This is a list of notable individuals associated with Case Western Reserve University , including students, alumni, and faculty.
Arts, journalism and entertainment[ edit ]
Directors Anthony Russo and Joe Russo have directed world-famous blockbusters Captain America: The Winter Soldier , Captain America: Civil War , Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame .
Actor Rich Sommer appeared in Mad Men and The Devil Wears Prada .
Barbara Allyne Bennet – actress and member of Screen Actors Guild (SAG) national board of directors (2005–2007)[ 1]
James Card – longtime film curator at George Eastman House
Mary Carruthers – among the world's foremost scholars on medieval religious literature
Janis Carter – film actress of 1940s and '50s
Gordon Cobbledick – J. G. Taylor Spink Award , the highest award given by the Baseball Writers' Association of America
Brenda Miller Cooper – operatic soprano
Franklin Cover – actor, Tom Willis in The Jeffersons
Jasmine Cresswell – best-selling author of over 50 romance novels
William Eleroy Curtis – journalist, diplomat, and advocate of Pan-Americanism
Anu Garg – author and speaker
Susie Gharib – co-anchor of Nightly Business Report
Gregg Gillis – musician; performs as Girl Talk
Dorothy Hart – film actress of 1940s and '50s
Jan Hopkins – journalist (CNN financial news show Street Sweep )
John Howard – actor, known for The Philadelphia Story and Bulldog Drummond films
Hal Lebovitz – J. G. Taylor Spink Award , the highest award given by the Baseball Writers' Association of America
Marc Parnell – second-most published ornithologist in the world, author of 41 bird-identification guides
M. Scott Peck – author of The Road Less Traveled and other self-help books
Harvey Pekar – comic book writer, creator of American Splendor
Jack Perkins – dubbed "America's most literate correspondent" by Associated Press; reporter, commentator, war correspondent, anchorman; seen on NBC 's Nightly News and The Today Show , and on A&E as host of Biography
Alan Rosenberg – actor; played Ira Woodbine on TV series Cybill ; Emmy-nominated for guest appearance on ER ; elected president of Screen Actors Guild in 2005
Joe Russo and Anthony Russo – brothers, co-alumni, and directors of films Captain America: The Winter Soldier , Captain America: Civil War , Avengers: Infinity War , Avengers: Endgame , Welcome to Collinwood , and TV series Arrested Development ; producers of NBC 's Community [ 2]
Alix Kates Shulman – author of Memoir of an Ex-Prom Queen and To Love What Is [ 3]
Rich Sommer – MFA theater alumnus; appeared in The Devil Wears Prada , Mad Men , and with Upright Citizens Brigade
Emma Rood Tuttle – writer
Thrity Umrigar – journalist; author of Bombay Time
Andrew Vachss – lawyer and child protection consultant; author of the Burke series
Roger Zelazny – science fiction and fantasy author; three-time Nebula Award winner and six-time Hugo Award winner; works include Lord of Light , Eye of Cat , and The Dream Master
Business and philanthropy [ edit ]
Craig Newmark (BS '75, MS '77), tech billionaire, philanthropist, founder of Craigslist
Richard Thaler (BA '67) – one of the founders of behavioral economics and recipient of the 2017 Nobel Prize in Economics
Government and military [ edit ]
Dennis Kucinich , U.S. Representative (1997–2013) and U.S. presidential candidate (2004 and 2008 )
Don Thomas , former NASA Astronaut . (Physics BS '73)
Elioda Tumwesigye , Member of Parliament and Cabinet Minister of Science Technology & Innovation, Republic of Uganda
John E. Barnes Jr. – member of Ohio House of Representatives
Janet Bewley – member of the Wisconsin Legislature
Justin Bibb – 58th and current mayor of Cleveland
Zdravka Bušić – member of the European Parliament
John Cairncross – Soviet spy and member of the Cambridge Five
Thomas J. Carran (1841-1894) – Ohio State Senator[ 6]
François-Philippe Champagne – Canadian Member of Parliament for Saint-Maurice—Champlain
Schive Chi – governor of Fujian Province and Minister without Portfolio, Republic of China (Taiwan)
Victor Ciorbea – Prime Minister of Romania (1996–1998)
Bruce Cole – 8th chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities
John Charles Cutler – acting chief of the venereal disease program in the United States Public Health Service and head of the Guatemala and the Tuskegee syphilis experiments
Benjamin O. Davis Jr. – first African-American to receive star in US Air Force; awarded Distinguished Flying Cross in 1943; Assistant Secretary of Transportation under Richard Nixon
Lincoln Díaz-Balart – U.S. Representative
Alene B. Duerk – first female rear admiral in the United States Navy
James A. Garfield – served on the University Board of Trustees
T. Keith Glennan – Case Institute of Technology President, first NASA Administrator
Subir Gokarn (Ph.D. ) – deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India
Paul Hackett – Iraq War veteran and former Congressional candidate
Rutherford B. Hayes – 19th President of the United States of America, served on the University Board of Trustees
John Hutchins – former U.S. Representative
Stephanie Tubbs Jones – former U.S. Representative
Ron Klein – U.S. Representative
Dennis Kucinich – former U.S. Representative
Clarence Lam – Maryland State Senator [ 7]
James Thomas Lynn – United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under Richard Nixon ; Director of the Office of Management and Budget under Gerald Ford
Josh Mandel (J.D. ) – Ohio State Treasurer
Nicole Nason (J.D. ) – Administrator of the Federal Highway Administration
Ogiame Atuwatse III – 21st Olu of Warri kingdom
Salvatore Pais – Inventor and Aerospace Engineer, U.S. Navy and Airforce
Alfredo Palacio – President of Ecuador , completed medical residency at Case
Raymond Stanton Patton (Ph.B. ) – rear admiral and first flag officer of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Corps
Trista Piccola – former Director of the Rhode Island Department of Children, Youth & Families
Paul A. Russo – Ambassador of the United States to Barbados , Dominica , St Lucia , Antigua , St. Vincent , and St. Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla
David Satcher – 16th Surgeon General of the United States
Milton Shapp – governor of Pennsylvania and 1976 Democratic presidential candidate
Louis Stokes – former U.S. Representative
Don Thomas – former NASA astronaut
Elioda Tumwesigye – Member of Parliament Sheema North and Cabinet Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation Republic of Uganda
Michael R. Turner – U.S. Representative
William H. Upson – former U.S. Representative
Andrew R. Wheeler – Deputy Administrator (and Acting Administrator ) of the United States Environmental Protection Agency
Milton A. Wolf – former U.S. Ambassador to Austria
See Notable Graduates section
Attorney Fred Gray represented Rosa Parks , Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. , and the Tuskegee syphilis experiment victims in his career. He marched from Selma to Montgomery .
Science, technology, and medicine[ edit ]
Case alum Herbert Henry Dow , founder of Dow Chemical
Julie Gerberding , former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
John Macleod , 1923 Nobel Prize winner for discovering insulin and Western Reserve University Professor of Physiology
Ferid Murad , 1998 Nobel Laureate and Case Medical School MD/PhD alumnus
David Satcher , former Surgeon General of the United States
Peter B. Armentrout – distinguished chemistry professor, University of Utah
Roger Bacon – inventor of carbon fiber
Hans Baumann – inventor and engineer[ 8]
Paul Berg – winner of the 1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry , for biochemical characterization of recombinant DNA
John Blangero – human geneticist; highly cited scientist in the field of complex disease genetics
Murielle Bochud – Swiss physician, co-chief of the Department of Epidemiology and Health Systems at the Unisanté in Lausanne
Paul Buchheit – 23rd employee of Google and creator of Gmail
Neil W. Chamberlain – economist and industrial relations scholar (A.B., 1937; M.A., 1939)
Philippe G. Ciarlet – mathematician known for work on finite element method ; received his Ph.D. from the Case Institute of Technology 1966 and was awarded the Légion d'honneur in 1999
Elizabeth Cosgriff-Hernandez – biomedical engineer who works on scaffolds for tissue regeneration
M. Jamal Deen , CM – Order of Canada and Senior Canada Research Chair in Information Technology at McMaster University [ 9]
Conor P. Delaney – colorectal surgeon known for laparoscopy and developing enhanced recovery pathways
Herbert Henry Dow – founder of Dow Chemical
Slayton A. Evans Jr. – research chemist and professor
Xyla Foxlin – engineer, entrepreneur and YouTuber[ 10]
H. Jack Geiger – founding member and past president of Physicians for Social Responsibility and Physicians for Human Rights
Julie Gerberding – first woman director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Alfred G. Gilman – co-winner of the 1994 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine , for co-discovery of G proteins
Donald A. Glaser – winner of the 1960 Nobel Prize in Physics , for invention of the bubble chamber
Millicent Goldschmidt – microbiologist, worked on NASA Lunar Receiving Laboratory and University of Texas
Siegfried S. Hecker – director of Los Alamos National Laboratory (1986–1997)
Joseph A. Helpern – emeritus professor at Medical University of South Carolina
Corneille Heymans – winner of the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work on carotid sinus reflex
Samuel Hibben – pioneer in blacklight technology; designed the lighting displays for the Statue of Liberty and other national monuments
Bambang Hidayat – astronomer, former Vice-President of the International Astronomical Union
George H. Hitchings – co-winner of the 1988 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, for research leading to development of drugs to treat leukemia, organ transplant rejection, gout, herpes virus, and AIDS-related bacterial and pulmonary infections
Robert W. Kearns – inventor of the intermittent windshield wiper systems used on most automobiles since 1969; won one of the best-known patent infringement cases against a major corporation
Donald Knuth – computer scientist and winner of the Turing Award (1974)[ 11]
Lawrence M. Krauss – physicist in the field of dark energy ; bestselling author (The Physics of Star Trek )
Polykarp Kusch – winner of the 1955 Nobel Prize in Physics, for determining the magnetic moment of the electron
George Trumbull Ladd (1842–1921) – philosopher, educator, and psychologist; first foreigner to receive the Second (conferred in 1907) and Third (conferred in 1899) Orders of the Rising Sun
Paul C. Lauterbur – co-winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine , for discoveries leading to creation of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Matthew N. Levy – cardiac physiologist and textbook author
John Macleod – co-winner of the 1923 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, for discovery of insulin
Sidney Wilcox McCuskey – astronomer noted for his work on the Milky Way galaxy
Albert A. Michelson – winner of the 1907 Nobel Prize in Physics, for disproving existence of "ether"; first American to receive a Nobel Prize
Edward Morley – performed interferometry experiment with Michelson
Ferid Murad – co-winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, for role in the discovery of nitric oxide in cardiovascular signaling
George A. Olah – winner of the 1994 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, for contributions to carbocation chemistry
Amit Patel – stem cell surgeon who demonstrated stem cell transplantation can treat congestive heart failure
Raymond Stanton Patton (Ph.B. ) – engineer, rear admiral and first flag officer of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Corps and second Director of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey (1929–1937)
M. Scott Peck – psychiatrist and author of The Road Less Traveled
David Pedlar – Director of Research at the National Headquarters of Veterans Affairs Canada
James Polshek – architect; designed William J. Clinton Presidential Library
Edward C. Prescott – co-winner of the 2004 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences , for theory on business cycles and economic policies
Charles Burleigh Purvis (1865) – leading physician at Howard University and the Freedmen's Hospital
Frederick Reines – co-winner of the 1995 Nobel Prize in Physics, for the detection of the neutrino
Barry Richmond – developer of the iThink simulation environment
Frederick C. Robbins – co-winner of the 1954 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, for work on polio virus, which led to development of polio vaccines; past president of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences
M. Frank Rudy – inventor of the Nike air sole
John Ruhl – physicist currently studying cosmic microwave background radiation
David Satcher – U.S. Surgeon General under President Clinton ; first African-American director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Terry Sejnowski – pioneer in the field of neural networks and computational neuroscience; one of only ten living scientists to have been elected to all three national academies (IOM, NAS and NAE)
Jesse Leonard Steinfeld – U.S. Surgeon General (1969–1973), noted for achieving widespread fluoridation of water, requiring prescription drugs to be effective, and strengthening the Surgeon General's warning on cigarettes
Earl W. Sutherland – winner of 1971 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, for establishing identity and importance of cyclic AMP in regulation of cell metabolism
Lars Georg Svensson – instrumental in the development of minimally invasive keyhole surgery and leader in aortic valve surgery
Peter Tippett – developer of the first anti-virus software, "Vaccine" (later sold and renamed Norton AntiVirus )
Alfred Wilhelmi – biochemist, medical researcher, and academic
Case alum Don Shula (MA Physical Education '53), former coach of the Miami Dolphins
Ed Andrews – Major League Baseball player
John Badaczewski – professional football player for the Washington Redskins and Chicago Bears
Steve Belichick – professional football player for the Detroit Lions and college football coach; father of NFL coach Bill Belichick
Manute Bol – at one time the tallest player to play in the National Basketball Association
Dick Booth – professional football player for the Detroit Lions
Wendy Cohn (Termini) – sports attorney[ 12]
Esther Erb – marathon runner
Ed Kagy – professional football player and founder of Gyro International
William Kerslake – Olympic wrestler and co-inventor of the first ion thruster for space propulsion
Sandy Knott – Olympic runner for outdoor track and field
Warren Lahr – NFL All-Pro defensive back who played 11 seasons with the Cleveland Browns
Bill Lund – professional football player for the Cleveland Browns
Ray Mack – professional baseball player for the Cleveland Indians , New York Yankees , and Chicago Cubs ; All-Star second baseman in 1940
Michael McCaskey – chairman of the board, Chicago Bears
Paul O'Dea – outfielder for the Cleveland Indians
Peggy Parratt – professional football player credited for throwing the first forward pass in professional football
Milton C. Portmann – professional football player, CWRU Hall of Fame class of 1976 for football, track, and hockey; selected to the WRU 50-Year Football All-Star Team at offensive tackle
Phil Ragazzo – professional football player for the Cleveland Rams , Philadelphia Eagles , and New York Giants
Mike Rodak – professional football player for the Cleveland Rams , Detroit Lions , and Pittsburgh Steelers
George Roman – professional football player for the New York Giants
Frank Ryan – professional football player; quarterback for the Cleveland Browns ; holds a PhD in math
Mickey Sanzotta – professional football player for the Detroit Lions
Don Shula (MA Physical Education '53) – former coach of the Miami Dolphins , member of Pro Football Hall of Fame [ 13]
Denny Shute – professional golfer, British Open and PGA Championship champion
Bianca Smith – first black woman hired to coach for Major League Baseball , hired for the Boston Red Sox
Mark Termini – Hall of Fame basketball player for Case Western Reserve University, sports attorney and NBA agent/contract negotiator[ 14]
Del Wertz – professional football and baseball player
Dan Whalen – Arena Football League quarterback for the Cleveland Gladiators and Orlando Predators
Johnny Wilson – professional football player for the Cleveland Rams
^ Dugan, Carmel (2016-01-13). "Actress Barbara Allyne Bennet Dies at 76" . Variety . Retrieved 2016-02-04 .
^ Luttermoser, John (August 29, 2009). "Anthony and Joe Russo put 'Community' on edge for NBC comedy series" . cleveland.com .
^ Shulman, Alix Kates. "Learning to Love What Is" . think . Case Western Reserve University. Archived from the original on December 14, 2009. {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link )
^ "Management Team" . CyberTrust .
^ "Personality: Dr. Regenia A. Perry" . richmondfreepress.com . 31 March 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2022 .
^ "Carran's Death: How the Sad News Was Received in Los Angeles" . Los Angeles Times . June 22, 1894. p. 10 – via www.newspapers.com.
^ "Clarence K. Lam, Maryland State Senator" . Maryland Manual On-Line . Maryland State Archives . February 12, 2019. Retrieved February 14, 2019 .
^ "Automation Founders Circle: Dr. Hans Baumann" . ISA . Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved 2011-02-23 .{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link )
^ "Jamal Deen | Faculty of Engineering" . www.eng.mcmaster.ca . Retrieved 2021-05-12 .
^ B. J. Colangelo (May 21, 2018). "Miss Greater Cleveland and Mechanical Engineer Xyla Foxlin is Revolutionizing What it Means to be a Beauty Queen" . Cleve Scene magazine. Retrieved July 8, 2021 . ...Xyla Foxlin is a mechanical and aerospace engineering major at Case Western Reserve University, a robotics whiz kid, the founder and inventor of Parihug, a pilot, ...
^ "A. M. Turing Award" . ACM . Archived from the original on 2009-12-12. Retrieved 2007-11-05 .{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link )
^ ALUMNI PROFILE: WENDY COHN ’88 AND MARK TERMINI ’84 (31 March 2021). "Alumni Profile: Wendy Cohn '88 and Mark Termini '84" . Cleveland Marshall College of Law . Cleveland State University. Retrieved 8 June 2021 . {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
^ "Don Shula" . Encyclopædia Britannica .
^ Mayock, Emily. "BIG SHOT: A CWRU Hall of Famer's Heavy-Hitting—but Lesser-Known—Role in Some of Basketball's Biggest Deals" . THINK . Case Western Reserve University. Retrieved 5 June 2021 .
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