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ATRA envisions a
future when trans-
portation will all be
orchestrated for the
convenience of people
and their businesses
– as well as for the
benefit of our planet.
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About ATRA THE ADVANCED TRANSIT ASSOCIATION
The Advanced Transit Association (ATRA) is an international association of active and retired transportation professionals,
engineers, architects, urban planners, students, educators, and enthusiasts that promote the consideration of advanced transit options. It is a diverse group of people brought together by the common realization that the transportation systems of the past can not meet the transportation needs of the future, or even the present. A non-profit corporation, ATRA’s purpose is to
encourage the development and deployment of advanced transportation systems that will benefit society. Membership is open to anyone who is willing to take a fresh look at new ways to meet our transportation needs. We do not endorse any particular
company or system. We strive to serve as an objective information resource to help decision makers navigate the often complex issues surrounding transportation choices.
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Jeral Poskey, ATRA Chairman,
Vice-President of Sales and Marketing at Taxi 2000. Jeral earned his MBA from
Stanford University, focusing on entrepreneurship and specializing in the process
of funding and managing startup businesses.
He completed numerous projects on
the commercialization of PRT, including the paper “TIFs, BIDs, and PRT:
Applicability of Tax Increment Financing or Business Improvement Districts to
Building Personal Rapid Transit.”
While Mr. Poskey brings project
management expertise from his time in the private sector, he also brings important
experience from his time in government. He was formerly a congressional aide in
Washington DC, working for both the U.S. House and Senate, where he gained an
understanding of how the public sector functions. It was during Jeral's time in
Washington DC that he decided to aim his career at realizing the potential of
personal rapid transit, enrolling at Stanford for
an advanced degree that could
help him achieve this goal.
Since then he has served on the board of
directors of the Advanced Transit
Association (ATRA) for a number of years,
becoming its youngest ever officer
in January 2000.
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Bob
Dunning, ATRA President, Employee of the Boeing Company, supporting information
systems in Seattle, Washington.
Bob is a long time advocate of
advanced transit rather than atransportation professional.
He
looks for opportunities to reapply the 25 years of experience he
has accumulated
in support of factory production systems - and may
be one of the earliest people
to use the phrase "lean transit".
Just as "Lean" production systems are updating
our factories and also
updating our preconceptions about "mass production",
"Lean" transit
systems can update our existing transportation
infrastructure,
replacing our preconceptions about "mass transit".
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Martin Lowson, Vice President, is founder and CEO
of Advanced Transport Systems Ltd, responsible for developing the ULTra (Urban
Light Transport) PRT system. He spent his previous career in the Aerospace
industry, both in the US where he worked on the Apollo Space program and in the
UK. He was Chief Scientist and Director of Corporate Development for Westland
Helicopters and then Sir George White Professor of Aerospace Engineering at the
University of Bristol. He is a co-patentee for the rotor system which has
held the world absolute speed record for helicopters since 1986. His
Undergraduate and Doctoral study was at the University of Southampton,
England. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in
1991. He is also a Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society, the Acoustical
Society of America and the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics. |
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Stan Young, Secretary has worked for the Kansas Department of
Transportation (KDOT) in since 1994 in various capacities including transportation
planning, pavement management, information systems management, and research. In
2000, he established an Advanced Technology Research program, which he continues to
lead. The research program investigates various topics related to Intelligent
Transportation Systems, instrumentation, communications, and data analysis for
application within the highway industry.
Prior to joining KDOT,
he worked at the John Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHUAPL) in
Maryland. During his tenure at JHUAPL he became involved in the lab's earliest
efforts into Intelligent Transportation Systems. These projects included an
automated crash notification system, known as the Mayday system, and detection of
impaired driving by analysis of driver control signatures.
Dr.
Young served in the United States Peace Corp from 1989 to 1990 in Cameroon, South
Africa. He holds a bachelors degree in Electrical Engineering from LeTourneau
University in Longview, Texas. He earned both his Masters and PhD degree in
Electrical Engineering from Kansas State University.
Dr. Young
and been involved in Advanced Transit study for many years. His primary interests
lie in automated mobility science, particularly in the application of modern
technology to enhance mobility across the full spectrum of society so as to enhance
the standard of living for current and future generations. |
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Lawrence J. Fabian, Treasurer, is an innovative
regional land use and transportation planner, writer, thinker and visionary. His professional career has been international and progressive. He possesses
world-level information on automated people movers (APMs) and APM-based strategies to better configure land use and sustainable density.
Mr.
Fabian is the founder and principal of Trans.21, a technical clearinghouse on world
APM developments. He is an office holder in the American Planning Association (APA)
and the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). He is also treasurer of the
Advanced Transit Association and active in the U.S. Transportation Research Board
(TRB).
Mr. Fabian graduated from Dartmouth College summa
cum laude in 1967. He holds a Masters in City & Regional Planning from the
University of Pennsylvania and has over thirty years of experience in both private
consultancies and the public sector. Benefiting from service as a Peace Corps
Volunteer, he is fluent in French and Persian and comfortable in most cultural and
multi-disciplinary settings.
With wife and children, he lives
in Boston where he walks its lovely tree-lined streets. |
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J. Edward Anderson, For
23 years Dr. Anderson was a professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University
of Minnesota where he worked on the theory and application of PRT systems since
1968. He chaired four international conferences on PRT, lectured and gave courses
widely in the U. S. and abroad on transit systems analysis and design, authored the
textbook Transit Systems Theory , has published frequently in the
Journal of Advanced Transportation and elsewhere. He has been a
member of the ATRA Board of Directors since its founding in 1976, and was its first
President. In 1981 he initiated the design of a new PRT system. In 1986 he moved to
Boston University as a Professor of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering and formed
an industry team with members from five Boston-Area companies to carry his PRT
design to the point that in 1989 it attracted the attention of the Chicago RTA and
Raytheon Company. In 1994 he moved back to the Minneapolis area where he has
continued to work to commercialize his system, currently through PRT International,
LLC. In his early career he worked for 12 years at the Honeywell Aeronautical
Division on instrument design, autopilots, inertial navigation, and spacecraft
development; and previously two years as an Aeronautical Research Scientist in the
Structures Research Division, NASA, Langley Field, VA. He has a Ph.D. from M. I. T.
in Astronautics, a MSME from the University of Minnesota, and a BSME from Iowa
State University. He is a registered professional engineer, was named Outstanding
Inventor of 1989 for his patents on PRT, and is a Fellow of the AAAS, cited for his
work on PRT. |
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Ingmar Andreasson, PhD. Former marketing & sales director
for Volvo Bus, President for Volvo Transportation Systems, Reseach Director,
Advanced Transit Systems at Chalmers University, co-founder of LogistikCentrum.
Currently Adjunct Professor in Transport and Logistics and Director for the Centre
for Traffic Research at the Royal Inst of Technology in Stockholm
Sweden. |
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Richard Arthur |
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Mary Bell Austin |
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Murthy V A Bondada |
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Daniel Brand, Vice President of
Charles River Associates Incorporated. He has served as Undersecretary of the
Massachusetts Department of Transportation, Associate Professor at Harvard
University, and Senior Lecturer at MIT. He was a member of four National Research
Council committees (High-Speed Surface Transportation, Small Aircraft
Transportation Systems, Advanced Vehicle and Highway Technologies, and Maritime
Industries R&D). He has also chaired three TRB standing committees (Passenger
Travel Demand Forecasting, Intelligent Transportation Systems [ITS], and New
Transportation Systems and Technology). He was a founding member of the
Coordinating Council of ITS America and serves on three of its technical advisory
committees. He was editor of Urban Transportation Innovation, coeditor of Urban
Travel Demand Forecasting, and the author of numerous monographs and articles on
transportation. He was the conference summary speaker and summary paper author at
two of the most important recent national transportation planning and policy
conferences in Americapost-ISTEA, Moving Urban America, the Charlotte
Conference, TRB Special Report 237 (1993), and pre-ISTEA, the TRB 2020 Conference,
TRB Special Report 220 (1988). His paper, "Theory and Method in Land Use and
Travel Forecasting," received the Best Paper Award in Planning and
Administration at a TRB annual meeting. |
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Marsden Burger, Mr. Burger is Chairman
and CEO of Cabintaxi Corporation in Detroit. He has over 30 years of experience in
the application of advanced transportation technology. He has three times held
positions responsible for the United States for marketing advanced transportation
systems. He has been involved in the planning of transit projects from the system
supplying side in over 100 cities in five countries, and has been a member of the
development team on six different advanced transportation systems. He was involved
in the building of the Detroit People Mover, and later was in charge of its
operation for two years. He holds a Masters Degree from Kent State University with
a major in Urban and Transportation Geography, specializing in the application of
advanced transportation systems. His Masters thesis (completed in 1978) dealt with
the application of high speed Maglev systems. In the field of advanced
transportation systems, Mr. Burger has been employed by, or done consulting work
for, the following organizations: the Chicago Department of Public Works,
Mannesmann in Germany, Messerschmitt in Germany, Urban Transportation Development
Corporation in Canada and the United States, Cabintaxi Corporation in Detroit,
Magnetic Transit of America in Los Angeles, Compaq Computer Corporation in Houston,
Siemens Transportation Corporation in New York, AEG-Westinghouse in Pittsburgh, the
Detroit Transportation Corporation, the City of Detroit, the United States Federal
Railroad Administration. |
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Catherine G.
Burke, PhD. Associate Professor, School of Policy, Planning and Development;
University of Southern California. Author: Innovation and Public Policy: The Case
of Personal Rapid Transit. |
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Mike Conwell is a computer
programmer and activist in Austin, Texas. A co-founder of Austin Citizens for
Personal Rapid Transit (ACPRT), Mike has been active in transportation issues in
Austin since 2000 and began serving on the ATRA board in 2004. |
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Wayne D. Cottrell,
is an Associate Professor in the
Civil Engineering
Department at California State Polytechnic University,
Pomona. He possesses
B.S. and M.S. degrees in civil engineering from the
University of
California, Berkeley, a Civil Engineers degree from the
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, and a Ph.D. in transportation
engineering from the
University of Utah. Dr. Cottrell is licensed as a
professional traffic
engineer in California. He has worked for
engineering consulting firms and
the Federal Highway Administration, and has
taught at San Joaquin Valley
College and the University of Utah. He is
active in several professional
organizations, including the Transportation
Research Board, in which he is
currently serving as the Chair of the Committee
on Major Activity Center
Circulation Systems. Dr. Cottrell has conducted
and published research in
motor vehicle safety, pedestrian safety, freeway
congestion measurement,
construction project scheduling, motor vehicle
emissions, transportation
education, and driverless
transit.
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Donn Fichter, BSME, MSCE. '57 published PRT
concept; '64 book on PRT feasibility; '68 PRT description (HRR 251);'73 Veyar:
Small Cars as the Key to Urban PRT (PRT II, U. of Minn.) |
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Bill
Flanigan, Database Programmer and Computer Consultant, Carbondale,
Colorado. Born in New York City and majored in Electrical Engineering at the
University of Vermont. His professional experience includes co-organizer of New
Visions in Transportation, held in Aspen, Colorado in October 2000; business
management at IRT Environment, an energy efficiency consulting firm based formerly
in Basalt, Colorado; applied physics at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New
York; radio broadcasting; audio engineering and computer programming. |
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Ian Ford is a Transportation activist living in Albuquerque,
NM |
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George Haikalis is a civil engineer and transportation planner. He is President of the Institute for Rational Urban Mobility, Inc., a NYC-based not-for-profit corporation concerned with reducing car use in dense urban areas. Haikalis was with the Tri-State Regional Planning Commission for 19 years, serving as it Research Director. While at Tri-State, Haikalis oversaw advanced transit efforts, including accelerating moving walkways and PRT. He is currently co-chair of vision42 - an initiative to create an auto-free light rail boulevard on 42nd Street. Haikalis is Chair of the Research Subcommittee of Transportation Research Board's Committee on Intercity Rail Passenger Systems.
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Jarold (Jerry) Kieffer,
Birthplace: Minneapolis, MN.; founding member and former treasurer, secretary, and
chairman, Advanced Transit Association (1976); life time member of ATRA and member
of Board of Directors; U.S. Army 1942-1946 (overseas service: South Pacific);
Ph. D. University of Minnesota (1950); former U.S. government official; professor
and administrator (University of Oregon); transportation consultant and writer; and
foundation executive. Chairman,, Senior Employment Resources; chairman;
Fairfax Alliance for Human Services President and Publisher-Kieffer
Publications. |
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Dennis Manning,
Born 1940 in Boise, Idaho. Moved to Los Angeles area in 1942, then to Fresno, CA
1951. Received BSME at Fresno State College 1963. Married 1972. Two children ages
29 and 25. Began career with California Department of Transportation as Jr. Civil
Engineer. Worked mostly in Design and Construction. Switched to Transportation
Planning 4 years prior to retirement in 1998. Side endeavors included 25 years as
small hotel owner-operator, and developer. PRT epiphany occurred in 1967 while
observing expressway traffic. Basic thought was that 400 feet of r/w was being used
to move 2 foot wide people. Began active PRT involvement in 1994 as the result of
email access. Joined ATRA in 1995. Served 3 years as Secretary/Treasurer, and 2
years as President. Did minor work with ASCE APM committee. I've read, attended
and participated in conferences/workshops, done some writing, exchanged a few
thousand e-mails, helped form CPRT-Umunum chapter in Santa Cruz, California.
Currently building support for PRT in Fresno, California, and remain on ATRA's
Board of Directors. |
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David Maymudes |
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Peter
Mitchell |
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Steve Raney is
founder of Cities21.org, a nonprofit that researches advanced transit, TDM
(transportation demand management), and land use for suburban edge cities (Palo
Alto, Emeryville, Pleasanton, Edina, Redmond). He holds three masters:
business, software, and transportation from Columbia, RPI, and Berkeley. He
is the Principal Investigator on EPA's "Transforming Office Parks into Transit
Villages" study of Hacienda Business Park. He has conducted technology
product research at Microsoft, Citigroup, and Silicon Valley start-ups. He
was project manager for BART's Group Rapid Transit study. He designed a
version of Cybertran's Group Rapid Transit control system. He is the author
of five Transportation Research Board (TRB) papers. His "wireless carpool
assistant," TrakRide, is patent pending. He served as Training Coordinator
for Habitat for Humanity. His recent conference presentations include TRB,
Association for Commuter Transportation, Going!, Engineers for a Sustainable World,
and Rail~Volution. |
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Tom Richert is a senior project manager working in
a client executive capacity for the Linbeck Group’s New England office. In
his role he provides the executive teams, organizational boards, and investment
managers that represent his Clients’ projects with the tools they need to
more effectively lead successful projects. Past project management work includes
campus development at Groton School and Middlesex School in the Boston metropolitan
area, and a multi-billion dollar enhancement of the City of San Diego’s
wastewater system. Current work includes the development of a real estate based
entertainment complex and the delivery of project stewardship coaching
programs. |
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William B Rourke |
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Jerry Schneider, Professor Emeritus, jointly appointed in the Departments of Urban Design and Planning and Civil Engineering at the University of Washington, Seattle. Degrees include a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania and a master's degree in City and Regional Planning from the University of California, Berkeley. Conducted numerous research projects on various transit issues with funding from the Urban Mass Transit Administration and the Federal Railroad Administration and taught numerous urban transportation subjects at the graduate level for 30 years. Has published several articles on urban transportation topics in leading academic journals. Active in various TRB committees, has made numerous TRB presentations, founder and chair of the TRB Interactive Computer Graphics Committee. Has served as VP of the Advanced Transit Association. Has created and managed a large website focused on Innovative Transportation Technologies during the past decade. More than 100 systems from around the world are reviewed, monitored and discussed and historical articles as well as current readings are provided at http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans
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Roxanne Warren is an
architect and author, and Chair of vision42, a proposal to convert Manhattan's
42nd Street into a landscaped, auto-free light rail boulevard — an initiative
co-founded with George Haikalis in 1999. Her 33 years of architectural experience
includes 21 years as principal of her own firm, where she has designed projects for
both private and public clients, including two large projects for NYC Transit. Ms.
Warren’s writing includes a book, The Urban Oasis: Guideways and Greenways in
the Human Environment (McGraw-Hill, 1997), and a number of articles on urban
transportation and land use published in professional journals. She is a member of
the Planning and Urban Design Committee of the American Institute of Architects, a
member of the Major Activity Center Circulation Systems Committee of the
Transportation Research Board, and a Fellow of the Institute for Urban Design. Ms.
Warren has been active over three decades in research and writing on
transportation/land use issues, and has been a speaker and moderator at conference
seminars on the subject in the U.S. and Europe. Work on vision42 has included
public outreach, with over 220 presentations of the proposal, and the
commissioning, oversight and coordination of three consultants on technical studies
of its traffic implications, costs and economic potential. |
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William Wilde, "I grew up
in Atlanta and got my Bachelor of Mechanical Engineering degree from Georgia Tech
in 1963, having worked as a Co-op student at Lockheed. After a tour with the U.S.
Army in Europe I returned to Lockheed as an Aircraft Design Engineer. During my
long commutes to work I began to envision an alternative (which we call PRT) to
dependence on the automobile. It came from thinking about inputs and outputs and
how incredibly inefficient the automobile/roadway/parking system is. I then became
aware of some of the early thinking about PRT and wanted to be a
part of
it. I went to the U. of Maryland for my Masters degree in Civil Engineering with a
focus on transportation. At the 1973 PRT Conference in Minneapolis I learned of the
Denver RTD's plan to build a PRT network and joined the staff as a transportation
planner. Unfortunately RTD's plans degraded into buses and light rail but I stayed
in the industry in various roles on a variety of urban transportation projects. My
commitment to PRT has remained constant since those first visions decades ago. It
amazes me that after all this time and effort we are still trying to get PRT into
the mix of available technologies. Someday, I'm convinced, PRT will be as natural
to people as breathing." |
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Tad Winiecki was educated at Grinnell
College (BA in Physics) and Rice University (MS in Space Science). He has five U.S.
patents on motorcycle safety inventions and is registered as a Professional
Engineer in Colorado. His main gift is solving difficult problems by the
application of science, engineering and economics.
After a career in the
space industry Tad started his own private service business and began working on
Doug Malewicki's PeoplePods personal rapid transit system. He is currently
designing the Higherway system of personal automated transport (see http://higherway.us). |
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Chan Wirasinghe obtained his B.Sc. in Civil Engineering from the
University of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) in 1968. Subsequently he won a full US
Fulbright Scholarship to study transportation engineering at the University of
California at Berkeley where he completed his M.S. in 1973 and Ph.D. in 1976. He
moved to the University of Calgary 1976 as an Assistant Professor in the Department
of Civil Engineering.
Dr. Wirasinghe became the founding
Associate Dean (Research) in the Faculty of Engineering at U of C in 1988 and was
one of the originators of the successful Research Chairs and Professorships Program
with over 25 currently in place. He became Dean of the Faculty of Engineering in
1994. He Chaired the National Council of Deans of Engineering and Applied
Sciences in 1999/2000 and is now the senior Dean of Engineering in Canada.
Dr.Wirasinghe is the Grantholder for NSERC Canadian Design Engineering Network
(C-DEN). Under his leadership, the Faculty of Engineering at U of C has essentially
doubled in size and quadrupled its research funds. It leads the U of C in post
graduate education. The U of C has won many national awards for women in
engineering activities and has the most women faculty of any Engineering School in
Canada.
Chan Wirasinghe’s research is on airport and
public transport systems. He has over 100 refereed publications and 100 citations
to his credit. He is the Co-Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Advanced
Transportation.
Chan Wirasinghe is married to Dhamitha
Wirasinghe, has three adult daughters, and two grand children. He is an amateur
Mozart historian, a collector of books on Sri Lanka, and reads for
relaxation. |
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Supin Yoder has over 16 years of
experience in transportation planning and travel demand modeling experience that
has been gained both in the consulting world and the public sector. Currently, she
is Planning Modeling Specialist with Federal Highway Administration. Before Joining
FHWA, she was a Senior Transportation Modeler with Wilbur Smith Associates in their
Chicago office. In this position, she served as a project manager for many
multi-modal projects including highway, transit, freight and airport ground access,
and multi-jurisdictional projects encompassing statewide, MPO, county and corridor
model development and applications. Prior to her time at Wilbur Smith for four
years, she worked as a principal modeler with the Regional Transportation Authority
(RTA) in Chicago for 11 years where she was responsible for the calibration,
validation and application of RTA's travel model. In addition, she has done
project-based consulting for Bechtel on a commuter rail project in Hong Kong and
high speed rail study in Taiwan.
She received Institute of
Transportation Engineer (ITE) Transportation Planning Council’s Best
Practices Award twice, one was in 1999 while she worked at the Chicago RTA and the
other was in 2003 while at Wilbur Smith Associates. She has also published numerous
papers in the transportation field, including one on asset management in the
September 2003 issue of the ITE Journal and Capital Costs and Ridership Estimates
of Personal rapid Transit.
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The executive committee consists of:
- Dennis Manning - chair
- Bob Dunning - president
- Ingmar Andreasson - vice president
- Wayne Cottrell - secretary
- David Maymudes - treasurer
- Martin Lowson - member at large
Last update: March 2008
By-laws of the non-profit corporation
DOCUMENT# 2
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