Vincent Scully, B.A. 1940, PH.D. 1949, Sterling Professor Emeritus of the History of Art, Yale University, and Distinguished Visiting Professor, University of Miami, has taught at Yale since 1947, where he was Master of Morse College from 1969 to 1975. He has written some twenty books and hundreds of articles on subjects ranging from Pre-Columbian and Greek to modern architecture. In 1999 a group of Yale alumni endowed a chair in his name, and in 2003 an anonymous alumnus endowed a second chair in his name in the School of Architecture. He became Emeritus in 1991 but continues to teach courses on introductory art history and modern architecture at Yale and the University of Miami.

Catherine Lynn, PH.D. 1980, teaches courses in preservation at the University of Miami and the Yale School of Architecture. A graduate of Sweet Briar College and of the Winterthur Program of the University of Delaware, she held curatorial posts at the Cooper-Hewitt Museum and the Atlanta Historical Society before teaching at Columbia University and the Fashion Institute of Technology. She was director of education and development for the Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation, editing its Connecticut Preservation News from 1987 to 1991. Her publications include Wallpaper in America (1980).

Erik Vogt, M.E.D. 1999, is a principal of Khoury & Vogt Architects in Miami, where he is also an adjunct professor at the University of Miami School of Architecture. Before earning his M.E.D. from the Yale School of Archi-tecture, he graduated from the University of Miami. Among his published works are drawings in Between Two Towers (1996) and an article in the Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin (2000).

Paul Goldberger, B.A. 1972, is the architecture critic of The New Yorker and Dean of Parsons School of Design. He won the Pulitzer Prize for his writings on architecture at The New York Times, where he served as a writer, critic, and editor for twenty-five years. He is the author of several books, including the text for The World Trade Center Remembered (2001) and Manhattan Unfurled (2001), and Up From Zero: Politics, Architecture, and the Rebuilding of New York (2004). He is now at work on a book about the experience of looking at architecture.