List of Rutgers University people: Difference between revisions
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| [[Roy Franklin Nichols]] || A.B. 1918<br />M.A. 1919 || Historian, winner of the [[Pulitzer Prize]] (19--) || |
| [[Roy Franklin Nichols]] || A.B. 1918<br />M.A. 1919 || Historian, winner of the [[Pulitzer Prize]] (19--) || |
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<ref>[http://cip.cornell.edu/DPubS/Repository/1.0/Disseminate/psu.ph/1134158473/body/pdf "Introduction"] to ''Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies'' (January 1971), 38:v. (Published on the Cornell University website), accessed 06 January 2007.</ref><ref>Nicholas, Roy Franklin. ''A Historian's Progress'' (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1968). NO ISBN </ref> |
<ref>[http://cip.cornell.edu/DPubS/Repository/1.0/Disseminate/psu.ph/1134158473/body/pdf "Introduction"] to ''Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies'' (January 1971), 38:v. (Published on the Cornell University website), accessed 06 January 2007.</ref><ref>Nicholas, Roy Franklin. ''A Historian's Progress'' (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1968). NO ISBN </ref> |
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|[[Clement Alexander Price]] || Ph.D. 1975 || African-American historian, Professor of History, Rutgers-Newark. || <ref name="hallofalumni">[http://www.alumni.rutgers.edu/news/hda.php?show=171 Clement A. Price biography] at Rutgers University Hall of Distinguised Alumni, published by Office of Alumni Relations, Rutgers University (no further authorship information available), accessed 06 January 2007.</ref> |
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| [[John U. Trefny]] || Ph.D. 1968 || President of the [[Colorado School of Mines]] || <ref>[http://www.mines.edu/Admin/president/trefnybio.html Biography of John U. Trefny] published by Office of the President, Colorado School of Mines (no further authorship information available), accessed 06 January 2007.</ref> |
| [[John U. Trefny]] || Ph.D. 1968 || President of the [[Colorado School of Mines]] || <ref>[http://www.mines.edu/Admin/president/trefnybio.html Biography of John U. Trefny] published by Office of the President, Colorado School of Mines (no further authorship information available), accessed 06 January 2007.</ref> |
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| '''[[Selman Waksman]]''' || B.Sc. 1915<br />M.Sc. 1916 || Professor of [[microbiology]], discovered 22 antibiotics (including [[Streptomycin]]) and winner of the [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]] (1952) || <ref>[http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1952/waksman-bio.html Biography of Selman Waksman] at Nobel Prize / Nobel Foundation website. Published by the Nobel Foundation (no further authorship information available), accessed 05 January 2007.</ref> |
| '''[[Selman Waksman]]''' || B.Sc. 1915<br />M.Sc. 1916 || Professor of [[microbiology]], discovered 22 antibiotics (including [[Streptomycin]]) and winner of the [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]] (1952) || <ref>[http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1952/waksman-bio.html Biography of Selman Waksman] at Nobel Prize / Nobel Foundation website. Published by the Nobel Foundation (no further authorship information available), accessed 05 January 2007.</ref> |
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| [[Carl Woodward]] || |
| [[Carl Woodward]] || B.Sc. 1914 || President of the [[University of Rhode Island]] || <ref> |
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[http://www.uri.edu/library/special_collections/registers/manuscripts/woodward/biograhical.html Biographical Note to the Carl R. Woodward Papers], published by Special Collections, University Archives, University of Rhode Island (no further authorship information available), accessed 06 January 2007.</ref> |
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Revision as of 01:02, 7 January 2007
This is an enumeration of notable people affiliated with Rutgers University, including graduates of the undergraduate and graduate and professional programs, former students who did not graduate or receive their degree, presidents of the university, current and former professors, as well as members of the board of trustees and board of governors, and coaches affiliated with the university's athletic program. Also included are characters in works of fiction (books, films, television shows, et cetera.) who have been mentioned or were depicted as having an affiliation with Rutgers, either as a student, alumnus, or member of the faculty.
Some noted alumni and faculty may be also listed in the main Rutgers University article or in some of the affiliated articles. Individuals are sorted by category and alphabetised within each category.
Presidents of Rutgers University
The following nineteen individuals have served as President of Rutgers University from the creation of the office in 1785 to the present.[1] Those enumerated below with their names emboldened were graduated from Rutgers.
President | Birth Year–Death Year | Years as President | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh | (1735 – 1790) | (1785 – 1790) |
2 | William Linn | (1752 – 1808) | (1791 – 1795) |
3 | Ira Condict | (1764 – 1811) | (1795 – 1810) |
4 | John Henry Livingston | (1746 – 1825) | (1810 – 1825) |
5 | Philip Milledoler | (1775 – 1852) | (1825 – 1840) |
6 | Abraham Bruyn Hasbrouck | (1791 – 1879) | (1840 – 1850) |
7 | Theodore Frelinghuysen | (1787 – 1862) | (1850 – 1862) |
8 | William Henry Campbell | (1808 – 1890) | (1862 – 1882) |
9 | Merrill Edward Gates | (1848 – 1922) | (1882 – 1890) |
10 | Austin Scott | (1848 – 1922) | (1891 – 1906) |
11 | William Henry Steele Demarest | (1863 – 1956) | (1906 – 1924) |
12 | John Martin Thomas | (1869 – 1952) | (1925 – 1930) |
13 | Philip Milledoler Brett | (1871 – 1960) | (1930 – 1931) |
14 | Robert Clarkson Clothier | (1885 – 1970) | (1932 – 1951) |
15 | Lewis Webster Jones | (1899 – 1975) | (1951 – 1958) |
16 | Mason Welch Gross | (1911 – 1977) | (1959 – 1971) |
17 | Edward J. Bloustein | (1925 – 1989) | (1971 – 1989) |
18 | Francis L. Lawrence | (b. 1937) | (1990 – 2002) |
19 | Richard Levis McCormick | (b. 1947) | (2002 – present) |
Notable Alumni
Alumni who have served on the faculty of staff of Rutgers University are enumerated below with their names displayed in emboldened text.
Nobel laureates
Alumnus/Alumna | Degree(s) and Class Year(s) |
Achievements | References |
---|---|---|---|
Milton Friedman | A.B. 1932 | Economist, Public Intellectual, winner of the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel (1976) | [2] |
David A. Morse | A.B. 1929 | Director-General of International Labour Organization on whose behalf he accepted the Nobel Peace Prize (1969) | [3] |
Selman Waksman | B.Sc. 1915 M.Sc. 1916 |
Professor of microbiology, discovered 22 antibiotics (including Streptomycin) and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1952) | [4] |
Arts (performing and visual) and entertainment
- Brad Ascalon, Class of 1999; Industrial Designer
- Alice Aycock, Class of 1968 — Sculptor
- Joanna Angel, Class of 2002 — Porn Star
- Gregg Asch, Class of 1984 — Beloved Comic from Matawan, New Jersey
- Roger Bart — Actor (Desperate Housewives, "The Producers", Tony Award for "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown")
- Mario Batali, Class of 1982 — Chef, Restaurateur, Television Host (Molto Mario, Iron Chef America)
- Bill Bellamy, Class of 1989 — Comedian, Actor
- Avery Brooks, Class of 1973 — Actor, Educator
- John Carpenter, Class of 1990 — First ever champion of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire television quiz show
- Asia Carrera (born Jessica Bennett), Class of 1995 — Porn Star (who majored in Business and Japanese).
- Kevin Chamberlin — Actor (Tony Award nominations for "Dirty Blonde" and "Seussical")
- Kristin Davis, Class of 1987, — Actress (Sex and the City)
- Calista Flockhart, Class of 1988 — Actress (stage, television, and motion pictures) (The Birdcage)(Ally McBeal), Emmy winner
- James Gandolfini, Class of 1983 — Actor (The Sopranos), Emmy winner
- Judy Gold, B.A. 1984 — Comedian, Actress
- Just Blaze, Grammy Award-nominated Hip-Hop producer
- Bernard Goldberg, Class of 1967, journalist
- Frank Iero - Guitarist/backup vocals for the acclaimed band My Chemical Romance
- Ben Jelen - Musician
- Bill Jemas, Class of 1980, Writer, creative director, publisher for Marvel Comics Group
- William Mastrosimone, Class of 1980 — Playwright, Golden Globe Award winner
- Christopher McCulloch, — Creator of The Venture Bros
- Natalie Morales, Class of 1994, — journalist and correspondent for The Today Show.
- Luis Moro, Class of 1987, — Actor (Love & Suicide), Comic, writer. Independent Spirit Award Nominee, Best Actor Nominee ABFF (Love & Suicide)
- Oswald "Ozzie" Nelson, Class of 1927 — Musician and Actor (The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet)
- Jimmy Palumbo, Actor
- Randal Pinkett, Class of 1994 — winner of The Apprentice 4. President and CEO of BCT Partners
- Surya Yalamanchili, Class of 2003 — appeared on The Apprentice 6. Entrepreneur and Brand Manager at Procter & Gamble
- Rebecca Quick, Class of 1993, — journalist and anchor (CNBC Squawk Box)
- Alan Semok, Class of 1975 — Actor/Artist/Songwriter/Puppeteer (Shining Time Station),(KIDS-TV).
- Aaron Stanford, Class of 2000, — Actor ("X2", "Tadpole")
- Larry Stark, Class of 1956, — Boston journalist and theater critic (Theater Mirror)
- Mike Taibbi, Class of 1971, — journalist and correspondent for NBC Nightly News.
- Lisa Williamson, a.k.a. "Sister Souljah", Class of 1986 — Rapper
- Karen Young — Actress (The Sopranos), (Law & Order)
- Looking Glass — 1970s famous one hit wonder of the song "Brandy"
- Ruthie Alcaide, Class of 2000 — star of MTV's The Real World Hawaii and The Real World Battle of the Sexes.
- Gabe Saporta — Musician (Midtown, Cobra Starship)
- Soraya Lamilla, Class of 1991 — singer-songwriter, international breast cancer advocate.
- Ambrose Hsu — Popular Chinese actor, model and singer
- George Segal, GSNB 1963 — Sculptor
Athletics
- Mike Barr, Class of 2004 — Football Player, NFL Punter (Pittsburgh Steelers, Frankfurt Galaxy) [5]
- Marco Battaglia, Class of 1996 — Football Player, NFL Tight End (Pittsburgh Steelers) [5]
- Jay Bellamy, Class of 1994 — Football Player, NFL Safety (New Orleans Saints) [5]
- Gary Brackett, Class of 2003 — Football Player, NFL Linebacker (Indianapolis Colts) [5]
- Jon Conway, Class of 1999 ; Professional Soccer player, goalkeeper for Red Bull New York
- Deron Cherry, Class of 1980 — safety with the Kansas City Chiefs, member of the NFL 1980s All-Decade Team
- David DeJesus, — Center fielder for Kansas City Royals [6]
- Quincy Douby, — Guard for the Sacramento Kings
- Josh Gros, Class of 2003, midfielder for D.C. United
- Clark Harris, Class of 2007
- Carl Howard, Class of 1984 — Football Player, NFL Cornerback (New York Jets)
- Roy Hinson, Class of 1983 — Long-time player in the NBA
- James Jenkins, Class of 1991 — Football Player, NFL Tight End (Washington Redskins)
- Nate Jones, Class of 2004 — Football Player, NFL Cornerback (Dallas Cowboys) [5]
- Eddie Jordan, Class of 1977 — Head Coach of the Washington Wizards
- Rashod Kent, Class of 2003 — Football Player, NFL Tight End (Houston Texans) [5]
- Alexi Lalas, Class of 1991 — Former U.S. Soccer National Team member, present President & General Manager of the Los Angeles Galaxy
- Brian Leonard, Class of 2007
- Ray Lucas, Class of 1996 — Football Player, NFL Quarterback 1996-2002 (New York Jets, Miami Dolphins), TV Football commentator
- Mike McMahon, Class of 2001 — Football Player, NFL Quarterback (Minnesota Vikings) [5]
- Linda Miles, a.k.a. "Shaniqua", Class of 2001 — World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) Wrestler, winner of WWE Tough Enough 2 competition on MTV
- Ryan Neill, Class of 2006 — Football Player, NFL Defensive End (Buffalo Bills) [5]
- Chelsea Newton, Class of 2004 — Basketball player, Sacramento Monarchs of the WNBA
- Shaun O'Hara, Class of 2000 — Football Player, NFL Center (New York Giants) [5]
- Raheem Orr, Class of 2004 — Football Player, NFL Defensive End, AFL DL/OL (Houston Texans, Philadelphia Soul) [5]
- J'Vonne Parker, Class of 2004 — Football Player, NFL Defensive Tackle (Cleveland Browns) [5]
- Bill Pickel, Class of 1982 — Football Player, NFL Defensive Tackle (Oakland Raiders)
- Cappie Pondexter, Class of 2006 — 2nd overall pick in the 2006 WNBA Draft by the Phoenix Mercury
- Paul Robeson, Class of 1919 — Athlete, Actor, Singer, Political Activist, NFL Guard 1920-1922 (Akron Pros, Milwaukee Badgers)
- L.J. Smith, Class of 2003 — Football Player, NFL Tight End (Philadelphia Eagles) [5]
- Reggie Stephens, Class of 1999 — Football Player, NFL Cornerback (New York Giants
- David Stern, Class of 1963 — Commissioner of the National Basketball Association
- Tammy Sutton-Brown, Class of 2001 — Basketball player, Charlotte Sting of the WNBA
- Harry Swayne, Class of 1986 — NFL lineman 1987-2001
- Lou Tepper, Class of 1967 — former head coach of Illinois
- Jeff Torborg, Class of 1963 — Major League Baseball Catcher (Los Angeles Dodgers and California Angels) and Manager (several teams) [6]
- Jim Valvano, Class of 1967 — Won NCAA Men's Basketball National Championship at N.C. State
- Sonny Werblin, Class of 1932 — Founder of the New York Jets
- Sue Wicks, Class of 1988 — Basketball player, member of the 1988 Olympic team and New York Liberty (1997-2002) of the WNBA
- Eric Young, Class of 1992 — Baseball player, San Diego Padres [6]
Business
- Roger Ackerman, Class of 1960, M.A. 1962 — former chairman and CEO of Corning, Inc.
- Jay Chiat, Class of 1953 — advertising executive
- James Cullen, Class of 1964 — former president and COO of Bell Atlantic
- Marc Ecko — CEO and Founder of Marc Ecko Enterprises
- Sharon Fordham, Class of 1975 — CEO of WeightWatchers.com, Inc.
- Arthur Goldberg, Class of 1963 — former president and CEO of Park Place Entertainment Corporation
- James Kelly, Class of 1973 — former chairman and CEO of UPS
- David Lloyd Kreeger, Class of 1929 — founder of GEICO
- Robert Kriendler, A.B. 1936. - owner of the 21 Club in New York City.
- Leonor F. Loree, Class of 1877 — President of the Pennsylvania Railroad;
- Bernard Marcus, Class of 1951 — Founder of the Home Depot
- Ernest Mario, Class of 1961 — former CEO of GlaxoSmithKline
- Duncan McMillan, B.S. 1966 - co-founder of Bloomberg, Ltd.
- Barry Schuler, Class of 1976 — former Chairman and CEO of AOL
- Gregg Spiridellis, Class of 1993 — founder of JibJab.com
- Avi Wilensky Class of 2003 — CEO of Promediacorp
- John Lee — CEO of UP & J Corporation
- Irwin Lerner - B.S. 1951, MBA 1958, former President and CEO Hoffmann-La Roche Inc.
- Marty Yudkovitz — former president of TiVo
Education
Alumnus/Alumna | Degree(s) and Class Year(s) |
Achievements | References |
---|---|---|---|
Philip Milledoler Brett | A.B. 1892 | Acting President of Rutgers University (1930-1931), successful corporate attorney | [7] |
Carol T. Christ | A.B. 1966 | President of Smith College | [8] |
Milton Friedman | A.B. 1932 | Economist, Public Intellectual, winner of the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel (1976) | [9] |
William H. S. Demarest | A.B. 1883 | Professor of Theology and Church Government, President of Rutgers University (1906-1924), President of New Brunswick Theological Seminary | [10] |
William E. Kirwan | M.A. 1962 Ph.D. 1964 |
Mathematician, Chancellor of the University System of Maryland (2002-present), former President of Ohio State University (1998-2002) | [11] |
Richard P. McCormick | A.B. 1938 M.A. 1940 |
Historian, Professor of History, Dean of Faculty at Rutgers University, President of New Jersey Historical Society | [12][13][14][15] |
John McWhorter | B.A. 1985 | African-American historian, former professor of linguistics at University of California, Berkeley, Senior Fellow at Manhattan Institute | [16] |
Roy Franklin Nichols | A.B. 1918 M.A. 1919 |
Historian, winner of the Pulitzer Prize (19--) | |
Clement Alexander Price | Ph.D. 1975 | African-American historian, Professor of History, Rutgers-Newark. | [19] |
John U. Trefny | Ph.D. 1968 | President of the Colorado School of Mines | [20] |
Selman Waksman | B.Sc. 1915 M.Sc. 1916 |
Professor of microbiology, discovered 22 antibiotics (including Streptomycin) and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1952) | [21] |
Carl Woodward | B.Sc. 1914 | President of the University of Rhode Island | [22] |
Government, Law, or Public Policy
- Phillip Alampi, A.B. 1934, M.A. 1945 — New Jersey Secretary of Agriculture
- Rebecca Barth, A.B. 1925, J.D.; Co-author of the Children's Labor Laws and legal advisor to Golda Meir.
- Joseph P. Bradley, A.B. 1836 — Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (1870–1891).
- Wayne R. Bryant, J.D. (Camden) 1972 — New Jersey Senator, Deputy Majority Leader (2004 - present)
- Clifford P. Case, A.B. 1925 — U.S. House of Representatives (1945–1953), United States Senate (1955–1979) [23].
- Simeon DeWitt, A.B. 1776 — Surveyor-General for the Continental Army, 1776-1783, and the State of New York, 1784-1834.
- Michael DuHaime, B.A., 1995; Campaign Manager, Rudy Giuliani for President, 2008; Political Director, Republican National Committee, 2005-2006; Regional Political Director, Bush-Cheney '04, 2003-2004.
- James J. Florio, J.D. 1967 — former Governor of New Jersey (1990–1994)
- Louis Freeh, Class of 1971 — Director of the FBI (1993–2001)
- Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, A.B. 1836 — United States Senate (1866–1869, 1871–1877) and Secretary of State (1881–1885) [23].
- E. Scott Garrett J.D. 1984 (Newark) — U.S. House of Representatives (2003–present) [23]
- Garret A. Hobart, A.B. 1863 — Industrialist, Vice President of the United States, (1897–1899) [23]
- James J. Howard, M.Ed. 1958; U.S. House of Representatives (1965–1988) [23]
- Richard Hughes, J.D. 1931 — New Jersey Governor, Chief State Supreme Court Justice
- William Hughes, Class of 1955 — Congressman, Ambassador to Panama [23]
- Jack H. Jacobs, Class of 1966, M.A. 1972 — Medal of Honor Recipient, military analyst for MSNBC
- Robert Menendez, J.D. (Newark) — U.S. House of Representatives (1992-2005), United States Senator (2006-present) [23]
- William A. Newell, A.B. 1836 — Physician, Governor of New Jersey, (1857-1860)
- Hazel O'Leary J.D. — U.S. Secretary of Energy (1993–1997)
- Clark V. Poling, A.B. 1933 — One of the Four Chaplains killed on the USAT Dorchester.
- Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri — South African Minister of Communications (1999 - )
- David A. Morse, A.B. 1929 — Director-General of ILO who accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in 1969 on behalf of the ILO
- Eduardo Robreno, J.D. (Camden) 1978 — Federal Judge for the United States District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania
- James Schureman, A.B. 1775 — Continental Congress, Senator. [23]
- Gregory M. Sleet, J.D. (Camden) 1976 — Federal Judge for the United States District Court, District of Delaware
- Robert Torricelli, Class of 1974 — United States Senator, Congressman [23]
- Peter W. Rodino, Jr., J.D. 1937 — Congressman [23]
- Foster M. Voorhees, A.B. 1876 — Governor of New Jersey, (1898, 1899-1902)
Historians
Journalism
- Joan Acocella, Class of 1984 — Journalist, Author, dance critic for the New Yorker
- Martin Agronsky, Class of 1936 — Journalist
- Richard Aregood, Class of 1965 — Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- Samuel Blackman, Class of 1927 — Journalist
- Nick Gillespie, Class of ? — Journalist, Editor
- Jerry Izenberg, Class of 1952 — Emmy-winning sports journalist
- Richard Newcomb, Class of 1962 — journalist and author.
- Cathy Young, Class of 1988 — journalist and non-fiction author
Literature
- James Blish, Class of 1942 — Science fiction and fantasy author.
- Lester Brown, Class of 1955 — environmental analyst and author
- Jonathan Carroll, Class of 1971 — Award-winning Author
- Janet Evanovich, Class of 1965 — Best-selling Author
- Richard Florida, Class of ? — Author and Public Intellectual
- Alfred Joyce Kilmer, Class of 1908 (did not graduate) — poet, died in France during World War I.
- Nina Raginsky, Class of 1962 — photographer.
- Robert Pinsky, Class of 1962 — Poet Laureate of the United States, Winner of the Pulitzer Prize.
- Michael Shaara, Class of 1951 — author of The Killer Angels and Winner of the Pulitzer Prize
- Junot Diaz, Class of 1991, short story writer, author.
Medicine
- Stephen D. Ford, Class of 1979— Chief of Staff, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital at Rahway.
- Clifton R. Lacy, Class of 1975 — New Jersey Commissioner of Health and Senior Services
- David A. Laskow, Class of 1977 — Chief of the Kidney and Pancreas Transplant Service at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital
- Albert Schatz, graduate assistant to Selman Waksman, co-discovered Streptomycin.
- William Trager, Class of 1930 — developed new treatments for Malaria
- Selman Waksman, Class of 1915 — discovered 22 antibiotics, best known for streptomycin. Nobel laureate. Waksman Institute of Microbiology and Waksman Hall are named in his honor.
- H. Boyd Woodruff, Class of 1939/Graduate School 1942 — discovered antibiotic actinomycin.
Religion
- Rev. Matthew Leydt, A.B. 1774, Rutgers first alumnus and Dutch Reformed Minister.
- Rev. Clark V. Poling, Dutch-Reformed Army Chaplain among the "Four Chaplains" on the USAT Dorchester during World War II.
Science and Technology
- Simeon DeWitt, A.B. 1776 — Geographer for George Washington and Continental Army during the American Revolution
- Peter C. Schultz, Class of 1964 — co-inventor of fiber optics
- Stanley N. Cohen, Class of 1956 — geneticist, pioneer in gene splicing
- Louis Gluck, Class of 1930 — engineer, considered the father of neonatology, the science of caring for newborn infants
- Nathan M. Newmark, Class of 1948 — inventor of the Newmark-beta method of numerical integration used to solve differential equations; winner of the National Medal of Science
- Philip S. Schein, Class of 1961 — cancer researcher, founder of U.S. Bioscience
- Matthew Golombek, Class of 1976 — project scientist in charge of NASA's Pathfinder mission to Mars
- Terry Hart, Class of 1978 — Astronaut, president of LORAL Skynet
Miscellaneous
- Ramzi Yousef (did not graduate) — Terrorist, involved in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing (studied Chemical Engineering, briefly)
- Nidal Ayyad — Terrorist, involved in 1993 World Trade Center bombing (graduated in Chemical Engineering )
Notable Faculty
Members or former members of the faculty whose names are emboldened were graduated from Rutgers.
Nobel laureates
Name | Years on Faculty | Achievements | References |
---|---|---|---|
Toni Morrison | – | African-American Novelist (Beloved, Song of Solomon), Nobel Prize in Literature (1993), Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (1988) | |
Heinrich Rohrer | 1961 – 1963 | Physicist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics (1986) | [24] |
Selman Waksman | 1918 – 1958 | Professor of Microbiology, discovered 22 antibiotics (including Streptomycin) and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1952) | [25] |
Arts
- Avery Brooks — Associate Professor of fine arts
- Leon Golub (deceased) — Professor of fine arts
- Roy Lichtenstein (deceased) — Professor of fine arts
- George Segal — Professor of fine arts; Fluxus artist
- Robert Watts — Professor of fine arts
Literature
- Miguel Algarín — Professor of English
- John Ciardi — Professor of English, poet, translator.
- William C. Dowling — Professor of English.
- Ralph Ellison (deceased) — Author of Invisible Man
- Francis Fergusson — Professor of English, literary critic
- Paul Fussell — Professor of English, author, literary critic, social commentator.
Law School
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg (former) — Professor at the School of Law in Newark, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
Mathematics
- Haim Brezis — Professor of mathematics
- Israel Gelfand — Professor of mathematics
- Daniel Gorenstein — (deceased) Professor of Mathematics
- Andras Hajnal — Professor of mathematics
- Henryk Iwaniec — Professor of mathematics
- Jeffry Kahn — Professor of mathematics
- Leonid Khachiyan(deceased) — Professor of mathematics
- Michael Saks — Professor of mathematics, winner of the Gödel Prize (2004)
- Saharon Shelah — Professor of mathematics
- Doron Zeilberger — Professor of mathematics, winner of the Steele Prize for Seminal Contributions to Research (1998)
Philosophy
- Jerry Fodor — Professor of philosophy and cognitive science
- Alvin Goldman — Professor of philosophy
- Allan Kaprow (deceased) — Professor of fine arts
- Ernest Lepore — Professor of philosophy
- Alan Prince — Professsor of linguistics and cognitive science, founder of Optimality Theory (OT)
- Zenon Pylyshyn — Professor of philosopy and cognitive science
Science and engineering
- C. Olin Ball (deceased) — Professor of food engineering, chair of the Department of Food Science
- Nicholas Belkin — Professor of information science
- Endre Boros — Professor of operations research
- Art Brown — Professor and former New Jersey Secretary of Agriculture
- Stephen S. Chang (deceased) — Professor of food science and Nicholas Appert Award winner
- Vašek Chvátal — Former professor of computer science
- Michael R. Douglas — Director of New High Energy Theory Center and Sackler Prize winner
- Helen Fisher — Research professor of anthropology
- Robin Fox — Professor of anthropology
- Apostolos Gerasoulis — Professor of computer science.
- Lila Gleitman — Professor of cognitive science, psychology and linguistics
- Chi-Tang Ho — Professor of food science and Stephen S. Chang Award for Lipid or Flavor Science winner
- Paul B. Kantor — Professor of information science
- Marcus Karel — Professor of food engineering and Nicholas Appert Award winner
- Jozef L. Kokini — Professor of food engineering and Marcel Loncin Research Prize winner
- Alan Leslie — Professor of cognitive science and psychology
- Kenneth G. Miller Sr — Professor and Chairman of geological sciences
- Myron Solberg (deceased) — Professor of food science, founding director of CAFT and Nicholas Appert Award winner
- Mario Szegedy — Professor of computer science
- Endre Szemerédi — Professor of computer science
- Lionel Tiger — Professor of anthropology
- Jay Tischfield — Professor genetics
- Robert Trivers — Professor of anthropology and biological sciences
- Selman Waksman (deceased) — Professor of microbiology and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1952)
- Wise Young — Professor of cell biology and neuroscience
Social Sciences
- Stephen Bronner — Professor of political science, comparative literature and German studies
- Claire Calandra — Professor of business, former COO of Tycom
- Michael Curtis — Professor of political science
- Mason W. Gross (deceased) — Professor of Classics, President of Rutgers University (1959-1971)
- Stephen Stich — Professor of philosophy
History
- David S. Foglesong — Professor of history, Cold War and Russiah history scholar.
- Lloyd Gardner — Mary and Charles Beard Professor of History and distinguished diplomatic historian
- Temma Kaplan — Professor of history and women's studies
- David Levering Lewis (former) — Professor of History, twice winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography (1994 and 2001)
- Tomás Eloy Martínez — Professor of Latin American studies; Argentinian journalist and writer
- Matt K. Matsuda — Professor of History
- Said Sheikh Samatar — Professor of History
Athletic coaches
Members of the Board of Trustees and Board of Governors
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. |
Fictional characters
- Todd Anderson, The Cookout
- Harriet Hayes, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip
- Mr. Magoo, 1950s cartoon character.
Notes and references
Notes and citations
- ^ Leadership on the Banks: Rutgers' Presidents, 1766-2004, biographical essays by Thomas J. Frusciano, University Archivist, published by Rutgers University Libraries. Originally published in The Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries, LIII, No. 1 (June 1991).
- ^ Autobiography of Milton Friedman at Nobel Prize / Nobel Foundation website, presumably by Milton Friedman, published by the Nobel Foundation (no further authorship information available), accessed 05 January 2007.
- ^ Presentation Speech for 1969 Nobel Peace Prize presumably by Aase Lionaes, at Nobel Prize / Nobel Foundation website. q.v. footnote marked "*" which states: "She then presented the Nobel medal and diploma to Mr. David A. Morse who, as director-general of the ILO, made a brief speech of acceptance on behalf of the ILO." Published by the Nobel Foundation (no further authorship information available), accessed 05 January 2007.
- ^ Biography of Selman Waksman at Nobel Prize / Nobel Foundation website. Published by the Nobel Foundation (no further authorship information available), accessed 05 January 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l National Football League Players Search: Players in NFL from Rutgers published by the National Football League Players, Incorporated (PLAYERS, Inc.), marketing subsidiary of the NFL Players Association (no further authorship information available), accessed 06 January 2007.
- ^ a b c League Baseball Player Search, published by Major League Baseball (no further authorship information available), accessed 06 January 2007.
- ^ Philip M. Brett, Acting President, 1930-1931, biographical essay at Leadership on the Banks: Rutgers Presidents, 1766-2004, written by Thomas J. Frusciano, University Archivist and Published by Rutgers University Libraries. These essays originally appeared in Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries, LIII, No. 1 (June 1991). Accessed 05 January 2007.
- ^ Carol T. Christ named 10th president of Smith College (Press Release, 30 July 2001). Published by Smith College Office of College Relations, accessed 06 January 2007.
- ^ Autobiography of Milton Friedman at Nobel Prize / Nobel Foundation website, presumably by Milton Friedman, published by the Nobel Foundation (no further authorship information available), accessed 05 January 2007.
- ^ William Henry Steele Demarest, 1906-1924, biographical essay at Leadership on the Banks: Rutgers Presidents, 1766-2004, written by Thomas J. Frusciano, University Archivist and Published by Rutgers University Libraries. These essays originally appeared in Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries, LIII, No. 1 (June 1991). Accessed 05 January 2007.
- ^ Biography of Chancellor William E. Kirwan, published by the University System of Maryland (no further authorship information available), accessed 06 January 2007.
- ^ Birkner, Michael J. McCormick of Rutgers: Scholar, Teacher, Public Historian (Greenwood Press, 2001), passim. ISBN 0-313-30356-8
- ^ Richard P. McCormick Papers, 1929-2006 in Special Collections and University Archives, Archibald S. Alexander Library, Rutgers University. Page Published by Rutgers University Libraries,accessed 05 January 2007
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- ^ McWhorter, John H. "The Campus Diversity Fraud" from City Journal Vol. 12, No. 1. (Winter 2002), 74-81, citation on page 75, (Published by the Manhattan Institute). This can be found online at: http://www.indiana.edu/~llc/Current_Students/q199/diversityfraud.pdf, accessed 06 January 2007.
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- ^ Nicholas, Roy Franklin. A Historian's Progress (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1968). NO ISBN
- ^ Clement A. Price biography at Rutgers University Hall of Distinguised Alumni, published by Office of Alumni Relations, Rutgers University (no further authorship information available), accessed 06 January 2007.
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- ^ Biography of Selman Waksman at Nobel Prize / Nobel Foundation website. Published by the Nobel Foundation (no further authorship information available), accessed 05 January 2007.
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- ^ Autobiography of Heinrich Rohrer at the Nobel Foundation website, presumably by Heinrich Rohrer. Published by the Nobel Foundation (no further authorship information available), accessed 05 January 2007.
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