Jerin jami'ar Michigan da tsoffin jami'an gwamnati

Labarin iyaye yana cikin Jerin tsofaffin ɗaliban Jami'ar Michigan
Maɓallin naúrar ilimi
Alama Ƙungiyar ilimi

ARCH Taubman College
BAS Makarantar Kasuwancin Ross
COE Kwalejin Injiniya
DENT Makarantar Dentistry
Farashin GFSPP Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
HHRS Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies
DOKA Makarantar Shari'a
LSA Kwalejin LS&A
MED Makarantar Likita
SMTD Makarantar kiɗa, wasan kwaikwayo da rawa
PHARM Makarantar Pharmacy
SED Makarantar Ilimi
SNRE Makarantar Albarkatun Kasa
SOAD Makarantar Stamps of Art & Design
SOI Makarantar Bayani
SON Makarantar Nursing
SOK Makarantar Kinesiology
SOSW Makarantar Social Work
SPH Makarantar Kiwon Lafiyar Jama'a
MDNG Matriculated, bai kammala karatu ba

Wannan jerin jerin fitattun tsofaffin ɗalibai ne a cikin doka, gwamnati da manufofin jama'a daga Jami'ar Michigan . Da fatan za a koma kuma ga jerin da ke ƙasa:

'Yan majalisa

  • Estefania Aldaba-Lim (Ph.D.), first female Filipino Cabinet secretary; social services and development secretary 1971–1977; first Filipino clinical psychologist; President of the Girl Scouts of the Philippines; first woman to become special ambassador to the United Nations (1979); UN Peace Medal Award
  • Justin Amash (B.A. 2002, J.D. 2005), lawyer, politician; U.S. Representative from Michigan's 3rd congressional district; libertarian-oriented maverick[1][2]
  • Donald M. Baker (B.A., M.A. economics 1952, J.D. 1956), major force in federal legislation on labor, education and poverty of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s; chief counsel for the Office of Economic Opportunity under Sargent Shriver during the Lyndon B. Johnson administration; oversaw such landmark legislation as the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, key additions to the Civil Rights Act, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act and many school busing, family planning, jobs and anti-poverty programs
  • Andrea Barthwell (M.D. 1980), Deputy Director for Demand Reduction at the Office of National Drug Control Policy (Drug Czar); resigned in July 2004 with an interest in running for United States Senate from Illinois
  • Alvin Morell Bentley (B.A. 1940, M.A. 1963), U.S. Representative from Michigan's 8th congressional district (1953–1961); wounded in the 1954 Capitol shooting incident; member of the Foreign Service[3]
  • William J. "Bill" Bogaard (J.D. 1965), mayor of Pasadena, California (1984–1986; 1999–present); longest-serving mayor in city history[4][5]
  • Howard L. Bost (Ph.D. 1955), historic architect of Medicare and job-related benefits for workers; U-M awarded him the nation's first doctorate in medical economics
  • Lyman James Briggs (M.A. in Physics, 1895), civil servant for the U.S. Government for 49 years; headed the Briggs Advisory Committee on Uranium; namesake of Lyman Briggs College at MSU[6]
  • Arleigh Burke (MSE 1931), United States Navy admiral; World War II naval hero; served an unprecedented three terms as Chief of Naval Operations (1955–1961)[7][8]
  • Anson Burlingame (1838–1841), Congressional Representative from Massachusetts; attended Detroit branch of the University of Michigan; served in the State senate in 1852; elected as a candidate of the American Party to the Thirty-fourth Congress and as a Republican to the Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth Congresses (March 4, 1855 – March 3, 1861); appointed Minister to Austria March 22, 1861, but was not accepted by the Austrian Government because of certain opinions he was known to entertain regarding Hungary and Sardinia; Minister to China from June 14, 1861, to November 21, 1867; appointed December 1, 1867, by the Chinese Government its ambassador to negotiate treaties with foreign powers[9]
  • Charles W. Burson (B.A. in political science, 1966), Senior Professor of Practice at the Washington University School of Law; Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary at Monsanto Company (2001–2006); Tennessee Attorney General (1988–1997); chief of staff to Vice President Al Gore (1997–2001)[10]
  • Harry M. Daugherty (LL.B. 1881), United States Attorney General; famously campaign manager and close advisor to Warren G. Harding
  • Donald McDonald Dickinson (J.D. 1867), United States Postmaster General under Grover Cleveland
  • Gerrit John Diekema (LAW: JD 1883), Congressional Representative from Michigan; member of the State house of representatives 1885–1891, serving as speaker in 1889; mayor of Holland in 1895; chairman of the Michigan Republican State central committee 1900–1910; delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1896; member of the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission from 1901 until he resigned in 1907; chairman of the Republican State central committee in 1927; appointed United States Minister to the Netherlands by President Hoover on August 20, 1929, and served until his death in The Hague, Netherlands, December 20, 1930;[11]
  • Gerald R. Ford (B.A. 1935, HLLD 1974), 38th President of the United States (1974–1977); 40th Vice President of the United States (1973–1974); Minority Leader of the United States House of Representatives (1965–1973); U.S. Representative from Michigan's 5th congressional district (1949–1973)[12]
  • Harold Ford Jr. (J.D. 1996), U.S. Representative from the Memphis-based Tennessee's 9th congressional district (1997–2007)[13]
  • Richard A. "Dick" Gephardt (J.D. 1965), President and CEO of the Gephardt Group lobbying firm; House Minority Leader (1995–2003); House Majority Leader (1989–1995); U.S. Representative from Missouri's 3rd congressional district (1977–2005); St. Louis city alderman (1971–1976); unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination for president in 1988 and 2004[14]
  • Stephen Goldsmith (J.D.), Professor of Practice at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government; chair of the Corporation for National and Community Service; Deputy Mayor of New York City (2010–11); mayor of Indianapolis (1992–1999); district attorney for Marion County, Indiana (1979–1990)[15]
  • Henry Thomas Hazard (LLD 1868), Mayor of Los Angeles (1889–1892)
  • Alexander W. Joel (J.D. 1987), Civil Liberties Protection Officer for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence[16]
  • Philip Lader (M.A. History 1967), United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom (1997–2001); Administrator of the Small Business Administration (1994–1997); House Deputy Chief of Staff and Deputy Director for Management of the Office of Management and Budget (1993–1994)[17]

Gwamnoni da Laftanar Gwamnoni

Tun daga 2021, Michigan ta ƙaddamar da gwamnoni 63 ko laftanar gwamnoni.

Michigan

  • Wilber Marion Brucker (AB 1916), Gwamna na 32 na Michigan 1931–1933; Sakataren Sojan Amurka 1955-1961 [18]
  • John Cherry (MPA 1984), Lt. Gwamnan Michigan; tsohon Sanatan jihar
  • William Comstock (AB 1899), Gwamna na 33 na Michigan [19]
  • Woodbridge N. Ferris (MD 1874), malami kuma ɗan siyasa; wanda ya kafa kuma shugaban Makarantar Masana'antu ta Ferris (daga baya Jami'ar Jihar Ferris ); shugaban Babban Rapids Savings Bank; gwamnan Michigan (1913-1916); aka zabe shi a matsayin dan Democrat ga Majalisar Dattawan Amurka a 1922 kuma ya yi aiki daga 1923 har zuwa mutuwarsa a 1928 [20]
  • Garlin Gilchrist II (an haife shi a watan Satumba 25, 1982) ɗan siyasan Amurka ne kuma ɗan gwagwarmaya wanda a halin yanzu yake aiki a matsayin laftanal gwamnan Michigan.
  • Fred W. Green (LAW: 1898), magajin garin Ionia, Michigan kafin ya yi aiki a matsayin Gwamnan Michigan na 31 daga 1927 zuwa 1931 [21]
  • Martha Wright Griffiths (DOKA: JD 1940), Wakilin Majalisa; aka zabe shi zuwa majalisar wakilai ta jihar Michigan 1948–1952; aka zabe shi a matsayin dan jam'iyyar Democrat zuwa Tamanin da hudu da kuma zuwa Majalisun Majalissar wakilai tara (1955-1974); Laftanar Gwamna na Michigan 1982-1991 [22]
  • George Griswold ɗan siyasan Amurka ne kuma Laftanar Gwamna na goma daga jihar Michigan ta Amurka.
  • Alex Goresbeck (DOKA: LLB 1893), Gwamna na 30 na Michigan [23]
  • Patrick Henry Kelley (LAW: JD 1900), Wakilin Majalisa daga Michigan; memba na kwamitin ilimi na jiha 1901-1905; Sufeto na koyarwa na gwamnati 1905–1907; Laftanar Gwamnan Michigan 1907–1911; An zabe shi a matsayin dan Republican zuwa Sittin da Uku da kuma zuwa ga Majalisun Majalisun hudu masu nasara (1913-1923) [24]
  • Dwight May A cikin 1842, ya halarci reshen Kalamazoo na Jami'ar Michigan (yanzu Kwalejin Kalamazoo), ya shiga aji na biyu a 1846, kuma ya sauke karatu a 1849 daga sashin gargajiya. A cikin 1866, an zaɓi Mayu 18th Laftanar Gwamna na Michigan da kuma amintaccen ƙauyen Kalamazoo.
  • Joseph R. McLaughlin, ɗan kasuwa kuma ɗan siyasa daga Michigan; Laftanar Gwamna 1895-1897
  • Kimber Cornellus "Kim" Sigler, 40th Gwamna na Michigan 1947-1949 [25]
  • Rick Snyder (LSA, LAW, BUS), 48th Gwamna na Michigan; tsohon shugaban kasa kuma COO na Gateway Computers [26]
  • Murray Delos Van Wagoner (COE: BA CE 1921), 38th Gwamna na Michigan 1941-1942 [27]
  • G. Mennen "Soapy" Williams (LAW: JD), Gwamnan Dimokuradiyya na Michigan na wa'adi shida (1948-1960); Babban Alkalin Kotun Koli na Michigan [28]
  • Edwin B. Winans (LAW), Wakilin Amurka; 22nd Gwamnan Michigan

Wajen Michigan

  • Thank Thomas Burton Adams Jr. was an American politician from the U.S. state of Florida. A Democrat, he served in the Florida Senate (1956–1960), as Secretary of State of Florida (1961–1971), and as the tenth Lieutenant Governor of Florida (1971–1975).
  • George Ariyoshi (J.D. 1952), third governor of Hawaii (1974–1986)
  • Theodore G. Bilbo was an American politician who twice served as governor of Mississippi (1916–20, 1928–32) and later was elected a U.S. Senator (1935–47).
  • William John Bulow (LAW: JD 1893), Senator from South Dakota; member of State Senate 1899; mayor of Beresford 1912–1913; county judge of Union County, 1918; Governor of South Dakota 1927–1931; elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1930; reelected in 1936 and served 1931–1943; chairman of Committee on the Civil Service (Seventy-third through Seventy-seventh Congresses)[29]
  • David Francis Cargo (BA 1951, MA 1953; LAW: LLB 1957), Governor of New Mexico, 1967–71; New Mexico State House of Representatives Albuquerque (1963–67)[30]
  • Fenimore Chatterton, Republican, governor of Wyoming (1903–1905)[31]
  • Chase Addison Clark, Democrat, governor of Idaho (1941–1943)[32]
  • Thomas Cuming (A.B. 1845) military officer; first Secretary of Nebraska Territory; twice was the territory's acting Governor, after the death of Francis Burt and after the resignation of Mark W. Izard
  • Cushman Kellogg Davis (AB 1857), governor of Minnesota (1874–1876); U.S. Senator (1887–1900)[33]
  • Thomas E. Dewey (B.A. 1923), governor of New York (1943–1954); unsuccessfully ran as Republican nominee for president in 1944 and 1948[34]
  • Frank Emerson (B.S. 1904), governor of Wyoming (1927–1931)[35]
  • Ralph F. Gates (BA 1915; LAW: JD 1917), Governor of Indiana, 1945–49[36]
  • John L. Gibbs was a Minnesota legislator, two-time Speaker of the Minnesota House of Representatives and the 14th Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota.
  • Joseph B. Gill was an American politician. Between 1893 and 1897 he served as Lieutenant Governor of Illinois.
  • Morley Isaac Griswold governor of Nevada (1934–1935) Republican[37]
  • Philip Hart was an American lawyer and politician.
  • Paul M. Herbert was an American politician of the Republicanparty who served three separate tenures as the 47th, 49th and 52nd Lieutenant Governor of Ohio.
  • Francis Grant "Frank" Higgins, first native-born person from Montana to become a member of the state's bar and of its legislature; served in the Montana House of Representatives; mayor of Missoula, Montana in 1892; fourth Lieutenant Governor of Montana, 1901–1905
  • Lyman Underwood Humphrey, Republican, governor of Kansas (1889–1893)[38]
  • Arthur Mastick Hyde, Republican, governor of Missouri (1921–1925)[39]
  • John N. Irwin, businessman; diplomat; Mayor of Keokuk, Iowa; Governor of Idaho Territory; Governor of Arizona Territory; U.S. Minister to Portugal
  • Gideon S. Ives was an American politician who served as Mayor of St. Peter, Minnesota, Minnesota State Senator and as the 11th Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota.
  • Clement Field Kimball (LAW), Lieutenant Governor of Iowa 1925–1928
  • Elbert L. Lampson, 21st Lieutenant Governor of Ohio; former State Senator
  • Washington Ellsworth Lindsey, Republican, governor of New Mexico (1917–1919)[40]
  • Oren Ethelbirt Long (AB 1916), Senator from Hawaii; superintendent of public instruction, Territory of Hawaii 1934–1946; secretary of Territory of Hawaii 1946–1951; appointed Governor of Territory of Hawaii 1951–1953; member and vice chairman, Hawaii Statehood Commission 1954–1956; territorial senator, Territory of Hawaii 1956–1959; elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate on July 28, 1959; upon the admission of Hawaii as a State into the Union on August 21, 1959, drew the four-year term beginning on that day and ending January 3, 1963[41]
  • Ernest Whitworth Marland (LAW: JD 1893), Congressional Representative from Oklahoma; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-third Congress (1933–1935); elected Governor of Oklahoma in 1934 for the four-year term commencing January 14, 1935[42]
  • George de Rue Meiklejohn (LAW: JD 1880), Congressional Representative from Nebraska; member of the State senate 1884–1888 and served as its president 1886–1888; chairman of the Republican State convention of 1887; chairman of the Republican State central committee in 1887 and 1888; Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska 1889–1891; elected as a Republican to the Fifty-third and Fifty-fourth Congresses (1893–1897); appointed by President McKinley as Assistant Secretary of War April 14, 1897, and served until March 1901, when he resigned[43]
  • Julius Sterling Morton, appointed Secretary of Nebraska Territory by President James Buchanan on July 12, 1858, a position he held until 1861; Acting Governor of Nebraska 1858–1859
  • Culbert Olson, lawyer; Democratic Party member; Governor of California (1939–1943)[44]
  • Walter Marcus Pierce (MDNG), Congressional Representative from Oregon; engaged in banking and in the power and light business 1898–1907; served in the Oregon senate 1903–1907 and 1917–1921; Governor of Oregon 1923–1927; member of the board of regents of Oregon State College 1905–1927; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-third and to the four succeeding Congresses (1933–1943)[45]
  • Ridgley C. Powers, governor of Mississippi (1871–1874)[46]
  • Donald Stuart Russell, Democrat, governor of South Carolina (1963–1965)[47]
  • John Franklin Shafroth, governor of Colorado (1909–1913)[48]
  • Robert Theodore Stafford (AB), Congressional Representative and a Senator from Vermont; deputy State attorney general 1953–1955; State attorney general 1955–1957; lieutenant Governor 1957–1959; Governor of Vermont 1959–1961; elected as a Republican to the Eighty-seventh Congress in 1960; reelected to the five succeeding Congresses and served from January 3, 1961, until his resignation from the House of Representatives, September 16, 1971, to accept appointment the same day to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Winston L. Prouty; elected by special election January 7, 1972, to complete the unexpired term ending January 3, 1977; reelected in 1976 and again in 1982 for the term ending January 3, 1989;[49]
  • William Story, federal judge; seventh Lieutenant Governor of Colorado, serving 1891–1893 under John Long Routt
  • Charles Spalding Thomas (LAW: JD 1871), Senator from Colorado; member of the Democratic National Committee 1884–1896; Governor of Colorado 1899–1901; elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1913 to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Charles J. Hughes, Jr.; reelected in 1914, and served 1913–1921; chairman, Committee on Woman Suffrage (Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Congresses), Committee on Coast Defenses (Sixty-fifth Congress), Committee on Pacific Railroads (Sixty-sixth Congress);[50]
  • Harriett Woods (AB 1949), Missouri's first female lieutenant governor; a Democrat; Missouri's lieutenant governor in 1984 and served one term as the state's No. 2 executive; previously served eight years in the state Senate, two years on a state transportation commission and eight years on the University City Council; first female editor of the U-M newspaper
  • Richard Yates, Republican governor of Illinois (1901–1905)[51]

Karamar hukuma

  • Saul Anuzis, shugaban jam'iyyar Republican daga Michigan; shugaban kasa na shirin Ajiye Ayyukan Ayyuka na Amurka akan ƙungiyar Ma'aikatar Harkokin Kasuwancin Amirka ; shugaban Jam'iyyar Republican ta Michigan 2005–2009; dan takarar shugaban kasa na kwamitin kasa na Republican a 2009
  • Henry Bodenstab, Sanatan Jihar Wisconsin (1909-1912)
  • Carol A. Buettner, Sanatan Jihar Wisconsin (1987-1991)
  • Rufus Davis, Magajin garin Camilla, Jojiya (2016  </link> -)
  • Mike Duggan, magajin gari na Detroit, Michigan (2013-)
  • Craig Greenberg, ɗan kasuwa, lauya, kuma ɗan siyasa; Magajin garin Louisville (2023-)
  • Richard J Kaplan, magajin garin Lauderhill, Florida (1998-)
  • Wade Kapszukiewicz, magajin gari na 58 na Toledo, Ohio (2018-)
  • John McMullen, Sanatan Jihar Wisconsin (1895-1898)
  • HHC Miller (AB 1868, AM 1871), magajin garin Evanston (1883-1891)
  • Robert E. Minahan, Magajin garin Green Bay, Wisconsin (1904–1907)
  • John M. Potter, Sanatan Jihar Wisconsin (1960-1964)
  • Laura Spurr, Shugabar ƙungiyar Nottawaseppi Huron na Potawatomi (2000–2001, 2003–2010)
  • Dwight Tillery, magajin garin Cincinnati, Ohio (1991–1993)
  • Nathan Triplett, Magajin Garin Gabashin Lansing, Michigan (2013-2016)

Jakadu

Tun daga 2022, Michigan ta ƙaddamar da Jakadu 64 waɗanda suka yi aiki a matsayin jakada a cikin ƙasashe sama da 72.

  • H. Gardner Ackley (MA, PhD), former Henry Carter Adams Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Political Economy; on U-M faculty for 43 years; leader in national economic affairs for several decades, including serving as adviser to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson; an expert on the Italian economy, he was also ambassador to Italy
  • Robert Worth Bingham, newspaper publisher and U.S. ambassador to Great Britain. Bingham was graduated from the Bingham School in 1888 and attended The University of North Carolina from 1888 to 1891. He received the LL.B. degree from the University of Louisville in 1897. After a year of postgraduate study at the University of Michigan, Bingham commenced practice in Louisville, Ky.
  • Donald Blome is an American diplomat currently serving as United States Ambassador to Tunisia. He is a graduate of the University of Michigan as well as of its law school; nominated in 2021 to serve as Ambassador to Pakistanl;
  • Paul H. Boeker (MA Economics), United States Ambassador to Jordan (1984–87); Director of Foreign Service Institute (1980–83); United States Ambassador to Bolivia (1977–80)
  • Anson Burlingame, United States Ambassador to China (1861–70)
  • Lawrence E. Butler (BUS: MBA), US Ambassador to Macedonia (2002–05); UN Official Principal Deputy High Representative in Bosnia-Herzegovina (2005–present); US Ambassador to Macedonia (2002–05); US National Security Council Staff, Director of European Affairs (1997–99); US Ambassador to Serbia ad interim (1995–96); US State Department Deputy Chief of Mission, Belgrade, Serbia-Montenegro (−1995); US State Department Deputy Chief of Mission, Copenhagen, Denmark (past); US State Department Deputy Chief of Mission, Dublin, Ireland (past)
  • William I. Cargo (B.A. Class of 1933), appointed U.S. Ambassador to Nepal in 1973
  • Vicente Blanco Gaspar, ambassador of Spain
  • Luis CdeBaca (J.D. 1993), Ambassador-at-Large to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons at the United States Department of State; lead trial counsel in the largest slavery prosecution in U.S. history
  • Brutus J. Clay II (COE: 1868), appointed Minister to Switzerland in 1905, served until 1910
  • E. William Crotty (J.D.) Ambassador to Barbados, Antigua and Barbuda, the Commonwealth of Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines. On November 19, 1998, E. William Crotty was sworn in as U.S. Ambassador to Barbados. Born on June 28, 1931, in Claremont, New Hampshire, Mr. Crotty graduated from Dartmouth College with a B.A. in economics. He earned a J.D. from University of Michigan Law School, where he was a Frederick L. Leckie Scholar. Mr. Crotty received a Masters of Law in Taxation from the New York University Law School.
  • Gerrit J. Diekema (LAW), appointed United States Minister to the Netherlands by President Herbert Hoover in 1929, and served until his death in The Hague, Netherlands
  • Robert F. Ellsworth (J.D. 1949), U.S. Representative from Kansas (1961–1969); United States Permanent Representative to NATO (1969–1971)
  • Brian James Proetel Fall, Britain's Ambassador to Russia (1992–95)
  • Homer S. Ferguson (B.A. 1913), judge of the United States Court of Military Appeals (1956–1971); Ambassador to the Philippines (1955–1956); judge of the United States Court of Military Appeals at Washington, D.C., 1956–1971; U.S. Senator from Michigan (1943–1955); circuit judge of the circuit court for Wayne County, Michigan (1929–1942)
  • Robert E. Fritts (B.A.) In 1974 at age 39, he became the then-youngest ambassador in the history of the Foreign Service when assigned to Rwanda, a record he wryly recalled "lasted about six months". He later served as the U.S. ambassador to Ghana during a period of fluctuating bilateral relations.
  • John Godfrey (diplomat) (M.A.) Nominee for Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Republic of the Sudan
  • James Goodby (MDNG: 1951–1952), United States Ambassador to Finland (1980–1981)
  • David Hermelin (BUS: BBA 1958), entrepreneur; philanthropist; former United States Ambassador to Norway; Ross School benefactor
  • Pete Hoekstra (MBA)is a Dutch-American politician who served as the United States Ambassador to the Netherlands from January 10, 2018, to January 17, 2021.
  • Aubrey Hooks (MA 1984), US Ambassador to Côte d'Ivoire
  • John Nichol Irwin, businessman; politician; diplomat; Mayor of Keokuk, Iowa; Governor of Idaho Territory; Governor of Arizona Territory; U.S. Minister to Portugal
  • Susan S. Jacobs, former U.S. Ambassador to Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu
  • Richard Kauzlarich (MA), US Ambassador to Azerbaijan 1994–1997 and to Bosnia and Herzegovina 1997–1999
  • Leo J. Keena, appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and served as the United States Ambassador to Honduras 1935–1937; United States Ambassador to South Africa 1937–1942
  • W. Robert Kohorst (J.D.) of California to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Republic of Croatia. He earned a J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School.
  • David Kostelancik (MA), Ambassador to Hungary. Mr. Kostelancik has served as Chargé d'Affaires, ad interim of the Mission since January 20, 2017. From August, 2014 until August, 2015 he served as the Senior State Department Advisor to the Congressional Helsinki Commission. From July, 2012 until August, 2014 he served as Director of the Office of Russian Affairs in the Department of State's Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs
  • Philip Lader (LSA: MA), United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom 1997–2001
  • Melvyn Levitsky (BA), retired career Minister in the U.S. Foreign Service; teaches international relations at the University of Michigan's Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy; Senior Fellow of the School's International Policy Center; had 35-year career as a U.S. diplomat, Ambassador to Brazil 1994–98; former Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics Matters, Executive Secretary of the State Department, Ambassador to Bulgaria, Deputy Director of the Voice of America, and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights
  • María Dora Victoriana Mejía Marulanda (B.A., M.A.), Ambassador of Colombia to Sweden
  • Fenton R. McCreery, Ambassador to Honduras
  • Douglas L. McElhaney (BA International Affairs), US Ambassador to Bosnia-Herzegovina 2004–present; entered the Foreign Service in 1975
  • Joseph R. McLaughlin, entrepreneur; politician; Lieutenant Governor of Michigan 1895–1897
  • William Bryant Milam (MA 1970), US Ambassador to Pakistan, 1998–2001
  • Earl R. Miller, U.S. Ambassador to Botswana Term of Appointment: 12/18/2014 to present Mr. Miller was sworn in as the U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Botswana on December 18, 2014. Ambassador Miller, a career member of the U.S. Senior Foreign Service, joined the Department of State in 1987
  • David Miller, Jr. (J.D.) He served as the United States ambassador to Tanzania from 1981 to 1984 and to Zimbabwe from 1984 to 1986.
  • Thomas J. Miller (PhD 1975), U.S. ambassador to Greece; U.S. ambassador to Bosnia-Herzegovina
  • José Teodoro Moscoso Mora (B.A. 1932), named Moscoso ambassador to Venezuela by President Kennedy in 1961
  • Robert G. Neumann (Ph.D. 1946), former United States Ambassador to Afghanistan 1969–73; Director, Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University (1976–81); US Ambassador to Saudi Arabia (June 1981 to July 1981), United States Ambassador to Morocco (1973–76)
  • David George Newton (MA 1970), US Ambassador to Iraq, 1984–88
  • Elliot Northcott, Ambassador to Colombia and Venezuela
  • Thomas J.O'Brien (LAW), ambassador to Denmark, Japan and Italy
  • Susan D. Page (A.B.), nominated in 2011 by President Obama to the post of U.S. Ambassador to South Sudan
  • Thomas W. Palmer, appointed US Minister to Spain in 1889 by President Benjamin Harrison; served 1889–1890
  • Mark A. Pekala (A.B. 1981), U.S. ambassador to Latvia in 2012
  • Nancy Bikoff Pettit (M.A.), Ambassador Pettit was confirmed by the Senate on June 24, 2015, as the Ambassador to the Republic of Latvia. She is a career member of the Foreign Service, Class of Minister Counselor. Prior to arriving in Riga, she served as Director of the Office of Western European Affairs in the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs, a position she held from 2013 to 2015.
  • William E. Quinby, newspaper publisher; diplomat; United States Ambassador to the Netherlands
  • Clark T. Randt, Jr. (LAW: JD 1975), US Ambassador to China, 2001–2009
  • Kenneth Salazar confirmed as Ambassador to Mexico in August 2021.
  • Joseph C. Satterthwaite (B.A. M.A.) served as United States Ambassador to Sri Lanka from 1949 to 1952, Head of the U.S. Legation at Tangier from 1953 to 1955, and as United States Ambassador to Burma from April 1955 to April 1957.
  • Margaret Scobey (Ph.D.), US Ambassador to Syria; US Ambassador to Egypt as of 2008
  • Marshall D. Shulman (A.B. 1937), principal architect of Columbia University's Russian studies program; longest serving director of the Russian Institute at Columbia; ambassador as the principal adviser on Soviet matters to Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance in the Carter administration; speechwriter for Secretary of State Dean G. Acheson; author of Stalin's Foreign Policy Reappraised (1963), a staple in Soviet studies for many years; his 1966 book of lectures, Beyond the Cold War, foreshadowed the détente between the Soviet Union and the US that occurred during the Nixon administration
  • William Graves Sharp (LAW: JD 1881), Congressional Representative from Ohio; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses; served 1909–1914, when he resigned to become Ambassador to France, in which capacity he served until April 14, 1919
  • William Story, federal judge; seventh Lieutenant Governor of Colorado, serving 1891–1893 under John Long Routt
  • Louis B. Susman (A.B.), former Vice Chairman of Citigroup Capital Markets; nominated as Ambassador to Great Britain in 2009
  • Edwin Uhl, Acting US Secretary of State and Ambassador to Germany during the Cleveland Administration
  • Jack Hood Vaughn (BA, MA), second Director of the United States Peace Corps; ambassador to Colombia and Panama
  • Howard Kent Walker, diplomat; Foreign Service officer; former United States Ambassador to Togo, Madagascar, and Comoros
  • Charles B. Warren (B.A. 1891), U.S. Ambassador to Japan 1921–1922; Ambassador to Mexico in 1924
  • Ronald N. Weiser (BUS: BBA 1966), US Ambassador to Slovak Republic; founder of McKinley Associates
  • G. Mennen Williams (J.D.), Ambassador to the Philippines; heir to a personal grooming products fortune, he was known as "Soapy"
  • Susan L. Ziadeh (Ph.D.) has enjoyed a 23-year career with the U.S. Department of State where she most recently served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Arabian Peninsula Affairs in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs (2014-2016). From May–October 2016, Amb. Ziadeh served as NEA Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary. She is a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, class of Minister-Counselor, and served as the U.S. Ambassador to the State of Qatar from 2011 to 2014.

Tarayyar Tarayya, FDIC, OCC, da Baitulmali

  • William Duscharme "Pink Cheeks" Cochran, darektan Babban Bankin Tarayya na Minneapolis 1936-1950, ciki har da shekaru biyar a matsayin Mataimakin Shugaban kasa, 1946-1950
  • John C. Dugan (AB 1977), 29th Kwanturolan Kudi na 2005
  • Naomi Feldman, majalisar ministocin Isra'ila, a ranar 5 ga Oktoba na 2021, ta amince da nadin nata a kwamitin manufofin kudi na bankin Isra'ila, in ji babban bankin kasar.
  • Jirgin Howard (BUS: MBA), MP na Burtaniya; yana da shugabanci 11; a 2001, an nada shi Shadow Paymaster General ; a 2002 an kara masa girma zuwa Shadow Chief Secretary to Treasury
  • G. Edward Griffin (BA, 1953), marubucin The Creature from Jekyll Island (1994), wanda ke inganta ra'ayoyin makirci game da Tsarin Tarayyar Tarayya; kuma yayi rubutu game da tsarin kula da lafiya
  • George M. Humphrey (BA, JD), Sakataren Baitulmali na Amurka a lokacin gwamnatin Eisenhower.
  • Donald Kohn (Ph.D. 1971), ya shiga cikin Tarayyar Reserve System a 1970; Memba na Gwamnoni tun 2002, Mataimakin Shugaban 2006-2010
  • Robb LaKritz (BA 1994), Mataimaki na musamman kuma mai ba da shawara ga Mataimakin Sakataren Baitulmalin Amurka, wanda Shugaba George W. Bush ya nada.
  • Rob Portman (LAW: JD 1984), tsohon Wakilin Ciniki na Amurka, wani matsayi da ke dauke da matsayi na Jakadan ; Shugaba Bush ya nada kuma Majalisar Dattijan Amurka ta tabbatar a 2006, a matsayin Daraktan Ofishin Gudanarwa da Kasafin Kudi na Amurka ; Zababben Sanata daga Ohio a 2010
  • L. William Seidman (BUS: MBA 1949, tsohon shugaban FDIC ; mataimakin shugaba da CFO na Phelps Dodge Corporation (1977-1982); manajan abokin tarayya na Seidman & Seidman, bokan jama'a akawu (1968-1974)
  • Daniel Tarullo (DOKA: JD 1977), memba na Hukumar Gwamnoni, Hukumar Tarayyar Tarayyar Amurka ; Shugaba Obama ya nada a 2009; tsohon mataimakin shugaban kasa Clinton kan manufofin tattalin arziki na kasa da kasa da mataimakin mataimakin mai kula da manufofin tattalin arziki
  • Nancy Teeters (Yuli 29, 1930 - Nuwamba 17, 2014) ita ce mace ta farko da ta yi aiki a Hukumar Kula da Reserve ta Tarayya. Shugaba Jimmy Carter ya nada ta, ta yi aiki daga 1978 zuwa 1984.
  • J. Leroy Adair (LAW: JD 1911), Congressional Representative from Illinois; member of the State senate 1928–1932; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses (1933–1937); appointed United States district judge for the southern district of Illinois in 1937 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and served until his death in 1956
  • Charles H. Aldrich (A.B. 1875), the Solicitor General of the United States
  • George G. Bingham (LLB 1880), judge in Oregon, dean of Willamette University College of Law
  • Brian Blanchard (BA 1980), Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals
  • Jackson Burton Chase (LAW: LLB 1913), Congressional Representative from Nebraska; assistant attorney general of Nebraska in 1921 and 1922; member of the State House of Representatives in 1933 and 1934; served as a major, Judge Advocate General's Department, 1942–1945; chairman of Nebraska Liquor Control Commission in 1945 and 1946; judge of the fourth judicial district court of Nebraska, 1946–1954; elected as a Republican to the Eighty-fourth Congress (1955–1957); again elected judge of the fourth judicial district court of Nebraska 1956–1960
  • John Logan Chipman (1843–1845), Congressional Representative from Michigan; attorney of the police board of Detroit 1867–1879; elected judge of the superior court of Detroit 1879; reelected in 1885 and served until 1887, when he resigned, having been elected to Congress; elected as a Democrat to the Fiftieth and to the three succeeding Congresses; served from 1887 until his death in 1893
  • George Pierre Codd (AB 1891), Congressional Representative from Michigan; mayor of Detroit in 1905 and 1906; circuit judge of Wayne County 1911–1921; regent of the University of Michigan in 1910 and 1911; elected as a Republican to the Sixty-seventh Congress (1921–1923); again elected circuit judge of Wayne County in 1924 and served until his death in 1927
  • Avern Cohn (LAW: JD 1949), district judge for the United States District Court, Eastern District of Michigan, appointed by President Jimmy Carter in 1979
  • Louis Convers Cramton (LAW: JD 1899), Congressional Representative from Michigan; law clerk of the State senate three terms; deputy commissioner of railroads of Michigan in 1907; secretary of the Michigan Railroad Commission from September 1907 to January 1, 1909; member of the State house of representatives in 1909 and 1910; elected as a Republican to the Sixty-third and to the eight succeeding Congresses (1913–1931); circuit judge of the fortieth judicial circuit 1934–1941
  • Shepard J. Crumpacker, Jr. (LAW: JD 1941), Congressional Representative from Indiana; elected as a Republican to the Eighty-second, Eighty-third, and Eighty-fourth Congresses (1951–1957); appointed judge of the St. Joseph Superior Court and served 1977–1985
  • Marc Dann (B.A. 1984), 47th attorney general of Ohio
  • Harry Micajah Daugherty (LAW: LL.B), Ohio Republican political insider; Attorney General of the United States under Presidents Harding and Coolidge
  • Robert Emory Evans (LAW: JD 1886), Congressional Representative from Nebraska; prosecuting attorney of Dakota County in 1895; resigned to become judge of the eighth judicial district, in which capacity he served from 1895 to 1899; president of the Nebraska State Bar Association in 1919; elected as a Republican to the Sixty-sixth and Sixty-seventh Congresses (1919–1923); elected judge of the supreme court from the third district of Nebraska in 1924
  • Homer Samuel Ferguson (AB 1913), Senator from Michigan; circuit judge of the circuit court for Wayne County, 1929–1942; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate in 1942; reelected in 1948 and served 1943–1955; Ambassador to the Philippines 1955–1956; judge of the United States Court of Military Appeals at Washington, D.C., 1956–1971
  • George Ford (LAW: JD 1869), Congressional Representative from Indiana; elected as a Democrat to the Forty-ninth Congress (1885–1887); elected judge of the superior court of St. Joseph County in 1914
  • Ralph M. Freeman (LAW: LL.B. 1926), Judge in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan; nominated by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1954; chief judge 1967–1972; assumed senior status in 1973
  • Ronald M. Gould (LAW: 1973), federal appeals judge; has served on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals since 1999; nominated by President Bill Clinton, confirmed by the United States Senate on November 17, and received his commission on November 22
  • Barzillai Gray (AB: 1845), judge
  • Byron Berry Harlan (LAW: JD 1909; LS&A: 1911), Congressional Representative from Ohio; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-second and to the three succeeding Congresses (1931–1939); chairman, Committee on Revision of the Laws (Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses); appointed judge of the Tax Court of the United States in 1946 to his death in 1949
  • James Harvey (LAW: LLB 1948), Congressional Representative from Michigan; elected as a Republican to the Eighty-seventh and to the six succeeding Congresses (1961–1974); appointed by President Richard Nixon as a United States District Court judge for the Eastern District, Michigan, 1974–1984; United States Senior District judge, 1984–2002
  • Guy Tresillian Helvering (LAW: JD 1906), Congressional Representative from Kansas; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses (1913–1919); Democratic State chairman 1930–1934; mayor of Salina from February 15, 1926, until his resignation on December 8, 1930; State highway director in 1931 and 1932; appointed Commissioner of Internal Revenue by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933 and served until his appointment as a Federal district judge for Kansas in 1943, in which capacity he was serving at the time of his death in 1946
  • Douglas Woodruff Hillman (LAW: JD 1948), practiced law in Grand Rapids for 30 years before President Carter appointed him to the federal court in 1979; retired from the bench in 2002
  • Jay Abel Hubbell (AB 1853), Congressional Representative from Michigan; prosecuting attorney of Houghton County 1861–1867; elected as a Republican to the Forty-third and to the four succeeding Congresses (1873–1883); chairman, Committee on Expenditures in the Department of the Interior (Forty-seventh Congress); member of the State senate 1885–1887; served as circuit judge of the twelfth judicial circuit from 1894 to 1899, when he resigned
  • William Leonard Hungate (MDNG), Congressional Representative from Missouri; special assistant attorney general 1958–1964; elected simultaneously as a Democrat to the Eighty-eighth and to the Eighty-ninth Congress by special election, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of United States Representative Clarence Cannon, and reelected to the five succeeding Congresses (1964–1977); professor, University of Missouri, St. Louis, 1977–1979; justice, United States district judge for the eastern district of Missouri, 1979–1992; president, American Bar Association's National Conference of Federal Trial Judges, 1985–1986
  • Edwin William Keightley (LAW: JD 1865), Congressional Representative from Michigan; appointed and subsequently elected judge of the fifteenth judicial circuit of Michigan in 1876 and served until 1877, having been elected to Congress; elected as a Republican to the Forty-fifth Congress (1877–1879); appointed by President Hayes Third Auditor of the United States Treasury Department and served from 1879 to 1885, when he resigned
  • Moses Pierce Kinkaid (LAW: JD 1876), Congressional Representative from Nebraska; member of the State senate in 1883; district judge 1887–1900; elected as a Republican to the Fifty-eighth and to the nine succeeding Congresses and served from 1903 until his death in 1922; chairman, Committee on Irrigation of Arid Lands (Sixty-sixth and Sixty-seventh Congresses)
  • Carolyn N. Lerner (born January 13, 1965) is an American lawyer from Washington, D.C., who is a Judge-designate of the United States Court of Federal Claims.
  • William Lewis (MDNG), Congressional Representative from Kentucky; studied law at the University of Kentucky at Lexington and at U-M; member of State House of Representatives in 1900 and 1901; Commonwealth attorney 1904–1909; circuit judge of the twenty-seventh judicial district of Kentucky 1909–1922 and 1928–1934; elected as a Republican to the Eightieth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John Marshall Robsion and served 1948–1949
  • Gordon Myse (LAW: LLB 1960), Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals
  • James Carson Needham (LAW: JD 1889), Congressional Representative from California; elected as a Republican to the Fifty-sixth and to the six succeeding Congresses (1899–1913); appointed judge of the superior court of California in 1919; elected to the same office in 1920 to fill an unexpired term; reelected in 1922 and again in 1926, and served until 1935
  • Darleen Ortega (LAW: JD 1989), judge on the Oregon Court of Appeals
  • Samuel Ritter Peters (LAW: JD 1867), Congressional Representative from Kansas; mayor of Memphis in 1873; elected a member of the State senate in 1874 and served until his resignation in March 1875; appointed and subsequently elected judge of the ninth judicial district and served from 1875 until 1883, when he resigned; elected as a Republican to the Forty-eighth and to the three succeeding Congresses (1883–1891); postmaster of Newton 1898–1910; editor of the Newton Daily Kansan-Republican in 1899
  • Rosemary S. Pooler (LAW: JD), U.S. federal judge; appointed in 1990 as a Justice for the Fifth Judicial District Supreme Court; appointed to the federal bench by President Bill Clinton, serving 1994–1998 as federal district judge in the Northern District of New York; received her current appointment as a Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in 1998
  • Joseph Very Quarles (AB 1966; LAW: JD 1867), Senator from Wisconsin; mayor of Kenosha 1876; member of state assembly 1879; member of state senate 1880–1882; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate and served 1899–1905; chairman, Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard (Fifty-sixth Congress), Committee on the Census (Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses); appointed United States district judge for the eastern district of Wisconsin by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1905, and served until his death in 1911
  • Ozora P. Stearns (AB 1858, LAW: JD 1860), Senator from Minnesota; mayor of Rochester 1866–1868; served in the Union Army during the Civil War as a lieutenant, and then colonel; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate in 1871 and served until 1871; judge of the eleventh judicial district of Minnesota 1874–1895; regent of the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis 1890–1895
  • Carl May Weideman (MDNG), Congressional Representative from Michigan; attended the public schools and the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor from 1914 until the outbreak of the First World War; delegate to the Democratic State conventions 1932–1944 and to the Democratic National Convention in 1940; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-third Congress (19331935); circuit judge for the third judicial circuit of Michigan 1950–1968
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