List of Northeastern University people
The following is a list of notable alumni and faculty of Northeastern University. This does not mention Northeastern alumni who were foreign students with subsequent careers overseas.
Alumni
Business
- Nikesh Arora – President and Chief Operating Officer of SoftBank
 - Jeff Bornstein – CFO, General Electric
 - Robert A. Brooks – founder and CEO, Brooks Fiber Properties[1]
 - George Chamillard – former CEO, Teradyne, Inc.
 - Jeff Clarke – CEO, Kodak
 - Jeff Cooper – COO and co-founder, EPOX-Z Corporation
 - Bob Davis – CEO and founder, Lycos
 - Richard Egan — co-founder, EMC
 - Shawn Fanning – founder, Napster
 - Jerald G. Fishman – CEO, Analog Devices
 - George Kariotis – founder, Alpha Industries
 - Amin Khoury – founder and CEO, B/E Aerospace
 - Roger Marino – co-founder of EMC; former part-owner of Pittsburgh Penguins[2]
 - Alan McKim – CEO and founder, Clean Harbors
 - Larry Meyer – CEO, Uniqlo USA
 - Srinath Narayanan – principal, Canaccord Adams
 - Sy Sternberg — chairman and CEO, New York Life Insurance Company
 - Biz Stone – co-founder of Twitter
 
Government and politics
- Jayson P. Ahern – Deputy Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection
 - George F. Archambault – Pharmacy Liaison Officer for the United States Public Health Service
 - Demetrius J. Atsalis – member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1998–present)
 - Thomas Calter – member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (2007–present)
 - Christie Carpino – member of the Connecticut House of Representatives
 - Cheryl A. Coakley-Rivera – member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1998–present)
 - Mo Cowan – U.S. Senator of Massachusetts
 - John O. Pastore – Governor of Rhode Island
 - William Delgado – Illinois General Assembly Senator
 - Harold Daniel Donohue – member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1947–1974)
 - David Chu – member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong (1997–2004) and the 9th and 10th National People's Congress of the People's Republic of China[3]
 - Patrick Duddy – U.S. Ambassador
 - Richard Egan – U.S. Ambassador
 - David Ferriero – 10th Archivist of the United States
 - Thomas Finneran – former Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1996–2004)
 - Gordon D. Fox – Majority Leader of the Rhode Island House of Representatives (1992–present)
 - Peter Franchot – Comptroller of Maryland
 - Maggie Hassan – Governor of New Hampshire
 - Russell Holmes – member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (2011–present)
 - Edward Jackamonis – speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly
 - James Franklin Jeffrey – U.S. Ambassador
 - Lyndon LaRouche – perennial presidential candidate
 - Hadassah Lieberman – wife of Connecticut senator Joseph Lieberman
 - Ari Porth – member of the Florida House of Representatives
 - Karen Spilka – member of the Massachusetts State Senate
 - Wallace Stickney – Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency under President George H. W. Bush
 - Leslie Winner – North Carolina State Senator
 
Judiciary
- Margot Botsford – Justice, Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
 - Linda Dalianis – Justice, New Hampshire Supreme Court
 - Dana Fabe – Chief Justice, Alaska Supreme Court
 - Edward Hennessey – Justice, Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
 - Peter T. Zarella – Justice, Connecticut Supreme Court
 
Science and technology
- Hans Baumann – inventor and engineer
 - George D. Behrakis – inventor of Tylenol
 - Amy Bishop – former professor; killer
 - Hans R. Camenzind – inventor of the 555 timer IC
 - Richard P. Gabriel – expert on the Lisp programming language
 - Gregory Jarvis – astronaut
 - Eugene F. Lally – aerospace engineer, photographer, entrepreneur
 - Alvin Joseph Melveger – scientist specializing in physical chemistry, spectroscopy, biomaterials, and polymers
 - Yale Patt – engineer
 - Albert Sacco – astronaut
 
Military
- Mark P. Fitzgerald – Admiral; former Commander, Allied Joint Force Command Naples and Commander, Naval Forces Europe and Naval Forces Africa for the United States Navy
 - Richard I. Neal – United States Marine Corps four-star general; Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps from 1996 to 1998
 - William Thornton – Colonel, U.S. Air Force, White House Fellow
 
Journalism and communications
- Ernie Anastos – New York City TV news anchorman
 - Eddie Andelman – sports radio talk show host (MBA)
 - Michelle Bonner – ESPNEWS/Sports Center anchor
 - Fred Cusick – sportscaster
 - Richard Daniels – former President, Boston Globe
 - Nat Hentoff — contributing editor, The New Yorker Magazine
 - Dan Mason – radio host
 - Will McDonough — sportswriter, Boston Globe
 - Don Orsillo – TV broadcaster
 - Walter V. Robinson – investigative journalist, Boston Globe
 - Michael Slackman – International Managing Editor, The New York Times
 
Arts and entertainment
- David Andelman – CEO, Phantom Gourmet
 - Al Barile – singer, guitarist for hardcore punk band SS Decontrol
 - Earle Brown – composer, developed open-form scores
 - Terry Carter – actor, Sgt. Joe Broadhurst in McCloud and Colonel Tigh in the original Battlestar Galactica
 - Carla Cook – Grammy-nominated jazz vocalist
 - Jane Curtin — actress, comedian, and founding member of Saturday Night Live
 - Martín Espada — poet
 - Damien Fahey — former host of the MTV program TRL
 - Mohammed Saeed Harib – creator of Freej [4]
 - Alex Garcia — Food Network chef
 - Meredith Garniss – visual artist and landscape painter
 - Courtney Hunt – writer and director, whose film Frozen River was nominated for an Academy Award
 - Beverly Johnson – Supermodel and actress
 - Aisha Kahlil — dancer, singer
 - Barbara Kopple — documentary filmmaker
 - Diana Lemieux – freelance photographer
 - Patrice O'Neal — comedian and actor
 - Peter Orner – fiction writer
 - Jennifer Toof — "Toastee" from VH1's Flavor of Love, Flavor of Love Girls: Charm School, and I Love Money
 - Jillian Wheeler – singer/songwriter
 - Wendy Williams – radio, TV talk show host
 
Academia and nonprofit
- William M. Fowler – author, professor, and former Director of the Massachusetts Historical Society
 - Michael R. Lane – 15th president of Emporia State University
 - Dean Tong – author and consultant
 
Sports
- José Juan Barea — Dallas Mavericks, NBA
 - Harry Barnes — 1969 San Diego Rockets, NBA
 - Ed Barry – 1946–47 Boston Bruins, National Hockey League (NHL)
 - Sandy Beadle – 1980–81 Winnipeg Jets, NHL
 - Randy Bucyk – 1985–86 Montreal Canadiens, 1987–88 Calgary Flames, NHL
 - Joe Callahan – 1939–40 Boston Bees, MLB
 - Art Chisholm – 1960–61 Boston Bruins, NHL
 - Rob Cowie – 1994–96 Los Angeles Kings, NHL
 - Kendall Coyne – silver medalist on the Sochi 2014 United States Women's National Ice Hockey Team
 - Jim Fahey — NHL defenseman, New Jersey Devils
 - Amber Ferreira – professional triathlete
 - Fernie Flaman — NHL Hockey Hall of Famer
 - Tony Fryklund – professional mixed martial arts fighter
 - Scott Gruhl – 1987–88 Pittsburgh Penguins, NHL
 - "Wild" Bill Hunnefield — Major League Baseball (MLB) 1926–31 Chicago White Sox, 1931 Cleveland Indians, Boston Braves, and New York Giants
 - Shawn James, professional basketball player for Maccabi Tel Aviv[5]
 - Sean Jones — National Football League, Los Angeles Raiders, Houston Oilers, Green Bay Packers
 - Steven Langton – Olympian, 2010 Vancouver, 2014 Sochi, Bobsled
 - Dave Leitao – college basketball coach
 - Reggie Lewis — Boston Celtics
 - Pat Mason – college baseball coach at Virginia Tech[6]
 - Dan McGillis — NHL defenseman San Jose Sharks, Philadelphia Flyers, Boston Bruins
 - Perry Moss — 1986 Washington Bullets, Philadelphia 76ers, 1987 Golden State Warriors
 - Chris Nilan — Montreal Canadiens, Boston Bruins, New York Rangers
 - Adam Ottavino – 1st-round pick in 2006 MLB draft, pitcher for St. Louis Cardinals (2010) and Colorado Rockies (2012–present)
 - Charlie Paulk – NBA, 1968–1970 Milwaukee Bucks, 1970–1971 Cincinnati Royals, 1971 Chicago Bulls, 1971–1972 New York Knicks
 - Carlos Peña — MLB first baseman/outfielder, Oakland Athletics, Detroit Tigers, Boston Red Sox, Tampa Bay Rays
 - Bruce Racine — NHL goaltender, St. Louis Blues
 - Dan Ross — NFL Cincinnati Bengals and Super Bowl record setter
 - Michael Ryan — NHL left winger, Buffalo Sabres
 - Florence Schelling – goaltender for the Switzerland's Women's Ice Hockey Team in 2006, 2010, and 2014; led Swiss team to a bronze medal finish in 2014; named MVP of the tournament[7]
 - Brian Sullivan – NHL, 1992–93 New Jersey Devils
 - Josh Heinrich Taves – NFL football player, 2000–02, Oakland Raiders and Carolina Panthers
 - Jocko Thompson – MLB pitcher, 1948–51 Philadelphia Phillies
 - Johnny Tobin — MLB, 1932 New York Giants
 - Joe Vitale – NHL, center for Pittsburgh Penguins 2011- Current
 - Kurt Walker – NHL, 1975–78 Toronto Maple Leafs
 - Rick Weitzman — 1968, World Champion, Boston Celtics
 - Keith Willis — NFL, Pittsburgh Steelers
 - Hillary Witt – assistant coach for the United States Women's National Ice Hockey Team in the Sochi 2014 Olympics
 - George Yankowski – MLB, 1942 Philadelphia Athletics, 1949 Chicago White Sox[8]
 - Molly Woodbury - Captain of Vertex Treasury Department Pick-up Basketball Game
 
Other
- Rezwan Ferdaus – convicted on terrorism charges, currently serving life sentence
 
Faculty
- M. Shahid Alam
 - Daniel P. Aldrich – well known expert on social capital and resilience in disaster
 - Albert-László Barabási – American Physical Society Fellow and major contributor to the development of real-world network theory
 - Lisa Feldman Barrett – Distinguished Professor of Psychology, fellow of AAAS
 - Barry Bluestone – founding director of the Kitty and Michael Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional Policy
 - Ed Bullins – playwright and Guggenheim Fellow
 - Joe Castiglione – radio announcer for the Boston Red Sox baseball team
 - Tim Cresswell – leading human geographer and poet
 - Nicholas Daniloff – former foreign correspondent for United Press International and U.S. News & World Report
 - Richard Deth – prominent voice in the autism and vaccine controversy
 - Michael Dukakis – former Massachusetts State Governor and 1988 Democratic Presidential Candidate
 - Matthias Felleisen – author of How to Design Programs
 - William M. Fowler – historian, former director of the Massachusetts Historical Society
 - James Alan Fox – leading authority on serial killers and hate crimes
 - Alexander Gorlov – ASME Thomas A. Edison Award winner; inventor of the Gorlov helical turbine
 - Gary Goshgarian – author, uses the pen name Gary Braver
 - Nat Hentoff – Guggenheim Fellow, Fulbright Fellow
 - M. Whitney Kelting
 - Harlan Lane – MacArthur Foundation Genius Award winner
 - Jack Levin – leading authority on serial killers and hate crimes
 - Karl Lieberherr – computer scientist and co-developer of the theory of P-optimal algorithms for NP-complete MAX-CSP problems
 - Peter K. Manning – leading authority on the occupational culture of policing
 - Pran Nath – co-developer of the theory of supergravity
 - Robert B. Parker – author of the "Spenser" novels
 - Walter V. Robinson – Pulitzer-winning journalist
 - Mikhail Shubin – member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and an accomplished mathematician
 - Mitchell Wand – author of Essentials of Programming Languages
 
Presidents of Northeastern
- Frank Palmer Speare, 1898–1940[9]
 - Carl Stephens Ell, 1940–1959
 - Asa Smallidge Knowles, 1959–1975
 - Kenneth Gilmore Ryder, 1975–1989
 - John Anthony Curry, 1989–1996
 - Richard M. Freeland, 1996–2006
 - Joseph Aoun, 2006–present
 
References
- ↑ Archived January 10, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.
 - ↑ "Faces: Roger Marino". Forbes. 2000-12-13. Retrieved 2015-11-14.
 - ↑ Theroux, Paul (2001). Fresh Air Fiend: Travel Writings, 1985–2000. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 256–259. ISBN 9780618126934.
 - ↑ "The Q&A: Mohammed Saeed Harib, animator." The Economist. August 10, 2011. Retrieved on March 29, 2012.
 - ↑ "Shawn James Basketball Player Profile". Eurobasket.com. Retrieved 2015-11-14.
 - ↑ Wood, Norm (July 15, 2013). "Mason Rises to Virginia Tech's Head Baseball Job from Humble New England Roots". DailyPress.com. Archived from the original on July 5, 2014. Retrieved July 5, 2014.
 - ↑ "Northeastern Huskies". Northeastern University Athletics. Retrieved 2015-11-14.
 - ↑ Northeastern University (2015). "Hall of Fame". Northeastern University Athletics. Northeastern University. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
 - ↑ Archived January 23, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.
 
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