Phi Delta Phi

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Phi Delta Phi is an international professional legal fraternity "established in the year 1869 to promote a higher standard of professional ethics." Thousands of members have become prominent public servants including judges from trial courts up to the US Supreme Court, legislators all the way up to the US Senate and House of Representatives, as well as Executive Branch leaders such as state Governors and US Presidents.

A partial list of prominent members include John Bayard Anderson, John Ashcroft, Howard Baker, James A. Baker III, Birch E. Bayh, Matthew J. Belcher, Hugo Black, Robert H. Bork, William J. Brennan, Ellen Burns, Benjamin N. Cardozo, Pamela Carter, William Colby, Archibald Cox, John Danforth, Gerald R. Ford, Joyce Hens Green, Charles Evans Hughes, Daniel K. Inouye, Henry M. Jackson, Thomas Penfield Jackson, Leon Jaworski, Anthony M. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, Patrick Leahy, Karl Llewellyn, Thurgood Marshall, William McKinley, Gerald T. McLaughlin, Edwin Meese III, Walter Mondale, Malcolm W. Monroe, Sandra Day O'Connor, R. Thomas Olson, Samuel Pierce Jr., Lewis Franklin Powell Jr., William L. Prosser, Dana Rasmussen, Sam Rayburn, William H. Rehnquist, Stephen R. Reinhardt, Owen J. Roberts, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Antonin Scalia, Myra C. Selby, William French Smith, Kenneth W. Starr, John Paul Stevens, Adlai Stevenson, Potter Stewart, William H. Taft, Earl Warren, Byron R. White and Wendell Willkie

. For a complete list, refer to the Phi Delta Phi homepage.

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