Georgia Tech's first two graduates were Henry L. Smith (top row, center) and
George G. Crawford (top row, far right).
This list of Georgia Institute of Technology alumni includes graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Georgia Tech. Notable administration, faculty, and staff are found on the list of Georgia Institute of Technology faculty. Georgia Tech alumni are generally known as Yellow Jackets. According to the Georgia Tech Alumni Association,[1]
[the status of "alumni"] is open to all graduates of Georgia Tech, all former students of Georgia Tech who regularly matriculated and left Georgia Tech in good standing, active and retired members of the faculty and administration staff, and those who have rendered some special and conspicuous service to Georgia Tech or to [the alumni association].
The first class of 128 students entered Georgia Tech in 1888, and the first two graduates, Henry L. Smith and George G. Crawford, received their degrees in 1890. Smith would later lead a manufacturing enterprise in Dalton, Georgia and Crawford would head Birmingham, Alabama's large Tennessee Coal, Iron, and Railway Company.[2] Since then, the Institute has greatly expanded, with an enrollment of 12,769 undergraduates and 6,464 postgraduate students as of spring 2011.[3]
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by
expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
Award winners
Nobel laureates
Scholars
Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
Joy Buolamwini |
2012 |
2013 Rhodes Scholar, 2012 Fulbright Fellow (Zambia) |
[7] |
Jerome M. Cooper |
1952 |
FAIA 1956 Fulbright Scholar at Sapienza University of Rome; architect |
[8] |
David Eger |
2003 |
2003 Fulbright Scholar (Hungary) |
[9][10] |
Jeremy Farris |
2004 |
2005 Rhodes Scholar; won a best of category award at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his discovery of a new pathogen for the invasive plant kudzu; American delegate to the 2000 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Science Forum |
[11][12] |
Melissa McCoy |
2012 |
2014 Rhodes Scholar; founder of Enterprise to Empower (en2em.org) |
[13] |
S. Alton Newton |
1950 |
1951 Rhodes Scholar |
[11] |
Andy Ozment |
2000 |
2001 Marshall Scholar |
[14][15] |
Will Roper |
2001 |
2002 Rhodes Scholar; 2001 Truman Scholar |
[14][16][17][18] |
|
|
Business
Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
Rawi Abdelal |
1993 |
Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School |
[19] |
Gil Amelio |
1965 |
CEO Emeritus of National Semiconductor and Apple; IEEE Fellow |
[20] |
Charles "Garry" Betty |
1979 |
President and CEO of EarthLink (1996-2007) |
[21] |
W. Frank Blount |
1961 |
Businessman, chairman and CEO of venture capital firm JI Ventures, Inc.; former chairman and CEO of Cypress Communications Inc.; former director and CEO of Telstra in Australia |
[22] |
John F. Brock |
1971 |
Chairman and CEO of Coca-Cola Enterprises Inc. |
[23] |
Gary C. Butler |
1968 |
CEO of Automatic Data Processing |
[24] |
Brook Byers |
1968 |
Venture capitalist of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers |
[25] |
George G. Crawford |
1890 |
Headed the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company |
[2] |
Quentin Dastugue |
1977 |
Founding partner and the chief executive officer of the New Orleans-based real estate firm Property One, Inc.; former four-term member of the Louisiana House of Representatives |
[26] |
Cecil B. Day |
1958 |
Founder of Days Inn Hotels |
[27] |
David Dorman |
1975 |
Chairman and CEO Emeritus of AT&T Corporation |
[28] |
Mike Duke |
1971 |
President and CEO of Wal-Mart Stores |
[29] |
David C. Garrett, Jr. |
1955 |
CEO of Delta Air Lines (1978–1987) |
[30] |
Jaime Gilinski |
1978 |
Chairman of JGB Financial Holding Company |
[31] |
Frank Gordy |
1929 |
Founder of The Varsity chain, which includes the world's largest drive-in |
[32] |
James Gerald Gulliver |
1950 |
Founder of Argyll Foods, one of the United Kingdom's largest retail businesses |
[33] |
Dennis Hayes |
1973 |
Founder of Hayes Communications, an early developer of PC modems |
[34] |
Ed Iacobucci |
1975 |
Leader of the IBM OS/2 Design Team; founder of Citrix Systems; President and CEO of DayJet; member of SCO Group's Board of Directors |
[35] |
Chris Klaus |
1994 |
Founder and current CEO of Kaneva, Inc.; co-founder and former CTO of Internet Security Systems; Donated $15 million to Georgia Tech towards the construction of the Klaus Advanced Computing Building |
[36] |
Alan J. Lacy |
1975 |
Last Chairman and CEO of Sears, Roebuck and Company |
[37] |
Mike Levy |
1969 |
Founder and current CEO of OPENSports.com; founder and former president, chairman and CEO of Sportsline |
[38] |
David S. Lewis, Jr. |
1939 |
Major force in the aerospace and defense industry for three decades |
[39] |
Calvin Mackie |
1996 |
Award-winning mentor; motivational speaker; entrepreneur |
[40] |
Scottie Mayfield |
1973 |
President of Mayfield Dairy Farms |
[41] |
Robert Milton |
1983 |
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of ACE Aviation Holdings, the parent company of Air Canada; former Chairman, President and CEO of Air Canada |
[42] |
Charles Moorman |
1975 |
Former CEO of Norfolk Southern, current CEO of Amtrak[43] |
[44] |
Dennis Patterson |
1971 |
Member of the Management Committee of SunTrust Banks Inc. |
[28] |
D. Nathan Meehan, Ph.D., P.E. |
1975 |
2016 President of the Society of Petroleum Engineers and Senior Executive Advisor of Baker Hughes Inc. |
[45] |
David Perdue |
1972 |
Former CEO of Dollar General and Reebok International; Georgia's Junior US Senator |
[46] |
J. Paul Raines |
1985 |
CEO of GameStop |
[47] |
Hazard E. Reeves |
1928 |
Introduced magnetic stereophonic sound to motion pictures; was president of over 60 companies, including Cinerama |
[48] |
Glen P. Robinson |
1948 |
Researcher at the Georgia Tech Research Institute; went on to found Scientific Atlanta |
[49] |
James D. Robinson III |
1957 |
CEO of American Express Co. (1977–1993); Director of The Coca-Cola Company (1975–present) |
[50] |
Joe Rogers, Jr. |
1968 |
Longtime CEO of Waffle House |
[51] |
Chuck Sannipoli |
1967 |
Executive in the data networking industry; Senior Member of the IEEE |
[52] |
Derek V. Smith |
1979 |
CEO of ChoicePoint (1997–2008) |
[53][54] |
Henry L. Smith |
1890 |
Led a manufacturing enterprise in Dalton, Georgia |
[2] |
Mark C. Smith |
1962 |
Co-founder of ADTRAN, Inc. |
[55][56] |
E. Roe Stamps |
1967 |
Founding managing partner of venture capital firm Summit Partners; member of the Georgia Tech Foundation Board of Trustees |
[57] |
Kan Trakulhoon |
1986 |
CEO of SCG |
[58] |
Henry Grady Weaver |
1911 |
Director of Customer Research Staff for General Motors Corporation, appeared on the cover of the November 14, 1938 issue of Time magazine |
[59] |
George W. Woodruff |
1917 |
Engineer, businessman, and philanthropist who gave generously to both Georgia Tech and Emory University; namesake of the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering |
[60] |
Guangping Zhou |
1991 |
Co-founder and Vice President, Xiaomi |
[61] |
|
|
Education
Politics and public service
Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
Dean Alford |
1976 |
Member of the Georgia General Assembly (1983–1993); President and CEO of Allied Energy Services |
[68] |
Ivan Allen, Jr. |
1933 |
Mayor of Atlanta (1962–1970) |
[69] |
Raymond W. Baker |
1957 |
Director of Global Financial Integrity, a think tank in Washington, DC |
[70] |
Timothy C. Batten, Sr. |
1981 |
United States federal judge since his nomination by George W. Bush in 2005 and confirmation in 2006 |
[71] |
Max Burns |
1973 |
Georgian Member of the US House of Representatives (2003–2005) |
[72] |
Charles M. Brown |
1925 |
Member of the Georgia State Senate (1957–1964); Chairman of Commission (1945–1947, 1976–1978, 1966, 1968, 1971, 1974); Fulton County commissioner (1941–1948, 1966–1979) |
[73][74] |
Howard Callaway |
1945 |
Businessman; US Secretary of Army (1973–1975); Georgian Member of US House of Representatives (1965–1967) |
[75][76] |
Mario Canahuati |
1977 |
Advisor of Honduras Government team during the negotiations of CAFTA; former Honduras Ambassador in the US; Current Secretary of Foreign Affairs of Honduras; affiliated with PNH |
[77][78] |
Jack Carter |
1972 |
Businessman and politician; son of Jimmy Carter |
[79][80] |
Jimmy Carter |
1946 |
39th President of the United States (1977–1981); 2002 Nobel Peace laureate; member of the Georgia State Senate (1962–1966); 76th Governor of Georgia (1971–1975) |
[4][5] |
J. Owen Forrester |
1961 |
United States federal judge since his appointment by Ronald Reagan in 1981 |
[81] |
Phil Gingrey |
1965 |
Georgian Member of US House of Representatives (2003–present) |
[82] |
Johnny Grant |
1972 |
Member of the Georgia State Senate representing the 25th district of Georgia |
[83][84] |
Jack Guynn |
1969 |
Former President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta; member of Oxford Industries' Board of Directors |
[28][85] |
Morley A. Hudson |
1938 |
Shreveport businessman, engineer, civic leader; pioneer of the modern Republican Party in Louisiana |
[86] |
John W. Keys |
1964 |
Director of the United States Bureau of Reclamation (2001–2006) |
[87] |
Tom Moreland |
1955 |
30+ year career with the Georgia Department of Transportation, Commissioner and/or Chief Engineer for the last 17 years; namesake of the Tom Moreland Interchange |
[88] |
Sam Nunn |
1956 |
Georgian Member of the US Senate (1972–1997); CEO of Nuclear Threat Initiative; received an honorary doctorate from Georgia Tech in 2008 |
[89][90] |
Stephen Pace |
1912 |
Georgian Member of the US House of Representatives (1937–1951); member of the Georgia State Senate (1923–1924); member of the Georgia House of Representatives (1917–1920) |
[91] |
E. Earl Patton |
1949 |
Georgia state senator and Atlanta businessman; first Republican to run for US senator from Georgia (1968) since Reconstruction |
[92] |
Paul Craig Roberts |
1961 |
Economist and political pundit; served as Undersecretary of the Treasury under Ronald Reagan |
[93] |
Chip Rogers |
1991 |
Politician in the Georgia General Assembly since 2002; selected as Georgia State Senate Majority Leader in 2009 |
[94] |
Mark D. Sickles |
1984 |
Politician in the Virginia House of Delegates since November 2003 |
[95] |
Jefferson W. Speck |
1939 |
Republican gubernatorial nominee in Arkansas, 1950 and 1952 |
[96][97] |
Orson Swindle |
1959 |
Commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission of the United States (1997–2005); decorated Vietnam War prisoner of war |
[98] |
Juan Carlos Varela |
1985 |
Former Vice President of Panama from 2009 to 2014; current President of Panama since 2014 |
[99][100] |
Daniel Webster |
1971 |
Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives; longest-serving Florida legislator |
[101] |
Rufus W. Youngblood |
1950 |
United States Secret Service agent who shielded Lyndon B. Johnson in the assassination of John F. Kennedy |
[102] |
|
|
Military service
Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
Edward C. Aldridge, Jr. |
1962 |
Served in many top U.S. Defense Department and defense industry jobs, including as the 16th Air Force secretary |
[103] |
William L. Ball |
1969 |
67th Secretary of the Navy (March 28, 1988 – May 15, 1989) |
[104] |
John Boyd |
1964 |
USAF fighter pilot, engineer and military strategist |
[105] |
Philip M. Breedlove |
1977 |
Four-star general in the United States Air Force and the current Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force |
[106] |
John M. Brown III |
|
Commander of United States Army Pacific Command |
[107] |
Tyler Brown |
2001 |
Former Student Body President (1999–2000); United States Army Lieutenant; KIA in Iraq |
[108] |
Timothy Cole Jr. |
1966 |
Aircraft commander and Warrant Officer that served and was killed by hostile fire in the Vietnam War in Quảng Tín Province during a MEDEVAC mission |
[109] |
Ray Davis |
1938 |
Assistant Commandant of the USMC; Korean War Medal of Honor recipient |
[110] |
James O. Ellis |
|
Retired 4-star admiral; former Commander of United States Strategic Command, Offutt Air Force Base |
[111] |
Pete Geren |
1973 |
Served as the 20th United States Secretary of the Army from July 16, 2007 to September 16, 2009; former member of the United States House of Representatives from Texas; currently president of the Sid W. Richardson Foundation in Fort Worth, Texas |
[112][113] |
Russell D. Hale |
1969 |
United States Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Financial Management & Comptroller) (1981–1984) |
[114] |
Haywood S. Hansell |
1924 |
USAF major general; air combat commander and strategist of the United States Army Air Forces during World War II |
[115] |
Hugh W. Hardy |
1944 |
United States Marine Corps Reserves major general; geoscientist |
[116] |
John W. Hendrix |
1965 |
Retired United States Army four-star general who served as Commander, United States Army Forces Command (1999–2001) |
[117] |
Orlando Llenza |
1951 |
Second Puerto Rican to reach the rank of Major General in the USAF |
[118] |
Thomas McGuire |
1941 |
Second leading USAAF ace of World War II with 38 victories; Medal of Honor recipient |
[119] |
Peter M. Rhee |
1983 |
Surgeon, medical professor, and military veteran; spent 24 years in the United States Navy serving as a battlefield casualty physician in Afghanistan and Iraq |
[120] |
William G. Thrash |
1939 |
Retired United States Marine Corps three-star general; highly decorated Naval Aviator |
[121] |
James A. Winnefeld, Jr. |
1978 |
United States Navy four-star admiral who currently serves as the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; former fourth Commander, U.S. Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) and 21st Commander, North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) |
[122] |
Leonard Wood |
1894 |
Medal of Honor recipient, Governor-General of the Philippines and Cuba, 5th Chief of Staff of the Army[123] |
|
|
|
Science and engineering
NASA and aerospace
Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
Eric Boe |
1997 |
NASA astronaut (STS-126, STS-133) |
[124] |
Michael R. Clifford |
1982 |
NASA astronaut (STS-53, STS-59, STS-76); former US Army lieutenant colonel |
[125] |
Jan Davis |
1975 |
Retired NASA astronaut (STS-47, STS-60, STS-85); current director of the Safety and Mission Assurance directorate at Marshall Space Flight Center |
[126] |
James Henry Deese |
1935 |
NASA administrator |
[127] |
Ben T. Epps |
1904 |
Known as "Georgia's First Aviator"; aviation pioneer; in 1907, he built a monoplane of his own design, now known as the Epps 1907 Monoplane, followed by other original monoplane and biplane designs |
[128] |
Gabriel Georgiades |
1979 |
Professor of Aerospace Engineering at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona |
[129] |
L. Blaine Hammond |
1974 |
Retired NASA astronaut (STS-39, STS-64) |
[130] |
Charlie Hillard |
1958 |
Aerobatics pilot; first American to win the world aerobatics title |
[131] |
Scott J. Horowitz |
1982 |
Retired NASA astronaut (STS-75, STS-82, STS-101, STS-105) |
[132] |
Ellis L. Johnson |
1960 |
Coca-Cola Chaired Professor in the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Georgia Tech |
[133] |
Susan Still Kilrain |
1985 |
Retired NASA astronaut (STS-83, STS-94) |
[134] |
Robert S. Kimbrough |
1998 |
NASA astronaut (STS-127); Among the first candidates selected for astronaut training in the United States following the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster |
[135] |
Charles Kohlhase |
1957 |
Worked for forty years at NASA/JPL leading the design of several robotic deep-space planetary missions |
[136] |
Timothy Kopra |
1995 |
NASA astronaut (STS-127); flight engineer and science officer of the International Space Station ; US Army lieutenant colonel |
[137] |
Sandra Magnus |
1996 |
NASA astronaut (STS-112, STS-126, STS-119, STS-135); member of the ISS Expedition 18 |
[138][139] |
David D. Marshall |
1995 |
Professor and Department Chair, Aerospace Engineering, California Polytechnic State University |
[140] |
William S. McArthur |
1983 |
NASA astronaut (STS-58, STS-74, STS-92); veteran of three Space Shuttle missions; veteran of one mission to the International Space Station via the Russian Soyuz capsule |
[141] |
Alan G. Poindexter |
1986 |
NASA astronaut (STS-122, STS-131) |
[142] |
James R. Thompson, Jr. |
1958 |
Director of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama (1986–1989); NASA's deputy director (1989–1991) |
[143] |
Joe F. Thompson |
1971 |
Aerospace engineer and chaired professor at Mississippi State University known for contributions to the field of computational fluid dynamics |
[144] |
Richard H. Truly |
1959 |
Retired NASA Astronaut (Approach and Landing Tests, STS-2, STS-8); Retired Vice Admiral in the United States Navy; 8th Administrator of NASA (1989–1992); head of the Georgia Tech Research Institute (1993–1998) |
[145] |
Douglas H. Wheelock |
1992 |
NASA astronaut (STS-120, Soyuz TMA-19, Expedition 24/25) |
[146][147] |
John Young |
1952 |
Retired NASA astronaut (Gemini 3, Gemini 10, Apollo 10, Apollo 16, STS-1, STS-9); first commander of the space shuttle, one of 12 men to walk on the Moon on Apollo 16 |
[148] |
|
|
Physics
Chemistry and biology
Engineering
Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
Jim Allchin |
1984 |
Former high-level executive at Microsoft |
[183] |
Eric Allender |
1985 |
Computer Science professor at Rutgers University, where he chaired the Department of Computer Science from 2006 to 2009 |
[184] |
Annie Antón |
1997 |
Chair and professor, School of Interactive Computing (Georgia Tech); professor of software engineering at NCSU; privacy expert |
[185] |
Krishna Bharat |
1996 |
Google research scientist; creator of Google News |
[186] |
Anurag Gupta |
1993 |
Distinguished Architect at Walmart |
[187] |
Joe Celko |
1982 |
Relational database expert from Austin, Texas; participated in the ANSI X3H2 Database Standards Committee; helped write the SQL-89 and SQL-92 standards |
[188] |
Dorothy M. Crosland |
1961 |
Long-time head librarian of the Georgia Tech Library, awarded honorary degree in 1961 |
[189] |
Tom Cross |
1999 |
Entrepreneur; computer security expert; hacker |
[190][191] |
Jim Davies |
1997 |
Cognitive scientist, playwright, artist; assistant professor of cognitive science at the Institute of Cognitive Science at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, where he is the director of the Science of Imagination Laboratory |
[192] |
Richard DeMillo |
1974 |
Former dean of the Georgia Tech College of Computing; Distinguished Professor of Computing; previous director of the Georgia Tech Information Security Center |
[193][194] |
Anind Dey |
1995 |
Computer scientist, currently an associate professor and the director of the Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University |
[195] |
W. Keith Edwards |
1989 |
Director of the GVU Center (Georgia Tech); Professor of School of Interactive Computing at Georgia Tech; former manager of the Ubiquitous Computing group at PARC |
[196] |
Chaim Gingold |
2003 |
Noted for his work with Spore |
[197] |
D. Richard Hipp |
1984 |
Architect and primary author of SQLite |
[198] |
Billy Hoffman |
2005 |
Hacker, discovered a security flaw in Buzzcard, the campus magnetic ID card system |
[199] |
Ed Iacobucci |
1975 |
Leader of the IBM OS/2 design team; founder of Citrix Systems; President and CEO of DayJet; member of SCO Group's Board of Directors |
[35] |
Paul Q. Judge |
2002 |
Technical expert for the Federal Trade Commission in the 2005 Report to Congress on the Effectiveness of the CAN-SPAM Act; founder of Anti-Spam Research Group in the Internet Research Task Force |
[200] |
Craig Mundie |
1972 |
Chief research and strategy officer at Microsoft |
[201] |
Elizabeth Mynatt |
1989 |
Executive Director, Institute for People and Technology (IPaT) at Georgia Tech; Director of the GVU Center at Georgia Tech; Associate Dean of Strategic Planning, Georgia Tech College of Computing |
[202] |
James F. O'Brien |
2000 |
Computer science professor at University of California, Berkeley |
[203] |
Jeff Offutt |
1988 |
Computer science professor of software engineering at George Mason University; software testing expert; Editor-in-Chief of Software Testing, Verification & Reliability journal |
[204] |
Rosalind Picard |
1984 |
Founder and director of the Affective Computing Research Group at MIT |
[205][206] |
Mike Pinkerton |
1997 |
Software developer working on the Mozilla browsers and Google Chrome browser; lectures on "Development of Open Source Software" at George Washington University |
[207] |
Alex Snoeren |
1997 |
Computer science professor at University of California, San Diego |
[208] |
Gene Spafford |
1981 |
Computer science professor at Purdue University; computer security expert |
[209] |
Jeff Trinkle |
1979 |
Computer science chair and professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute |
[210] |
|
|
Mathematics
Humanities
Architecture and design
Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
Cecil Alexander |
1937 |
Architect; transferred to Yale after his first year at Georgia Tech |
[214] |
Michael Arad |
1999 |
Designer architect of the World Trade Center Memorial in New York City, selected from 5,201 competitors as the winning designer with "Reflecting Absence" |
[215] |
Bill Finch |
1936 |
Architect and founder of architectural firm FABRAP |
[216] |
George T. Heery |
1951 |
Atlanta architect who developed several important architectural concepts and founded Heery International |
[217] |
Jan Lorenc |
1994 |
Designer; co-owner of Lorenc+Yoo Design |
[218] |
John C. Portman, Jr. |
1950 |
Architect who designed several high-profile buildings, including SunTrust Plaza, and the Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel |
[219] |
L. W. "Chip" Robert, Jr. |
1908 |
Founder of Atlanta engineering and architectural firm Robert and Company; namesake of the L. W. "Chip" Roberts, Jr. Alumni House, which houses the offices of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association; Assistant Treasurer of the United States (1933–1936) |
[220] |
Hugh Stubbins |
1933 |
Architect who designed several high-profile buildings, including Yokohama Landmark Tower, Citigroup Center, and Kongresshalle |
[221] |
Vern Yip |
1995 |
Designer on reality program Trading Spaces |
[222] |
Janice N. Wittschiebe |
1980 |
Principal of Richard Wittschiebe Hand Architects, prominent Atlanta architecture firm; former President of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association; member of the Georgia Tech Foundation Board |
[223] |
|
|
Arts and entertainment
Athletics
Despite their highly technical backgrounds, Tech graduates are no strangers to athletics; approximately 150 Tech students have gone into the NFL, with many others going into the NBA or MLB. Well-known American football athletes include former students Calvin Johnson, Daryl Smith, and Keith Brooking, former Tech head football coaches Pepper Rodgers and Bill Fulcher, and all-time greats such as Joe Hamilton, Pat Swilling, Billy Shaw, and Joe Guyon. Tech's recent entrants into the NBA include Javaris Crittenton, Thaddeus Young, Jarrett Jack, Luke Schenscher, Stephon Marbury, Derrick Favors, Iman Shumpert, and Chris Bosh. Award-winning baseball stars include Kevin Brown, Mark Teixeira, Nomar Garciaparra, Jason Varitek, and Jay Payton. In golf, the legendary Bobby Jones founded The Masters, David Duval was ranked No. 1 in the world in 2001, Stewart Cink was the 2009 Open Championship winner, was ranked in the top ten, and Matt Kuchar won the U.S. Amateur.
Fictional people
References
- ↑ "Bylaws of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association, Inc." (PDF). Georgia Tech Alumni Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-15. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
- 1 2 3 Wallace, Robert (1969). Dress Her in WHITE and GOLD: A biography of Georgia Tech. Georgia Tech Foundation.
- ↑ "Enrollment by College, Spring 2011". Facts and Figures: Enrollment. Georgia Tech Institutional Research and Planning. Retrieved 2011-05-16.
- 1 2 "Presidential Tour of Campus Not the First for the Institute" (Press release). Georgia Institute of Technology. 2002-03-27. Archived from the original on 2008-02-02. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
- 1 2 "History of the NROTC Unit at Georgia Institute of Technology". Georgia Tech NROTC. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
- 1 2 Goettling, Gary (Summer 1994). "The Unconventional Genius of Dr. Kary Banks Mullis". Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Online. Georgia Tech Alumni Association. Retrieved 2007-03-06.
- ↑ "Rhodes Scholar Shows Compassion through Computation" (Press release). Georgia Institute of Technology. 2012-11-19. Retrieved 2010-11-25.
- ↑ "Transforming Urbanism: a Search for a More Thoughtful Architecture". Georgia Tech Library. 2009-04-01. Archived from the original on March 15, 2012. Retrieved 2013-06-23.
- ↑ "Tech Student to Travel to Budapest on a Fulbright Fellowship" (Press release). Georgia Institute of Technology. 2003-05-06. Retrieved 2010-09-15.
- ↑ "American Fulbright Grantees in Hungary: Academic Year 2003/2004" (Press release). Hungarian-American Fulbright Commission for Educational Exchange. 2003. Retrieved 2010-09-15.
- 1 2 "Georgia Tech Student Wins Rhodes Scholarship" (Press release). Georgia Institute of Technology. 2004-11-21. Archived from the original on September 2, 2006. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- ↑ Kantheti, Usha (2005-01-21). "High honors bestowed upon two Tech students". The Technique. Archived from the original on January 12, 2006. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- ↑ "Social Enterprising Alumna Wins Rhodes Scholarship" (Press release). Georgia Institute of Technology. 2013-11-26. Archived from the original on December 1, 2013. Retrieved 2010-11-25.
- 1 2 LaHatte, Jennifer (2002-01-25). "Two Tech students named scholars". The Technique. Archived from the original on June 29, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-22.
- ↑ Terraso, David (2001-12-17). "Georgia Tech College of Computing Student Wins Marshall Scholarship" (Press release). Archived from the original on September 4, 2006. Retrieved 2007-06-10.
- ↑ "Georgia Tech Student First in 50 Years to Win Rhodes Scholarship" (Press release). Georgia Institute of Technology. 2001-12-10. Archived from the original on September 4, 2006. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- ↑ "Rhodes Scholar". Tech Topics. Georgia Tech Alumni Association. Spring 2002. Archived from the original on February 25, 2005. Retrieved 2007-03-14.
- ↑ Bala, Rina (2001-04-06). "Faces at Georgia Tech: Profile on Will Roper". The Technique. Archived from the original on 2007-07-02. Retrieved 2007-04-04.
- ↑ "Rawi E. Abdelal". Harvard Business School. Retrieved 2011-05-16.
- ↑ Coffee, Hoyt (Spring 1996). "Tech Type: Recent Releases from Alumni and Friends". Tech Topics. Georgia Tech Alumni Association. Retrieved 2007-03-06.
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- ↑ "Gift of the Generations". Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine Online. Georgia Tech Alumni Association. Winter 2005. Archived from the original on 2007-10-26. Retrieved 2007-07-28.
- ↑ "Arthur Murray Taught the World to Dance". Tech Topics. Summer 1991. Archived from the original on November 12, 2011. Retrieved 2013-06-23.
- ↑ Meisner, Nadine (2006-07-25). "Wallace Potts". The Independent. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
- ↑ "Frequently Asked Questions". AndyRunton.com. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
- ↑ Terraso, David (2004-12-07). "NBA Veteran John Salley to Address Tech Graduates" (Press release). Georgia Institute of Technology. Archived from the original on September 4, 2006. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
- ↑ Cathey, Boyd D. "Randolph Scott (1898–1987)". North Carolina History Project. Archived from the original on February 11, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
- ↑ Amick, Daniel (2004-08-20). "George P. Burdell: the legend lives on". The Technique. Archived from the original on January 11, 2006. Retrieved 2007-02-04.
- ↑ Wolfe, Tom (1998). A Man In Full. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, LLC. Archived from the original on December 30, 2006. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ↑ "Grunt: Infantry Trooper". JMM's G.I. Joe Character Guide. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
- ↑ Rotten Tomatoes http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1078021-contact/quotes/. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
- ↑ Thomas, Roy (w), Buscema, John (p), Adkins, Dan (i). "Terror Stalks the Everglades". Astonishing Tales Vol. 1, #12 (June 1972), Marvel Comics
- ↑ Mark Gruenwald (w) & (p), Breeding, Brett (i). "Point Blank!". Hawkeye Vol. 1, #2 (Oct. 1983), Marvel Comics. p. 9
- ↑ Two Bits Man (2006-09-10). "A lesson in love, a lecture on hate: that's the Tech way". The Technique. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
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