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*[[Michael A. Smith]] – professor of philosophy
*[[Michael A. Smith]] – professor of philosophy
* [[Walter Terence Stace]] – professor of [[philosophy]]
* [[Walter Terence Stace]] – professor of [[philosophy]]
*[[Donald Steven]] – Canadian composer, winner of the JUNO Award for Best Classical Composition and the Jules-Léger Prize
*[[Gregory Vlastos]] – professor of [[philosophy]]
*[[Gregory Vlastos]] – professor of [[philosophy]]
*[[Andrew Fleming West]] – Giger Professor of Latin, 1883–1928; dean of the graduate school, 1900–1928
*[[Andrew Fleming West]] – Giger Professor of Latin, 1883–1928; dean of the graduate school, 1900–1928

Revision as of 17:21, 28 June 2016

James Madison, Father of the U.S. Constitution, fourth President of the United States, member of the Princeton Class of 1771, and Princeton's first graduate student.

This list of notable people associated with Princeton University includes faculty, staff, graduates and former students in the undergraduate program and all graduate programs, and others affiliated with the University. Individuals are sorted by category and alphabetized within each category. The "Affiliation" fields in the tables in this list indicate the person's affiliation with Princeton and use the following notation:

Politics and government

Royalty

Military

Academia

This section includes lists of notable academics who graduated from Princeton and notable Princeton faculty members. Boldface indicates a current professor at Princeton.

Alumni and students

Name Field Affiliation Notes Refs
Hal Abelson Computer Science B 1969 [3]
Mike Archer Biology B 1967 Director of the Australian Museum, 1999–2003 [4]
John Bardeen Physics PhD 1936 Nobel Prize in Physics, 1956 and 1972 [5][6]
Gary Becker Economics B 1951 Nobel Prize in Economics, 1992 [7]
Walden Bello Sociology MA 1972, PhD 1975 Member of the House of Representatives of the Philippines, 2007– [8][9]
Gregory Berns Psychology B 1986 [10]
Manjul Bhargava Mathematics PhD 2001 Fields Medal 2014 [11]
James H. Billington History B 1950, F 1964–75 Librarian of Congress, 1987– [12]
Alan Blinder Economics B 1967; F 1971– Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, 1994–96 [13]
George Boolos Philosophy B 1961 [14]
Alan Brinkley History B 1971 Provost of Columbia University, 2003–09 [15]
Michael E. Brown Astronomy B 1987 Named to the Time 100, 2006 [16][17]
Eugenio Calabi Mathematics PhD 1950 [18]
David Card Economics PhD 1983, F 1983–97 John Bates Clark Medal, 1995 [19][20]
Alonzo Church Mathematics B 1924, PhD 1927, F 1929–67 Proved the undecidability of the Entscheidungsproblem [21][22]
Arthur Compton Physics B 1914, PhD 1916 Nobel Prize in Physics, 1927 [23][24]
Karl Compton Physics PhD 1912, F 1915–30 President of MIT, 1930–48 [24][25]
Wilson Compton Economics PhD 1915 President of Washington State University, 1945–51 [24][26]
Ira Condict B 1784 Third President of Queen's College (Rutgers University) and Queen's College Grammar School (Rutgers Preparatory School), 1795–1810; Presbyterian and Dutch Reformed clergyman [27]
James Creese B 1918, AM President of Drexel University, 1945–63 [28][29]
R. F. Patrick Cronin Medicine B Class of 1947, conferred in 2000 Dean of the McGill University Faculty of Medicine [30]
Dennis Crouch Law B 1997 Publisher of Patently-O [31]
Loring Danforth Anthropology PhD 1977 [32]
Clinton Davisson Physics PhD 1911 Nobel Prize in Physics, 1937 [33]
David A. Dodge Economics PhD 1972 Chancellor of Queen's University, 2008–; Governor of the Bank of Canada, 2001–08 [34][35]
Acheson Duncan Statistics B 1923, AM 1927, PhD 1936, F 1936–42 [36]
Robert H. Edwards B 1957 President of Carleton College, 1977–86; President of Bowdoin College, 1990–2001 [37][38][39]
Selden Edwards Literature B 1941 Headmaster of Elgin Academy, the Crane Country Day School, and Sacramento Country Day [40][41]
Christopher L. Eisgruber Physics B 1983. President of Princeton University since 2013; Rhodes Scholar; JD cum laude from University of Chicago Law School [42]
Robert D. English Politics MPA 1982; PhD 1995 [43]
Hugh Everett III Physics PhD 1957 [44]
Livingston Farrand Medicine B 1888 President of Cornell University, 1921–37 [45]
Max Farrand History B 1892 [46]
Charles Fefferman Mathematics PhD 1969, F 1973– Fields Medal, 1978 [47]
Richard Felder Chemical Engineering PhD 1966 [48]
Richard Feynman Physics PhD 1942 Nobel Prize in Physics, 1965 [49]
Norman Finkelstein History PhD 1988 [50]
Evan Flatow Medicine B 1977 [37][51]
John V. Fleming English PhD 1963, F 1965–2006 [52]
Henri Ford Medicine B 1980; Trustee [53][54]
Hal Foster Art History B 1977; F 1997– [55]
Michael Freedman Mathematics PhD 1973 Fields Medal, 1986 [56]
Robert Goheen Classics B 1940, AM 1947, PhD 1948, F 1948–72, Pres 1957–72 [57]
Phillip Griffiths Mathematics PhD 1962, F 1967–72 Wolf Prize in Mathematics, 2008 [58][59]
Noel F. Hall Economics AM 1926 [60]
Robin Hartshorne Mathematics PhD 1963 [61]
James Heckman Economics AM 1968; PhD 1971 Nobel Prize in Economics, 2000 [62][63]
Sam Higginbottom Religion B 1903 [64][65]
Robert Hofstadter Physics PhD 1938, F 1945–60 Nobel Prize in Physics, 1961 [66]
D. Kern Holoman Music PhD 1974 Distinguished Professor of Music at the University of California, Davis [67]
Carl Hovde English PhD 1955 Dean of Columbia College of Columbia University, 1968–72 [68]
Nathan Jacobson Mathematics PhD 1934 [69]
Elena Kagan Law B 1981 Dean of Harvard Law School, 2003–09; Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, 2010– [70]
Bob Kahn Computer Science PhD 1964 Turing Award, 2004; Presidential Medal of Freedom, 2005 [71][72][73]
Ray Keck Spanish language B. A. (1969) and Ph.D. (1978) Fifth and current president of Texas A&M International University in Laredo, Texas [74]
David Kelley Philosophy PhD 1975 Former philosophy professor; founder of The Atlas Society [75]
John G. Kemeny Computer Science B 1947, PhD 1949 Co-developer of BASIC; President of Dartmouth College, 1970–81 [76]
Brian Kernighan Computer Science PhD 1969, F 2000– Co-developer of C [77]
Alan Kreider Divinity GS 1962–63 [78]
Stephen Kurtz History B 1948 Principal of Phillips Exeter Academy, 1974–87 [79][80]
Eric Lander Biology B 1978 Founding Director of the Broad Institute [81]
Serge Lang Mathematics PhD 1951 [82]
Paul Lansky Music PhD 1973, F 1969– [83]
William Lennox English AM, PhD Superintendent of the United States Military Academy [84][85]
Alan Lightman Physics B 1970 [86]
George Lusztig Mathematics PhD 1971 [87]
Juan Maldacena Physics PhD 1996 [88]
Burton Malkiel Economics PhD 1964; F 1964–81, 1988– Dean of Yale School of Management, 1981–87; author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street [89][90]
N. Gregory Mankiw Economics B 1980 Chair of the U.S. President's Council of Economic Advisers, 2003–05 [91]
James Manning Divinity B 1762 Founder and first President of Brown University, 1764–91 [92]
Thomas Maren Medicine B 1918, AM [93]
Juan Marichal History PhD 1949 [94]
Donald Markwell Woodrow Wilson School VS 1984-85 Former Warden of Rhodes House, University of Oxford [95]
Lorna Marsden Sociology PhD 1972 President of York University, 1997–2007 [96][97]
Bahram Mashhoon Physics PhD 1972 [98]
Barry Mazur Mathematics PhD 1959 [99]
James McCarthy Sociology PhD 1977 President of Suffolk University 2012–present [100]
John McCarthy Computer Science PhD 1951 Turing Prize, 1971 [101]
Edwin McMillan Chemistry PhD 1932 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1932 [102]
John Milnor Mathematics B 1951; PhD 1954 Fields Medal, 1962; Wolf Prize in Mathematics, 1989; Abel Prize, 2011 [103]
John Nash Mathematics PhD 1950, F Nobel Prize in Economics, 1994 [104][105]
Clifford Nass Sociology B 1981, AM 1985, PhD 1986 [106]
Alexander Nehamas Philosophy PhD 1971, F 1990– [107]
Joseph Nye Politics B 1958 Dean of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, 1995–2004 [108][109]
Steven Orszag Mathematics PhD 1966, F 1984–98 [110][111]
Wolfgang Panofsky Physics B 1938 Director of SLAC, 1961–84; National Medal of Science, 1969 [112]
Christos Papadimitriou Computer Science PhD 1976 [113]
Richard Pildes Law B 1979 [114]
Paul Pressler Pre-Law B Texas judge and leader of the Southern Baptist Convention Conservative resurgence [115]
John Rawls Philosophy B 1943; PhD 1950 [116]
W. Taylor Reveley Law B 1965 President of the College of William & Mary, 2008– [117]
Richard Revesz Law B 1979 Dean of New York University School of Law, 2002– [118]
David Romer Economics B 1980 [119]
Avital Ronell Comparative Literature PhD 1979 [120]
Theodore Roszak History PhD 1958 [121]
Gian-Carlo Rota Mathematics B 1953 [122]
Neil Rudenstine English B 1956, F 1968–87, Provost 1977–87, T 2002–06 President of Harvard University, 1991–2001 [123][124]
George Rupp Divinity B 1964 President of Columbia University, 1998–2002 [125][126]
Edward Saïd English B 1957 [127]
Chris William Sanchirico Law B 1984 [128]
Michael H. Schill Law B 1980 President of the University of Oregon, dean of UCLA Law School and University of Chicago Law School [129]
Harold T. Shapiro Economics PhD 1964, F 1988–, Pres 1988–2001 [130]
Richard Smalley Chemistry PhD 1973 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1996 [131]
Allen Shenstone Physics B 1914, AM 1920, PhD 1922, F 1925–62. [132][133]
Anne-Marie Slaughter Woodrow Wilson School B 1980. Former Dean of Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University; JD from Harvard Law School; MPhil and DPhil from University of Oxford [42]
Raymond Smullyan Mathematics PhD 1959 [134]
Charles Henry Smyth, Jr. Geosciences F 1905–34 [135]
Charles Phelps Smyth Chemistry B 1916, AM 1917, F 1920–63 Medal of Freedom, 1947 [136]
Henry DeWolf Smyth Physics B 1918, PhD 1921, F 1924–66 Author of the Smyth Report [137]
Michael Spence Economics B 1966 John Bates Clark Medal, 1981; Nobel Prize in Economics, 2001 [138][139]
Isaac Starr Medicine B 1916 Developed first practical ballistocardiograph; 1957 Albert Lasker Award; 1967 Kober Medal of the Association of American Physicians; 1977 Burger Medal of the Free University of Amsterdam; Dean of the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, 1945 to 1948 [140]
Richard E. Stearns Computer Science PhD 1961 [141]
Norman Steenrod Mathematics PhD 1936, F 1947–71 [142]
Devin J. Stewart Near Eastern Studies B 1984 Professor at Emory University [143][144]
Michael Stonebraker Computer Science B 1965 [145]
Jeffrey Stout Religion PhD 1976, F 1976–
Phillip Swagel Economics B 1987 U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy, 2006–09 [146]
Ilhi Synn German PhD 1966 President of Keimyung University, 1988–2004 [147]
Terence Tao Mathematics PhD 1996 MacArthur Fellowship, 2006; Fields Medal, 2006 [148][149]
John Tate Mathematics PhD 1950 Wolf Prize in Mathematics, 2002–03; Abel Prize, 2010 [150][151]
Richard Taylor Mathematics PhD 1988 [152]
Kip Thorne Physics PhD 1965 [153]
Stephen Thorsett Physics AM 1989, PhD 1991, F 1994–99 President of Willamette University, 2011– [154]
Rick Trainor History GS Principal of King's College London, 2004– [155]
John Tukey Statistics AM 1938, PhD 1939, F 1945–2000 National Medal of Science, 1973. IEEE Medal of Honor, 1982 [156]
Alan Turing Computer Science PhD 1938 Produced the foundation of research in artificial intelligence; made advances in the field of cryptanalysis [157]
Cumrun Vafa Physics PhD 1985 [158]
Cornel West African American Studies PhD 1980, F 2002– [159][160]
Steven Weinberg Physics PhD 1957 Nobel Prize in Physics, 1979; National Medal of Science, 1991 [161]
J. H. C. Whitehead Mathematics PhD 1932 [162]
Red Whittaker Electrical Engineering B 1973 [163]
Avi Wigderson Computer Science MSE 1981, AM 1982, PhD 1983 [164]
Arthur Wightman Physics PhD 1949, F 1949– [165]
Frank Wilczek Physics PhD 1974, F 1974–81 Nobel Prize in Physics, 2004 [166]
John Tuzo Wilson Geology PhD 1936 [167]
Edward Witten Physics AM 1974, PhD 1976, F 1980–87 MacArthur Fellowship, 1982; Fields Medal, 1990; National Medal of Science, 2003 [168]
Richard Wolfenden Chemistry B 1956 [169]
Susan Woodward Politics AM 1968; PhD 1975 [170]
Ben Zinn Aerospace Engineering B 1963, PhD 1965 [171]
Steven Zucker Mathematics PhD 1974 [172]
Gregg Zuckerman Mathematics PhD 1975 [173]

Faculty and staff

Faculty with only short visiting appointments are excluded from this list. Albert Einstein was one of many scholars at the independent Institute for Advanced Study not formally associated with the University but nevertheless closely linked to it.

Architecture

Economics and business

Government, law, and public policy

Art, literature, and humanities

Math and science

Engineering

Business

Science and technology

Here are listed alumni who made notable contributions to science and technology outside academia.

Astronauts

Engineering and science

Literature

Name Affiliation Notes Refs
Lorraine Adams A.B. 1981 Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, author of Harbor and The Room and the Chair [188]
Hyatt Bass A.B. Author of The Embers (2009) [189]
John Peale Bishop A.B.1917 Poet
Frederick Buechner A.B. 1947 Pulitzer Prize-nominated author
Susan Cain 1989 New York Times bestselling author of Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking [190][191]
Ian Caldwell A.B. 1998 Co-authored the recent book The Rule of Four, set on the Princeton campus.
José Donoso A.B. 1951 Chilean author
Selden Edwards A.B. 1963 Author of The Little Book and The Lost Prince
Timothy Ferriss A.B 2000 Author of The 4-Hour Workweek and holder of the world record in tango
Stona Fitch A.B. 1983 Author of Senseless on which the movie Senseless is based and Give and Take, founder of Concord Free Press
F. Scott Fitzgerald Class of 1917 (did not graduate) Author of The Great Gatsby and This Side of Paradise
Jonathan Safran Foer A.B. 1999 Author of Everything Is Illuminated
Rivka Galchen A.B. 1998 Author of Atmospheric Disturbances
Richard Halliburton A.B. 1922 Author, adventurer, lecturer
Mohsin Hamid A.B. 1993 Author of The Reluctant Fundamentalist
Peter Hessler A.B. 1992 Author of River Town and Oracle Bones
Ailish Hopper A.B. 1993 Poet and teacher
Walter Kirn A.B. (English) 1983 Author of Up in the Air and other novels, literary critic, essayist
A. Walton Litz A.B 1951 Literary critic
John McPhee A.B. 1953 Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and Ferris Professor of Journalism since 1974
John Matteson A.B. 1983 Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer
George Frederick Morgan Poet
John Norman Ph.D 1963 Sci-fi author and philosopher
Jodi Picoult A.B. 1987 Bestselling novelist
William H. Quillian B.A. 1965, M.A.,Ph.D. 1975 Author, Professor of English on the Emma B. Kennedy Foundation at Mount Holyoke College
David Remnick A.B. 1981 Editor of The New Yorker
Lawrence Riley Playwright and screenwriter, author of Personal Appearance, Return Engagement and Kin Hubbard
Deborah Salem Smith A.B. Art and Archaeology, 1996 Poet and playwright [192]
Eric Schlosser A.B. 1982 Journalist, Fast Food Nation
Charles Scribner I Founder of Scribner's publishing house; his descendants include several Princeton alumni
Annabel Soutar Canadian documentary playwright
Jennifer Weiner A.B. 1991 Novelist, Good in Bed, In Her Shoes Little Earthquakes, and Goodnight Nobody
Edmund Wilson A.B. 1916 Literary critic
Chris Welles (1937–2010) Business journalist and author [193]

Pulitzer Prize winners

Journalism

Sports

Entertainment

Name Affiliation Notes Refs
Sara Baiyu Chen A.B. 2008 Singer-songwriter and actress
Erik Barnouw Writer, critic, documentary filmmaker, Columbia University professor
Roger Berlind A.B. 1954 Produced or co-produced over 40 plays and musicals on Broadway (winning over 60 Tony Awards, including 12 for best production), as well as many off-Broadway and regional productions
Stephen Bogardus A.B. 1976 Actor
Brooks Bowman A.B. 1936 Jazz composer and writer of the song "East of the Sun (and West of the Moon)"
Dean Cain A.B. 1988 Actor (Clark Kent/Superman in the TV series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman)
Ethan Coen A.B. 1979 Academy Award-winning filmmaker (No Country for Old Men, O Brother, Where Art Thou?, Fargo)
Kwanza Jones Billboard-charting singer, songwriter and actress
David Duchovny A.B. 1982 Actor, won Golden Globe Awards for The X-Files and Californication
Molly Ephraim A.B. 2008 Stage, film, and television actress
José Ferrer A.B. 1933 Academy Award and Tony Award-winning actor
Mark Feuerstein A.B. 1993 Film and television actor (Royal Pains)
Ruth Gerson A.B. 1992 Singer, songwriter
Thomas Gibbons A.B. 2013 Comedian and screenwriter
Bo Goldman A.B. 1953 Co-winner of the 1976 Academy Award for Best Writing, Screenplay Adapted From Other Material (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest); winner of the 1981 Academy Award for Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen (Melvin and Howard)
Karron Graves A.B. 1999 Actress
Nicholas Hammond Actor (The Sound of Music, The Amazing Spider-Man)
Charles Horn Ph.D. Writer (Robot Chicken)
Andrew Jarecki Academy Award-nominated documentary filmmaker, Capturing the Friedmans
Eugene Jarecki Documentary filmmaker, Why We Fight
Robert L. Johnson A.M. 1972 Founded BET in 1980; member of the board for US Airways, General Mills, and Hilton Hotels
Stanley Jordan A.B. 1981 Jazz guitarist
Larissa Kelly A.B. 2002 Seventh-ranked all-time Jeopardy! winner
Ellie Kemper A.B. 2002 Actress (Erin Hannon on The Office)
Philip B. Kunhardt, Jr. A.B. 1950 Managing director of Life magazine and documentary filmmaker; producer of The American President[208][209]
Joshua Logan A.B. 1931 Director (Camelot, South Pacific); winner (or co-winner) of seven Tony Awards, co-winner of a Pulitzer Prize, nominated three times for Academy Award
David Madden A.B. 2003 Sixth-ranked all-time Jeopardy! winner, founder and Executive Director of the National History Bee and Bowl and the International History Olympiad
Craig Mazin A.B. 1992 Screenwriter (Scary Movie 3, Scary Movie 4)
Cara McCollum A.B. 2015 Miss New Jersey 2013
Myron McCormick A.B. 1933 Actor; winner of a Tony Award in 1950
Douglas McGrath A.B. 1980 Actor, director, and screenwriter (Bullets Over Broadway)
Wentworth Miller A.B. 1995 Film and TV actor (Michael Scofield on Prison Break)
Jeff Moss A.B. 1963 Lyricist, composer, poet; co-creator of Sesame Street; former member of Princeton Triangle Club; winner of fifteen Emmy Awards
Rose Catherine Pinkney Television executive with Paramount and Twentieth Century Fox
Jane Randall Third place contestant on America's Next Top Model, Cycle 15; currently signed to modelling agency IMG Models
Wayne Rogers A.B. 1955 Actor (Trapper John McIntyre on M*A*S*H)
Barbara Romer A.B. 1993 Film and theatrical producer; founder of the Globe Theatre
Marc Rosen Film and television producer, known for his work on the Harry Potter film franchise and the TV series Threshold
Brooke Shields A.B. 1987 Model/actress (The Blue Lagoon, TV series Suddenly Susan), former member of Princeton Triangle Club
Brett Simon A.B. 1997 Director (Assassination of a High School President)
Jimmy Stewart B.S. 1932 Academy Award-winning actor (former member of Princeton Triangle Club), aviator, Brigadier General in the United States Air Force; Honorary degree in 1947
Robert Taber Actor
Bretaigne Windust A.B. 1929 Film director, producer

Art and architecture

Other

In fiction

Listed in alphabetical order by title name.

See also

References

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  229. ^ The Simpsons, episode "Brother from another series" (Season 8, Episode 160): Sideshow Bob: "Oh, come now! You wanted to be Krusty's sidekick since you were five! What about the buffoon lessons? The four years at Clown College?" Cecil: "I'll thank you not to refer to Princeton that way."
  230. ^ In the movie, Herbert Greenleaf says: "I see you were at Princeton. Then you'll most likely know our son, Dick. Dickie Greenleaf".
  231. ^ Ripley meets Dickie, and says "It's Tom. Tom Ripley. We were at Princeton together."
  232. ^ Episode 406, "Game On", in which Seaborn says "I'm a magna cum laude graduate of Princeton and editor of the Duke Law Review. Tell her I've worked for Congressmen and the D-triple-C."
  233. ^ From the movie, Mary : "There was this guy back in college who was bothering me...got kind of ugly—a restraining order, the whole bit. Anyway, when I got out of Princeton I changed my name as a precaution."
  234. ^ From the movie, one friend says "Loser? Woogie was all-state football and basketball and valedictorian of his class", and another follows with "I heard he got a scholarship to Princeton but he's going to Europe first to model."
  235. ^ Book synopsis of the 75th anniversary edition at Publishers Weekly (January 30, 1995): "Fitzgerald's first novel, about a coterie of Princeton socialites, appears in a 75th anniversary edition."
  236. ^ From the book, "Amory had decided definitely on Princeton, even though he would be the only boy entering that year from St. Regis'."