This list of Princeton University people include notable alumni (graduates and attendees) or faculty members (professors of various ranks, researchers, and visiting lecturers or professors) affiliated with Princeton University. People who have given public lectures, talks or non-curricular seminars; studied as non-degree students; received honorary degrees; or served as administrative staff at the university are excluded from the list. Summer school attendees and visitors are generally excluded from the list, since summer terms are not part of formal academic years.
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:
- B indicates a bachelor's degree
- Att indicates that the person attended the undergraduate program but may not have graduated
- AM indicates a Master of Arts degree
- MPP indicates a Master of Public Policy degree awarded by the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs
- MPA indicates a Master in Public Affairs degree awarded by the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs
- MCF indicates completion of the Mid-Career Fellowship, a discontinued non-degree program of the Woodrow Wilson School[1]
- MSE indicates a Master of Science in Engineering degree awarded by the School of Engineering and Applied Science
- PhD indicates a Ph.D. degree
- GS indicates that the person was a graduate student but may not have received a degree
- F indicates a faculty member, followed by years denoting the time of service on the faculty
- T indicates a Trustee of Princeton University, followed by years denoting the time of service
- Pres indicates a President of Princeton University, followed by years denoting the time of service
Politics and government
editRoyalty
editMilitary
edit- James Millikin Bevans – U.S. Air Force Major General
- Alexander Bonnyman Jr., 1932 – World War II Medal of Honor recipient killed in the Battle of Tarawa
- William L. Brandon, 1819 – Confederate Army general[2]
- James Caldwell, A.B. 1759 – American Revolutionary soldier and chaplain
- Christopher G. Cavoli, A.B. 1987 – commander, United States European Command
- James Robb Church, 1888 – Medal of Honor recipient, Spanish–American War
- Kenneth F. Cramer, B.Litt. 1916, M.A. 1917 – United States Army Major General and Chief of the National Guard Bureau
- William J. Crowe (1925–2007), Ph.D. 1965 – U.S. Navy Admiral, Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff and American Ambassador to Great Britain
- Philip Dalton (1903–1941) M.S. 1925 – American Naval aviator and engineer, creator of E6B analog flight computer
- Glen Edwards, M.S. 1947 – U.S. Air Force test pilot
- Joseph C. Fegan Jr., B.A. 1943 – United States Marine Corps Lieutenant general; World War II, Korea and Vietnam
- Andrew Goodpaster, A.M. 1949, M.S.E. 1949, Ph.D. 1950 – Supreme Allied Commander, Europe for NATO
- 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
- Fumitaka Konoe - son of Japanese Prime Minister Fumimaro Konoe and lieutenant in the Imperial Japanese Army in World War II
- Mark A. Milley, A.B. 1980 – U.S. Army General, 20th Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- David Petraeus, M.P.A. 1985 Ph.D. 1987 – former commander of International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and United States Forces Afghanistan (USFOR-A), USCENTCOM, and Multi-National Force – Iraq; former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency
- Nathaniel Scudder – physician and patriot leader during the Revolutionary War
- Blake Wayne Van Leer, M.S. 1959 – commander and captain in the U.S. Navy. Lead SeaBee program and lead the nuclear research and power unit at McMurdo Station during Operation Deep Freeze.
- Elliott White Springs, A.B. 1917 – World War I flying ace and memoirist
- Tamon Yamaguchi, 1921–1923 – Japanese Admiral
Academia
editThis section includes lists of notable academics who graduated from Princeton and notable Princeton faculty members.
Alumni and students
edit- Nicholas Allard (born 1952), dean and president of Brooklyn Law School
- E. Spencer Miller (1836), dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School
- Mark Steiner (1942–2020), professor of philosophy of mathematics and physics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Faculty and staff
editAlbert 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
edit- Stan Allen – former dean of the Princeton University School of Architecture; author of Points and Lines
- Elizabeth Diller – architect, professor of architecture, winner of MacArthur Foundation Fellowship 1999–2004
- Michael Graves – professor emeritus
- Vincent Lee – architect, writer, mountaineer, and member of the Institute of Andean Studies
- Paul Lewis – professor; associate dean; principal of LTL Architects
- Sergey Padyukov – architect, engineer and human rights activist
- Monica Ponce de Leon – dean of the School of Architecture; Winner National Design Award
- Kazuyo Sejima – principal of Tokyo-based architecture firm SANAA
- Sarah Whiting – assistant professor and M.Arch thesis director; editor of Assemblage and Log; principal of WW Architecture
Economics and business
edit- 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
- William G. Bowen – professor emeritus of economics; president of Princeton University, 1972–1988; president of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, 1988–2006
- Angus Deaton – professor of economics; president of the American Economic Association; Nobel Prize in economics (2015)
- Avinash Dixit – professor of economics; co-author of Games of Strategy; former president of the Econometric Society; 2008 president of the American Economic Association
- Aly Kassam−Remtulla – anthropologist, Vice Provost
- 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)
- Arthur Lewis – former professor; Nobel laureate (Economics 1979)
- Burton Malkiel Ph.D. [1964] – professor of economics; former dean of the Yale School of Management; author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street
- Eric Maskin – professor of economics; Nobel Prize in economics (2007)
- Albert Rees – former Provost, professor of economics and advisor to President Gerald Ford[199]
- 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
- Christopher Sims – professor of economics; Nobel Prize in economics (2011)
- Lars E. O. Svensson – professor of economics; deputy governor of the central bank of Sweden; one of the ten best economists in the world according to IDEAS/RePEc
Government, law, and public policy
edit- Samuel Alito – associate justice, U.S. Supreme Court
- Bruce Alger – former U.S. Representative for Texas's 5th congressional district, based in Dallas
- Charles Beitz – professor of politics
- Jeremy Ben-Ami – executive director of J Street and JStreetPac
- Cyril Edwin Black – professor of history and international affairs 1939–1986, director of the Center of International Studies 1968–1985
- Willie Blount – Governor of Tennessee from 1809 to 1815[200]
- Barbara Bodine – diplomat in residence
- Ken Buck – representative, Eastern Colorado, U.S. House of Representatives
- Thomas J. Christensen – William P. Boswell Professor of World Politics of Peace
- John E. Colhoun – U.S. Senator and lawyer from South Carolina
- Ted Cruz – U.S. Senator for Texas, 2013–present; candidate for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination
- Angus Deaton – Dwight D. Eisenhower Professor of International Affairs, and professor of economics and international affairs, Woodrow Wilson School and department of economics
- Alexandra Davis DiPentima, chief judge of the Connecticut Appellate Court
- Robert Ehrlich – governor, Maryland, 2003–2007
- Richard Falk – Albert G. Milbank Professor of International Law and Practice, emeritus
- Aaron Friedberg – professor of international relations
- Edgar S. Furniss Jr. – professor of political science
- Robert P. George – professor of jurisprudence, constitutional law scholar
- Robert Gilpin – Eisenhower Professor of Public and International Affairs, emeritus
- Bob Giuffra – partner, Sullivan & Cromwell
- Jan Gross – professor of history
- Thad Hutcheson (Class of 1937) – lawyer and Republican politician from Houston, Texas
- Robert Hutchings – diplomat-in-residence
- G. John Ikenberry – Albert G. Milbank Professor of Politics and International Affairs
- Harold James – professor of History and International Affairs
- Elena Kagan, associate justice, U.S. Supreme Court
- Thomas Kean 48th governor of New Jersey and chairman of 9/11 Commission
- Nannerl O. Keohane – Laurance S. Rockefeller Distinguished Visiting professor of Public Affairs
- Robert Keohane – university professor of international relations
- George Kern, 1947 – lawyer, partner at Sullivan & Cromwell
- Daniel Kurtzer – diplomat-in-residence
- Ira Brad Matetsky, A.B. 1984 – business litigation and real estate lawyer and prominent Wikipedian
- Nolan McCarty – Susan Dod Brown Professor of Politics and Public Affairs
- Helen Milner – B.C. Forbes Professor of Politics and International Affairs
- Hassan Ali Mire – first Minister of Education of the Somali Democratic Republic
- Robert Morrow (Class of 1987) – former Republican county chairman in Travis County, Texas
- Philip Pettit – professor of politics and philosophy
- Jay Powell – 16th chair of the Federal Reserve
- Uwe Reinhardt – James Madison professor of political economy
- Paul Sarbanes – former US Senator from Maryland
- Stephen Schulhofer (born 1942) – professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and NYU Law School
- Reed Shuldiner – Alvin L. Snowiss Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
- Anne-Marie Slaughter – dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
- Sonia Sotomayor, associate justice, U.S. Supreme Court
- John Thomas Steen Jr. – lawyer in San Antonio and currently the 108th Secretary of State of Texas[201]
- Isaac Tichenor, 1775 – Governor of Vermont, U.S. Senator[202]
- Robert C. Tucker – IBM Professor of International Studies, emeritus
- John Waterbury – William Stewart Tod Professor of Politics and International Affairs, emeritus
- Joel Westheimer – professor of citizenship education at the University of Ottawa
- Thomas Woodrow Wilson, A.B. 1879 – author of Congressional Government 1885; president of Princeton University, 1902–10; Governor of New Jersey, 1911–13; 28th president of the US, 1913–21; recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, 1919, for promoting the establishment of the League of Nations
- Sheldon Wolin – professor of politics
Art, literature, and humanities
edit- Kwame Anthony Appiah – professor of philosophy
- Edward J. Balleisen (BA 1987) – professor of history at Duke University[203]
- Peter Brown – professor of history
- Anthony Burgess – visiting professor, 1970–71; novelist and critic; author of The Long Day Wanes, A Clockwork Orange and Earthly Powers
- Américo 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
- Jeff Dolven, professor of English at Princeton University.[204]
- Selden Edwards – best-selling novelist, headmaster, teacher
- Jeffrey Eugenides – novelist, professor of creative writing and Pulitzer Prize Winner
- Robert Fagles – emeritus professor of English and comparative literature
- Denis Feeney – professor of classics
- John V. Fleming – emeritus professor of English and comparative literature
- Hal Foster – art critic professor in the department of art and archeology
- Arthur Frothingham – professor of Art and Archaeology
- Emmet Gowin – professor of photography
- Anthony Grafton – professor of history
- Gilbert Harman – professor of philosophy, winner of the Jean Nicod Prize
- Winnie Holzman – dramatist, screenwriter, and poet
- William Howarth – professor of English and environmental studies
- Frank Cameron Jackson – professor of philosophy
- Walter Kaufmann – professor of philosophy
- Yusef Komunyakaa – poet, professor in the Creative Writing Program (Pulitzer Prize for Poetry)
- Saul Kripke – professor emeritus of Philosophy at Princeton University; winner of the 2001 Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy
- Mirjam Kuenkler – assistant professor of Near Eastern Studies
- Victor Lange – professor of modern languages
- Paul Lansky – composer, professor of music
- 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
- Paul Needham – senior librarian at the Scheide Library
- Alexander Nehamas – professor of philosophy
- Philip Nord – professor of history
- 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
- Francis Landey Patton – professor of theology; president of the university, 1888–1902
- Ricardo Piglia – professor of Latin-American literature
- Thomas J. Preston Jr. – professor of archeology
- Albert J. Raboteau – Henry W. Putnam Professor of Religion, Princeton University, former dean of the graduate school
- Noliwe Rooks – associate director of the African-American program at Princeton University, author[205]
- Richard Rorty – professor of philosophy
- Carl Emil Schorske – emeritus professor of history, winner of the 1981 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction for his book Fin-de-Siècle Vienna: Politics and Culture (1980)
- Ruth Simmons – vice provost, 1992–95[206] – first female and first black president of any Ivy League school (Brown)
- 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
- Nigel Smith – professor of English
- 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
- Andrew Fleming West – Giger Professor of Latin, 1883–1928; dean of the graduate school, 1900–1928
- Cornel West – professor of religion and Africa American studies
- C. K. Williams – professor of poetry, Pulitzer Prize winner
- Michael Wood – professor in the English department
Math and science
edit- Forman S. Acton – professor of computer science
- Philip Warren Anderson – Joseph Henry Professor of Physics and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics
- Manjul Bhargava – Brandon Fradd, Class of 1983, professor of mathematics, 2014 Fields Medalist
- Shane Campbell-Staton, professor of biology, principal investigator, Campbell-Staton Group
- John H. Conway – professor of mathematics, best known for the Game of Life
- Ingrid Daubechies – professor of mathematics; namesake of Daubechies wavelet
- Henry Eyring – professor of chemistry, known for the Eyring equation; recipient of the National Medal of Science in 1966
- Charles Fefferman – professor of mathematics, Fields Medalist
- Val Fitch – professor emeritus of physics, Nobel laureate
- J. Richard Gott – professor of astrophysics, winner of the President's Award for Distinguished Teaching
- James E. Gunn – Eugene Higgins Professor of Astronomy, leader of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and predicted the eponymous Gunn–Peterson trough
- Joseph Henry – professor of natural philosophy
- Thomas H. Jordan – former professor of earth sciences; current director of the Southern California Earthquake Center
- Mustapha Ishak Boushaki – professor of physics
- Karl Jöreskog – professor of statistics
- Celeste Rohlfing – Deputy Assistant Director at the National Science Foundation and Chief Operating Officer at the American Association for the Advancement of Science
- Daniel Kahneman – Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Economics
- Nicholas Katz – professor of mathematics
- Brian Kernighan – co-author of AWK and AMPL, author of The C Programming Language
- Elon Lindenstrauss – professor of mathematics, Fields Medalist
- Juan Martin Maldacena – professor emeritus of physics, 2012 Fundamental Physics Prize
- Fernando Codá Marques – professor of mathematics
- George A. Miller – professor emeritus of psychology, seminal contributions in cognitive psychology and cognitive science
- 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
- 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
- Nathan Seiberg – professor emeritus of physics, 2012 Fundamental Physics Prize
- 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
- David Spergel – professor of astrophysics, leading astrophysicist
- 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)
- Paul Steinhardt – Albert Einstein professor of physics; recipient of the Dirac Medal (2002)
- 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)
- Edward Witten – professor emeritus of physics, Fields Medalist, 2012 Fundamental Physics Prize
- Andrew Yao – computer scientist, winner of the 2000 Turing award
Engineering
edit- Amir Ali Ahmadi – professor of operations research and financial engineering
- Robert Calderbank – professor of electrical engineering, mathematics, and applied mathematics
- Matias D. Cattaneo - professor of operations research and financial engineering
- Erhan Çınlar – professor of operations research and financial engineering
- Ahmed Cemal Eringen – professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, leading expert in elasticity theory, continuum mechanics, and plasticity
- Jianqing Fan – professor of operations research and financial engineering
- Jason W. Fleischer – associate professor of electrical engineering[207]
- Claire F. Gmachl – professor of electrical engineering
- Brian Kernighan – professor of computer science and co-author of The C Programming Language
- William A. Massey – professor of operations research and financial engineering
- 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
- Robert J. Vanderbei – professor of operations research and financial engineering, mathematics, astrophysics, computer science
Business
edit- Gerhard Andlinger, A.B. 1952 – founder of Andlinger & Company
- James T. Aubrey, A.B. 1941 – president of CBS and MGM
- Norman Augustine, B.S.E. 1957– former CEO of Lockheed Martin
- Ben Baldanza, M.P.A./U.R.P. 1986 – former CEO of Spirit Airlines
- Alexander Bannwart, L.L.B 1906[208]
- Jeff Bezos, B.S.E. 1986 – founder of Amazon.com
- Frank Biondi, A.B. 1966 – former chairman of Viacom
- John C. Bogle, A.B. 1951 – former founder and CEO of The Vanguard Group, which pioneered the index fund
- Charles W. Coker, A.B. 1955 – former CEO and chairman of Sonoco Products
- Archibald Crossley, B. 1950 – pollster and pioneer in the field of public opinion research
- Franklin D'Olier, A.B. 1898 – former president and chairman of Prudential Insurance Company; first National Commander of the American Legion (1919–20)
- Steve Feinberg, A.B. 1982 – billionaire financier and a top economic adviser to President Donald Trump
- David Siegel (computer scientist), B.S.E. 1983 – co-founder and co-chairman of Two Sigma
- George M. Ferris Jr. – investment banker and philanthropist
- Joseph Fichera, B. 1976 – founder and CEO of Saber Partners; auction rate securities expert
- 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
- Thomas F. Frist, III, 1991 – investor
- William Fung, B.S.E. 1970 – managing director of Li & Fung (Trading) Ltd.
- Franklin Potts Glass Jr., 1877 – newspaper publisher
- Phil Goldman, B.S.E. 1986 – founder of WebTV
- Bob Hugin, A.B. 1976- former chairman of Celgene, and Republican nominee for New Jersey 2018 senate race.
- Jaquelin H. Hume, B. 1928 – founder of Basic American Foods, conservative philanthropist
- Nathan Hubbard, B.A. – business and music executive, former CEO of Ticketmaster
- 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
- F. Thomson Leighton, B.S.E. 1978 – cofounder of Akamai Technologies
- Arthur D. Levinson, Ph.D. 1977 – chairman of Apple Inc. (2011–present); chairman of Genentech (1999–2014), CEO Calico
- Peter B. Lewis, A.B. 1955 – chairman of Progressive
- Joseph Wharton Lippincott Jr. – head of Philadelphia publisher J. B. Lippincott & Co.
- Donold Lourie, A.B. 1922 – president and CEO of Quaker Oats Company
- Aaron Marcus, B.A. 1965 – founded Aaron Marcus and Associates, Inc. in 1982
- Ginna Marston, B.A. 1980 – public service advertising[209][210]
- James S. McDonnell, M.S. 1921 – founded McDonnell Aircraft Corporation in 1939
- Nick Morgan, A.B. English literature 1976 – speaking coach and author[211]: 229
- Robert S. Murley, B.A. 1972 – chairman of the Investment Banking of Credit Suisse Securities and chairman of the Educational Testing Service (ETS).[212]
- Ellen Pao – CEO of Reddit
- Sandi Peterson, M.P.A. – worldwide chairman, Johnson & Johnson
- Louis Rukeyser, A.B. 1954 – former host of Wall $treet Week and business commentator
- Eric Schmidt, B.S.E. 1976 – former CEO of Google; 136th wealthiest person in the world in 2011
- Jeffery A. Smisek, A.B. Economics 1976 – CEO of United Continental Holdings
- Tad Smith – CEO, Sotheby's[213]
- Jon Steinberg, B.A. 1999 – president and COO of BuzzFeed
- Rawleigh Warner Jr., A.B. 1944 – former president, CEO and chairman of Mobil
- John Weinberg, A.B. 1948 – head of Goldman Sachs from 1976 to 1990
- Meg Whitman, A.B. 1977 – CEO of eBay and Hewlett-Packard
- Sir Gordon Wu, B.S.E. Civil Engineering 1958 – founder and chairman of Hopewell Holdings Ltd
- Stockton Rush, BS 1984 - CEO of OceanGate
Science and technology
editHere are listed alumni who made notable contributions to science and technology outside academia.
Astronauts
edit- 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. 1966, only Princeton graduate to walk on the Moon.
- Gerald Carr, M.S.E. 1962
- Gregory T. Linteris, B.S.E. 1979, Ph.D. 1990
Biology
edit- Emily Blumberg, A.B. 1977 – infectious disease physician
- Gerhard Fankhauser (1901–1981) embryologist, professor from 1931 to 1969.[214]
- Donna M. Fernandes M.Sc. 1984, Ph.D. 1988, president and CEO Buffalo Zoo 2000 – 2017.
Engineering and other natural sciences
edit- Sridhar Vembu, Ph.D. 1994 - founder and CEO of zoho corporation
- 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
- Yitzhak Apeloig (born 1944) – Israeli computational chemistry professor and president of the Technion
- Daniel Barringer, A.B. 1879 – geologist
- David R. Boggs, B.S.E. 1972 – co-inventor (with Robert Metcalfe) of Ethernet
- Eugene Lent Church, Ph.D., A.B. 1946 – nuclear and theoretical physicist and father of the Church–Weneser effect
- Henry Crew, A.B. 1882 – physicist; president of the American Physical Society in 1909
- Thomas C. Hanks, 1966 – seismologist, introduced Moment magnitude scale to measure earthquakes
- John D. Hunter, A.B. 1990 – neurobiology[215]
- Ernest Lester Jones, A.B. 1898 – head of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey from 1914 until his death in 1929[216]
- Susan Landau, A.B. 1976 – mathematician and cybersecurity policy expert
- Yueh-Lin Loo, Ph.D. 2001 – chemical engineer
- William C. Martin, Ph.D. 1956 – atomic spectroscopist
- Andreas Mandelis, Ph.D. 1980 – expert on photonics
- Wilder Penfield, 1913 – Canadian neurosurgeon
- John Warner, Ph.D. 1988 – chemist, one of the founders of the field of green chemistry
- Stephen A. Fulling, M.S. in 1969 and Ph.D. in 1972 - theoretical physicist known for preliminary work that led to the discovery of the Unruh effect (also known as the Fulling-Davies-Unruh effect).[217]
Literature
editName | Affiliation | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|
Lorraine Adams | A.B. 1981 | Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, author of Harbor and The Room and the Chair | [218] |
Hyatt Bass | A.B. | Author of The Embers (2009) | [219] |
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... and Bittersweet | [220][221][222] |
Ian Caldwell | A.B. 1998 | Co-authored the 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 | |
Shelley Frisch | PhD 1981 | Literary translator from German to English | |
Rivka Galchen | A.B. 1998 | Author of Atmospheric Disturbances | |
Richard Halliburton | A.B. 1922 | Author, adventurer, and lecturer | |
Mohsin Hamid | A.B. 1993 | Author of The Reluctant Fundamentalist | |
Laura Hankin | 2010 | Author of A Special Place for Women | |
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 | |
Fred G. Leebron | A.B. 1983 | Short story writer, novelist, professor of English | [223] |
A. Walton Litz | A.B 1951 | Literary critic | |
John Matteson | A.B. 1983 | Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer | |
John McPhee | A.B. 1953 | Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and Ferris Professor of Journalism since 1974 | |
George Frederick Morgan | Poet | ||
John Norman | PhD 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 | [224] |
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 | |
Chris Welles (1937–2010) | Business journalist and author | [225] | |
Edmund Wilson | A.B. 1916 | Literary critic |
Pulitzer Prize winners
edit- 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[226]
- Robert Caro, A.B. 1957 – two-time Pulitzer Prize Winner for The Power Broker and Master of the Senate[227]
- 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)[228]
- 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
- Charles McIlwain, A.B.1894 – Pulitzer Prize for history in 1924; professor at Princeton
- John McPhee, A.B. 1953 – Humanities Council professor, 1999 Pulitzer Prize recipient[229]
- James M. McPherson – Professor of History; Pulitzer Prize winner in 1989 for Battle Cry of Freedom
- W. S. Merwin, A.B. 1948 – Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and translator[230]
- Steven Naifeh, A.B. 1974 – Pulitzer Prize for biography or autobiography in 1991 for Jackson Pollock: An American Saga
- 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[231]
- Ernest Poole, A.B. 1902 – Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1918[232]
- David Remnick, A.B. 1981 – Pulitzer Prize Winner for general nonfiction in 1994 for Lenin's Tomb: The Last Days of the Soviet Empire; general editor of The New Yorker magazine since 1998
- Booth Tarkington, A.B. 1893 – two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist for The Magnificent Ambersons and Alice Adams[233]
- William W. Warner, 1943 – science writer, Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction 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 Prize for drama in 1918[234]
Journalism
edit- 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[235]
- 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 Brooks, A.B. 1942 – author and staff member, The New Yorker
- Robert Caro, A.B. 1957 – Pulitzer Prize-winning nonfiction writer
- Patrick Chovanec, A.B. 1993 – commentator on the economy of China in Western media
- 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. 1962 – writer for Sports Illustrated; broadcaster on U.S. radio and television[236]
- James D. Ewing, 1938 – newspaper publisher, government reform advocate and philanthropist[237]
- Marc Fisher – writer for The Washington Post
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, A.B. 1917 – novelist and short story author
- Justin Fox (born 1964) – financial journalist, commentator, and writer
- Barton Gellman, A.B. 1982 – editor at The Washington Post and Pulitzer Prize winner
- 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[238]
- Julia Ioffe (2005) – Russian-born American journalist
- Olivier Kamanda, B.S.E 2003 – editor, Foreign Policy Digest
- Donald Kirk, A.B. 1959 – national correspondent, Chicago Tribune
- Richard Kluger, A.B. 1956 – Pulitzer Prize-winning author, journalist and book publisher
- 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
- Alexis Okeowo, 2006 – staff writer at The New Yorker
- Norimitsu Onishi, A.B. 1992 – reporter for The New York Times
- Ramesh Ponnuru, A.B. 1995 – editor of National Review
- Paul Raushenbush, F. 2003–2011 – Editor of Huffington Post Religion
- T.R. Reid, A.B. 1966 – former correspondent, The Washington Post; bestselling nonfiction author
- Maria Ressa, A.B. – 2021 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Rappler CEO, included in the Time's Person of the Year 2018
- James Ridgeway, A.B. 1959 – editor and writer, New Republic and The Village Voice
- Rick Stengel, A.B. 1977 – managing editor of Time
- 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
- Katrina vanden Heuvel, A.B. 1981 – editor of The Nation
- Grant Wahl, A.B. 1996 — sports journalist for Sports Illustrated
- 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; founder and first president of The Wilderness Society
Sports
edit- Kwesi Adofo-Mensah – General Manager for the Minnesota Vikings
- Bella Alarie, A.B. 2020 – starting professional basketball career in 2020 with the WNBA's Dallas Wings
- Hobey Baker, A.B. 1914 – ice hockey player; college hockey's top individual award is named in his memory
- Carl Barisich – former professional football player, Cleveland Browns and Miami Dolphins
- Danny Barnes – professional baseball pitcher
- Darius Bazley(Basketball) Oklahoma City Thunder
- Amir Bell (born 1996) – basketball player in the Israel Basketball Premier League
- Moe Berg, A.B. 1923 – professional baseball player and spy
- David Blatt, A.B. 1981 – Israeli-American basketball player and coach (most recently, for the Cleveland Cavaliers)
- Arthur Bluethenthal, 1913 – All-American football player; 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 – US National Soccer Coach and MLS Cup-winning coach
- Andrew Calof – ice hockey player
- Devin Cannady – professional basketball player with the South Bay Lakers
- Karl Chandler – former professional football player, New York Giants and Detroit Lions
- Mike Chernoff – Cleveland Indians general manager
- Geep Chryst – quarterbacks coach, San Francisco 49ers
- Mike Condon – professional hockey goaltender with the Ottawa Senators
- 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
- Pablo Eisenberg (born 1932) – scholar, social justice advocate, and tennis player
- Keith Elias, A.B. 1993 – former professional football player in the National Football League
- Jonathan Erlichman, A.B. 2012 — Process and Analytics Coach, Tampa Bay Rays; first analytics coach in the history of Major League Baseball
- John Fisher, A.B. 1983 – owner, Oakland Athletics
- Jason Garrett – former professional football player, offensive coordinator, interim head coach, head coach (2010–19) for the Dallas Cowboys
- Charlie Gogolak – former professional football player, Washington Redskins and New England Patriots
- Wycliffe Grousbeck, A.B. 1983 – CEO, governor, and co-owner, Boston Celtics
- Jeff Halpern, A.B. 1999 – current NHL player; plays for the NHL team Los Angeles Kings
- Tora Harris, 2002 – Olympic high jumper
- Sara Hendershot, A.B. 2010 – rower at the 2012 Summer Olympics[239]
- Armond Hill – assistant coach, Los Angeles Clippers; former NBA basketball player, 1976–84
- Red Howard – football player
- Ariel Hsing – Olympic table tennis player
- Lynn Jennings, A.B. 1983 – Olympic runner, three-time world cross country champion, member of National Distance Running Hall of Fame
- Dick Kazmaier, A.B. 1952 – Heisman Trophy winner 1952
- Zak Keasey – former professional football player, San Francisco 49ers
- Chloe Kim – Olympic snowboarder
- Andrea Leand – tennis player
- Donold Lourie, A.B. 1922 – College Football Hall of Fame inductee
- Larry Lucchino, A.B. 1967 – president and CEO of the Boston Red Sox
- Tyler Lussi, A.B. 2017 – professional soccer player, winner of the 2017 NWSL championship with Portland Thorns FC
- Jesse Marsch, A.B. 1995 – professional soccer player, winner of three MLS championships with D.C. United and the Chicago Fire
- Rich McKay, A.B. 1981 – president and general manager, Atlanta Falcons
- Frank McPhee – football player
- Steve Mills (sports executive) – president of the New York Knicks
- Steve Meister – tennis player
- John Messuri – former professional hockey player, Princeton Tigers all-time leading scorer
- Abby Meyers (born 1999) - basketball player for the Dallas Wings of the Women's National Basketball Association
- Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum – American-born German showjumper
- Edwin Mortimer Hopkins – first ever full-time head football coach at the University of Kansas, also a long-time English professor at the school
- Cook Neilson, A.B. 1967 – motorcycle racer, member of American Motorcycle Association Hall of Fame
- Dennis Norman, 2001 – former professional football player, San Diego Chargers
- Ross Ohlendorf – former MLB pitcher for the Washington Nationals
- 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
- Crista Samaras, A.B. 1999 – former lacrosse player and coach
- Mark Shapiro – Toronto Blue Jays general manager; two-time MLB Executive of the Year
- Brian Taylor – former ABA and NBA basketball player, 1972–82
- John Thompson III, 1988 – basketball coach at Georgetown
- Soren Thompson, 2005 – fencer, NCAA épée champion, Junior Olympic champion, Maccabiah Games silver medalist, 2x Olympic fencer, team world champion.
- Ross Tucker, 2000 – former professional football player, sports columnist
- 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 Texas Rangers
- Maia Weintraub (born 2002) - NCAA foil champion, national champion, and Olympic fencer
- Spencer Weisz (born 1995) – American-Israeli basketball player for Hapoel Haifa of the Israeli Premier League
- Kevin Westgarth – NHL player; plays for the NHL team Los Angeles Kings
- Lauren Wilkinson (rower) – 2012 Summer Olympics silver medalist
- Erica Wu – Olympic table tennis player
- Chris Young – starting pitcher for the Kansas City Royals
- Ben Zinn – international soccer player and academic at Georgia Tech
Entertainment
editName | Affiliation | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|
Sara Baiyu Chen | A.B. 2008 | Singer-songwriter and actress | |
Erik Barnouw | A.B. 1929 | Writer, critic, documentary filmmaker, Columbia University professor | |
Dale Bell | A.B. 1960 | producer, director, screenwriter and cinematographer, best known for his documentary Woodstock | [240] |
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) | |
David Aaron Carpenter | A.B. 2008 | Violist & violinist – winner of the Avery Fisher Career Grant and Rolex Protege Prize, Warner Classics recording artist | |
Ethan Coen | A.B. 1979 | Academy Award-winning filmmaker (No Country for Old Men, O Brother, Where Art Thou?, Fargo) | |
Kwanza Jones | A.B. 1993 | 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 | |
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 | A.B. 1985 | Academy Award-nominated documentary filmmaker, Capturing the Friedmans | |
Eugene Jarecki | A.B. 1991 | 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 | Fifth-ranked all-time Jeopardy! winner, including co-Champion (with David Madden '03 and Brad Rutter) of the Jeopardy! All-Star Games tournament | |
Ellie Kemper | A.B. 2002 | Actress (Erin Hannon on The Office) | |
Gilbert Levine | A.B. 1971 | Conductor | |
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 | Fourth-ranked all-time Jeopardy! winner including co-Champion of the Jeopardy! All-Star Games Tournament (with Larissa Kelly '02 and Brad Rutter), founder and executive director of the National History Bee and Bowl, the International History Olympiad, and International Academic Competitions | |
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 | A.B. 1986 | Television executive with Paramount and Twentieth Century Fox | |
Jane Randall | A.B. 2013 | 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 | A.B. 1998 | 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
edit- Stan Allen M.Arch. – dean of School of Architecture, Princeton University
- Leslie Ayres – architect, 1926 winner of Princeton Prize in Architecture
- Merritt Bucholz – partner of Irish-based Bucholz | McEvoy Architects, and Professor of Architecture at University of Limerick
- Thomas S. Buechner – founding director of the Corning Museum of Glass; director of the Brooklyn Museum[241]
- Johanna Burton, Director of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
- Donald Drew Egbert, A.B. 1924, M.Arch. 1927 – art historian and Princeton professor
- Michael Graves – architect, designer and Princeton professor
- Jodi Hauptman, A.B. 1986 – art historian and curator
- Indrani Pal-Chaudhuri, A.B. Anthropology – 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, known for work on X-Men, Batman; a founder of Image Comics
- Bill Pierce, A.B. 1957 – freelance photographer for Time
- Demetri Porphyrios, M.Arch. 1974, Ph.D. 1980 – architect and architectural theorist
- Frank Stella – artist
- William Turnbull Jr. – architect and Fellow of the American Institute of Architects
- Margaret Rose Vendryes Ph.D. 1997 – visual artist, curator, and art historian
- 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
Other
edit- Thomas B. Craighead – Presbyterian minister, president of Davidson Academy and Cumberland College in Nashville, Tennessee[242]
- Collins Denny Jr., 1921 – pro-segregationist lawyer[243]
- David W. Doyle, '49 – Central Intelligence Agency officer; author[citation needed]
- Cate Edwards, '04 – daughter of two-time presidential candidate and 2004 Democratic Vice Presidential nominee John Edwards
- John Frame, '61 – Reformed theologian
- Donald B. Fullerton, 1913 – missionary and founder of the Princeton Christian Fellowship
- Zelda Harris, '07 – former child actress, known for her starring role in the Spike Lee dramedy Crooklyn
- James Hogue – attended Princeton under the fraudulent persona of "Alexi Indris Santana", 1989–1991
- Dario Hunter, '04 – the first Muslim-born person to be ordained a rabbi[244]
- 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
- Joseph (Lyle) Menendez – convicted murderer, left Princeton in 1988 following plagiarism charges
- Michelle Obama, '85 – First Lady of the United States, wife of United States President Barack Obama
- Zhuo Qun Song, '19 – currently the most highly decorated International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) contestant, with five gold medals and one bronze medal
- Richard Aaker Trythall, '63 – composer and pianist, winner of the 1964 Rome Prize in Musical Composition, fellow and music liaison of the American Academy in Rome[245]
- Peter Aaron Van Dorn – lawyer, judge and planter from Mississippi
- John C. Whitcomb, '48 – young earth creationist
In fiction
editListed in alphabetical order by title name.
- 24 – President Charles Logan graduated from Princeton University[246]
- 30 Rock – Jack Donaghy is an alumnus; multiple episodes center on his college experience
- Across the Universe – the character Max attends Princeton, but drops out
- Atlanta — Earnest "Earn" Marks attended Princeton University before dropping out
- Batman Begins – 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)[247]
- A Beautiful Mind – tells of the mathematician John Forbes Nash Jr.'s initial days at Princeton University (Although the film is a fictionalized biography, in real life Nash did receive his doctorate from Princeton and was a Princeton professor)[248]
- The Big Bang Theory – Leonard Hofstadter attended and graduated from Princeton, and Amy Farrah Fowler served a fellowship there until Sheldon Cooper proposed to her.
- Boardwalk Empire – James "Jimmy" Darmody attended Princeton, but dropped out to enlist in World War I, disappointing his guardian Enoch Thompson
- 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[249]
- The Caine Mutiny - Willis Seward "Willie" Keith graduated from Princeton University before joining the Navy
- The Change-Up – Dave Lockwood graduated from Princeton University
- Charles in Charge – Charles gets accepted as a graduate student in Princeton
- A Cinderella Story – the characters played by Hilary Duff and Chad Michael Murray will be attending Princeton at the end of the movie[250]
- Commander in Chief – Kelly Ludlow, the press secretary played by Ever Carradine has graduated from Princeton
- The Cosby Show – Sondra Huxtable and her (future) husband Elvin Tibideaux of graduated from Princeton[251]
- Cruel Intentions – Marci Greenbaum, Tara Reid's character was accepted into Princeton. Sebastian, the protagonist, manipulated her.
- Designated Survivor – Tom Kirkman, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development turned President of the United States who was named designated survivor for the State of the Union address, and rose to the presidency after a terrorist attack killed the entire line of succession, was a Princeton alumni.
- Doogie Howser, M.D. – the namesake child prodigy graduated from Princeton at the age of 10 in 1983 and received his medical license at age 14[252]
- Everwood – Amy Abbott is accepted to Princeton[253]
- Family Ties – "Young Republican" Alex P. Keaton (Michael J. Fox) spends the first two seasons of the series preparing to attend Princeton
- The Flintstones – in the 1961 episode entitled "Flintstone of Prinstone", Fred briefly attends Princeton's prehistoric counterpart, "Prinstone University", as a part-time student; in the 1964 episode "Cinderellastone", Fred's dream character also attended Prinstone
- The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air – Princeton is Philip's alma mater; his son, Carlton, enrolls in Princeton by the final episode[254]
- Gilmore Girls – Rory Gilmore is accepted into Princeton University
- The Girl Next Door – Eli is mentioned as having been accepted to Princeton
- Good in Bed, novel by Jennifer Weiner – protagonist Cannie Shapiro is a Princeton alumna
- In Her Shoes (1991), a novel by Jennifer Weiner – Rose Feller is a Princeton grad. Her younger sister Maggie camps out in a Princeton library
- Leatherheads – the character of Carter Rutherford is a star Princeton quarterback[255]
- Left Behind series – character Cameron "Buck" Williams is a Princeton grad
- Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen, science fiction novel 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 becomes an officer with the Pennsylvania State Police and transported to another time-line
- 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[256]
- Mars Attacks! – President James Dale (Jack Nicholson) is a Princeton alumnus
- The Mindy Project – the main character, Mindy Lahiri, attended Princeton
- Never Have I Ever -- the main character, Devi Vishwakumar, is accepted into Princeton University.
- No Hard Feelings – The film is set the summer before Percy's (played by Andrew Barth Feldman) freshman year at Princeton.
- 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)
- The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement – Anne Hathaway's character has graduated from Princeton[257]
- The Reluctant Fundamentalist, novel – the characters Changez and Erica are Princeton grads
- Risky Business – Tom Cruise's character gets into Princeton after an unconventional interview at his own home
- Rubber – one of the spectators ("film buff Ethan") appears wearing an orange-embroidered black baseball cap reading "PRINCETO"
- The Rule of Four, mystery novel – the protagonists are Princeton students and the Art Museum and its collections play a central role in the plot
- Salt – Angelina Jolie's character Evelyn Salt went to Princeton
- Scandal (TV series)-- Olivia Pope graduated from Princeton.
- 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);[258] Snake also attended, but took a year off, presumably never to return
- South Pacific – Lt. Joe Cable attended Princeton
- South Park – Mayor McDaniels[259]
- The Sun Also Rises – Robert Cohn is a Princeton graduate
- The Talented Mr. Ripley – Dickie Greenleaf (played by Jude Law) has attended Princeton,[260] and the title character Tom Ripley pretends he is a Princeton alumnus.[261]
- There's Something About Mary – Mary attended Princeton University,[262] as did her ex-boyfriend "Woogie" who was also holder of a scholarship from Princeton[263]
- Thirtysomething – Hope Murdoch Steadman, portrayed by Mel Harris, graduated from Princeton and Mel's real-life father (Warren Harris) was a football coach at Princeton in the 1970s[264]
- This Side of Paradise, semi-autobiographical novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald – a Princeton alumnus himself, the protagonist Amory Blaine attends Princeton[265][266]
- The War of the Worlds, 1938 radio adaptation Professor Richard Pierson of the Princeton Observatory, portrayed by Orson Welles
- 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 in 1948–1958 and graduated with a Ph.D. in atomic physics
- Weeds – the character Megan gets accepted into Princeton
- The West Wing – former Deputy Communications Director Sam Seaborn (Rob Lowe) is a magna cum laude Princeton graduate[267]
See also
editReferences
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- ^ Catalogue of the American Whig Society: Instituted in the College of New Jersey. American Whig Society. 1845.
- ^ "Hal Abelson" (PDF). MIT. Retrieved 20 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Gerald Ackerman, Professor Emeritus of Art History, dies at 87 – Art History".
- ^ "Professor Mike Archer – Profile". University of New South Wales. Archived from the original on 2010-07-22. Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ "John Bardeen – Biography". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ "John Bardeen – Biography". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Gary S. Becker". Hoover Institution. Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Faculty: Walden Bello". Binghamton University. Archived from the original on 13 November 2010. Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ House of Representatives of the Philippines. "Bello, Walden F." Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Gregory S. Berns". Emory University. Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ Greenwood, Katherine Federici (13 Jan 2010). "New book provides a window into mathematicians' minds". Princeton Alumni Weekly. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ Library of Congress. "James H. Billington". Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Alan Blinder". Princeton University. Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ Van Gelder, Lawrence (30 May 1996). "George Boolos, 55, philosopher". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Faculty Bio: Alan Brinkley". Columbia University Department of History. Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Astronomer Mike Brown". Caltech. Retrieved 20 Oct 2011.
- ^ Lemonick, Michael D. (8 May 2006). "Mike Brown". TIME. Archived from the original on May 5, 2010. Retrieved 20 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Eugenio Calabi". Mathematics Genealogy Project. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ "David Card" (PDF). University of California, Berkeley. Sep 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-11-12. Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ American Economic Association. "John Bates Clark". Retrieved 15 Oct 2011.
- ^ Princeton University Library. "Alonzo Church Papers". Archived from the original on 15 May 2012. Retrieved 20 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Alonzo Church". Mathematics Genealogy Project. Retrieved 20 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Tom Clark". polisci.emory.edu.
- ^ Corbett, Charles Hodge (1955). Shantung Christian University (Cheeloo). New York: United Board for Christian Colleges in China.
- ^ "Dr. Cochran Dies at 81". Plainfield Courier-News. December 27, 1952. p. 14.
- ^ Cochran, Jean Carter. Her Eldest Son: Samuel Cochran, M.D.
- ^ Cochran, Samuel (1961). "The Story of Hope Hospital". Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine. 37: 47–65. PMC 1804639. PMID 13694213.
- ^ "Dr. Samuel Cochran Dies, Medical Missionary 81". Newport Daily News. December 27, 1952.
- ^ "George Collins papers, 1838-1986, bulk 1949-1986 | Avery Drawings & Archives Collections | Columbia University Libraries Finding Aids".
- ^ "Arthur H. Compton". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ a b c Leitch, Alexander (1978). "Compton Brothers, The". Princeton University Press. Archived from the original on 2 June 2010. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ Stratton, Julius A. (1992). Karl Taylor Compton, 1887–1954 (PDF). National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Wilson M. Compton". Washington State University. Archived from the original on 2011-10-02. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Ira Condict, President Pro Tem, 1795-1810". Rutgers University. Retrieved 2007-08-26.
- ^ Princeton University Library. "James Creese papers". Archived from the original on 8 July 2012. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ^ University of Pennsylvania Library. "James Creese administration records". Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Robert Francis Patrick Cronin '47". Princeton Alumni Weekly. 18 Jul 2007. Archived from the original on 2010-07-08. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Dennis D. Crouch". University of Missouri School of Law. Archived from the original on 12 October 2011. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Loring Danforth curriculum vitae". Bates College. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Clinton Davisson – Biography". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ "Frederick B. Deknatel".
- ^ Bank of Canada. "David A. Dodge". Archived from the original on 2011-11-12. Retrieved 7 Sep 2011.
- ^ Queen's University at Kingston (29 Oct 2008). "David Dodge installed as chancellor Thursday". Archived from the original on 2012-10-13. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ^ Johns Hopkins University Library. "Duncan (Acheson J.) 1904–1994 Papers (1936–1985)". Archived from the original on 2011-09-29. Retrieved 24 Oct 2011.
- ^ a b "Catalog of Princeton University senior theses". Princeton University Library. Archived from the original on 27 May 2019. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ^ Carleton College Office of the President (11 Oct 2011). "History of the President's Office". Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ^ Bowdoin College Library. "Robert H. Edwards, administrative records, 1950–2002". Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
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- ^ 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."
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External links
edit- Official website of Princeton University