After four years at Columbia, you will join the ranks of pioneers and leaders who have shaped industry, politics, culture and academia in the United States and around the world. Columbia has always been ahead of its time, with alumni pushing the limits of science, inventing new technologies and changing the way we live. Columbia’s innovation is evidenced by the 39 graduates and the 48 current or former faculty who have been awarded Nobel Prizes. Fourteen Nobel laureates hold undergraduate degrees, including 2004 winner Richard Axel, currently a Professor of Biochemistry at Columbia.
With over 250,000 living alumni across all schools, Columbia alumni are in every state and in over 180 countries. By selecting Columbia you are joining a family of individuals, scholars and leaders – people who make a difference.
Undergraduate alumni have made a great impact on the world in many diverse fields. Read below to see what the future may hold for you.

Alumni come back to celebrate the annual class day, offering congratulations and support to the new graduates.
Academia
Hundreds of Columbians have gone on to academia, such as American historians and Bancroft Prize winners Sean Willentz (CC ’72) and Eric Foner (CC ’63, PhD ’69). Jacques Barzun (CC ’27, PhD ’32) helped develop Columbia’s Core Curriculum and was once on the cover of Time Magazine. Robert Merton (EN ’66), Nobel Prize winner and Harvard Business School professor, was an Engineering Mathematics major at Columbia before he went on to develop influential theories in financial economics.
Architecture and Urban Development

Rockefeller Center, once owned by Columbia, is now controlled by Tishman-Speyer
Living in the middle of New York City, Columbians have always been integral to the development of the city’s architecture and infrastructure. Continuing this tradition, Robert A.M. Stern (CC ’60) is dean of the Yale School of Architecture and heads his own firm that is currently constructing the much anticipated 15 CPW Building. Barry Bergdoll (CC ’77) splits his time between teaching in Columbia’s Art History department and serving as the Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art. On the business end, Jerry Speyer (CC ’62), Chair Emeritus of the Board of Trustees, is CEO of Tishman-Speyer, one of the largest real estate developers in the world.
Athletes
With former students like Hall of Fame baseball player Lou Gehrig and football standout Sid Luckman (CC ’39), Columbia has produced star athletes who have gone on to win Olympic medals and more. Former NFL star Marcellus Wiley (CC ’97) was First-Team All-American for the Lions. Christina Teuscher (CC ’00), an Olympic gold medal swimmer, won the prestigious Honda-Broderick Cup as the female collegiate athlete of the year in 2000. Current Chair of the Board of Trustees Bill Campbell was captain of the football team and later head coach before he went on to be CEO of Intuit and serve on the boards of many organizations, including Apple.
Business

John W. Kluge funds Columbia’s Kluge Scholars
Many Columbians have made significant headway in the business world as entrepreneurs and astute managers. John W. Kluge (CC ’37) built the first independent network of television stations that is the basis of the Fox Network. In the world of sports business, Columbia alums Randy Lerner (CC ’84) and Robert Kraft (CC ’63) are owners of the Cleveland Browns and New England Patriots respectively, as well as leading their own companies. Vikram Pandit (EN ’74) is currently a University Trustee and CEO of Citigroup, the largest financial institution in the world.
Inventors and Engineers
A rich history of innovators includes the likes of William Barclay Parsons (CC 1879, EN 1882), lead designer of the New York subway system, and Edwin Armstrong (EN ’13), inventor of FM Radio. This enterprising spirit lives on with Kai-Fu Lee (EN ’83), head of Google China, as well as Michael Massimino (EN ’84), a mechanical engineer who took his skills into outer space as a NASA astronaut.
Literature
The campus where the Beats first met not only produced Allen Ginsburg (CC ’48) and Jack Kerouac (CC ’44) but also fostered the writings of novelists Paul Auster (CC ’69) and Pulitzer Prize-winning Herman Wouk (CC ’34) and of Tony-Award winning playwrights Tony Kushner (CC ’78) and Terrance McNally (CC ’60).
Media and Publishing
Columbia has long been a powerhouse in the world of media and publishing. Undergraduates have gone on to found the most important publishing houses in the country, including Harcourt & Brace (both CC 1904), Simon (CC ’20) & Schuster (CC ’21), Alfred A. Knopf (CC ’12), and Bennett Cerf (CC ’19), the founder of Random House. This tradition continues today with the likes of Janice Min (CC ’90), Editor-in-Chief of Us Weekly magazine and Adweek Magazine’s 2005 Editor of the Year; John MacArthur (CC ’78), an award-winning journalist and current President and Publisher of Harper’s magazine; and Claire Shipman (CC ’86), noted broadcast journalist on ABC News.
Performing Arts
There is a long list of actors, directors and writers who once graced Columbia stages, including Academy Award-winners Herman Mankiewicz (CC ’17), Joseph Mankiewicz (CC ’28) and I.A.L. Diamond (CC ’41). Current performing artists include actors Julia Stiles (CC ’05), Maggie Gyllenhaal (CC ’98), Dan Futterman (CC ’89), Matthew Fox (CC ’89) and Brian Dennehy (CC ’60); and directors Brian Depalma (CC ’62) and Jim Jarmusch (CC ’75).
Politics
From Alexander Hamilton (King’s College 1778) and John Jay (KC 1764), America’s first Chief Justice, to current senators Barack Obama (CC ’83) and Judd Gregg (CC ’69), and from Johan Jorgen Holst (CC ’60), former Foreign Minister of Norway and important figure in the Oslo Accords, to President of Estonia Tomas Hendrik Ilves (CC ’72), Columbians have always been at the forefront of American political issues and international affairs.
Sciences
Some of the world’s greatest scientific minds were honed at Columbia. Harold Brown (CC ’45), who completed three degrees from Columbia, was Secretary of Defense for the Carter administration after serving as an influential physicist and President of the California Institute of Technology. Richard Axel (CC ’67) won a 2004 Nobel Prize for his research on the olfactory system, and Paul A. Marks (CC ’46, MD ’49) is the former president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.




















