education, and despite

the difficulty and pressure in law school, my plans to specialize are not yet firm, but myfirst interest is land use, zoning and municipal law.

DEHNER, Valerie J. (MUP '83): Currently, I am the Assistant City Planner for the City

of Hammond, Indiana. It is a wonderful position and I thoroughly enjoy the work, the

people and the challenge. I handle a whole array of work: grant writing, historic

preservation, zoning, downtown reitalization, etc. There is something new every day.

Prior to this position, I was Administrative Assistant for Economic Development at the

Chicago Regional Park District. I live in Chicago—in Pullman, a national, state and local

historic district. I feel as though I'm living and breathing planning. I have never knownsuch a "together" community. It's like living in a small town in the big city. I have

served as board member and a vice president of the Historic PuUman Foundation, and

last year I organized the first Historic Pullman Art Festival. It went over so well last

year that we're in the process of planning the Second Annual Historic Pullman Art

Festival. I also love living in Chicago. It is the epitome of planning. All else is well-family, Sparta and our occasional "Guild" get-to-gethers. Would enjoy hearing from

other classmates. Our chainletter has yet to return. Also hope to organize a Chicago

reunion one of these days.

DICE, Stephen R. (BUP '69): We are completing one transition to being Americansuburbanites, after nearly five years in Indonesia, although we are still suffering from a

bit of "reverse culture shock." My employer for the past six years has just been acquired

by the URS Corporation, a New York Stock Exchange-listed professional service group;

so it appears that change will continue to be a major part of our lives for a while. Our

principal recreation recently has been chasing our 2V2- year old son, whose energy seemslimitless. I would really enjoy hearing from my friends and classmates, as it seems I have

lost touch with nearly everyone during the past few years.

DICKERSON, Barbara (BAUP '85): I have just finished my first year in law school and

will be working for the summer in Raleigh, N.C., for the Department of Natural

Resources and Community Development.

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DIRKS, Herman (BFA '59): On October 1, 1984, I assumed the job of City Manager for

the City of Bloomington. I have never been busier but I enjoy it. I now have the

opportunity to implement planning policies from a different viewpoint. The selection of

this area for the new Diamond-Star plant has created many new opportunities and

challenges for both planners and administrators.

DONALDSON, Carlos F. (BUP '79): I am supervisor of Campus Mail. Wife, Willeta, is an

administrative aide in the Office of Admissions and Records. Son, Carlos Jr., an

Agriculture Gardener at the U of I married last June to Mae Nunnery, a graduate in

Program Management/ALS, U of I in 1985. Daughter, Carletta, married David Walker.

She lives in New Jersey. Carletta is a word processor and David is a corporal in the U.S.

Marines. Son, Dennis, is a freshman at the U of I, Pre-Med major. We plan to travel to

the West Coast this year. Last year, we traveled Southeast and Northeast.

DORY, William A., Jr. (MUP '83): Since leaving the campus, I have become the project

manager for a very exciting courthouse square revitalization project here in Greencastle

that is based on the National Trust for Historic Preservation's Main Street approach to

downtown revitalization. We have already had over $1,000,000 in rehab work and almost

$4,000,000 in new construction. I am now in the process of administering a $431,000-

project to replace sidewalks, curbs, and install landscaping around our courthouse

square. The last two and a half years have been extremely exciting running a one-manredevelopment office. As a result of our work here locally, another organization I workfor. Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana, was instrumental in getting a state-wide

Main Street program set up here in Indiana. This was a real first for the Indiana

Department of Commerce. Recently, I was asked to serve on the Board of Directors of

Preservation Action. Preservation Action is a Washington, DC-based national lobby for

the preservation movement. Current efforts focus on retaining the investment tax

credits for historic buildings. In my personal life, I wiU be celebrating my fourth weddinganniversary this summer with my lovely wife Kathryn. In a sense, we have returned to

familiar territory by locating in Greencastle. Both of her parents grew up in Greencastle

and she stiU has many family members living in the area.

DRESDNER, Allen J. (BSCP '56): My professional life has taken an interesting andexciting turn as my company takes on new and different projects. We are heavily into

the urban waterfront environment, emergency response planning and solid waste(including hazardous) management. One of the great pleasures of this work is that weare on the leading edge of a learning nerve.

ECKEL, BiU (MUP '74): Work at the County is interesting still after almost 10 years—

7

years longer that I thought I'be be there. After salmon enhancement and wetlandinventory and projection projects, my focus this year is on stream corridor protection,

finishing my third watershed plan (flood, erosion and habitat protection) and staffing

County Council adoption of a surface water management utility. We are also reviewingand advising on several billion doUar water resource projects including Seattle's

secondary sewage treatment plan and a new water supply/power dam. In my spare time,

I continue to garden but have taken up the pursuit of the elusive king salmon, bobbing

around Puget Sound in a 10-foot boat. Mary takes on a few architectural remodelling

jobs each year while spending most of her time with our 3V2year old daughter, Sandy.

We StiU try to travel as much as possible—last year we explored Southern Europe for

three weeks focusing on museums and beaches. Seattle still is a wonderful place, but it's

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78

more crowded, winters seem longer and the summers never quite warm enough. If

friends are up this way for Expo this summer, give us a call.

EDIDIN, Nina (MUP 77): Vm on hiatus after the birth of my son, Benjamin Edidin

Daskal. He's wonderful, of course, and Dean and I are looking forward to introducing himto his first Spring in Atlanta. Fve kept involved as a board member with Metro Fair

Housing Services.

EDMINSTER, Richard MUP '77: I am staff to the County Airport Land Use Commissionand County Solid Waste Management Authority. Both are hot, so I spend most of mytime in meetings. Quit smoking three years ago. Can't remember why I started the

weed. Now I swim a lot and eat vegetables.

EISEMAN, Beth K. (BAUP '85): I'm completing my first year of Law School at

Georgetown University Law Center, doing little more than studying right now. This

summer Til be a law clerk at Dechert Price and Rhoads in Washington, DC.

ELSDEN, John (MUP '85): Living as a planner on an island is a great way to get a broadrange of experience in the field. Aspects such as dune management and beach erosion

are always hot topics here. Vm also learning about historic districts while writing andpresenting cases for our Historic District Review Board. Our Neighborhood Planning

class (Prof. Earl Jones) has come in handy — we are currently in the process of preparing

a plan for one of our neighborhoods here in GgQveston.

ERICSSON, Sally C. (BUP '76): I've worked for Speaker O'Neill now for 4 years and plan

to stay until he retires at the end of the year. Then, who knows? Our daughter, Rachel,

was born in April, 1985. She's a happy, healthy kid. We're having a great time exploring

the neighborhood and city with her.

FAULSTICH, Mary Etta (BAUP '82): I moved in April from my cottage with the Bayview in the gardens under Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill to an old Victorian in the ghetto

near the Golden Gate Park panhandle where the local street vendors still come by onSunday mornings to deliver the daily drug supplies. I will probably be getting marriedthis June to a Polish architect (broadening horizons from the Greeks, Dutch and English

of the Kavala trip) whom I met at a neighbor's "Sleaze to Please" Halloween party whereonly 2 males present weren't gay. I am also currently working part-time while

considering job/career changes and carrying out some of the aforementioned personal life

changes.

FENNER, Tony (BUP '85): As a community organizer, I am trying to strengthen a

faltering and burnt out leadership for the Wicker Park Neighborhood Council. Theprimary focus of my organizing efforts, as dictated by my grant funding, is grassroots-

empowerment on crime-centered issues. As a human being, I am trying to bring a little

peace and a few more smiles into an area torn by politics (we're smack in the middle of

the 26th Ward), gang rivalry, and all the problems that come with an economically

depressed community. I need to keep on my toes, but I am periodically rewarded—evensurprised— by expressions of resolve in this interesting and dynamic neighborhood.

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FICHT, Thomas A. (BFA '59): I work for the Regional Office of HUD and am responsible

for administering the programs for Community Planning & Development in the state of

Georgia. My staff and I work on community development in the Metro areas in Georgia

as well as making grants to the state. Other work includes economic development and

housing rehabilitation in Georgian communities. I now have two nephews at the U.of 1.

but not in the Department, however. We have an active Illini Club here in Atlanta. 1 got

up a group to go to the '86 Peach Bowl.

FRANK, Joe (MUP '76): Serving as acting planning director for the past nine months has

been an eye-opening experience. I just completed the city's first neighborhood plan for

part of the older core area of the city. The city has undergone a change of city

administration and v/ith the threat of re-call of some city council persons by a group

approving tax increases, life has been interesting around the planning department. Wehad our third child in September and we are all happy. Springtime in the Rockies is just

beginning and we're looking forward to a summer of hiking, fishing, camping, etc.

FREUND, Adrian P. (BUP '72): After spending 25 years in the upper Midwest—the last

ten years in Madison, Wisconsin, with the Dane County Regional Planning Commission—

I

packed up my belongings and moved south to Austin, Texas, last December. With mymove came a shift in career direction, a change of pace and a definite change in the

climate! Within the City of Austin I serve as Acting Chief Environmental Officer for the

Office of Environmental Resource Management, which is located in the Department of

Planning and Growth Management. We have 20 members in our Office organization and

have an annual budget of around one million dollars. Development has been rife in this

city for several years, so our Office—and I—have been working "flat out" to keep up with

the flow of events. I have also been recovering from moving and fixing up a new house

and garden, so sleep has been scarce! I was elected to the national APA Board of

Directors as a Director at Large, and would welcome any suggestions that members mayhave for improvement of the organization, or any communication that members may wish

to send to me. I am also the Board Member of the DURP Constituent Alumni Association

responsible for liaison with the U of I Alumni Association, and would be pleased, also, to

receive any ideas that alumni might have relating to the activities and running of the

organization. In this regard, I would particularly like to hear from alums who are in

states where there might be sufficient numbers to support local meetings and functions.

I think it would be a good idea if we could get something like this off the ground. Anysuggestions and program ideas?

FUKE, Sidney M. (MUP '71): After thirteen rewarding years with the County of Hawaii,

eight as its Planning Director, I am now embarking on an equally exciting and challenging

career—that of a private planning consultant. 1 began in January 1985 and am working

harder but enjoying every minute of it.

GEORGE, Vernon (BSCP '61): The firm is continuing to grow and to diversify the range

of real estate, urban economic and investment services offered. The Atlanta, Denver

and Florida operations are thriving and challenging us in Washington to stay ahead in

volume. We have a lot of fun managing the business aspects of the firm. Some day wemay even make some money. On the home front, one of the six teenagers has graduated

and is looking at law school. One is still in high school, the others still in college. Bette

still in mortgage finance. Had a chance to spend some time on campus a couple of

months ago and was very impressed with the job Lew Hopkins and the faculty are doing.

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80

But the building space! We hire MBAs, MPAs, economists and others, but planners dobest.

GETZEL, Patricia M. (MUP '73): Barry and I moved our family to San Diego fromSeattle in October, 1984. My twin sons turned 10 in February and are enjoying playing

sports in the sun instead of rain. My job is quite hectic. My office runs a communitynewspaper, a community garden and gets involved with community development issues in

the neighborhood. There are still a number of non-profit groups in Southern California

struggling to survive is these days of Reaganomics. San Diego metropolitan area is

receiving 1,000 new residents a week! Imagine the planning problem.

GHAREEB, M. Noshy (MUP '71): As Head of Planning and R.D. Sector, I am involved

now in more meetings with Governors and official people. I am also a member of the

Egyptian Businessmen Association, which extends its umbrella of activities to manycountries. My second daughter will join the university next year with her eldest sister

who is now studying at the Faculty of Art. In 1984, 1 attended Henley, the managementcollege in the U.K.—the "Senior Course." This year, 1 am applying for the Spurs Grant at

MIT.

GILCHRIST, Martin, C. (MUP '66): Time has passed too quickly since the U of I. It has

been 18 years since my partner (University of Pittsburgh) and I founded Urban Researchand Development Corporation to offer urban planning, landscape architecture and site

engineering services. Over 800 public and private clients have been served in the

intervening years including Federal, state, county and local agencies to business,

industrial and various private entities. I am happy that you are publishing an alumninewsletter and thankful that I periodically come in contact with past U of I graduates

and fellow students.

GILTNER, Robert E. (BFLA '54, MSCP '58): Continuing to enjoy working with our

interdisciplinary consulting firm. We currently have a staff of over 50 engaged in a

wide-range of projects for both public and private clients. On the public side, we are

doing socioeconomic analysis, land use regulation, comprehensive planning, and park andopen space planning. For the private sector, we do economic feasibility, planning for

land development and detailed site planning and landscape architecture. We are able to

carry private investors from beginning feasibility analysis to the layout and landscaping

of model homes or industrial parks. Working in the Rocky Mountain Region primarily,

but with other jobs throughout the country. Sizable Illinois contingent in Colorado, somein other private firms, some in public agencies.

GINSBACH, Kate (MUP '84): Have worked at American Airlines since graduation.

Moved into a new position on March 24; Market Analyst, Domestic Pricing. In my formerposition, the mostjnteresting projects have been demographic and marketing studies of

the Senior Market, Women's Market, and a national/regional economic and demographicstudy which is scheduled to be published. A BIG TEXAS HOWDY TO ALL!!!

I

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81

GLANCE, A. Richard (MUP '73): As preservation consultants, we won an award, in

conjunction with Carnegie Mellon University, in the 33rd Annual Progressive

Architecture Awards Program. 99% of our work over the past several years has beenarchitectural. There is no money or interest in the Pittsburgh region for planning

issues. Planning is dead!!

GLEBSNER, Robert L. (MUP '80): In 1984, 1 left my job with the City of ColoradoSprings to join the United States Peace Corps. After a brief but very enjoyable stay withthe Peace Corps in Fiji, I returned to my hometown in Indiana to take care of somefamily problems. 1 am now anxiously awaiting a chance to return to planning in

Colorado.

GLITHERO, Patrick J. (MUP '75): I will soon have been Director here ten years. I'm

just as busy as ever. No major changes have occurred in my life.

GOBLE, Bob (MUP '71): 1985 was a year of optimism for Carter Goble Associates withmajor staff growth and the opening of branch offices in Raleigh and Orlando plus aproject office in West Palm Beach. We continue to do planning consulting in ourtraditional areas of transit, paratransit and criminal justice systems and facilities, andhave grown significantly in the courts and judicial facilities area this past year. Most of

our work is still Eastern seaboard with occasional projects in the Midwest andSoutheast. We were delighted to hire Karen Chinn—another U. of I. MUP graduate—whois proving and upholding the U of I tradition of producing good and versatile planners.

She works both in transit and criminal justice facilities planning and has been a big plus

for our firm.

GOLDFARB, Eugene (MUP '74): The children are growing up fast; Melanie is a secondgrader and Justin starts kindergarten in the Fall. It's even to the part where Pip is readyto rejoin the workforce after an eight-year hiatus. On the job, I've moved fromenvironmental planning for HUD programs in the State of Illinois to coordinatingmicrocomputers and single-family housing developments for HUDs Midwest region.

GRIMES, Jim (BUP '71, MUP '73): I'm keeping busy as Communications and MediaInstructor at the Capital Area Vocational Center and manager of our radio station WQNAFM Springfield and our television production center. I'll be working my eighth summer atthe U.S. Defense Information School in Indianapolis as a Media Instructor. My Illinois

National Guard unit recently completed a three week tour of duty in Germany. My wife,

Jan (BA '73 UI) has joined the Illinois State Library's Literacy Project as a publicrelations specialist and our daughters, Katie 10 and Erin 5 are keeping us on our toes asthey move into and through elementary school. I just stepped down as chairman of ourvillage plan commission after four years and recently completed two terms as RecordingSecretary and Newsletter Editor for the Illinois News Broadcasters Association. 1 amtrying desperately to finish a Masters Thesis at SSU for an M.A. in Communications, this

year for sure! P.S. (to the Department Head), I am very interested in lecturing yourstudents on the role that media plays in urban planning issues and on how planningpractitioners can develop effective working relationships with the electronic and print

media in their communities. My phone is (217) 529-5431 (CAVC) and 483-4985 (home).Best wishes to everyone at C-U and to my former professors, Blair, et.al.

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GRONER, Guy (BUP '75, MUP '77): I am out of planning at this point, and instead, amnow part of the ENR data processing staff. My responsibility is to manage the

acquisition and use of microcomputers within ENR's Springfield offices. Things havebeen moving very fast in this field currently. It is a distinct change to have people seek

out your assistance in making a decision rather than trying to convince them you should

be making the decision for them—a la planning. I imagine that if there were somemystique about planning, as there is with computers, with various arcane references to

things unknowable by mortal man, and strong divisions into mutually incompatible campsof theory and practice so that the media would have something to report, planning might

garner a few more interested spectators.

HAAR, Herbert (MSCP '64): Am carrying out a port strategic plan this year with

Temple Barker and Sloane as the consultant. Have traveled overseas during the last 2

years to London, Paris, Finland, Sweden, Brussels, Kingston, Brazil, Japan, and china on

several different business trips. Was awarded in 1984 the Department of the Army'sOutstanding Civilian Service Medal and in 1985 received the American Association of

Port Authorities Important Service Award. May retire for the second time in about a

year and go into consulting work in the Washington, D.C. area.

HACK, Gary A. (MUP '67): 1 am completing my term as department head and looking

forward to returning to urban design practice and teaching. The past four years have hadtheir satisfactions including starting new degree programs in planning for developing

areas and countries, and in real estate development, as well as seeing a new edition of

Site Planning published. However, I realize now that the real satisfaction in the

academic world is in teaching and research and the prospect of returning to it seems a

real luxury. Lynda's interior design practice is busy and our two children, now 10 and 12

seem to be growing up too quickly.

HAMELTON, Calvin S. (BFALA '49): July 1, 1986, I intend to retire as Planning Director

for the city of Los Angeles. I have served the city as Director for almost 22 years. I

intend to pursue new challenges as an expert witness in court, consulting in planning andurban design, teaching, lecturing, developing international seminars on future technology

and completing three books. This period of 22 years has seen great changes in Los

Angeles. I have led the adoption of its first General Plan, development of Coastal Plans,

Specific Design Plans for many major centers of activity such as the Central Business

District, Century City, etc. and helped stimulate plans for rapid transit, massivedownzoning, etc. AU of our 7 children except one are through college or graduate school

and we enjoy 6 grandchildren. Life continues to be satisfying and ever more challenging.

HARDER, Dennis A. (MUP '67): In early 1984, I resigned as the Chicago Department of

Planning Deputy Commissioner to become Director of Planning for Murphy/Jahn,Architects in Chicago. I spent 1984 and 1985 at Murphy/Jahn, working primarily on the

O'Hare International Airport $1.6 billion Development Program. In January, 1986, I left

to join TRKLA, PETTIGREW, ALLEN AND PAYNE, a Chicago-based planning anddevelopment consulting firm.

HARRIS, Paul C. (MSCP '64): I've had 22 satisfying years living in Chattanooga,Tennessee—a city that is making many significant improvements to enhance its livability

and to capitalize on its beautiful natural river/mountain setting. Providing planning

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83

assistance these many years (as a planner with the Tennessee Department of Economicand Community Development) to outlying towns and counties in Southeast Tennessee

covers the broad spectrum of planning tasks and countless interesting situations arise

when the elements of rural politics and often strained local finances interplay.

Personally, I've become increasingly involved in the environmental and social activities

of the Tennessee Ornithological Society; and how spend much of my free time traveling

across North America on well-planned birding trips, some of which result in illustrated

programs which I present at various chapter meetings. The outdoor experience of

"birding" affords a fine contrast to the demands of the planning office.

HARRISS, Lynn M.F. (BSLA '31): Last September (1985) quite a group of us who werebusy at our drawing boards and other places, working on plans for the Blue Ridge

Parkway in 1935 (wow!) gathered together at the site of the start of the first

construction contract, Cumberland Knob, North Carolina, to celebrate the Parkway's

Golden Anniversary. A few days prior, another celebration was held in Boone, N.C.

during which time some of us "old timers" delivered reminiscenses and bits of wisdom;

and such lesser lights as Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., Harry F. Byrd, Jr., and others, held

forth.

HAUERSPERGER, R.C. (Dick) (MUP '62): Looking forward to spending 2 weeks in

Berlin, Germany, with Friendship Force in May.

HERMANSSON, Gunnar (MUP '71): Working for Landskrona municipality—now in myeighth year. The past two years I have been working in the mayor's office as a

coordinator and advisor. Landskrona has lost 10% of its population due to the shutdownof our biggest industry, a shipyard with 3,500 employees. Restructuring our industry andadjusting our local government to the new situation has been most interesting andregarding. Come and see the result!

HERON, Keith (MUP '74): This is a message to my classmates. I haven't been to our

school in a number of years. I would really like to see the Class of '74 again in a reunion

setting. Send a letter this way, so we can get together. Pm having a new burst of

energy. I could do with some 'planning' discourse from planners who have remained in the

field, especially academics. My Cornell experience was very, very insightful. And, nowVm about to explore teaching. I hope to hear from some of you real soon.

HERRMANN, KatMeen (MUP '80): I've enjoyed the new changes in my job. Initially, I

was involved in tort litigation. Now, I handle arbitrations, employment disputes andcontract litigation. On the home front, I've done some traveling—most recently, to

Spain.

HILLAL, Michelle (MUP '82): In University City, we're busily finishing the City's

Comprehensive Plan which was done in house and are beginning work on the ZoningCode. Other activities have include revitalizing the central business district andcoordinating a plan to develop priorities and development guidelines for a local historic

district. Our first project in that plan will involve raising funds to restore two limestone

pylons with cast concrete lions on top. These pylons were constructed by George Zolnay,

a famous sculptor and are on the National Register of Historic Places. Obviously, I do a

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84

little of everything. Outside of work I've become involved in working on the Ozark Trail

which will eventually extend from south St. Louis County into northern Arkansas. As a

member of the Sierra Club, about one weekend a month is spent building trails or

maintaining trails that have been built. The Sierra Club supplies the tools. We're alwayslooking for volunteers to supply the labor.

HINSMAN, Linda (Raymon) (MUP '84): I've lived in Springfield since April 1985 when I

started working at the Illinois EPA. I married Will Hinsman last November in Elmhurst.

WiU works for the city of Springfield as a Environmental Technician. We still haveKirby.

HINSMAN, Will (MUP '85): Finally found a permanent full-time job after working under

contract with the Department of Conservation for 5 months. In November married Linda

Raymon.

HLAVACEK, Kathleen (McMahon) (BAUP '80): I worked as a planner for Arlington

Heights until October 1985, when I resigned a month before the birth of my second son. I

am now a full-time homemaker.

HOEFER, LiUa F. (MUP '76): From graduation until one year ago, I worked in

transportation related jobs at the Federal and local levels and with private consultants.

My current job is in land use, zoning, subdivision and community developmentadministration. I was rusty on these subjects, but have always thought of them as the

heart of our profession, and am glad that I went "back to basics." The county I amresponsible for is Lexington, which is experiencing tremendous growth and has great

infrastructure needs such as water, sewer and road improvements. This urbanized area

includes my hometown, Columbia, where I live once again after moving around for eight

years. It's a new thing to no longer be anonymous...! find myself tidying up even to go

grocery shopping, because I keep running into people I know. A blessing and sometimes a

thorn!

HOFFMAN, Terry (BAUP '79, MUP '83): StiU rehabbing in downtown St. Louis. FinaUyhave a shower and hot/cold running water. Still plugging away at Anheuser-Busch doing

logistics/policy implementation planning for the beer company, in the areas of systemscapacity planning, new beverage/product planning, etc. StiU married, no kids yet but

under a lot of pressure to start (Fm running out of excuses).

HOLLAND, Iris (BUP '70, MUP '72): John and I continue to enjoy retirement on

beautiful Lake Lanier in Georgia's Blue Ridge Mountains. We do some traveling and have

lots of company, mainly relatives and old friends. This is tourist country, and there are

many interesting and pleasant things to do. Grandchildren are fun, too. I still do somepublic relations work, and 1 plan on doing some private research and writing this year. I

usually have too many irons in the fire and have to juggle some of them, but eventually I

get everything accomplished. Happy springtime to aU of you, and I wish you weU.

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85

HOLLAND, Steven J. (BUP '69): Life continues to be busy and challenging here in theCoUege of Engineering, as we plan for the large expansion of the next 20 years. I stiU

have only one son, but we are planning another child in the future. A special "heUo" to

Iris Holland.

HOOPER, Richard (MUP 72): I am manager of housing program development for

Seattle's Department of Community—very busy developing locally funded housingprograms to replace disintegrating federal resources. Nancy Silberg (also MUP '72) and I

have two children, 9 and 6, who take up the remainder of time after work. Nancy is nowPresident of Pacific Health, a new health maintenance organization affiliated withPacific Medical Center in Seattle.

HOPKINS, Roger G. (MUP '75): We relocated to DeKalb after spending 9 very goodyears in Neenah, Wisconsin. Much of my energy in DeKalb, since coming here in

September, 1984, has been devoted to reorganizing the department to include inspectionand code enforcement, planning, community development grant management, andeconomic development attraction and retention. We are now a family of 4. Tony is 4

years old and Megan is 7 months as of this writing. Debbie is studying at NIU for herMasters of Accounting, hopefuUy to teach at the coUege leveL

HORAN, Peter J. (BUP '67): The last two years have been critical professionally.

Reorganization of the Planning and Development Departments that I'm responsible for

has taken shape with positive community support and has allowed the economicdevelopment program to grow substantially. However, the most fulfilling has beenaccomplishing the 100-acre Focal Point Development which wiU create a skyline for oursuburban community—a real first that I hope you'll be reading more about. My privatelife has also been changing with Carolyn working fulltime as a learning disability tutor,

sending our oldest daughter off to Miami University and getting ready to ship out theyoungest. Next year, we'U be "empty nesters"!

HOUSTON, Douglas L. (BUP '70): Laura and I have lived in Boulder since 1980 and, withEmily (8) and Andrew (5) in school, intend to stay here. I came to Boulder as head of theBoulder Urban Renewal Authority to undertake a large tax increment redevelopmentproject. That project was successfully closed out in 1984. From 1984-85, I worked as aconsultant for several cities in Colorado, including Denver. In 1985, I joined KirchnerMoore & Co., a Denver-based investment banking firm which specialized in publicfinance throughout Colorado and the West. This may be a strange place for a planner butit certainly involves extensive use of my governmental experience. Laura and I alwayslook forward to hearing from our friends and the Department.

HOUSTON, Rt^er L. (BUP '74): My wife, Gillian, and I are stiU living in Arvada,Colorado. Arvada is a city with a population of approximately 92,000, and is located in

the Northwest metropolitan ares of Denver.

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INGRISH, Kathi (BUP 76): I have finally escaped the cold and snow of northern

Illinois. Rockingham, NC, is a textiles-oriented small community of 8,500 within a

couple of hours' drive of larger cities, mountains, or the ocean. I am the entire "Planning

Department" and therefore have been involved in diverse projects—from disaster

preparedness planning to downtown revitalization. I live in the country but tend to spend

many free weekends in the city of Charlotte.

ISSEL, William E. (MSCP '64): I had the dubious distinction of starting up a new planning

department in a newly incorporated town which has an advanced case of sunbelt

explosive growth. Our staff has grown in two years from 13 to 23 just to keep our heads

above water, and I've stopped counting the gray hairs I've added. All in all, it's a

fascinating and thrilling experience.

JACOBSON, Bonnie (BAUP '81, MUP '83): I am working for a consulting firm which does

economic and market feasibility studies and am loving it! Am also quite active in the

American Planning Association here in Chicago and encourage all of you planners whohave settled in the Chicago area to join us at our monthly meetings. For those of youwho were in Len Heumann's housing seminar with me, I have still not given up on the

concept of joint planning with hospitals and have recently published an article on that

subject entitled, "Changes in the Health Care Industry Provide New Commercial Real

Estate Opportunities," in my company newsletter. I live in an area just West of Lincoln

Park in Chicago enjoying urban living. Am also stiU single and available! I have managedto keep in contact with quite a few alumns from both grad and undergrad and we get

together every once in a while and have a lot of fun.

JAROSS-ARBBE, Janet (MUP '81): Yes, I'm still working in the Landscape Architecture

Department and still managing the Illinois Streams Information System database. I've

been learning all I ever wanted to know about computers and databases. Now I am in the

middle of a job search looking to move up in planning. Next Alumni News hopefully I'll

be telling you about a new job. I'd also like to encourage more alumni to write notes in

the Alumni News. It's great to hear what you're aU up to and where you've moved since

leaving DURP. We want to hear from you!

JOHNSON, Rhonda (MUP '83): I am currently living in Boston and working as an airport

planner for Hoyle, Tanner in Associates, Inc. in southern New Hampshire. I'm enjoying

my work and living on the East Coast. In my spare time, I take classes in theater and

baUet, and I travel as often as possible.

JONES, William M. (BUP '70): Sorry I did not respond to the last news. I recently left

employment as Director of Housing and Economic Development for a local communitybased development corporation to start my own real estate development firm. I have

been practicing real estate planning and development for the last 16 years. Some of myaccomplishments include the construction of two multipurpose centers, one public health

facility, three day care centers, two elderly housing projects, 400 units of family housing,

600 units rehab housing, a comprehensive plan spanning twenty years for a communityorganization and workable plan applications for the city. Look for some exciting newsfrom this graduate in the near future.

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KEHO, John (MUP '85): My job in Carrolton has proven to be very busy. We are

constantly trying to keep up with our growth while developing policies and procedures for

our one-and-a-half-year-old department. If any of you are down here for our TexasSesquieentennial, be sure to stop by for a visit.

KELiVIAN, Paul B. (MUP '71): After 12 years in regional planning, I jumped ship to local

government. In June 1985, I became Director of the Gwinnett County Planning

Department. Since Gwinnett is the fastest-growing county in the U.S., it has beenextremely fast-paced. In my first 8 months, we have adopted a new zoning ordinance and

the county's first land use plan, reorganized the department and the planning process, and

built a professional staff. It has been fun. On the home front, my wife. Donna, is

wrapping up her computer science degree at Georgia Tech, my daughter is now in high

school and my son is heavily into transforming robots.

KING, Thomas (MUP '81): I'm nearing completion of a land use and development plan

update for the City of Akron (235,000 pop.) involving many meetings over one and a half

years and coordinating work of several planners. My wife Debbie and I visited John Page('79) and his wife Cindy in Cedar Falls, Iowa, last summer and were treated to the

spectacular Sturgeon Falls Days Festival. Fm looking forward to Spring while working on

our 72 year old house.

KLATT, Bill (BFLA '51): Out of retirement — working with Rock Island EconomicDevelopment projects and processes. Challenging — and sometimes a bit more.

KRAINTZ, Franz (MUP '85): I never imagined I'd be living and working in the St. Louis

metropolitan area, but what a time! And what a town!

KREINES, Ted (BSCP '60): Our firm has grown: 3 offices, the most recent in Honolulu.

No work yet, but plenty of nice promises. Nice to go and check promises out. By the

time we're ready to retire, we'll be ready to go to the clients in Hawaii. Vern Georgecalled the other day. Since it was 9:30 a.m. his time, it was 8:30 a.m. PST. Since I

wasn't available, I called him back. $14 later, I found out he wants to expand into

California. Fruits, nuts & flakes, but not enough consultants out here! Come on down,Vern.

KRIVISKEY, Bruce M. (MUP '67): For the past two years, I have been in Washington,DC, with the American Institute of Architects. I am directing the AIA's urban design andhistoric preservation programs and am working with national committees addressing

these issues. Topping our list this year are: Urban Design/Historic Preservation

Administration, Disaster Preparedness and Recovery Planning, Partial Building

Preservation or "Facadism", Winter Cities, and Underutilized Railroad Lands in UrbanAreas. I also direct the AIA's Regional/Urban Design Assistance Teams (R/UDAT)Program. This involves working with communities around the country that haveidentified specific urban design or planning problems and assembling, with the aid of the

national committees, multidisciplinary teams of experts to work with these. A variety of

issues are touched on including growth management, neighborhood preservation,

downtown revitalization, transportation corridors, and urban housing. Team membersdonate their time and produce their reports in the field during a four or five day

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8!

intensive work session. About six such team visits are held each year. Needless to say,

my work takes me arounc^ the country. A highlight last year, however, was visiting the Uof I at the invitation of Lock Blair and lecturing on the R/UDAT program.

KURTZ, Ken (BUP 77): In October 1 began a new position, still with the Port Authority,

as Planning and Budget Coordinator. We are in the process of instituting a programbudgeting system and my job, therefore, has become a textbook cast of instituting

change in a reluctant organization. Quite a change from the number crunching andpolicy analysis of my previous assignments.

LaPLANT, Suzanne Johnson (MUP 74): I have been Chief of the Metrobus Service

Management Branch for 2 years now and I'm still learning something new every day.

Between ingenious bus operators and often incredible demands from the public andpoliticians, I'm never bored. Dale's son and wife just had a baby, so I am now a (step?)

grandmother. 1 never figured Fd have grandchildren without having to be a motherfirst. Good deal. ..no stretch marks!

LEITNER, Martin L. (MUP '69): 1985 was a momentous year for us, both personally andprofessionally. We built and moved into a new home in Leawood, Kansas — a fast-

growing suburb of Kansas City, Missouri. In addition, on August 1, 1985, our law firm,

Freilich, Leitner & Carlisle, P.C., merged with a larger New York firm, Herrick

Feinstein, which specializes in real estate development and finance to complement our

zoning and land use practice. My work in the past year has taken me to Florida, Texas,

California, Minnesota, Maryland and Tennessee as weU as to various cities in Missouri

and Kansas. Our firm has developed a speciality in impact fees and other innovative

techniques for public facilities financing, which has been in considerable demand given

the budgetary constraints of most local governments.

LEVESQUE, Larry P. (MUP '76): My law clients include several people shaping andinfluencing a rapidly-changing Hartford, the "Insurance Capitol" of the USA. I work in

finance, taxation and housing programs. The Redevelopment and Planning departmentstry to plan carefully, despite political and budgetary vacillations. Hartford, the fourth-

poorest American city in terms of percentage of residents below the area's poverty line,

is the scene of constant battle between downtown business interest and poor residents

surrounding spectacular downtown growth. The resulting lawsuits are leaders in the

nation and sometimes productive. Hello to everyone. Tim Beebel hosted a great Conn.,

U of I Alumni Rose BoU party last year.

MACZKA, Michael (BAUP '79): I am currently working as an analyst for a small

mortgage banking and real estate consulting firm. My work involves market andfinancial feasibility for investment grade real estate, mostly to-be-builts and recently

completed developments. Before this, I worked at VMS Realty, Inc., a Chicago-basedsyndicator. I finally completed by MBA at DePaul University in 1983, on which I had

worked as a part-time student. (I thought I'd never be done with school!) On the homefront, I spent three years "pioneering" in the South Loop and rehabbed a loft apartment in

the process. I've since bought a house in the Ravenswood Manor neighborhood on the

city's north side. The house was built in the 20's in the Arts & Crafts style and rehabbing

this has been a lot of fun also.

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MARLATT, Richard M. (BAUP '82, MUP '84): Have been working at the U.S. ArmyCorps of Engineers Construction Engineering Research Lab for a year now. Employmenthas had its ups and downs with the current situation of the Federal budget, but Fve

managed to retain my position so far! My responsibilities have increased and I'm

beginning to feel a sense of accomplishment in that all those years at DURP weren't

wasted! After graduation, I thought I was leaving school behind, but no such thing. Vmlearning that the real world is much more work than school and I still have to attend

seminars and lectures. I take the AICP exam in May. ...after reviewing all the material

to be covered on it, I realize that it's like studying for a big final. Clyde Forrest and

Carl Patton have told me not to worry: no one with a Master's from DURP has ever

failed. Thanks for the extra pressure guys, but there's a first time for everything. I look

forward to reading the Alumni News and learning what all of you are up to. I would enjoy

talking to some of you "from the past". ...Linda Getz, Doug Powell, Dave Full, Scott

Ewbank and others from the undergrad days.

MATHIEN, James (MUP '81): New Mexico has turned out to be a great adventure. Lots

of sunshine, clean air, blue skies, mild winters, mountains, etc. The next best thing to

"Mecca."

MEA, Susan (BAUP '84): 1 am currently a grad student at the School of Architecture

here at the U of I, in my first year of the 3V2-year program.

MEE, Joy (MUP '70): I'm in my second year of directing long-range planning for

Phoenix—general, neighborhood, redevelopment, downtown, historic preservation,

research, governmental, mall and other planning—anything beyond 6 months—pluspersonnel, budget and graphics. We support almost two dozen citizen committees andtask forces. My big accomplishment was directing the effort to write the Phoenix

General Plan and getting it adopted in October. In my leftover time I attend APAfunctions, participate in Soroptomist, serve on the DURP Planning Council, work with

youth, teach Sunday School, and go on hikes and other outings with Bill and our twosons. Enjoyed visiting the campus last fall for the first time since 1970 as a member of

the Planning Council. It was good to see so many familiar faculty members and meetnew ones. BiU and I are challenged by ever-increasing job responsibilities and the desire

to spend enough time with our family and participate in professional and communityactivities. Besides heading up Water Resource Planning, he's now taken over the WaterConservation Program, is Professional Development Chair for APA and serves on twohomeowner's association boards. Life moves at a very fast pace.

MERKIN, Laura (MUP '81): Currently working toward a Master of Management degreefrom Northwestern University's J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management. I plan to

specialize in the management of public and non-profit organizations.

MICHIE, Scott A. (MUP '78): After 3 years as the City Planner/Director of CommunityDevelopment, the City Manager asked me (in 1984) to join him as his assistant andPersonnel Director. We are currently in the middle of a difficult one-cent local sales tax

campaign. I've remained active in planning, serving on the Kansas State Chapter of APAExecutive Committee and also served on a panel at a recent APA forum in Kansas City.

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MUNSHAW, Nancy (MUP '79): Presently I'm enjoying my first experience in working in a

suburb, albeit one with a strong sense of identity. We live in the city, watching St. Louis

blossom. What fun!

MILKINT, Craig (BAUP '83, MUP '86): Was married last September to Margaret Resce,

a 1985 U of 1 grad in English. I work as a real estate analyst involved with acquisition

analysis, market studies, and development analysis. My wife is an executive recruiter

with a firm in Chicago. We enjoy living in the Lakeview area of Chicago.

MILLER, Barry (BAUP '81): After two years in Texas (1983-85), returned to the BayArea to begin working as an urban planner with the consulting firm of Sedway CookeAssociates. We are a medium-sized firm based in San Francisco and do most of our workfor local governments in California. I'm finding the Bay Area as fascinating from aprofessional perspective as I did from an academic perspective a few years back. Rightnow I'm in the midst of preparing a 10-year master plan for the Alameda Naval Air

Station. Next month Fm scheduled to work on a video production of the Farmers Branch,

Texas, comprehensive plan. (Next stop—MTV!) As far as my personal life is concerned,

Fm still an SWM. Fd be glad to hear from any DURP alumni if you're in the area.

MILLINER, Wsdter (MSCP '59): Nannie and I are part-timers now — volunteer workers,

travellers, and residents also of my hometown east of the Chesapeake Bay. 'Tis the

simpler, slower life we cherish now, but we have ventured forth (to Europe yet!) for

reunions of my WWII unit and our 50s neighbors in France. We are looking forward to

visiting the mid-west and northcentral states to see both grandchildren and perhaps the

alma mater. Cheers.

MILLS, Raymond W. (BFALA '40): Single. No offspring. Partially retired. Spendwinters in Dominican Republic, summers—home in Michigan.

MOELLER, Anne Marie: (BUP '75): At the present time I am a full-time homemaker.My husband, David, and I have 2 boys (4 yrs. and 2 yrs.) and are expecting a 3rd baby this

May. Obviously, our home life is very busy and fun. David is a full-time real estate

appraiser and at times I assist him in photographing properties or writing up reports.

MOELLER, John Robert (BSCP '66): June of 1986 will be a double anniversary of sorts—20 years since I received my BS in planning from the U of I and 20 years of service with

the Local Planning Office (formerly Tennessee State Planning Office). Doesn't seempossible—it feels like only a few years ago that Ed Geubtner, Pete Horan, Pat Nardi, andI swapped stories about one day earning $10,000 a year and how, if it ever happened, wewould be on easy street! Life in Tennessee—this was definitely the right move for us.

When Diane and I first came to TN it was with the understanding that we would stay 2

years and then return to the Chicago area and get a "real" job. How things change! TN,and especially Chattanooga, has been home to us these past 15 years and we love it. Theclimate is ideal, the rolling hills are beautiful, the people are warm and friendly, the cost

of living is less, state and nationeil parks are close with a whole range of new recreational

adventures, and all the other amenities of the area have provided a wonderfulenvironment in which to raise a family. The children-John Jr. is 16 and Nancy is 11

(going on 21)—cover the whole gamut with their activities: soccer, tennis, band,

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basketball, volleyball, scouts, church youth groups, plus they manage to stay on the honorroUs of their respective schools. Truly we have been blessed as a family in so manyways! Our church and home are at the center of our lives. This has made for a morepeaceful home environment and has kept us close and loving toward one another. (Dianeand I celebrated our 20th wedding anniversary in August 1985). The future—who knows—

I

might be in a new job in a new location at some point, but until that time I have learned

to trust the Lord and enjoy the blessings He bestows for each and every day.

NANETTI, Raffaella (MUP 70): With my husband and son I spent 1984-85 in Oxford,England, as a Visiting Fellow at Nuffield College. During that time, I conducted a study

on municipal services planning for which I had received a Fulbright Senior ResearchGrant. I am back in Chicago now teaching at UIC and writing a book on the linkage

between Italy's policies of decentralization and the performance of the country's smalland medium size industrial and commercial enterprises.

NELSON, William I. (BFLA '48): Planning to merge with a large architectural firm.

NICHOLAS, Milton J. (MUP '69): Since 1979 when I left public planning, I have beeninvolved in a construction firm specializing in custom residences and light commercialprojects. We have experienced a solid steady growth and our emphasis on design/build

projects has been an exciting aspect of our business. I retain my interest in planning andhave been serving on the Los Altos Planning Commission for the last three years. Bestwishes to all. If anyone is in the San Francisco Bay area, don't hesitate to call.

NIELSEN, Christopher E. (BUP '75): I'm now a fire sprinkler fitter—U.A. local #709—and reaUy enjoy the work. Still single and crazy as ever and I love Los Angeles. I workfor the largest sprinkler company in L.A. and have worked on several exciting jobs

including the Bl bomber hanger in Palmdale, the Promenade Towers (a city within thecity) that is part of the Community Development Agency—Bunker HiU area of downtown,and I'm now working at the downtown L.A. Hilton that is being retrofitted to bring it upto code.

OAKES, Kevin (MUP '83): I'm still working and living in the Salt Lake City Area. SandyCity is a suburb of about 60,000 people, close to the ski resorts. Subdivision approval,site plan review, and conditional uses are my responsibility. Rhonda and 1 have onebeautiful girl, now 2 years old, 2 dogs, and 1 cat. We would enjoy hearing from any old

friends.

O'DONNELL, Michael (MUP '79): The Area Agency on Aging continues to be a dynamicand innovative place to work. The Agency created a new title holding corporation in

1984 and developed a new facility in the Bloomington-Normal enterprise zone. Thefacility houses the administrative offices of the ECIAAA and a central kitchen for thePeace Meal Senior Nutrition Program. In 1985, the ECIAAA reorganized staff into twomajor divisions to improve the effectiveness of grants management and communityservices to promote innovative programming and resource development to meet theneeds of a growing population of older Americans—you and me. Maria and I purchasedour first home on West side of Bloomington. We now have four daughters, ages 8, 6, 3

and 1.

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O'DONNELL, Patricia (MUP '85): Lots of things happening! Fm an associate at a small

(6 person, 5 landscape architects) firm in Soho! We specialize in urban waterfronts (East

River Esplanade—59th-72nd St. and 103-125th—Manhattan—completed 1982, North ShoreStaten Island 7-mile Esplanade in progress now); housing site planning (several 40-100

unit sites and 2 in New Jersey, "VVittingham" and "60-Acre Reserve," each with over a

thousand units) and, my specialty, historic landscapes (City Hall Park, Manhattan

schematic design completed 1985 and moving toward 1st phase reconstruction; Prospect

Park, Brooklyn (designed by Olmsted 6c Vaux 1866-70); 3 historic landscape studies

nearing publication; construction documents for "The Upper Lakes" reconstruction of 20

acres in process. We won an Art Commission Award for Excellence in Design for this

project. Completed an historic orchard for Mt. Clare, Baltimore, in the fall/winter of

1985. Won a limited competition for the restoration of Druid HiU Park, Baltimore, andare currently in the first phase reconstruction of the Conservatory and grounds. Ourmost recent historic landscape project is the Restoration Master Plan for Olmsted's 1884

Emerald Necklace in Boston which is a joint venture with William Pressley & Associates

and begun in April 1986. For ASLA, I chair the Committee on Historic Preservation anddo a lot for landscape preservation through this volunteer position. At home—JimDonovan (MLA, Illinois 1980) and 1 are fine. During the past two years, we have beenbuilding our own passive solar home (as general contractors) on 3 acres of

environmentally sensitive wetlands. We stiU have the interior finishes and landscaping to

go. Jim works for P.P. Clark Associates, Planners in Rye, N.Y., is a registered landscape

architect, and Director of Environmental Services for their office of 20. Our daughter,

Chanda, is 16 V3 a junior in high school and struggling through her teens.

O'DONNELL, Robert M. (BFALA '38): Retired from HOH Associates, Inc.—continuingas: Chairman of the Board, Colorado Open Lands (501-C3); Trustee of Urban LandInstitute, Weshington, DC; Program Chairman of INTA-10, Sept. '36, in Mission Viejo andSan Francisco (International New Towns Association in The Hague, Netherlands);

FeUow/ASLA—Council of FeUows, APA-AICP.

OLANIPEKUN, Olayinka A. (MUP '79): Early in January I moved from Atlanta, Georgia,

to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to concurrently attend the graduate school of Civil

Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania, and work with the Delaware VaUeyRegional Planning Commission. So far, it has been quite an exciting, but sobering

experience. In this environment (University of Pennsylvania/City of

Philadelphia/Regional Planning) abounds in opportunities to be somebody in life, to leave

us nobler, thus "perfecting" us to help others. Greetings to my colleagues of Class of

1979, and my best wishes for your happiness.

OMAR, McrtKl. Zaki (BAUP '86): At present, I'm enroUed in the MUP program at the U of

I. Glad to be 'accepted' again, so I'm stiU stuck with 'academic life'.

PAGE, John M. (MUP '77): Our time in Alaska came to a sudden halt when the state lost

in building a bridge across Knik Arm. Julie, our son, Dick (19 months in May), and I

transferred to Dallas. I am responsible for environmental impact analyses and the

planning data base for the planned Dallas area rail transit system.

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PAGE, John S. (MUP 79): Iowa has been "home" for more than five years now. My job

responsibilities seem to grow as the City budget gets tighter. Responsibilities include

zoning enforcement, current and long-range planning, and floodplain management. The

troubled farm economy has had definite adverse impacts upon the community. Like mostMidwestern cities, "Economic Development" has become everyone's top priority. The

most important news I have to offer is a birth announcement: Lauren Elizabeth was born

12/9/85. We're having a terrific time with the baby and couldn't be prouder parents.

PAPKE, Gary R. (MUP '75): Carol and I live in a much too old house in Oak Park, with

our two daughters, Anna and Ellen. At Shlaes & Co. I am involved in a wide range of

assignments for both public and private sector clients. Everything from zoning and

development reviews for municipalities, to market studies and feasibility analyses for

developers, to appraisals of large commercial, industrial, and residential properties. Weare especially active in historic preservation, with a nationwide practice in the appraisal

of preservation easement donations.

PARKIN, Roy A. (BUP '76): My wife and I now have two beautiful children, Cate (4

years old) and Ann (1V2 years old). We are still in the process of rehabilitating a turn-of-

the-century house in Galesburg. On the professional level, I have been given increased

responsibilities by the City Manager. I tend to be more of an assistant City Manager. Asin many places, I have become highly invlved in economic development. Our majorprojects now include the establishment of an incubator facility for new business and the

reuse of a vacated mental health center.

PATTON, Carl V. (MUP '69): In 1983 I moved from being Head of the Department of

Urban and Regional Planning at the University of Illinois to Dean of the School of

Architecture and Urban Planning at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee. The School

has 850 students (with about 130 international students), 5 degree programs, a large

research and public service program, eind programs in Europe and Asia. During the past

year we established a faculty exchange program with Gadja Mada University in Indonesia

and with the Central University of Science and Technology in China. We also offer a

Spring semester in Paris and Summer programs in Paris/Barcelona/Berlin/ London and/or

Mexico, depending on the summer. We're expanding our CAD operation and will

demonstrate our capabilities at the ACSP conference which will be in Milwaukee in

1986. Come see us. My research during the past couple of years has included multi-

objective decision-making processes for the State of Wisconsin, Dept. of Transportation,

the design of a Lakefront Terrace for the County and City of MQwaukee, the

development of an international design competition that wiU take place beginning in

1987, and consulting for Emery Realty in Cincinnati. In 1985, I published TheMetropolitan Midwest: Policy Problems and Prospects for Change with Barry Checkowayas co-editor (U of I Press). In 1986, I published Basic Methods of Policy Analysis andPlanning with David Sawicki as co-author (Prentice HaU). On the family front—by the

time you read this, Jane wiU be a freshman in college and John will be a junior in high

school. Both love Wisconsin. John especially loves the skiing. They both have had the

opportunity to travel with me on my research and with their school exchange programs-going to Greece, Austria, New York and Florida. Gretchen found a great job as personnel

director for the Visiting Nurse Corporation. She's also back in school working on another

Master's degree—in Industrial and Labor Relations—heavy economics and statistics.

Hope to see alums at the APA alumni reunions and at the Association of Collegiate

Schools of Planning conference in Milwaukee - October 10-12, 1986.

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PERRY, Gre^ (MUP '80): I've finally settled into a permanent job as Assistant to the

Director, Office of Admissions and Records at the U of I, after traveling through the

Middle East for six months. Admissions work is great and believe it or not, I do^ useplanning skills in this job.

PERSON, Jeffrey D. (BAUP '80): It's a little hard to believe, but I am working in the

real estate syndication department of a public accounting firm in St. Louis after earninga master's degree in accountancy in 1984. We do financial forecasting and assist ourclients in structuring limited partnerships for a wide range of developments. Recentprojects have included IRB-financed apartments in the Sunbelt, historic rehabilitation of

buildings for residential and commercial uses, a neighborhood retail developmentpartially funded with UDAG funds and a nursing home/retirement community. Still fondof the good old days at DURP.

PHILLIPS, York (BUP '69): Not much new to report. Family still doing well. Nicki is

selling real estate—I'm looking forward to her making enough to support me so I canafford to find an easier way to make a living (ha). Amy (9) is busy with girl scouts andJeff (16) is busy with his computer and waiting until I let him get his driver's license. Weare very busy at work trying to figure out how we will comply with the new state

planning regulations. The next couple of years should be pretty exciting!

PETERS, James (MUP '84): Left fulltime work as Associate Editor of Planning magazinelast fall, after 5 years. Traveled overseas (mostly France, Italy, Spain) for several

months, and am now doing freelance writing/editing and planning consulting work in the

Chicago area, much of it for American Planning Association and Planning, plus someediting work for non profits, including the Society for Commercial Archeology (roadside

architecture) and the Society of American Baseball Researchers (send yourcontributions). Enjoying the release from daily commuting to Chicago (40 miles

distance). Learning how to write with music in the background. My wife, Pat, is the

community development director for Aurora.

PETRIE, Pattsi Donahoe- (MUP '83): I am presently working on my Ph.D. in ContinuingEducation. My program is set up to enable me to combine my academic interests in

continuing education and urban planning. This combination will culminate during mydissertation research—looking at the behavior of professionals when planning —"planning" being defined as the generation of information. (Hopkins & Schaeffer). Myteaching assistantship and hourly jobs are in the Psychology Department.

PORTER, Douglas R. (MSCP '60): I'm having a great deal of satisfaction carrying outresearch and education projects for the Urban Land Institute, including publishing

regularly (several books in the past year), and 4 national conferences, plus speakingengagements. My work in the public policy area has concentrated on infrastructure

financing (chiefly fees and exactions), affordable housing, vested rights, and aU sorts of

zoning issues. On the home front, this year all my four children are teenagers, makingthings rather frenetic. I still love living and working in the Washington area, and, after

almost 25 years here, I am beginning to feel like a native.

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POWELL, Delmer H., Jr. (MUP 79): Since my graduation in 1979, I have worked for the

City of Burlington, Iowa, Illinois Department of Transportation, the Chicago AreaTransportation Study, and the Kane County Highway Department. I am currently

employed as the Director of Planning and Programming for the Lake County HighwayDepartment located in Libertyville, Illinois. I enjoy the challenge of being a professional

planner working in an office dominated by professional engineers. In addition to myduties and responsibilities for the County of Lake, I have served the past few years as

Chairman of the Plan Commission of the municipality where I reside. While this has

resulted in even more evening and weekend meetings, I have found the experienceextremely rewarding. It permits me the opportunity to use my experience and knowledgeas a professional planner to assist my community and helps me to understand what it is

like to be a "decision maker"—actually casting that "yea" or "nay" vote. 1 find mypersonal life more and more satisfying and rewarding as time goes on. 1 have beenblessed with a loving and understanding wife, without whom I would wander aimlesslythrough life. We have two dynamic and energetic children—one of each variety. I havecome to fully appreciate why God made two parents. The most awesome responsibility is

the raising and nurturing of another human being.

PREM, Clyde (MUP '83): I'm now living in the Kansas City Area and am working as atransportation planner for the local council of government. 1 like the job. My wife Saraand I hope to do some travelling. We plan to go to Europe this fall. Of course, Tve beenfollowing the baseball world champion Royals, playing some softbaU and doing somewoodworking over the winter. For real excitement, Fm developing a computer softwareprogram to prioritize rural road and bridge projects.

RABB, Gregory P. (MUP '78): I'm in my last semester of the last year of law school (JD,May 1986, S.U.N.Y. - Buffalo). I'm presently employed as a part time political scienceinstructor at S.U.N.Y. - Brockport and inside Attica (maximum security) correctional

facility and as a part time business studies instructor at ViUa Maria College (Buffalo).

My cat is now 14 years old and is getting a "swelled" head because he will soon belong to

a lawyer.

RAHMAAN, Anis-Ui^ (MSCP '61): After having taught planning theory and techniquecourses for three years (1975-78) at the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay campus, I

have been fruitfully busy for the last eight years in Saudi Arabia in the capacity ofUnited Nations Adviser, Urban and Regional Planning. The assignment is quite satisfying

both professionally as well as monetarily. It involves: (a) formulation 6c coordination ofurban and regional planning projects, (b) monitoring and supervising the work of inter-

national/national consulting firms engaged in the preparation of urban and regionaldevelopment plans, and (c) assisting "on the job training program" of Saudi counterpartsin the field of urban and regional development planning. Besides, 1 have contributedpapers in international conferences in various planning issues held in Saudi Arabia,Pakistan and Turkey.

REDELL, Richsu-d (BFALA '34): Retired. Formerly supervisory site planner—PacificCoast area—Department of Housing and Urban Development.

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REED, Wallace (MSCP '61): I continue active planning for the atmospheric future of the

State of Virginia through my role on the Virginia State Air Pollution Control Board. Myacademic research continues to be focused on modeling land use change.

RIMAVICIUS, Lucia E. (MUP '83): The DURP ties are almost impossible to break. It

seems that I am continually bumping into DURP alums in all odd corners. At TeskaAssociates, Inc. (a consulting firm in Evanston, IL) where I now work, two of mycolleagues are DURPERS. They're everywhere, they're everywhere! I am enjoying mywork since there are always new challenges to keep me on my toes. I have thrown in mytap shoes and given up my tap dancing career. I'll leave the soft shoe to Fred Astaire andGinger Rogers. I'll stick to comprehensive plans, tax increment financing and take upteam rowing. My phalanges are too pooped to keep shuffling off to Buffalo!

RINGE, James D. (BSCP '60): I have been Director of Community Development for

Colorado Springs, Colorado, since 1973. Prior to that, I was Planning Director. ColoradoSprings is a major growth community and provides many challenges for me in my current

position. During the past year, we have accomplished an update of the city's

comprehensive plan and started a joint city-county comprehensive plan process. This

should be done by the end of 1986. Last summer, my wife and I went to China for 3

weeks on a bicycle trip. Planning is very different over there.

ROBINSON, Frederic M. (BFALA '36): Retired after 44 years with Harland Bartholomew& Associates. Consultant planner working in over 40 cities in twenty states.

RODGERS, Edwin (MUP '70): I have recently traded the snow, rain, clouds and scarcity

of work in N.E. Ohio for the warmth, sunshine and steady construction on Hilton HeadIsland. Living in one of the Country's most "famous" resort communities is indeed a

unique experience. My family and 1 love it.

RUSSELIVIANN, Anita (MUP '79): Enjoying my work in comprehensive municipalplanning. Fixing up a "new" old house and summer wedding plans are keeping me verybusy.

SANDS, Carolyn M. (MUP '78): In 1983 I left the Illinois Department of Agriculture in

Springfield to return to the University of Illinois to enter a doctoral program in

international agricultural education. The last three years have been filled with the usual

grad school experiences—hectic, stressful and exciting. Fortunately, I'm working with a

wonderful group of people which has made it all even better. I was fortunate to spendthree weeks in Jamaica in January as a member of a study team looking at the national

agricultural technology research, transfer (extension) and farmer utilization system. It

was a wonderful experience, especially since the technology transfer system is the

subject of my thesis. Also, 85 degree weather and palm trees weren't hard to take at

that time of year. 1 hope to complete the degree in a year and return to the real world.

I would like to work in Africa, if there is an opportunity. Otherwise my life is much the

same. My cat and 1 live in an apartment in an older house in Champaign away fromcampus in a good area for walking. There's not much time for hiking or canoeing, which I

reaUy miss. If anybody is coming through town I would love to see them. I've lost touchover the last few years.

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SCHENK, Carl J. (MSCP '63): Son, Peter, is completing a Bachelor's degree at GustavusAdolphus College with a major in financial economics. Other son, Tim, is enrolled at St.

Cloud State University. Wife, Barbara, is completing another year as Teacher's Aide in

Minneapolis School. I have extended my planning interests as a board member of

Crestview Lutheran Nursing Home into the area of long-term care for the elderly.

SCHERER, Dale R. (BFALA '47, MSCP '48): Since retiring from Federal service andprivate practice (Regional Planner-Consultant), I've been active in playing golf, visiting

this great United States, and spending time with the "children" and grandchildren. Wentover to Nigeria to supervise the installation of some computer equipment for a friend of

mine and collected about 6000 used textbooks and sent them to Third World countries

(elementary, high school and college text) through the United Nations Educational

Division and Phoenix International Development Foundation of Bethesda, Maryland.Other than that, I've been in excellent health and look forward to continuing myretirement years.

SCHUBERT, Michael (MUP '75): Most of my time is spent working on the expansion of

NHS into two additional neighborhoods and keeping up with my two-year-old son,

Martin. I have been appointed to serve on the city's Community Development AdvisoryCommission which has given me an insight into how CD works in Chicago (and confirmedmy worst fears). I would be happy to be a resource to any students who are interested in

working in neighborhood revitalization in Chicago or elsewhere.

SEELIG, Jerome (BUP '71): In this report, personal life comes first. In October 1984, I

married Julia Alexander who will complete her residency program in dermatology in Juneof this year. Julia will then establish a private practice at Ravenswood Hospital andteach at Cook County Hospital. But both of our careers have gladly taken a backseat to

our son, Alextmder Lewis Seelig, born February 18, 1986. I am working with threepartners in a small investment banking firm that also owns an equipment leasing

company. Over the past three years, I have been involved in a variety of smaU (and

occasionally large) leverage buyouts and corporate refinancings. The job provides for a

wide variety of work experiences, an endless number of interesting people and travel to

exotic and non-exotic places. The partnership is getting by, but shows promise ofoffering us both an economic as well as an intellectual return on investments. Fm prettyfar afield from urban planning, yet even my most high powered negotiations pale in rigor

when compared to studio presentations.

SEGGERMAN, Karen E. (BAUP '84): I am finishing up my last semester toward my P/IUP

and just have to finish that thesis! Then it's off to the real world. I took a job for Polkcounty, Florida, as a Planner I. and will be living in Lakeland.

SHEADE, Gina Natarus (BUP '75): Fm temporarity "retired" in order to care for mydaughter, HaUe, born December 1984.

SINGLEY, Yvonne (MUP '74): My daughter, Jennifer, is four years of age, and she hasbecome quite bossy. However, wouldn't trade her for the world.

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SJURGEN, Nancy (MUP '81): After getting fully frustrated in the city planning office at

Ft. Lauderdale, FL, I went home to finish my paper for my Master's degree which I

received in September 1981. I then joined the crew of the Jan Pamela—a privately-

owned American Yacht—which was docked at Miami. It was great spending that timewith 8 other single professional crew members. On Thanksgiving Day 1984, I was marriedto the ship's captain, Jim Courtemanche, on board the Jan Pamela by my father, the Rev.Ralph Sjursen. In October 1985, Jim and I left the boat to take jobs in Tahoe, CA—Jimas a builder and I as a city planner. Our home overlooks the lake.

SKOLNICK, Elyse (BAUP '34): I am writing a law review comment on the enforceability

of annexation agreements, contracts between developers and municipalities guaranteeingannexation, zoning, building permits and utilities in exchange for dedication, tax baseenhancement, job opportunities, etc.

SMANIOTTO, Tony (BAUP '79): After graduating from DURP in '79, I joined the

planning staff of the Village of Tinley Park, IL, working for DURP alumnus Bob VanTreeck. Public sector bureacracy and frustrations soon caught up with me though, and I

returned to graduate school at DePaul University, to receive an MBA degree with aconcentration in real estate and finance. I then parlayed my skills, experience, andbusiness education into a new career as an investment broker with Coldwell Banker. In

November of 1985, I joined their Commercial Group, and am specializing in the sale of

downtown Chicago real estate. I now find myself happily working amongst the big,

institutional investors, top development firms, and major property owners! In October1984, I married Rejeanne Derrick (ALS '80), and we've made our home in historic OakPark, IL. vVe haven't started a family yet; we've been too busy travelling to Europe(twice), Mexico, and the west coast, and working on our new, exciting careers (Rejeanneruns a microfilm system business in nearby River Forest). That brings it aU up-to-date. I

hope aU of my classmates and friends on the DURP faculty/staff are weU, and hope to

hear from you if you're ever in the area.

SMITH, Tracy (BUP '72): Working with my own software consulting company. AttendingU of I, working on an MBA. Married, one 10 year old daughter.

SPORE, James K. (BUP '67, MUP '69): Planning and coping with growth in positive waystakes on new dimensions in metropolitan DaUas/Fort Worth. Since March 1985, I've beenrunning full speed as City Manager of Garland, Texas—a rapidly expanding city of

180,000— located northeast of Dallas. Joan and the kids have adjusted weU to Texas.Amy is now 10 and David a very energetic 4.

STAPLETON, Ken (MUP '83): New house and jobs are keeping Sue and me busier than

we care to be. Jen travelled to Hawaii in December to perform in the Aloah Bowl as a

member of the National Superstar Drill Team dance group. Florida is nothing short of

challenging, exciting, and exasperating at times. Miss good friends 'back home.'Professionally, I am learning aD about politics—elected and office—and how to win at

that game. Also back in school to hone my business skills and knowledge.

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STEFEN, Dorothea L. (MUP '74): At work I negotiate with developers for the

donation/conveyance of park land and recreation facilities. I can see the results of myefforts everytime I drive around this county and that's rewarding. At home Fve beenpainting, gardening and showing my doberman.

STERN, David A. (MUP '79): Nadine and I entered parenthood in October with the

addition of Stephanie Beth. Since then, most of our time and energy has been focused on

Stephanie. I can't imagine what it will be like when she's old enough to actually be

demanding. We took a last fling this past summer to Israel and Greece and bumped into

Mike Romanos in the Athens airport enroute to Crete. 1 have completed development of

a microcomputer-based information system for the Division of Coastal Resources and

recently began work with the New Jersey Office of Management and Budget as the

state's "Technology Planner," a position yet to be fully defined. Basically, myresponsibilities are to monitor trends in technology and define issues relevant to either

state and local government operations or the state's information-based industries. Thelatter can be thought of as "hi tech" economic development.

STERN, Richard B. (BUP '72): Apparently 1986 is not destined to be a great year for

real estate investment/syndication firms, but Balcor seems to be surviving despite the

spectre of tax reform and law inflation—which are good for everyone in the long run. Athome, we believe in the "family squared theory," that two sons (ages six and four) plus

twins on the way equals four (and definitely NO MORE!). Eileen and I are fine, though a

little apprehensive about the twins! Regards to aU (especially the class of '72).

STIMPSON, Donna C. (MUP '78): I've been very busy working on reports for TheGovernor's Task Force on the Homeless, prepared an allocation plan for CommunityDevelopment Block Grant and helped the Connecticut Committee to the U.S.

Commission on Civil Rights on Police Response to Battered Women. Have just

completed report on utilization patterns of shelters of domestic violence. In volunteercommunity involvement, I've recently completed a 2-year term as President and 7-yearBoard involvement for a non-profit organization which shelters battered women.Presently, I'm actively looking for a house to buy. I'm looking forward to Spring, also, in

order to go on bicycling trips again.

STONE, Cathy Chazen (MUP '71): I started my own research consultant firm. SinceMarch 1985, I have been working on several projects including: Project 2000—a studyexamining critical issues facing New York State to the year 2000; a report for aU the 220

colleges and universities in New York State concerning the implementation of the

twenty-one year old drinking age; and me currently interviewing smaU businesses to

determine how they forecast their employment needs and provide job training. The first

two projects were sponsored by the Rockefeller Institute of Government—a smallresearch institution which is part of SUNY-Albany— and the last project by the NewYork State Business Council. Besides working, my husband Daniel and I have two lovely

children; Mary, age 6V2and Andrew age 3. Life is certainly a challenge having to find

time for both work and family, but I wouldn't change anything.

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100

SULZER, Ken (MSCP '62): Recently promoted to Executive Director of San Diego's

Regional Planning Agency. Wife, Dorene, is nearing completion of latest book proposal

and doing a little lawyering on the side. Both sons have completed college and areworking in L.A. Last Fall, did a family vacation to Europe for a month. Remodeling arecently-bought house near Mission Bay in San Diego.

TALKINGTON, Laurel (MUF '84): Evanston is a wonderful community in which to

practice planning. Residents of the community are very concerned with maintaining the

existing housing stock, promoting fair housing, and providing housing for special

populations. As with most other communities, we are facing severe cutbacks in federal

funding and must focus much of our attention on creative financing efforts. I wouldappreciate being informed of any creative efforts being initiated in other communities. I

would also just simply like to hear from others 1 went to school with.

TESKA, Robert B. (MSCP '61): 1986 will mark my 25th anniversary in private practice

as a planning consultant. My oldest son, Michael, is a sophomore in the School of

Architecture at the University of Illinois and is looking forward to spending his junior

year in the Versailles program. How time flies!

TICK, Marvin J. (MUP '78): I returned to Decatur in 1981 after having spent 5 years in

Washington, D.C. working on housing and economic development issues for the National

Governors' Association organization in cooperation with federal and local agencies. I amnow the Operations Manager for KeUy Food Products, Inc., and keep highly involved in

housing and planning matters through activity in state and local politics and as a memberof the Decatur Economic Development Foundation and Chairman of the Decatur CityPlan Commission's Resource Task Force. As in the past, Fve kept up an active role in

political affairs and am now the treasurer for a campaign for the Illinois State Senate.

My wife, Bobbie, and I are expecting our second child in August and are currently trying

to match the boundless energy of our 2 year old daughter, Adriane. Kudos to LenHeumann, Clyde Forrest, and Eric Freund whose great teaching spurred my interest in

the planning field and taught me the insides necessary to translate the theoretical to

practical.

TINTERA, Julie (MUP '33): I am currently employed as a planner in the zoning section

of the St. Louis County Department of Planning. The job is a learning experience in bothplanning and the "political process" in St. Louis. Otherwise, I am enjoying urbanrenovation in St. Louis, trying to keep up on other planning issues, and hoping to do sometraveling soon.

TOOK, Jeff (MUP '75): I was a planner in Chicago for two years before attending lawschool. I graduated from IIT in 1980 and presently practice in Urbana. I married my wife

Kathy in 1983. We had a daughter in 1985 whom we named Erika.

TRIMARCO, Gina M. (BAUP '79): I am still a transportation planner with "Metra" the

commuter rail division of the Regional Transportation Authority in Chicago. We governthe day to day operations of the seven commuter railroads into the City. Myresponsibilities include environmental assessments of our capital projects, elderly andhandicapped accessibility issues, and historic preservation. Fve been with the same

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101

company for five years now, but given the fact that we keep reorganizing and changing

names (from the "RTA" to the "NIRC" to "Metra") I feel like I have had several different

jobs! On the personal side, I got married last June to a fellow Metra employee (work

does pay off in some cases!) and we live on the near north side of Chicago. We love the

City and are contemplating home ownership on the newly developed west side.

URBONAS, James E. (MUP '69): In 1983, Max Ruppeck, Frank Gray (of PetalumaGrowth Management fame) and I formed our own firm called West Plan Partnership. Wehave been doing a lot of planning/urban design work in Colorado, Nebraska, California,

Utah and Wyoming. We have enjoyed working in a number of smaller communities in the

areas of downtown revitalization and economic development. This past faU I made time

to teach a course in Environmental Design at the University of Colorado. Over the

winter, Max and I have gone ski touring at least twice a week. The snow in Colorado has

been great.

URYCKI, Richard R. (BAUP '80): Since graduation. May 1980:

Grad Business Studies, NIU, DeKalb, IL

10/83

12/83

01/83

05/35

12/85

02/86

C & NW Railroad, Chicago, IL

Married Sarah Sorenson, Hinsdale, IL

C & NW Railroad, San Francisco, CA

Chessie/Seaboard Railroad, Los Angeles, CA

MBA, GGU, San Francisco, CA

CSX, Walnut Creek, CA

Although my main function with the railroads has been sales and marketing, my urban

planning experience has been beneficial when called upon to perform industrial

development services for the railroad to secure industry along our lines.

WALDEN, Bruce (3UP, '77, MUP '84): While it seems impossible, I am starting my 9th

year with the City of Urbana. I've been able to accomplish much in the Urbana smalltown setting while finishing up my MUP and believing I could stiU fit in with the

students. Graying, 30, married and with 2 children (Jessica and Jennifer) it may finally

be time to graduate from the Urbana security blanket.

WALKER, Robert E. (MUP '73): After 12 years in Lancaster, PA, my family and I havemoved to the Philadelphia metropolitan area. I am working on economic developmentand environmental planning for Chester County.

WEST, Kathleen C. (BUP '73): I have entered my fifth year of practicing law. I amenjoying myself. My work still involves zoning, land development and municipal affairs.

However, I am getting more involved in real estate and family law matters. NaperviUe is

stiU growing rapidly. Growth management is the most important political issue. It is a

very interesting period.

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102

WESTLAKE, Ken (MUP '82): I continue to work for the U.S. Environmental ProtectionAgency in solid and hazardous waste. In addition to being the only staff personresponsible for solid waste management and resource recovery, I manage the Agency'sHousehold Hazardous VVaste Grant Program and am involved with developing a prototypewaste regulatory program for Indian Reservations. I serve on both the Chicago andNortheastern Illinois Planning Commission Task Forces on solid waste. I wiU be

graduating from Northwestern University's Graduate School of Management in June 1986

after three long years of evening classes. My majors are finance, marketing and public

management. Fm aiming to combine my urban planning and business training by shifting

careers to the public finance or real estate fields. Kate and 1 are enjoying newparenthood, following the birth of our daughater, Beth, in April 1985. Church,Toastmasters, and community service round out our busy lives.

WHEELER, Wes (MUP '86):

* The APA Intergovernmental Affairs Division chose my paper to receive the

award for best student paper, 1986 (accepted at APA National Convention).

* I was honored to be asked to present a paper at the Department's 1986 Institute

on Zoning and Planning and pleased that aU went weU ( a very enjoyable

conference).

* Julie is well into her Doctor of Musical Arts program (and is enjoying it verymuch). It looks like we'U be in C-U for a few more years.

I am actively seeking a long-term job in C-U and anticipate being with a newemployer soon.

*

WILBRANDT, Laurence A. (BAUP '74): By the time you read this, I hope to be a full-

fledged/sworn in (not sworn at) attorney. After completing the Illinois Bar Exam last

week, I felt aU the "standard" feelings of frustration and rage directed at the

comprehensive, but incomprehensible, 2-day exam. The abnormally long 4 years of being

a village planner by day and law student by night (and studying at aU points in between)has mercifully come to an end. Currently, I work as law clerk for the fledgling family

law firm in Crystal Lake. Upon passing the Bar (example of positive thinking), I will join

my older brother and father as attorneys in a city stuffed to the brim with attorneys

(isn't every city?). After nearly 10 years toiling as a local government planner, the

switch to the private sector is most refreshing. However, I have kept ties to governmentand planning by virtue of my new position as Village Trustee (ie. alderman) in WestDundee, my former employer. I am taking great pleasure in giving directives to myformer boss/ Village Manager, who always thought he was a city planner (a commonmailady among city managers). Life on the home front has been somewhat rocky during

my law school years, particularly with the arrival of Emily (now age sVi and Daniel (nowage 2). However, Vicki has been magnificent in handling both the children and myselfwhile I was out on my "paper chase." Now, we are aU looking forward to a return to

normalcy. Good luck to DURP and fellow DURP grads.

WILLIAMS, Erwin L. (MSCP '63): I started my own consulting practice in September1985. 1 am enjoying it immensely, and results so far are ahead of plan. Mark graduatedlast year from UC Berkeley in Geography/Cartography and immediately set aboutproducing the map graphics for two textbooks to be used in teaching Geography to

mentaUy-handicapped students. He is now on a well-earned extended vacation and travel

throughout Europe. Laurie is a junior at UC Berkeley majoring in Conservation and

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103

Resource Management. She plans to join a work-study program in Alaska next term.

Betsy graduates from high school this year and wiU be off to coUege in the fall, probably

at UC - Santa Barbara. In August, Barbara and I plan to celebrate my first year in

business and our 25 years of marriage by joining an Illini Alumni Association tour of

Moscow, Leningrad, and Copenhagen.

WILSON, Scott D. (BUP '67, MUP 70): Recently promoted to current position where I

have responsibility for corporate communications with the media and our state's Utility

Regulatory Commission. A real challenge! But rather far afield from planning. We still

are living on the Gulf beaches and enjoying our year around "vacation environment." Ourtwo sons, 14 and 11, are growing up too fast but are a great joy to both my wife and me.

WONG, Betsy Pendleton (BUP '71): Kam and I are busy juggling marriage, two boys andcareers between tennis games. Greetings to all those with whom we shared classes andassignments that we mistakenly thought would never end.

WOOD, Anthony C. (MUP '78): After five years with the Municipal Art Society, I havejoined The J.M. Kaplan Fund. I will continue my work with civic and community groups

working on planning and preservation issues and wiU be exploring ways in which the Fundcan help address through its philanthropic work the major preservation and planning

issues facing the city. My new job was celebrated with a trip to Europe which was both

intellectually and visually stimulating.

WOOD, Gary L. (BUP '75): As of March 1986, Leslie and I have two children. Ben is 5

and Charlie is 1 V^

YAZBEC, Michael (BAUP '86): 1 am currently enroUed in the 3 V2 year Master of

Architecture program at the University of Illinois. I plan to finish the undergraduatesequence of courses in the spring of 1987 and complete my graduate work at U of I at

Chicago Circle.

ZABLE, Diane (MUP '80): In fall of 1985, I began working as a reference librarian at

Penn State, where my husband, Craig, is an assistant professor. Prior to our move to

State College, I worked as a public librarian in Carlisle, PA (while Craig taught at

Dickinson CoUege) and Fluvanna County, VA (while Craig taught at the University of

Virginia). We are enjoying the large university setting once again and intend to stay in

State CoUege for some time, perhaps permanently. I have remained in contact with Lois

Rocker and Lachlan Blair. Having lost contact with Carl Patton since his departure fromthe U of I, I hope the newsletter has news of him.

ZIEGLER, Scott (BAUP '79): I am enjoying an active professional and personal life. AtCamiros, we are busy with planning work representing a broad range of clients. My wifeJoan and 1 are also becoming more involved in our church and community which roundsout our schedule pretty well. It's good to keep in touch with alumni through APA and Uof I activities.

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10

ALUMNI ADDRESSES UNKNOWNALLEN, Wilbert MUP, June 1971ANDREASEN, Jeff R. BAUP, Jan. 1983ASH, Julius Nelson ("Jay") BSCP, 1956BAIE, John WiUiam BUP, June 1968BARKULIS, Susan BAUP, Jan. 1984BATESON, Charles Edward BSCP, June 1963BECKETT, Robert L. MUP, Feb. 1971BERGER, David Allison BUP, Feb. 1970BLAIR, Melvin Robert BUP, Aug. 1972BORCHARDT, Howard W. MSCP, 1949BORKER, Lynn Faith BUP, May 1976BRESLER, Susan Ruth BUP, June 1965BRUNINGA, Barry James BUP, May 1976BURCH, Alice Jeanette Sanders BUP, June 1969CARPENTER, Terrell BUP, Jan. 1975CHANG, Ching Shing MUP, Aug. 1973CHOUDHURY, Gopal Krishna MSCP, June 1961CHUN, Hyock MUP, June 1971CLEMENT, David D. BUP, June 1971COLEMAN, Jeffrey Haven BUP, May 1976COOKE, Joan Lynn MUP, Aug. 1967COUNIHAN, Timothy C. BUP, June 1970CRIDLAND, Peter F. BSCP, Aug 1961CROMWELL-CAIN, Kristi MUP, Aug. 1980CURTIS, Kenneth Moore MUP, June 1971DAMRON, Ted P/Iareus BFALA, 1956DAVIEE, KeUy K. MUP, Jan. 1979DUKER, Ann E. BUP, June 1972EDWARDS, Michael George BUP, June 1970ELKUS, Martha J. MUP, May 1978ELSTNER, Mark L. BUP, Feb. 1971ERIKSON, Margaret E. MUP, Aug. 1978FACTOR, WiUiam A. MUP, Feb. 1970FARRELL, Martin Francis BUP, May 1976FELDMAN, Jay H. BUP, June 1971FLOORE, Charles BUP, May 1974FREESMAN, George MUP, June 1971FULL, David J. BAUP, May 1982GALLAGHER, David A. BAUP, May 1982GARCIA, Adrian M. BAUP, Jan. 1980GASSMAN, Arnold BSCP, Aug. 1963GELMAN, WiUiam Thomas MUP, Feb. 1966GROSSMAN, Steven Jay MUP, May 1977GUNDERSON, Nancy Sue BAUP, May 1979HANSEN, Charles BSLA, 1930HASON, Nino BUP, June 1973HERSHBERGER, Becky G. MUP, Aug. 1975HILL, Connie Little BUP, May 1975HORMELL, Robert AUen MUP, June 1973HU, Yu MUP, June 1971JENSEN, Curtis BUP, June 1970JORDAN, Brevetta O. MUP, Aug. 1982

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105

JUNG, Leo H. BAUP, May 1983

KALGAONKAR, Shashikant MUP, Feb. 1967

KALLA, Muin Vlohammed BSCP, June 1966

KATSAROS, Beth MUP, May 1978

KESSLER, Daniel Evart MUP, Oct. 1982

KOPS, Deborah Simi 3UP, Jan. 1974

KRON, Norman BUP, May 1975

LAGER, David C. MUP, Feb. 1972

LAIRD, David A. MSCP, Oct. 1961

LAMBERT, Michael T. BUP, Aug. 1970

LANE, Bridget Robin BUP, May 1974

LEVIN, David L. BAUP, Aug. 1979

LEVIN, Philip Yale BUP, May 1975

LEWIS, Monica E. BAUP, May 1982

LEWIS, Rosa Keith MUP, June 1972

LIBERTY, John Kevin BUP, Jan. 1974LOCICERO, Donna Lee BAUP, Aug. 1980

LOVE, Christie Sue MUP, Aug. 1974

LUTHI, Ward E. MUP, May 1973

MANDALIA, Gopoldas M. MSCP, Aug. 1957MATHEWSON, David L. BAUP, May 1979

MC CAFFREY, Charles T. Jr. MUP, June 1970

MC CLISH, Arthur L. BFALA, 1947

MILLER, Mervyn K. MUP, June 1970

MILLER, Paul H. BAUP, Jan. 1979

MOSES, Edwin James MSCP, 1951

MUSTO, Vincent M. MUP, Jan. 1977NICHOLS, Floyd A. MUP, 1967

NICHOLSON, Peter C. BAUP, May 1978

NIEBLING, Mary Ruth MUP, May 1983

NOWICKI, Alexander Raymond, Jr. MSCP, 1953

NURSE, Thomas L. BSCP, June 1959

OSTHREIM, Robert Oscar BSCP, Oct. 1957OTTO, Jerry William MUP, May 1981PEREZ, Antonio BUP, Aug. 1975

PETERS, Hansjorg K.R. MUP, June 1970

PETERSON, John Eric MSCP, June 1958POTTER, David B. BAUP, Jan. 1982RANAHAN, Edward E.J. MUP, Aug. 1972REYNOLDS, John Lloyd, Jr. BUP, June 1969RHODES, Barbara C. MUP, May 1975

RICE, Joe David MUP, May 1976ROBINSON, Kermit C. BUP, Aug. 1973

RODGERS, Jon Kurt MUP, Oct. 1983ROGAL, Brian J. BUP, June 1972

ROSSI, Carolyn C. BAUP, Jan. 1986ROTH, Barbara Simon MUP, Jan. 1977ROTH, Richard O. BSCP, 1960SANDERS, Alice Jeanette BUP, June 1969SCHEIBE, John Eugene BUP, June 1965SCHEIN, Frederick L. BUP, Feb. 1971SELLERS, David B. BAUP, May 1978SEERMON, Lynn T. MUP, Jan. 1974SHEN, Yu-Ling MSCP, 1949

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106

SIMON, Sarabara E. - See ROTHSIYANBADE, Akindele O. Adeniran BAUP, Jan. 1980; MUP, May 1982

SLIMAK, John H. BSCP, Aug. 1958

SMITH, AUan John MUP, June 1968

SMITH, WiUiam Yancy MUP, June 1972

SOOD, Parveen Kumar MUP, May 1979

SOONG, Kuo-Lon MUP, Jan. 1979SPENCER, Arthur Lloyd BFALA, 1944

STEELE, James Edward MUP, June 1969

STEPHENS, Sandra O. MUP, Aug. 1975

STERK, Leo Gerard BUP, Aug. 1977; MUP, May 1979STERNBERG, Sheri Hart BUP, Aug. 1975

STOUT, Arthur Milton BSCP, 1961

SULUVAN, Kevin Michael BUP, May 1974

SULLIVAN, Terrence Edward BUP, Aug. 1968

SUSMAN, Newton Bradley MSCP, Aug. 1964

SZERSZEN, Carol Ann BUP, Aug. 1971

TANNER, Alan Wayne BUP, May 1975

TORABY-ZADEH, Gholamali MUP, Jan. 1980

TROST, Charles Marvin MSCP, 1948

TUCKER, David Kalman BAUP, May 1978

TULLY, Bruce Anthony BUP, Aug. 1969VON PROTZ, Christie Sue Love MUP, Aug. 1974

WADDELL, George A. BSCP, June 1962

WAGNER, Gilbert A. BUP, June 1969

WALD, Susan L. BUP, Feb. 1973

WALHUS, Paul Terry BUP, June 1968

WALKER, Kenneth Richard MUP, June 1973

WALKER, Ronald Lavern MUP, May 1977

WARD, James Edward MUP, June 1973

WARD, Nancy EUyn MUP, Aug. 1980

WEISS, PoUy Linda BAUP, Jan. 1980

WILDMAN, Linda BUP, June 1972

YAP, Clinton Chian-Shen BAUP, May 1983

YIN, Sharon C.Y. MUP, June 1970

YONKERS, Karen Nelson MUP, May 1974

YOUNG, Thomas Lyle MUP, June 1973

ZALECKI, Michael George BUP, Feb. 1968

INCOMPLETE ADDRESSES

Please send us both your office and home addresses and phone numbers.

ADEGBORO, Coker MUP, May 1979

AGUAR, Charles BFALA, 1949; MSCP, 1950

BALL, Terry E. MUP, Jan. 1979BHAT, S. Srinivasa MUP, Aug. 1979

BROWN, Charles O. MFALA, Aug. 1960BURNS, Craig Edward BAUP, May 1978CAHILL, WiUiam D. MUP, May 1979

CAIAZZO, Gaetan ("Guy") MUP, Feb. 1968CAMPBELL, Ann MUP, Aug. 1979DAVIS, Paul T. MUP, Feb. 1966

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107

DIETRICH, Robbi Rice MUP, May 1978

DINATALE, Achille N. BUP, Jan. 1976

GROLL, Mary BAUP, Jan. 1981

GUDERLEY, Susan G. BUP, May 1975

HALLOCK, Peter H. MUP, Oct. 1977

HAY, Gerald Porter BUP, Aug. 1976

ISLEY, David MUP, May 1976

JOHNSON, Steven P. BUP, Feb. 1968

KOENIG, Thomas Charles BUP, May 1977

KOTULLA, Daniel E. BUP, June 1968

KUBEESA, James W. BUP, Oct. 1975

LANGFORD, Michael Carson MUP, May 1974

LAUBER, Daniel M. MUP, June 1972

LUCIBELLA, Frank A. MUP, May 1975

MESSENGER, Katherine MUP, June 1972

MILLER, Brian Joel MUP, Oct. 1980

NIEMANN, Donald T. MUP, May 1978

PETERS, E. James MUP, Aug. 1984

POOL, Jeffrey WiUiam BAUP, May 1981

ROBBINS, Gerald M. MUP, June 1971

STRASSENBURG, Clifford G. BSCP, June 1963

WACK, Ricard G. BUP, June 1972

WEEKS, Stephen C. BUP, May 1974

WESTERVELT, James D. MUP, May 1981

WIBOWO, Herbasuki MUP, May 1979

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APPENDIX

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109

Publications Available

County Growth Management Regulation: A Guide for Zoning and Subdivision

Administration. Clyde W. Forrest, Editor. Five contributors. $7.80 prepaid.

A practical guide for zoning and plats officers, building inspectors, plan

commissions, zoning boards, elected officials, and citizens as they work with the

issues surrounding zoning administration. Contains chapters on the "Basis of county

Land Use Controls," "Comprehensive Growth Management and Planning," "The Land

Use Officer," "The Board of Appeals," "Appeals Procedures," "Variations,"

"Amendements," "Special Uses," "Subdivision Review," and "Enforcement." Theappendix contains rules, forms, and procedures.

A Guide for Municipal Zoning Administration, with Forms. R. Marlin Smith, Clyde W.

Forrest, and Eric C. Freund, 1972. $4.00 prepaid.

National, State, and Regional Planning in the Mid-1980's. Edited by Dr. Bruce D.

McDowell, AICP. Prepared by Intergovernmental Affairs Division, AmericanPlanning Association. Published by Bureau of Urban and Regional Planning

Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. $3.50 prepaid.

Selected papers from the National Planning Conference of the American Planning

Association, May 5-9, 1984, Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Planning and PubUe Policy

Planning and Public Policy is a one-article journal, which is published by the Departmentof Urban and Regional Planning and its Bureau of Urban and Regional Planning

Research. We also intend to add one or two short essays so that we can address

additional topics. The major purpose of Planning and Public Policy is to bring current

work in planning to the attention of planners and the interested public in a concise andreadable form. As a state institution, we are committed to providing Planning and Public

Policy free of charge to agencies and individuals involved in planning in the State of

Illinois. For this purpose, we maintain a mailing list of state and local agencies. We also

send Planning and Public Policy to interested faculty at the University of Ulinois,

planning faculty at other universities, and our alumni. If you are not currently receiving

Planning and Public Policy, we would be glad to add your name to our list.

Others wishing to receive Planning and Public Policy wiU be required to subscribe at

$1.00 per three-issue volume. To save handling of small amounts, we request that youremit $5.00 for six volumes. Make checks payable to: University of Illinois.

Contributions are always welcome.

Volume 10, Number 1, February 1984, "How City Planning Education Developed at a 'CowCoUege'," by Albert Z. Guttenberg and Louis B. Wetmore.

Volume 10, Number 2, August 1984, "RP3: Preservation Embraces ComprehensivePlanning," by Lachlan F. Blair.

Page 130: Alumni news - CORE

110

Volume 10, Number 3, November 1984, "Affordable Homeownership: The Role of

Manufactured Housing," by James L. Rose and Michael Duncan.

Volume 11, Number 1, February 1985, "Local Regulation of Manufactured Housing:

Current Issues," by James L. Rose and Michael Duncan.

Volume 11, Number 2, August 1985, "Social Impact Assessment and the Planning

Process," by Rabel Burdge.

Volume 11, Number 3, November 1985, "Changing Technology and the Future of

Residential Construction," by Marylee MacDonald.

Volume 12, Number 1, February 1986, "No-Til Agriculture and Its Role in Conservation,"

by A.J. Sofranko, J.C. Van Es and W.R. Harryman.

Planning Papers $2.00

Author TiUe Number Date

Lewis Hopkins &Peter Schaeffer

John Kim, D.E. BoyceJ.H. Rho & Y.J. Lee

Lewis Hopkins &Peter Schaeffer

Louis Wetmore &Leonard Heumann

Gill-Chin Lim

Gill-Chin Lim

Gill-Chin Lim

GiU-Chin Lim

r. John Kim & C.H. ParkJ.H. Rho, M. J. Choi

Planning Behavior: The Economicsof Information & Land Development

Solving A Large-Scale Nonlinear

Optimization Model of ThreeDimensional Urban Activities

The Logic of Planning Behavior

The Changing Role and use of TheWorkshop Course in Educating

Urban Planning Professionals

Land Markets and Public Policy:

A Conceptual Framework

Land Markets and Public Policy:

A Korean Case Study

Theory and Taxonomy of

Sectoral, Distributional, and Spatial Policies

Toward a Synthesis of ContemporaryPlanning Theories

Investment Priorities ForRoad Improvements With Alternative

National Growth Policies in Korea

85-1 June 1985

85-2 August 1985

85-3 July 1985

85-4 October 1985

85-5 October 1985

85-6 October 1985

85-7 November 1985

85-8 November 1985

85-9 November 1985

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Ill

William I. Goodman

Peter V. Schaeffer

Federal Contributions to the

Management of Local Planning

The Economics of Information &Property Rights: Additional

Topics for Planning Education

85-10 November 1985

85-11 December 1985

Gill-Chin LimJohann Albrecht

David E. BoyceT. John Kim

Mack Joong ChoiT. John Kim

Earl R. JonesWiUiam M. Harris

(U. of \^rginia)

Wes Wheeler

1986 Planning Papers

A Search for Alternative PlanningTheory; Use of Phenomenology

The Role of Congestion of

Transportation Networks in Urban Location

and Travel networks

Optimal Lot Size ConfigurationWith Zoning Constraints

A Conceptual Scheme For TheAnalysis of the Social

Planning Process

Illinois Municipalities'

Authority, Standards and Enforcementof Municipal Extraterritorial Land

Development Regulations

86-01 January 1986

86-02 January 1986

86-03 February 1986

86-04 February 1986

86-05 March 1986

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113

Please Send Me The Following

Graduate Program Information

Undergraduate Program Information

Ph.D. Program Information

The Following Publieations:

Planning and Public Policy:

The follow] ng back issue(s)

Vol. No.

Vol. No.

Vol. No.

Planning Papers

No.

No.

No.

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

**************************************************

Return completed form to: Department of Urban and Regional Planning

University of Illinois

1003 West Nevada Street

Urbana, Illinois 61801

Name

Address

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Department of Urban and Regional PlanningUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign1003 West Nevada Street

Urbana, Illinois 61801

Address Correction Requested

NON-PROFIT ORG

U.S. POSTAGE

PAID

PERMIT NO. 75

CHAMPAIGN, IL 61(

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