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|nota=Former Student Body President (1999-2000) and Army Lt. Killed in Action in Iraq
|nota=Former Student Body President (1999-2000) and Army Lt. Killed in Action in Iraq
|ref=<ref>{{cite pressrelease|first=David|last=Terraso|url=http://www.gatech.edu/news-room/release.php?id=457| title=Alumnus Killed Serving in Iraq|publisher=Georgia Institute of Technology|date=[[2004-09-17]]| accessdate=2007-03-07}}</ref>}}
|ref=<ref>{{cite pressrelease|first=David|last=Terraso|url=http://www.gatech.edu/news-room/release.php?id=457| title=Alumnus Killed Serving in Iraq|publisher=Georgia Institute of Technology|date=[[2004-09-17]]| accessdate=2007-03-07}}</ref>}}
{{Alum
|name=[[William A. Darden]]
|year=1935
|nota=Decorated [[U.S. Army]] serviceman who served in [[World War II]] and the [[Korean War]].
|ref=<ref>{{cite web| first=Kathryn E| last=Darden| url=http://www.christianactivities.com/bytheway/story.asp?ID=6127| title=William A. Darden - My Father Remembered| publisher=Christian Activities|date=[[2007-01-01]]| accessdate=2007-03-07}}</ref>}}
{{Alum
{{Alum
|name=[[Ray Davis (U.S. Marine)|General Ray Davis]]
|name=[[Ray Davis (U.S. Marine)|General Ray Davis]]

Revision as of 09:50, 23 March 2008

Georgia Tech's first two graduates were Henry L. Smith (top row, center) and George G. Crawford (top row, far right).

This list of Georgia Institute of Technology alumni includes graduates, non-graduate former students and current students of Georgia Tech. Notable administration, faculty, and staff are found on the list of Georgia Institute of Technology faculty. Georgia Tech alumni are generally known as Yellow Jackets. According to the Georgia Tech Alumni Association,[1]

[the status of "alumni"] is open to all graduates of Georgia Tech, all former students of Georgia Tech who regularly matriculated and left Georgia Tech in good standing, active and retired members of the faculty and administration staff, and those who have rendered some special and conspicuous service to Georgia Tech or to [the alumni association].

The first class of 128 students entered Georgia Tech in 1888, and the first two graduates, Henry L. Smith and George G. Crawford, received their degrees in 1890. Smith would later lead a manufacturing enterprise in Dalton, Georgia and Crawford would head Birmingham, Alabama's large Tennessee Coal, Iron, and Railway Company.[2] Since then, the institute has greatly expanded, with an enrollment of 11,484 undergraduates and 5,309 postgraduate students as of Spring 2007.[3]

Nobel laureates

Jimmy Carter
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Jimmy Carter 1946 The 39th President of the United States from 1977 to 1981, and the Nobel Peace laureate of 2002. Prior to becoming president, Carter served two terms in the Georgia Senate, and was the 76th Governor of Georgia from 1971 to 1975. [4][5]
Kary Mullis 1964 Won the 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his development of the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), a central technique in biochemistry and molecular biology which allows the amplification of specified DNA sequences. [6]

Scholars

File:Jeremy Farris.jpg
Jeremy Farris, Rhodes Scholar; Image courtesy of Georgia Tech
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Jeremy Farris 2004 2005 Rhodes Scholar, won a best of category award at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his discovery of a new pathogen for the invasive plant kudzu, American delegate to the 2000 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Science Forum in Singapore [7][8]
S. Alton Newton 1950 1951 Rhodes Scholar [7]
Andy Ozment 2000 2001 Marshall Scholar [9][10]
Will Roper 2001 2002 Rhodes Scholar, 2001 Truman Scholar [9][11][12][13]

Business

David S. Lewis, Jr.
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Gil Amelio 1965 CEO Emeritus of National Semiconductor and Apple and IEEE Fellow [14]
Charles "Garry" Betty 1979 President and CEO of EarthLink, a large American Internet service provider, from 1996 until his death in 2007 [15]
Gary C. Butler 1968 CEO of Automatic Data Processing [16]
Brook Byers 1968 Venture capitalist of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers [17]
Quentin Dastugue 1977 Founding partner and the chief executive officer of the New Orleans-based real estate firm Property One, Inc., and a former four-term member of the Louisiana House of Representatives [18]
Cecil B. Day 1958 Founder of Days Inn Hotels [19]
David Dorman 1975 Chairman and CEO Emeritus of AT&T Corporation [20][21]
Mike Duke 1971 President and CEO of Wal-Mart Stores [22]
Frank Gordy 1929 Founder of The Varsity chain of restaurants, which includes the world's largest drive-in [23]
Dennis Hayes 1973 Founder of Hayes Communications, an early developer of PC modems [24]
Ed Iacobucci 1975 Leader of the IBM OS/2 Design Team, founder of Citrix Systems, president and CEO of DayJet, member of SCO Group's Board of Directors [25]
John Calvin Jureit 1949 Inventor of the Gang-Nail connector plate [26]
Chris Klaus 1994 Founder and current CEO of Kaneva, Inc. and a cofounder and former CTO of Internet Security Systems. Donated $15 million to Georgia Tech towards the construction of the Klaus Advanced Computing Building. [27]
David S. Lewis, Jr. 1939 Major force in the aerospace and defense industry for three decades [28]
Calvin Mackie 1996 Award winning mentor and motivational speaker and successful entrepreneur [29]
Scottie Mayfield 1973 President of Mayfield Dairy Farms [30]
Charles Moorman 1975 CEO of Norfolk Southern [31]
Dennis Patterson 1971 Member of the Management Committee of SunTrust Banks Inc [21]
James D. Robinson III 1957 CEO of American Express Co. from 1977 to 1993 and director of The Coca-Cola Company since 1975 [32]
Joe Rogers Sr. 1968 Co-founder of Waffle House [33]
Chuck Sannipoli 1967 Executive in the data networking industry and a Senior Member of the IEEE [34]
Derek V. Smith 1979 CEO of ChoicePoint. [35][36]
Mark C. Smith 1962 Cofounder of ADTRAN [37]
E. Roe Stamps 1967 Founding managing partner of venture capital firm Summit Partners and a member of the board of trustees at the Georgia Tech Foundation [38]

Politics and public service

G. Wayne Clough, President of Georgia Tech
Sam Nunn, former U.S. Senator and CEO of NTI
File:DonPGiddens.jpg
Don Giddens, Dean of Georgia Tech's College of Engineering
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Ivan Allen, Jr. 1933 Atlanta Mayor during the 1960s [39]
Max Burns 1973 Former U.S. Congressman from Georgia [40]
Charles M. Brown 1925 Long-time Atlanta politician [41][42]
Howard Callaway 1945 Businessman and former politician from the state of Georgia. [43][44]
Mario Canahuati 1977 Advisor of Honduras Government team during the negotiations of CAFTA, former Honduras Ambassador in the U.S.A. [45][46]
Jack Carter 1972 Businessman and politician, son of Jimmy Carter [47][48]
Jimmy Carter 1946 The 39th President of the United States from 1977 to 1981, and the Nobel Peace laureate of 2002. Prior to becoming president, Carter served two terms in the Georgia Senate, and was the 76th Governor of Georgia from 1971 to 1975. [4][5]
G. Wayne Clough 1964 First alumnus to be president of Georgia Tech [49]
Y. Frank Freeman 1910 First winner of The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award [50]
Don Giddens 1963 Dean of Georgia Tech's College of Engineering [51][52]
Phil Gingrey 1965 Current U.S. Congressman from Georgia [53]
Jack Guynn 1969 Former President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, current member of Oxford Industries' Board of Directors. [21][54]
Morley A. Hudson 1938 Shreveport businessman, engineer, civic leader, and a pioneer of the modern Republican Party in Louisiana [55]
Tom Moreland 1955 Had a 30+ year career with the Georgia Department of Transportation, serving as Commissioner and/or Chief Engineer for the last 17 years. The Tom Moreland Interchange is named after him. [56]
Sam Nunn 1956 Former U.S. senator, currently CEO of The Nuclear Threat Initiative [57]
Stephen Pace 1912 Former politician and lawyer [58]
Paul Craig Roberts 1961 Economist and political pundit, who served as Undersecretary of the Treasury under Ronald Reagan [59]
John K. Snyder 1947 Mayor of Alexandria, Louisiana from 1973 to 1977 and from 1982 to 1986.

Military service

General Ray Davis
Admiral James O. Ellis
Major General Leonard Wood
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Edward C. Aldridge Jr. 1962 Served in many top U.S. Defense Department and defense industry jobs, including as the 16th Air Force secretary [60]
William L. Ball 1969 67th Secretary of the Navy during the Reagan administration. [61]
John Boyd 1964 USAF Fighter Pilot, Engineer and Military Strategist [62]
John M. Brown III Commander of United States Army Pacific Command, headquartered at Fort Shafter, Hawaii [63]
Tyler Brown 2001 Former Student Body President (1999-2000) and Army Lt. Killed in Action in Iraq [64]
General Ray Davis 1938 Assistant Commandant of the USMC, Korean War Medal of Honor recipient [65]
James O. Ellis Retired 4-star admiral and former Commander, United States Strategic Command, Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska [66]
Pete Geren 1973 20th United States Secretary of the Army [67]
Hugh W. Hardy 1944 United States Marine Corps Reserves major general and a geoscientist [68]
Orlando Llenza 1951 Second Puerto Rican to reach the rank of Major General (two-star General) in the United States Air Force [69]
Thomas McGuire 1941 USAAF second leading ace of WWII with 38 victories and Medal of Honor recipient [70]
William G. Thrash 1939 Retired United States Marine Corps three-star general and highly decorated Naval Aviator [71]
Leonard Wood 1894 Medal of Honor winner for helping capture of the Apache Geronimo [72]
File:Mos morgan h.jpg
W. Jason Morgan, 2003 National Medal of Science recipient
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Anthony J. Arduengo, III 1974 Chemist known for his work in the field of stable carbene research. [73]
Ronald Collé 1969 Specialist in nuclear and radiochemistry and radionuclidic metrology [74]
Ali Erdemir 1982 Turkish materials scientist specializing in surface engineering and tribology [75]
Kenneth Lane 1964 American physicist and professor of physics at Boston University [76]
Robert C. Michelson 1974 Recipient of the 2001 Pirelli Award and the first €25,000 Top Pirelli Prize. [77][78]
W. Jason Morgan 1957 Geophysicist who has made seminal contributions to the theory of plate tectonics and geodynamics [79]
Kary Mullis 1964 Won the 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his development of the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), a central technique in biochemistry and molecular biology which allows the amplification of specified DNA sequences. [6]
David Rasnick 1978 Biochemist, AIDS dissident, and former president of the Group for the Scientific Reappraisal of the HIV/AIDS Hypothesis [80]
Herbert Saffir 1940 Developer of the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale [81]

NASA astronauts and administrators

William S. McArthur, astronaut
File:Richard H. Truly, official NASA photo.jpg
Richard H. Truly, retired Vice Admiral, former head of NASA and GTRI
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Eric A. Boe 1997 NASA astronaut [82]
Michael R. Clifford 1982 Former U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel and NASA Astronaut [83]
Jan Davis 1975 American astronaut and the current director of the Safety and Mission Assurance directorate at Marshall Space Flight Center [84]
James Henry Deese 1935 NASA Administrator [85]
L. Blaine Hammond 1974 NASA Astronaut [86]
Scott J. Horowitz 1982 Retired NASA Astronaut and a veteran of four space shuttle missions [87]
Susan Still Kilrain 1985 Former NASA Astronaut [88]
R. Shane Kimbrough 1998 Among the first candidates selected for astronaut training in the United States following the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster [89]
Timothy L. Kopra 1995 U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel and a NASA Astronaut [90]
Sandra Magnus 1996 NASA Astronaut [91]
William S. McArthur 1983 NASA Astronaut and a veteran of three space shuttle missions and one mission to the International Space Station via the Russian Soyuz capsule [92]
Richard H. Truly 1959 Retired Vice Admiral in the United States Navy, former astronaut, was the 8th Administrator of NASA from 1989 to 1992, and was the head of the Georgia Tech Research Institute from 1993 to 1998 [93]
Douglas H. Wheelock 1992 NASA Astronaut [94][95]
John Young 1952 First commander of the space shuttle [96]

Computer science

James F. O'Brien, computer graphics researcher and professor at University of California, Berkeley
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
James Allchin 1984 Former high-level executive at Microsoft [97]
Annie Antón 1997 Professor of software engineering at NCSU and privacy expert [98]
Krishna Bharat 1996 Research scientist at Google that created Google News. [99]
Tom Cross 1999 American entrepreneur, computer security expert, and hacker [100][101]
Richard DeMillo 1974 Dean of the Georgia Tech College of Computing, Distinguished Professor of Computing, and previous director of the Georgia Tech Information Security Center. [102][103]
Chaim Gingold 2003 Noted for his work with the computer game Spore [104]
D. Richard Hipp 1984 Architect and primary author of SQLite [105]
Billy Hoffman 2005 American hacker; discovered a security flaw in the campus magnetic ID card system called "BuzzCard" and was subsequently sued by Blackboard Inc. [106]
Ed Iacobucci 1975 Leader of the IBM OS/2 Design Team, founder of Citrix Systems, president and CEO of DayJet, member of SCO Group's Board of Directors [25]
Paul Q. Judge 2002 Technical expert for the Federal Trade Commission in the 2005 Report to Congress on the Effectiveness of the CAN-SPAM Act. In 2003, he founded the Anti-Spam Research Group in the Internet Research Task Force. [107]
James F. O'Brien 2000 Professor of Computer Science at University of California, Berkeley [108]
Rosalind Picard 1984 Founder and director of the Affective Computing Research Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology [109][110]
Mike Pinkerton 1997 American software developer working on the Mozilla browsers. He lectures on Development of Open Source Software at George Washington University [111]
Marcus Sachs 1981 Director of the Washington operations of SRI International's Computer Science Laboratory [112][113]
Gene Spafford 1981 Professor of computer science at Purdue University and a leading computer security expert [114]
Jeff Trinkle 1979 Professor and Chair of Computer Science at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York [115]

Humanities

Architecture and design

Jan Lorenc
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Michael Arad 1999 Designer architect of the World Trade Center Memorial in New York City; he was selected from 5,201 competitors as the winning designer with "Reflecting Absence" [116]
Jan Lorenc 1994 Prominent designer; co-owner of Lorenc+Yoo Design [117]
John Portman 1950 Architect that designed several buildings; examples are the Shanghai World Financial Center, SunTrust Plaza, and the Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel [118]
Hugh Stubbins Jr. 1933 Architect who designed several high-profile buildings around the world [119]
Vern Yip 1995 Designer on Trading Spaces [120]
Janice N. Wittschiebe 1980 Principal of Richard Wittschiebe Hand Architects, prominent Atlanta architecture firm, former President of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association, member of the Georgia Tech Foundation Board [121]

Arts and entertainment

Jeff Foxworthy, comedian
Jorge Cham, post-doc and popular cartoonist. Image by Ragib Hasan
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
James Crumley 1958 Author of violent hardboiled crime novels and several volumes of short stories and essays, as well as published and unpublished screenplays [122]
Ed Dodd 1925 20th-century American cartoonist known for his Mark Trail comic strip. [123]
Jeff Foxworthy 1979 Comedian and creator/producer of the Blue Collar Comedy Tour [124]
Yury Gitman 2000 New media artist and inventor [125]
Phil Gordon 1991 Professional poker player [126]
Nicole Jordan Best-selling American author of romance novels [127]
Mark Lee 1995 Member of the Christian band Third Day [128]
Nagesh Kukunoor 1993 Critically acclaimed Bollywood movie director and actor [129]
Matt Moulthrop 2004 American woodturner and artist [130]
Arthur Murray 1923 Dance instructor and businessman [131]
John Salley 1988 Co-host of The Best Damn Sports Show Period and former NBA player [132]
Randolph Scott 1924 Movie star of the 1940s and 1950s [133]
Edlyn Lewis 1998 Miss Georgia USA 1998 and competitor in the Miss USA 1998 pageant [134][135]
Wallace Potts 1970 Independent film director and archivist for the Rudolf Nureyev Foundation [136]
Jorge Cham 1997 Creator of Piled Higher and Deeper comics and faculty at Stanford [137]
Andy Runton Creator of the Owly graphic novels [138]

Athletics

Despite their highly technical backgrounds, Tech graduates are no strangers to athletics; approximately 150 Tech students have gone into the NFL, with many others going into the NBA or MLB. Well-known American football athletes include former students Calvin Johnson, Daryl Smith, and Keith Brooking, former Tech head football coaches Pepper Rodgers and Bill Fulcher, and all-time greats such as Joe Hamilton, Pat Swilling, Billy Shaw, and Joe Guyon. Tech's recent entrants into the NBA include Javaris Crittenton, Thaddeus Young, Jarrett Jack, Luke Schenscher, Stephon Marbury, and Chris Bosh. Award-winning baseball stars include Kevin Brown, Mark Teixeira, Nomar Garciaparra, Jason Varitek, and Jay Payton. In golf, the legendary Bobby Jones founded The Masters, David Duval was ranked #1 in the world in 2001, Stewart Cink was ranked in the top ten, and Matt Kuchar won the U.S. Amateur.

Crime

File:MichaelThevis2.JPG
Michael Thevis, gangster dubbed by tabloids as "The Scarface of Porn"
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Syed Haris Ahmed 2006 Arrested by the FBI in March 2006 and charged with providing material support to a terrorist group. [139]
Reuben Houston 2005 Georgia Tech cornerback charged with conspiring to distribute 94 pounds of marijuana. Later signed by the Tampa Bay Bucs. [140][141]
Michael Thevis 1950 American gangster dubbed by tabloids "The Scarface of Porn" due to his rise and fall in marketing illegal pornography, multiple murders of his business associates, and eventual placement on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list. [142]

Fictional people

WikiWorld Illustration of George P. Burdell
Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
George P. Burdell NA A fictitious student officially enrolled in 1927, and who has been continuously enrolled since his "graduation" in 1930. [143]
Charlie Croker NA Character in Tom Wolfe's "A Man in Full" [144]
Robert W. Graves NA G.I. Joe character known as "Grunt" [145]
Kevin Lomax NA Protagonist in the film The Devil's Advocate (played by Keanu Reeves) [146]
Two Bits Man NA Anonymous humor columnist; typically majoring in a computer-related discipline. [147]
Michael C. Robertson NA Creator of the Entomopter at the Georgia Technology Research Institute in the Novel "Soft Target: The Air" (2007) by Joel Narlock. Fictitious character is a transposition of the name Robert C. Michelson who is the actual inventor of the Entomopter at the Georgia Tech Research Institute. [148]

References

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