| Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
| James Truslow Adams |
1898 |
Writer, historian |
|
| Benjamin Adler |
|
Helped develop commercial television |
[6] |
| Ali Akansu |
1983, 1987 |
Turkish American scientist; known for his contributions to the theory and applications of sub-band and wavelet transforms; professor at NJIT |
|
| Fred Amoroso |
|
Former chairman of Yahoo!; former president, CEO, and director of Rovi Corporation |
[7] |
| Charles E. Anderson |
1948 |
First African-American to receive a Ph.D. in Meteorology |
|
| Bishnu S. Atal |
1968 |
Researcher in linear predictive coding; joined Bell Laboratories in 1961; made major contributions in the field of speech analysis, synthesis, and coding, including low bit-rate speech coding and automatic speech recognition; retired in 2002 to become affiliate professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Washington |
|
| Franklin Bartlett |
1865 |
U.S. representative from New York |
|
| Jacob Bekenstein |
1966, 1969, 1971 |
Namesake of Bekenstein bound in general relativity; member of Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities; laureate of the Wolf Prize in Physics for work on black holes |
|
| David Bergstein |
1982 |
Entrepreneur; film producer; chairman of THINKFilm and Capitol Films |
|
| Barouh Berkovits |
1956 |
Invented the cardiac defibrillator and artificial cardiac pacemaker |
[1] |
| Denis Blackmore |
1965, 1969 |
Physicist; contributed to the foundation of black hole thermodynamics; professor at New Jersey Institute of Technology |
|
| Bruno A. Boley |
|
Dean of Engineering at Northwestern University |
|
| Israel Borovich |
1967, 1968, 1971, Hon 2005 |
Chairman, El Al Israel Airlines |
|
| Ursula Burns |
1980 |
CEO, Xerox Corporation |
|
| Charles Camarda |
1974 |
NASA scientist and mission specialist on the Return to Flight voyage of the shuttle Discovery |
|
| Hugh John Casey |
|
Chairman of the New York City Transit Authority; chief engineer of the Army |
|
| K. Mani Chandy |
1968 |
Simon Ramo Professor of Computer Science and deputy chair of engineering at the California Institute of Technology |
|
| Bern Dibner |
1921 |
Inventor of the first solderless electrical connector; founder of the Burndy Corporation |
|
| John Dionisio |
|
Chairman and CEO of AECOM |
|
| Dot da Genius |
2008 |
Hip-hop producer |
|
| Gertrude B. Elion |
|
Former doctoral student at Polytechnic; awarded 1988 Nobel Prize in medicine |
[8] |
| Joel S. Engel |
1964 |
Engineer, known for fundamental contributions to the development of cellular networks |
|
| Leopold B. Felsen |
1959, 1961, 1964 |
Electrical engineer; member of the National Academy of Engineering; named a life fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers; dean of Engineering 1974–1978 at Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn; professor at Boston University College of Engineering |
|
| Antonio Ferri |
|
Leader of a team that created the first practical hypersonic tunnel heater, used to heat air for discharge into a wind tunnel |
[2] |
| Paul Ferri |
|
Founder of Matrix Partners |
|
| Charles Ranlett Flint |
1868 |
Businessman; founder of the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company, which later became IBM |
|
| Elmer L. Gaden |
|
Russ Prize winner |
[9] |
| Torunn Atteraas Garin |
|
Oversaw the development of the artificial sweetener aspartame and was a national spokesperson for it; developed nontoxic processes to create food colorings and remove caffeine from coffee |
|
| Carl Gatto |
1960 |
Republican member of the Alaska House of Representatives |
|
| Norman Gaylord |
1949, 1950 |
Industrial chemist and research scientist; played a key role in the development of the oxygen-permeable contact lens |
|
| Erol Gelenbe |
1968, 1972 |
Electrical engineer; Electrical and Computer Engineering professor at University of Michigan; Electrical and Computer Engineering professor at Duke University; Electrical and Computer Engineering professor at Imperial College London |
|
| Bancroft Gherardi, Jr. |
1891, 1933H |
Electrical engineer; pioneer in early telephone systems |
|
| Tetsugen Bernard Glassman |
1960 |
Jewish-American Zen Buddhist roshi |
|
| Steven L. Goldman |
1962 |
Andrew W. Mellon Distinguished Professor in the Humanities at Lehigh University |
|
| Martha Greenblatt |
1967 |
Chemist, researcher, and faculty member at Rutgers University |
|
| Jay Greene |
1964 |
Former chief engineer of NASA Johnson Space Center |
|
| Leonard Greene |
|
Inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame; inventor and aerodynamics engineer who held more than 200 patents, many aviation-related |
|
| Clayton Hamilton |
1900 |
Drama critic; professor at Columbia University |
|
| Fredric J. Harris |
1961 |
Expert on DSP and communication systems |
|
| Charles Waldo Haskins |
|
Founder of Haskins and Sells, which later merged with Deloitte |
|
| F. Augustus Heinze |
|
Colorful Montana entrepreneur |
|
| Nicholas Hoff |
|
Structural analyst whose calculations became the international guideposts in aircraft design |
[2] |
| Edward Everett Horton |
1908 |
Character actor, appeared in The Front Page, Top Hat, Here Comes Mr. Jordan, Pocketful of Miracles |
|
| Frances Hugle |
|
Scientist, engineer, inventor; contributed to the understanding of semiconductors, integrated circuitry, and the unique electrical principles of microscopic materials |
|
| Joseph J. Jacobs |
1937, 1939, 1942 |
Founder of Jacobs Engineering Group |
|
| Tudor Jenks |
1874 |
Author, poet, artist, editor, journalist, lawyer |
|
| Leopold Just |
|
Designed virtually every major bridge and tunnel in New York City, as well as Washington’s Metro system and the Ohio and Connecticut Turnpikes |
|
| Ephraim Katzir |
Post-doc |
President of Israel; biophysicist |
|
| Thomas Kelly |
1958 |
Scientist, father of lunar module |
[10] |
| Murray S. Klamkin |
1947 |
Mathematician |
|
| Eugene Kleiner |
1948 |
Honored by the U.S. Postal Service with a commemorative stamp for developing and manufacturing revolutionary computer chips |
|
| William B. Kouwenhoven |
1906 |
Inventor of closed-chest cardiac defibrillator; recipient of Edison Medal; professor and dean of engineering at Johns Hopkins University |
|
| Erich E. Kunhardt |
1976 |
Professor at Stevens Institute of Technology, University of Texas, and NYU-Poly |
|
| Norman Lamm |
|
Chancellor and president of Yeshiva University |
|
| Eugene Lang |
1940-41 |
Millionaire; industrialist; chair emeritus of Swarthmore College; founder and chair emeritus of the Conference of Board Chairs of Liberal Arts Colleges; board member of the Columbia University Business School; board member of New School University |
|
| Yehuda (Leo) Levi |
1964 |
Rector of Jerusalem College of Technology |
|
| Robert H. Lieberman |
1962 |
Novelist and film director; long-time member of the Physics faculty at Cornell University |
|
| Hung-Chang Lin |
1956 |
Inventor |
|
| O. Winston Link |
1937 |
Pioneering photographer |
|
| Charles Battell Loomis |
|
Author |
|
| William H. Maddren |
|
Physician; fourth head coach of the Johns Hopkins University lacrosse team, 1897–1901 |
|
| Nathan Marcuvitz |
|
Head of the experimental group of the Radiation Laboratory (MIT) |
|
| Christos V. Massalas |
1976 |
Greek academic working in the fields of mathematics and materials science |
|
| George W. Melville |
1861 |
Civil War-era engineer for the Navy; awarded Congressional Gold Medal; namesake of several ships |
|
| Ami Miron |
|
American Israeli entrepreneur and technology developer; developed and patented the first picture-in-picture for Philips Electronics; led the development of the first high-definition television (HDTV) system in the U.S., for which he received two Technology and Engineering Emmy Awards; founded software networking company MoreCom; president and founder of AM Partners |
|
| Stephen Morse |
1963 |
Architect of the Intel 8086 chip |
|
| Paolo A. Nespoli |
1988, 1989 |
Italian astronaut, mission specialist of STS-120 Space Shuttle mission |
|
| A. Michael Noll |
1971 |
Professor emeritus and dean at the Annenberg School for Communication at University of Southern California |
|
| Joseph Owades |
1944, 1950 |
Brewing pioneer, inventor of lite beer |
[11] |
| Frank Padavan |
1956 |
Republican New York state senator |
|
| Judea Pearl |
1965, Ph.D |
Professor of Computer Science and Statistics and director of the Cognitive Systems Laboratory at UCLA; awarded Turing Prize in 2011 |
|
| Martin L. Perl |
1948, Hon 1996 |
Awarded 1982 Wolf Prize in physics and 1995 Nobel Prize in physics; member of National Academy of Sciences |
|
| Peter Pershan |
1956 |
Physicist; Frank B. Baird, Jr. Professor of Science, in both the Physics Department and Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Harvard University; recipient of 1988 Rothschild Prize, 2005 Israel Prize, and 2012 Wolf Prize in Physics |
|
| Leonard M. Pomata |
|
Virginia's secretary of technology |
[12] |
| Martin Pope |
1950 |
Physical chemist and professor emeritus at New York University |
|
| George Preti |
|
Analytical organic chemist, Monell Chemical Senses Center |
|
| Stav Prodromou |
1967, 1970 |
Executive advisor, Alien Technology |
|
| Buddy Ratner |
1972 |
A founding father of modern bioengineering; fellow of the American Association For the Advancement of Science |
|
| Fazlollah Reza |
1950 |
Professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
|
| Mark Ronald |
1968 |
Former president and CEO, BAE Systems Inc. |
|
| Jack Ruina |
1957, 1961 |
Professor emeritus of Electrical Engineering at MIT; instrumental in establishing the MIT Security Studies Program and its first director; professor at Brown University and the University of Illinois |
|
| Richard Santulli |
1966 |
CEO, NetJets |
|
| Martin Schechter |
|
Order of British Columbia recipient for HIV research |
|
| George Segal |
|
Sculptor of monochromatic, cast plaster figures |
|
| Hugh Seidman |
1961 |
Taught writing at the University of Wisconsin, Yale University, Columbia University, the College of William and Mary, and The New School |
|
| Seymour Shapiro |
1956 PhD |
Synthesized phenformin |
|
| Len Shustek |
|
Chairman of the board of trustees of the Computer History Museum |
|
| Ronald Silverman |
1979, 1990 |
Professor of ophthalmology at Weill Cornell Medical College |
|
| Joel B. Snyder |
|
IEEE president |
|
| Robert J. Stevens |
1985 |
Chairman, president and CEO of Lockheed Martin |
|
| Jerome Swartz |
1968 |
Co-founded Symbol Technologies; professor at Stony Brook University in the departments of Electrical & Computer Engineering and Applied Math & Statistics; professor at NYU-Poly; board member at Stony Brook University and NYU-Poly; trustee at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and at the University of California at San Diego |
|
| Mario Tchou |
|
Led a group of scientists from the University of Pisa to invent, in 1959, the ELEA 9003, Italy's first computer |
|
| David J. Thomson |
1967, 1971 |
Electrical engineer; professor at Princeton University, Stanford University, MIT, University of Cambridge, and Queen’s University; fellow of the Royal Society of Canada |
|
| Don Torrieri |
1966 |
Research engineer; fellow of the US Army Research Laboratory |
|
| William Tubby |
1875 |
|
|
| Hermann Viets |
1965, 1966, 1970 |
President of Milwaukee School of Engineering; professor of Engineering at Wright State University; professor and associate dean for research at West Virginia University; dean of Engineering at University of Rhode Island |
|
| Pat Villani |
1976, 1982 |
Computer programmer |
|
| Steve Wallach |
1966 |
Adviser to Centerpoint Venture partners, Sevin-Rosen, and Interwest; consultant to the United States Department of Energy Advanced Scientific Computing program at Los Alamos |
|
| Sang Whang |
1956, 1966 |
Korean-American community leader and politician in Florida |
|
| Robert Anton Wilson |
attended 1952–57 |
Author of 35 influential books |
|
| Ronald R. Yager |
1958 |
Professor at Pennsylvania State University; visiting researcher and scholar at University of California, Berkeley |
|