ART
Joyce
Cutler-Shaw, MFA ’72 (Visual Arts)
Award-winning artist of public sculpture and design
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ATHLETICS
Mark
Allen, ’80 (Biology)
Six-time Ironman Triathalon World Chapter, inducted into the Ironman Hall of
Fame; named the world’s fittest man by Outside magazine.
Holly
Beck,’01 (Psychology)
Professional surfer and model
Isabelle, ’89
(Communication) and Caroline Tihanyi, ’89 (Communication)
Founders of Surf Divas
Julie
Swail, ’95 (Economics)
Olympian (women’s water polo); UC Irvine head coach
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BUSINESS
Russell
Shanks, ’90 (Computer Engineering)
Senior VP, Chief Technology Officer, Sony Online Entertainment
Eric
Judson, ’91 (Economics)
San Diego Padres – Vice President of Development and Director of Ballpark
Planning (PETCO Park)
Rusty
Preisendorfer, ’78 (Visual Arts)
Rusty (surfboards and apparel) founder; known for worldwide for his trademark “R",
Rusty started shops in La Jolla and Del Mar to have local retail space for
his boards. His surfboards are sold around the world, his trademark one of
the best known in the surf world. Rusty still owns a shop in La Jolla.
Sports Illustrated recently rated UCSD as the “Best School for Surfing” in the nation
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COMMUNICATIONS
Robert
B. Hansen, ’80, a.k.a. Consumer Bob on NBC 7/39 (Communications)
Consumer Reporter
Jeff
Godlis, ’76 (Psychology)
KGTV Channel 10 Producer
James
Avery, ’76 (Theatre/Drama)
Stage, screen and television actor who co-starred with Will Smith on the hit
TV show, “Fresh Prince of Bel Air".
Mike
Judge, ’85 (Physics)
Writer/director/producer of television and motion pictures, including “Beavis
and Butthead",“Office Space" and “King of the Hill” animated
sitcoms.
Jane
Mitchell, ’85 (Political Science)
Producer and reporter for Cox Communications Channel 4 San Diego; winner of
seven Emmys.
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COMPUTER
SCIENCE
Guy “Bud” Tribble, ’75
(Physics)
Principal architect of the original Macintosh computer and co-founder of NeXt,
Inc.
Bill
Atkinson, ’74 (Chemistry)
Co-developer of the Macintosh computer
Michael
Robertson, ’90 (Cognitive Science)
Founder of Mp3.com and Lindows.com
Greg
Papadopoulos, ’79 (AMES)
Vice president and chief technology officer at Sun Microsystems; founder of
three technology companies while at MIT
Steve
Hart, MA ’80 (Mathematics)
Co-founder and vice president of engineering for ViaSat; recognized for excellence
and growth by Forbes, Inc. and BusinessWeek.
Richard
Kornfeld, ’82 (Electrical Engineering)
CEO and founder of Dot Wireless (acquired by Texas Instruments), a leader in
providing CDMA development platform to manufacturers of cellular handsets and
wireless data internet applicances. Former vice president of engineering at
Qualcomm, where he helped the company grow from a twenty-person start-up to
a world leader in telecommunications, currently employing over 7,000 people.
Al
Zollar, MA ’76 (Applied Mathematics)
President and CEO, Lotus Technologies, Inc.
David
Shaw, ’72 (Mathematics)
Founder of Juno Online Services.
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LAW
AND PUBLIC SERVICE
Tim
Roemer, ’79 (Political Science)
Five-term Democratic congressman, 3rd Congressional District, Indiana
Steve
Peace, ’76 (Political Science)
California State Senator, 40th Senate District, chair of the Senate Budget
and Fiscal Review Committee, California Journal of Legislator of the Year 2000;
andproducer of the 1970’s cult film, “Attack of the Killer Tomatoes.”
Abby
Leibman, ’78 (Political Science)
Co-founder and executive director of the California Women’s Law Center
and named one of California’s 100 Most Influential Attorneys by the Daily
Journal Corporation.
DeAnn
Salcido, ’86 (Philosophy)
Superior Court Judge for San Diego County and co-founder of the Hispanic Scholarship
Fund.
Patricia
Garcia, ’81 (Psychology)
Commissioner Family Law for San Diego County and co-founder of the Hispanic
Scholarship Fund
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LITERATURE
Sandra
Dijkstra, Ph.D., ’77 (French Literature)
Literary agent who has helped bring authors like Amy Tan, Susan Faludi and
LeLy Hayslip to prominence.
Greg
Benford, ’67 Ph.D (Astrophysics)*
Nebula Award Winner
David
Brin, ’81 Ph.D (School of Engineering/AMES)*
Nebula and Hugo Award Winner
Raymond
Feist, ’77 (Communications)
Nancy
Holder, ’76 (Communications)
Bram Stoker Award winner
Kim
Stanley Robinson, ’74 (Literature); Ph.D. ‘’82 (Literature)
Two-time Nebula and Hugo Award winner
Vernor
Vinge, ’71, Ph.D (Mathematics)
Hugo Award winner
The Nebula Awards are chosen by the members of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) in the following categories: Novel, Novella, Novellette, Short Story, and Script.
The Hugo Award was named in honor of Hugo Gernsback, "The Father of Magazine Science Fiction", as he was described in a special award given to him in 1960. The Hugo Award, also known as the Science Fiction Achievement Award, is given annual by the World Science Fiction Society (WSFS).
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MUSIC/THEATRE
Nathan
East, ’78 (Music)
Considered one of the world’s leading bass guitarists. A long time member
of the Eric Clapton Band and recorded, performed or written songs with artists
such as Anita Baker, Elton John, Celine Dion, Whitney Houston, Quincy Jones,
Michael Jackson, Babyface, Al Jarreau, David Benoit, and Sting.
Priti
Gandi, ’94 (Communication)
Internationally renowned Opera diva
Michael
Greif, MFA, ’85 (Theatre/Drama)
Director of “Rent” and former artistic director of La Jolla Playhouse
Carol
Becker, Ph.D., ’76 (Literature)
Dean of Faculty, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (first woman dean
in the school’s history)
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SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Susumu
Tonegawa, M.D. ’68 (Biological Sciences)
A molecular biologist that won the 1987 Nobel Prize in Medicine for his work
on the way the body marshals its immunological defenses when it is threatened
by different disease agents. Tonegawa, the eighth student to receive a doctorate
in biology at UCSD, was the first UCSD alumnus and first person with Japanese
citizenship to win a Nobel Prize.
Craig
Venter, ’72, ’75 (Biology, School of Medicine)
President of Celera Genomics, the first private firm to decode the human genome.
David
Goeddel, ’72 (Chemistry)
The first full-time scientist and director of Genentech’s molecular biology
department, responsible for cloning five major drugs that helped propel the
firm into prominence as the nation’s premier biotech company. He is co-founder,
president and CEO of Tularik, Inc., a biotech company that focuses on transcription
factors (the non-protein switches that turn genes on and off) to regulate genes
involved in specific human diseases.
He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences (the first UCSD undergraduate alumnus to be so honored); a fellow of both the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; a recipient of the Eli Lilly Award in Biological Chemistry and the Scheele Medal from the Swedish Academy of Pharmaceutical Sciences.
Walter
Munk, Ph.D., ’47 (SIO, Doc. of Philosophy)
A renowned oceanographer who has made fundamental contributions to understanding
various ocean waves and tides and the mechanism of ocean circulation. He was
also the first to shed light on the influence of the atmospheric and oceanic
motions on the rotation of the earth.
Zachary
Fisk, Ph.D. ’69 (Physics)
Leading condensed matter physicist in the country. Member of the National Academy
of Sciences and American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Captain
Eleanor “Connie” Mariano, M.D., ’77 (Biology)
Physician to the President of the United States; Commander/White House Medical
Unit; first military woman to be named White House physician and first woman
director of the White House Medical Unit.
Brian
Druker, ’77 (Chemistry), ’81 (SOM)
Oncologist/chief investigator who developed a new drug for leukemia treatment
Wolfgang
Berger, Ph.D. ’68 (SIO)
One of the world’s top paleoceanographers, recognized for his pioneering
work in deciphering the geological history of the oceans and its climatic implications.
George
DeVries, ’84 (Psychology)
President and CEO, American Specialty Health Plans, the nation’s largest
health care organization for complementary and alternative health care; appointed
by President Clinton to the White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative
Medicine Policy.
John
DoBak, M.D. ’92 (SOM)
Inventor who holds twelve issues patents for medical devices; CEO of INNERCOOL
Therapies; founder, vice president and chief technology officer of CryoGen,
Inc.; one of the MIT Technology Review’s Top 100 Inventors for 1999.
Paul
Bender, Ph.D. ’88 (Electrical Engineering)
Vice president of technology for Qualcom; one of the MIT Technology Review’s
Top 100 Innovators for 1999. Using a protocol called Code Division Multiple
Access (CDMA), he developed new equipment to take maximum advantage of the
technology, including a sophisticated processing system on a single chip that
reduced the mass and cost of cell phones.
Lloyd
Shabazz, 77, M.D. (Biology)
Cancer Treatment Centers of America; one of the few Americans involved in clinical
cancer research and patient care across a broad range of cancer specialties,
specifically hematology (blood). Dr. Shabazz is also an expert in tumors (breast,
colorectal and lung), and hematologic (leukemia, lymphoma) cancers.