List of City College of New York people
The following is a list of notable alumni and faculty of the City College of New York.
Nobel laureates
- Julius Axelrod 1933 - Nobel laureate in Medicine, 1970
- Kenneth Arrow 1940 - Nobel laureate in Economics, 1972
- Robert J. Aumann 1950 - Nobel laureate in Economics, 2005
- Herbert Hauptman 1937 - Nobel laureate in Chemistry, 1965
- Robert Hofstadter 1935 - Nobel laureate in Physics, 1961
- Jerome Karle 1937 - Nobel laureate in Chemistry, 1985
- Henry Kissinger 1923 - winner of Nobel Peace Prize, 1973
- Arthur Kornberg 1937 - Nobel laureate in Medicine, 1959
- Leon M. Lederman 1943 - Nobel laureate in Physics, 1988
- Arno Penzias 1954 - Nobel laureate in Physics, 1978
- Julian Schwinger - Nobel laureate in Physics, 1965
- John O'Keefe - Nobel laureate in Medicine, 2014
Graduates of Business School (which became Baruch College in 1968)
- William F. Aldinger III 1969 – Chairman and CEO, HSBC North America Holdings
- Abraham Beame 1928 – Mayor of New York City
- Akis Cleanthous – former Minister of Education and Culture, Cyprus
- Monte Conner 1986 – Senior Vice President of Roadrunner Records, A&R Department
- Michael Grimm – member of United States House of Representatives for New York's 13th congressional district
- Sidney Harman 1939 – founder and executive chairman of Harman Kardon; owner of Newsweek
- Ralph Lauren – fashion designer, Polo
- Carlos D. Ramirez – publisher of El Diario La Prensa
- Carl Spielvogel BBA 1957 – former U.S. Ambassador to Slovakia
- Craig A. Stanley – member of New Jersey General Assembly, 1996-2008
- George Weissman BBA 1939 – former CEO, Philip Morris International
- Larry Zicklin 1957 – former Chairman, Neuberger Berman
Politics, history, government, sociology, philosophy, and religion
- Herman Badillo 1951 – Congressman and Chairman of CUNY's Board of Trustees
- Bernard M. Baruch 1889 – Wall Street financier and adviser to American Presidents; author of the Baruch Plan
- Max Beauvoir 1958 – Haitian Vodou priest and Supreme Chief
- Daniel Bell 1939 – sociologist, professor at Harvard University
- Abraham D. Beame 1928 – mayor of New York City, 1974 to 1977
- Stephen Bronner – political theorist, Marxist, professor at Rutgers University
- Frank Caplan – educator, founder of children's educational toy company Creative Playthings
- Upendra J. Chivukula – first Asian American elected to the New Jersey General Assembly
- Henry Cohen 1943 – Director, Föhrenwald DP Camp; Founding Dean of the Milano School for Management and Urban Policy at The New School
- Morris Raphael Cohen – graduate of CCNY and professor at CCNY; philosopher, lawyer, and legal scholar; namesake of the Cohen Library at CCNY
- Marty Dolin – former Manitoba NDP MLA for Kildonan
- Philip Elman – Justice Department attorney and Federal Trade Commission member, wrote government's brief in Brown v. Board of Education
- Benjamin B. Ferencz – international jurist and criminal justice pioneer; co-winner of the 2009 Erasmus Prize
- Louis Finkelstein – Conservative Jewish theologian
- Abraham Foxman – National Director of the Anti-Defamation League
- Felix Frankfurter 1902 – Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
- George Friedman – founder of Stratfor, author, professor of Political Science, security and defense analyst
- Nathan Glazer – sociologist, professor at Harvard University; author of Beyond the Melting Pot with Daniel Patrick Moynihan
- Steven Goldberg – president of the sociology department of CCNY
- Paul Goodman – writer, social critic, public intellectual; author of The Empire City, Growing Up Absurd, and Communitas
- Edmund W. Gordon – founding Director of the Institute for Research on African Diaspora in the Americas and Caribbean at CCNY
- Stanley Graze – economist and former lecturer at CCNY; worked in the United Nations, State Department, US Army and the Brookings Institution; MA from Columbia University
- Sidney Hook 1923 – writer and philosopher
- Benjamin Kaplan 1929 – helped write the indictments of Nazi war criminals who were tried at Nuremberg; served as Nuremberg prosecutor; distinguished Harvard law professor
- Henry Kissinger – Secretary of State under Richard Nixon
- Ed Koch 1945 – mayor of New York City, 1978 to 1989
- Irving Kristol 1940 – neoconservative intellectual, professor at New York University
- David Landes 1942 – historian, professor at Harvard University
- Melvin J. Lasky 1938 – anti-communist, editor of Encounter 1958 to 1991
- Albert L. Lewis – conservative rabbi, president of international Rabbinical Assembly
- Samuel A. Lewis – politician and philanthropist in the late 19th century; a trustee of the college
- Guillermo Linares 1975 – the first Dominican-American New York City Council Member
- Seymour Martin Lipset – political sociology, trade unions
- Deborah Lipstadt 1969 - historian; combatted Holocaust denial
- Rachel Lloyd – applied urban anthropology graduate; founder of Girls Educational and Mentoring Services in New York
- Joseph Lookstein - Rabbi and President of Bar-Ilan University
- Jay Lovestone 1918 – radical political leader and trade union functionary
- Richard Lowitt - historian, Guggenheim Fellow.
- Sidney Morgenbesser – philosopher, John Dewey Professor of Philosophy, Columbia University, known to have witheringly applied Jewish humor to issues in metaphysics and epistemology
- Henry Morgenthau, Sr. – financier and diplomat; as ambassador to Ottoman Empire attempted to warn the world about the Armenian genocide
- Daniel Patrick Moynihan – spent a year at CCNY before he was drafted; author of Beyond the Melting Pot with Nathan Glazer; ambassador to the U.N.; senator representing New York
- Massimo Pigliucci – scientist and philosopher
- Colin L. Powell 1961– U.S. Secretary of State, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, U.S. Army General, National Security Advisor
- Donald A. Ritchie 1967 – historian, currently historian of the United States Senate
- Alexander Rosenberg – Lakatos Award-winning philosopher at Duke University
- Julius Rosenberg – executed for espionage during the Cold War
- Bertrand Russell – invited by the Philosophy Department in 1940 to become a professor but his appointment was blocked by a suit and timidity on the part of the Board of Higher Education; see the Bertrand Russell Case
- Bernice Sandler, the 'Godmother of Title IX'
- Oscar Schachter 1936 – law professor and United Nations aide
- George D. Schwab 1954 – political scientist, editor and academic, president of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy
- Henry Schwarzschild – founder of NCADP, LCDC, and head of ACLU's Capital Punishment project in America
- Allen G. Schwartz – U.S. federal judge
- Morrie Schwartz – sociologist, author, and subject of Tuesdays with Morrie
- Assata Shakur – civil rights activist; involved in May 1973 shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike in which a state trooper was killed
- Stanley S. Surrey 1929 – tax law scholar, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Tax Policy from 1961 to 1969
- Samuel Turk – rabbi, religious leader, columnist
- Friedrich Ulfers 1959 – Deconstructionist writer, Dean of Media and Communications at European Graduate School, and NYU professor
- Robert F. Wagner, Sr. – U.S. Senator from New York, 1927 to 1949; introduced the National Labor Relations Act
- Michele Wallace 1975 – major figure in African-American studies, feminist studies and cultural studies
- General Alexander S. Webb – second president of the college; winner of the Congressional Medal of Honor for heroism at the Battle of Gettysburg
- Melvyn Weiss, attorney who co-founded the plaintiff class action law firm Milberg Weiss.
- Stephen Samuel Wise 1891 – Reform rabbi, early Zionist and social justice activist
- Bertram D. Wolfe 1916 – political activist and historian
Psychology
- Solomon Asch 1928 – psychologist, known for the Asch conformity experiments
- Morton Bard – psychologist, trailblazer in crisis intervention and author of The Crime Victim's Book
- Isidor Chein 1932 – minority group identification, co-wrote amicus curiae brief in Brown v. Board of Education
- Kenneth Clark – CCNY professor who studied attitudes toward race and testified at Brown v. Board of Education
- Jacob Cohen – psychologist and statistician, developed the coefficient kappa to assess the reliability of ratings of discrete categories of behavior ; expert on factor analysis and regression analysis
- Morton Deutsch – social psychology, conflict resolution
- Leonard Eron – expert on the development of aggression
- Leon Festinger 1939 – social psychologist. Pioneered experimental social psychology, the theory of cognitive dissonance
- Robert Glaser – educational psychology
- Henry Gleitman – cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics
- Arno Gruen – psychologist and psychoanalyst
- Richard Herrnstein – quantitative analysis of behavior; co-author of The Bell Curve; Harvard professor
- Frederick Irving Herzberg – two-factor theory of job satisfaction
- Richard Lazarus – emotion, stress, and coping
- Abraham Maslow – psychologist, known of Maslow's hierarchy of needs
- Walter Mischel – social and personality psychology
- Gardner Murphy – professor of psychology at City College
- Charles Nemeroff - Chair of psychiatry at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
- Irvin Rock 1947; MA 1948 – professor of psychology at Berkeley. Leading researcher on perception.
- David Streiner 1963 - psychologist, researcher and author
- Hans Strupp – expert in psychotherapy research
The arts
- Woody Allen
- Maurice Ashley 1993 – first African American International Chess Grandmaster
- Jeff Barry – singer/songwriter; wrote with his wife Ellie Greenwich many hit songs, including "Be My Baby" and "Baby, I Love You"
- Seymour Boardman – New York abstract expressionist
- Joshua Brand – Emmy Award-winning writer, director, and producer
- Eddie Carmel, born Oded Ha-Carmeili - Israeli-born entertainer with gigantism and acromegaly, popularly known as "The Jewish Giant"
- Paddy Chayefsky 1943 – playwright and screenwriter; wrote Marty, The Hospital, Network, and Altered States
- Shirley Clarke – independent filmmaker
- Madeleine Cosman – author of medieval cookbook
- Julie Dash – filmmaker best known for Daughters of the Dust
- Edward Eliscu – songwriter; screenwriter; actor; wrote lyrics for "Carioca", inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame
- Victor Ganz – collector of contemporary art in the 20th century
- Davidson Garrett – poet; actor; New York City yellow taxi cab driver; known for his book King Lear of the Taxi: Musings of a New York City Actor/Taxi Driver
- Ira Gershwin 1918 – lyricist; collaborator with his brother George Gershwin, and with Jerome Kern, Kurt Weill, and Harold Arlen
- William Gibson 1938 – playwright, The Miracle Worker
- Marv Goldberg 1964 – music historian in the field of rhythm & blues
- Hazelle Goodman 1986 – stage, screen and TV actress
- Bill Graham - music promoter
- Allen J. Grubman – entertainment lawyer
- Arthur Guiterman – humorous poet
- Luis Guzmán – actor
- E.Y. "Yip" Harburg 1918 – lyricist, "Brother Can You Spare a Dime?," The Wizard of Oz, Finian's Rainbow
- Caroline Hirsch – founder of the comedy club Caroline's
- Judd Hirsch 1960 – actor
- Sam Jaffe 1912 – actor, teacher, musician, and engineer
- Dayal Kaur Khalsa 1963 – author of children's books
- Arthur Knight 1940 – movie critic, historian, teacher and TV host
- Stanley Kubrick 1946 – film director
- Mordecai Lawner – actor
- Ernest Lehman BS 1937 – screenwriter
- David Maurice Levett – composer and music teacher
- Hal Linden – actor, musician
- Frank Loesser – songwriter; Tin Pan Alley, stage and films; wrote music and lyrics of "Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition" and the music of Guys and Dolls, etc.
- Donald Madden – stage, television, and screen actor
- David Margulies – actor
- Ernest Martin – theatre director and manager
- Jackie Mason – comedian and actor
- Jerry Masucci – founder of Fania Records
- Radley Metzger – filmmaker and film distributor
- Andy Mineo – rapper, singer, producer, director, actor and minister
- Sterling Morrison 1970 – musician, co-founder of The Velvet Underground
- Zero Mostel 1935 – actor
- Stanley Nelson 1976 – documentary filmmaker
- Abraham Polonsky 1932 – screenwriter, director of Force of Evil
- George Ranalli 1946 – architect and dean, Spitzer School of Architecture of The City College of New York
- Adrienne Rich – feminist poet and essayist; taught at CCNY from 1968 to 1979
- Faith Ringgold – artist known for her painted story quilts
- Edward G. Robinson 1914 – actor
- Judith Rossner – novelist; author of Looking for Mr. Goodbar and August; attended 1952-1955.
- Mickey Rourke – actor; never officially attended, but began auditing Sandra Seacat's acting class in 1975, making what is generally referred to as his stage debut at CCNY in May of that year
- Chris Rush 1968 – stand-up comedian
- Robert Russin – sculptor
- Richard Schiff 1983 – Emmy Award-winning actor; star of The West Wing
- Sandra Seacat 1970s – actor, director and acting coach, taught acting at City College
- Ben Shahn – artist
- Dan Shor – actor
- Gabourey Sidibe – actress, majored in psychology
- Russell Simmons – rap mogul
- Hrvoje Slovenc – photographer
- Erik Sommer - contemporary artist
- Alfred Stieglitz 1884 – photographer
- Ed Summerlin – tenor saxophonist, composer and arranger; directed CCNY's jazz program 1971-1989
- Roy Turk – songwriter; member of the Songwriters' Hall of Fame; wrote lyrics of standards including "Mean To Me," "I'll Get By," "Walkin' My Baby Back Home," and others
- Vagabon - multi-instrumentalist, singer-songwriter and producer; graduated from Grove School of Engineering
- J. Buzz Von Ornsteiner – forensic psychologist; television personality
- Eli Wallach MA 1938 – actor
- Dirk Weiler – singer and actor
- Cornel Wilde 1935 – actor
Literature and journalism
- Alan Abelson 1942 – columnist, former editor, Barron's
- Marc D. Angel MA – rabbinic leader, published author
- Maurice Ashley 1988 – chess grandmaster, chess promoter, and author
- Toni Cade Bambara
- Helen Boyd 1995 – writer, speaker, and educator on gender and transgender theory
- Lawrence Bush – author and editor of Jewish Currents
- Barbara Christian
- Dan Daniel 1910 – dean of American sportswriters
- Reuben Fine 1932 – chess grandmaster, psychologist, and author
- Davidson Garrett 1988 - American poet
- Floriana Garo 1987 – Albanian television presenter and model
- Rebecca Newberger Goldstein – novelist, philosopher, MacArthur Fellow
- Vivian Gornick – writer, memoirist, feminist, professor; author of Fierce Attachments
- Clyde Haberman 1966 – New York Times reporter and columnist
- Safiya Henderson-Holmes MFA – Poet, winner of the 1990 William Carlos Williams Award
- Oscar Hijuelos 1975 – won the 1990 Pulitzer Prize for novel The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love
- Hy Hollinger – entertainment trade journalist, reporter and editor for Variety, international editor of The Hollywood Reporter
- Irving Howe 1940 – author of World of Our Fathers, literary critic, coined the phrase "New York Jewish Intellectual"
- John Johnson BA 1961, MA 1963 - journalist and television news correspondent/anchor
- June Jordan
- Bernard Kalb 1951 – journalist and television news correspondent
- Marvin Kalb 1951 – journalist and television news correspondent
- David Karp 1948 – novelist and television writer
- Alfred Kazin – author of A Walker in the City, literary critic
- Marvin Kitman 1953 – television critic, humorist, and author
- Jack Kroll 1937 – culture editor, Newsweek
- Joseph P. Lash 1931 – Pulitzer Prize for Biography winner, author of Eleanor and Franklin
- Harvey Leonard 1970 – meteorologist, broadcast journalist, and TV personality
- Paul Levinson – author of The Plot to Save Socrates and The Silk Code
- Oscar Lewis 1936 – anthropologist, author, and professor
- Douglas Light 2003 – novelist, screenwriter, short story writer
- Audre Lorde
- Bernard Malamud BA 1936 – author ; author of The Assistant
- Henry Miller Attended one semester. Author of Tropic of Cancer.
- Ralph Morse – career photographer for LIFE magazine; youngest war correspondent in World War II; recipient of the 1995 Joseph A. Sprague Memorial Award, the highest honor in photojournalism
- Montrose Jonas Moses 1899 – author
- Walter Mosley 1991 – best-selling author whose novels about private eye Easy Rawlins have received Edgar and Golden Dagger Awards
- Larry Neal
- Michael Oreskes 1975 - former senior vice president for news at NPR
- Mario Puzo – best-selling novelist; screenwriter, The Godfather
- Ernesto Quiñonez BA, MA 1996 – national bestselling author of Bodega Dreams
- Robert Rosen 1BA, MA 974 – author of the best-selling biography
- A.M. Rosenthal 1949 – former executive editor of The New York Times
- Henry Roth 1928 – novelist, author of Call It Sleep
- Miriam Roth – Israeli writer and scholar of children's books; kindergarten teacher; educator
- Robert Scheer – journalist
- Daniel Schorr 1939 – journalist, veteran newscaster and commentator for CBS, CNN, and NPR
- Stephen Shepard 1961 – editor in chief, Business Week
- Anatole Shub – editor and journalist specializing in Eastern European matters
- Upton Sinclair BA 1897 – author,The Jungle
- Robert Sobel BSS 1951, MA 1952 – best-selling author of business histories
- Stephen Somerstein BA 1966 - Took iconic photographs of the Civil Rights Movement
- Earl Ubell 1948 – print, TV and radio journalist specializing in science and health reporting
- Elsie B. Washington – author of the 1980 book Entwined Destinies, considered the first romance novel featuring African American characters written by an African American author
- Gary Weiss 1975 – investigative journalist, author
- Rajzel Żychlińsky - Yiddish-language poet
Science and technology
- Edward I. Altman 1963 – Max L. Heine Professor of Finance at the NYU Stern School of Business and the Academic leader in the study of High-Yield Bond and Distressed Debt Markets and Credit Risk Management
- Solomon A. Berson 1938 – medical scientist at Mt. Sinai Hospital who would probably have won a Nobel with his colleague Rosalyn Yalow had he not died prematurely
- Julius Blank – engineer, member of the "Traitorous Eight" who founded Silicon Valley
- Burrill Bernard Crohn 1902 - Gastroenterologist; known for disease named after him
- Charles DeLisi BA 1963 – scientist, "Father of the Human Genome Project"
- Milton Diamond 1955 – sexologist and professor of anatomy and reproductive biology
- Jesse Douglas 1916 – mathematician; one of two winners of the first Fields Medal awarded in 1936
- Joel S. Engel 1957 – scientist and electrical engineer instrumental in mobile phone technology
- Adin Falkoff – engineer, computer scientist, co-inventor of the APL language interactive system
- Mitchell Feigenbaum 1964 – mathematical physicist
- Richard Felder 1962 – engineering professor, co-author of Elementary Principles of Chemical Processes
- Jeffrey Scott Flier 1969 – Dean of Harvard Medical School
- Michael Freeman BS 1969 - inventor
- Alfred Gessow 1943 – Pioneering helicopter aerodynamicist at NACA/NASA, and professor at University of Maryland
- Wolcott Gibbs – distinguished chemistry professor at the Free Academy
- Seymour Ginsburg 1948 – distinguished computer science professor
- Richard D. Gitlin 1964 – engineer, co-invention of DSL Bell Labs
- George Washington Goethals 1887 – civil engineer, supervised the construction and opening of the Panama Canal
- Joseph Goldberger – started in engineering; transferred to Bellevue Hospital Medical School; discovered that B vitamin deficiency was cause of pellagra; paved way for Elvehjem to narrow cause to vitamin B3
- Dan Goldin – 9th and longest-tenured administrator of NASA
- Andrew S. Grove ChE. 1960 – founder and former Chairman of Intel Corp; donated $26 million, the largest gift ever received by the college
- Gary Gruber 1962 – physicist, testing expert, educator, author
- Herman Hollerith – early computer pioneer, invented Key punch
- Robert E. Kahn – Internet pioneer, co-inventor of the TCP/IP protocol, co-recipient of the Turing Award in 2004
- Michio Kaku – CCNY professor; theoretical physicist and co-founder of string field theory
- Harvey Kaylie 1960 - Mini-Circuits, RF and microwave components company founder
- Gary A. Klein 1964 – research psychologist, known for pioneering the field of naturalistic decision making
- Leonard Kleinrock 1957 – Internet pioneer
- Edward Kravitz 1954 - Neurobiologist
- Solomon Kullback – mathematician; NSA cryptology pioneer
- Arthur J. Levenson – Lieutenant Colonel, United States Army; National Security Agency official; cryptographer; mathematician
- Valentino Mazzia – forensic anesthesiologist
- Albert Medwin BSEE 1949 – engineer and inventor, developed CMOS integrated circuit technology
- David Michaels 1976 – epidemiologist and Occupational Safety and Health Administration administrator
- Irving Millman 1948 – microbiologist and virologist
- Lewis Mumford – historian of technology; author of The City in History
- Karl J. Niklas – professor of plant biology at Cornell University
- John O'Keefe – neuroscientist
- Paul Pimsleur – professor, applied linguist, inventor of the Pimsleur language learning system
- Charles Lane Poor – astronomer
- Martin Pope 1939 – physical chemist; 2006 Davy Medal winner; known for pioneering work in electronic process in organic crystals and polymers, particularly discoveries in area of ohmic contacts
- Emil Leon Post – distinguished mathematician and professor of mathematics at CCNY
- George Edward Post – BA in 1854, MA in 1857, and later MD in 1860, professor of surgery at the Syrian Protestant College in Beirut, now the American University of Beirut.
- Jacob Rabinow – engineer; inventor; held 230 U.S. patents on a variety of mechanical, optical and electrical devices
- Maurice M. Rapport 1940 – biochemist; identified the neurotransmitter serotonin
- Saul Rosen 1941 BS Mathematics – early computer pioneer, mathematician, engineer, and professor
- Jack Ruina 1944 BSEE – former director of ARPA
- Mario Runco Jr. 1974 – astronaut
- Jonas Salk 1934 – inventor of the Salk vaccine
- Philip H. Sechzer 1934 – anesthesiologist; pioneer in pain management; inventor of patient-controlled analgesia
- Abraham Sinkov – mathematician; National Security Agency cryptology pioneer
- David L. Spector – biology; professor and Director of Research, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
- David B. Steinman 1906 – engineer; bridge designer; designed the Mackinac Bridge; founded the National Society of Professional Engineers; namesake of the CCNY engineering building
- Leonard Susskind 1962 – physicist, string theory
- Joseph F. Traub 1954 – computer scientist, mathematician
- Edgar Villchur BA, MS 1940 – inventor, educator, writer, founder of Acoustic Research
- Mark Zemansky 1921 – physicist; textbook author; Professor of Physics at City College of New York from 1925 until he became an Emeritus Professor of Physics in 1967
- Benjamin W. Zweifach 1931 – Professor Emeritus Bioengineering, University of California, San Diego
Business
- Sheldon Adelson - businessman and Republican donor. Attended City College but dropped out before graduating
- Frank Avellino 1958 – accountant involved in the Madoff investment scandal
- Edward Blank – industrialist and pioneer in the telemarketing industry, founder of Edward Blank Associates, and the United Nations representative for the Jewish National Fund
- Miles Cahn – co-founder of Coach, Inc.
- Millard Drexler – chairman and CEO of J.Crew Group; former CEO of Gap Inc
- Jerald G. Fishman – Chief Executive Officer and President of Analog Devices since November 1996
- Andrew Grove 1960 – 4th employee of Intel, and eventually its president, CEO, and chairman, and Time magazine's Man of the Year in 1997, who donated $26,000,000 to CCNY's Grove School of Engineering in 2005.
- Joseph Gurwin – philanthropist who dropped out after becoming a partner in a textile firm; "realized I was making more money than my professors"
- Stanley H. Kaplan 1939 – founded Kaplan Educational Services
- Nat Lefkowitz - co-chairman of the William Morris Agency
- Jean Nidetch – founded Weight Watchers
- Jack Rudin 1941 – real estate developer
- Herbert Simon B.B.A. – real estate developer, co-founder of Simon Property Group, owner of the Indiana Pacers NBA basketball team
- Melvin Simon 1949 – real estate developer, co-founder of Simon Property Group
- Bernard Spitzer 1943 – real estate developer
- Linda Kaplan Thaler 1972 – CEO of ad agency in New York; brought us the Aflac Duck
Sports
- Albert Axelrod, Olympic medalist foil fencer
- Daniel Bukantz, Olympic fencer
- Abram Cohen, Olympic fencer
- Irwin Dambrot – basketball player involved in the CCNY Point Shaving Scandal
- Phil Farbman - basketball player
- Nat Fleischer - Founder and editor of Ring magazine. Authority on boxing.
- Heather Foster – Jamaican-born American professional bodybuilder
- Benny Friedman – University of Michigan and College and NFL Hall of Fame football quarterback, coached the CCNY football team from 1935 to 1941
- Harold Goldsmith 1952 – foil and épée fencer, won the 1952 NCAA foil championship, competed in three Olympiads for the US, won two Pan American Games gold medals and two silver medals
- Sidney Hertzberg – former NY Knicks basketball player
- Nat Holman - Hall of Fame basketball player and CCNY coach
- Red Holzman 1942 – All-American guard at CCNY; two-time All-Star NBA guard; basketball coach for the New York Knicks; Hall of Famer
- Jane Katz - Olympic swimmer
- Floyd Layne – basketball player involved in the CCNY Point Shaving Scandal; later coached the CCNY men's basketball team
- Bennet Nathaniel "Nate" Lubell -- Olympic fencer
- Nat Militzok – basketball player for the New York Knicks
- Saul Rogovin - Major League Baseball pitcher; 1951 AL ERA leader
- Hank Rosenstein – basketball player for the New York Knicks
- Barney Sedran – Member of the Basketball Hall of Fame
- Moe Spahn – basketball player
- James Strauch - Olympic fencer
- Fred Thompson Hall of Fame Track and Field Coach
- Henry Wittenberg – Olympic wrestler; won gold medal at 1948 Olympics and silver medal in 1952
Other
- Leon M. Goldstein, President of Kingsborough Community College, and acting Chancellor of the City University of New York
- Raymond Lisle, attorney, officer in the US Foreign Service, and Dean of Brooklyn Law School
Fictional
- Lennie Briscoe – character from the TV show Law & Order
- Brian Flanagan – character from the 1988 film Cocktail
- Gordon Gekko – character from the 1987 film Wall Street
- Nancy – character from the 1971 film Bananas
- Sam Posner – character from the 1988 film Crossing Delancey
- Don Draper – character from the TV show Mad Men
- Toby Ziegler – character from the TV show The West Wing