The following is a list of notable alumni and faculty of the City College of New York .
Henry Kissinger
Julius Axelrod 1933 – Nobel laureate in Medicine, 1970
Kenneth Arrow 1940 – Nobel laureate in Economics, 1972
Robert J. Aumann 1950 – Nobel laureate in Economics, 2005
Herbert Hauptman 1937 – Nobel laureate in Chemistry, 1985
Robert Hofstadter 1935 – Nobel laureate in Physics, 1961
Jerome Karle 1937 – Nobel laureate in Chemistry, 1985[ 1]
Henry Kissinger 1923 (did not graduate) – winner of Nobel Peace Prize, 1973
Arthur Kornberg 1937 – Nobel laureate in Medicine, 1959
Leon M. Lederman 1943 – Nobel laureate in Physics, 1988
Arno Penzias 1954 – Nobel laureate in Physics, 1978
Julian Schwinger (transferred to Columbia University ) – Nobel laureate in Physics, 1965
John O'Keefe 1963 – Nobel laureate in Medicine, 2014
Graduates of Business School (which became Baruch College in 1968)[ edit ]
Ralph Lauren
Politics, history, government, sociology, philosophy, and religion[ edit ]
Bernard M. Baruch
Felix Frankfurter
Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Herman Badillo 1951 – Congressman and chairman of CUNY's board of trustees
Bernard M. Baruch 1889 – Wall Street financier and adviser to American Presidents; author of the Baruch Plan
Max Beauvoir 1958 – Haitian Vodou priest and Supreme Chief
Daniel Bell 1939 – sociologist, professor at Harvard University
Abraham D. Beame 1928 – mayor of New York City, 1974 to 1977
Stephen Bronner – political theorist, Marxist, professor at Rutgers University
Frank Caplan – educator, founder of children's educational toy company Creative Playthings
Upendra J. Chivukula – first Asian American elected to the New Jersey General Assembly
Henry Cohen 1943 – director, Föhrenwald DP Camp; Founding Dean of the Milano School for Management and Urban Policy at The New School
Morris Raphael Cohen – graduate of CCNY and professor at CCNY; philosopher, lawyer, and legal scholar; namesake of the Cohen Library at CCNY
Marty Dolin – former Manitoba NDP MLA for Kildonan
Philip Elman – Justice Department attorney and Federal Trade Commission member, wrote government's brief in Brown v. Board of Education
Benjamin B. Ferencz – international jurist and criminal justice pioneer; co-winner of the 2009 Erasmus Prize
Louis Finkelstein – Conservative Jewish theologian
Abraham Foxman – national director of the Anti-Defamation League
Felix Frankfurter 1902 – justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
George Friedman – founder of Stratfor, author, professor of political science, security and defense analyst
Nathan Glazer – sociologist, professor at Harvard University; author of Beyond the Melting Pot with Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Steven Goldberg – president of the sociology department of CCNY
Paul Goodman – writer, social critic, public intellectual; author of The Empire City , Growing Up Absurd , and Communitas
Edmund W. Gordon – founding director of the Institute for Research on African Diaspora in the Americas and Caribbean (IRADAC) at CCNY
Stanley Graze – economist and former lecturer at CCNY; worked in the United Nations, State Department, US Army and the Brookings Institution; MA from Columbia University
Anthony J. Griffin - Congressman and State Senator
Leon Harrison – rabbi
Carl G. Hempel , philosopher of science and professor of philosophy at CCNY
Sidney Hook 1923 – writer and philosopher
Benjamin Kaplan 1929 – helped write the indictments of Nazi war criminals who were tried at Nuremberg; served as Nuremberg prosecutor; distinguished Harvard law professor
Charles E. H. Kauvar 1900 – rabbi in Denver, Colorado
Henry Kissinger – Secretary of State under Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford
Ed Koch 1945 – mayor of New York City, 1978 to 1989
Irving Kristol 1940 – neoconservative intellectual, professor at New York University
Diana Lachatanere 1969 - archivist
David Landes 1942 – historian, professor at Harvard University
Melvin J. Lasky 1938 – anti-communist, editor of Encounter 1958 to 1991
Milton Leitenberg – American arms control expert
Felix A. Levy 1904 – rabbi
Albert L. Lewis – conservative rabbi, president of international Rabbinical Assembly
Samuel A. Lewis – politician and philanthropist in the late 19th century; a trustee of the college
Guillermo Linares 1975 – the first Dominican-American New York City Council Member
Seymour Martin Lipset – political sociology, trade unions
Deborah Lipstadt 1969 – historian; combatted Holocaust denial
Rachel Lloyd – applied urban anthropology graduate; founder of Girls Educational and Mentoring Services in New York
Joseph Lookstein – rabbi and president of Bar-Ilan University
Jay Lovestone 1918 – radical political leader and trade union functionary[ 4]
Richard Lowitt (B.A.) – historian, Guggenheim Fellow.[ 5]
Sister Jean M. Marshall (M.A.) – who received the Eleanor Roosevelt Human Rights Award from President Bill Clinton in 1999.[ 6]
Sidney Morgenbesser – philosopher, John Dewey Professor of Philosophy, Columbia University, known to have witheringly applied Jewish humor to issues in metaphysics and epistemology[ 7]
Henry Morgenthau, Sr. – financier and diplomat; as ambassador to Ottoman Empire attempted to warn the world about the Armenian genocide
Daniel Patrick Moynihan – spent a year at CCNY before he was drafted; author of Beyond the Melting Pot with Nathan Glazer ; ambassador to the U.N.; senator representing New York
Massimo Pigliucci – scientist and philosopher
Colin L. Powell 1961– U.S. Secretary of State, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, U.S. Army General, National Security Advisor
Simon H. Rifkind 1922 – Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
Donald A. Ritchie 1967 – historian, currently historian of the United States Senate
Alexander Rosenberg – Lakatos Award -winning philosopher at Duke University
Julius Rosenberg – executed for espionage during the Cold War
Bertrand Russell – invited by the philosophy department in 1940 to become a professor but his appointment was blocked by a suit and timidity on the part of the Board of Higher Education; see the Bertrand Russell Case
Bayard Rustin - (did not graduate) African American leader in social movements for civil rights, socialism, nonviolence, and gay rights (an (adviser to Martin Luther King, Jr. and main organizer of the March on Washington in 1963).[ 8]
Bernice Sandler (M.A. 1950), the 'Godmother of Title IX'
Oscar Schachter 1936 – law professor and United Nations aide
George D. Schwab 1954 – political scientist, editor and academic, president of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy
Henry Schwarzschild – founder of NCADP , LCDC, and head of ACLU's Capital Punishment project in America
Allen G. Schwartz – U.S. federal judge
Morrie Schwartz – sociologist, author, and subject of Tuesdays with Morrie
Philip Selznick 1938 - sociologist, organizational theorist
Assata Shakur – civil rights activist; involved in May 1973 shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike in which a state trooper was killed
Moses J. Stroock 1886 – lawyer
Myron Sulzberger – American lawyer, politician, and judge
Stanley S. Surrey 1929 – tax law scholar, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Tax Policy from 1961 to 1969
Samuel Turk – rabbi, religious leader, columnist
Friedrich Ulfers 1959 – Deconstructionist writer, Dean of Media and Communications at European Graduate School , and NYU professor
Robert F. Wagner , Sr. – U.S. Senator from New York, 1927 to 1949; introduced the National Labor Relations Act
Michele Wallace 1975 – major figure in African-American studies, feminist studies and cultural studies
General Alexander S. Webb – second president of the college; winner of the Congressional Medal of Honor for heroism at the Battle of Gettysburg
Melvyn Weiss (1935–2018, class of 1956), attorney who co-founded the plaintiff class action law firm Milberg Weiss .[ 9]
Stephen Samuel Wise 1891 – Reform rabbi, early Zionist and social justice activist
Bertram D. Wolfe 1916 – political activist and historian[ 10]
Solomon Asch 1928 – psychologist, known for the Asch conformity experiments
Morton Bard – psychologist, trailblazer in crisis intervention and author of The Crime Victim's Book
Isidor Chein 1932 – minority group identification, co-wrote amicus curiae brief in Brown v. Board of Education
Kenneth Clark – CCNY professor who studied attitudes toward race and testified at Brown v. Board of Education
Jacob Cohen – psychologist and statistician, developed the coefficient kappa to assess the reliability of ratings of discrete categories of behavior (e.g., diagnoses of mental disorder); expert on factor analysis and regression analysis
Morton Deutsch – social psychology, conflict resolution
Leonard Eron – expert on the development of aggression
Leon Festinger 1939 – social psychologist; pioneered experimental social psychology, the theory of cognitive dissonance
Robert Glaser – educational psychology
Henry Gleitman – cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics
Arno Gruen – psychologist and psychoanalyst
Samuel Guze - psychiatrist; pioneered the emergence of psychiatry's ability to validly diagnose disorders
Richard Herrnstein – quantitative analysis of behavior; co-author of The Bell Curve ; Harvard professor
Frederick Irving Herzberg – two-factor theory of job satisfaction
Richard Lazarus – emotion, stress, and coping
Abraham Maslow – psychologist, known of Maslow's hierarchy of needs
Barry Mehler - psychologist, MA from CCNY, 1972
Walter Mischel – social and personality psychology
Gardner Murphy – professor of psychology at City College
Charles Nemeroff – chair of psychiatry at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
Vera S. Paster – clinical psychologist known for her contributions to ethnic minority issues and mental health
Margaret Rosario – clinical psychologist known for her research on human sexuality
Irvin Rock 1947; MA 1948 – professor of psychology at Berkeley. Leading researcher on perception
Hans Strupp (did not graduate) – expert in psychotherapy research
Woody Allen
Stanley Kubrick
Zero Mostel
Woody Allen (briefly attended)
Maurice Ashley 1993 – first African American International Chess Grandmaster
Jeff Barry – singer/songwriter; wrote with his wife Ellie Greenwich many hit songs, including "Be My Baby " and "Baby, I Love You "
Deborah Berke – architect
Chakaia Booker – sculptor
Seymour Boardman – New York abstract expressionist
Joshua Brand – Emmy Award -winning writer, director, and producer
Eddie Carmel , born Oded Ha-Carmeili (1936–1972) – Israeli-born entertainer with gigantism and acromegaly, popularly known as "The Jewish Giant"
Paddy Chayefsky 1943 – playwright and screenwriter; wrote Marty , The Hospital , Network , and Altered States [ 11]
Shirley Clarke – independent filmmaker
Madeleine Cosman – author of medieval cookbook
Julie Dash – filmmaker best known for Daughters of the Dust [ 12]
Edward Eliscu – songwriter; screenwriter; actor; wrote lyrics for "Carioca" (nominated for Best Song Oscar in 1935), inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame
Victor Ganz – collector of contemporary art in the 20th century
Davidson Garrett – poet; actor; New York City yellow taxi cab driver; known for his book King Lear of the Taxi: Musings of a New York City Actor/Taxi Driver
Sergio George 1961 – producer, musician
Ira Gershwin 1918 – lyricist; collaborator with his brother George Gershwin , and with Jerome Kern , Kurt Weill , and Harold Arlen
William Gibson 1938 – playwright, The Miracle Worker
Marv Goldberg 1964 – music historian in the field of rhythm & blues
Hazelle Goodman 1986 – stage, screen and TV actress
Eydie Gormé – singer
Bill Graham – music promoter
Allen J. Grubman – entertainment lawyer
Arthur Guiterman – humorous poet
Luis Guzmán – actor
E.Y. "Yip" Harburg 1918 – lyricist, "Brother Can You Spare a Dime? ," The Wizard of Oz , Finian's Rainbow
Caroline Hirsch – founder of the comedy club Caroline's
Judd Hirsch 1960 – actor
Sam Jaffe 1912 – actor, teacher, musician, and engineer
Sondra James - actress[ 13]
Dayal Kaur Khalsa 1963 (as Marcia Schonfeld) – author of children's books
Arthur Knight 1940 – movie critic, historian, teacher and TV host
Stanley Kubrick 1946 – film director
Mordecai Lawner – actor[ 14]
Ernest Lehman BS 1937 – screenwriter
David Maurice Levett – composer and music teacher
Leonard Liebling 1897 – composer, music critic, and long time editor-in-chief of the Musical Courier [ 15]
Hal Linden – actor, musician[ 16]
Frank Loesser (did not graduate) – songwriter; Tin Pan Alley, stage and films; wrote music and lyrics of "Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition" and the music of Guys and Dolls , etc.
Darko Lungulov 1996 – film director
Donald Madden – stage, television, and screen actor
Roma Maffia – actress[ 17]
David Margulies – actor
Ernest Martin – theatre director and manager
Jackie Mason – comedian and actor
Jerry Masucci – founder of Fania Records
Butterfly McQueen 1975 - actress
Radley Metzger – filmmaker and film distributor
Andy Mineo – rapper, singer, producer, director, actor and minister
Sterling Morrison 1970 – musician, co-founder of The Velvet Underground
Zero Mostel 1935 – actor
Thom Michael Mulligan – actor and film festival director
Stanley Nelson 1976 – documentary filmmaker
John Patitucci , jazz bassist, City College
Abraham Polonsky 1932 – screenwriter, director of Force of Evil
George Ranalli 1946 – architect and dean, Spitzer School of Architecture of The City College of New York
Adrienne Rich – feminist poet and essayist; taught at CCNY from 1968 to 1979
Faith Ringgold – artist known for her painted story quilts
Edward G. Robinson 1914 – actor
Judith Rossner – novelist; author of Looking for Mr. Goodbar and August ; attended 1952–1955.
Mickey Rourke – actor; never officially attended, but began auditing Sandra Seacat 's acting class in 1975, making what is generally referred to as his stage debut at CCNY in May of that year[ 18]
Chris Rush 1968 – stand-up comedian
Robert Russin – sculptor
Richard Schiff 1983 – Emmy Award-winning actor; star of The West Wing (played Toby Ziegler; see "Fictional" below)
Sandra Seacat 1970s – actor, director and acting coach, taught acting at City College
Ben Shahn – artist
Dan Shor – actor
Gabourey Sidibe – actress, majored in psychology
Russell Simmons (did not graduate) – hip hop mogul
Hrvoje Slovenc – photographer
Erik Sommer – contemporary artist
Alfred Stieglitz 1884 – photographer
Ed Summerlin – tenor saxophonist, composer and arranger; directed CCNY's jazz program 1971-1989
Jean Toomer - novelist; associated with the Harlem renaissance; did not graduate
Roy Turk – songwriter; member of the Songwriters' Hall of Fame; wrote lyrics of standards including "Mean To Me," "I'll Get By," "Walkin' My Baby Back Home," and others
Vagabon – multi-instrumentalist, singer-songwriter and producer; graduated from Grove School of Engineering
J. Buzz Von Ornsteiner – forensic psychologist; television personality
Eli Wallach MA 1938 – actor
Dirk Weiler – singer and actor
Cornel Wilde 1935 – actor
Literature and journalism [ edit ]
Keith Sweat 1984 – R&B singer, and radio show host personality
Alan Abelson 1942 – columnist, former editor, Barron's
Marc D. Angel MA – rabbinic leader, published author
Maurice Ashley 1988 – chess grandmaster, chess promoter, and author
Toni Cade Bambara
Helen Boyd 1995 – writer, speaker, and educator on gender and transgender theory
Lawrence Bush – author and editor of Jewish Currents
Barbara Christian
Dan Daniel 1910 – dean of American sportswriters
Dayal Kaur Khalsa (née Marcia Schonfeld) 1963 - award-winning author of children's books
Reuben Fine 1932 – chess grandmaster, psychologist, and author
Davidson Garrett 1988 – American poet
Floriana Garo 1987 – Albanian television presenter and model
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein – novelist, philosopher, MacArthur Fellow
Vivian Gornick – writer, memoirist, feminist, professor; author of Fierce Attachments (1987)
Clyde Haberman 1966 – New York Times reporter and columnist
Safiya Henderson-Holmes MFA – Poet, winner of the 1990 William Carlos Williams Award [ 19]
Oscar Hijuelos 1975 – won the 1990 Pulitzer Prize for novel The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love
Hy Hollinger – entertainment trade journalist, reporter and editor for Variety , international editor of The Hollywood Reporter (1992–2008)[ 20]
Irving Howe 1940 – author of World of Our Fathers , literary critic, coined the phrase "New York Jewish Intellectual"
John Johnson BA 1961, MA 1963 – journalist and television news correspondent/anchor
June Jordan
Bernard Kalb 1951 – journalist and television news correspondent
Marvin Kalb 1951 – journalist and television news correspondent
Kwame Karikari – Ghanaian journalist and academic
David Karp 1948 – novelist and television writer
Alfred Kazin – author of A Walker in the City , literary critic
Marvin Kitman 1953 – television critic, humorist, and author
Jack Kroll 1937 – culture editor, Newsweek
Joseph P. Lash 1931 – Pulitzer Prize for Biography winner, author of Eleanor and Franklin
Harvey Leonard (Moskowitz) 1970 – meteorologist, broadcast journalist, and TV personality
Paul Levinson – author of The Plot to Save Socrates and The Silk Code (winner, Locus Award, 1999)
Oscar Lewis 1936 – anthropologist, author, and professor
Douglas Light 2003 – novelist, screenwriter, short story writer (O. Henry Prize winner 2003, Grace Paley Prize 2010)
Audre Lorde
Bernard Malamud BA 1936 – author (won the 1967 Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award); author of The Assistant
Henry Miller Attended one semester. Author of Tropic of Cancer .
Ralph Morse – career photographer for LIFE magazine; youngest war correspondent in World War II; recipient of the 1995 Joseph A. Sprague Memorial Award, the highest honor in photojournalism
Montrose Jonas Moses 1899 – author
Walter Mosley 1991 (MA) – best-selling author whose novels about private eye Easy Rawlins have received Edgar and Golden Dagger Awards
Larry Neal
Michael Oreskes 1975 – former senior vice president for news at NPR [ 21]
Arthur Pine – author, literary agent[ 22]
Mario Puzo – best-selling novelist; screenwriter, The Godfather
Ernesto Quiñonez BA, MA 1996 – national bestselling author of Bodega Dreams
Robert Rosen BA 1974, MA 1977 – author of the best-selling biography Nowhere Man: The Final Days of John Lennon
A.M. Rosenthal 1949 – former executive editor of The New York Times
Henry Roth 1928 – novelist, author of Call It Sleep
Miriam Roth – Israeli writer and scholar of children's books; kindergarten teacher; educator
Robert Scheer – journalist
Daniel Schorr 1939 – journalist, newscaster, and commentator for CBS , CNN , and NPR
Stephen Shepard 1961 – editor-in-chief, Business Week
Anatole Shub – editor and journalist specializing in Eastern European matters
Upton Sinclair BA 1897 – author of The Jungle
Robert Sobel BSS 1951, MA 1952 – best-selling author of business histories
Stephen Somerstein BA 1966 – took iconic photographs of the Civil Rights Movement [2]
Julius Thompson BA Arts – Teacher and novelist (Andy Michael Pilgrim trilogy)
Earl Ubell 1948 – print, TV and radio journalist specializing in science and health reporting
Al Wasserman 1941 – documentary film-maker
Elsie B. Washington – author (using the pseudonym Rosalind Welles) of the 1980 book Entwined Destinies , considered the first romance novel featuring African American characters written by an African American author[ 23]
Gary Weiss 1975 – investigative journalist, author
Edward Wellen 1955 – mystery and science fiction writer[ 24]
Rajzel Żychlińsky – Yiddish -language poet
Science, technology, and mathematics[ edit ]
Edward I. Altman 1963 – Max L. Heine Professor of Finance at the NYU Stern School of Business and the Academic leader in the study of High-Yield Bond and Distressed Debt Markets and Credit Risk Management
Solomon A. Berson 1938 – medical scientist at Mt. Sinai Hospital who would probably have won a Nobel with his colleague Rosalyn Yalow had he not died prematurely
Joseph Berkson 1920 - physician and biostatistician known for Berkson's fallacy /Berkson's paradox.
Julius Blank – engineer, member of the "Traitorous Eight" who founded Silicon Valley
Eli Brookner - BEE 1953 - Radar authority, author, Raytheon Co.[ 25]
Burrill Bernard Crohn 1902 – gastroenterologist; known for disease named after him
Charles DeLisi BA 1963 – scientist, "Father of the Human Genome Project"
Milton Diamond 1955 – sexologist and professor of anatomy and reproductive biology[ 26]
Jesse Douglas 1916 – mathematician; one of two winners of the first Fields Medal awarded in 1936
Joel S. Engel 1957 – scientist and electrical engineer instrumental in mobile phone technology
Adin Falkoff – engineer, computer scientist, co-inventor of the APL language interactive system
Mitchell Feigenbaum 1964 – mathematical physicist
Richard Felder 1962 – engineering professor, co-author of Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes
Jeffrey Scott Flier 1969 – Dean of Harvard Medical School
Michael Freeman BS 1969 – inventor
Alfred Gessow 1943 – Pioneering helicopter aerodynamicist at NACA/NASA, and professor at University of Maryland
Wolcott Gibbs – distinguished chemistry professor at the Free Academy
Seymour Ginsburg 1948 – distinguished computer science professor
Richard D. Gitlin 1964 – engineer, co-invention of DSL Bell Labs
George Washington Goethals 1887 – civil engineer, supervised the construction and opening of the Panama Canal
Joseph Goldberger – started in engineering; transferred to Bellevue Hospital Medical School; discovered that B vitamin deficiency was cause of pellagra ; paved way for Elvehjem to narrow cause to vitamin B3
Dan Goldin – 9th and longest-tenured administrator of NASA
Andrew S. Grove ChE. 1960 – founder and former chairman of Intel Corp; donated $26 million, the largest gift ever received by the college
Gary Gruber 1962 – physicist, testing expert, educator, author
Alan Hantman – served as 10th Architect of the Capitol
Herman Hollerith – early computer pioneer, invented Key punch
Girardin Jean-Louis 1997 – professor in the Department of Population Health and Psychiatry at New York University
Robert E. Kahn – Internet pioneer, co-inventor of the TCP/IP protocol, co-recipient of the Turing Award in 2004
Michio Kaku – CCNY professor; theoretical physicist and co-founder of string field theory
Gary A. Klein 1964 – research psychologist, known for pioneering the field of naturalistic decision making
Leonard Kleinrock 1957 – Internet pioneer
Edward Kravitz 1954 – neurobiologist
Solomon Kullback – mathematician; NSA cryptology pioneer
Arthur J. Levenson – Lieutenant Colonel, United States Army; National Security Agency official; cryptographer; mathematician[ 27] [ 28]
Emanuel Libman – physician
Valentino Mazzia – forensic anesthesiologist[ 29]
Albert Medwin BSEE 1949 – engineer and inventor, developed CMOS integrated circuit technology
David Michaels 1976 – epidemiologist and Occupational Safety and Health Administration administrator
Irving Millman 1948 – microbiologist and virologist
Lewis Mumford – historian of technology; author of The City in History
Karl J. Niklas – professor of plant biology at Cornell University
John O'Keefe – neuroscientist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine
Paul Pimsleur – professor, applied linguist, inventor of the Pimsleur language learning system
Charles Lane Poor – astronomer
Martin Pope 1939 – physical chemist; 2006 Davy Medal winner; known for pioneering work in electronic process in organic crystals and polymers, particularly discoveries in area of ohmic contacts
Emil Leon Post – distinguished mathematician and professor of mathematics at CCNY
George Edward Post – BA in 1854, MA in 1857, and later MD in 1860, professor of surgery at the Syrian Protestant College in Beirut , now the American University of Beirut (AUB).
Jacob Rabinow – engineer; inventor; held 230 U.S. patents on a variety of mechanical, optical and electrical devices
Maurice M. Rapport 1940 – biochemist; identified the neurotransmitter serotonin
Saul Rosen 1941 BS Mathematics – early computer pioneer, mathematician, engineer, and professor[ 30]
Jack Ruina 1944 BSEE – former director of ARPA
Mario Runco Jr. 1974 – astronaut
Jonas Salk 1934 – inventor of the Salk vaccine (see polio vaccine )
Harold Scheraga 1941 - pioneering scientist in physical biochemistry
Philip H. Sechzer 1934 – anesthesiologist; pioneer in pain management; inventor of patient-controlled analgesia (PCA)
Henry Semat – Atomic and nuclear physicist; over 45 years with CCNY; Michio Kaku is the Henry Semat Professor
Abraham Sinkov – mathematician; National Security Agency cryptology pioneer
David L. Spector – biology; professor and director of research, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
David B. Steinman 1906 – engineer; bridge designer; designed the Mackinac Bridge ; founded the National Society of Professional Engineers ; namesake of the CCNY engineering building
Leonard Susskind 1962 – physicist, string theory
John P. Turner , c. 1906 – physician, surgeon, hospital administrator, and educator
Joseph F. Traub 1954 – computer scientist, mathematician[ 31]
Edgar Villchur BA, MS 1940 – inventor, educator, writer, founder of Acoustic Research
Mark Zemansky 1921 – physicist; textbook author; professor of physics at City College of New York from 1925 until he became an Emeritus Professor of Physics in 1967
Sheldon Adelson – businessman and Republican donor. Attended City College but dropped out before graduating
Frank Avellino 1958 – accountant involved in the Madoff investment scandal [ 32] [ 33]
Miles Cahn – co-founder of Coach, Inc. [ 34]
Millard Drexler – chairman and CEO of J.Crew Group; former CEO of Gap Inc
Jerald G. Fishman – chief executive officer and president of Analog Devices since November 1996
Andrew Grove 1960 – 4th employee of Intel, and eventually its president, CEO, and chairman, and Time magazine's Man of the Year in 1997, who donated $26,000,000 to CCNY's Grove School of Engineering in 2005.[ 35]
Joseph Gurwin – philanthropist who dropped out after becoming a partner in a textile firm; "realized I was making more money than my professors"[ 36]
Stanley H. Kaplan 1939 – founded Kaplan Educational Services
Nat Lefkowitz – co-chairman of the William Morris Agency [ 37]
Jean Nidetch – founded Weight Watchers
Lin Peng (professor) – David Krell Chair in Finance
Jack Rudin 1941 – real estate developer
Herbert Simon B.B.A. – real estate developer, co-founder of Simon Property Group , owner of the Indiana Pacers NBA basketball team
Melvin Simon 1949 – real estate developer, co-founder of Simon Property Group
Bernard Spitzer 1943 – real estate developer
Linda Kaplan Thaler 1972 – CEO of ad agency in New York; brought us the Aflac Duck
Benny Friedman
Nat Holman
Red Holzman
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^ Bertram D. Wolfe, A Life in Two Centuries. New York: Stein and Day, 1981; pg. 152.
^ "Profile: Paddy Chayevsky" , NNDB
^ Lee, Felicia R., [1] "In the Old Neighborhood With: Julie Dash; Home Is Where the Imagination Took Root", The New York Times , December 3, 1997
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^ Hoffman, Jan (January 8, 1995). "UP AND COMING: Roma Maffia; Ask Her Anything, But Don't Ask, 'What Is She?' ". The New York Times . p. 2.11. ProQuest 430012546 . She did grow up on First Avenue and 119th Street in East Harlem and was a drama major at City College.
^ "Mickey Rourke's elusive stage debut" . Flickr. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
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^ "Alumni Relations/Affiliates/Communications Alumni" . CCNY Alumni Association. Retrieved November 3, 2017 . The Hall of Fame was founded by the Communications Alumni Group in 1998. Among the members of this prestigious group of 117 City College alumni are screenwriters Ernest Lehman '37 and Paddy Chayefsky '43; public relations men David Finn '44 and Carl Spielvogel ' 52B; broadcast journalists Daniel Schorr '39 and David Diaz '65; newspaper editors A.M. Rosenthal '49 and Michael Oreskes '75; magazine editors Edward Kosner '58 and Jacqueline Leo '68; novelists Oscar Higuelos '75, '76 MA and Walter Mosley '91 MA, and advertising/marketing trail blazers Betsy Frank and Linda Kaplan Taylor '72; and sportswriters Maury Allen '53 and Vic Ziegel '58.
^ Nolan, Frederick (November 1, 2000). "Obituary: Arthur Pine" . The Independent . Retrieved May 2, 2021.
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^ Arthur J. Levenson Biography – Arlington National Cemetery
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