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List of University of Michigan alumni

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Academic unit key
Symbol Academic unit

ARCH Taubman College
BUS Ross School of Business
COE College of Engineering
DENT School of Dentistry
FLNT Flint Campus
GFSPP Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
HHRS Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies
LAW Law School
LSA College of LS&A
MED Medical School
SMTD School of Music, Theatre and Dance
PHARM School of Pharmacy
SOE School of Education
SNRE School of Natural Resources
SOAD The Stamps School of Art & Design
SOI School of Information
SON School of Nursing
SOK School of Kinesiology
SOSW School of Social Work
SPH School of Public Health
TCAUP Architecture and Urban Planning
MDNG Matriculated, did not graduate

The following is a list of University of Michigan alumni.

There are more than 640,000 living alumni of the University of Michigan in 180 countries across the globe.[1] Notable alumni include computer scientist and entrepreneur Larry Page, actor James Earl Jones, and President of the United States Gerald Ford.

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Transcription

Alumni

Nobel laureates

Activists

AAAI, ACM, IEEE Fellows and awardees

As of 2021, more than 65 Michigan alumni have been named as Fellows. Of those alumni, four have been awarded the Eckert-Mauchly Award (out of the 42 total awards granted), the most prestigious award for contributions to computer architecture.

Aerospace

Art, architecture, and design

See List of University of Michigan arts alumni

Arts and entertainment

See List of University of Michigan arts alumni

Astronauts

A campus plaza was named for McDivitt and White in 1965 to honor their accomplishments on the Gemini IV spacewalk. (At the time of its dedication, the plaza was near the engineering program's facilities, but the College of Engineering has since been moved. The campus plaza honoring them remains.) Two NASA space flights have been crewed entirely by University of Michigan degree-holders: Gemini IV by James McDivitt and Ed White in 1965 and Apollo 15 by Alfred Worden, David Scott (honorary degree) and James Irwin in 1971. The Apollo 15 astronauts left a 45-word plaque on the Moon establishing its own chapter of the University of Michigan Alumni Association.[14] The Apollo 15 crew also named a crater on the Moon "Wolverine".

Belles lettres

See List of University of Michigan arts alumni

Business

See List of University of Michigan business alumni

Computers, engineering, and technology

Turing, Ada Lovelace Award, and Grace Murray Hopper Award winners

Criminals, murderers, and infamous newsmakers

"Father of..."

  • John Jacob Abel (PHARM: Ph.D. 1883), North American "father of pharmacology"
  • Leon Jacob Cole (June 1, 1877 – February 17, 1948), geneticist and ornithologist; "father of American bird banding"
  • George Dantzig (MA Math 1937), "father of linear programming"; studied at UM under T.H. Hildebrandt, R.L. Wilder, and G.Y. Rainich
  • Tony Fadell (COE: BSE CompE 1991), "father of the Apple iPod"; created all five generations of the iPod and the Apple iSight camera
  • Moses Gomberg (February 8, 1866 – February 12, 1947), chemistry professor at the University of Michigan; "father of radical chemistry"
  • Saul Hertz, M.D. (April 20, 1905 – July 28, 1950), physician who devised the medical uses of radioactive iodine; pioneered the first targeted cancer therapies; "father of the field of theranostics", combining diagnostic imaging with therapy in a single chemical substance
  • Ellis R. Kerley (September 1, 1924 – September 3, 1998), anthropologist, and pioneer in the field of forensic anthropology
  • Samuel Kirk (1904–1996), psychologist and educator recognized for his accomplishments in the field of special education; "father of special education”
  • Chris Langton (Ph.D.), computer science; "father of artificial life"; founder of the Swarm Corporation; distinguished expellee of the Santa Fe Institute
  • Theodore C. Lyster, M.D. (10 July 1875 – 5 August 1933), United States Army physician and aviation medicine pioneer; "father of aviation medicine"
  • Li Shouheng (Chinese: 李寿恒; pinyin: Lǐ Shòuhéng; 1898–1995), also known as S. H. Li, Chinese educator, chemist and chemical engineer; founded the first chemical engineering department in China; "father of modern Chinese chemical cngineering"
  • Sid Meier, "father of computer gaming"; created games Civilization, Pirates!, Railroad Tycoon, SimGolf
  • Daniel Okrent (BA 1969), public editor of New York Times; editor-at-large of Time Inc.; Pulitzer Prize finalist in history (Great Fortune, 2004); founding father of Rotisserie League Baseball
  • Oyekunle Ayinde "Kunle" Olukotun, Cadence Design Systems Professor in the Stanford School of Engineering, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Stanford University and the director of the Stanford Pervasive Parallelism Lab; "father of the multi-core processor"
  • Robert E. Park acknowledged as "father of human ecology" by Emory S. Bogardus: "Not only did he coin the name but he laid out the patterns, offered the earliest exhibit of ecological concepts, defined the major ecological processes and stimulated more advanced students to cultivate the fields of research in ecology than most other sociologists combined."
  • Raymond Pearl, biologist, one of the founders of biogerontology
  • John Clark Salyer II, attended the University of Michigan where he received his MS in 1930; for his efforts as head of the Division of Wildlife Refuges, has become known as "father of the National Wildlife Refuge System"
  • Claude Shannon (April 30, 1916 – February 24, 2001), mathematician, electrical engineer, and cryptographer; "father of information theory" and "father of digital circuit design theory"
  • Richard Errett Smalley (June 6, 1943 – October 28, 2005), Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and a professor of Physics and Astronomy at Rice University; upon his death, the US Senate passed a resolution to honor Smalley, crediting him as the "father of nanotechnology"
  • William A. Starrett, Jr. (June 14, 1877 – March 25, 1932), builder and architect of skyscrapers; best known as the builder of the Empire State Building in New York City; "father of the skyscraper"
  • Larry Teal (March 26, 1905 - July 11, 1984), considered by many to be the father of American orchestral saxophone
  • Olke Uhlenbeck, biochemist, known for his work in RNA biochemistry and RNA catalysis; completed his undergraduate degree at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1964; "father of RNA"
  • Mark Weiser (July 23, 1952 – April 27, 1999), computer scientist and chief technology officer (CTO) at Xerox PARC; "father of ubiquitous computing"
  • Wu Ta-You (simplified Chinese: 吴大猷; traditional Chinese: 吳大猷; pinyin: Wú Dàyóu) (September 27, 1907 – March 4, 2000), Chinese physicist and writer who worked in the United States, Canada, mainland China and Taiwan; "father of Chinese physics"

Founders and co-founders

Educators

University presidents

Fiction, nonfiction

See List of University of Michigan arts alumni.

Finance

Foodies

Guggenheim fellows

As of 2021, Michigan alumni include over 145 Guggenheim Fellows.

  • Richard Newbold Adams (August 4, 1924 – September 11, 2018), anthropologist
  • Thomas R. Adams (May 22, 1921 – December 1, 2008), librarian of the John Carter Brown Library and John Hay Professor of Bibliography and University Bibliographer at Brown University
  • Ricardo Ainslie, Mexican-American documentary filmmaker
  • John Richard Alden (23 January 1908, Grand Rapids, Michigan – 14 August 1991, Clearwater, Florida), American historian and author of a number of books on the era of the American Revolutionary War
  • W. Brian Arthur (born 31 July 1945), economist credited with developing the modern approach to increasing returns
  • John William Atkinson (December 31, 1923 – October 27, 2003), also known as Jack Atkinson, psychologist who pioneered the scientific study of human motivation, achievement and behavior
  • Dean Bakopoulos, writer, born in Dearborn Heights, Michigan in 1975; two-time National Endowment for the Arts fellow, a Guggenheim Fellow, and writer-in-residence at Grinnell College
  • John Bargh (born 1955), social psychologist currently working at Yale University
  • Leslie Bassett, composer of classical music
  • Richard Bauman, folklorist and anthropologist, now retired from Indiana University Bloomington; distinguished professor emeritus of folklore, of anthropology, and of communication and culture
  • Warren Benson (January 26, 1924 – October 6, 2005), composer, mostly of music for wind instruments and percussion.
  • Theodore H. Berlin (8 May 1917, New York City – 16 November 1962, Baltimore), theoretical physicist
  • Derek Bermel (born 1967, in New York City), composer, clarinetist and conductor
  • Robert Berner (November 25, 1935 – January 10, 2015), scientist known for his contributions to the modeling of the carbon cycle
  • Sara Berry (born 1940), scholar of contemporary African political economies, professor of history at Johns Hopkins University, co-founder of the Center for Africana Studies at Johns Hopkins
  • Lawrence D. Bobo, W. E. B. Du Bois Professor of the Social Sciences and the Dean of Social Science at Harvard University.
  • Kevin Boyle (born 7 October 1960), author and the William Smith Mason Professor of American History at Northwestern University
  • Bertrand Harris Bronson (June 22, 1902 – March 14, 1986), academic and professor in the English department at the University of California, Berkeley
  • Clair Alan Brown (born August 16, 1903; died 1982), botanist
  • Roger Brown (April 14, 1925 – December 11, 1997), psychologist, known for his work in social psychology and in children's language development
  • Eugene Burnstein, social psychologist and professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts
  • John W. Cahn, scientist, recipient of the 1998 National Medal of Science
  • David George Campbell (born January 28, 1949, in Decatur, Illinois, United States), educator, ecologist, environmentalist, and award-winning author of non-fiction
  • Victoria Chang, poet and children's writer
  • Patricia Cheng (born 1952), Chinese-American psychologist
  • Laura Clayton (born December 8, 1943), pianist and composer
  • Allan M. Collins, cognitive scientist, professor emeritus of Learning Sciences at Northwestern University's School of Education and Social Policy
  • Philip Converse (November 17, 1928 – December 30, 2014), political scientist
  • Richard M. Cook, academic who specializes in American literature
  • Harold Courlander (September 18, 1908 – March 15, 1996), novelist, folklorist, and anthropologist and expert in the study of Haitian life
  • Olena Kalytiak Davis (born September 16, 1963), poet
  • Philip James DeVries (born March 7, 1952), tropical biologist whose research focuses on insect ecology and evolution, especially butterflies
  • Charles L. Dolph (August 27, 1918 – June 1, 1994), professor of mathematics, known for research in applied mathematics and engineering
  • William Doppmann (Springfield, Massachusetts, October 10, 1934 — Honokaa, Hawaii, January 27, 2013), concert pianist and composer
  • William H. Durham, biological anthropologist and evolutionary biologist; Bing Professor Emeritus in Human Biology at Stanford University
  • W. Ralph Eubanks (born June 25, 1957), author, journalist, professor, public speaker, and business executive
  • Avard Fairbanks (March 2, 1897 – January 1, 1987), 20th-century sculptor
  • Ada Ferrer, Cuban-American historian; Julius Silver Professor of History and Latin American Studies at New York University; Pulitzer Price for History award recipient
  • Sidney Fine (October 11, 1920 – March 31, 2009), professor of history at the University of Michigan
  • Neil Foley, historian
  • Gabriela Lena Frank (born Berkeley, California, United States, September 1972), pianist and composer of contemporary classical music
  • Steven Frank (born 1957), professor of biology at the University of California, Irvine.
  • William Frankena (June 21, 1908 – October 22, 1994), moral philosopher
  • Ronald Freedman, international demographer and founder of the Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan
  • Douglas J. Futuyma (born 24 April 1942), evolutionary biologist
  • Neal Gabler (born 1950), journalist, writer and film critic
  • Mary Gaitskill (born November 11, 1954), novelist, essayist, and short story writer
  • David Gale, American mathematician and economist
  • William A. Gamson, professor of sociology at Boston College, where he was also the co-director of the Media Research and Action Project
  • Seymour Ginsburg (December 12, 1927 – December 5, 2004), pioneer of automata theory, formal language theory, and database theory, and computer science
  • Charles R. Goldman (born 9 November 1930 in Urbana, Illinois), limnologist and ecologist
  • Francisco Goldman (born 1954), novelist, journalist, and Allen K. Smith Professor of Literature and Creative Writing, Trinity College
  • Leslie D. Gottlieb (1936–2012), biologist described by the Botanical Society of America as "one of the most influential plant evolutionary biologists over the past several decades"
  • Josh Greenfeld, author and screenwriter mostly known for his screenplay for the 1974 film Harry and Tonto along with Paul Mazursky
  • Gwendolyn Midlo Hall (born June 27, 1929), historian, focuses on the history of slavery in the Caribbean, Latin America, Louisiana, Africa, and the African diaspora in the Americas
  • Amy Harmon, journalist
  • Joel F. Harrington (born August 25, 1959), historian of pre-modern Germany; Centennial Professor of History at Vanderbilt University
  • Donald Harris (April 7, 1931, in St. Paul, Minnesota – March 29, 2016, in Columbus, Ohio), composer, taught music at the Ohio State University for 22 years, Dean of the College of the Arts 1988–1997
  • Garrett Hongo (born May 30, 1951, Volcano, Hawai'i), Yonsei, fourth-generation Japanese American academic and poet
  • Joseph Hickey (16 April 1907 - 31 August 1993) was an American ornithologist who wrote the landmark Guide to Bird Watching
  • Isabel V. Hull (born 1949) is John Stambaugh Professor Emerita of History and the former chair of the history department at Cornell University.
  • Philip Strong Humphrey (26 February 1926, Hibbing, Minnesota – 13 November 2009, Lawrence, Kansas), ornithologist, museum curator, and professor of zoology
  • M. Kent Jennings (born 1934), political scientist best known for his path-breaking work on the patterns and development of political preferences and behaviors among young Americans
  • Lawrence Joseph (born 1948 in Detroit, Michigan), poet, writer, essayist, critic, lawyer, and professor of law
  • James B. Kaler (born December 29, 1938, in Albany, New York), astronomer and science writer
  • Rosabeth Moss Kanter (born March 15, 1943), Ernest L. Arbuckle professor of business at Harvard Business School
  • Laura Kasischke (born 1961), fiction writer and poet; best known for the novels Suspicious River, The Life Before Her Eyes and White Bird in a Blizzard
  • Mike Kelley (October 27, 1954 – c. January 31, 2012), artist
  • Aviva Kempner (born December 23, 1946), filmmaker
  • James Stark Koehler (10 November 1914 in Oshkosh, Wisconsin – 19 June 2006 in Urbana, Illinois), physicist, specializing in metal defects and their interactions; known for the eponymous Peach-Koehler stress formula
  • Timothy Kramer (born 1959), composer whose music has earned him a Fulbright Scholarship, an NEA grant, and a Guggenheim Fellowship
  • Edward Kravitz (born December 19, 1932), George Packer Berry Professor of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School
  • Armin Landeck (1905–1984), printmaker and educator
  • Chihchun Chi-sun Lee (Chinese: 李志純; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lí Chì-sûn; Pinyin: Li Zhìchún, born 1970), composer of contemporary classical music
  • Otis Hamilton Lee (28 September 1902, Montevideo, Minnesota – 17 September 1948, Vermont), philosopher; Guggenheim Fellow
  • Normand Lockwood (March 19, 1906, New York, New York – March 9, 2002), composer
  • Alvin D. Loving Jr. (September 19, 1935 – June 21, 2005), better known as Al Loving, abstract expressionist painter
  • Mary Lum (born 1951), visual artist
  • Suzanne McClelland, New York-based artist known for abstract work based in language, speech, and sound
  • Jay Meek (1937 – November 3, 2007, St. Paul), poet, and director of the Creative Writing program at the University of North Dakota
  • Jonathan Metzl (born December 12, 1964), psychiatrist and author
  • Nancy Milford (born March 26, 1938), biographer
  • Harvey Alfred Miller (October 19, 1928, Sturgis, Michigan – January 7, 2020, Palm Bay, Florida), botanist, specializing in Pacific Islands bryophytes
  • Susan Montgomery (born 2 April 1943, Lansing, Michigan), mathematician whose current research interests concern noncommutative algebras
  • Howard Markel (born April 23, 1960), physician and medical historian
  • George H. Miley (born 1933), professor emeritus of physics from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
  • Christine Montross (born 1973), medical doctor and writer
  • Paul M. Naghdi (March 29, 1924 – July 9, 1994), professor of mechanical engineering at University of California, Berkeley
  • Homer Neal (June 13, 1942 – May 23, 2018), particle physicist and a distinguished professor at the University of Michigan
  • Marjorie Hope Nicolson, literary scholar
  • Harald Herborg Nielsen (January 25, 1903 – January 8, 1973), physicist
  • Nicholas Nixon (born October 27, 1947), photographer, known for his work in portraiture and documentary photography
  • Richard Nonas (January 3, 1936 – May 11, 2021), anthropologist and post-minimalist sculptor
  • Mary Beth Norton (born 1943), American historian, specializing in American colonial history and well known for her work on women's history and the Salem witch trials
  • Pat Oleszko, visual and performing artist
  • Susan Orlean (born October 31, 1955), journalist and bestselling author of The Orchid Thief and The Library Book
  • Peter Orner, author of two novels, two story collections, and a book of essays
  • Scott E. Page, social scientist and John Seely Brown Distinguished University Professor of Complexity, Social Science, and Management at the University of Michigan
  • Douglass Parker (May 27, 1927 – February 8, 2011), classicist, academic, and translator
  • Doug Peacock, naturalist, outdoorsman, and author
  • Vivian Perlis (April 26, 1928 – July 4, 2019), musicologist; founder and former director of Yale University's Oral History of American Music
  • Elizabeth J. Perry, scholar of Chinese politics and history at Harvard University, where she is the Henry Rosovsky Professor of Government and director of the Harvard-Yenching Institute.
  • Alvin Plantinga (born November 15, 1932), analytic philosopher who works primarily in the fields of philosophy of religion, epistemology (particularly on issues involving epistemic justification), and logic
  • Michael Posner, psychologist, researcher in the field of attention, and the editor of numerous cognitive and neuroscience compilations
  • Richard Prum (born 1961), William Robertson Coe Professor of ornithology; head curator of vertebrate zoology at the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University
  • Rayna Rapp (pen name Rayna R. Reiter), professor and associate chair of anthropology at New York University, specializing in gender and health
  • Bertram Raven (September 26, 1926 – February 26, 2020), academic; member of the faculty of the psychology department at UCLA from 1956 until his death.
  • Roger Reynolds (born July 18, 1934), Pulitzer prize-winning composer
  • Roxana Robinson (born 30 November 1946), novelist and biographer
  • David Rosenberg (born August 1, 1943, in Detroit, Michigan), poet, biblical translator, editor, and educator
  • Norman Rosten (January 1, 1913 – March 7, 1995), poet, playwright, and novelist
  • Elizabeth S. Russell (May 1, 1913 – May 28, 2001), also known as "Tibby" Russellz, biologist in the field of mammalian developmental genetics
  • Stanley Schachter (April 15, 1922 – June 7, 1997), social psychologist
  • Betsy Schneider, photographer who lives and works in the Boston Area
  • Edwin William Schultz (1888 Wisconsin – 1971), pathologist
  • Paul Schupp (born March 12, 1937), professor emeritus of Mathematics at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
  • Kathryn Kish Sklar (born December 1939), American historian, author, and professor
  • Paul Slud (31 March 1918, New York City – 20 February 2006, Catlett, Virginia), ornithologist and tropical ecologist
  • Joel Sobel (born 24 March 1954), economist; professor of economics at the University of California, San Diego
  • Frank Spedding (22 October 1902 – 15 December 1984), Canadian-American chemist; expert on rare earth elements, and on extraction of metals from minerals
  • Edward A. Spiegel (1931 — January 2, 2020), professor of astronomy at Columbia University
  • Duncan G. Steel (born 1951), experimental physicist, researcher and professor in quantum optics in condensed matter physics
  • Alexander Stephan (August 16, 1946 – May 29, 2009), specialist in German literature and area studies
  • James W. Stigler, psychologist, researcher, entrepreneur and author
  • Joan E. Strassmann, evolutionary biologist and the Charles Rebstock Professor of Biology at the Washington University in St. Louis
  • Larissa Szporluk, poet and professor
  • G. David Tilman (born 22 July 1949), ForMemRS, ecologist
  • Richard Toensing (March 11, 1940 - July 2, 2014), composer and music educator
  • David Treuer (born 1970) (Ojibwe), writer, critic and academic
  • Susan M. Ervin-Tripp (1927–2018), linguist whose specialities were psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic research
  • Karen Uhlenbeck (born August 24, 1942), mathematician and a founder of modern geometric analysis
  • Sim Van der Ryn, architect, researcher, educator
  • Henry Van Dyke, Jr. (1928 – December 22, 2011), novelist, editor, teacher and musician
  • Andrew G. Walder (born 1953), political sociologist specializing in the study of Chinese society
  • William Shi-Yuan Wang (Chinese: 王士元; born 1933), linguist, with expertise in phonology, the history of Chinese language and culture, historical linguistics, and the evolution of language in humans
  • Michael Watts (born 1951 in England), emeritus Class of 1963 Professor of Geography and Development Studies at the University of California, Berkeley
  • Grady Webster (1927–2005), plant systematist and taxonomist; recipient of a number of awards and appointed to fellowships of botanical institutions
  • Joan Weiner, philosopher and professor emerita of philosophy at Indiana University Bloomington, known for books on Gottlob Frege
  • Morris Weitz (July 24, 1916 – February 1, 1981), philosopher of aesthetics who focused primarily on ontology, interpretation, and literary criticism
  • Edmund White (born January 13, 1940), novelist, memoirist, and an essayist on literary and social topics
  • Michael Stewart Witherell (born 22 September 1949), physicist and laboratory director. He is currently the director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Jorge Eduardo Wright (20 April 1922 – 2005), Argentinian mycologist
  • X. J. Kennedy (born Joseph Charles Kennedy on August 21, 1929, in Dover, New Jersey), poet, translator, anthologist, editor, and author of children's literature and textbooks on English literature and poetry
  • Al Young (May 31, 1939 – April 17, 2021), poet, novelist, essayist, screenwriter, and professor

Journalism, publishing, and broadcasting

Law, government, and public policy

MacArthur Foundation award winners

As of 2020, 31 Michigan alumni — 17 undergraduate students and 14 graduate students — have been awarded a MacArthur fellowship.

  • James Blinn (BS Physics 1970; MSE 1972; Communications Science 1970; MS Information and Control Engineering 1972)
  • Caroline Walker Bynum (BA 1962), Medieval scholar; MacArthur Fellow
  • Eric Charnov (BS 1969), evolutionary ecologist
  • William A. Christian (Ph.D. 1971), religious studies scholar
  • Shannon Lee Dawdy (M.A. 2000, Ph.D. 2003), 2010 fellowship winner; assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago
  • Philip DeVries (B.S. 1975), biologist
  • William H. Durham (Ph.D. 1973), anthropologist
  • Andrea Dutton (MA, Ph.D.) is an associate professor of geology at the University of Florida
  • Aaron Dworkin (BA 1997, M.A. 1998), Fellow, founder, and president of Detroit-based Sphinx Organization, which strives to increase the number of African-Americans and Latinos having careers in classical music
  • Steven Goodman (BS 1984), adjunct research investigator in the U-M Museum of Zoology's bird division; conservation biologist in the Department of Zoology at Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History
  • David Green (BA 1978; MPH 1982), executive director of Project Impact
  • Ann Ellis Hanson (BA 1957; MA 1963), visiting associate professor of Greek and Latin
  • John Henry Holland (MA 1954; Ph.D. 1959), professor of electrical engineering and computer science, College of Engineering; professor of psychology, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts
  • June Huh (Ph.D.) a mathematician and a 2022 winner
  • Monica Kim (Ph.D.), University of Wisconsin-Madison historian and winner in 2022
  • Vonnie McLoyd (MA 1973, Ph.D. (1975), developmental psychologist
  • Natalia Molina, professor; received her Ph.D. and M.A. from the University of Michigan
  • Denny Moore (BA), linguist, anthropologist
  • Nancy A. Moran (Ph.D. 1982), evolutionary biologist; Yale professor; co-founder of the Yale Microbial Diversity Institute
  • Dominique Morisseau (BFA 2000) is an American playwright and actor from Detroit, Michigan
  • Cecilia Muñoz (BA 2000), senior vice president for the Office of Research, Advocacy and Legislation at the National Council of La Raza (NCLR), White House Director of Intergovernmental Affairs
  • Dimitri Nakassis (BA 1997), a 2015 MacArthur Fellow; joined the faculty of the University of Toronto in 2008; currently an associate professor in the Department of Classics
  • Richard Prum (Ph.D. 1989), William Robertson Coe Professor of Ornithology; Head Curator of Vertebrate Zoology at the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University
  • Mary Tinetti (BA 1973; MD 1978), physician; Gladys Phillips Crofoot Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology and Public Health at Yale University; Director of the Yale Program on Aging
  • Amos Tversky (Ph.D.. 1965), psychologist
  • Karen K. Uhlenbeck (BA 1964), mathematician
  • Jesmyn Ward (MFA 2005), writer of fiction
  • Julia Wolfe (BA 1980), classical composer
  • Henry Tutwiler Wright (BA 1964), Albert Clanton Spaulding Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology in the Department of Anthropology; Curator of Near Eastern Archaeology in the Museum of Anthropology at the University of Michigan; 1993 MacArthur Fellows Program
  • Tara Zahra (MA 2002; Ph.D. 2005); fellow with the Harvard Society of Fellows (2005–2007) prior to joining the faculty of the University of Chicago; 2014 MacArthur Fellow
  • George Zweig (BA 1959), physicist who conceptualized quarks ("aces" in his nomenclature)

Mathematics

Mathematics educators

Fellows of the American Mathematical Society

As of 2021, UM numbers amongst its alumni 29 Fellows of the American Mathematical Society.

  • Kenneth Appel (October 8, 1932 – April 19, 2013) was an American mathematician who in 1976, with colleague Wolfgang Haken at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, solved one of the most famous problems in mathematics, the four-color theorem.
  • Susanne Brenner is an American mathematician, whose research concerns the finite element method and related techniques for the numerical solution of differential equations.
  • Ralph Louis Cohen (born 1952) is an American mathematician, specializing in algebraic topology and differential topology.
  • Robert Connelly (born July 15, 1942) is a mathematician specializing in discrete geometry and rigidity theory.
  • Brian Conrey (23 June 1955) is an American mathematician and the executive director of the American Institute of Mathematics.
  • Ronald Getoor (9 February 1929, Royal Oak, Michigan – 28 October 2017, La Jolla, San Diego, California) was an American mathematician.
  • Tai-Ping Liu (Chinese: 劉太平; pinyin: Liú Tàipíng; born 18 November 1945) is a Taiwanese mathematician, specializing in partial differential equations.
  • Russell Lyons (6 September 1957) is an American mathematician, specializing in probability theory on graphs, combinatorics, statistical mechanics, ergodic theory and harmonic analysis.
  • Gaven Martin FRSNZ FASL FAMS (born 8 October 1958) is a New Zealand mathematician.
  • Susan Montgomery (born 2 April 1943 in Lansing, MI) is a distinguished American mathematician whose current research interests concern noncommutative algebras
  • Paul Muhly (born September 7, 1944) is an American mathematician.
  • James Munkres (born August 18, 1930) is a professor emeritus of mathematics at MIT
  • Zuhair Nashed (born May 14, 1936, in Aleppo, Syria) is an American mathematician, working on integral and operator equations, inverse and ill-posed problems, numerical and nonlinear functional analysis, optimization and approximation theory, operator theory, optimal control theory, signal analysis, and signal processing.
  • Peter Orlik (born 12 November 1938, in Budapest) is an American mathematician, known for his research on topology, algebra, and combinatorics.
  • Mihnea Popa (born 11 August 1973) is a Romanian-American mathematician at Harvard University, specializing in algebraic geometry. He is known for his work on complex birational geometry, Hodge theory, abelian varieties, and vector bundles.
  • Jane Cronin Scanlon (July 17, 1922 – June 19, 2018) was an American mathematician and an emeritus professor of mathematics at Rutgers University.
  • Maria E. Schonbek is an Argentine-American mathematician at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her research concerns fluid dynamics and associated partial differential equations such as the Navier–Stokes equations.
  • Paul Schupp (born March 12, 1937) is a professor emeritus of Mathematics at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign.
  • George Roger Sell (February 7, 1937 – May 29, 2015) was an American mathematician, specializing in differential equations, dynamical systems, and applications to fluid dynamics, climate modeling, control systems, and other subjects.
  • Charles Sims (April 14, 1937 – October 23, 2017) was an American mathematician best known for his work in group theory.
  • Isadore Singer (May 3, 1924 – February 11, 2021) was an American mathematician.
  • Christopher Skinner (born June 4, 1972) is an American mathematician working in number theory and arithmetic aspects of the Langlands program.
  • Karen E. Smith (born 1965 in Red Bank, New Jersey) is an American mathematician, specializing in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry.
  • Kannan Soundararajan (born December 27, 1973) is an India-born American mathematician and a professor of mathematics at Stanford University.
  • Irena Swanson is an American mathematician specializing in commutative algebra.
  • Karen Uhlenbeck (born August 24, 1942) is an American mathematician and a founder of modern geometric analysis.
  • Judy L. Walker is an American mathematician. She is the Aaron Douglas Professor of Mathematics at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, where she chaired the mathematics department from 2012 through 2016
  • John H. Walter (born 14 December 1927, Los Angeles) is an American mathematician known for proving the Walter theorem in the theory of finite groups.
  • Charles Weibel (born October 28, 1950, in Terre Haute, Indiana) is an American mathematician working on algebraic K-theory, algebraic geometry and homological algebra.

Mathematicians: African American

African American pioneers in the field of Mathematics

Manhattan project

A number of Michigan graduates or fellows were involved with the Manhattan Project, chiefly with regard to the physical chemistry of the device.

Medicine and dentistry

Military

Miscellaneous honors

NASA

National Academy Members

As of 2021, dozens of Michigan graduates have been inducted into various National Academies (inter alia, the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Science...).

Newsmakers

Not-for-profit

Pulitzer Prize winners

As of 2022, 35 of Michigan's matriculants have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize. By alumni count, Michigan ranks fifth (as of 2018) among all schools whose alumni have won Pulitzers.

Rhodes Scholars

As of 2021, Michigan had matriculated 30 Rhodes Scholars. Some notable winners are linked below.

Science

National Medal of Science Laureates/National Medal of Technology and Innovation

Sloan Research Fellows

  • James Andreoni (born 1959 in Beloit, Wisconsin), professor in the Economics Department of the University of California, San Diego, where he directs the EconLab
  • John Avise (born 1948), evolutionary geneticist, conservationist, ecologist and natural historian
  • Robert Berner (November 25, 1935 – January 10, 2015), scientist known for his contributions to the modeling of the carbon cycle
  • Allan M. Collins, cognitive scientist, professor emeritus of Learning Sciences at Northwestern University's School of Education and Social Policy
  • Ralph Louis Cohen (born 1952), mathematician, specializing in algebraic topology and differential topology
  • Michael D. Fried, mathematician working in the geometry and arithmetic of families of nonsingular projective curve covers
  • William L. Jungers (born November 17, 1948), anthropologist, distinguished teaching professor and the chair of the Department of Anatomical Sciences at State University of New York at Stony Brook on Long Island, New York
  • Jeffrey MacKie-Mason, economist specializing in information, incentive-centered design and public policy
  • Gaven Martin FRSNZ FASL FAMS (born 8 October 1958), Zealand mathematician
  • George J. Minty Jr. (September 16, 1929, Detroit – August 6, 1986, Bloomington, Indiana), mathematician, specializing in mathematical analysis and discrete mathematics; known for the Klee-Minty cube and the Browder-Minty theorem
  • Alison R. H. Narayan (born 1984), chemist; William R. Roush assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts
  • Homer Neal (June 13, 1942 – May 23, 2018), particle physicist and a distinguished professor at the University of Michigan
  • Hugh David Politzer (born August 31, 1949), theoretical physicist and the Richard Chace Tolman Professor of Theoretical Physics at the California Institute of Technology
  • Jessica Purcell, mathematician specializing in low-dimensional topology whose research topics have included hyperbolic Dehn surgery and the Jones polynomial.
  • Donald Sarason (January 26, 1933 – April 8, 2017), mathematician who made fundamental advances in the areas of Hardy space theory and VMO.
  • Stephen Smale (born July 15, 1930), mathematician, known for his research in topology, dynamical systems and mathematical economics
  • Richard Smalley (June 6, 1943 – October 28, 2005), Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and a professor of Physics and Astronomy at Rice University.
  • Karen E. Smith (born 1965 in Red Bank, New Jersey), mathematician, specializing in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry
  • James Stasheff (born January 15, 1936, New York City), mathematician
  • Chelsea Walton, mathematician whose research interests include noncommutative algebra, noncommutative algebraic geometry, symmetry in quantum mechanics, Hopf algebras, and quantum groups
  • Zhouping Xin (Chinese: 辛周平; born 13 July 1959), Chinese mathematician and the William M.W. Mong Professor of Mathematics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong; specializes in partial differential equations

Sports

See List of University of Michigan sporting alumni

References

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NOTE: The University of Michigan Alumni Directory is no longer printed, as of 2004. To find more recent information on an alumnus, one must log into the Alumni Association website to search their online directory.

External links

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