List of Rice University people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The list of Rice University people includes notable alumni, former students, faculty, and presidents of Rice University.

Alumni[]

The names of Distinguished Alumni Award recipients is available online[1] (the list is arranged alphabetically and includes recipients of other Rice University awards)

Selected Rice Alumni
Howard Hughes, former aviator, engineer, industrialist, film producer and director
Alberto Gonzales, former U.S. Attorney General
Josh Earnest, former White House Press Secretary
John Kline, U.S. Congressman
Annise Parker, 61st mayor of Houston
Tim League, founder of Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
Peggy Whitson, NASA astronaut
Lance Berkman, MLB player

Government and politics[]

Note: individuals who belong in multiple sections appear in the most relevant section.

U.S. Cabinet Secretaries[]

  • James Baker, former Secretary of State and Treasury, chair of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy[2]
  • Charles Duncan, 1947, U.S. Secretary of Energy (1979–1981)[3]
  • Alberto Gonzales, 1979, United States Attorney General (2005–2007)

U.S. Ambassadors[]

  • Edward Djerejian, Ambassador to Syria (1988–1991)
  • James Ward Hargrove, 1943, Ambassador to Australia (1976–1977)
  • Eric Nelson, 1983, Ambassador to Bosnia and Herzegovina (2019–present)

Other federal officials[]

  • Patrick G. Carrick, member of the Senior Executive Service[4]
  • Robert L. Clarke, 1963, attorney, Comptroller of the Currency (1985–1992)
  • L. Patrick Gray (attended), acting director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (1972–1973)
  • Josh Earnest, 1997, White House Press Secretary for President Barack Obama[5] (2014–2017)
  • Stephen Hahn 1980, Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration (2019–present)
  • Benjamin J. Rhodes, 2000, speechwriter and national security adviser to Barack Obama[6]

U.S. Senators and Congressmen[]

Governors[]

Mayors[]

  • George Chang, Ph.D. 1966, mayor of Tainan, Taiwan (1997–2001)
  • Roy Hofheinz, 1932 (attended), mayor of the City of Houston[12] (1953–1955)
  • Annise Parker, 1978, mayor of the City of Houston[13] (2010–2016)
  • Starke Taylor, 1943, mayor of the City of Dallas (1983–1987)

State and local officials[]

  • George P. Bush, 1998, commissioner of the Texas General Land Office; son of Florida Governor Jeb Bush; nephew of former President George W. Bush; grandson of former President George H. W. Bush
  • William P. Hobby, Jr., 1953, Lieutenant Governor of Texas (1973–1991); former chancellor of the University of Houston System; former president and executive editor at The Houston Post'[14]
  • Scott Hochberg, member of the Texas House of Representatives[citation needed]
  • M.J. Khan, Master of Business Administration, former Houston City Council member[15]
  • Eliot Shapleigh, 1974, Texas state senator[16]

Judges[]

  • Lamar John Ryan Cecil, 1923, United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas (1954-1958)
  • Samuel B Cole, 1995, Immigration Judge, Chicago Immigration Court
  • Finis E. Cowan, 1951, United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas (1977-1979)
  • Harold R. DeMoss Jr., 1952, Federal Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (1991-2015)
  • Hugh Gibson, 1940, United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas (1979-1998)
  • Sam E. Haddon, 1959, United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Montana (2012-present)
  • Sharon Keller, 1975, Presiding Judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (2001-present)
  • James Aubrey Parker, 1959, Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico (2003-present)
  • Karen Gren Scholer, 1979, United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas (2018-present)
  • Anuraag Singhal, 1986, United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida (2019-present)
  • Leslie H. Southwick, 1972, Federal Judge on the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals[17]

Other[]

  • Mitch Bainwol, 1983, former chair, Republican National Committee[18]
  • William Luther Pierce, 1955, National Alliance founder[citation needed]
  • Gary H. Stern, chief executive of the Ninth Federal Reserve Bank, at Minneapolis[19]

Arts and letters[]

Architecture[]

  • E. Fay Jones, Master of Architecture degree 1951, architect, named in 2000 by the American Institute of Architects as "one of the ten most influential architects of the twentieth century"[20]
  • Eric Kuhne, 1973, British architect
  • Charles Renfro, BArch 1989, architect, partner of Diller Scofidio + Renfro
  • Karen Cook, BArch, architect, founding partner of PLP Architecture

Film and television[]

History and journalism[]

  • William Broyles, Jr., 1966, founder of Texas Monthly; former editor in chief at Newsweek; screenwriter of Apollo 13, Cast Away, Unfaithful, Flags of Our Fathers
  • Gwynne Dyer, M.A. 1966, journalist, syndicated columnist and military historian; Senior Lecturer in War Studies at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (1973–1977)
  • John Graves, 1942, nature writer, Goodbye to a River
  • Jo Ling Kent, 2006, NBC News correspondent[22]
  • Michael Noer, 1992, executive news editor for Forbes.com
  • Steve Sailer, 1980, writer for Taki's Magazine and VDARE
  • Rosa Levin Toubin, Jewish Texan historian, civic leader and philanthropist
  • Lamar White, 2005, investigative journalist known for his work on racism and political corruption in the Deep South
  • Zack Kopplin, 2015, political activist, journalist, and television personality who came to fame during high school for publicly campaigning against the Louisiana Science Education Act, a creationism law. He currently serves as an investigator for the Government Accountability Project.

Literature[]

  • Candace Bushnell (attended), author of Sex and the City
  • Eva Hoffman, 1967, author, Lost in Translation, Shtetl: The Life and Death of a Small Town and the World of Polish Jews, The Secret: A Novel, After Such Knowledge
  • Larry McMurtry, M.A. 1960, Pulitzer Prize-winning author, known for Lonesome Dove, The Last Picture Show, and Terms of Endearment; won Oscar for Brokeback Mountain screenplay
  • Elizabeth Moon, 1968, author, The Deed of Paksenarrion, Winning Colors
  • Joyce Carol Oates (attended), author; Princeton creative writing professor; dropped out of English PhD program after publishing in Best American Short Stories
  • John Pipkin, PhD 1997, novelist

Music[]

  • Lola Astanova, Master's 2005, summa cum laude, Russian-born classical pianist[citation needed]
  • Rebecca Carrington, Masters in Music, British "music comedian"
  • Carl P. Daw Jr., Episcopalian priest; director of the Hymn Society in the United States and Canada; researcher and authority on sacred music
  • Caroline Shaw, 2004, Pulitzer Prize-winning musician
  • Kate Soper, 2003, Pulitzer Prize-finalist musician

Visual art[]

Business[]

  • Brian Armstrong, 2005 and 2006, founder and CEO of Coinbase[23]
  • George R. Brown, 1920, founder of Brown and Root, one of the world's largest construction firms[24]
  • Thomas H. Cruikshank, former chairman and CEO of Halliburton[25]
  • L. John Doerr, 1973, venture capitalist at Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers; CEO of ; co-founder of the @Home Network; on the board of directors of Intuit, Amazon.com, PalmOne, Sun Microsystems, Google, and Segway[26]
  • Charles Duncan, 1947, former president, Coca-Cola; former Secretary of Energy under Jimmy Carter (1979–1981)[27]
  • Mark Dankberg, 1976, co-founder and CEO, ViaSat
  • Mark Durcan, 1984, CEO of Micron Technology[28]
  • Lynn Elsenhans, chairman and CEO of Sunoco[29]
  • Kevin Harvey, 1987, founding member and general partner at Benchmark, a Silicon Valley venture capital firm.[30]
  • Howard Hughes (attended), richest man in the world in 1976[citation needed]
  • Steve Jackson, 1974, founder of Steve Jackson Games[31]
  • Ken Kennedy, 1967, founder of Center for Research on Parallel Computation, the High Performance Fortran Forum; co-chair of the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee with Bill Joy of Sun Microsystems[citation needed]
  • Ali Yıldırım Koç, 1990, Koç Holding member; 37th president of Turkish multisport club Fenerbahçe S.K.
  • Fred C. Koch (attended), founder of Koch Industries, one of the largest private companies in the United States[32]
  • James E. Lyon, Houston developer and Republican politician[33]
  • Cal McNair, 1995, chairman and CEO of the Houston Texans NFL franchise[34][35]
  • Arun Netravali, 1969 and 1971, pioneer of digital technology including HDTV; former president of Bell Laboratories and Chief Scientist for Lucent Technologies[36]
  • David Rhodes, 1996, president of CBS News; former head of U.S. television for Bloomberg.[37]
  • Hector Ruiz, 1972, president and CEO of AMD[38]
  • James Treybig, 1963 and 1964, founder of Tandem Computers[citation needed]
  • Jim Turley, 1977 and 1978, chairman and CEO of Ernst & Young[39]
  • Jim Whitehurst, 1989, president and CEO of Red Hat[40]
  • Glenn Youngkin, 1990, former co-CEO of The Carlyle Group[41]

Science and technology[]

Astronauts[]

NASA flight directors[]

Nobel laureates[]

  • Robert Woodrow Wilson, 1957, co-discoverer of cosmic microwave background radiation
  • Robert F. Curl Jr., 1954, co-discoverer of fullerenes

Other sciences[]

  • Jay Bailey, BA 1966, PhD 1969, pioneer of biochemical engineering
  • Andrew Dessler, Lovett 1986 climate change meteorologist
  • Mark Durcan, 1979–1984, Master of Chemical Engineering and a BS chemical engineering, chief executive officer at Micron Technology[52]
  • David Eagleman, 1993, neuroscientist at Stanford University and author of Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives
  • James E. Gunn, Baker 1961, astronomer at Princeton University, 1977 National Academy of Sciences 2009 recipient of the National Medal of Science
  • Wanda Gass, 1978, electrical engineer who helped develop the first commercially viable digital signal processor at Texas Instruments
  • He Jiankui, PhD 2010, widely condemned geneticist who claimed to have created the world's first genome edited babies, Nana and Lulu
  • Dave Hyatt, Baker 1994, browser developer at Netscape and Apple
  • Howard Johnson, PhD 1982, electrical engineer
  • Riki Kobayashi, 1943, B.S., chemical engineering.
  • Larry Lake, PhD 1973, petroleum engineer and member of the National Academy of Engineering
  • Amy Leventer, 1988, Ph.D., geology, marine biologist, micropaleontologist, Antarctic researcher[53]
  • Frank L. Lewis, 1971, MEE.
  • George Whitelaw Mackey, 1938, mathematician, 1962 National Academy of Sciences
  • Diana McSherry, 1967, M.A., 1969, Ph.D., computer scientist, biophysicist
  • Jack Morava, 1968, mathematician
  • John Morgan, 1968, mathematician, 2013 National Academy of Sciences
  • Harold E. Rorschach Jr., professor of physics at Rice (1952-1993), was the chairman of the physics department three times and principal investigator of the NASA interdisciplinary laboratory at Rice
  • Steven Schafersman, 1983 PhD in geology, president of Texas Citizens for Science
  • Dorry Segev, Israeli-born Marjory K. and Thomas Pozefsky Professor of Surgery at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Professor of Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and Associate Vice Chair of the Department of Surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital
  • Fred I. Stalkup, 1957 BS in chemical engineering, 1961 Ph.D. chemical engineering noted for work in enhanced oil recovery, member of the National Academy of Engineering
  • Dennis Sullivan, 1963 BA in mathematics, mathematician at Stony Brook University and CUNY grad school; recipient of the 2004 National Medal of Science; 2010 Wolf Prize in Mathematics
  • Powtawche Valerino, PhD 2005, mechanical engineer at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory who worked on the Cassini mission

Academia[]

  • Daniel Albright, 1967, Harvard University English professor
  • Walter L. Buenger, Ph.D. 1979, historian at Texas A&M University
  • Nancy Cole, 1964, educational psychologist
  • Gwynne Dyer, 1973–1977, Senior Lecturer in War Studies at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
  • Cristle Collins Judd B.M./M.M. 1983, 11th President of Sarah Lawrence College
  • R. Bowen Loftin, Ph.D. 1975, chancellor of the University of Missouri
  • Bennett McCallum, B.A. 1957, B.S. 1958, Ph.D. 1969, monetary economist and professor at the Tepper School of Business
  • Robert K. Ritner, 1975, Egyptologist at the University of Chicago
  • Roland W. Schmitt, Ph.D. 1951, President of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (1988–1993)
  • Namita Gupta Wiggers, 1989, expert in the field of contemporary craft, curator, educator and writer
  • Kannan Moudgalya, PhD 1985, professor of Chemical Engineering at IITB

Religion[]

Sports[]

Baseball[]

  • David Aardsma, 2003, MLB pitcher, 22nd overall pick of the San Francisco Giants[54]
  • Lance Berkman, 1997, six-time All-Star Major League baseball player for the Houston Astros[55]
  • Norm Charlton, 1984, Major League Baseball player[56]
  • Bubba Crosby, 1998, Major League Baseball player for the New York Yankees[57]
  • José Cruz, Jr., 1993, Major League Baseball player[58]
  • Tyler Duffey, Major League Baseball player for the Minnesota Twins[59]
  • Brock Holt, 2009, Major League Baseball utility player for the Boston Red Sox[60]
  • Philip Humber, 2004, Major League Baseball player, 3rd overall pick of the New York Mets;[61] pitched a perfect game in 2012
  • Jeff Niemann, 2004, Major League Baseball pitcher, 4th overall pick of the Tampa Bay Devil Rays[62]
  • Anthony Rendon, 2011, Major League Baseball first-round draft choice of the Washington Nationals

Basketball[]

  • Morris Almond, 2007, NBA guard, 25th overall pick of the Utah Jazz[63]
  • Suleiman Braimoh (born 1989), Nigerian-American basketball player in the Israel Basketball Premier League
  • Egor Koulechov (born 1994), Israeli-Russian professional basketball player for Israeli team Ironi Nahariya
  • Ricky Pierce, 1983, NBA guard, 1983–1998; NBA All-Star 1991; NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award 1987 and 1990[64]
  • Mike Wilks, 2001, NBA guard 2002–09[65]

Football[]

Tennis[]

  • Sam Match (1923–2010), tennis player; won the NCAA doubles championship with Rice University in 1947[90]
  • Harold Solomon (born 1952), professional tennis player ranked as high as number 5 in the world[91]

Track and field[]

  • Andrea Blackett 1997, Barbados Olympic hurdler[92] and 1998 Commonwealth Games 400 m hurdles champion[93]
  • Jason Colwick, 2010, two-time NCAA champion in pole vault[94]
  • Fred Hansen, 1963, NCAA champion in pole vault, gold medalist at 1964 Summer Olympics, world record holder[95]
  • Dave Roberts, 1974, bronze medalist in pole vault at 1976 Summer Olympics,[96] and former world record holder (twice) in pole vault[97]
  • Sean Wade, Master runner of the Year and Coach of the Cross Country team at The Kinkaid School[98]

Other[]

  • Adi Bichman, 2001, Israeli freestyle and medley swimmer[99]
  • Sam McGuffie, 2013, member of the 2018 U.S. Olympic Men's Bobsleigh Team as a push crewman for the four man bobsled and brakeman for the two-man bobsled
  • Robert L. Leuschner Jr., 1957, graduated as a chemical engineer, but after joining the NROTC at Rice, pursued a distinguished career in the U.S. Navy, attaining the rank of rear admiral

Miscellaneous[]

  • Bill Arhos, KLRU station manager, program director; Austin City Limits executive producer
  • John Bradshaw, author and motivational speaker
  • Amanda Goad, Scripps National Spelling Bee champion
  • Henry Masterson III, National Medal of Arts recipient

Fictional[]

  • L. Bob Rife, fiber-optics monopolist and villain in Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash[100]
  • Louis Holland, protagonist and KTRU station manager in Jonathan Franzen's Strong Motion[101]
  • a mathematician from William Gibson's novel Pattern Recognition[102]
  • Andy Carpenter, Mississippi native working on his history Ph.D. in Dean James's novel Death by Dissertation[103]
  • Carla Walton, a software engineer in the television show Silicon Valley

Faculty and staff[]

Nobel laureates[]

  • Robert F. Curl Jr. (also an alumnus of Rice), professor of chemistry, awarded 1996 in chemistry for the discovery of fullerenes[104]
  • Hermann Joseph Muller, professor of biology, awarded 1946 in physiology or medicine for the discovery for X-ray mutagenesis
  • Richard Smalley, professor of chemistry, awarded 1996 in chemistry for the discovery of fullerenes
  • Robert Woodrow Wilson, senior scientist, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; awarded 1978 in physics for the discovery of cosmic microwave background radiation
  • Roger Penrose, former Rice University’s Edgar Odell Lovett Professor of Mathematics,[105] awarded 2020 in physics for the discovery that black hole formation is a robust prediction of the general theory of relativity[106]

Other faculty[]

  • Hanan Ashrawi, Palestinian scholar and activist
  • Richard Baraniuk, professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
  • Tani E. Barlow, feminist scholar
  • Earl Black, political science professor
  • Elias Bongmba, professor of Religious Studies
  • Douglas Brinkley, award-winning historian
  • Solomon Bochner, mathematician
  • Bun B (guest lecturer),[107] rapper
  • C. Sidney Burrus, electrical engineer
  • B. Jill Carroll, professor of Religious Studies
  • Suchan Chae, Korean politician and economics professor
  • Franklin Chang-Diaz, former NASA astronaut
  • Justin Cronin, author and professor of English
  • Rajdeep Dasgupta, professor of Planetary Studies
  • Gerald R. Dickens, professor of Earth Science
  • Edward Djerejian, American diplomat
  • Elaine Howard Ecklund, professor of Sociology
  • Paul Ellison, bass musician
  • Mark Embree, mathematician
  • Ariel Fernandez, physical chemist
  • Naomi Halas, professor of biochemical engineering, chemistry and physics
  • Mauro Hamza, fencing coach
  • Julian Huxley, evolutionary biologist
  • Ken Kennedy, computer scientist
  • Anne C. Klein, professor of Religious Studies and Buddhist scholar
  • Riki Kobayashi, chemical engineer
  • Jeffrey Kurtzman, pianist and musicologist
  • Sydney Lamb, linguist
  • Neal Lane, physicist and former director of the National Science Foundation
  • Robert Lewis, actor, director and co-founder of the Actors Studio
  • Qilin Li,[108] environmental engineer
  • Cho-Liang Lin, American violinist and soloist
  • D. Michael Lindsay, sociologist
  • Andreas Luttge, professor of Earth Science and Chemistry
  • George Marcus, anthropologist
  • Guy T. McBride, chemical engineer
  • Brian O'Brien, space scientist
  • Ann Saterbak, professor of Biomedical engineering
  • Scott Sonenshein, organizational psychologist
  • Monroe K. Spears (1916-1998), Libbie Shearn Moody Professor of English at Rice University from 1964 to 1986.[109]
  • Robert M. Stein, political scientist
  • Robert B. Stobaugh, economics writer
  • Yizhi Jane Tao, biochemist
  • Richard Tapia, mathematician and winner of the National Medal of Science
  • James Tour, chemist and nanotechnologist
  • Frank Vandiver, American Civil War historian and university president
  • Moshe Vardi, Israeli mathematician and computer scientist
  • William F. Walker, engineer and university president
  • Martin Wiener, historian
  • Peter Wolynes, professor of Chemistry
  • Susan Wood, poet and professor of English
  • Stephen A. Zeff, accounting historian

Staff[]

  • John Heisman, for whom the coveted Heisman Trophy is named; football coach, 1924–1927, College Football Hall of Fame inductee, 1954[110]
  • Jess Neely, football coach 1940–1966, College Football Hall of Fame inductee, 1971[111]

Presidents of Rice[]

  1. Edgar Odell Lovett (president founding to 1946)
  2. William V. Houston (president 1946–1961)
  3. Kenneth Pitzer (president 1961–1968)
  4. Norman Hackerman (president 1970–1985)
  5. George Rupp (president 1985–1993)
  6. Malcolm Gillis (president 1993–2004)
  7. David Leebron (president 2004 to present)

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  110. ^ John Heisman College Football Hall of Fame
  111. ^ Jess Neely College Football Hall of Fame
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