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Nobel laureates
- Thomas Cech, Ph.D. 1975 - Nobel laureate (1989, Chemistry)
- Steven Chu, Ph.D. 1976 - Nobel laureate (1997, Physics)
- Robert Curl, Ph.D. 1957- Nobel laureate (1996, Chemistry)
- Joseph Erlanger, B.S. 1895 - Nobel laureate (1944, Physiology or Medicine)
- William F. Giauque (B.S. 1920, Ph.D. 1922) - Nobel laureate (1949, Chemistry)
- David Gross, Ph.D. 1966 - Nobel laureate (2004, Physics)
- Alan Heeger, Ph.D. 1961 - Nobel laureate (2000, Chemistry)
- Daniel Kahneman, Ph.D. 1961 - Nobel laureate (2002, Economics)
- Lawrence Klein, B.A. 1942 - Nobel laureate (1980, Economics)
- Willis Lamb, B.S. 1934, Ph.D. 1938 - Nobel laureate (1955, Physics)
- Robert Laughlin, B.S. 1972 - Nobel laureate (1998, Physics)
- Yuan T. Lee (Ph.D. 1962) - Nobel laureate (1986, Chemistry), Professor of Chemistry, Principal Investigator, Materials and Molecular Research Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
- Willard Libby (B.S. 1931, Ph.D. 1930) - Professor of Chemistry, Nobel laureate (1960, Chemistry)
- Mario Molina, Ph.D. 1972- Nobel laureate (1995, Chemistry)
- Kary Mullis, Ph.D. 1972 - Nobel laureate (1993, Chemistry)
- Douglas North, B.A. 1942, Ph.D. 1952- Nobel laureate (1993, Economics)
- Glenn T. Seaborg (Ph.D. 1937) - Nobel laureate (1951, Chemistry), University Professor of Chemistry, Associate Director, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Chancellor, Berkeley campus (1958-1961)
- Hamilton Smith, B.S. 1952 - Nobel laureate (1978, Physiology or Medicine)
- Otto Stern, L.L.D 1930 - Nobel laureate (1943, Physics)
- Henry Taube, Ph.D. 1940 - Nobel laureate (1983, Chemistry )
- Harold Urey, Ph.D. 1923 - Nobel laureate (1934, Chemistry)
- Selman Waksman, Ph.D. 1918 - Nobel laureate (1952, Physiology or Medicine)
Turing Award laureates
- Leonard Adleman, 1968, Ph.D. 1976, the "A" in the RSA encryption algorithm for computer security. Co-recipient of the Turing Award in 2002.
- Douglas Engelbart, B. of Engineering 1952, Ph.D. 1955 - Inventor of the computer mouse. Recipient of the 1997 Turing Award.
- James Gray, 1966 BSME, 1969 Ph.D. - Recipient of the 2001 Turing Award
- Butler Lampson, Ph.D. 1967 - computer scientist, founding member of Xerox PARC, major contributor to the development of the personal computer, and recipient of the 1992 Turing Award
- Dana Scott (B.S. 1954) - computer scientist, recipient of the 1976 Turing Award, Associate Professor of Math
- Ken Thompson, 1965 BSEE, 1966 MSEE - Co-creator of the Unix operating system and co-recipient of the 1983 Turing Award
- Niklaus Wirth, Ph.D. 1967 - computer scientist, creator of the Pascal programming language, recipient of the 1984 Turing Award
Academia
- John Bahcall, 1956 - physicist, co-winner of the Fermi award in 2003
- Stephen Bronner Ph.D. 1975 - Political Theorist, Professor at Rutgers University
- Robert E. Connick (Ph.D. 1942) - professor of chemistry, dean of college of chemistry, vice-chancellor
- George Dantzig Ph.D. 1946 - Father of linear programming, created the simplex algorithm
- David P. Gardner M.A. 1959, Ph.D. 1966 - 15th president of the University of California
- Clark Kerr (Ph.D. 1939) - Professor of Industrial Relations, Chancellor (1952-58), UC President (1958-67)
- Maxine Hong Kingston (B.A. 1962) - author, Senior Lecturer
- Emil Mrak, B.S. 1926, M.S, Ph.D 1936 - Former chancellor of the University of California, Davis
- Josiah Royce, 1875 - philosopher, professor at Harvard University
- T. Y. Lin (M.S. 1933) - Professor of Civil Engineering, bridgebuilder, pioneering researcher and practioner of prestressed concrete, designed Moscone Convention Center, recipient of the National Medal of Science
- Kenneth Pitzer (Ph.D. 1937) - Dean of the College of Chemistry (1951-60), Professor of Chemistry, President of Rice University and Stanford University
- Charles Shank B.S. 1965, M.S. 1966, Ph.D. 1969 - Director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory from 1990 to 2005
- Samuel H. Smith, B.S. 1961, PhD 1965 - Eighth president of Washington State University, former chair of the executive committee of the National Collegiate Athletic Association
- Robert Sproul, 1913, UC president 1930-1958
- William Thurston, Ph.D. 1972 - mathematician, winner of the Fields Medal in 1982
- Shing-Tung Yau Ph.D. 1971 - mathematician, winner of the Fields Medal in 1983, winner of the United States National Medal of Science in 1997
- Chien-Shiung Wu, Ph.D. 1940 - physicist
Arts and media
- Scott Adams, MBA 1986 - creator of Dilbert
- Bill Bixby, 1957 - actor, director
- David Brock, 1985 - political author
- John Cho, 1996 - actor, Harold and Kumar Go To White Castle
- Suzanne Ciani - composer
- Liz Claman, 1986 - Anchor of CNBC's Wake Up Call
- Beverly Cleary - author
- Henry Cowell - composer
- Sara Davidson, 1962 - author
- Roxann Dawson, 1980 - actress, director, author, playwright
- Philip K. Dick - science fiction author whose stories inspired Blade Runner and Total Recall
- Joan Didion, 1956 - author
- Adam Duritz, (did not graduate) - lead singer of Counting Crows
- Ralph Edwards, 1935 - National television star
- Carl Franklin, 1971 - film director (Devil in a Blue Dress)
- Pauline Esther Friedman, 1938 (did not graduate) a.k.a Abigail Van Buren ("Dear Abby")
- Rube Goldberg, 1904 - cartoonist, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1948
- Karen Grassle, 1965 - actress, best known for her role as Caroline Ingalls (the mother) on the Little House on the Prairie television series
- Marguerite Higgins, 1941 - journalist, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1951, honored on a commemorative postal stamp issued by the United States Post Office
- Susanna Hoffs, 1980 - lead singer of The Bangles
- Oren Jacob, B.S. 1992, M.S. 1995 - Pixar Animation Studios technical director
- Stephan Jenkins, B.A. 1987, lead singer and songwriter of the band Third Eye Blind, was valedictorian of his class at UC Berekely
- Sanaa Lathan - actor
- Jean LemMon - editor of Better Homes and Gardens magazine
- Pauline Kael, 1940 - The New Yorker film critic
- Christopher Kasparek, 1966 - author, translator
- Stacy Keach, 1963 - actor
- Jack London, attended 1896-7 - novelist
- Jerry Mathers, 1974 - actor (Leave it to Beaver)
- Karen McKinnon, 1982 - author
- Terry McMillan, 1977 - author (Waiting to Exhale, How Stella Got Her Groove Back)
- Julia Morgan, 1894 - architect, designed the Hearst Castle for newspaper businessman William Randolph Hearst
- Errol Morris, film director (Fog of War)
- Dhan Gopal Mukerji - first successful Indian man of letters in the United States of America
- Gregory Peck, 1939 - actor, won the Academy Award for portrayal of Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird, nominated for the Oscar four other times; served as president of the Screen Actors Guild
- Mary Pipher, 1969 - author
- Michael Savage - radio talk show host
- James Schamus, 1982 - screenwriter, moving picture producer
- Irving Stone, 1923 - novelist (The Agony and the Ecstasy)
- George Takei, 1959 - (later transferred to UCLA) actor
- Robert Penn Warren, 1926 - author, poet
- Jann Wenner, 1967 (did not graduate) - founder of Rolling Stone magazine
Business
- Stephen D. Bechtel, 1923 founder of Bechtel Corporation
- Joan Blades, circa 1977 - Co-founder of After Dark "flying-toaster" screensaver company Berkeley Systems, co-founder of MoveOn.org
- Weili Dai, B.A.C.S.1984, Co-founder of broadband firm Marvell Technology Group, a billion dollar company in the NASDAQ 100
- Donald Fisher, 1951 - Founder and Chair, The Gap
- Walter Haas, 1910 - Co-founder of Levi Strauss & Co.
- William Randolph Hearst, Jr., 1959 - newspaper publisher
- Paul E. Jacobs, BS 1984, M.S. 1986, Ph.D 1989 - CEO of Qualcomm
- Edgar F. Kaiser, 1930 - founder of Kaiser Permanente
- Brian Maxwell, 1975 - founder of PowerBar
- Teresa Meng, MS 1984, PhD 1988- founder, Atheros Communications
- Paul Otellini, MBA 1974 - CEO of Intel
- Robert S. Pepper, BS 1957, MS 1959, PhD 1961 - Founder and CEO of Level One Semiconductor, sold to Intel for $2.2 billion
- Ryan Petersen - Founder, Faculty Imports
- John Schaeffer, 1971 - founder of ecologically-friendly Real Goods solar energy store and the Solar Living Center
- John Scharffenberger, 1973 - namesake and co-founder of chocolate company "Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker".
- Eric E. Schmidt, MS 1979, PhD 1982 - CEO of Google
- Sehat Sutardja, M.S. 1983, Ph.D.1988 EECS - Co-founder of broadband firm Marvell Technology Group, a billion dollar company in the NASDAQ 100
- Pantas Sutardja, B.S. 1983, M.S. 1985, Ph.D. 1988 EECS - Co-founder of Marvell Technology Group
- Cher Wang, chair of VIA Technologies
- Ralph Warner (Law, ca. 1966), pioneer in the legal self-help book industry, founder of Nolo Press
- Dean Witter, 1909 - partner in Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Politics and government
- Horace Albright, 1912 - conservationist, helped establish the National Park Service (with Stephen Mather, Class of 1887), second director of the National Park Service, awarded the Medal of Freedom
- W. Michael Blumenthal, 1951 - former United States Secretary of the Treasury
- Michael Boskin, 1967, Ph.D. 1971 - Chair, Presidential Council of Economic Advisors, professor at Stanford University
- James H. Budd, 1873 - Governor of California
- Jerry Brown, 1961 - Governor of California, mayor of Oakland, California
- Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, 1950 - President of Pakistan, Prime Minister of Pakistan
- Rachelle Chong, 1981, J.D. 1984 - former comissioner of the FCC
- Shirley Dean, 1956 - former mayor of Berkeley, California (1998-2002)
- Ron Dellums, M.S.W. 1962 - Congressman
- Nicole Devenish, B.A. 1996 - White House Communications Director, 2004-Present
- Newton Drury, 1912 - conservationist, fourth Director of the National Park Service
- Maria Echaveste, J.D. 1980 - White House deputy chief of staff 1998-2001
- John Morton Eshleman, 1903, M.A. 1905 - Lieutenant Governor of California, 1915-1916.
- John Kenneth Galbraith, M.S. 1932, Ph.D. 1934 - Harvard professor emeritus of economics, ambassador to India
- Julie Gerberding, M.P.H. 1990 - director of the Centers for Disease Control
- Walter Gordon, 1918, J.D. 1922 - Governor of the Virgin Islands, judge, member of National Football Foundation Hall of Fame
- Philip Habib, PhD 1952 - U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East
- Judith Heumann, M.P.H. 1975 - pioneer for disability rights and former assistant United States Secretary of Education
- Sun Ke, 1916 - Premier of the Republic of China
- Franklin Lane, 1887 - United States Secretary of the Interior
- Barbara Lee, M.S.W. 1975 - Congresswoman (D-Oakland) 1998-present
- Stephen Mather, 1887 - conservationist, Founding Director of the National Park Service
- Robert Matsui, 1963 - Congressman
- John McCone, 1922, CIA director 1961-1965.
- Robert McNamara, 1937 - President of World Bank, United States Secretary of Defense, Chair of Ford Motor Company
- Edwin Meese III, J.D. 1958 - United States Attorney General
- Norman Mineta, 1953 - Congressman, United States Secretary of Commerce, United States Secretary of Transportation
- Richard Neustadt, 1939 - political historian and advisor to several U.S. Presidents
- Theodore Olson, J.D. 1965 - United States Solicitor General
- Sadako Ogata, PhD. 1963 - United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
- James Robertson, 1923 - National Chair of the Spartacist League
- Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, M.A., Ph.D. - President of Costa Rica
- Dean Rusk, 1940 - United States Secretary of State
- James Soong, M.A. 1967 - Governor of Taiwan Province
- Lionel Wilson, 1938 - first African American mayor of Oakland
- Pete Wilson, J.D. 1962 - U.S. Senator, Governor of California
- James D. Zellerbach, 1913 - United States ambassador to Italy
Law
- Roger J. Traynor, B.A. 1923, Ph.D. 1926, J.D. 1927 - Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, 1964-1970
- Melvin Belli, J.D. 1929 - attorney
- Lance Ito, J.D. 1975 - judge, presided over O. J. Simpson trial
- Earl Warren, B.A. 1912, J.D., 1914 - Attorney General of California, 1939-1943; Governor of California, 1943-1953; 14th Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court from 1953-1969.
Astronauts
- Leroy Chiao, B.S. 1983 - First Chinese-American astronaut
- Tamara E. Jernigan, M.S. 1985 - astronaut
- Don L. Lind, Ph.D. 1964 - astronaut
- Brian T. O'Leary, Ph.D. 1967- astronaut
- Margaret Rhea Seddon, B.A. (physiology) 1970 - astronaut
- James van Hoften, B.S. 1966 - astronaut
- Rex Walheim, B.S. 1984 - astronaut
- Mary Weber, Ph.D. 1988 - astronaut
Technology
- Allan Alcorn, 1971 - Atari employee #3, electronics designer behind Atari's seminal Pong video arcarde unit, and erstwhile boss of Steve Jobs at Atari
- Gary Chevsky, 199? - Co-founder of Ask Jeeves, where he served as the chief software architect of its natural language processing search engine
- Kevin Donelly, EECS BS 1985 - Vice president of engineering at Rambus
- Lee Felsenstein, 1972 - pioneer in the personal computer industry, founder of Community Memory, designer of the Osborne 1 computer, and influential leading mediator of the Homebrew Computer Club, from which would emerge 23 companies, including Apple Computer
- Charles Giancarlo, EECS BS 1980 - Chief technology officer of Cisco Systems
- Albert Ghiorso, EE BS 1937 - Co-discoverer of twelve chemical elements such as Americium, Berkelium, and Californium
- Andrew Grove, Ph.D., 1963 - 4th employee of Intel, and eventually its president, CEO, and chairman, and TIME magazine's Man of the Year in 1997
- Eugene Jarvis, 1976 - Creator of the classic Defender video arcade game
- Lynne Greer Jolitz, 1978? - Co-author, with husband William Jolitz, of 386BSD, which is the ancestor of FreeBSD, which is an ancestor of Apple's Darwin operating system.
- William Jolitz, 1978? - Co-author, with wife Lynne Greer Jolitz, of 386BSD
- Bill Joy, M.S. 1982, co-founder of Sun Microsystems
- E. Floyd Kvamme, 1959 - co-founder of National Semiconductor.
- Barbara Liskov, 1961 - first woman in the United States to earn a Ph.D. in Computer Science (in 1968 at Stanford), creator of CLU, professor at MIT.
- Jay Miner, 1958 - inventor of the Amiga personal computer
- Gordon E. Moore, 1950 - co-founder of Intel and the originator of Moore's Law
- Charles Simonyi, 1972 - computer scientist. At Xerox PARC, he created the first WYSIWYG word processor, Bravo, then joined Microsoft to spread the WYSIWYG and computer mouse gospel. Originally from Hungary, he is the "Hungarian" in Hungarian notation, which he created.
- Andrew Tanenbaum, Ph.D. 1971 - computer scientist and creator of Minix, the precursor to Linux
- Steve Wozniak, Class of 1976, graduated 1987 - co-founder of Apple Computer
Athletics
- Shareef Abdur-Rahim - National Basketball Association (NBA) player with the Sacramento Kings
- Nnamdi Asomugha, 2003 - defensive back for the Oakland Raiders (NFL)
- J.J. Arrington,2005 - National Football League (NFL) running back with the Arizona Cardinals
- Matt Biondi, 1988 - three-time Olympian, winner of 8 gold medals
- Kyle Boller, 2003 - quarterback for Baltimore Ravens (NFL)
- Andre Carter, 2002 - defensive end for the San Francisco 49ers.
- Pete Cipollone, 1994 - Coxswain for the gold medal winning rowing team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece
- Natalie Coughlin, 2004 - Olympic swimmer, winner of two gold medals at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, three-time NCAA Swimmer of the Year
- Joy Fawcett, 1990 - member of the gold winning United States women's soccer team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, and the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta
- Michele Granger, 1993 - softball pitcher and Olympic gold medalist
- Mark Henderson, 1991 - swimmer, gold medalist at the 1996 Summer Olympics where he broke the world record in the 400 meter medley swimming relay
- Jackie Jensen, 1950 - professional baseball player
- Kevin Johnson, 1987 - professional basketball player
- Joe Kapp, 1959 - professional football player
- Jeff Kent - professional baseball player with the Los Angeles Dodgers
- Jason Kidd - professional basketball player with the New Jersey Nets
- Ryan Longwell, 1996 - National Football League kicker with the Green Bay Packers
- Mary T. Meagher, 1987 - Olympic swimmer, winner of three gold medals
- Xavier Nady - baseball player for the San Diego Padres (MLB)
- Conie Carpenter Phinney, 1981 - cycling gold medalist
- Aaron Rodgers,2005 - quarterback of the Green Bay Packers
- Leigh Steinberg, 1970, J.D. 1973 - sports agent
- Staciana Stitts, 2003, - Olympic swimmer, gold medalist in 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia
- Helen Wills, 1925 - winner of eight Wimbledon tennis championships and two Olympic gold medals
One of a kind
- Jimmy Doolittle, 1922 - aviator, United States Army Lt. General
- Ida Louise Jackson, B.A. 1922, M.A. 1923 - education and public-health pioneer
- Timothy Leary, Ph.D. 1950 - psychologist and cult figure
- Haakon Magnus, Crown Prince of Norway, 1999
- Ed Roberts (Independent Living Movement), 1964 - Founder of the Independent Living Movement
- R.J. Rushdoony, B.A. 1938, M.A. 1940 - prominent author of the Christian right
- Alice Waters, 1967 - celebrity chef, founder of Chez Panisse, originator of the California cuisine style of gourmet cooking
Students (currently enrolled)
- William Hung - Of American Idol Fame
- Adam Lamberg - star of the Disney Channel show Lizzie McGuire
- Jonny Moseley - Gold Medalist in 1998 Winter Olympics
UC Berkeley Faculty
- George A. Akerlof - Nobel laureate (2001, economics), Professor of Economics
- Luis W. Alvarez - Nobel laureate (1968, physics), Professor of Physics
- Walter Alvarez - Professor of Geology
- Richard Borcherds - Fields medallist (1998), Professor of Mathematics
- Judith Butler - Maxine Elliot Professor of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature
- Melvin Calvin - Nobel laureate (1961, chemistry), University Professor of Chemistry, discovered Calvin Cycle
- Owen Chamberlain - Nobel laureate (1959, physics), Professor of Physics
- Shiing-Shen Chern - leading differential geometer, Professor of Mathematics
- Robert E. Connick (Ph.D. 1942) - professor of chemistry, dean of college of chemistry, vice-chancellor
- Donald Davidson - philosopher, Willis S. and Marion Slusser Professor of Philosophy
- Gerard Debreu - Nobel laureate (1983, economics), Professor of Economics and of Mathematics
- J. Bradford DeLong - Professor of economics
- Hubert Dreyfus - Professor of philosophy
- Paul Feyerabend - philosopher of science
- William F. Giauque (B.S. 1920, Ph.D. 1922) - Nobel laureate (1949, Chemistry)
- Donald A. Glaser - Nobel laureate (1950, physics), Professor of Molecular Biology and of Physics
- Erich S. Gruen - Gladys Rehard Wood Professor of History and Classics
- John C. Harsanyi - Nobel laureate (1994, economics)
- Robert Hass - U.S. Poet Laureate, Professor of English
- Vaughan Jones - Fields medallist (1990), Professor of Mathematics
- Theodore Kaczynski - the Unabomber, Assistant Professor of Mathematics
- William Kahan - recipient of the 1989 Turing Award
- Richard Karp - recipient of the 1985 Turing Award
- Clark Kerr (Ph.D. 1939) - Professor of Industrial Relations, Chancellor (1952-58), UC President (1958-67)
- Maxine Hong Kingston (B.A. 1962) - author, Senior Lecturer
- Alfred Kroeber - Professor of Anthropology
- Thomas Kuhn - historian/philosopher of science
- George Lakoff - Professor of Linguistics and Cognitive Science
- Ernest O. Lawrence - Nobel laureate (1939, physics)
- G.N. Lewis - Dean of the College of Chemistry, professor of physical chemistry
- Yuan T. Lee (Ph.D. 1962) - Nobel laureate (1986, Chemistry), Professor of Chemistry, Principal Investigator, Materials and Molecular Research Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
- Willard Libby (B.S. 1931, Ph.D. 1930) - Professor of Chemistry, Nobel laureate (1960, Chemistry)
- T. Y. Lin (M.S. 1933) - Professor of Civil Engineering, bridgebuilder
- Geoffrey Marcy, Professor of Astronomy, has discovered many extrasolar planets
- Bernard Maybeck - drawing instructor (1894), Professor of Architecture (1898-1903)
- Edwin M. McMillan - Nobel laureate (1951, chemistry), Professor of Physics, Director, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
- Daniel L. McFadden - Nobel laureate (2000, economics)
- Czeslaw Milosz - Nobel laureate (1980, literature), Professor of Slavic Languages and Literature, Emeritus
- Roger Montgomery - Dean, College of Environmental Design, Professor of Urban Design, Architecture, and City and Regional Planning (1967-1996)
- Richard A. Muller - Professor of Physics, MacArthur Genius Award winner
- Laura Nader - Professor of Anthropology, pioneer of Legal Anthropology, older sister of Ralph Nader
- John H. Northrop - Nobel laureate (1946, chemistry)
- Peter Norvig (Ph.D 1985) - former research faculty member, the other co-author of Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach
- Robert Oppenheimer - Professor of Physics, scientific head of the Manhattan Project, "father of the atomic bomb"
- Andreas Papandreou - Professor and Chair of Economics, Prime Minister of Greece
- David A. Patterson - Professor of Computer Science, pioneer of RISC computer design
- Kenneth Pitzer (Ph.D. 1937) - Dean of the College of Chemistry (1951-60), Professor of Chemistry, President of Rice University and Stanford University
- Ken Ribet - Professor of Mathematics, contributor to the proof of Fermat's last theorem
- Stuart Russell - Professor of Computer Science, co-author of Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach
- Dana Scott (B.S. 1954) - computer scientist, recipient of the 1976 Turing Award, Associate Professor of Math
- Glenn T. Seaborg (Ph.D. 1937) - Nobel laureate (1951, Chemistry), University Professor of Chemistry, Associate Director, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Chancellor, Berkeley campus (1958-1961)
- John Searle - Professor of Philosophy
- Emilio G. Segrè - Nobel laureate (1959, physics), Professor of Physics, Emeritus
- Julian Schwinger - theoretical physicist, National Research fellow
- Wendell M. Stanley - Nobel laureate (1946, chemistry)
- Edward Teller - Professor of Physics, "father of the hydrogen bomb"
- Chang-Lin Tien - University Professor (UC system), NEC Distinguished Professor of Engineering, Chancellor of Berkeley campus (1990-1997)
- Charles H. Townes - Nobel laureate (1964, physics), University Professor of Physics
- Ulrich Walter - German astronaut, now professor at the Technische Universität München
- Charles W. Woodworth - (1891-1930) Founder of the UCB Division of Entomology, PBESA gives the C. W. Woodworth Award
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