THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 12, 2013
Guest List for the First Lady’s Box
State of the Union Address
February 12, 2013
First Lady Michelle Obama
Dr. Jill Biden
Valerie Jarrett, Senior Advisor to the President
The following individuals will be seated in the box with the First Lady and Dr. Biden at the State of the Union Address:
Sergeant Sheena Adams (Vista, CA)
Team Advisor & Lead Instructor, Female Engagement Team
A
 native of Kauai, Hawaii, Sergeant Adams joined the Marine Corps in 2003
 and attended recruit training in Parris Island, S.C.  In 2010, Sergeant
 Adams joined the Female Engagement Team (FET) and was deployed to 
Helmand Province, Afghanistan from September 2010 to April 2011 in 
direct support of 1st Battalion 8th Marines in Musa Qal’eh District.  
Sergeant Adams received her Combat Action Ribbon and Navy and Marine 
Corp Achievement Medal (second award) after successful completion of the
 deployment.  In September 2011, Sergeant Adams returned to 1st Marine 
Expeditionary Force Advisor Training Cell, as Team Advisor/Liaison and 
lead FET instructor, where she re-engineered the Period of Instruction 
for future FETs.
Alan Aleman (Las Vegas, NV)
DREAM Student 
Alan
 Aleman was born in Mexico City, Mexico.  In high school, Alan watched 
his friends come of age – driving around town with their new licenses 
and earning some extra cash from their summer jobs at the mall.  
Although Alan knew he could not do those things because of his 
immigration status, he was determined to get a good education.  Last 
year, when Alan heard the news that the Obama Administration was going 
to provide Deferred Action for undocumented youth like him to emerge 
from the shadows, he was one of the first to sign up.  Alan was among 
the first people in Nevada to get approved.  In that moment, Alan said, 
“I felt the fear vanish.  I felt accepted.”  Today, Alan is in his 
second year at the College of Southern Nevada.  He’s studying to become a
 doctor and he hopes to join the Air Force.  Alan is currently working 
at Hermandad Mexicana, where he is in charge of final review for DACA 
applications.  
Jack Andraka (Crownsville, MD)
Winner of the 2012 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair
Jack
 Andraka, 16, of North County High School, was awarded first place for 
his new method to detect pancreatic cancer at the Intel International 
Science and Engineering Fair 2012, a program of Society for Science 
& the Public. Motivated by the death of his uncle due to pancreatic 
cancer, Jack created a simple dip-stick sensor based on diabetic test 
paper to test blood or urine to determine whether or not a patient has 
early-stage pancreatic cancer. His study resulted in over 90 percent 
accuracy and showed his patent-pending sensor to be 28 times faster, 28 
times less expensive and over 100 times more sensitive than current 
tests. President Obama strongly believes that we need more students like
 Jack who are passionate about science, technology, engineering and math
 (STEM) and has hosted two White House Science Fairs to celebrate 
students participating in such competitions.  
Susan Bumgarner (Norman, OK)                                         
Early Childhood Educator
Susan
 Bumgarner's home state of Oklahoma is a national leader in providing 
access to high quality preschool for all children, and she has been an 
early educator in the Oklahoma system for more than twenty years. Susan 
was educated at the University of Oklahoma and influenced by family 
members who taught and studied there.  Susan has written curriculum, 
trained Head Start teachers, taught infants and toddlers, and prepared 
parents by teaching Early Birds readiness class.  In 1992 Susan began 
teaching pre-kindergarten at what is now Wilson Arts Integration 
Elementary School, a public school. “My work is enthralling and my 
students are amazing, creative, intelligent people,” she said. “It is an
 honor to facilitate their playful transition into the formal world of 
learning.”
Deb Carey (New Glarus, WI)
Small Business Owner, New Glarus Brewing Company 
Deborah
 Carey’s decision to start New Glarus Brewing Company was rooted in 
doing what was best for her family.  As she worked on a business plan, 
her husband Dan, a master brewer, gathered the materials, grains and 
equipment needed for start-up.  In 1993 they negotiated to rent a 
warehouse in New Glarus, exchanging the lease for stock in the New 
Glarus Brewing Company.  They sold their home and raised $40,000 in seed
 money, but still needed more funding. Deborah pitched her story to 
local newspapers, and the media attention brought $200,000 from 
investors.  In the early days, the couple worked hard to establish the 
brewery’s reputation for consistent quality beers and developed a very 
loyal customer base. Today, New Glarus Brewing Company has grown to 50 
full-time employees, and registered growth in profits of 123 percent 
from 2007 to 2009, becoming Wisconsin’s number one micro-brewery 
relative to sales volume.
Sergeant Carlos Evans, USMC (Cameron, NC)
Wounded Warrior 
Sergeant
 Evans, born in Puerto Rico, was on his fourth overseas deployment when 
he sustained injuries in Afghanistan that resulted in the loss of both 
of his legs and his left hand.  Recovering at Walter Reed Medical 
Center, Sergeant Evans met the First Lady and later visited the White 
House for a Wounded Warrior Tour.  At that time, the President signed 
his prosthetic arm.   He credits the support he has received from 
private organizations to the First Lady and Dr. Biden’s efforts in 
Joining Forces.  In 2012, he received a custom home from Operation 
Coming Home and now resides in North Carolina with his wife and two 
young daughters.  
Tim Cook (Cupertino, CA) 
CEO of Apple
Before being named CEO in August 2011, Tim was Apple's Chief Operating Officer and was responsible for all of the company’s worldwide sales and operations, including end-to-end management of Apple’s supply chain, sales activities, and service and support in all markets and countries. He also headed Apple’s Macintosh division and played a key role in the continued development of strategic reseller and supplier relationships, ensuring flexibility in response to an increasingly demanding marketplace.
Prior to joining Apple, Tim was vice president of Corporate Materials for Compaq and was responsible for procuring and managing all of Compaq’s product inventory. Previous to his work at Compaq, Tim was the chief operating officer of the Reseller Division at Intelligent Electronics. Tim also spent 12 years with IBM, most recently as director of North American Fulfillment where he led manufacturing and distribution functions for IBM’s Personal Computer Company in North and Latin America.
Tim earned an M.B.A. from Duke University, where he was a Fuqua Scholar, and a Bachelor of Science degree in Industrial Engineering from Auburn University.
Before being named CEO in August 2011, Tim was Apple's Chief Operating Officer and was responsible for all of the company’s worldwide sales and operations, including end-to-end management of Apple’s supply chain, sales activities, and service and support in all markets and countries. He also headed Apple’s Macintosh division and played a key role in the continued development of strategic reseller and supplier relationships, ensuring flexibility in response to an increasingly demanding marketplace.
Prior to joining Apple, Tim was vice president of Corporate Materials for Compaq and was responsible for procuring and managing all of Compaq’s product inventory. Previous to his work at Compaq, Tim was the chief operating officer of the Reseller Division at Intelligent Electronics. Tim also spent 12 years with IBM, most recently as director of North American Fulfillment where he led manufacturing and distribution functions for IBM’s Personal Computer Company in North and Latin America.
Tim earned an M.B.A. from Duke University, where he was a Fuqua Scholar, and a Bachelor of Science degree in Industrial Engineering from Auburn University.
Cleopatra Cowley-Pendleton and Nathaniel A. Pendleton Sr. (Chicago, IL)
Cleopatra
 and Nathaniel’s daughter Hadiya Pendleton was murdered on January 29, 
2013, when she was shot and killed in Harsh Park on Chicago’s South 
Side. Hadiya had participated in President Obama’s public inaugural 
celebration on January 21, 2013.  She was an honor student and band 
majorette at King College Prep High School.  First Lady Michelle Obama 
attended Hadiya’s memorial service on Saturday, February 6th.   
Menchu de Luna Sanchez (Secaucus, NJ)
Registered Nurse, NYU Langone Medical Center 
When
 Hurricane Sandy cut the power at NYU Langone Medical Center, Menchu 
Sanchez, a Registered Nurse, devised a plan to transport twenty at-risk 
infants to intensive care units around the city.  She organized the 
nurses and doctors to carefully carry the babies down eight flights of 
stairs with only cell phones to light the way.  Even as Menchu’s own 
home was flooding, she thought only of protecting the babies in her 
care.  Menchu was born, raised, and educated in the Philippines and she 
immigrated to the United States in the 1980s.  She has worked as a nurse
 in New York for more than 25 years, and has been at NYU since 2010. 
 Menchu currently lives in New Jersey with her husband and two children,
 both of whom are in college.
Bobak Ferdowsi (Pasadena, CA)
Flight Director, Mars Curiosity Rover
Bobak
 Ferdowsi, aka NASA’s “Mohawk Guy,” is a member of the Mars Curiosity 
rover team at NASA and Caltech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 
California.  After the successful landing of the Curiosity rover in 
August 2012, President Obama called to congratulate the team on their 
success, and singled out Bobak for his unique haircut that captured the 
imagination of millions of people around the world. The Curiosity rover 
is a car-sized robot equipped with a laser, chemistry set, and drill for
 assessing whether Mars ever had an environment able to support small 
life forms. Bobak is an Iranian-American and science, technology, 
engineering, and math (STEM) professional who, in addition to his 
inspiring day-to-day work on the Mars Curiosity mission, volunteers as a
 FIRST robotics mentor to get more boys and girls excited about STEM 
education.
Bradley Henning (Louisville, KY)
Machinist, Atlas Machine and Supply
Bradley
 Henning’s high school has one of the best machining programs in 
Kentucky.  He got hooked on machining in his sophomore year, and by the 
time he graduated, Bradley had taken enough vocational classes to get 
hired as a full-time apprentice with Atlas Machine and Supply in 
Louisville, Kentucky.  For the past four years, Bradley has worked under
 a veteran machinist and is taking additional classes to earn his full 
certification. Today, at 23, he is a card-carrying Journeyman Machinist 
at Atlas, and responsible for mentoring the next generation of 
apprentices.  Bradley is committed to a career in manufacturing and sees
 a bright future ahead. “This is going to be my lifelong career,” he 
said. “I come in every day with a smile on my face. I learn something 
new every day…I love that.”
Tracey Hepner (Arlington, VA)
Co-Founder, Military Partners and Families Coalition 
Tracey
 is a co-founder of the Military Partners and Families Coalition (MPFC),
 which provides support, resources, education, and advocacy for LGBT 
military partners and their families.  Outside of her work with MPFC, 
Tracey works full time for the Department of Homeland Security as a 
Master Behavior Detection Officer.  She is married to the first openly 
gay or lesbian general officer in the military, Army Brigadier General 
Tammy Smith.
Peter Hudson (Evergreen, CO)
Co-Founder and CEO, iTriage 
Dr.
 Peter Hudson, the co-founder and CEO of iTriage, is a physician and 
entrepreneur with more than 15 years of experience founding and growing 
healthcare-related businesses. His focus has been on creating 
efficiencies within the healthcare delivery system, and empowering 
healthcare consumers with technology.  Using open government data, Dr. 
Hudson launched iTriage in 2009, a company focused on prompting citizens
 to actively engage in their own healthcare. Through the app, an example
 of government inspired innovation, smartphone users can locate nearby 
providers based on their symptoms, make appointments, store their 
personal health records, save medication refill reminders, and learn 
about thousands of medications, diseases and procedures. 
Governor John Kitzhaber (D-OR)
Governor
 John Kitzhaber has built on his experience as a former emergency room 
doctor to transform health care delivery in Oregon. Now in his third 
term, Governor Kitzhaber is working with the Obama administration to 
scale up innovative models that show how government can do more with 
less. These performance partnerships, which emphasize federal 
flexibility and local accountability, are key to achieving improved 
health care outcomes and efficiencies, better results for our students 
and building the infrastructure we'll need to unleash the 21st century 
economy.
Mayor Marie Lopez Rogers (Avondale, AZ)
Marie
 Lopez Rogers served on the Avondale City Council for 14 years before 
being elected as the city’s first Latina Mayor in 2006.  Growing up in 
migrant farm labor camps and picking cotton alongside her parents in 
fields where her City Hall now stands, Mayor Rogers never imagined that 
she would be guiding the transformation of the region.  Mayor Rogers 
currently serves as Chair of the Maricopa Association of Governments.  
In Dec. 2012, she was named president of the National League of Cities, 
an organization dedicated to helping city leaders build better 
communities. She and her husband Ed have been married for 43 years and 
have three children and six grandchildren. 
Amanda E. McMillan (Jackson, MS)
Pay Discrimination Victim 
For
 a number of years Amanda McMillan worked as a secretary for the owner 
of a Forrest City Grocery Company. She was doing many of the same duties
 as male salespeople, but at lower pay. Despite repeatedly asking to be 
officially promoted to the better and higher-paying job in sales, she 
was told by the company that the job of a salesman was too dangerous for
 a woman, and that she would not be a good mother if she were on the 
road meeting customers. With the help of the Equal Employment 
Opportunity Commission (EEOC), she sued the company for sex 
discrimination. The lawsuit charged that Forrest City Grocery denied 
sales positions to an employee because she was a woman and paid McMillan
 less than men doing the same work. When asked why she has pursued the 
case, McMillan said, “I’m doing this because it was wrong and I could 
never look my girls in the face and then tell them they live in America 
and could be anything they wanted to be.”As a result of the suit, 
Forrest City Grocery agreed to pay $125,000 in monetary damages and 
agreed to disseminate employment policies to employees and provide 
ongoing training for management on sex discrimination. Amanda, a mother 
of three, currently lives in Jackson, MS.
Lee Maxwell (Wilton, IA)
Graduate, Kirkwood Community College Wind Technician Program 
In
 2012, Lee Maxwell graduated from Kirkwood Community College in Cedar 
Rapids, Iowa.   He gained twenty six separate certifications in 
everything from reading blueprints to driving forklifts.  Today, he’s 
responsible for turning on the power for new wind turbines that are 
being built all around the country.   Kirkwood started its wind 
technician training program three years ago in partnership with 
Iowa-based Clipper Windpower, combining an industry-based curriculum and
 donated equipment to give students the hands-on experience they need to
 succeed.
Lieutenant Brian Murphy (Oak Creek, WI)
Lieutenant
 Brian Murphy was the first police officer to arrive at the scene of the
 tragic Sikh temple shooting in Oak Creek, Wisconsin last August.  Lt. 
Murphy directly confronted the shooter, and took fifteen bullets to his 
head, neck, and body before the rest of the police force arrived.  When 
his fellow officers moved to assist him, he waved them off and told them
 to protect the threatened citizens who remained in the temple. When 
asked how he was able to respond with such bravery, Lt. Murphy 
responded, “That’s just the way we’re made.” Today, Lt. Murphy is on 
medical leave from the force and still recovering from his injuries.  
Lt. Murphy has served as a police officer for more than twenty years and
 previously served in the Marine Corps and the United National security 
force.  He lives with his wife and children in Oak Creek, Wisconsin. 
Lisa Richards (Arlington, VA)
#My2K Participant 
Lisa
 Richards, a single mom, was one of thousands of Americans who shared 
stories about what paying $2,200 more in taxes would mean for her family
 by using #My2K. She wrote, “It's 20 weeks of groceries, two years worth
 of gasoline, 1/3 of a new roof (which I need), six months of 
utilities.” With the passage of the middle class tax cuts at the 
beginning of the year, Lisa and millions of Americans like her did not 
see did not see an income tax increase. Born in 
Philadelphia and raised in New York and Dallas, Lisa has called the 
Washington, DC area home for more than 25 years. She now lives in 
Arlington, Virginia with her seven-year-old daughter working freelance 
and contract work for a variety of website clients.  
Kaitlin Roig (Greenwich, CT)
1st Grade Teacher, Sandy Hook Elementary School 
Kaitlin
 Roig has taught first grade for six years at Sandy Hook Elementary, and
 has always had a passion for education and working with children.  
She attended and received her Master’s degree from the NEAG School of 
Education at the University of Connecticut, where she was a member of 
the Order of Omega Honor Society, The Historical Honor Society, and the 
NEAG honor society.  In addition to her teaching, Kaitlin also started a
 running club called Marathon Mondays for third and fourth grade 
students at Sandy Hook Elementary.  She will be running the New York 
City Marathon this year.
Abby Schanfield (Minneapolis, MN)
ACA Beneficiary 
Prior
 to the passage of the Affordable Care Act, Abby would have lost 
coverage upon turning 21 and would not have been able to obtain care due
 to her several pre-existing conditions.  Abby is a member of TakeAction
 Minnesota’s healthcare team, a grassroots organization that advocates 
for progressive policies ranging from health care to economic reform.  
Abby was influenced by her experiences growing up with a chronic 
illness, and the privileges that come with being insured.  A recent 
graduate of the University of Minnesota, Abby hopes to work in public 
policy, focusing on women’s and community health. 
Haile Thomas (Tucson, AZ)
Let’s Move! Champion 
Haile
 Thomas is a 12 year-old Youth Advisory Board member with the Alliance 
for a Healthier Generation.  She is Co-Founder/Director of the HAPPY 
Organization, an Arizona nonprofit dedicated to improving the health and
 wellness of youth through education, outreach, and advocacy about 
proper nutrition and healthy lifestyle choices. Haile hosts an annual 
H.E.A.L. (healthy eating, active lifestyle) Festival on Global Youth 
Service Day in Tucson. She created the Healthy Girl Adventures Club to 
inspire girls to embrace healthy habits, and produces online cooking 
videos aimed at encouraging kids to get cooking. Haile is also the Youth
 Spokesperson and Jr. Chef Consultant for Hyatt Hotels. 
Desiline Victor (Miami, FL) 
Desiline
 Victor, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Haiti and retired farmworker, 
is 102 years old. On October 28, the first Sunday of early voting in 
Florida, Desiline went to vote at her polling place, a local library. 
When she arrived at 10:00 a.m., wait times were up to six hours. 
Determined to vote, she stood in line for three hours, until 1:00 p.m. 
After citizen advocates complained that the elderly woman was struggling
 on her feet, a poll worker asked Desiline to come back at a later time.
 On Desiline’s second visit that evening, she was finally able to cast 
her ballot. When she emerged from the building with her “I Voted” 
sticker, the crowd of thousands of waiting voters erupted into applause.
 Several voters remarked that the lines were long, and they needed to 
get home, but because of Desiline they would continue to stand and wait.
 Desiline resides in North Miami, where she is lovingly known as 
“Granny” among the city’s Haitian community. A spirited and independent 
centenarian, she enjoys attending church services and cooking her own 
meals.
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