Alumni Mentors
  Please click on the name of the alumni mentor for contact information and bio.

Team 1: Assessing Risk
Kevin Johnson
Sheldon Buck
Douglas J Quattrochi

To contact the team: tsunami1@mit.edu
  Team 6: Developing a Warning System
David Andre Broniatowski
Karl Chang
Danny Fain

To contact the team: tsunami6@mit.edu
Team 2: Designing for Tsunami Prevention and Damage Minimization
Walt Simmons
Winslow Burleson
Ion Freeman

To contact the team: tsunami2@mit.edu

  Team 7: Evacuation Planning
Jordan B Brayanov
Alex Crumlin
Lexcie Lu


To contact the team: tsunami7@mit.edu
Team 3: Designing an Education Program
Ariel Martinez
Daniel Braunstein
Daniel Port

To contact the team: tsunami3@mit.edu
  Team 8: Designing the Emergency Response
Tony Leier
Jessica Lin
Ethan J Crumlin
Hillary B Stanton

To contact the team: tsunami8@mit.edu
Team 4: Preparing for an Effective Response
Shaheer Hussam
Dawn Nekorchuk
Marion L. Rideout
Dr. Sanith Wijesinghe

To contact the team: tsunami4@mit.edu
  Team 9: Planning for Long-Term Recovery and Environmental Remediation
Bob Kusik
Krishnan Sriram
Meisha Bynoe
Bob Gurnitz

To contact the team: tsunami9@mit.edu
Team 5: Earthquake and Tsunami Monitoring
Todd Harland-White
Elise Ralph
Allan Kent

To contact the team: tsunami5@mit.edu
  Team 10: Coordinating with Global Tsunami Preparedness Efforts and Developing Funding Strategies
Andrea Au
Johnny T. Yang
Tulika Khemani

To contact the team: tsunami10@mit.edu

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Andrea Au andreau@alum.mit.edu
  Andrea Au graduated in 2002 with a course 15 degree. She now works at State Street Global Advisors in their Advanced Research Center in Boston, doing statisical and financial research and modeling for mutual fund strategies.  She was born and raised in Hawaii.

I don't have a strong background in earth science or engineering, although I do have contacts in Hawaii that do. I do statistical research and problem solve, mainly by testing and building statistical models, on a daily basis. I also have experience with writing papers (I have a published paper and two forthcoming papers) as well as presenting in front a professional
audience. I am pretty free this fall and live in Harvard Square. ... I was a freshman associate advisor my sophomore year and a freshman resident associate advisor in McCormick Hall for both my junior and senior years.
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Daniel Braunstein dbraunstein@optikos.com
  ME 2 SM 1994
ME 2D PHD 1998

Vice President Optikos Corporation
Cambridge, MA
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Jordan B. Brayanov jordan12@mit.edu
  ME 2 SB 2004

x-Mission student (2004: Mars)
I am still at MIT (finishing up my Masters) and I will be around for another semester (at least).
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David Andre Broniatowski david@mit.edu
  AA 16-2 SB 2004

I have access to a great International Space University report that documents steps that might be taken to mitigate disasters due to earthquakes and tsunamis in Southeast Asia, using space-based assets.... could be a useful source material. (In addition, it has a good bibliography...)

Phone: 617 852 5006

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Sheldon Buck

sheldon.buck@comcast.net

 

AA 16 SB 1958

Sheldon Buck is an aeronautical engineer who specializes in the development of aerospace control systems and geophysical instrumentation. He has experience fishing in remote inland areas of Alaska and camping in the wilderness areas. He has also visited the existing Alaska oil pileline. Sheldon is looking forward to working with you and Kip Hodges in the Fall.

Expertise: Aerospace engineering with an emphasis on missile guidance systems and aircraft and helicopter control. As a member of the MIT Instrumentation Laboratory which became the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory 1959 until present, I worked on the Atlas, Titian 2, Minuteman, MX / Peacekeeper, Polaris, Posidon, and Trident Missile Programs. Experience as both an airplane and helicopter pilot trained at Pan American World Airways and Handscom Field.

Geophysical instrumentation engineer particularly in seismology and gravimetry assigned to the MIT Earth and Planetary Science Department 1968 to 1973 working for Prof. Nafi Toksoz and Prof. Frank Press, Department Head. Technical Director Lunar Traverse Gravimeter Experiment flown December 1972 on the Apollo 17 flight. Member Apollo 17 EVA Team at NASA Mission Control during the flight.

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Winslow Burleson win@media.mit.edu
  former Mission mentor

Win has attended the joint-staff training seminar for the US militaries response for humanitarian missions. He has helped teams for the past several years and has been involved in two areas that are highly relevant to this work. Win has been involved in context aware computing, that is the development of sensors and the placement of those sensors in environments to ascertain relevant conclusions about these environments. While many of these have been in human environments some have been in natural environments and that experience may be relevant.

Currently Winslow is a Ph.D. candidate in the Context-Aware Computing Group (http://cac.media.mit.edu:8080/contextweb/jsp/index.htm) at the MIT Media Lab (http://www.media.mit.edu/). Before coming to MIT he worked in the USER Group (http://www.almaden.ibm.com/software/user/) at IBM's Almaden Research Center’s department of Computer Science. After completing a Master of Science degree at Stanford University's Mechanical Engineering Product Design Program (http://design.stanford.edu/PD/) he served as a lecturer on brainstorming, creativity, and visual thinking within that department. Prior work included curriculum development at the SETI Institute, (http://www.seti.org/) co-principal investigator on the Hubble Space Telescope's Investigation of Binary Asteroids (http://www.stsci.edu/resources/), and consultant to UNICEF (http://www.unicef.org/) and the World Scout Bureau (http://www.scout.org/front/index.shtml) on Healthy Lifestyles for Youth. He holds a bachelor's degree in physics from Rice University (http://www.rice.edu/).

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Meisha Bynoe dabulb@gmail.com
  x-Mission student

Meisha Bynoe graduated from MIT in June of 2005 with degrees in Biology and Music. During her freshman year, she participated in Mission 2005 as a member of the team responsible for designing the underwater research facility off the Belizean coast. The following year, she was a UTF for the Misssion 2006. Meisha enjoys music, traveling and reading. In the fall, she will be entering the PhD program in Microbiology at Yale University.

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Karl Chang tekno@alum.mit.edu
  EE 6 SB 1965

I successfully designed the Ocean bottom seater vibratron tsunami gauges with Martin Vitousek back in 1968 at Hawaii institute of geophysics. I believe the bottom seating gauges can be built cheaply but the anchoring system for a deep ocean surface buoy is very expensive. Communication cost to even remote area is getting much more affordable. False alarm was always a problem in Hawaii.

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Alex Crumlin acrumlin@mit.edu
  x-Mission student

I'm doing my Meng here at MIT in course 6, so I'm quite local.

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Ethan Crumlin ecrumlin@mit.edu
  x-Mission student

Ethan Crumlin has been involved in Mission since his freshman year as a student
followed by 3 years of being a UTF. Spring '05, he graduated MIT with a B.S.
in Mechanical Engineering, and is continuing on to graduate school at MIT
working on alternative energy concepts, primarily focusing on fuel cell
research. His role in Mission will be to further volunteer and help out where
every possible including special lectures to try and help convey certain topics
breeched in everyone's Mission experience

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Danny Fain dannyf@alum.mit.edu
  GY 12 SB 1999
former Mission mentor

I worked with the New England Seismic Network at ERL in my undergrad days (in the mid-80's). Since then, I've kept up with the lay literature on earthquake/tsunami studies, and I teach that topic in my high school science classes. I prefer email, but can also be called at home: 781-373-2407

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Ion Freeman ionfreeman@gmail.com
  SDM '03 (graduated 04 with an MS in Engineering and Management), Engineering Systems Division. Undergrad in Physics, Peace Corps Kenya 1989 - 1991 teaching secondary math & science, 3 years graduate school in Physical Oceanography, 7 years as a software architect, 1 year as a systems architect, long trips to France, Prague, Chile, Tonga, Micronesia and Indonesia, Volunteer experience with Horizon's Initiative as a playspace volunteer, Cascade Bicycle Club in many roles, and much more.
Phone or email contact is great, and I'm often in Cambridge.

Ion Freeman is an experienced solver of complex problems. Born in Boston in 1968 while his father was a visiting professor in Chemical Engineering at MIT (hence the name), he grew up in Darien, CT, a bedroom community for Manhattan. After completing his undergraduate studies in Physics with a Music Theory Minor at Rutgers Camden, Ion spent the summer of 1989 in San Francisco before spending two years teaching high school in Africa as a Peace Corps volunteer. He then moved from complex social problems to complex geophysical problems, studying tropical instability waves at the University of Washington from 1992 - 1995. Realizing that the problems were actually enviropolitical, he decided to go into politics, but was derailed by a car accident, and spent the following seven years pursuing a career as a software architect. Peaking at that, he returned to MIT for a Master's in Engineering and Management, and spent a year transforming the business processes of Fortune 50 Companies. Which brings us, more or less, to now.

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Bob Gurnitz email: RGurnitz@aol.com or rgurnitz@alum.mit.edu
  1966 Course 10 PhD

Bob Gurnitz has been a mentor for several Missions.
Experience:
* 1997-2001 Envirosource, Inc., Horsham, PA - Chairman
* 1991-1997 Northwestern Steel and Wire Co., Sterling, IL - Chairman and CEO
* 1988-1991 Webcraft Technologies, Inc., N. Brunswick, NJ - President
* 1985-1988 Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Bethlehem, PA - President, Shape and Rail Products Division
* 1984-1985 Rockwell International Corporation, Troy, MI - Vice President/General Manager, On Highway Axle Division;
* 1980-1984 Rockwell International Corporation, London England and Troy, MI - President, Body Components Division; 1978-1980 Rockwell International Corporation, Troy, MI - Vice President/General Manager, Supply and Mass Transit Div.
* 1977-1978 Rockwell International Corporation, Troy, MI - Vice President, Business Development;
* 1974-1977 Rockwell International, Pittsburgh, PA Senior Engineering Executive, Corporate Staffs.
* 1973-1974 President's Executive Interchange Program U. S. Government, D.H.E.W., Washington, DC Director, Office of Management Technology
* 1966-1973 Rockwell International, Canoga Park, CA Manager, Physical and Engineering Sciences, Rocketdyne Div.

Education:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA: S.B. 1960 Chemical Engineering; S.M. 1961 Chemical Engineering; Ph.D. 1966 Chemical Engineering
Hobbies include sailing, skiing, fishing, traveling, and reading.

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Todd Harland-White todd@alum.mit.edu
  Todd Harland-White's career since MIT (XIII-C, '76) has involved designing and building manned and unmanned systems operating in the deep sea for Northrop Grumman Oceanic Systems, where he is now Chief Architect for Integrated Underwater Systems. Projects have included design of deepsea research submersibles and mini-subs, participation in teams designing new submarine and surface ship classes, developing underwater robotic systems, and working with both optical and acoustic sensors for probing and mapping the underwater space. In addition, Todd's company has expertise in sensor systems placed within the environment and operated from remote locations - underwater, airborne, or even in space - that may be of assistance in the development of Mission 2008 designs to monitor the status of installed environmental sensors.

This is Todd's fifth tour of duty as a 12.000 mentor, having served for Missions 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008. Todd also serves as an MIT Educational Counselor possibly responsible for some of you being there at MIT to begin with!

Todd did manage to visit one of the classes last fall, but usually he will have to everything long distance from Annapolis MD.

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Shaheer Hussam shussam@gmail.com
  ME 2A SB 2003

Currently an associate at a venture capital firm, investing in clean energy, environment, and biotech. While at MIT was an active member of Model UN and the Campus Committee on Race Relations. Have worked and travelled in Switzerland, Bangladesh, Spain, Haiti, and Brazil. Grew up in northern Virginia.

Overall the best team fit would be anything related to the energy sector, and in general anything in sustainability.

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Kevin Johnson kjohnso2@hawaii.edu
  GY 12W PHD

Kevin T. M. Johnson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Dept. of Geology and Geophysics
SOEST, University of Hawaii

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Allan Kent ALRKent@comcast.net
  former Mission mentor

My background is B.S. (MIT '63) in physics and M.S. (MIT '69) in Electrical Engineering (and Computer Science) with emphasis on "systems". I have worked in water supply systems, Radar systems, computer systems, data communications systems, telecommunications systems, among others. I have also maintained an interest in weather, sewage systems, environmentally friendly designs, industrial control systems, linguistics, etc. etc.

My "thing" is applying many disciplines to the solution of problems.

I am currently semi-retired (with occasional consulting business). I can usually get to Cambridge and attend the classes and lectures which makes for a good interaction with the students. I am also available via e-mail, telephone, etc. 508-381-0582

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Tulika Khemani

tulika.khemani@gmail.com

 

Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering and a concentration in Economics, June 2003.

CRA International, Boston, MA Feb 2005 – Present
Associate – Pharmaceuticals Litigation and Consulting
Gotham Consulting Partners, New York NY Oct 2003 – Dec 2004
Business Analyst – Operations Consulting
Robert Bosch, Stuttgart Germany Jun 2003 – Sep 2003
Summer Intern
MIT, Hatsopoulos Micro-fluids Laboratory, Cambridge MA Sep 2002 – May 2003
Corporate Finance Summer Analyst – Equity Capital Markets (ECM)
General Electric – John F Welch Technology Center, Bangalore India Jun 2001 – Aug 2001

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Bob Kusik bkusik@alum.mit.edu
  1970 SM in Course 6
Phone: 978.369.3240

Bob is especially interested in nature, human's impact on nature, and nature's impact on humans. He has experienced the rain forests of Costa Rica, the barrier reef of Belize, the Galapagos Islands, the Serengeti in Tanzania, and the glaciers of Alaska.

Bob is a retired software executive. His professional career has ranged from an information retrieval research project in the Electronics Systems Lab at MIT, to advanced development of online financial systems, to computer aided design of VLSI chips and computer systems, to nonlinear video editing systems, to telemedicine (plus a few more stops along the way). He received an SM in Course 6 in 1970. He has also attended advanced management programs at Stanford and INSEAD.

Since Bob lives in Concord, interaction on campus or by eMail would be convenient.

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Tony Leier tleier@alum.mit.edu
 

Course 2; BSME '96 with minor in Planetary Science, MS Engineering '98

Senior game designer, at Tilted Mill Entertainment, http://www.tiltedmill.com.

We published a city building and society simulation game set in ancient Egypt about a year ago called Children of the Nile http://www.immortalcities.com/cotn/. I've been doing this sort of thing since I graduated in 1998- I'm working on my 9th title now. I do all sorts of design work- GUI, text writing, marketing speak (lots recently), but my specialty is game systems design and interactions- and as much AI as I can get away with. It's a lot of finding 'best' answersto complex problems, along with presenting it well to the press and our customers.

Hobby-wise, in addition to playing a lot of computer games, I also dabble in astronomy, geological sciences, and history.

Tony started playing computer games over 20 years ago and hasn't stopped since. After spending 6 years at MIT and earning a Bachelors ('96) and Masters ('98) degrees in Mechanical Engineering, Tony, in quite the lateral move, went out and got a job making computer games. Fortunately, the Mechanical Engineering design methodologies, technical writing skills, systems design, and product development strategies he studied transferred remarkably well into the game development profession. Even better, making games didn't require any thermodynamics or fluid mechanics.

During his 4+ years at Sierra's Impressions Games studio, Tony helped create: Caesar III, Pharaoh, Cleopatra, Zeus: Master of Olympus, Poseidon, Emperor: Rise of the Middle Kingdom, and Lords of the Realm III. Tony has now worked at Tilted Mill Entertainment since January 2003, where he's helped release Immortal Cities: Children of the Nile
into the public.

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Jessica Lin jessica.lin@alum.mit.edu
  1999, EE/CS, 6-2
former Mission mentor

Jessica is in her second year of employment with Capgemini, based out of Cambridge, MA. Prior to joining Capgemini's Transformation Consulting practice, Jessica gained experience in both the private and public sectors in groups ranging from the Commercial Mortgaged Backed Securities Group of Lehman Brothers to the development office of a downtown Manhattan Nonprofit arts organization. She has significant experience in financial analysis, market research, business analysis, and quantitative modeling. She has worked in a range of industries including energy, manufacturing, technology, financial services, and life sciences.

She is available to meet with students on weekends or after work.

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Lexcie Lu lexcie@alum.mit.edu
  2003, M.S.T. (Master of Science in Transportation), Course I (CEE). Lexcie is Transit Analyst at a local consulting firm, who was born in England of Formosan parents, grew up in Taiwan & Scotland, and moved to Boston for MIT. In his spare time he loves to tinker with computers (he is a proud co-owner of an Apple Mac Mini), listen to music, and watch trains. Before Mr. Lu was a teacher, he worked for the Massachsuetts Bay Transportation Authority. His undergraduate work was in Physics and Psychology, and holds a masters degree in Transportation Management.

Work Experience:
1999-2000: Railtrack PLC, Glasgow, Scotland.
2000-2001: ScotRail Railways Ltd., Glasgow, Scotland.
2001-2003: MIT Research and Teaching Assistant, Course I (1.011 & UIC Project)
2003: MBTA Green Line Intern, Newton, MA
2003-2005: Reebie Associates, Transportation Consultant, Cambridge, MA
2005-present: Math and Science Teacher, Boston Public Schools, Boston, MA

Hobbies:
Computer Tinkering/Programming, Communication/Writing, The Railroad Industry, Music, Art & Craft, Non-fiction Reading, People, Travel, Photography, Local History, Cities

Travel Experience:
Approx. 40 out of 50 states (incl. HI); Amtrak cross-country in coach w/ whistle-stops; Greyhound through the Rockies; flew to Atlanta to see its south side neighbourhoods.
States I know well: MA, VT, RI, NJ, PA, OH, Northern IN, Chicago Metro, San Francisco Metro. Europe: Extensive in England/Scotland; Amsterdam, Geneva Asia: Extensive in Taiwan; Hong Kong -- was in Taiwan at the time of the 1999 earthquake. Mostly confined to the "civilized" world -- I would call this "urban adventure travel"; was caught in the record 1999 snowstorm in Cleveland without a hotel room (due to Amtrak delays from a bridge
blowout) -- surviving that one was fun!

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Ariel Martinez ariel.martinez@shell.com
  former Mission mentor

Course 1M SM 1998, Project Manager / Financial Analyst & Controller.
Ariel currently lives in Houston, TX but spends a significant amount of time abroad (currently in the Asia-Pacific Region). He works for Shell Exploration & Production. During his career he has done mostly technical & economic project valuation. However, in the last 2 years Ariel has focused into developing a career in corporate finance inside Shell (which he enjoys). He can share his experience in oil & gas exploration and production industry, as well as his experience with geotechnical & geoenvironmental project management & financial and economic valuations.

Education:
MBA (Finance & Strategy) Oxford University (UK) – Sept 2001
Master of Science (Geotechnical Eng) MIT (USA) - Feb 1999
Civil Engineer (& Project Management) University of Buenos Aires (Argentina) 1996
Management Accountant CIMA-UK – In Progress (planned 2004)

Work Experience:
Ariel is a Sr. Financial Advisor / EP-Europe / NAM (Netherlands)
EP-Europe (temporary) - Project Controller
EP-Europe (temporary) - Business Warehouse Content Expert
EP - NAM - Management Information & Reporting
EP- NAM & out of Shell - Finance & Economic Modeling Consulting (out of Shell) - Project Manager

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Dawn Nekorchuk dawneko@alum.mit.edu
  dawneko@alum.mit.edu

I graduated in 2000 with a BS in Biology. Dec 2004 I graduated from
University of Hawaii with a MS in Public Health (Epidemiology). I now work at the Hawaii State Department of Health as the Bioterrorism Preparedness Food Safety Coordinator.

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Daniel Port dport@hawaii.edu
  Dr. Daniel Port recieved his doctorate in Applied Mathematics from MIT in 1994.

He is an Assistant Professor of IT Management at University of Hawaii at Manoa. Prior to this, he was a Research Assistant Professor working with Barry Boehm at USC's Center for Software Engineering, where he now holds the title of Visiting Scholar. Dr. Port has been involved in software development process research, and in the development and assessment of innovative pedagogic techniques for software engineering education. His primary research activities lie in strategic and economic based software engineering and mathematical modeling.

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Douglas Quattrochi dougjq@mit.edu
  x-Mission student and Mission mentor

MIT Class of 2004, Course 16 (B.S.)

Working on a M.S., Course 16, hypersonic heat transfer
Work/Hobbies: Philosophy, investing, space tourism, model aircraft.
I'm on campus, face-to-face contact is best.

Started in Mission 2004: Mission to Mars. Was a teaching fellow for Mission 2005: Atlantis, and a teaching assistant for MIT Course 16.05 Thermodynamics for three semesters.

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Elise Ralph eralph@nsf.gov
  GY 12W SM 1991
GY 12W PHD 1994

Elise is a graduate of the MIT-Woods Hole Joint Program. She is going to be starting at the National Science Foundation as a program director in physical oceanography in September 2005.

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Marion Rideout marionr@alum.mit.edu
  Marion is currently in Boston, and is a great local resource.

She is a Double major, in Course 5 (Chemistry) and 12 (EAPS /Geochemistry)

"I later studied oceanography and applied geochemistry, worked in exploration in the petrochemical industries, went through the ‘bust’ of late 1985-86, and went on to employment and a career in areas related to environmental and regulatory affairs. I took classes at MIT in hydrology and environmental law, both based out of the Civil Engineering Department.

I have worked offshore Alaska, Central North and South Atlantic, in the field in virtually every EPA region in the United States, and in the field in Canada, remote Alaska, Azores, Belize, and a few other places. My most recent applied technical consulting position was with a company that did a great deal of federal consulting work. I was Principal Scientist, Senior Technical Manager, and served a stint as Manager for the Environmental Sciences and Engineering groups. I was Project Manager on a major combined EPA Region 10, Washington State Dept. of Ecology, and US Navy-Pacific Fleet project. ... I have been taking college classes toward a ‘career shift’ into environmental and occupational health and clinical investigations. I’ve been studying at the MGH Institute of Health Professions in Clinical Investigations and Nursing/Acute Care. "

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Walt Simmons WAS@Phys.Hawaii.Edu
  (MIT BS Physics 1962) PhD, Theoretical Physics, Purdue University, 1968.

Research Interests: Theoretical Physics.
Other Interests: Software Development, Applied Statistics, Business.

Department of Physics and Astronomy
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Honolulu, HI

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Krishnan Sriram sriram@mit.edu
  ME 2M SM 2001

I am finishing my Ph.D. in mechanical engineering this year. I have a M.S. from MIT (2001).
Currently an associate at a venture capital firm, investing in clean energy, environment, and biotech. While at MIT was an active member of Model UN and the Campus Committee on Race Relations. Have worked and travelled in Switzerland, Bangladesh, Spain, Haiti, and Brazil. Grew up in northern Virginia.

Overall the best team fit would be anything related to the energy sector, and in general anything in sustainability.

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Hillary Stanton hstanton@alum.mit.edu
  x-Mission student
LI 7 SB 2005

I am actually going to be attending Yale to study similar topics to Mission: Emergency preparedness for disasters. I would be able to help most with things relating to public health and biology.

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Dr. Sanith Wijesinghe sanithw@gmail.com
  PhD '03, Course XVI

Phone: +94 773 55 8401
Address: Meepe, Padukka, Sri Lanka.

What Sanith found after the tsunami in Sri Lanka:
http://web.mit.edu/12.000/www/m2009/Trincomalee.pdf
http://web.mit.edu/12.000/www/m2009/tangalle.pdf

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Johnny Yang jtyang@mit.edu
  Class of 2004, SB, Course 15
x-Mission student

Johnny was one of the first guinea pigs to participate in 12.000: Solving Complex Problems. As a student in Mission 2004 (Mars), he was a member of the "Mission Control" team, and later took part in writing and editing the mission's final paper. Because he loved 12.000 so much, he joined the staff for the class, serving as a Undergraduate Teaching Fellow (UTF) for Mission 2005 (Ocean) and Mission 2006 (Amazon). Due to class conflicts, Johnny was not able to return as a UTF for Mission 2007 (Alaska); however, the powers that be snuck him in as an alumni mentor.

After graduating with a Course 15 degree in 2004, Johnny now returns again as an alumni mentor for Mission 2009 (Tsunami). He currently works for a privately-held distribution firm in New Hampshire, where he is also failing miserably at learning how to golf.

Personally, Johnny enjoys traveling (to the extent his pocketbook allows), reading, and fine dining. He looks forward to working with his team of students and the entire class as a whole.

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