List of University of California, Santa Cruz people

This page lists notable alumni and faculty of the University of California, Santa Cruz; alumni may have attended without graduating.

Notable alumni

Academia

Arts and letters

Business

Entertainment and broadcasting

Law

Politics and public life

Science

Sports

Notable faculty

  • Ralph Abraham – professor emeritus of mathematics, notable for founding the Visual Mathematics Institute and for his pioneering work on chaos theory
  • Bettina Aptheker – professor of feminist studies and history
  • Elliot Aronson – professor emeritus of psychology; author of The Social Animal and Nobody Left to Hate: Teaching Compassion after Columbine; creator of the Jigsaw Classroom model; one of the few psychologists to win the American Psychological Association's highest honor in all three fields
  • Reyner Banham – late professor of art history and a preeminent architectural historian, in particular of the modern era
  • Tom Banks – professor of physics. Known for work on string theory, elementary particle physics, and cosmology
  • Gregory Bateson – late lecturer and fellow of Kresge College; anthropologist, social scientist, linguist, visual anthropologist, semiotician and cyberneticist
  • George R. Blumenthal – professor of astronomy and astrophysics, and chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz
  • Norman O. Brown – late professor emeritus of humanities
  • William L. Burke – late professor of physics (cosmologist); chaos theory "godfather"
  • James H. Clark – assistant professor of information science, founder of Silicon Graphics and Netscape
  • James Clifford – professor of history of consciousness, known for publications of postmodernist and postcolonial interpretations of anthropology and ethnography
  • David Cope – professor of music; notable for his experiments in A.I. and computer-created musical compositions
  • Angela Davis – professor of history of consciousness, writer, activist
  • John Dizikes – professor emeritus of American studies, author, won the 1993 National Book Critics Circle Award
  • Frank Drake – professor emeritus of astronomy and astrophysics; proposed the Drake Equation; member of the AAAS (elected 1974)[10]
  • William Everson – late lecturer and poet-in-residence
  • Sandra M. Faber – professor of astronomy and astrophysics; instrumental in inventing cold dark matter theory and fundamental work in the field of galaxy formation and evolution; member of the NAS (elected 1985), the AAAS (elected 1989),[10] and the American Philosophical Society (elected 2001)
  • Alison Galloway – forensic anthropologist who worked in identifying the physical remains of Laci Peterson in the Scott Peterson Trial [10]
  • Shelly Grabe – associate professor of social psychology and scholar-activist in women's human rights
  • Craig Haney – professor of psychology and instrumental researcher in the Stanford Prison Experiment
  • Donna Haraway – professor of history of consciousness; doctorate in biology; often-cited author of feminist history of science and culture studies of cyborg
  • David Haussler – professor of biomolecular engineering; he and his team assembled the public draft human genome and developed the Genome Browser as part of the Human Genome Project; member of the AAAS (elected 2006)[10] and the National Academy of Sciences
  • George Herbig – emeritus professor of astronomy and astrophysics, pioneer in the study of star formation, discoverer of the Herbig Ae/Be stars and Herbig-Haro Objects, member of the National Academy of Sciences
  • George Hitchcock – late lecturer, poetry and theater
  • David A. Huffman – deceased; founding faculty of the Information and Computer Science Board; developed Huffman coding
  • Frederic Jameson – professor of history of consciousness; cultural critic and theorist of the post-modern; published the essay "Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism", a significant investigation into contemporary culture and the political economy
  • Jim Kent – associate research scientist in the Department of Biomolecular Engineering; directs the genome browser development and quality assurance staff of the UCSC Genome Bioinformatics Group; created the computer program that assembled the first working draft of the human genome sequence; participates in the public consortium efforts to produce, assemble, and annotate genomes
  • Robert P. Kraft – professor of astronomy and astrophysics, stellar astronomer, member of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Cynthia Ling Lee – professor of theatre arts, known for postmodern and classical Indian dance
  • Tom Lehrer – lecturer in American studies and mathematics; known for his satire and songwriting
  • Darrell Long – professor of computer science and engineering, fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
  • Chip Lord – professor of film and digital media; member of Ant Farm, a groundbreaking, experimental art and architecture collective he founded in 1968 with fellow architect Doug Michels
  • Nathaniel Mackey – poet and editor
  • Dominic W. Massaro – professor of psychology and computer engineering; originator of the fuzzy logical model of perception, one of the leading theories of speech perception
  • Claire Ellen Max – professor of astronomy and astrophysics, member of the AAAS (elected 2002)[10] and the National Academy of Sciences
  • Gordon Mumma – professor emeritus of music, composer
  • Richard Abel Musgrave – member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 1961)[10]
  • Jerry Nelson – professor of astronomy and astrophysics; pioneered the use of mirror segments, making the Keck telescopes possible; member of the NAS
  • Harry Noller – professor of biology. RNA research; member of the [American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 1969)[10] and the National Academy of Sciences (elected 1992)
  • Donald E. Osterbrock – member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 1968)[10] and the National Academy of Sciences (elected 1966)
  • Micah Perks – fiction writer and memoirist
  • Larry Polansky – professor of music, composer and performing artist
  • Joel Primack – professor of physics, noted cosmologist; renowned for Cold Dark Matter Theory proposed along with Sandra Faber (see above) and Sir Martin Rees
  • Geoffrey Pullum – professor of linguistics and distinguished professor of humanities; co-author of Cambridge Grammar of the English Language; member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 2003)[10]
  • Adrienne Rich – late professor, poet and essayist
  • Constance M. Rockosi – chair of the astronomy and astrophysics department
  • Page Smith – Historian
  • Michael Ellman Soule – member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 2005)[10]
  • Ben Stein – former professor of economics, more notable for his work as a comedian, actor and political commentator
  • Stephen Thorsett – professor of astronomy and astrophysics; dean of physical and biological science; known for work on properties of compact stars
  • Anna Tsing – professor of anthropology; Guggenheim Fellow and Niels Bohr Professorship
  • Noah Wardrip-Fruin – associate professor of computer science, digital media and interactive fiction researcher
  • Hayden White – member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 1991)[10]
  • Jim Whitehead – chair of Computer Science and creator of WebDAV
  • Harold Widom – member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 2006)[10]
  • Stanford E. Woosley – professor of astronomy and astrophysics; noted for his work on supernova gamma ray bursts; member of the NAS (elected 2006) and American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 2001)[10]
  • Karen Tei Yamashita – author and playwright

Notes and references

  1. https://geography.arizona.edu/people/stefano-bloch
  2. "Eva Hayward, The Department of Gender & Women's Studies". gws.arizona.edu. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
  3. Attended but did not graduate.
  4. Hallmark, Kara Kelley (2007). Encyclopedia of Asian American Artists, Artists of the American mosaic. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 87–90. ISBN 031333451X.
  5. Czeck, Jessica (May 15, 2013). "Feline Fantasies: Cat Superheroes by Jenny Parks". Visual News. Visual News. Archived from the original on July 29, 2015. Retrieved September 14, 2016.
  6. Hatheway, Cameron (June 12, 2015). "Catvengers, Assemble! The CatConLA Interview With Jenny Parks". Bleeding Cool. Rich Johnston. Retrieved September 14, 2016.
  7. http://goodtimes.sc/santa-cruz-news/news/charles-harder-ucsc-donald-trump-lawyer/
  8. BA from UCSC in 1972, MA – Lone Mountain College, 1975
  9. John Grinder (1971). On deletion phenomena in English. Thesis (PhD. in Linguistics). University of California, San Diego. OCLC 17641707
  10. Bulletin of the American Academy, Fall 2006, pp 66 – 104, "List of Active Members by Classes" Archived 2005-05-06 at the Wayback Machine, accessed July 17, 2007
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