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Alumni & Friends
For over 50 years, the University of Michigan has been training Russian, East European, and Eurasian specialists.
Many alumni/ae from CREES and other degree programs have gone on to have distinguished academic careers; 10 have directed area studies centers at major U.S. universities.
CREES-affiliated University of Michigan alumni/ae have also pursued careers in government (CIA; Defense, Homeland Security, Justice, and State Departments; NSC; NSF; U.S. Army; U.S. Forest Service); the non-profit sector (IREX, Human Rights Watch, Open Society Institute, Oxfam, Kennan Institute, NDI, CIEE, American Councils for International Education); the for-profit sector (GM, Merrill Lynch, Citigroup); and international organizations (EBRD, OSCE, United Nations, World Bank).
CREES alumni and friends, please send us news about your activities since graduation via snail mail, email (crees@umich.edu), fax (734.763.4765), or in the comments section on the web subscription form. Include your name, class year(s), degree(s), current activities, as well as address updates so that we may continue to send you these postings. Please let us know if we may post this news on our website and if we may share your contact information with current students or recent alumni/ae interested in pursuing an internship or career in your field.
Visit Alumni(ae) News for updates from our graduates.
We gratefully acknowledge gifts from CREES alumni/ae and friends whose support will insure the Center's excellence and financial security in the future.
Profiles
CREES Alumna Martha Loerke (MA REES '90) offers advice on career paths for areas studies students
Martha Loerke (MA REES '90), director of Scholarship Programs at the Open Society Institute/Soros Foundations, came to Ann Arbor to share her insights on career opportunities.
Her own career has included work as program coordinator for Senior Fulbright Fellowships at the Council for International Exchange of Scholars and as program manager for Muskie/Freedom Support Act Graduate Fellowships at the Institute for International Education. In 1994, she became deputy director of Network Scholarship Programs at the Open Society Institute/Soros Foundations; in 1995, she was appointed director of this OSI department. In this position, Martha oversees OSI programs offering 800 humanities and social science scholarships annually in over 30 countries via open, merit-based competitions. She directs offices in New York and London, and coordinates global program administration with 30 local partners. Although she focused primarily on countries of the former Soviet Union during her career with CIES, IIE, Fulbright, and the Open Society Institute, her work is currently expanding to include Burma, Cambodia, and Laos; as well as Palestine, Turkey, and Afghanistan. She is also starting to look at climate change fellowships for Sub-Saharan Africa.
Listen to her CREES Brown Bag lecture (February 4, 2009) on "Career Paths and Opportunities for Students Specializing in Area Studies": audio ![]()
CREES Alumna Stephanie DeGroote (BA REES '85) returns to Ann Arbor
Following completion of her BA in REES, Stephanie DeGroote traveled to Moscow, where she worked as a free-lance journalist and with ABC News and witnessed the final years and break up of the Soviet Union.
Currently a producer with Sky News in London, she returned to the University of Michigan this year as a 2008-09 Knight-Wallace Fellow. During her visit, she gave a CREES Brown Bag lecture on January 14, 2009.
Listen to her lecture, "Fear and Loathing in Moscow: Covering 11 Time Zones and 15 Republics during Times of Great Change, 1989-1995": audio ![]()


