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Prestigious Faculty and Alumni, and University Achievements

The faculty and alumni of the University of Minnesota have included some of the most renowned teachers, researchers, and public figures in the world. They have won Nobel Prizes, Pulitzer Prizes, and other awards for their inventions and discoveries, and in other innovative ways continue to shape society today.

Prestigious Faculty

Prestigious Alumni

University Achievements

Nobel Prize Faculty

  • Leonid Hurwicz, Economics, 2007
  • Edward C. Prescott, Economics, 2004
  • Paul D. Boyer, Chemistry, 1997
  • George Stigler, Economics, 1982
  • John H. Van Vleck, Physics, 1977
  • Saul Bellow, Literature, 1976
  • William N. Lipscomb, Chemistry, 1976
  • John Bardeen, Physics, co-winner in 1956 and 1972
  • Philip S. Hench and Edward O. Kendall with Tadeus Reichstein, Medicine, 1950
  • Arthur Compton, Physics, 1927

 

Regents Professors

  • Frank Bates, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
  • Ellen S. Berscheid, Department of Psychology
  • Thomas S. Clayton, Department of English
  • H. Ted Davis, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
  • Sara M. Evans, Department of History
  • Apostolos P. Georgopoulos, Department of Neuroscience
  • Richard J. Goldstein, Department of Mechanical Engineering
  • Megan Gunnar, Institute of Child Development
  • Ashley T. Haase, Department of Microbiology
  • Patricia Hampl, Department of English
  • Robert P. Hebbel, Department of Medicine
  • Allen F. Isaacman, Department of History
  • Richard Leppert, Department of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature
  • Elaine Tyler May, Department of American Studies
  • Matt McGue, Department of Psychology
  • Ronald L. Phillips, Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics
  • Peter Reich, Department of Forest Resources
  • Lanny D. Schmidt, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
  • Kathryn Sikkink, Department of Political Science
  • John L. Sullivan, Department of Political Science
  • G. David Tilman, Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior
  • Donald Truhlar, Department of Chemistry
  • David S. Weissbrodt, Law School
  • James G. White, Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology

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McKnight Presidential Endowed Chairs

  • Dante Cicchetti, Institute of Child Development
  • Gunda Georg, Institute for Therapeutic Discovery
  • Apostolos P. Georgopoulos, Department of Neuroscience
  • Leonid Glazman, Department of Physics and Astronomy
  • Phyllis E. Moen, Department of Sociology
  • Ronald L. Phillips, Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics
  • Mark Snyder, Department of Psychology
  • G. David Tilman, Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior
  • Kamil Ugurbil, Department of Radiology
  • Catherine M. Verfaillie, Department of Medicine
  • John Wagner, Department of Pediatrics

 

Distinguished McKnight University Professors

2007

  • Gary J. Balas, Department of Aerospace Engineering & Mechanics, Development and Application of Robust Feedback Control to Complex Systems

    Gary J. Balas

 

 

 

  • Bernardo Cockburn, Department of Mathematics, Computational Mathematics Bernardo Cockburn

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Uwe R. Kortshagen, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Cold Gas and Hot Electrons: Plasma Research for Microelectronics and Energy TechnologiesUwe R. Kortshagen

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Claudia Neuhauser, Department of Ecology, Evolution & Behavior, Analysis of Mathematical Models in Ecology and Development of Statistical Tools in Population GeneticsClaudia Neuhauser

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Nikos P. Papanikolopoulos, Department of Computer Science & Engineering, Robots and Vision-Based Algorithms—Breaking New Frontiers Nikos P. Papanikolopoulos

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Eric Weitz, Department of History, Germany in a Global and Comparative Context: Mass Movements and Genocides in the 19th and 20th Centuries

    Eric Weitz

 

 

 

 

 

 

2006

  • John C. Bischof, Department of Mechanical Engineering; biomaterial cryopreservation and thermal therapies: temperature, injury, and their connection
  • Karin Musier-Forsyth, Department of Chemistry; biochemical and biophysical studies of protein-nucleic acid interactions
  • J. Ilja Siepmann, Department of Chemistry; molecular simulation of complex chemical systems and processes
  • Christopher Uggen, Department of Sociology; the effect of life course transitions on crime and deviance

 

McKnight Land-Grant Professors

2008

Taner Akkin

Taner Akkin, Biomedical Engineering
Ph.D., University of Texas
Non-invasive optical imaging of tissue microstructure and function

Alptekin Aksan

Alptekin Aksan, Mechanical Engineering
Ph.D., Michigan StateUniversity
Biopreservation by confinement

Elizabeth Beaumont

Elizabeth Beaumont, Political Science
Ph.D., Stanford University
Exploring democratic citizenship: bridging the theory and practice of democracy and constitutional rule

Mark Bee

Mark A. Bee, Ecology, Evolution & Behavior
Ph.D., University of Missouri
Studying non-traditional animal models to discover the behavioral and neural mechanisms for separating continuous streams of sensory input

Nicholas Hopper

Nicholas Hopper, Computer Science & Engineering
Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University
Provable security analysis of privacy-related technologies

Chris Kim

Chris H. Kim, Electrical & Computer Engineering
Ph.D., Purdue University
Design for reliability:  making future generation chips resilient to aging

Kirill Martemyanov

Kirill A. Martemyanov, Pharmacology
Ph.D., Russian Academy of Sciences
Regulation of cellular signaling in health and disease

Katsumi Matsumoto

Katsumi Matsumoto, Geology & Geophysics
Ph.D., Columbia University
Climate change and carbon cycling in oceans and lakes

Jason McGrath

Jason McGrath, Asian Languages & Literatures
Ph.D., University of Chicago
Inscribing the real:  Chinese cinema from the silent era to the twenty-first century

Shana Sturla

Shana J. Sturla, Medicinal Chemistry
Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Chemistry in cancer research:  understanding how cancers are initiated, and advancing treatment using chemical tools

Elizabeth Wilson

Elizabeth J. Wilson, Public Affairs
Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University
Responding to climate change: energy within a carbon managed world

Michael Wilson

Michael L. Wilson, Anthropology
Ph.D., Harvard University
Using 40 years of data to better understand intergroup aggression and vocal communication in chimpanzees

Hui Zou

Hui Zou, Statistics
Ph.D., Stanford University
Statistical methods for knowledge discovery in the information age

 

2007

  • Daniel R. Bond, Biotechnology Institute; Using bacteria to make electricity and useful products from renewable resources
  • Kathleen A. Collins, Department of Political Science; The rise of Islam and Islamism in Central Asia and the Caucasus
  • Christy L. Haynes, Department of Chemistry; Development of analytical tools to study cellular function and dysfunction
  • Karen Ho, Department of Anthropology; From Wall Street to microfinance: the culture and consequences of financial markets
  • Nihar Jindal, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering; Pushing the limits of wireless communication networks
  • Marta Lewicka, Department of Mathematics; Partial Differential Equations: propagation of waves in fluid dynamics
  • Helene C. Muller-Landau, Department of Ecology, Evolution & Behavior; Mechanisms underlying tropical forest diversity
  • William Schuler, Department of Computer Science & Engineering; Incorporating referential meaning into spoken language interfaces
  • Kathleen D. Vohs, Department of Marketing and Logistics Management; Why do people fail at self-control?
  • Christophe M. Wall-Romana, Department of French & Italian; How film culture transforms poetic texts and writing practices
  • Chun Wang, Department of Biomedical Engineering; Biologically guided design and application of biomaterials

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Nobel Prize Alumni

  • Norman Borlaug, peace winner in 1970; agronomist credited with launching the "Green Revolution"

    Norman Borlaug
    Norman Borlaug is one of only five people in history to be awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, Nobel Peace Prize, and Presidential Medal of Freedom.

  • Walter H. Brattain, physics co-winner for developing the transistor (tiny switches that allow information to be stored and retrieved)

    Nobel Prize winner Walter Brattain with co-winners John Bardeen and William Shockley
    Walter Brattain (right), John Bardeen (left), and William Shockley (center) were the Nobel Prize co-winners in physics in 1956.

  • Melvin Calvin, chemistry winner for describing the chemical reaction that occurs in photosynthesis

    Melvin Calvin won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1961.

  • Louis J. Ignarro, medicine and physiology winner in 1998 for contributions leading to the development of Viagra

    Nobel Prize winner Louis J. Ignarro
    Louis J. Ignarro (left) receiving his Nobel Prize from the King of Sweden

  • Ernest O. Lawrence, physics winner in 1939 for developing the cyclotron, an accelerator of subatomic particles

    Nobel Prize winner Ernest O. Lawrence
    Ernest Lawrence at the controls of the 37-inch cyclotron (about 1938)

  • Edward B. Lewis, physiology winner in 1995 for his work in genetics

    Edward B. Lewis discovered a class of genes that controls embryonic development in all animals.

  • Daniel McFadden, economics winner for his work in microeconometrics

    Daniel McFadden won the Nobel prize in 2000 for his theory on analyzing discrete choice.

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Architecture

  • Leslie Kerr, public-sector landscape architect
  • J.J. Leibenberg, designer of more than 200 grand Art Deco movie theaters
  • William Pedersen, architect and founding member of KPF Associates

    Artist's rendering of the Shanghai World Financial Center building
    The Shanghai World Financial Center, designed by KPF Associates, is the world's second tallest building.

  • Sarah Susanka, architect; author of The Not So Big House

 

Arts and Literature

  • Emilie Buchwald, co-founder of Milkweed Editions
  • Kimberly Elise, actor, director, and playwright
  • Patricia Hampl, writer of fiction, poetry, and memoir
  • Greg Howard, cartoonist of Sally Forth
  • Garrison Keillor, author; creator of NPR's "A Prairie Home Companion"

    Garrison Keillor with 'A Prairie Home Companion' guest
    Garrison Keillor (left) with "A Prairie Home Companion" guest

  • Libby Larsen, composer for orchestra, dance, opera, choral, chamber, and solo performance
  • Robert Pirsig, author of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
  • Maria Schneider, Grammy-winning jazz composer, conductor, and pianist
  • Gale Sondergaard, winner of the first Academy Award given for Best Supporting Actress (Anthony Adverse, 1936)
  • David Zinman, conductor; Aspen Music Festival and School director

 

Business

  • Earl Bakken, transistorized cardiac pacemaker inventor; founder of Medtronic, Inc.
  • Paul Brainerd, Aldus® PageMaker® creator; founder of Social Venture Partners
  • Curtis L. Carlson, founder of Carlson Companies, Inc.
  • Archie Givens, Jr., CEO of Legacy Management
  • Jim Johnson, CEO of Fannie Mae
  • Dave Kappell, creator of Magnetic Poetry®
  • Harvey Mackay, chairman and CEO of Mackay Envelope Corporation; author of five New York Times bestsellers
  • Frank Mullaney, co-founder (with Seymour Cray) of Control Data Corporation
  • Lee Raymond, Chairman and CEO, ExxonMobil
  • Irving Shapiro, chair and CEO of E. I. du Pont Company; a director of Citicorp
  • Hicks Waldron, CEO of Avon

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Education

  • Ronald Abler, executive vice president and provost, The Pennsylvania State University
  • Robert Berdahl, chancellor, University of California, Berkeley
  • Bob Brown, provost of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Endesha Ida Mae Holland, professor of theatre and women's studies, University of Southern California; playwright; civil rights activist
  • Fred Hovde, president of Purdue University
  • Jolene Koester, president of California State University at Northridge
  • Lester Monts, University of Michigan professor of music; and senior vice provost for academic affairs and senior counselor to the president
  • Somwung Pitiyanuwat, vice president for research, Chulalongkorn University of Thailand
  • Kevin P. Reilly, president of the University of Wisconsin system
  • Fouzia Saeed, well-known human rights activist and the founding member of Bedari, a women's educational and advocacy group
  • Tong-in Wosothorn, president of Sukothai Thammatirat University of Thailand
  • James Zumberge, president of the University of Southern California and Southern Methodist University; geologist; namesake of Cape Zumberge in Antarctica

    Antarctic map showing Cape Zumberge
    Cape Zumberge in Antarctica was named after alumnus James Zumberge.

 

Journalism

  • Daryl Royster Alexander, editor of the New York Times Magazine and Essence magazine
  • Sam Dillon, New York Times Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter
  • Hedley Donovan, editor-in-chief of TIME Inc.; adviser to President Carter
  • Dick Durrell, creator of People magazine
  • Tom Gjelten, author and National Public Radio correspondent
  • Chris Ison, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter
  • Judy Olausen, photojournalist
  • Harry Reasoner, reporter for CBS News and ABC News
  • Carl Rowan, author, television commentator, and syndicated columnist
  • April Saul, Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist
  • Harrison Salisbury, journalist; Pulitzer Prize winner

    Harrison Salisbury with Robert F. Kennedy
    Harrison Salisbury (seen in this photo with Robert F. Kennedy) covered the southern civil rights movement in 1960.

  • Eric Sevareid, reporter for CBS News

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Law, politics, and public service

  • Clara Adams-Ender, retired brigadier general
  • Warren Burger, Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court
  • Orville Freeman, agriculture commissioner in the Kennedy administration and Minnesota governor
  • Hubert H. Humphrey, United States vice president and senator

    Hubert Humphrey
    Hubert Humphrey at a political rally in Minnesota (1968)

  • Max Kampelman, political scientist, lawyer, teacher, diplomat, champion of democracy and human rights; in the 1980s, was chief U.S. nuclear arms-reduction negotiator with the U.S.S.R.
  • Eugene McCarthy, United States representative and senator
  • Mildred McWilliams-Jeffrey, founder, National Women's Political Caucus and winner of the Medal of Freedom
  • Mee Moua, first Hmong state legislator elected in the U.S.
  • Walter Mondale, United States vice president and ambassador to Japan
  • Alan Page, Minnesota Supreme Court justice; NFL Hall of Fame member; University regent; and recipient of the NCAA's 2004 Theodore Roosevelt Award
  • Patricia Schroeder, United States Congresswoman from Colorado
  • Yvonne Scruggs-Leftwich, executive director and chief operating officer of the Black Leadership Forum, Inc.; scholar and leader in the civil rights movement
  • Gene Sperling, White House economic adviser to President Clinton and director of the National Economic Council
  • Harold Stassen, Minnesota governor and assistant to President Eisenhower on disarmament
  • Carl Stokes, first African American mayor of a major U.S. city (Cleveland)
  • Y. S. Tsiang, secretary general to the president of Taiwan
  • Roy Wilkins, civil rights activist and head of the NAACP

    Whitney Young with John Lewis, Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King, Jr., James Farmer, and Roy Wilkins
    Whitney Young (second from left) with John Lewis, Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King, Jr., James Farmer, and Roy Wilkins (far right) in 1963

  • Whitney Young, civil rights activist who worked with Martin Luther King, Jr.; vice president of the NAACP; and director of the Urban League

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Medicine, science, and technology

  • Christiaan Barnard, world's first human heart transplant surgeon
  • Susan Berget, geneticist and research collaborator with Philip Sharp, winner of the 1993 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine
  • Michele Brekke, first woman NASA flight director
  • Duane Carey, space shuttle pilot and astronaut
  • Seymour Cray, founder of Cray Research and co-founder of Control Data Corporation
  • Jack Dangermond, developer of geographic information systems software
  • Robert Gore, inventor of GORE-TEX®
  • C. Walton Lillehei, open heart surgery pioneer who helped develop the heart pacemaker
  • John Mallet-Paret, mathematician
  • Michael Osterholm, epidemiologist and director of the University of Minnesota Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy
  • Norman Shumway, performed the first U.S. heart transplant and the first U.S. heart-lung transplant

    Norman Shumway
    Norman Shumway performed the first U.S. heart-lung transplant in 1981.

  • Deke Slayton, Mercury astronaut
  • Paul Volberding, pioneer in AIDS research and patient care
  • Owen Wangensteen, inventor of the heart-lung machine

 

In addition, University alumni have founded 2,600 technology companies in the state that employ 175,000 Minnesotans and add $46 billion annually to the state's economy.

 

Research

  • Among its current and past faculty, the University has 29 members of the National Academy of Sciences, 26 members of the National Academy of Engineering, 33 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and 8 members of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies.
  • From 1988 through the 2005-06 academic year, 91 University faculty members have won Fulbright Scholarships to work in 52 countries.
  • Since 2000, seven University faculty members have been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships.
  • Three faculty members have won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry, prose, or music.

Current and former University of Minnesota faculty members are known for their significant contributions to the state of Minnesota, the nation, and the world. Listed below are some of those contributions.

 

Owen Wangensteen presenting to peers
Owen Wangensteen, a pioneer in open heart surgery

Faculty innovations in medicine include the following:

  • first heart-lung machine and its use in the first open heart surgery
  • first heart pacemaker and heart valves

    Prosthetic heart valve
    C. Walton Lillehei developed prosthetic heart valves in the 1960s and 1970s.

  • ultrasound screening for cancer
  • synthetic compounds which led to the AIDS drug Ziagen
  • first artificial liver
  • first bone marrow transplant
  • functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

    MRI images of human brain activation
    MRI images of human brain activation associated with performance of a task that utilizes motor, visual, and planning cognitive processes

  • first stem cell institute

 

Faculty innovations in agriculture include the following:

  • the development of more than 120 new varieties of 20 different crops including apples, soybeans, strawberries, potatoes, wheat, and bluegrass for golf courses

    Mesabi strawberries
    University faculty members developed the Mesabi™ strawberry variety.

  • the eradication of many poultry and livestock diseases

 

Accomplishments of our faculty members in science and technology include:

  • development of the MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory)
  • invention of the "black box" flight recorder
  • invention of synthetic rubber and retractable seat belts

    James 'Crash' Ryan buckling into a seatbelt
    Professor James "Crash" Ryan, inventor of retractable seat belts

  • isolation of uranium 235
  • development of the Autoscope traffic management system

 

Further evidence of the spirit of innovation includes:

  • University research awards in fiscal year 2006 totaled $576 million, a 2.7% increase over fiscal year 2005.
  • University research expenditures increased by 1.5% in fiscal year 2006 to $518 million.
  • The gross revenue from patents and licenses in fiscal year 2006 was $56 million
  • In fiscal year 2006, patent and licensing activity increased by 18.6%.
  • The Milken Institute ranked the University 6th in technology transfer and commercialization in 2006.

 

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This page was last updated on 2/25/2008.