U s V U 0- a 0 0 Th ihga al -W dedyFnury2,2 0 William Morse Davidson $4 billion I alumni (and two dropouts) Before they were the nation's richest, they sang The Victors in the Big House. These are the eight wealthiest living students who ever passed through the Engin Arch on their way to greatness. The ranking next to their name denotes their spot on Forbes magazine's list of the 400 richest Americans. From graduating in the Big House to running a glass business to owning wildly successful professional sports teams, Bill Davidson has had quite a run. And at 85, he's not finished. In 1947, Davidson graduated from the University with a bachelor's degree in Business Administration. An avid bas- ketball fan, he became the owner of the Detroit Pistons in 1974. In 1997, he scaled the Forbes list of the most gener- ous Americans, landing at the number 10 spot. And in 2004, Davidson made sports history by becoming the first owner to win championships in three different profes- sional leagues. Even at his advanced age, Davidson still attends his teams' games. In 2004, when the Pistons won the championship, Davidson delivered a victory speech that the Detroit Free Press labeled "saucy," in which, he jubilantly decried Pistons skeptics' doubts as "bullshit." The cur- rent owner of the Pistons, the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Detroit Shock, however, has managing experience that extends well beyond the playing field. Davidson began his career by working at a law practice. After three years, he quit his job to take over and resuscitate several failing companies. Later, Davidson assumed control of the Guardian Industries Corporation, which manufactures glass, when his relative who owned it died and it went bankrupt. Today, the Auburn Hills- based company runs facilities in 21 coun- tries on five ° conti- nents. David- son has been generous with his success. In 1992, he donated $30 million to the University to establish the William Davidson Institute currently located on the first floor of Wyly Hall. Recent dona- tions since then have been more lavish, but at the time, it was the largest gift the University had ever received. - KIRSTY MCNAMARA E Joan H. Tisch $3.4 billion She may have lived in Ann Arbor for four years, but Joan Tisch is a New York- er at heart. The Tisches are a family with immense star power. A Google image search yields several pictures of Tisch with Sex and the City star Sarah Jessica Parker at a benefit hosted by the Metropolitan Museum of Art to honor Tisch, 80. Her husband was the owner of Loews Hotels and the New York Giants, and her son Steve is an elite Hollywood producer behind films like "Forest Gump" and "Risky Business." But while the family may have moved onto bigger cities and bigger projects, they haven't forgotten Ann Arbor. An English major, Tisch met husband Preston Robert Tisch at the University. They stayed married for more than half a century until he died from a brain tumor in 2005. After graduation, Tisch partnered with his brother, Lawrence, and embarked on a career that is almost clich6. Sons of immi- grant parents, the brothers started with a small hotel and rapidly expanded the busi- ness into the Loews Corporation, which placed 145th on the Fortune 500 list of the country's largest corporations in 2006. The family has made many charitable contributions, including $7.5 million to the University in 1997 totfinance Tisch Hall and a new tennis facility. For nearly a decade, Tisch was president of Gay Men's Health Crisis, an organization that works to combat AIDS. She started working as an anonymous volunteer brew- ing coffee and doing office work, often for long hours.Theother employees didn't real- ize who she was until, when g t someone complained about a defunct copy machine, and she wrote a check for a new one, according to her son Jonathan's book "The Power of We." Tisch wrote the check so quickly and casually that the office manager was hesitant to accept it, wondering if it would bounce. Tisch replied simply, "Trust me, it won't bounce." - TARYN HARTMAN Stephen M Ross $2.5 billion JorgeM.Perez -$1.8 billion Stephen M. Ross has one memory oftthe University that sticks out more clearly than the others. John F. Kennedy was standing on the steps of the Michigan Union, in October 1960, speaking to a crowd that spilled onto the street. "I want to express my thanks to you, as a graduate of the Michigan of the East, Har- vard University," Kennedy said. It was the same speech in which he first proposed the formation of the Peace Corps and asked for the support of the educated youth of America. As he watched Kennedy, Ross was just one month into his first year on campus. He waited up late with hundreds of his classmates to catch a glimpse of the young senator as he hit the campaign trail for the first time. That moment in Ross' life was pivotal, but not for the reasons you would think. That phrase, which has been repro- duced on T-shirts and used as a rallying cry for the anti-haughty for years, caused the students to boo. Ross and others booed because they didn't want their politicians to be patron- izing, he said. They knew precisely what separated them from graduates from the nation's oldest college, Ross said, and they all knew exactly how hard they would have to work to close that gap. And Ross tackled that gap with a ven- geance. He moved to New York City, and founded what would become the larg- est real-estate development company in America. And in 2004, he smashed dona- tion records by giving $100 million to the University's business school, which now bears his name. When asked what one piece of advice he would give incoming Ross Business School students, he said that it couldn't be narrowed down to a single buzzword. He offered no self-help tapes or get-rich schemes. It's obvi- ous that his a days don't end at 5 p.m. - that he has spent many a long night studying the real-estate mar- ket. Even the Ann Arbor housing market hasn't escaped his eye. For the two years that Ross was on campus, he lived in small apartments on Catherine Street and Pack- ard Road. What Ann Arbor needed then was much what it needs now, Ros,66, s said: A set of modern apartments within residential zoning close to campus. The high rise developments springing up around campus don't fit the character of the school, he said. It all goes back to that October night in 1960, when Kennedy wasn't being real, when Ross, not yet wealthy, opened his mouth and booed. - FOREST CASEY When he was a student at the Univer- sity, in the early 1970s, Jorge Perez wasn't your typical undergraduate. The son of Cuban-exiled parents, he came to the U.S. and head to Michigan shortly afterward. Today he's the owner of an extensive art gallery featuring stars like Frida Kahlo and Fernando Botero. Lauded by askmen.com for his "gorgeous looks and infinite charm," it's hard to imagine Perez doing keg stands at a party. He put his major in urban planning to good use, going on to lend his vision to major city development projects and dra- matically changing the skyline of Miami, where he currently lives. Newspapers and magazines who cover his company have given him nicknames like the Don- ald Trump of the Tropics and the King of Condominiums. At 57, Perez has corrobo- rated with the best and brightest in the real-estate world and beyond, even head- ing up an elaborate resort and casino in Las Vegas with actor George Clooney, though it never materialized. After he graduated from the University, Perez focused mainly on restoration work before he started developing low-income housing. He continued to work on bigger and biggerprojectsand nowdevelopssome of the most glitzy buildings in Miami. PerezisthepresidentofTheRelatedGroup of Florida, partner company with the Relat- ed Groupof New Yorkheaded by Stephen M Ross, Per- ez's longtime business partner, also an alum. The Forbes 400 list isn't the only acknowledgement Perez has received in the last few years. He was also ranked as one of the 25 most influential Hispanics in the country by Time Magazine. In addition, Hispanic Business magazine ranked The Related Group of Florida as the largest His- panic-owned company in America. - ANNE VANDERMEY Larry Page $14 billion What do Legos and a ubiquitous Internet Page also behemoth have in common? Not just their served as colorful logos. president of engi- Theyeach have the blessing of Engineer- neering honor society Eta Kappa Nu and ing alum Larry Page, who graduated from recalled selling doughnuts as a fundraiser the University in 1995. for the society as one of his favorite memo- While he was a student at the Univer- ries of University life. sity, Page built a working Inkjet printer out After graduation, he moved on to Stan- of the popular toys, and playing with Legos ford University, where he met Brin. Google remains one of his favorite pastimes. A was born soon after. 2006 article in Time magazine described A decade after graduating with honors Page, Google co-founder Sergey Brin and in 1995, Page returned to the University to Google CEO Eric Schmidt playing with a deliver the commencement speech for the table full of the brightly-colored building College of Engineering. He's also serves on blocks. Page has said Lego Mindstorms kits the College of Engineering's National Advi- - which include a small robot - are among sory Committee. his favorite pieces of technology. The immanent arrival of Google offices Page, 34, grew up in East Lansing. He and in Ann Arbor, isa boon to the city and state his older brother, Carl, broke with the fami- economy, and some have said it's a result of ly's Spartan tradition - his mother Gloria Page's fond memories of Ann Arbor. taught computer programming at Michigan Despite being the richest University State University and his father was among alum, Page insisted that Google's not about the first professors to teach computer sci- the money. After all, Google came up with ence there - to come to Ann Arbor. He the inspirational business model "do no studied computer engineering and was a evil." Apparently sometimes, it works. member of the University's Solar Car Team. - TARYN HARTMAN PHOTOGRAPHS FROM FORBES.cOM AND HIS- PANICONLINE.COM Samuel Zell $4.5 billion A. Alfred Taubman $1.4 billion SCharles T. Munger $1 .6 billionI USA Today once called Sam Zell "the country's largest landlord, with 125 mil- lion square feet of office space and 225,000 apartments." A graduate of both the University's undergrad program and law school, Zell got a jump start on his real estate career in 1960s Ann Arbor with his Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity brother and future business partner, the late Robert Lurie. Lurie was an engineering student who earned both his bachelor's and master's degrees from the University, and is the namesake of the Lurie Tower on North Campus. The partnership worked like this: Vivacious and exuberant Zell made the deals, and math-minded Lurie crunched the numbers behind the scenes. The two aspiring moguls started their own real-estate business while stillstudy- ing students at the University. Zell left the Univeristy in 1966 with a bachelor's and a law degree. He sold the apartment busi- ness to Lurie before returning to Chica- go, believing he was destined for bigger, brighter; Zell becameabig-time player in his own right, as his Chicago-based Equi- ty International corporation expanded beyond real estate and soon proved to have an eye for lucrative investments. Today, Zell finds time outside of running huge chunks of real estate to ski, play racquetball and ride his motorcycle. In 1999, Zell and Lurie's widow Ann gave a $10-million gift to the University in the form of the Samuel Zell and Rob- ert H. Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies in the Ross School of Business. He has also endowed the Samuel Zell/ Robert Lurie Real Estate Center at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School and the Northwestern University Center for Risk Management. Zell was an LSA DeRoy Visiting Professor in Hon- ors the College and has also made con- tributions to the business school's Polish Studies Program. - TARYN HARTMAN Charles Munger, often referred to as the sidekick or right-hand man to investor War- ren Buffett, is the vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway. In 1942, Munger, 66, left the University after a year and a half to serve in World War II. He would later take a few classes at The Unviersity of Mexico and Cal Tech, but he neverobtained an undergraduate degree. But that didn't stophimfromattendingin Harvard Law School when he returnedfrom overseas. He enrolled through a program designed for veterans who had completed three-quarters of their undergraduate coursework. Often credited with being one of the best investors to ever step foot on Wall Street, it's surprising to learn that Munger never com- pleted a course in economics. "And with this striking lack of credentials, you may wonder why I have the chutzpah to be up here giving this talk," he said in a speech he delivered to the economics department at the University of California at Santa Barabara in 2004. "The answer is that I have a black belt in chutzpah. I was born with it." But Munger, said he shouldn't be a rol- emodel for would-be successful students. During his year and a half at the University, Munger enrolled inan economics course. "In those days, I was kind of a wise ass and tried toget A'swithout doingany of the work. I went to the first exam and it was honestly the hardest exam I've ever seen," he said. "I tried my best at it, but went and dropped the class right afterward, because, well, you know." He checked back to see how he did a few days later, and found out he had achieved the second highest score in the class. Munger claimed that the top score went to "a young man that was even more mal-adjusted than I was." Outside of the weather, Munger said he looks on his time at the University as a posi- tive expe- rience, and hasdonated to the school. Famous for his unconvention- al wisdom, Munger's rules of life are sometimes referred to as "Mungerisms."For instance, he said he gives everyone who asks the same piece of advice. "The best way to get what you want is to deserve what you want:" As a man who has chosen one of the most prolific money makers in history as his busi- ness partner, Munger said students would be well-advised to be careful about who they associate with. "The high quality people you interact with, clutch them to your bosom," he said. "And the low quality people just get them the hell out of your life:" - CALLIE WORSHAM A. Alfred Taubman launched his business career while at the University with a big suit- case full of women's shoes. Taubman, who studied architecture at the University with the help of the Gl bill, needed to find a way to make a little extra money to finance his education. An enterprising sales- man, he approached a local cobbler with a business venture. He would take a suitcase full of the craftsman's shoes to local sorority houses, where he would show them off and take orders. For his effort, Taubman would keep a small commission on each pair. He would go to sorority houses while the sisters were eating dinner and arrange the shoes in a display on the staircase. After the members finished dinner, Taub- man would make his sales pitch. His scheme was successful. With the help of his shoe business and another business he started, for which he sold flowers and corsages to students before big dances, Taubman was able to supple- ment the money he received from the GI bill and attend the University from 1945 to1948. But he didn't graduate. Taubman, 82, first enrolled at the Univer- sity in 1942, shortly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. But after two months in Ann Arbor, he left to join the Army Air Corps. In a soon to be published memoir, Taub- man reflects on his brief time at the Universi- ty. "Before I could learn the words of the fight song, geopolitics got in the way and I was off to war," he writes. Although Taubman never finished his undergraduate career, he now holds an hon- orary degree. After three years, he left school and moved to Detroit In 1950, he founded a development firm called the Taubman Company. His first proj- ect was a bridal salon he built in Detroit. But it wasn't long before his developments became more ambitious. One of his first major under- takings was building a large retail mall on the outskirts of Ann Arbor called Arborland. Taubman quickly became one of the most prolific shopping mall developers in the nation. In 1983, he bought Sotheby's, one of the most famous auction houses in the world. Taubman colluded with rival auction house Chris- tie's to fix the commissions charged to clients - an illegal business practice. In 2001, Taubman was con- victed of anti-trust violations by ajury in New York. He was fined $7 million dollars and imprisoned for one year at the age of 78. After his conviction, there was a cam- paign at the University to strip his name from buildings and schools he had donat- ed to, including the Taubman Medical Library, the A. Alfred Taubman Medical Center and the A. Alfred Taubman Col- lege of Architecture and Urban Planning. The campaign was ultimately unsuccess- ful, and his name remained on many Uni- versity buildings. After his release, Taubman continued donating to the school. Last February, he gave $4 million to the University Museum of Art to help finance an expansion. - WALTER NOWINSKI