List of Franklin & Marshall College alumni
Here follows a list of notable graduates of Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Arts
- Richard Altick, Class of 1936, literary scholar known for his pioneering contributions to Victorian Studies as well as for championing both the joys and the rigorous methods of literary research
- Franklin Schaffner, Class of 1942, Oscar-winning film director (Patton, Planet of the Apes)
- Glen Tetley, Class of 1946, choreographer
- Ed Flesh, Class of 1953, art director, designed wheel for Wheel of Fortune[1]
- Roy Scheider, Class of 1955, Academy Award-nominated actor (Jaws and All That Jazz)
- Dick Orkin, Class of 1956, radio announcer and commercial producer
- James Lapine, Class of 1971, Pulitzer Prize-winning and Tony Award-winning playwright (Sunday in the Park with George, Into the Woods)
- Treat Williams, Class of 1973, actor (Hair, Prince of the City, TV's Everwood)
- Piers Halley, Class of 1991, President of Pittsburgh Institution of Art and Culture
- Jennifer Gareis, Class of 1992, actress (TV's The Bold and the Beautiful, The Young and the Restless)
- Spliff Star, Class of 1996, rapper and hypeman for MC Busta Rhymes
- Jason Narvy, Class of 2002, actor (Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers)
- Dominic Akena, current sophomore, xylophone player, subject of Emmy-winning documentary War/Dance; member of the Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity
Government and law
- John Weinland Killinger, Class of 1843, U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania (1859–1863, 1871–1875, 1877–1881) *
- Thomas Bard McFarland (1828-1908), associate justice of the Supreme Court of California
- J. Roland Kinzer, Class of 1896, U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania (1930–1947)
- William I. Troutman, Class of 1927, Judge and U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania (1943–1945)
- John P. Saylor, Class of 1929, member of U.S. House of Representatives, environmental advocate
- Eugene Shirk, Mayor of Reading, Pennsylvania (1964–1968, 1972–1976)[2]
- Edwin D. Eshleman, Class of 1942, U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania (1967–1977)
- William H. Gray, Class of 1963, U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania (1979–1991); House Majority Whip (1989-1991); President of United Negro College Fund (1991–2004)
- Kenneth Duberstein, Class of 1965, White House Chief of Staff under Ronald Reagan
- The Hon. D. Brooks Smith, Class of 1973, Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (2002–present); former Judge on the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (1988-2002) (Chief Judge 2001-2002)
- Jeffrey M. Lacker, Class of 1977, President of the Federal Reserve Bank, Richmond, Virginia
- Mary Schapiro, Class of 1977, chairwoman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
- Patricia Harris, Class of 1977, former First Deputy Mayor for the City of New York; current CEO of Bloomberg Philanthropies
- Paula Dow, Class of 1977, Attorney General of New Jersey (2010–present)
- Jane Orie, Class of 1984, former State Senator of Pennsylvania, convicted in March 2012 of 14 counts of forgery, conflict of interest and theft of services, which included 5 felonies
- Ken Mehlman, Class of 1988, campaign manager for George H.W. Bush, former chairman of the United States Republican Party, 2005–2007
- Barry Finegold, Class of 1993, Massachusetts State Senator
- Justin McShane, Class of 1998, nationally-known criminal defense trial attorney who specializes in forensic science
Business
- George Frederick Baer, Class of 1861, President of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad
- Martin L. Scott, Class of 1971, co-founder of Jem Records and Passport Records
- Wanda Austin, Class of 1975, president and CEO of The Aerospace Corporation
- David Best, Class of 1975, President, co-founder of the The Doctor's Channel
- Richard Lee Plepler, Class of 1981, CEO, HBO (Time Warner)[3]
- Rob Shepardson, Class of 1983, founding partner of advertising agency SS+K
- Raje Singh, Class of 2004, head of finance for international operations at Airbnb
Science and medicine
- Theodore E. Woodward, Class of 1934, Nobel Prize nominee; renowned medical researcher
- David Simons, Class of 1943, NASA physician, established altitude record of 102,000 feet in a helium balloon in 1957, testing equipment that would used by astronauts
- Denis A. Cortese, Class of 1966, CEO and President of the Mayo Clinic (2003–present)[4]
- David A. Ansell, Class of 1974, doctor and author
- William Bevan, former president of the American Psychological Association
Athletics
- Frank (Sprig) Gardner, Class of 1930, National Wrestling Hall of Fame (1986); Mepham High School (New York) Wrestling Coach (1937 - 1955 * (minus 3 years for active duty in U.S. Navy during WW II)); Franklin & Marshall College Athletic Hall of Fame (Wrestling) (1992).
- Bowie Kuhn, Class of 1948, Commissioner of Baseball (1969–1984)
- Don Wert, attended in 1957, MLB player
- Jeff Rineer, attended 1974–75, former MLB pitcher
- Peter Schaffer, Class of 1984, sports agent; columnist for the Washington Post, and star of the Esquire Network docuseries titled "The Agent."
- Michael T. Dee, Class of 1985, CEO, San Diego Padres (2009–present)[3][5]
- Matt Steinmetz, Class of 1986, journalist and sportscaster
- Mark St. Amant, Class of 1990, author of Committed: Confessions of a Fantasy Football Junkie and Just Kick It: Tales of an Underdog, Over-Age, Out-of-Place Semi-Pro Football Player; contributor to the New York Times and ESPN
- Chris Finch, Class of 1992, Assistant Coach of the Houston Rockets
Religion
- Willam R. Rathvon, CSB, Class of 1873, Christian Science practitioner, lecturer, Church director and the only known eyewitness of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address to leave an audio recording of his impressions[6]
Academia
- David Bowman Schneder, Class of 1880, second President of Tohoku Gakuin University (1857–1938)
- William Edwin Hoy, Class of 1882?, founder of Tohoku Gakuin; missionary to Japan and China, (1858–1927)
- Andrew Truxal, Class of 1920, president of Hood College and Anne Arundel Community College
- James J. Whalen, Class of 1950, president of Ithaca College (1975–1992)
- Keith Hamm, Class of 1969, Edwards Professor of Political Science at Rice University
- Paul R. Brown, Class of 1972, eighth president of Monmouth University
- Louise Burkhart, Class of 1980, ethnohistorian and scholar of Mesoamerican literature; professor of anthropology at University at Albany, SUNY
- Henry Kulp Ober former President of Elizabethtown College
Military
- Richard Winters, Class of 1941, WWII officer and veteran of D Day, Market Garden, Carentan and the Battle of The Bulge; main character in Band of Brothers; member of Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity
- Richard P. Mills, Class of 1972, Lieutenant General, U.S.M.C. Deputy Commandant for Combat Development and Integration and Commanding General, Marine Corps Combat Development Command
Other
- Clifford Pickover, Class of 1979, author and IBM researcher
- Scott Ritter, Class of 1979, anti-war activist
- Saah Kirk, Class of 2015, anti-r activist
References
- ↑ Slotnik, Daniel E. (July 21, 2011). "Ed Flesh, Designed the Wheel of Fortune, Dies at 79". The New York Times.
- ↑ "Shirk Beats Guldin's Bid For Mayor". Reading Eagle. 1963-11-06. Retrieved 2014-02-23.
- 1 2 "America's Best Private Colleges". Forbes. December 9, 2009.
- ↑ "A CONVERSATION WITH DENIS A. CORTESE, M.D., PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, MAYO CLINIC". Retrieved 2009-10-10.
- ↑ Center, Bill (July 17, 2013). "Mike Dee returns as Padres President, CEO". San Diego Union-Tribune.
- ↑ Eyewitness at Gettysburg February 15, 1999, NPR
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, October 29, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.