List of Princeton University people
This is a table of notable people affiliated with Princeton University, including graduates of the undergraduate college and all graduate programs, former students, and former professors. Some noted current faculty are also listed in the main University article. Individuals are sorted by category and alphabetized within each category.
Note: Alumni who have served as Princeton professors are listed in bold:
Government, law and public policy
Presidents and Heads of State
- Fakhruddin Ahmed Ph.D. in Economics. Chief Advisor of the Caretaker Government (title given to the Interim Prime Minister) of Bangladesh. Formerly he was the Governor of Bangladesh Bank, the central bank of the country.
- John F. Kennedy Class of 1939, but left after first semester for medical reasons (jaundice) – 35th President of the United States[1]
- James Madison A.B. 1771 – 4th President of the United States[2]
- Queen Noor of Jordan A.B. 1974 – Her Majesty Queen of Jordan.[3][4] Known as Lisa Halaby while she attended Princeton.
- Syngman Rhee Ph.D. – 1st president of the Republic of Korea, 1st president of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea[5]
- Woodrow Wilson A.B. 1879 – 28th President of the United States, 13th president of Princeton University and Governor of New Jersey; Nobel laureate (Peace, 1919)[6]
Vice-Presidents
- Aaron Burr A.B. 1772 – 3rd Vice President of the United States
- John C. Breckinridge A.B. ? – 14th Vice President of the United States
- George M. Dallas A.B. 1810 – 11th Vice President of the United States
Governors
- Nathaniel Alexander 1776 – 14th Governor of North Carolina (1805–1807)
- Dewey F. Bartlett A.B. 1942 – 19th Governor of Oklahoma (1967–1971)
- Kit Bond A.B. 1960 – 47th and 49th Governor of Missouri (1972–1976)
- Brendan Byrne A.B. 1949 – Governor of New Jersey (1974–1982)
- Alfred Holt Colquitt 1844 – Governor of Georgia (1876–1882)
- William Prentice Cooper, Jr. 1917 – Governor of Tennessee (1939–1945)
- George Washington Crawford 1820 – Governor of Georgia (1843–1847)
- Mitch Daniels A.B. 1971 – 47th Governor of Indiana (2005 – )
- William Richardson Davie 1776 – Governor of North Carolina (1798–1799)
- Mahlon Dickerson A.B. 1789 – Governor of New Jersey (1815–1817)
- James H. Duff A.B. 1904 – Governor of Pennsylvania (1947–1951)
- Pierre S. du Pont, IV 1956 – Governor of Delaware (1977–1985)
- Peter Early 1792 – Governor of Georgia (1814–1815)
- Henry Waggaman Edwards 1797 – Governor of Connecticut (1835–1837)
- Robert Ehrlich A.B. 1979 – 60th Governor of Maryland (2003–2007)
- John Forsyth A.B. 1799 – 35th Governor of Georgia (1827–1829)
- Robert Stockton Green 1850 – 27th Governor of New Jersey, from 1887–1890.[7]
- Daniel Haines A.B. 1820 – Governor of New Jersey (1843–1844, 1848–1851)
- John Henry 1769 – Governor of Maryland (1797–1798)
- James Iredell 1806 – Governor of North Carolina (1827–1828)
- Thomas Kean A.B. 1957 – Governor of New Jersey (1982–1990)
- Blair Lee III A.B. 1938 – Governor of Maryland (1977–1979)
- Henry Lee III 1773 – Governor of Virginia (1792–1795)
- Morgan Lewis 1773 – Governor of New York (1804–1807)
- Alexander Martin 1756 – Governor of North Carolina (1782–1785)
- James G. Martin 1960 – Governor of North Carolina (1985–1993)
- Patrick Noble 1806 – Governor of South Carolina (1838–1840)
- Aaron Ogden A.B. 1773 – Governor of New Jersey (1812–1813)
- Joel Parker 1839 – Governor of New Jersey (1863–1866, 1872–1875)
- William Paterson A.B. 1763 – Governor of New Jersey (1790–1792)
- William Pennington A.B. 1813 – Governor of New Jersey (1837–1843)
- James Pollock 1831 – Governor of Pennsylvania (1855–1858)
- Samuel Lewis Southard A.B. 1804 – Governor of New Jersey (1832–1833)
- Eliot Spitzer A.B. 1981 – Governor of New York (2007–2008)
- Samuel Sprigg 1806 – Governor of Maryland (1819–1822)
- Adlai Stevenson A.B. 1922 – 33rd Governor of Illinois, (1949–1953) Democratic Presidential candidate, and United Nations ambassador
- David Stone 1788 – Governor of North Carolina (1808–1810)
- Robert Taft 1967 – Governor of Ohio (1999–2007)
- John Taylor 1790 – Governor of South Carolina (1826–1828)
- Isaac Tichenor 1775 – Governor of Vermont (1797–1809)
- George Michael Troup 1797 – Governor of Georgia (1823–1827)
- William Henry Vanderbilt 1925 – Governor of Rhode Island (1939–1941)
- George White 1895 – Governor of Ohio (1931–1935)
- G. Mennen Williams 1933 – Governor of Michigan (1949–1960)
- Woodrow Wilson A.B. 1879 – Governor of New Jersey, listed above under Presidents
- John Gilbert Winant 1913 – Governor of New Hampshire (1925–1927, 1931–1935)
- Maria Imelda Marcos A.B. 1978 – Governor of Ilocos Norte, the Philippines, daughter of Former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos and Imelda Marcos
Senators
Information can be verified at the Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress.[8]
- Dewey F. Bartlett A.B. 1942 – U.S. Senator from Oklahoma, listed under Governors
- John M. Berrien A.B. 1796 – U.S. Senator from Georgia
- Kit Bond A.B. 1960 – U.S. Senator from Missouri, listed under Governors
- Bill Bradley A.B. 1965 – U.S. Senator from New Jersey
- Aaron Burr A.B. 1772 – U.S. Senator from New York, listed under Vice-Presidents
- George M. Dallas A.B. 1810 – U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, listed under Vice-Presidents
- John Danforth A.B. 1958 – U.S. Senator from Missouri, United States Ambassador to the UN
- Jonathan Dayton A.B. 1776 – U.S. Senator from New Jersey, signer of the Constitution
- Mahlon Dickerson A.B. 1789 – U.S. Senator from New Jersey, listed under Governors
- John Forsyth A.B. 1799 – U.S. Senator from Georgia, listed under Governors
- Bill Frist A.B. 1974 – U.S. Senator from Tennessee
- Blair Lee I 1880 – U.S. Senator from Maryland
- Edward Livingston A.B. 1781 – U.S. Senator from Louisiana
- Aaron Ogden A.B. 1773 – U.S. Senator from New Jersey, listed under Governors
- William Paterson A.B. 1763 – U.S. Senator from New Jersey, listed under Governors
- Claiborne Pell A.B. 1940 – U.S. Senator from Rhode Island
- Paul Sarbanes A.B. 1954 – U.S. Senator from Maryland
- Samuel Lewis Southard A.B. 1804 – U.S. Senator from New Jersey, listed under Governors
Congressmen
Information can be verified at the Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress.[8]
- Nan Hayworth 1959– represents New York's 19th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives since 2011
- Bruce Alger 1940 – U.S. Representative from Texas, 1955–1965
- Arthur Glenn Andrews 1931—U.S. Representative from Alabama, 1965–1967
- John Archer A.B. 1760 – U.S. Representative from Maryland
- Stevenson Archer I A.B. 1805 – U.S. Congressman from Maryland
- Stevenson Archer II A.B. 1848 – U.S. Congressman from Maryland
- George H. Brown 1828 – represented New Jersey's 4th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives from 1853 to 1855.[9]
- Charles Browne 1896 – represented New Jersey's 4th congressional district from 1923–1925.[10]
- Jonathan Dayton A.B. 1776 – U.S. Congressman from New Jersey, 3rd Speaker of the House of Representatives, listed above under Senators
- Bob Ehrlich A.B. 1979 – U.S. Congressman from Maryland, listed under Governors
- John Forsyth A.B. 1799 – U.S. Congressman from Georgia, listed above under Governors
- Samuel Fowler unspecified, represented New Jersey's 4th congressional district in the U.S. Representative from 1893–1895.[11]
- Henry S. Harris 1870 – represented New Jersey's 4th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives from 1883 to 1885.[12]
- Charles R. Howell attended in 1923 and 1924 – represented New Jersey's 4th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives from 1949 to 1955.[13]
- Jim Leach A.B. 1964 – former U.S. Congressman from Iowa
- Edward Livingston A.B. 1781 – U.S. Congressman from Louisiana, listed above under Senators
- James Madison A.B. 1771 – U.S. Congressman from Virginia, listed above under Presidents
- Jim Marshall A.B. 1972 – U.S. Congressman from Georgia
- Donald Rumsfeld A.B. 1954 – U.S. Congressman from Illinois
- William Fitts Ryan A.B. 1947 – U.S. Congressman from New York
- Paul Sarbanes A.B. 1954 – U.S. Congressman from Maryland, listed above under Senators
- John Sergeant – U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania and 1832 Vice Presidential candidate
- Peter Plympton Smith A.B. 1968 – U.S. Congressman from Vermont, former dean of the School of Education and Human Development of George Washington University
- Laurence Hawley Watres A.B. 1904 – U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania
- Addison White A.B. 1844 – U.S. Congressman from Kentucky
- James Moore Wayne A.B. 1808 – U.S. Congressman from Georgia
- Ira W. Wood 1877 – represented New Jersey's 4th congressional district from 1904 to 1913.[14]
- Ed Zschau – U.S. Congressman from California
- Jared Polis A.B. 1997 – U.S. Congressman from Colorado
- Maria Imelda Marcos A.B. 1978 – Philippine Congress 1998–2007, daughter of Former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos and Imelda Marcos
Attorneys General
- John M. Berrien A.B. 1796
- William Bradford A.B. 1772
- Benjamin H. Brewster A.B. 1834[15]
- Nicholas Katzenbach A.B. 1945
- Charles Lee A.B. 1775
- Richard Rush A.B. 1797
- Robert Smith A.B. 1781
Solicitors General
- Ted Cruz A.B. 1992 – Solicitor General of Texas.
- William Marshall Bullitt A.B. 1894 – United States Solicitor General
- Charles Fried A.B. 1956 – United States Solicitor General
- Caitlin Halligan A.B. 1988 – Solicitor General of New York
- Elena Kagan A.B. 1981 – United States Solicitor General
State Attorneys General
- John Marshall Harlan A.B. 1920 – Kentucky Attorney General
- Luther Martin A.B. 1766 – Maryland Attorney General
- Aaron Burr A.B. 1772 – New York State Attorney General
- Eliot Spitzer A.B. 1981 – New York State Attorney General
- Stuart Rabner A.B. 1982 – New Jersey Attorney General, and later Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court.[16]
Supreme Court Justices
Information can be verified through the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges.[17]
- Samuel Alito A.B. 1972 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 2006–present, chosen by George W. Bush
- Oliver Ellsworth A.B. 1766 – Chief Justice of the United States 1796–1800
- John Marshall Harlan II A.B. 1920 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 1955–1971
- William Johnson A.B. 1790 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 1804–1834
- Elena Kagan A.B. 1981 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 2010–present, chosen by Barack Obama
- Henry Brockholst Livingston A.B. 1774 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 1806–1823
- William Paterson A.B. 1763 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 1793–1806, listed above under Governors
- Mahlon Pitney A.B. 1879 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 1912–1922
- Sonia Sotomayor A.B. 1976 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 2009–present, chosen by Barack Obama
- Smith Thompson A.B. 1788 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 1823–1843
- James Moore Wayne A.B. 1808 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 1835–1867, listed above under Congressmen
Cabinet Members and Ministers
- James Baker A.B. 1952 – Secretary of State under President George H. W. Bush[18]
- W. Michael Blumenthal M.P.A., M.A., PhD – Secretary of the Treasury under President Jimmy Carter[19]
- Frank Carlucci A.B. 1952 – Secretary of Defense under President Ronald Reagan
- John Foster Dulles A.B. 1908 – Secretary of State under President Dwight D. Eisenhower
- James V. Forrestal Class of 1915 (did not graduate) – Secretary of Defense under Harry Truman
- John Forsyth A.B. 1799 – Secretary of State under Presidents Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren, listed under Governors
- Edward Livingston A.B. 1781 – Secretary of State under President Andrew Jackson, listed above under Senators
- James Madison A.B. 1771 – Secretary of State under President Thomas Jefferson, listed above under Presidents
- Peter Orszag A.B. 1991 - Director of the Office of Management and Budget
- Donald Rumsfeld A.B. 1954 – Secretary of Defense under Presidents Gerald Ford and George W. Bush, listed under Congressmen
- Prince Saud bin Faisal bin Abdul Aziz A.B. 1964 – Minister of Foreign Affairs of Saudi Arabia
- George Shultz A.B. 1942 – Secretary of State under President Ronald Reagan
- Robert Smith A.B. 1781 – Secretary of State under President James Madison, listed above under Attorneys General
- Abel P. Upshur Class of 1807 (expelled) – Secretary of the Navy and Secretary of State under President John Tyler[20]
- Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad A.B. 1988 - Prince of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
White House Chiefs of Staff
- Joshua B. Bolten A.B. 1976. White House Chief of Staff under President George W. Bush.
- James Baker A.B. 1952. White House Chief of Staff under President Ronald Reagan.
Directors of Central Intelligence
- William Colby A.B. 1940 – Director of Central Intelligence under Presidents Richard M. Nixon and Gerald Ford (1973–1976)
- Allen Dulles A.B. 1914, M.A. 1916 – Director of Central Intelligence under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, later fired by President John F. Kennedy (1953–1961)
- A.B."Buzzy" Krongard A.B. 1958 – executive director of the CIA under President George W. Bush (2001–2004)
Military Leaders
- Alexander Bonnyman, Jr., 1932 – World War II Medal of Honor recipient killed in the Battle of Tarawa
- James Caldwell, A.B. 1759 American Revolutionary soldier and chaplain
- Glen Edwards, M.S. 1947 – U.S. Air Force test pilot
- Henry "Lighthorse Harry" Lee A.B. 1773 – American Revolutionary cavalry officer, father of Robert E. Lee
- Gordon Johnston, A.B. 1896 -Medal of Honor recipient, Philippine–American War
- David Petraeus, M.P.A. 1985 Ph.D. 1987 – Current commander of International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and United States Forces Afghanistan (USFOR-A).
- Elliott White Springs, A.B. 1917 – World War I flying ace and memoirist.
- Tamon Yamaguchi, 1921–1923, Japanese Admiral killed at the Battle of Midway.
- Nathaniel Scudder an American physician and patriot leader during the Revolutionary War.
- James Millikin Bevans – U.S. Air Force Major General
Other
- Nicholas Biddle A.B. 1801 – American financier who served as President of the Second Bank of the United States
- James H. Billington A.B. 1950 – Librarian of Congress, former professor of history at Harvard and Princeton.
- Matthew Boxer – the 1st New Jersey State Comptroller.[21]
- Rudi Brewster A.B. 1954 - Federal District Court Judge
- Ken Buck A.B. 1981 - Republican nominee for U.S. Senate in Colorado, 2010
- Richard Funkhouser – U.S. Ambassador to Gabon
- Charles Garside A.B. 1920 – New York City municipal judge, active in New York State Government
- Katherine Jackson A.B. 2003 – distinguished sociology scholar and current accountant
- Ernest Lester Jones A.B. 1898 – head of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey from 1914 until his death in 1929.[22]
- George F. Kennan A.B. 1925 – Cold War diplomat, architect of "containment" strategy.
- W. Thacher Longstreth A.B. 1941– Philadelphia City Councilman
- Donold Lourie A.B. 1922 – Under Secretary of State for Administration for President Dwight D. Eisenhower
- Robert Mueller 1966 – 18th Director of the F.B.I.
- Ralph Nader A.B. 1955 – Green Party presidential candidate, political activist
- Michelle Robinson Obama 1985 – First Lady (Wife of President Barack Obama)
- Paul Offner, Masters/PH.D 1970 – Wisconsin State Legislature and educator
- Richard Perle M.A. 1967 – former United States Assistant Secretary of Defense
- Richard Riordan A.B. 1952 – mayor of Los Angeles, 1993–2001
- Anthony Romero A.B. 1987 – Executive Director of the ACLU
- Mike Signer 1995 – Candidate for Virginia lieutenant governor and former advisor to Mark Warner and Tom Perriello
- Anne-Marie Slaughter A.B. 1980 – professor of politics and international affairs, dean of the Woodrow Wilson School, president of the American Society of International Law
- Ronald I. Spiers M.A. 1950 – retired United States Ambassador to the Bahamas and diplomat
- Norman Thomas A.B. 1905 – American socialist, pacifist and six-time presidential candidate
- James Yates A.B. 1967 – General counsel to the Governor of New York David Paterson, former Justice of the New York State Supreme Court
Academia
- Mike Archer, BA Geology/Biology 1967 – former director of the Australian Museum[23]
- Walden Bello – professor at UC Berkeley; executive director of Focus on the Global South; member of the Philippine House of Representatives and; 2003 laureate of Right Livelihood Award.
- Gregory Berns – Emory University neuroscientist
- Alan Brinkley A.B. 1971 – historian, Allan Nevins Professor of History at Columbia University, current Provost of Columbia University
- Patrick Chovanec A.B. 1993 – business professor at Tsinghua University
- James Creese 1918 – Former president of Drexel University[24]
- R. F. Patrick Cronin A.B. 2000 – cardiologist, professor, healthcare consultant, Dean of the McGill University Faculty of Medicine (1972–1977)
- Dennis Crouch, B.S.E. 1997 – Associate professor at the University of Missouri School of Law; author of the Patently-O blog on United States patent law
- Loring Danforth Ph.D. 1977 – anthropologist at Bates College.
- Robert Hazard Edwards – former president of Bowdoin College
- Robert D. English M.P.A and Ph.D. (1995) – Assistant Professor of International Relations at the University of Southern California
- Stephen C. Ferruolo Ph.D. and J.D. (Stanford, 1990) – author and Dean of University of San Diego School of Law (as of August 1, 2011)[25]
- Evan Flatow, Professor and Chair of Orthopaedics at the Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City
- Hal Foster A.B. 1977 – Art Critic, Townsend Martin, Class of 1917, Professor of Art and Archaeology at Princeton University
- John George Kemeny A.B. 1947, Ph.D. 1949 – Mathematician and 13th President of Dartmouth College. Co-developer of the BASIC programming language.
- Livingston Farrand A.B. 1888 – former president of Cornell University
- Robert Goheen A.B. 1940, M.A. 1947, Ph.D. 1948 – former president of Princeton, former U.S. Ambassador to India
- Noel Frederick Hall A.M. 1926 – economist, Professor at University College London, co-founder of Henley Business School, Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford
- Jane Harrison [disambiguation needed] Ph.D. 1972 – Assn. Provost, University of Kentucky
- Richard Harrison [disambiguation needed] Ph.D. 1971 – Former Dean of Faculty and Vice President, Lawrence University
- David S. Hibbard M.A. 1896 – Founder and First President of Silliman University, the first American private school in the Philippines[26]
- Sam Higginbottom – missionary and founder of Allahabad Agricultural Institute
- Carl Hovde Ph.D. 1955 – professor and Dean during the Columbia University protests of 1968.[27]
- Elena Kagan A.B. 1981 – dean of Harvard Law School, listed above under Supreme Court Justices
- Alan Kreider – formerly Director, Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture, University of Oxford
- Saul Kripke – professor emeritus of Philosophy at Princeton University
- Stephen G. Kurtz – historian, principal of Phillips Exeter Academy (1974–1987)
- William J. Lennox, Jr. M.A., Ph.D. – 56th Superintendent, United States Military Academy
- Alan Lightman A.B. 1970 – physicist and novelist, professor at MIT
- Gregory Mankiw A.B. 1980 – economist, professor at Harvard University
- James Manning A.B. 1762 – Co-founder of the College of Rhode Island (now Brown University) and served as its first president from 1765 to 1791; Rhode Island's delegate to the Continental Congress in 1786.
- Thomas H. Maren A.B. 1938 – inventor of the drug Trusopt
- Juan Marichal Ph.D. 1949 – Spanish historian and Harvard University professor[28]
- Lorna Marsden Ph.D. 1972 – President and Vice-Chancellor of York University, former senator of Canada
- John Forbes Nash Ph.D. 1950 – Mathematician and Nobel Prize winner in economics 1994
- Alexander Nehamas Ph.D. 1971 – Philosopher, Edmund N. Carpenter II Class of 1943 Professor in the Humanities at Princeton University
- Joseph Nye A.B. 1958 – former dean, current University Distinguished Service Professor at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University
- Richard Pildes A.B. 1979 – Professor of Constitutional and Election Law, NYU School of Law
- Albert J. Raboteau – Henry W. Putnam Professor of Religion, Princeton University, former Dean of the Graduate School
- John Rawls A.B. 1943, Ph.D. 1950 – American political philosopher
- W. Taylor Reveley III A.B. 1965 (Phi Beta Kappa) – President, College of William and Mary, former dean and law professor at William and Mary Law School
- Richard Revesz B.S.E. 1979 – Dean of NYU School of Law
- Avital Ronell Ph.D 1979 – Philosopher, Deconstructionist and feminist writer, who studied with Jacques Derrida, Professor in Comparative Literature, German at New York University and the European Graduate School
- Theodore Roszak – professor emeritus of history and author of the 1968 text, The Making of a Counter Culture
- Neil Rudenstine A.B. 1956 – former president of Harvard University
- George Rupp A.B. 1964 – former president of Columbia University
- Edward W. Said A.B. 1956 – literary theorist, critic, Palestinian activist, professor of literature (Columbia University)
- Ruth Simmons Hon. 1998 – first female and first black president of any Ivy League school (Brown)
- Jeffrey Stout Ph.D 1976 – Professor of Religion, Princeton University
- Ilhi Synn, Ph.D 1966 – President of Keimyung University
- Rick Trainor A.M. – Principal of King's College London
- Cornel West Ph.D 1980 – professor of religion and African American studies
- Christine Whelan A.B. 1999 – visiting assistant professor of Sociology at University of Iowa and author of Why Smart Men Marry Smart Women
- Richard Wolfenden A.B. 1956 – professor of chemistry, biochemistry and physics at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Susan L. Woodward Ph.D. 1975 – professor of Political Science at The Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
- Ben Zinn Ph.D 1965 – International soccer player and academic at Georgia Tech
- Norman G. Finkelstein Ph.D 1988 – political scientist and author
Business
- Gerhard Andlinger 1952 – founder of Andlinger & Company, Inc.
- James T. Aubrey, Jr. A.B. 1941 – president of CBS and MGM
- Jeff Bezos B.S.E. 1986 – founder of Amazon.com
- Phil Goldman B.S.E. 1986 – founder of WebTV
- Frank Biondi A.B. 1963 – former chairman of Viacom
- Marina Birch A.B. 1998 – Chicago-based event designer
- John Bogle A.B. 1951 – former founder and CEO of The Vanguard Group, which pioneered the retail mutual fund industry
- Richard Bott – B.S.E (Chemical Engineering) – current Vice Chairman of Morgan Stanley
- Youngsuk Chi- A.B. 1983– CEO of Elsevier and former University Trustee
- Charles W. Coker – A.B. 1955 – former CEO and Chairman of Sonoco Products
- Ralph Denunzio A.B. 1953 – former CEO of Kidder, Peabody & Co.
- Harvey S. Firestone, Jr. (class of 1920) – former CEO of Firestone Tire and Rubber Company
- Malcolm Forbes A.B. 1941 – businessman and publisher
- Steve Forbes A.B. 1970 – son of Malcolm Forbes, businessman and publisher of Forbes magazine
- William Clay Ford, Jr. 1979 – Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors Ford Motor Company
- Franklin Potts Glass, Jr. 1877 - newspaper publisher
- Irvine O. Hockaday, Jr. A.B. 1954 – Former President and CEO, Hallmark Cards; Former President and CEO, Kansas City Southern Industries; Member or Former Member of the Board, Kansas City Southern Industries, Ford Motor Company, Dow Jones & Co., Aquila, Inc., Sprint, Estee Lauder; Former Chairman, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
- Carl Icahn A.B. 1957 – Corporate raider
- Andrea Jung A.B. 1979 – CEO of Avon Products
- John Katzman A.B. (Architecture) 1981 – founder of The Princeton Review
- Joe Kennedy B.S.E. 1981 – CEO and President of Pandora Internet Radio
- George Kern 1947 – prominent lawyer, partner at Sullivan & Cromwell
- F. Thomson Leighton B.S.E. 1978 – cofounder of Akamai Technologies
- Peter B. Lewis A.B. 1955 – Chairman of Progressive
- Joseph Wharton Lippincott, Jr. (1914–2003), head of Philadelphia publisher J.B. Lippincott & Company
- Donold Lourie A.B. 1922 – President and CEO of Quaker Oats Company
- James S. McDonnell M.S. 1921 – founded McDonnell Aircraft Corporation in 1939
- Louis Rukeyser A.B. 1954 – former host of Wall $treet Week and business commentator
- Eric E. Schmidt B.S.E. 1976 – CEO of Google
- Daniel J. Warmenhoven B.S.E. 1972 – CEO of NetApp, Inc. (NTAP)
- Ralph Warner A.B. 1963 – pioneer in the legal self-help book industry, co-founder of Nolo Press
- John L. Weinberg A.B. 1948 – head of Goldman Sachs from 1976 to 1990
- John S. Weinberg A.B. 1979 – Vice Chairman, co-head of Investment Banking Division, Goldman Sachs
- Sidney James Weinberg, Jr. A.B. 1945 – head of Investment Banking Services at Goldman Sachs
- Meg Whitman A.B. 1977 – CEO of eBay
- Sir Gordon Wu B.S.E. (Civil Engineering) 1958 – founder and chairman of Hopewell Holdings Ltd
- William Fung B.S.E. 1970 - managing director of Li & Fung (Trading) Ltd.
Economics
- Gary Becker A.B. 1951 – Nobel laureate (Economics 1992)
- Ben Bernanke Former Professor of Economics – 14th Chairman of the Federal Reserve
- Alan Blinder A.B. 1967 – professor of economics, Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board under President Bill Clinton
- Richard Bott – A.B. in Chemical Engineering, current Vice Chairman of Morgan Stanley
- David Card - Ph.D. 1983, John Bates Clark medal winner (1995)
- David A. Dodge Ph.D. 1972 – Governor of the Bank of Canada
- James Heckman M.A. 1968, Ph.D 1971 – Nobel laureate (Economics 2000)
- Daniel Kahneman Professor Emeritus – Nobel Laureate (Economics 2002)
- Paul Krugman Professor of Economics and International Affairs – Nobel laureate (Economics 2008)
- Arthur Lewis Former Professor – Nobel laureate (Economics 1979)
- N. Gregory Mankiw A.B. 1980 – chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors under George W. Bush
- Eric Maskin Visiting Lecturer with the rank of Professor – Nobel laureate (Economics 2007)
- Rakesh Mohan Ph.D – former Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India
- John Forbes Nash Ph.D. 1950 – Mathematician and Nobel laureate (Economics 1994)
- Harvey S. Rosen Professor of Economics - Former Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers
- Harold Tafler Shapiro Ph.D 1964 – professor of economics, president of Princeton until 2001
- Michael Spence A.B. 1966 – Nobel laureate (Economics 2001)
- Paul Volcker A.B. 1949 – 12th Chairman of the Federal Reserve and current Chairman of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board
Science and technology
Astronauts
- James C. Adamson, M.S.E. 1977
- Daniel T. Barry, M.A. 1977, M.S.E. 1977, Ph.D. 1980
- Brian Binnie, M.S.E. 1978
- Pete Conrad, Jr., B.S.E. 1953, M.A. (h.c.) 1966, only Princeton graduate (as of 2010) to walk on the Moon.
- Gerald Carr, M.S.E. 1962
- Gregory T. Linteris, B.S.E. 1979, Ph.D. 1990
Engineering and science
- Hal Abelson, A.B. 1969 – directed implementation of the Logo programming language for the Apple II, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT
- David R. Boggs, B.S.E. 1972 – co-inventor (with Robert Metcalfe) of Ethernet
- Michael E. Brown, A.B. 1987 Professor of Planetary Astronomy at Caltech, known for leading the team that discovered the dwarf planet Eris, which is larger than Pluto; named to TIME Magazine's "The TIME 100: The People Who Shape Our World"[29]
- Alonzo Church, A.B. 1924, Ph.D.1927 – mathematician known for the Church–Turing thesis, developed the lambda calculus that exposed the "undecidability" problem and influenced the Lisp programming language
- Charles "Pete" Conrad, B.S.E. 1953 – astronaut, third man to walk on the moon
- Richard Felder, Ph.D. 1962 – engineering professor, coauthor of Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes
- Thomas C. Hanks 1966 – seismologist, introduced Moment magnitude scale to measure earthquakes
- Brian Kernighan Ph.D 1969, electrical engineering. Professor, computer science. Co-inventor of the awk programming language, the AMPL modeling language, and co-author of the definitive textbook The C Programming Language.
- Eric Lander A.B. 1978. Professor of biology at MIT, founding director of the Broad Institute
- Michael Stonebraker, S.B. 1965 – pioneer researcher in relational databases, founder of Ingres (acquired by Computer Associates) and Illustra Information Technologies (acquired by Informix) and initiator of PostgreSQL
- Alan Turing Ph.D 1938 – pioneering computer scientist, formulated the Turing machine and the Turing test. The Turing Award is named in his honor.
- Red Whittaker B.S. 1973 – Fredkin Professor of Robotics, Director of the Field Robotics Center, and founder of the National Robotics Engineering Consortium, all at Carnegie Mellon University; leader of the team "Tartan Racing" which won the 2007 DARPA Grand Challenge; Chief Scientist of RedZone Robotics.
- Avi Wigderson Ph.D 1983 – theoretical computer scientist at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, Nevanlinna Prize laureate 1994
- Richard Stearns Ph.D 1961 – received a Turing Award in 1993 for his contributions in the field of computational complexity theory
- John Tuzo Wilson, Ph.D 1936 – Canadian geophysicist and geologist who achieved worldwide acclaim for his contributions to the theory of plate tectonics. The John Tuzo Wilson Medal of Geophysics is named in his honor.
- Christos Papadimitriou Ph.D 1976 – pioneer in computational complexity theory and algorithms.
- Bob Kahn Ph.D 1964–2004 Turing Award winner.
Mathematics and physics
Many prominent scientists, most famously Albert Einstein, worked at the Institute for Advanced Study, a research facility in Princeton, New Jersey not formally associated with the University but closely linked to it.
- John Bardeen Ph.D 1936– Nobel laureate (Physics 1956 and 1972)
- Manjul Bhargava Ph.D 2001 – Mathematician, professor at Princeton University
- George Boolos, A.B. 1961 – Philosopher/logician, professor at MIT
- Eugenio Calabi Ph.D 1950 – Mathematician, professor at University of Pennsylvania
- Arthur Compton Ph.D 1916 – Nobel laureate (Physics 1927)
- Karl Compton Ph.D 1912 – Physicist, President of MIT
- Clinton Davisson Ph.D 1911 – Nobel laureate (Physics 1937)
- Acheson J. Duncan, A.B. 1925, A.M. 1927, Ph.D. 1936 – Statistician, winner of the Shewhart Medal
- Hugh Everett III Ph.D 1956 – Physicist, first proponent of the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics
- Charles Fefferman Ph.D 1969 – Mathematician, professor at Princeton University, winner of the (Fields Medal 1978)
- Richard Feynman Ph.D 1942 – Nobel laureate (Physics 1965)
- Michael Freedman Ph.D 1973 – Mathematician, professor at University of California at San Diego, winner of the (Fields Medal 1986)
- Phillip A. Griffiths Ph.D 1962 – Mathematician, professor at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton; and the secretary of the International Mathematical Union
- Robin Hartshorne Ph.D. 1963 – Mathematician, professor at University of California at Berkeley
- Robert Hofstadter Ph.D 1938 – Nobel laureate (Physics 1961)
- Nathan Jacobson Ph.D 1934 – Mathematician, professor at Yale University
- Brian Kernighan Ph.D. 1969 – professor of computer science, co-inventor of the C programming language, AWK, AMPL
- Serge Lang Ph.D 1951 – Mathematician, professor at Yale University
- George Lusztig Ph.D 1971 – Mathematician, professor at MIT
- Juan Maldacena Ph.D 1996 – Physicist, professor at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
- Bahram Mashhoon Ph.D 1972 – Physicist, General Relativity, University of Missouri.
- Barry Mazur Ph.D 1959 – Mathematician, professor at Harvard University
- John McCarthy Ph.D. 1951—Creator of the LISP Programming Language.
- Edwin McMillan Ph.D 1933 – Nobel laureate (Chemistry 1951)
- John Milnor Ph.D 1954 – Mathematician, professor at State University of New York at Stony Brook winner of the (Fields Medal 1962)
- John Nash, Ph.D 1950 – professor emeritus of mathematics, Nobel laureate (Economics 1994)
- Steven A. Orszag Ph.D 1966 – Applied mathematician, professor at Yale University
- Wolfgang Panofsky, A.B. 1938 – Physicist, Director emeritus of SLAC
- Gian-Carlo Rota, A.B. 1953 – Mathematician, professor at MIT
- Richard Smalley Ph.D 1974 – Nobel laureate (Chemistry 1996)
- Raymond Smullyan Ph.D 1959 – Mathematician, Logician, professor emeritus at Indiana University
- Norman Steenrod Ph.D 1936 – Mathematician, professor at Princeton University
- Terence Tao Ph.D 1996 – Mathematician, professor at UCLA winner of the (Fields Medal 2006)
- John Tate Ph.D 1950 – Mathematician, professor at Harvard University and University of Texas
- Richard Taylor Ph.D 1988 – Mathematician, involved in the completing the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem, professor at Harvard University
- Kip Thorne Ph.D 1965 – Physicist, professor at Caltech
- Stephen Thorsett Ph.D 1991 – Astrophysicist, Professor and Dean at University of California, Santa Cruz
- John Tukey Ph.D 1939 – Statistician, best known for the Cooley–Tukey FFT algorithm.
- Cumrun Vafa Ph.D 1985 – Physicist, professor at Harvard University
- Steven Weinberg Ph.D 1957 – Nobel laureate (Physics 1979)
- John Henry Constantine Whitehead Ph.D 1932 – Mathematician, professor at Oxford University
- Arthur Wightman Ph.D 1949 – Physicist, professor at Princeton University
- Frank Wilczek M.A. 1972, Ph.D. 1974 – Nobel laureate (Physics 2004)
- Edward Witten Ph.D 1976 – Physicist, professor at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, winner of the (Fields Medal 1990)
- Steven Zucker Ph.D 1974 – Mathematician, professor at Johns Hopkins University
- Gregg J. Zuckerman Ph.D 1975 – Mathematician, professor at Yale University
Literature
- John Peale Bishop A.B.1917 – American poet.
- Frederick Buechner A.B. 1947 – Pulitzer Prize-nominated author
- Nina Berberova – writer, professor of Russian literature (1963–1971)
- 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
- Timothy Ferriss A.B 1978 – author of The 4-Hour Workweek and holder of the world record in tango
- 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
- 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
- Walter Kirn A.B. (English) 1983 – novelist, literary critic, essayist
- A. Walton Litz A.B 1951 – literary critic
- John McPhee A.B. 1953 – Pulizer Prize-winning writer and Ferris Professor of Journalism since 1974
- George Frederick Morgan – poet
- Toni Morrison Winner of Nobel and Pulitzer Prizes, Novelist and Professor of Creative Writing 1989–2006
- John Norman Ph.D – sci-fi author and philosopher
- Joyce Carol Oates Professor in Creative Writing Program
- Jodi Picoult A.B. 1987 – bestselling novelist
- William H. Quillian, B.A. 1965, M.A.,Ph.D. 1975 – 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.
- Eric Schlosser A.B. 1982 – journalist, Fast Food Nation
- Charles Scribner I – founder of Scribner's publishing house, his descendants include several Princeton alumni.
- 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.[30]
- Mario Vargas Llosa Nobel prize winner, Novelist and Visiting Lecturer in Creative Writing in the Lewis Center for the Arts 2010–11
Pulitzer Prize winners
- A. Scott Berg A.B. 1971 – Pulitzer Prize winner for biography of Charles Lindbergh, winner of the National Book Award for biography of Max Perkins[31]
- Robert Caro A.B. 1957 – Two time Pulitzer Prize Winner for The Power Broker and Master of the Senate[32]
- George F. Kennan, A.B. 1925 – two time Pulitzer Prize winner for history in 1957 and biography in 1968; Cold War diplomat, architect of "containment" strategy (also listed in Government: Other).[33]
- Galway Kinnell A.B. 1948 – Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award-winning poet
- Arthur Krock A.B. 1908 – Two-time Pulitzer Prize winner while writing for The New York Times in the 1930s
- John Matteson A.B. 1983 – Pulitzer Prize winner for Biography in 2008 for Eden's Outcasts: The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father
- John McPhee A.B. 1953 – Humanities Council professor, 1999 Pulitzer Prize recipient[34]
- Charles McIlwain, A.B.1894– Pulitzer Price for history in 1924, professor at Princeton
- W. S. Merwin A.B. 1948 – Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and translator[35]
- David Remnick A.B. 1981 – Pulitzer Prize Winner for general non-fiction in 1994 for Lenin's Tomb: The Last Days of the Soviet Empire, general editor of The New Yorker magazine since 1998
- Eugene O'Neill class of 1910 (did not graduate) – Nobel laureate (Literature 1936), three-time Pulitzer Prize winner
- Ralph Barton Perry, A.B. 1896– Pulitzer Prize for biography in 1936, professor at Harvard University[36]
- Ernest Poole, A.B. 1902 – Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1918[37]
- Booth Tarkington, A.B. 1893 – two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist for The Magnificent Ambersons and Alice Adams[38]
- William W. Warner, 1943 – science writer, Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction in 1977 for Beautiful Swimmers: Watermen, Crabs, and the Chesapeake Bay
- Thornton Wilder M.A. 1925 – three-time Pulitzer Prize-winner, once for fiction and twice for drama; National Book Award winner; Our Town premiered at Princeton
- George F. Will, Ph.D. 1968– Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 1977
- Jesse Lynch Williams, A.B. 1892– Pulitzer Price for drama in 1918[39]
Sports
- Armond Hill Assistant Coach, Boston Celtics; former NBA basketball player, 1976 to 1984
- Hobey Baker A.B. 1914 – famous ice hockey player; college hockey's top individual award is named in his memory
- Moe Berg A.B. 1923 – baseball player and spy
- Arthur Bluethenthal 1913 – All American football player and decorated World War I pilot
- Bill Bradley A.B. 1965 – former basketball star, member of the Basketball Hall of Fame, former U.S. Senator
- Bob Bradley A.B. 1980, United States National Soccer Coach and MLS Cup winning coach.
- Geep Chryst, Quarterbacks coach, San Francisco 49ers
- Jon Dekker, professional football player, Pittsburgh Steelers
- Emerson Dickman – baseball coach (1949–51); his teams won two Eastern League championships and tied one, as the 1951 team reached the College World Series
- Keith Elias A.B. 1993 – former professional football player in the National Football League
- John Fisher A.B. 1983 – Owner, Oakland Athletics
- Jason Garrett – Offensive coordinator, interim head coach, Head Coach (2011 – ) for the Dallas Cowboys
- Wycliffe Grousbeck A.B. 1983 – CEO, Governor, and co-owner, Boston Celtics
- Lynn Jennings A.B. 1983 – Olympic runner, three-time world cross country champion, member of National Distance Running Hall of Fame
- Jeff Halpern A.B. 1999 – current NHL player; plays for the NHL team Los Angeles Kings
- Dick Kazmaier A.B. 1952 – Heisman Trophy winner 1952
- Zak Keasey, professional football player, San Francisco 49ers
- Donold Lourie A.B. 1922 – College Football Hall of Fame inductee
- Larry Lucchino A.B. 1967 – President and CEO of the Boston Red Sox
- Jesse Marsch A.B. 1995 – professional soccer player, winner of three MLS championships with D.C. United and the Chicago Fire.
- Tim McCann - professional football player, New York Giants
- John Messuri - former professional hockey player, Princeton Tigers all-time leading scorer.
- Rich McKay A.B. 1981 – President and General Manager, Atlanta Falcons
- Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum – Successful American-born German showjumper
- Cook Neilson A.B. 1967 – Motorcycle Racer, member American Motorcycle Association Hall of Fame
- Dennis Norman 2001 – professional football player currently playing center for the San Diego Chargers
- Ross Ohlendorf – Current MLB pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates
- George Parros – professional ice hockey player, for the 2007 Stanley Cup champion Anaheim Ducks
- Geoff Petrie A.B. 1970 – former NBA player, current President of Basketball Operations for the Sacramento Kings
- Mark Shapiro – Cleveland Indians general manager and two-time MLB Executive of the Year
- Brian Taylor former ABA and NBA basketball player, 1972 to 1982
- John Thompson III 1988 – Basketball Coach at Georgetown
- Soren Thompson 2005 – fencer, NCAA épée champion, junior olympic champion, Maccabiah Games silver medalist, Olympic fencer
- Bob Tufts, major league baseball pitcher
- Terdema Ussery – A. B. 1981 – President and CEO of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks basketball team.
- Will Venable – outfielder for the San Diego Padres
- Kevin Westgarth - current NHL player; plays for the NHL team Los Angeles Kings
- Chris Young – starting pitcher for the New York Mets
- Ben Zinn – International soccer player and academic at Georgia Tech
Journalism
- Joel Achenbach A.B. 1982, writer for The Washington Post and author of the Post's Achenblog
- R. W. Apple, Jr. A.B. 1957, writer for The New York Times[40]
- Hamilton Fish Armstrong A.B. 1914, editor of Foreign Policy
- William Attwood A.B. 1941, U.S. Ambassador and publisher of Newsday
- Kate Betts, A.B. 1986, editor-in-chief of Harper's Bazaar.
- John N. Brooks, Jr. A.B. 1942, author and staff member, The New Yorker
- Peter D. Bunzel A.B. 1949, op-ed page editor, Los Angeles Times
- Robert Caro A.B. 1957, Pulitzer Prize-winning non-fiction writer
- Lisa R. Cohen Ferris professor of journalism, Emmy-winning television producer, author
- Burton Crane 1922, The New York Times foreign correspondent and financial author
- Bosley Crowther A.B. 1928, film critic at The New York Times
- Frank Deford A.B. 1961, writer for Sports Illustrated and broadcaster on U.S. radio and television.[41]
- Marc Fisher, writer for The Washington Post
- F. Scott Fitzgerald A.B. 1917, novelist and short-story author.
- Barton Gellman A.B. 1982, editor at The Washington Post and Pulitzer Prize-winner
- Richard Just A.B 2001, managing editor, The New Republic
- Charlie Gibson A.B. 1965, journalist, former Good Morning America host, anchor of ABC World News Tonight
- Robert Hilferty A.B. 1982, writer for Bloomberg News, New York, The New York Times, Opera News, and The Village Voice[42]
- Olivier Kamanda B.S.E 2003, editor, Foreign Policy Digest
- Donald Kirk A.B. 1959, national correspondent, Chicago Tribune
- Rick Klein A.B. 1998, author of The Note (ABC News).
- Richard Kluger A.B. 1956, Pulitzer Prize-winning author, journalist and book publisher
- Doug Lederman A.B. 1984, co-founder and editor of Inside Higher Ed and former editor at The Chronicle of Higher Education
- John S. Martin A.B. 1923, managing editor, Time
- Robert McLean A.B. 1913, publisher, Philadelphia Evening Bulletin
- John B. Oakes A.B. 1934, editorial page editor, The New York Times
- Don Oberdorfer A.B. 1952, writer for The Washington Post, current professor at Johns Hopkins University
- Norimitsu Onishi A.B. 1992, reporter for The New York Times
- T.R. Reid A.B. 1966, former correspondent, The Washington Post and bestselling non-fiction author.
- Maria Ressa B.S.E. – CNN Anchor
- James Ridgeway A.B. 1959, editor and writer, New Republic and The Village Voice
- Rick Stengel A.B. 1977 – managing editor of Time
- Mark Stevens A.B. 1973, film critic for New York and co-author of De Kooning: An American Master
- John Stossel A.B. 1969, ABC News anchor/correspondent
- Annalyn Swan A.B. 1973, co-author of 2005 Pulitzer Prize-winning De Kooning: An American Master
- Robert McLean A.B. 19, publisher, Philadelphia Evening Bulletin
- John S. Martin A.B. 1923, managing editor, Time
- Katrina vanden Heuvel A.B. 1981 – editor of The Nation
- Sylvana-Soto Ward A.B 2003 – Accessories Editor for Vogue
- Christine Whelan A.B. 1999, contributor to The Wall Street Journal and others, author of Why Smart Men Marry Smart Women
- Alexander Wolff A.B. 1979 – Writer for Sports Illustrated
- Robert Sterling Yard B.A. 1883 – journalist for the New York Sun and New York Herald, editor-in-chief of The Century Magazine; later founder and first president of The Wilderness Society
Entertainment
- 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) produced or co-produced over 40 plays and musicals on Broadway and many off-Broadway and regional productions as well. The Broadway production have won over 60 Tony Awards, including 12 for best production.
- 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, played Superman in the television series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman.
- Ethan Coen A.B. 1979 – Academy Award-winning filmmaker of No Country for Old Men, O Brother, Where Art Thou?',' and Fargo, among others
- Kwanza Jones – Billboard (magazine) charting singer, songwriter and actress
- Connor Diemand-Yauman and Jonathan Schwartz – contestants on The Amazing Race 17
- David Duchovny A.B. 1982 – actor best known for his role in The X-Files. Won Golden Globe Awards for this and Californication
- José Ferrer A.B. 1933 – Academy Award and Tony Award-winning actor
- Mark Feuerstein A.B. 1993 – film and television actor
- Ruth Gerson, A.B. 1992 – singer, songwriter
- 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); nominated for the 1993 Academy Award for Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium (Scent of a Woman)
- Nicholas Hammond – actor best known for his roles in The Sound of Music and 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 (2005 film)
- Robert L. Johnson A.M. 1972 – Founded Black Entertainment Television 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 – third all-time Jeopardy! winner.
- Ellie Kemper A.B. 2002 – comedienne that plays Kelly Erin Hannon on The Office
- Joshua Logan A.B. 1931 – winner (or co-winner) of seven Tony Awards, co-winner of a Pulitzer Prize, nominated three times for the Academy Award, directed the film versions of Camelot and South Pacific
- Craig Mazin A.B. 1992 – screenwriter of Scary Movie 3 and Scary Movie 4
- Myron McCormick A.B. 1933 – actor, winner of a Tony Award in 1950
- Douglas McGrath A.B. 1980 – actor, director, and screenwriter (including Bullets Over Broadway)
- Wentworth Miller A.B. 1995 – film and television actor best known for his role as Michael Scofield on the Fox Network's series 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 – 3rd place contestant on America's Next Top Model, Cycle 15. She is currently signed to modelling agency IMG Models.
- Wayne Rogers – actor best known for his role as Trapper John McIntyre on TV series M*A*S*H
- Marc Rosen – film and television producer, best known for his work on the Harry Potter film franchise and the TV series Threshold
- Brooke Shields A.B. 1987 – model/actress, from The Blue Lagoon and the TV series Suddenly Susan and Lipstick Jungle (former member of Princeton Triangle Club)
- Brett Simon A.B. 1997 – director of 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
- Stan Allen M.Arch., dean of School of Architecture, Princeton University
- Merritt Bucholz, partner of Irish based Bucholz | McEvoy Architects, and Professor of Architecture at University of Limerick.
- Thomas S. Buechner (1936–2010), founding director of the Corning Museum of Glass and director of the Brooklyn Museum.[43]
- Michael Graves, architect, designer and Princeton professor
- Indrani Pal-Chaudhuri, A.B. (Anthropology) famed photographer, director and digital artist, star of Bravo's 2010 docu-series "Double Exposure" about her photography
- Jim Lee, A.B. (Psychology) 1986, comic book artist famous for his works on X-Men, Batman, and others, as well as one of seven founders of Image Comics
- Mark B. Mennin, A.B. 1982 - Sculptor
- Demetri Porphyrios M.Arch. 1974, Ph.D. 1980 – architect and architectural theorist
- Frank Stella, American Artist
- William Turnbull, Jr., architect and Fellow of the American Institute of Architects
- Robert Venturi A.B. 1947, M.F.A. 1950 – architect, Pritzker Prize laureate 1991
- Marion Sims Wyeth, architect of Mar-A-Lago and other mansions
- James Maitland Stewart, Hollywood actor, class of 1932 ( B.S in Architecture ) was a real Brigadier General of the USAF Reserve, and fought in the Second World War and Vietnam and not only a honorary general. When discharged, was promoted by the then President Reagan to Major General
Other
- Joseph (Lyle) Menendez left in 1988 following plagiarism charges – murderer
- James Hogue attended Princeton under the fraudulent persona of Alexi Indris Santana from 1989 to 1991
- Michelle Obama '85 – First Lady of the United States, wife of United States President Barack Obama
- Cate Edwards '04 – daughter of two time presidential candidate and 2004 Democratic Vice Presidential nominee John Edwards
- Rebecca Sealfon '05 – Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee Champion
- Zelda Harris '07 – Former child actress, best known for her starring role in the Spike Lee dramedy Crooklyn
- Josue Lajeunesse, custodian and honorary member of the class of 1998, founded project to bring clean water to Lasource, Haiti, subject of the documentary film The Philosopher Kings (film)
- Dr. Jeffrey R. Macdonald '65, subject of Joe McGinnis' best seller "Fatal Vision". Green Beret physician convicted of murdering his wife and two children at Fort Bragg.
Fictional
See also: Princeton University: In fiction
(in alphabetical order by title name)
- In the television series 24, President Charles Logan graduated from Princeton University.[44]
- Jack Donaghy, from 30 Rock, is an alumnus.
- An American Wife a roman a clef about President George W. Bush and Laura Bush byCurtis Sittenfeld, George W. Bush's stand in Charlie Blackwell was a Princeton alumnus and one section of the book describes the couple attending a Princeton Renunion in great detail.
- A Beautiful Mind, the Academy Award winning film about the famous mathematician John Forbes Nash, Jr. features a major part depicting Nash's initial days at Princeton University. Although the film is a fictionalized biography, in real life Nash did receive his doctorate from Princeton and is a Princeton professor.[45]
- In A Cinderella Story, the characters played by Hilary Duff and Chad Michael Murray will be attending Princeton at the end of the movie.[46]
- In the movie Batman Begins, it is revealed that Bruce Wayne attended Princeton University, although he chose not to continue his education there after returning home (it is unknown whether he had completed his undergraduate school education and was attending graduate school or if he was dropping out of college).[47]
- In Burn After Reading, Osbourne Cox, the lead played by John Malkovich, was a Princeton Graduate Class of 1973, and in a scene at a fictional Princeton Club, leads a fast-tempo rendition of Princeton's anthem, Old Nassau[48]
- In Commander in Chief, Kelly Ludlow, the press secretary played by Ever Carradine has graduated from Princeton.
- In Doogie Howser, M.D., the namesake is a child prodigy who graduated from Princeton at the age of 10 in 1983 and received his medical license at age 14.[49]
- In The WB Television Network show "Everwood", Amy Abbott is accepted to Princeton.[50]
- In an episode of The Flintstones entitled "Flintstone of Princestone", which originally aired on November 3, 1961, Fred briefly attends "Princestone" and becomes the star quarterback in the big football game against arch-rival, Shale. In another episode entitled "Cinderellastone", which originally aired on October 22, 1964, Fred's dream character also attended "Princestone".
- In the novel Good in Bed by Jennifer Weiner, protagonist Cannie Shapiro is a Princeton alumna.
- In Leatherheads, the character of Carter Rutherford is a star Princeton quarterback[51]
- In Mad Men, Paul Kinsey is a Princeton Graduate (class of '55), and in "My Old Kentucky Home" (Season 3, Episode 3), Kinsey's classmate Jeffrey, a drug dealer, reminisces about the Tigertones a cappella group[52]
- In Mars Attacks!, President James Dale (Jack Nicholson) is a Princeton alumnus.
- In the movie Risky Business, Tom Cruise's character gets into Princeton.
- In Salt, Angelina Jolie's character Evelyn Salt went to Princeton.
- In South Park, Mayor McDaniels.[53]
- Sondra Huxtable and her future husband Elvin Tibideaux of The Cosby Show graduated from Princeton.[54]
- In The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Princeton is Philip's alma mater. Phillip's son Carlton enrolls in Princeton by the final episode.[55]
- In The Girl Next Door, Eli is mentioned as having been accepted to Princeton
- In Her Shoes, a novel by Jennifer Weiner '91: Rose Feller is a Princeton grad. Her younger sister Maggie camps out in a Princeton library.
- In the Left Behind series, character Cameron "Buck" Williams is a Princeton grad.
- In "The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement", the character played by Anne Hathaway has graduated from Princeton.[56]
- In the novel The Reluctant Fundamentalist, the characters Changez and Erica are Princeton grads.
- In the mystery novel The Rule of Four , the protagonists are Princeton students.
- In The Simpsons, Cecil Terwilliger, the brother of Sideshow Bob, is an alumnus (Sideshow Bob refers to it as the years Cecil spent in Clown College).[57] Snake also attended, but took a year off, presumably never to return.
- In There's Something About Mary, Mary attended Princeton University.[58] So did her ex-boyfriend "Woogie" who was also holder of a scholarship from Princeton.[59]
- In the novel and movie The Talented Mr. Ripley, Dickie Greenleaf (played by Jude Law) has attended Princeton,[60] and the title character Tom Ripley pretends he is a Princeton alumnus.[61]
- Professor Richard Pierson of the Princeton Observatory was portrayed by Orson Welles in the Mercury Theatre on the Air's famous radio adaptation of The War of the Worlds, broadcast October 30, 1938.
- In The West Wing, former Deputy Communications Director Sam Seaborn (Rob Lowe) is a magna cum laude Princeton undergraduate.[62] In fact, in Season 1 it is revealed that Sam's Secret Service code name is "Princeton."
- In the semi-autobiographical novel This Side of Paradise, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, a former Princeton alumnus himself, the protagonist Amory Blaine attends Princeton.[63][64]
- In the science fiction novel Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen by H. Beam Piper, Calvin Morrison had been a theology student at Princeton, but dropped out to join the U.S. Army and fight in the Korean War. He later became an officer with the Pennsylvania State Police and was transported to another time-line.
- In the musical South Pacific, Lt. Joe Cable had attended Princeton.
- In the television series Numb3rs, the characters of Charlie Eppes and Larry Fleinhardt are Princeton Alumni. Charlie graduated at the age of 16 and Larry at the age of 19.
- In the television series Weeds, the character Megan gets accepted into Princeton.
- In Family Ties, "Young Republican" Alex P. Keaton (Michael J. Fox) spends the first two seasons of the series preparing to attend Princeton. While visiting for an on-campus interview, Mallory has an emotional crisis. Ultimately, Alex chooses to tend to her rather than complete his interview, thus destroying any possibility of attending Princeton.
- In Charles in Charge, Charles gets accepted as a graduate student in Princeton.
- In the film Across the Universe, the character Max attends Princeton, but drops out.
- Watchmen, a graphic novel created by writer Alan Moore, artist Dave Gibbons, and colorist John Higgins: Dr. Jon Osterman/Doctor Manhattan, born 1929, attended Princeton University from 1948–1958 and graduated with a Ph.D. in atomic physics.
Notable Princeton professors
Architecture
- Elizabeth Diller – architect, professor of architecture, winner of MacArthur Foundation Fellowship 1999–2004
- Kazuyo Sejima – principal of Tokyo based architecture firm SANAA
- Michael Graves – professor emeritus
- Stan Allen – Dean of the Princeton University School of Architecture and author of Points and Lines
- Sarah Whiting – assistant professor and M.Arch thesis director, also editor of Assemblage and Log and principal of WW Architecture.
- Paul Lewis (architect) – assistant professor and Director of Graduate Studies, principal of LTL Architects.
Economics and business
- Orley Ashenfelter professor of economics, winner of the Frisch Medal (1982)
- Ben Bernanke – professor of economics and public affairs, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board
- Alan Blinder – professor of economics, former Vice-Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board
- William G. Bowen – professor emeritus of economics, president of Princeton University from 1972 to 1988 and president of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation from 1988 to 2006.
- Angus Deaton – professor of economics, president of the American Economic Association
- Avinash Dixit – professor of economics, co-author of Games of Strategy, former president of the Econometric Society and 2008 president of the American Economic Association
- Gene Grossman – professor of economics
- Daniel Kahneman – professor of economics and psychology, Nobel Prize in economics (2002)
- Nobuhiro Kiyotaki – professor of economics winner of the 1997 Nakahara Prize of the Japan Economics Association and the 1999 Yrjö Jahnsson Award of the European Economic Association
- Alan Krueger – professor of economics
- Paul Krugman – professor of economics, New York Times columnist, winner of the John Bates Clark Medal, Nobel Prize in economics (2008)
- Burton Malkiel Ph.D. [1964] – professor of economics, former dean of the Yale School of Management, and author of "A Random Walk Down Wall Street"
- Eric Maskin – Professor of economics, Nobel Prize in economics (2007)
- Harvey S. Rosen – professor of economics, former chairman of Council of Economic Advisers
- Harold Tafler Shapiro – professor emeritus of economics, former president of Princeton University and of the University of Michigan
- Lars E. O. Svensson – professor of economics, deputy governor of the central bank of Sweden and one of the ten best economist in the world according to IDEAS/RePEc
Government, law, and public policy
- Charles Beitz – professor of politics
- Barbara Bodine – diplomat in residence
- Thomas Christensen – professor of international relations
- Angus Deaton – Dwight D. Eisenhower Professor of International Affairs, and Professor of Economics and International Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School and Department of Economics
- Richard Falk – Albert G. Milbank Professor of International Law and Practice, Emeritus
- Aaron Friedberg – professor of international relations
- Robert P. George – professor of jurisprudence, constitutional law scholar
- Robert Gilpin – Eisenhower Professor of Public and International Affairs, Emeritus
- Jan Gross – professor of history
- Robert Hutchings – diplomat-in-residence
- G. John Ikenberry – Albert G. Milbank Professor of Politics and International Affairs
- Daniel Kurtzer – diplomat-in-residence
- Harold James – professor of History and International Affairs
- Nannerl O. Keohane – Laurance S. Rockefeller Distinguished Visiting Professor of Public Affairs
- Robert Keohane – university professor of international relations
- Helen Milner – B.C. Forbes Professor of Politics and International Affairs
- Philip Pettit – professor of politics and philosophy
- Uwe Reinhardt – James Madison professor of political economy
- Anne-Marie Slaughter – dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
- Robert C. Tucker – IBM Professor of International Studies, Emeritus
- John Waterbury – William Stewart Tod Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Emeritus
Art, Literature, and Humanities
- Kwame Anthony Appiah – professor of philosophy
- Marco Aponte Moreno – lecturer of Spanish, 2005–06, 2007–08 – Theater actor / Linguist
- Anthony Burgess – visiting professor, 1970–71 – novelist and critic – author of The Long Day Wanes, A Clockwork Orange and Earthly Powers
- Peter Brown – Professor of History
- Americo Castro – Professor of Hispanic literature
- Lisa R. Cohen – Ferris professor of Journalism, Emmy award-winning TV news magazine producer, author
- Robert Darnton – Emeritus professor of history
- Donald Davidson – professor of philosophy
- Jeffrey Eugenides – novelist, professor of creative writing and Pulitzer Prize Winner
- Robert Fagles – Emeritus professor of English and Comparative literature
- John V. Fleming – Emeritus professor of English and Comparative Literature
- Hal Foster – art critic professor in the department of art and archeology
- Emmet Gowin – professor of photography
- Anthony Grafton – professor of history
- Gilbert Harman – professor of philosophy, winner of the Jean Nicod Prize
- William Howarth – professor of English and environmental studies
- Yusef Komunyakaa – poet, professor in the Creative Writing Program (Pulitzer Prize for Poetry)
- Frank Cameron Jackson – professor of philosophy
- Walter Kaufmann – professor of philosophy
- Saul Kripke – professor of philosophy, winner of the 2001 Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy
- Victor Lange – professor of modern languages
- Paul Lansky – composer, professor of music
- Denis Feeney – professor of classics
- Chang-Rae Lee – professor of writing, New York Times Bestselling Author
- David K. Lewis – professor of philosophy
- Perry Link – professor of East Asian Studies
- Toni Morrison – professor in the Creative Writing Program, Nobel laureate (Literature 1993)
- Paul Muldoon – professor of poetry, Pulitzer Prize winner
- Haruki Murakami – visiting professor, literature, creative writing
- Alexander Nehamas – professor of philosophy
- Joyce Carol Oates – Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of the Humanities, professor in the Creative Writing Program – author, Pulitzer Prize nominee
- Elaine Pagels – professor of religion
- Ricardo Piglia – professor of Latin-American literature
- Thomas J. Preston, Jr. – professor of archeology
- Richard Rorty – professor of philosophy
- Carl Emil Schorske – Emeritus professor of history, winner of the 1981 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction for his book Fin-de-Siècle Vienna: Politics and Culture (1980).
- Peter Singer – professor of human values, expert on practical ethics
- P. Adams Sitney – film historian, professor of visual arts
- Michael A. Smith – professor of philosophy
- Walter Terence Stace – professor of philosophy
- Gregory Vlastos – professor of philosophy
- C. K. Williams – professor of poetry, Pulitzer Prize winner
- Michael Wood – professor in the English department
- Cornel West – professor of philosophy
Math and science
- John H. Conway – professor of mathematics, best known for the Game of Life
- Ingrid Daubechies – professor of mathematics after whom the Daubechies wavelet is named
- Henry Eyring – professor of chemistry, famous for the Eyring equation and recipient of the National Medal of Science in 1966.
- Charles Fefferman – professor of mathematics, Fields Medalist
- James E. Gunn – Eugene Higgins Professor of Astronomy, leader of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and predicted the eponymous Gunn–Peterson trough
- Karl Jöreskog – professor of statistics
- Joseph Henry – professor of natural philosophy
- Daniel Kahneman – Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Economics
- Nicholas Katz – professor of mathematics
- Brian Kernighan – coauthor of AWK and AMPL, author of The C Programming Language.
- Elon Lindenstrauss – professor of mathematics, Fields Medalist
- George A. Miller – professor emeritus of psychology, author of the article The Magical Number Seven
- Gananath Obeyesekere – professor of Anthropology
- Andrei Okounkov – professor of mathematics, Fields Medalist
- Gerard K. O'Neill – professor of physics, leader in field of space colonization, author of The High Frontier: Human Colonies in Space
- Nai Phuan Ong – professor of physics
- Jeremiah Ostriker – professor of astrophysics and recipient of the National Medal of Science
- Philip James Edwin Peebles – professor emeritus of physics, one of the first to predict the nature of the cosmic microwave background radiation
- Peter Sarnak – professor of mathematics
- Paul Seymour – professor of mathematics
- Yigong Shi – professor of molecular biology, leader in the field of apoptosis
- Osamu Shimomura – researcher honored with the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on GFP
- Goro Shimura – professor emeritus of mathematics, fundamental contributions to number theory and automorphic forms, especially in Langlands program
- Yakov G. Sinai – professor of mathematics
- Elias M. Stein – professor of mathematics, recipient of the Steele Prize (1984 and 2002), the Schock Prize in Mathematics (1993), the Wolf Prize in Mathematics (1999), the National Medal of Science (2002), and Stefan Bergman Prize (2005).
- Robert Tarjan – professor of computer science, inventor of many algorithms related to graph theory, winner of the 1986 Turing Award, recipient of the 1982 Nevanlinna Prize
- Joseph Hooton Taylor – professor of physics, 1993 Nobel Prize in Physics
- Daniel C. Tsui – professor of applied physics and electrical engineering, 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics
- John Archibald Wheeler – professor emeritus of physics, later collaborator of Albert Einstein, advisor to Richard Feynman and Kip Thorne
- Eric Wieschaus – professor of molecular biology, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
- Andrew Wiles – professor of mathematics, proved Fermat's Last Theorem, winner of the Schock Prize (1995), Royal Medal (1996), Cole Prize (1996), Wolf Prize (1996), King Faisal Prize (1998) and Shaw Prize (2005).
- Andrew Yao – computer scientist, winner of the 2000 Turing award
Engineering
- Robert Calderbank – professor of electrical engineering, mathematics, and applied mathematics
- Claire F. Gmachl – professor of Electrical Engineering
- Brian Kernighan – professor of computer science and coauthor of The C Programming Language
- Robert Sedgewick – professor of computer science
- Alexander Smits – professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, leading expert on turbulence and fluid dynamics
- Howard Stone – professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and chemical engineering, leading expert in fluid dynamics
References
- ^ Biographical excerpt from "A Princeton Companion" by Alexander Leitch
- ^ Biography from the Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress
- ^ Official biography from the government of Jordan
- ^ Biographical entry from The Biography Channel
- ^ Biographical entry at CNN's "Cold War Experience"
- ^ Biographical entry at the Nobel Prize organization
- ^ Robert Stockton Green, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed August 29, 2007.
- ^ a b Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress
- ^ George Houston Brown, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed September 1, 2007.
- ^ Charles Browne, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed September 1, 2007.
- ^ Samuel Fowler, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed September 4, 2007.
- ^ Henry Schenck Harris, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed September 3, 2007.
- ^ Charles Robert Howell, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed September 10, 2007.
- ^ Ira Wells Wood, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed September 6, 2007.
- ^ Benjamin H. Brewster (1882–1885): Attorney General, Miller Center of Public Affairs. Accessed November 27, 2007.
- ^ Stuart Rabner: State Attorney General, State of New Jersey. Accessed September 20, 2007. "Rabner grew up in Passaic and was graduated summa cum laude in 1982 from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University."
- ^ Biographical Directory of Federal Judges
- ^ Biography entry from the United States Treasury website
- ^ Biographical entry from the United States Treasury website
- ^ Biographical entry from American National Biography Online (login required).
- ^ "Matthew Boxer". State of New Jersey. Retrieved 2008-12-18.
- ^ Colonel E. Lester Jones, NOAA. Accessed December 20, 2007. "Later he matriculated to Princeton University in the Class 1898, from which institution he received the Bachelor of Arts Degree."
- ^ "Professor Mike Archer – Profile". UNSW Faculty of Science. Retrieved 2009-07-22.
- ^ Bachrach, Fablan (February 10, 1966). "Dr. James Creese Drexel President". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-04-15.
- ^ USD School of Law Press Release, June 1, 2011
- ^ Jomao-as, Regan (2003), The Foundation of God Standeth Sure:The Silliman Church Story, Silliman University Church, p.2-3
- ^ Hevesi, Dennis. "Carl F. Hovde, Former Columbia Dean, Dies at 82", The New York Times, September 10, 2009. Accessed September 11, 2009.
- ^ "Historian and Essayist Juan Marichal Dies". Latin American Herald Tribune. 2010-08-09. Retrieved 2010-08-21.
- ^ Mike Brown, Pluto's Worst Nightmare article by Michael D. Lemonick in Time, May 8, 2006
- ^ Hevesi, Dennis. "Chris Welles, Award-Winning Business Writer, Dies at 72", The New York Times, June 22, 2010. Accessed June 24, 2010.
- ^ A Pulitzer Biography, interview from the News Hour with Jim Lehrer April 23, 1999
- ^ Biography entry at the Pulitzer organization
- ^ Obituary from the Associated Press, entitled "George Kennan, celebrated historian, dies at 101", March 18, 2005
- ^ Biographical entry at the Encyclopædia Britannica
- ^ Biographical entry at the Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th edition
- ^ Biographical entry at the Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th edition
- ^ Biographical entry at the Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th edition
- ^ Biographical entry at the Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th edition
- ^ The Pulitzer Prizes for 1918 at Pulitzer organization
- ^ Epstein, Jennifer (2006-10-05). "A Man of the Times". The Daily Princetonian. Retrieved 2007-08-14.
- ^ Frank Deford: All in the Game, The Washington Post, April 23, 2006
- ^ Los Angeles Times
- ^ Grimes, William. "Thomas S. Buechner, Former Director of Brooklyn Museum, Dies at 83", The New York Times, June 17, 2010. Accessed June 19, 2010.
- ^ Profile at the official website of 24 at Fox
- ^ A Brilliant Madness companion website for the PBS American Experience historical series.
- ^ Movie review in The New York Times entitled "Shattered Pieces of a Glass Slipper: A San Fernando Valley 'Cinderella'" by Stephen Holden, July 16, 2004: "Outside school, Cinderella and the Prince have already fallen in cyber-love. The sweethearts spend hours billing and cooing via instant messages on the Internet, where Samantha goes by the name of Princeton Girl but refuses to divulge her true identity. Princeton, you see, is the movie's equivalent of Happily Ever After."
- ^ Movie review in Rolling Stone magazine by Peter Travers:"Bruce later dumps Princeton and his virginal Rachel (Katie Holmes – OK, Tom Cruise, start raving) and heads for the Himalayas to toughen up".
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0887883/
- ^ Allmovie by Hal Erickson at The New York Times
- ^ Everwood official website synopsis, Episode "Acceptance" (Season 3, Episode 64)
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0379865/
- ^ [1]
- ^ South Park episode "Volcano" (Season 1, Episode 2), Daniels says: "Don't you think I know that? How dare you insult my intellect, I went to Princeton for God's sake! You get out of my office!"
- ^ Entry at TV Land
- ^ The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air episode "I, done", part 2 (series finale) Season 6, Episode Number 148
- ^ Movie review in Entertainment Weekly by Scott Brown, posted August 11, 2004: "In Princess Diaries 2: A Royal Engagement Mia, having graduated Princeton in poli sci, is now off to rule Euro Disney, er, Genovia."
- ^ 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."
- ^ 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."
- ^ 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."
- ^ In the movie, Herbert Greenleaf says: "I see you were at Princeton. Then you'll most likely know our son, Dick. Dickie Greenleaf".
- ^ Ripley meets Dickie, and says "It's Tom. Tom Ripley. We were at Princeton together."
- ^ 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."
- ^ 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."
- ^ From the book, "Amory had decided definitely on Princeton, even though he would be the only boy entering that year from St. Regis'."