List of University of Michigan alumni


The following is a list of University of Michigan alumni.
There are more than 640,000 living alumni of the University of Michigan in 180 countries across the globe. Notable alumni include computer scientist and entrepreneur Larry Page, actor James Earl Jones, and President of the United States Gerald Ford.

Nobel laureates

Activists

Aerospace

Astronauts

Two NASA space flights have been crewed entirely by University of Michigan degree-holders.
Other astronaut alumni include:

[NASA]

Business

Computers, engineering, and technology

Turing Award winners

[Ada Lovelace Award] and [Grace Murray Hopper Award] winners

[AAAI], ACM">Association for Computing Machinery">ACM, [IEEE] Fellows and awardees

As of 2021, more than 65 Michigan alumni have been named as Fellows. Of those alumni, four have been awarded the Eckert-Mauchly Award, the most prestigious award for contributions to computer architecture.

Criminals, murderers, and infamous newsmakers

"Father of..."

  • John Jacob Abel, North American "father of pharmacology"
  • Leon Jacob Cole, geneticist and ornithologist; "father of American bird banding"
  • George Dantzig, "father of linear programming"; studied at UM under T.H. Hildebrandt, R.L. Wilder, and G.Y. Rainich
  • Tony Fadell, "father of the Apple iPod"; created all five generations of the iPod and the Apple iSight camera
  • Moses Gomberg, chemistry professor at the University of Michigan; "father of radical chemistry"
  • Saul Hertz, M.D., physician who devised the medical uses of radioactive iodine; pioneered the first targeted cancer therapies; "father of the field of theranostics", combining diagnostic imaging with therapy in a single chemical substance
  • Ellis R. Kerley, anthropologist, and pioneer in the field of forensic anthropology
  • Samuel Kirk, psychologist and educator recognized for his accomplishments in the field of special education; "father of special education"
  • Chris Langton, computer science; "father of artificial life"; founder of the Swarm Corporation; distinguished expellee of the Santa Fe Institute
  • Li Shouheng, also known as S. H. Li, Chinese educator, chemist and chemical engineer; founded the first chemical engineering department in China; "father of modern Chinese chemical engineering"
  • Theodore C. Lyster, M.D., United States Army physician and aviation medicine pioneer; "father of aviation medicine"
  • Sid Meier, "father of computer gaming"; created games Civilization, Pirates!, Railroad Tycoon, SimGolf
  • Daniel Okrent, public editor of New York Times; editor-at-large of Time Inc.; Pulitzer Prize finalist in history ; founding father of Rotisserie League Baseball
  • Oyekunle Ayinde "Kunle" Olukotun, Cadence Design Systems Professor in the Stanford School of Engineering, professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Stanford University and the director of the Stanford Pervasive Parallelism Lab; "father of the multi-core processor"
  • Robert E. Park, acknowledged as "father of human ecology" by Emory S. Bogardus: "Not only did he coin the name but he laid out the patterns, offered the earliest exhibit of ecological concepts, defined the major ecological processes and stimulated more advanced students to cultivate the fields of research in ecology than most other sociologists combined."
  • Raymond Pearl, biologist, one of the founders of biogerontology
  • John Clark Salyer II, attended the University of Michigan where he received his MS in 1930; for his efforts as head of the Division of Wildlife Refuges, has become known as "father of the National Wildlife Refuge System"
  • Claude Shannon, mathematician, electrical engineer, and cryptographer; "father of information theory" and "father of digital circuit design theory"
  • Richard Errett Smalley, Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and a professor of Physics and Astronomy at Rice University; upon his death, the US Senate passed a resolution to honor Smalley, crediting him as the "father of nanotechnology"
  • William A. Starrett, Jr., builder and architect of skyscrapers; best known as the builder of the Empire State Building in New York City; "father of the skyscraper"
  • Larry Teal, considered by many to be the father of American orchestral saxophone
  • Olke Uhlenbeck, biochemist, known for his work in RNA biochemistry and RNA catalysis; completed his undergraduate degree at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1964; "father of RNA"
  • Mark Weiser, computer scientist and chief technology officer at Xerox PARC; "father of ubiquitous computing"
  • Wu Ta-You, Chinese physicist and writer who worked in the United States, Canada, mainland China and Taiwan; "father of Chinese physics"

Founders and co-founders

Educators

University presidents

Food

Guggenheim fellows">Guggenheim Fellowship">Guggenheim fellows

As of 2021, Michigan alumni include over 145 Guggenheim Fellows.

Journalism, publishing, and broadcasting

[MacArthur Foundation] award winners

As of 2020, 31 Michigan alumni — 17 undergraduate students and 14 graduate students — have been awarded a MacArthur fellowship.

Mathematics

Mathematics educators

Fellows of the American Mathematical Society

As of 2021, UM numbers among its alumni 29 fellows of the American Mathematical Society.
  • Kenneth Appel, mathematician; in 1976, with colleague Wolfgang Haken at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, solved one of the most famous problems in mathematics, the four-color theorem
  • Susanne Brenner, mathematician whose research concerns the finite element method and related techniques for the numerical solution of differential equations
  • Ralph Louis Cohen, mathematician specializing in algebraic topology and differential topology
  • Robert Connelly, mathematician specializing in discrete geometry and rigidity theory
  • Brian Conrey, mathematician, executive director of the American Institute of Mathematics
  • Ronald Getoor, mathematician
  • Tai-Ping Liu, Taiwanese mathematician specializing in partial differential equations
  • Russell Lyons, mathematician specializing in probability theory on graphs, combinatorics, statistical mechanics, ergodic theory and harmonic analysis
  • Gaven Martin FRSNZ FASL FAMS, New Zealand mathematician
  • Susan Montgomery, mathematician whose current research interests concern noncommutative algebras
  • Paul Muhly, mathematician
  • James Munkres, professor emeritus of mathematics at MIT
  • Zuhair Nashed, mathematician, working on integral and operator equations, inverse and ill-posed problems, numerical and nonlinear functional analysis, optimization and approximation theory, operator theory, optimal control theory, signal analysis, and signal processing
  • Peter Orlik, mathematician, known for his research on topology, algebra, and combinatorics
  • Mihnea Popa, Romanian-American mathematician at Harvard University, specializing in algebraic geometry; known for his work on complex birational geometry, Hodge theory, abelian varieties, and vector bundles
  • Jane Cronin Scanlon, mathematician; emeritus professor of mathematics at Rutgers University
  • Maria E. Schonbek, Argentine-American mathematician at the University of California, Santa Cruz; research concerns fluid dynamics and associated partial differential equations such as the Navier–Stokes equations
  • Paul Schupp, professor emeritus of Mathematics at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
  • George Roger Sell, mathematician, specializing in differential equations, dynamical systems, and applications to fluid dynamics, climate modeling, control systems, and other subjects
  • Charles Sims, mathematician best known for his work in group theory
  • Isadore Singer, mathematician
  • Christopher Skinner, mathematician working in number theory and arithmetic aspects of the Langlands program
  • Karen E. Smith, mathematician specializing in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry
  • Kannan Soundararajan, India-born American mathematician and a professor of mathematics at Stanford University
  • Irena Swanson, mathematician specializing in commutative algebra
  • Karen Uhlenbeck, mathematician; a founder of modern geometric analysis
  • Judy L. Walker, mathematician; Aaron Douglas Professor of Mathematics at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, where she chaired the mathematics department 2012–2016
  • John H. Walter, mathematician known for proving the Walter theorem in the theory of finite groups
  • Charles Weibel, mathematician working on algebraic K-theory, algebraic geometry and homological algebra

Manhattan project

A number of Michigan graduates or fellows were involved with the Manhattan Project, chiefly with regard to the physical chemistry of the device.

Medicine and dentistry

Military

Miscellaneous honors

National Academy members

As of 2021, dozens of Michigan graduates have been inducted into various National Academies.

Newsmakers

Not-for-profit

Pulitzer Prize winners

As of 2022, 35 of Michigan's matriculants have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize. By alumni count, Michigan ranks fifth among all schools whose alumni have won Pulitzers.

Rhodes Scholars

As of 2021, Michigan had matriculated 30 Rhodes Scholars. Some notable winners are linked below.

Religion

Science

National Medal of Science Laureates">List of National Medal of Science laureates">National Medal of Science Laureates/[National Medal of Technology and Innovation]

Sloan Research Fellows

  • James Andreoni, professor in the Economics Department of the University of California, San Diego, where he directs the EconLab
  • John Avise, evolutionary geneticist, conservationist, ecologist and natural historian
  • Robert Berner, scientist known for his contributions to the modeling of the carbon cycle
  • Allan M. Collins, cognitive scientist, professor emeritus of Learning Sciences at Northwestern University's School of Education and Social Policy
  • Ralph Louis Cohen, mathematician, specializing in algebraic topology and differential topology
  • Michael D. Fried, mathematician working in the geometry and arithmetic of families of nonsingular projective curve covers
  • William L. Jungers, anthropologist, distinguished teaching professor and the chair of the Department of Anatomical Sciences at State University of New York at Stony Brook on Long Island, New York
  • Jeffrey MacKie-Mason, economist specializing in information, incentive-centered design and public policy
  • Gaven Martin FRSNZ FASL FAMS, New Zealand mathematician
  • George J. Minty Jr., mathematician, specializing in mathematical analysis and discrete mathematics; known for the Klee-Minty cube and the Browder-Minty theorem
  • Alison R. H. Narayan, chemist; William R. Roush assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts
  • Homer Neal, particle physicist and a distinguished professor at the University of Michigan
  • Hugh David Politzer, theoretical physicist and the Richard Chace Tolman Professor of Theoretical Physics at the California Institute of Technology
  • Jessica Purcell, mathematician specializing in low-dimensional topology whose research topics have included hyperbolic Dehn surgery and the Jones polynomial
  • Donald Sarason, mathematician who made fundamental advances in the areas of Hardy space theory and VMO
  • Stephen Smale, mathematician, known for his research in topology, dynamical systems and mathematical economics
  • Richard Smalley, Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and a professor of Physics and Astronomy at Rice University
  • Karen E. Smith, mathematician, specializing in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry
  • James Stasheff, mathematician
  • Chelsea Walton, mathematician whose research interests include noncommutative algebra, noncommutative algebraic geometry, symmetry in quantum mechanics, Hopf algebras, and quantum groups
  • Zhouping Xin, Chinese mathematician and the William M.W. Mong Professor of Mathematics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong; specializes in partial differential equations