The following is a list of notable people who attended the Bronx High School of Science in the Bronx, New York City.
Academia
- Paul Sunde, Director of Admissions, Dartmouth College
- Bruce Ackerman (1960), constitutional law scholar, Yale Law School
- Marshall Berman, professor, City College
- Harold Brown, former president, California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
- Charles Cogen, president, New York City's United Federation of Teachers and American Federation of Teachers
- Martin S. Fiebert (1956), author, psychologist, professor emeritus, California State University, Long Beach
- Jeffrey S. Flier (1964), Dean of Harvard Medical School[citation needed]
- Murray Gerstenhaber (born 1927), mathematician and lawyer
- Herb Goldberg, author, psychologist, and male liberation movement activist[1]
- Gene Grossman (1973), former chair, Department of Economics, Princeton University[citation needed]
- Martin Jay (1961), historian, University of California Berkeley[citation needed]
- Richard Kadison (1942), mathematician[2]
- Deborah Frank Lockhart (1965), American Mathematical Society fellow
- Andrew Lo (1977), professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, Director of MIT's Laboratory for Financial Engineering
- Daniel Lowenstein (1960), Director of the Center for Liberal Arts and Institutions, UCLA and first chairman of California Fair Political Practices Commission[citation needed]
- Lynn Mahoney (1982), president, San Francisco State University[3][4]
- Anthony Marx (1977), president and CEO of New York Public Library and former president, Amherst College
- Richard A. Muller, professor of physics, University of California, Berkeley
- George Ritzer (1958), sociologist[5]
- Michael I. Sovern, former president, Columbia University[citation needed]
- Joan Straumanis (1953), former president, Antioch College
- Gregory J. Vincent (1979), president, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
- Jack Russell Weinstein (1987), professor of philosophy and Director of Institute for Philosophy in Public Life, University of North Dakota, and NPR radio host
- Barry Wellman (1959), author, sociologist, founder of International Network for Social Network Analysis, Royal Society of Canada fellow, and developer of the theory of "networked individualism"[6]
- Judy Yee, professor of radiology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Activism, and government
- Seth Andrew (1996), educator and founder, Democracy Prep Public Schools
- Jamaal Bailey (2000), New York State Senator
- Harold Brown (1943), scientist and former United States Secretary of Defense (1977–81)[7][8][9]
- Kwame Turé (Stokely Carmichael) (1960), leader of Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and Black Panther Party, notable figure in the Civil Rights Movement[10][7]
- Majora Carter (1984), urban revitalization strategist, 2005 recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship "Genius Grant", 2010 Peabody Award recipient[11][12][13]
- Edmond E. Chang (1988), federal judge, U.S. District Court for Northern Illinois[14]
- Richard Danzig (1961), lawyer, former U.S. Secretary of the Navy (1998–2001), and Center for a New American Security chariman[15]
- Jeffrey Dinowitz (1971), New York State Representative[16]
- Eric Dinowitz (2003), member of the New York City Council from the 11th district
- Harriet Drummond (1969), Alaska state legislator
- Martin Garbus (1951), First Amendment lawyer
- Todd Gitlin (1959), writer, social critic, and former president of Students for a Democratic Society[17]
- Harrison J. Goldin (1953), former New York City Comptroller and former New York State Senator[11][7]
- Alan Grayson (1975) former U.S. Congressman representing Florida's 8th congressional district[18]
- Howard Gutman, (1973) lawyer, actor, and former U.S. ambassador to Belgium
- Alvin Hellerstein (born 1933), U.S. federal district court judge
- Dora Irizarry (1972), U.S. federal district court judge, U.S. District Court for Eastern District of New York[19]
- Benjamin Kallos (1999), New York City councilman
- G. Oliver Koppell (1958), former New York State attorney general, former New York State Representative, former New York City councilman
- Jeffrey Korman (1963), former New York State Senator
- Kenneth Kronberg (1964), printing company owner and LaRouche movement activist
- Bill Lann Lee (1967), former U.S. Assistant Attorney General in U.S. Justice Department Civil Rights Division and first Asian–American to head the division[20][21]
- Leonard Lauder (1950), businessman, art collector, and heir to the Estee Lauder fortune.
- Ronald Lauder (1961), businessman, art collector, heir to the Estee Lauder fortune, former U.S. Ambassador to Austria; current president of the World Jewish Congress[22]
- Harold O. Levy (1970), former New York City School Chancellor (2000–02)[10][23]
- Ira Millstein (1943), antitrust lawyer, longest-practicing partner in big law[24]
- John Liu (1985), former New York City councilman, former New York City Comptroller, first Asian–American member of New York City Council, and first to hold citywide office[11][25][26]
- Nita Lowey (1955), U.S. Congresswoman representing New York's 17th congressional district[25][11][27][28]
- Edward Mermelstein (1987), former lawyer and businessman, current Commissioner of the New York City Mayor's Office of International Affairs
- Robert Price (1950), New York State Commissioner of Investigation and former Deputy Mayor of New York City.[citation needed]
- Donald L. Ritter, former U.S. Congressman representing Pennsylvania's 15th congressional district[citation needed]
- Martha Shelley, lesbian activist, feminist, writer, and poet
- Madeline Singas, Associate Judge, New York Court of Appeals
- Toby Ann Stavisky, (1956) Member of the New York State Senate
- Terence Tolbert (1982), political operative and consultant for various New York State politicians; was involved in Barack Obama's presidential campaign[29]
Arts
Fine arts
- Elliott Landy (1959), photographer noted for his work with rock musicians, especially for his work at the Woodstock Festival
- Daniel Libeskind (1965), architect whose designs include Freedom Tower, Jewish Museum Berlin, Felix Nussbaum Haus, and the Royal Ontario Museum[11][25][30][31]
- Marilyn Nance (1971), award-winning photographer of spirituality and the African diaspora
Performing arts
- Zack Alford (1983), professional drummer, (David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, and The B-52's[32][33])
- Emanuel Azenberg (1951), multiple Tony and Drama Desk Award-winning producer, noted for his long professional relationship with Neil Simon[34]
- James Bethea (1982), television producer and executive
- Mark Boal (1991), Academy Award-winning screenwriter, The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty
- Jessie Cannizzaro (2008), actress, singer, and comedy writer[35]
- Dominic Chianese (1948), singer and actor, The Godfather Part II, Dog Day Afternoon and Junior Soprano on The Sopranos[25][11][36]
- Jon Cryer (1983), two-time Primetime Emmy Award-winning actor (Pretty in Pink, Hot Shots!, Two and a Half Men)[37]
- Bobby Darin (as Walden Robert Cassotto) (1953), Oscar-nominated actor, best known for his work as a songwriter and recording artist ("Mack the Knife", "Beyond the Sea")[25][7][38][39]
- Jon Favreau (1984), screenwriter and actor Rudy and Swingers and director, Elf and Iron Man[10][40][11][25]
- Jonah Falcon (1988), actor and talk show personality[41]
- Michael Hirsh (c. 1966), head of the Cookie Jar group (animation); founder of Nelvana animation[citation needed]
- Sondra James, actress[42]
- Qurrat Ann Kadwani, television actress, playwright and film producer[43]
- Don Kirshner, music producer and songwriter, best known for his work with The Monkees and for his television show Don Kirshner's Rock Concert[38][44]
- James Kyson Lee (1993), actor, best known for his role as Ando Masahashi on the television series Heroes[45]
- Reggie Lucas, musician, songwriter, and record producer best known for having produced the majority of Madonna's 1983 self-titled debut album.[46]
- Dash Mihok (c. 1988), actor, director, best known for co-starring since 2013 as Brendan "Bunchy" Donovan in the Showtime series Ray Donovan[47]
- Tom Paley (1945), banjo and fiddle player, best known for his association with old-time music; co–founded the New Lost City Ramblers[48]
- Paul Provenza (1975), actor and comedian[49]
- Christopher "Kid" Reid (1982), rap musician, comedian, and actor, best known for being one half of the group Kid 'n Play[50]
- Daphne Maxwell Reid (1966), actress (The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Frank's Place), producer, and former model; first African–American homecoming queen at Northwestern University; first African–American to appear on the cover of Glamour[51][52]
- Dawn Porter (1984), documentary filmmaker and director
- David Ren (c. 2003), writer, and director[citation needed]
- Esther Scott (1971), film and television actress
- Maggie Siff (1992), actress (Mad Men, Sons of Anarchy, "Billions")
- Mel Simon (c. 1943), businessman and film producer
- Karina Smirnoff (c. 1996), award-winning professional ballroom Latin dancer, who was featured on seven seasons of Dancing With the Stars[53][54]
- Worley Thorne, TV screenwriter, script consultant[citation needed] and adjunct assistant professor of English
- Eliot Wald (1962), TV and film writer (Saturday Night Live, Camp Nowhere)[citation needed]
- Boaz Yakin (1983), screenwriter and director
Authors and journalists
Pulitzer Prize winners
- Joseph Lelyveld (1954), journalist and author; Executive Editor at The New York Times (1994–2001); won the 1986 award for General Non-Fiction (Move Your Shadow: South Africa, Black and White)[10]
- William Safire (1947), author and speechwriter; won the 1978 award for Commentary[10][55]
- Buddy Stein (1959), editor and publisher of The Riverdale Press won the 1998 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for writing on politics and other issues affecting New York City residents.[56]
- William Taubman (1958), professor of political science at Amherst College; won the 2004 award for Biography or Autobiography for Khrushchev: The Man and His Era
- Gene Weingarten (1968), reporter and columnist for The Washington Post; won the 2008 and 2010 awards for Feature Writing[57]
- Spencer Ackerman (1998), senior national security correspondent for The Daily Beast; was part of a team of editors and reporters awarded the 2014 award for public service journalism, for reporting on Edward Snowden and the National Security Agency's warrantless surveillance programs.[58]
- Robert Samuels (2002), author and staff writer at The New Yorker, won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction (His Name is George Floyd: One's Man Life and the Struggle for Racial Justice).[59]
Other authors and journalists
- Judith Baumel (1973), poet; 1987 recipient of the Walt Whitman Award[60]
- Ed Kosner (1953), editor of Newsweek, New York Magazine, Esquire, and New York Daily News.
- Peter S. Beagle (1955), author, singer, and guitarist, best known for The Last Unicorn[citation needed]
- Jennifer Belle, writer[61]
- Joseph Berger, (1962], New York Times reporter, author of memoir "Displaced Persons:Growing Up American After the Holocaust"[62]
- Charles Bernstein, poet, essayist, editor, and literary scholar.
- Harold Bloom (1947), influential literary critic, MacArthur Foundation Fellow, and Professor of English at Yale University
- Mark Boal (1991), journalist and screenwriter; won two Oscars as screenwriter and producer of The Hurt Locker[63][64]
- Samuel R. Delany (1960), science fiction author (Babel-17, The Einstein Intersection, "Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones"); recipient of four Nebula Awards and two Hugo Awards[65][66][67]
- E. L. Doctorow (1948),[11][25] author (The Book of Daniel, Ragtime, Loon Lake, Billy Bathgate, and The March); received the National Humanities Medal in 1998[10][63][7]
- John T. Georgopoulos (1982), award-winning fantasy sports journalist, writer and broadcast radio host
- Gerald Jay Goldberg, professor emeritus at the University of California, Los Angeles; novelist and critic
- Jeff Greenfield (1960), television journalist and political analyst for CBS News; author (The People's Choice: A Novel)[11][25][68]
- Pablo Guzmán (as Paul Guzman) (1968), television journalist for WCBS-2 in New York; formerly a spokesman for the Young Lords[69]
- Clyde Haberman (1962), columnist for the New York Times[70]
- Marilyn Hacker (1959), poet, critic, translator, and recipient of the National Book Award[67]
- Danny Fingeroth (1971), comic book writer and editor, known for his work on Spiderman
- Lars-Erik Nelson (1959), award-winning correspondent and columnist for the New York Daily News, Newsweek, and Newsday[71][72]
- Otto Penzler (1959), editor, author, and collector of espionage and thriller books; received an Edgar Award for Encyclopedia of Mystery & Detection[73]
- Martin Peretz (1955), former owner and editor-in-chief of The New Republic magazine[74]
- Kevin Phillips (1957), author and political analyst[75][76]
- Richard Price (1967), author (Bloodbrothers, Clockers, Freedomland, Lush Life); Oscar–nominated screenwriter (The Color of Money)[11][63]
- James Sanders (1972), architect, author, filmmaker, Guggenheim Fellow and Emmy Award-winning screenwriter[citation needed]
- April Smith (1967), author of novels including Be The One, and Good Morning, Killer, and TV scriptwriter for Lou Grant, Chicago Hope, and Cagney & Lacey
- Dava Sobel (1964), author, best known for her popular expositions in the sciences (Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time, Galileo's Daughter)[77]
- Norman Spinrad (1957), science fiction author (The Solarians, Bug Jack Barron, The Iron Dream); screenwriter ("The Doomsday Machine" from Star Trek)[78]
- Gary Weiss (1971), journalist and author
- Dave Winer (1972), computer scientist and blogger
- Min Jin Lee (1986), acclaimed novelist and author of the novels Free Food for Millionaires (2007) and Pachinko (2017).
Business, finance, and economics
Nobel Prize winner
- Claudia Goldin, economic historian and labor economist, 2023 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences recipient[79]
Other business, finance, and economics alumni
- Rose Marie Bravo (1969), vice chairman, Burberry, former President of Saks Fifth Avenue[80]
- Millard Drexler (1962), CEO, J.Crew, former CEO of Gap[81][82]
- Jerald G. Fishman (1962), CEO, Analog Devices[citation needed]
- Gene Freidman (1988), New York City attorney[83]
- Gedale B. Horowitz, partner, Salomon Brothers, former chairman of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board[84]
- David Karp, founder, Tumblr[85][86]
- Ray King, entrepreneur
- Leonard Lauder (1950), former president and current chairman, Estée Lauder Companies[22]
- Phil Libin (1989), CEO, EverNote[87][88]
- Lisa Su (1986), CEO and president of Advanced Micro Devices[89][90]
Science
Nobel Prize-winning scientists
The Bronx High School of Science counts nine Nobel Prize recipients as graduates. Seven of these Nobel laureates received their prize in the field of physics. Robert J. Lefkowitz was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
- Leon N. Cooper (1947), co–developer of BCS theory; namesake of Cooper pairs[10][91]
- Sheldon Glashow (1950), physicist who proposed the modern electroweak theory (shared the 1979 prize with Weinberg)[10][91][92]
- Roy J. Glauber (1941), physicist who made contributions to the quantum theory of optical coherence[93]
- Russell A. Hulse (1966), astrophysicist who co–discovered the first binary pulsar, providing significant evidence in support of the theory of general relativity[10][94]
- Robert J. Lefkowitz (1959), biochemist known for his work with G protein-coupled receptors
- Hugh David Politzer (1966), physicist who co–discovered asymptotic freedom in quantum chromodynamics[95]
- Melvin Schwartz (1949), physicist who co–developed the neutrino beam method demonstrating of the doublet structure of the lepton through the discovery of the muon neutrino[10][96]
- Steven Weinberg (1950), physicist who proposed the modern electroweak theory[10][91]
- Claudia Goldin (1963), economist who won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2023 for her research in participation and gender pay gaps in the work force. [97]
Other science and engineering alumni
- David Adler (1952), physicist
- Bruce Ames (1946), biologist, inventor of the Ames Test, winner of the National Medal of Science[98]
- Naomi Amir, pediatric neurologist, established first pediatric neurology clinic in Israel[99]
- Allen J. Bard, a chemist, Priestley Medal recipient, and an influential pioneer of modern electrochemistry.
- Jill Bargonetti (1980), biologist; noted for her work on the function of the oncogene p53[100]
- Hans Baruch, physiologist and inventor
- Ira Black, neuroscientist and stem cell researcher, first director of the Stem Cell Institute of New Jersey[101]
- Gregory Chaitin (1964), mathematician, computer scientist, and author; one of the founders of algorithmic information theory; namesake of Chaitin's constant[102][103]
- Rahul Desikan (1995), neuroscientist and neuroradiologist; known for using 'big data' acquired through ongoing global collaborations, he innovated a variety of cross disciplinary methods to identify novel risk factors for brain diseases
- Rana Fine, physical oceanographer, worked on ocean circulation and ventilation[104]
- Michael H. Hart, astrophysicist, author of three books on history
- Martin Hellman (1962), electrical engineer and cryptologist who was instrumental in the development of public-key cryptography;[105] 2015 recipient of the ACM Turing Award[106]
- Leonard Kleinrock (1951), electrical engineer and computer scientist; oversaw the first ARPANET connection to the first node at UCLA; supervised sending the first message over what would become the internet[107][108]
- Andrew R. Koenig (1968), computer scientist, inventor, and author, retired from Bell Labs[109]
- Leslie Lamport (1957), computer scientist noted for fundamental contributions to theory of computing, including distributed systems and the development of LaTeX; 2013 recipient of the ACM Turing Award; namesake of the Lamport signature and Lamport's scheme[110]
- Norman Levitt (1960), author and mathematics professor at Rutgers University; a figure in the fight against anti-intellectualism; his book Higher Superstition: The Academic Left and Its Quarrels with Science inspired the Sokal Affair[111]
- Richard Lindzen, former Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology at MIT and critic of climate change extremism.
- Barry Mazur, Professor of Mathematics and Gerhard Gade University Professor at Harvard University, a title given to the most distinguished professors at Harvard. Mazur is a recipient of the National Medal of Science and a number of prestigious mathematical prizes, and is a member of the National Academy of Sciences.[112][113][114][115]
- Marvin Minsky (1945), cognitive scientist, computer scientist and inventor; pioneer in artificial intelligence; co-founder of the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory; wrote Society of Mind and The Emotion Machine; patented the confocal microscope; recipient of the Turing Award[116][117]
- Robert Moog (1952), electrical engineer; pioneer in the development of electronic music, notably for the invention of the Moog synthesizers, still produced by his namesake company[10][118][119]
- Jay Pasachoff (1959), astronomy professor at Williams College; textbook writer; expert in astronomy education; director of the Hopkins Observatory; Asteroid 5100 Pasachoff is named in his honor[120][121]
- Stanley Plotkin (1948), medical doctor, author, and co-creator of vaccines for several diseases including rubella, rabies, rotavirus, and cytomegalovirus[122]
- Stuart Alan Rice, theoretical chemist and physical chemist
- Frank Rosenblatt (1946), computer pioneer; noted for designing Perceptron, one of the first artificial feedforward neural networks; namesake of the Frank Rosenblatt Award given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers[117]
- Jun John Sakurai (1951), particle physicist and author, noted for his work on vector mesons; namesake of the Sakurai Prize awarded annually by the American Physical Society[123]
- Myriam Sarachik (1950), solid-state physicist and a former president of the American Physical Society
- Edl Schamiloglu, distinguished professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the University of New Mexico[124]
- Ben Shneiderman (1964), developer of computer visualization and human-computer interaction[125]
- Lawrence B. Slobodkin, pioneer in the field of modern ecology[citation needed]
- Lisa Su (1986), Electrical Engineer, CEO and president of Advanced Micro Devices[89][90]
- Leonard Susskind, widely regarded as one of the "fathers" of string theory[126]
- Larry Tesler (1961), helped develop modern graphical user interface, invented the cut, copy, and paste commands[127]
- Joseph F. Traub, computer scientist
- Neil deGrasse Tyson (1976), astrophysicist and current director of the Hayden Planetarium, American Museum of Natural History; known for his work on educational television, such as NOVA ScienceNOW and Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey; namesake of Asteroid 13123 Tyson[128][129][130]
- Robert Williamson, molecular biologist and professor of medical genetics from 1995 to 2005 at the Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, University of Melbourne[131]
- Cynthia Wolberger (1979) professor of biophysics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; member of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Medicine.
- George Yancopoulos (1976), medical researcher in molecular immunology; member of the National Academy of Sciences; founder and Chief Scientific Officer of Regeneron Pharmaceuticals[11][132]
- Norton Zinder (1945), biologist in the field of molecular biology; known for his discovery of genetic transduction; recipient of the NAS Award in Molecular Biology from the National Academy of Sciences in 1966; became a member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1969; led a lab at Rockefeller University until shortly before his death
Sports
- Arthur Bisguier, chess grandmaster; 1954 U.S. Chess Champion; won three U.S. Open chess tournaments; played for the U.S. team in five Chess Olympiads[133]
- Robert Ford (1997),[134] radio broadcaster, Houston Astros, one of two full-time African-American play-by-play broadcasters in Major League Baseball[135]
- Michael Kay (1978), New York Yankees sportscaster and current host of The Michael Kay Show[136]
- Jeanette Lee, professional pool player known by her nickname "The Black Widow"[137][138]
- Ira Rubin (1946), contract bridge player known as "The Beast" for his aggressive playing style and for inventing three famous bidding systems[139]
- Joel Sherman (1979), Scrabble champion (1997, World Champion; 2002 US Champion)[140]
- Herb Stempel, former contestant on the television game show Twenty One, known for his contest against Charles Van Doren, and for his role in exposing the subsequent quiz show scandals[141]
- Benjamin (Benji) Ungar (born 1986), fencer
- Wolf Wigo (1991), 3-Time Olympic water polo player who was captain of the US National Water Polo Team[142]
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alumni of Bronx High School of Science.
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