List of Syracuse University people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of people associated with Syracuse University, including founders, financial benefactors, notable alumni, notable educators, and speakers. Syracuse University has over 250,000 alumni representing all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and more than 170 countries and territories.[1][2]

Founders[]

Jesse Truesdell Peck
  • Jesse Truesdell Peck – first chairman of the university's board of trustees
  • George F. Comstock
  • George L. Taylor
  • Charles Andrews

Benefactors[]

Syracuse has had many financial supporters, but some stand out by the magnitude of their contributions. Among those who have made transformative donations commemorated at the university are:

  • John Dustin Archbold – oil
  • Andrew Carnegie – steel
  • George F. Comstock – real estate
  • Joseph Lubin – real estate
  • Donald Newhouse – publishing
  • Samuel Irving Newhouse, Sr. – publishing
  • Samuel Irving Newhouse, Jr. – publishing
  • Eliphalet Remington – firearm[3]
  • Margaret Olivia Slocum Sage – philanthropist
  • Lyman Cornelius Smith- firearm and typewriter magnate
  • Thomas J. Watson- IBM
  • Martin J. Whitman – investment advisor

Notable alumni[]

Arts and letters[]

Stephen Dunn
Joyce Carol Oates
  • Nilo Alcala - composer, first Philippine-born recipient of the Aaron Copland House Residency Award[4] and a Los Angeles Master Chorale commission[5][6]
  • Julia Alvarez – poet, novelist, and essayist
  • Donna Alvermann – prominent professor and researcher in adolescent and media literacies[7]
  • Joe Amato – author
  • Robb Armstrong – cartoonist of the comic strip Jump Start
  • Brad Anderson – cartoonist of the comic strip Marmaduke
  • Maltbie D. Babcock – 19th century clergyman and author
  • Harriete Estel Berman - artist
  • Nydia Blas - photographer
  • James Bishop - painter[8]
  • Joel Brouwer – poet, educator, and journalist
  • Gordon Chandler – sculptor[9]
  • Wendy Coakley-Thompson – novelist
  • Stephen Crane – novelist; stayed only one semester, later admitting he came "more to play baseball than to study."[10]
  • Mabel Potter Daggett – journalist and suffragist
  • Aleš Debeljak – poet, essayist and sociologist
  • Stephen Dunn – poet, winner of the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
  • Birgitta Moran Farmer – painter, winner of 1906 Hiram Gee Award in Painting[11]
  • Frances Farrand Dodge – Watercolorist and landscape artist
  • Paul Finkelman – historian
  • Moses Finley – historian
  • Carlisle Floyd – opera composer
  • Whitney Gaskell – novelist
  • Sharon Gold – artist and professor
  • William Pratt Graham – sixth chancellor of Syracuse University
  • Clement Greenberg – art critic
  • Henry Grethel – fashion designer
  • Beth Gylys – poet and professor
  • Beth Harrington - filmmaker and musician
  • Michael Herr - writer and war correspondent
  • Morton L. Janklow – literary agent
  • Shirley Jackson – novelist
  • Betsey Johnson – fashion designer
  • David N. Johnson – composer, organist, and professor
  • Joseph S. Kozlowski – portrait artist
  • Hilton Kramer – critic, "The Revenge of the Philistines"
  • Barbara Kruger – collage artist
  • Sol LeWitt – sculptor
  • James F. Light – literary scholar
  • Mark Lombardi – abstract painter
  • Jenni Lukac – contemporary artist
  • John D. MacDonald – novelist
  • Don Maloney – Japanophile author
  • Barry N. Malzberg – science fiction writer
  • Jerre Mangione – novelist, and scholar of the Italian-American experience
  • Robert Mankoff – cartoonist and editor of The New Yorker
  • Donald Martino – Pulitzer Prize-winning composer
  • Clifton E. Marsh – historian of the African diaspora
  • Scott McCloud – cartoonist and comics theorist
  • Jay McInerney – novelist
  • Joyce Carol Oates – novelist
  • Robert O'Connor – novelist
  • Tom Perrotta – novelist and screenwriter
  • John Pfahl – photographer and professor[12]
  • Salvador Plascencia – novelist
  • Kim Ponders - novelist
  • William Powhida – artist
  • Mary Jo Putney – romance novelist
  • Jim Ridlon – sports painter and sculptor, also a former professional football player
  • M. J. Rose – author and book marketing executive
  • William Safire – Pulitzer Prize-winning commentator and former New York Times columnist
  • George Saunders – short-story writer
  • Alice Sebold – novelist
  • Laurie Gwen Shapiro – novelist, director, Independent Spirit Award for Keep the River on Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale
  • Anthony Veasna So - Cambodian-American short story writer
  • Cheryl Strayed – novelist, memoirist, and essayist
  • Elizabeth Strout – Novelist
  • William Tester – short story writer
  • Dorothy Thompson – journalist
  • Jack Tippit – cartoonist
  • Lori Weitzner – textile designer
  • Stephanie Welsh – Pulitzer prize winning photographer turned midwife
  • Ryan Van Winkle – poet
  • Irene Vilar – author and literary agent
  • Kate Vrijmoet – artist
  • John A. Williams – novelist
  • Howard Wyeth – drummer and pianist

Education[]

Donna Shalala
  • Molly Corbett Broad – President, American Council on Education
  • Walter Broadnax – President, Clark Atlanta University
  • George Campbell Jr. – President, Cooper Union
  • Mary Campbell - President, Spelman College
  • Kent John Chabotar – President, Guilford College
  • R. Inslee Clark, Jr. – Director of Admissions, Yale College
  • Michael Crow – President, Arizona State University
  • Mark Emmert – President, University of Washington
  • Paul Finkelman - President, Gratz College
  • Welthy Honsinger Fisher – Founder, World Education and World Literacy Canada.
  • Jonathan Gibralter – President, State University of New York at Farmingdale
  • Shelley Haley -- Professor of Classics and Africana Studies, Hamilton College
  • Kermit L. Hall – former President, State University of New York at Albany, Utah State University
  • Alice Ilchman – President, Sarah Lawrence College
  • David Knapp – President, University of Massachusetts
  • Barry Mills – President, Bowdoin College
  • Sean O'Keefe – former Chancellor, Louisiana State University (LSU)
  • L. Jay Oliva – former President, New York University
  • Joseph Rallo – President, Angelo State University
  • Mark Reckase – University Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Michigan State University
  • Kenneth P. Ruscio – President, Washington and Lee University
  • Donna Shalala – President, University of Miami
  • Deborah F. Stanley – President, State University of New York at Oswego
  • Mitchel Wallerstein – President, Baruch College

Investors, industrialists, and executives[]

  • P.O. Ackley – World-Renowned Gunsmith, CEO, P.O. Ackley Inc.
  • Daniel A. D'Aniello – Co-founder and Chairman, The Carlyle Group
  • Ben Baldanza – Airline Executive and Former CEO of Spirit Airlines
  • Al-Waleed bin Talal – founder and President, Kingdom Holding Co
  • William J. Brodsky – Chairman and chief executive officer of the Chicago Board Options Exchange
  • Stanley Chais (1926–2010) - investment advisor in the Madoff investment scandal
  • Dennis Crowley – Co-Founder, Foursquare (service)
  • Mary C. Daly - President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
  • Nick Donofrio – Senior Vice President, Technology & Manufacturing, IBM
  • Bernard Goldberg (1948) – Co-founder of Raymour & Flanigan
  • William James – Director, Lazard Freres & Company
  • E. Floyd Kvamme – Partner Emeritus; Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers. Chairman, Presidents Council of Advisors on Science and Technology under President George W Bush
  • Jeff McCormick – Founder, Saturn Partners, and Independent candidate for governor in the Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 2014
  • Richard Menschel - (retired) senior director of Goldman Sachs, philanthropist.[13]
  • Robert Menschel - (retired) legendary senior director of Goldman Sachs, philanthropist, created Wall Street's first institutional department.
  • Sean O'Keefe – former Chairman of Airbus Group, Inc.
  • Lowell W. Paxson – Founder of Home Shopping Network
  • Kirthiga Reddy – former MD of Facebook India .
  • Arthur Rock – venture capitalist, cofounder of Intel and father figure to Apple founder Steve Jobs
  • Vishal Sikka – CEO & MD (Designate) Infosys Ltd.
  • Martin J. Whitman – founder, Co-Chief Investment Officer, Third Avenue Value Fund

Hospitality, real estate, construction, and architecture[]

  • Dean Alvord – developer known best for developing Belle Terre, New York, Prospect Park South, and Roslyn Estates, New York.[14][15][16]
  • Harley Baldwin – developer in Aspen, Colorado
  • Thomas Boyde Jr – first Black architect in Rochester, New York
  • Arthur Bridgman Clark – architect, professor, first head of the Art Department at Stanford University.
  • Bruce Fowle – architect, Fox & Fowle Architects
  • James Garrison - architect, Garrison Architects
  • Adam Gross – architect, Ayers Saint Gross
  • Wilbur R. Ingalls, Jr. – architect
  • Lorimer Rich – architect, designed the Tomb of the Unknowns in Washington, DC and the Tomb of the Unknown Revolutionary War Soldier in Rome, NY
  • David Rockwell – founder and CEO, Rockwell Group
  • Steve Rubell – former Studio 54 club owner
  • Ian Schrager – hotelier and former Studio 54 club owner
  • Werner Seligmann – architect
  • Thom Filicia – interior designer, author, television host

Law and public service[]

Joe Biden
Daniel P. Moynihan
  • Bob Antonacci - Former NYS Senate Member, NYS Supreme Court Judge
  • Andrew P. Bakaj - U.S. Attorney and lead counsel for the Whisteblower during the Impeachment Inquiry and the subsequent Impeachment of President Donald Trump.
  • Craig Benson – former New Hampshire Governor
  • Joe Biden – 46th President of the United States, 47th Vice President of the United States, U.S. Senator from Delaware, Chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
  • Beau Biden – former Attorney General of Delaware, son of Joe Biden
  • Dave Bing – former Mayor of Detroit, NBA Hall of Famer
  • Jon Bramnick – Current New Jersey Assembly Minority Leader
  • Angus Cameron – former Senator from Wisconsin
  • Gary Chan – Member of Legislative Council of Hong Kong since 2008
  • George Fletcher Chandler – First Superintendent of the New York State Police
  • John T. Connor – former US Secretary of Commerce
  • David Crane – former Chief Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Al D'Amato – former Senator from New York
  • Willy De Clercq – former European Commissioner for Trade and External Relations, former Belgian Minister of Finance, Foreign Trade, and Budget; former Belgian Deputy Prime Minister
  • John A. DeFrancisco – New York State Senator
  • Robert Duffy – Mayor of Rochester, New York - Lt. Governor, New York State
  • Kwabena Dufuor – Finance Minister of Ghana and former of Governor, Bank of Ghana.
  • Ronald A. George – Maryland State Delegate
  • James E. Graves, Jr. – United States Court of Appeals Judge for the Fifth Circuit, formerly Mississippi Supreme Court Justice
  • David GurfeinU.S. Marine Corps lieutenant colonel, and CEO of nonprofit organization United American Patriots
  • Arthur T. Hannett – former Governor of New Mexico
  • Kathy Hochul – Congresswoman, New York - Governor, New York State
  • John Katko – Congressman, New York[17]
  • Randy Kuhl – Congressman, New York
  • Mordecai Lee – Wisconsin State Senator
  • Belva A. Lockwood – (GC) First woman to receive her party's nomination for President of the United States, and the first woman to argue a case before the US Supreme Court
  • Oren Lyons – Onondaga Faithkeeper and Global Indigenous Leader
  • William Magnarelli – NYS Assemblyman
  • Joanie Mahoney – Former Onondaga County Executive
  • Neal P. McCurn – Senior Judge for the US District Court, Northern District of New York
  • Theodore McKee – United States Court of Appeals Chief Judge for the Third Circuit
  • Rodney C. Moen – Wisconsin State Senator
  • Toby Moffett – Former US Congressman from Connecticut
  • Daniel P. Moynihan – (Ph.D) US Ambassador to India, Senator, scholar
  • John H. Mulroy – former Onondaga County Executive
  • Norman A. Mordue – Chief Judge for the US District Court, Northern District of New York
  • Bismarck Myrick – former US Ambassador to the Republic of Liberia and Lesotho
  • Sean O'Keefe – former NASA administrator
  • Masahide Ota – former Governor of Okinawa, Japan
  • John Prevas – Circuit Court Judge, City of Baltimore
  • Elliott Portnoy – Chairman of SNR Denton
  • Steven Rothman – Congressman, New Jersey
  • Warren Rudman – former Senator, New Hampshire
  • Frederick J. Scullin, Jr. – Senior Judge for the US District Court, Northern District of New York
  • Donna Shalala – former Secretary, US Department of Health and Human Services, US House of Representatives from Florida
  • Salvador del Solar – former Prime Minister of Peru
  • Glenn T. Suddaby – Justice for the US District Court, Northern District of New York
  • John H. Terry – former US Congressman
  • Sandra L. Townes – Justice for the US District Court, Eastern District of New York
  • Mitchel Wallerstein – former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for counter-proliferation policy
  • Ben Walsh – 54th Mayor of Syracuse
  • George WarringtonNJ Transit president and former Amtrak president
  • David P. Weber – former Assistant Inspector General for Investigations at the US Securities and Exchange Commission
  • John P. White – former Deputy Secretary, US Department of Defense
  • Stanley L. Greigg – member of the U.S. House of Representatives from northwestern Iowa[18]

Media and communications[]

  • Russ Alben – advertising executive, created the Timex tagline, "It takes a licking and keeps on ticking"[19]
  • Marv Albert – sportscaster
  • David Amber – reporter, ESPN
  • Damon Amendolara – sportscaster
  • Michael Barkann – sportscaster, Comcast SportsNet, Philadelphia
  • Len Berman – sportscaster
  • Matthew BerryESPN fantasy sports analyst
  • Paul Bouche – TV producer - Media Personality
  • Contessa Brewer – broadcast journalist, MSNBC
  • Samantha Brown – TV host
  • Steve Bunin – sportscaster, ESPN
  • Ryan Burr – sportscaster, ESPN, NBC and Golf Channel
  • Mary Calvi – journalist, anchor at WCBS-TV, New York City
  • Craig Carton – Co-Host, Boomer and Carton in the Morning, WFAN NY
  • Joe Castiglione – Boston Red Sox radio announcer
  • Ernest Chappell – radio and television announcer[20]
  • Dick Clark – television personality, American Bandstand, Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve
  • Michael ColeWWE commentator
  • Ed Coleman – sportscaster, WFAN NY
  • Bob Costas – sportscaster, NBC Sports and MLB Network
  • Denise D'Ascenzo (1958–2019) – television news anchorwoman (WFSB-TV in Hartford, Connecticut)
  • Bob Dotson – journalist
  • Ian Eagle – sportscaster, CBS and YES
  • Emmeplus-size model and TV host
  • Susan Feeney – journalist, former senior editor for NPR
  • Marty Glickman – sportscaster
  • Jeff Glor - anchor, CBS Evening News
  • Daniel J. Halstead - publisher of The Syracuse Daily Union (1860), The Syracuse Daily Courier and Union (1860–1869), The Syracuse Daily Courier (1869–1888) and The Syracuse Courier (1888–1898) newspapers
  • Scott Hanson - sportscaster, NFL Network, host of NFL RedZone
  • Vaughn Harper - radio DJ, WBLS NY 'Quiet Storm', basketball player, musician.
  • Ariel Helwani – MMA journalist
  • Deborah Henretta, senior advisor, SSA & Company; retired group president, Procter & Gamble
  • Larry HrybXbox Live Director of Programming
  • Avery Yale Kamila – vegan food columnist, Portland Press Herald
  • Megyn Kelly – news anchor, Fox News Channel
  • Ted Koppel – broadcast journalist, "Nightline"
  • Larry Kramer – President and Publisher of USA Today
  • Steve Kroft – co-editor and news correspondent, "60 Minutes"
  • Michael Kranish – journalist
  • Harold E. MartinPulitzer Prize-winning newspaperman, Montgomery, Alabama Advertiser
  • Mike McAlary – Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
  • Sean McDonough – sportscaster, ESPN
  • Joe McNally – photographer
  • Jeanne Moos – news correspondent, CNN
  • Will Murray – researcher and segment producer, The Howard Stern Show
  • Akshay Nanavati - USMC, author of Fearvana
  • Jim Naughtie – British journalist and radio presenter
  • Diane Nelson – President of DC Entertainment
  • Bob Neumeier – sportscaster, NBC
  • Donald Newhouse – president, Advance Publications
  • S.I. Newhouse, Jr. – Chairman & CEO, Advance Publications/ Chairman, Conde Nast Publications
  • Jeff Passan - baseball journalist, ESPN
  • Greg Papa – sportscaster, Oakland Raiders
  • Dave Pasch – sportscaster, ESPN
  • Henry Jarvis Raymond – (GWS), Founder of the New York Times
  • Dave Roberts – weatherman, broadcaster and presenter, WPVI-TV
  • Dan Roche – sportscaster, WBZ-TV, Boston, MA
  • Harry M. Rosenfeld – former editor, "Washington Post"
  • Dave Ryan – sportscaster, ESPN
  • Robert Scheer – editor-in-chief, TruthDig, former managing editor Ramparts, Professor, USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
  • Adam Schein – SNY, Sirius XM Satellite radio NFL
  • Bob Shannon – radio DJ/Announcer, CBS-FM New York
  • Arun ShouriePadma Bhushan recipient, World Bank Economist, former editor of Times of India and Indian Express
  • Anish ShroffESPNews anchor
  • Andrew Siciliano - sportscaster, NFL Network, host of DirecTV Red Zone Channel
  • Fred Silverman – former President, NBC
  • Lakshmi Singh – newscaster, journalist, NPR
  • Jayson Stark – journalist, sportscaster, ESPN
  • Dick Stockton – sportscaster
  • John Sykes – President of iHeartMedia Entertainment Enterprises
  • Mike Tirico – sportscaster, NBC
  • Nick Wright - TV host, radio talk show, Fox Sports 1, Son of Joshua Allen
  • Justin Robert Young - podcaster, journalist, comedian and writer
  • Adam Zucker – sportscaster/anchor, CBS Sports Network
  • Sam Roberts (radio personality) - broadcaster, SiriusXM - Jim Norton & Sam Roberts, WWE

Science, engineering, innovation, medicine, and exploration[]

Eileen Collins
  • Joseph A. Ahearn – Civil Engineer of the U.S. Air Force; member of the National Academy of Engineering.
  • Ishfaq Ahmad - Professor of Computer Science
  • Betty Lise Anderson - Professor of Optical Science
  • Albert Baez – developer of the X-ray reflection microscope, physics educator, and father of Joan Baez.
  • John Boardman – physics educator, social activist, and gaming authority.
  • Daniela Bortoletto - experimental particle physicist, Nicholas Kurti Senior Research Fellow at Oxford University.
  • Charles F. Brannock - inventor and manufacturer; inventor of the Brannock Device.
  • Rubin Braunstein - semiconductor physics, pioneer of LEDs.
  • Penny Budoff - Physician and medical researcher; author of No More Hot Flashes and Even More Good News.
  • Marilyn Burns; mathematics educator and the author of over a dozen children's books on mathematics.[21]
  • George Campbell Jr. - theoretical physicist who served as the eleventh president of Cooper Union.
  • Eileen Collins – NASA astronaut and first female space shuttle commander.
  • Alice Carter Cook – botanist and writer, first woman PhD in botany from an American university
  • Tesfaye Dinka – Industrial Engineer and Prime Minister of Ethiopia from April to June 1991.
  • Nina Fedoroff – geneticist and molecular biologist; Science and Technology Adviser to the Secretary of State. Recipient of the National Medal of Science in 2007; member of the National Academy of Sciences.
  • Joan Feynman – astrophysicist, younger sister of physicist Richard Feynman.
  • Robert Finn – mathematician and professor.
  • Edith M. Flanigen – chemist and inventor; winner of the 2014 National Medal of Technology and Innovation.
  • George E. Fox – biologist and chemical engineer; co-discoverer of the Archaea kingdom of organisms.
  • Jean Fréchet – chemist and professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley.
  • Joshua N. Goldberg - pioneering researcher in general relativity, professor emeritus at Syracuse University.
  • Gabriela González - former spokesperson for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration. Winner of the National Academy of Sciences Award for Scientific Discovery (2017); member of the National Academy of Sciences.
  • Hermann Gummel – semiconductor device physicist; member of the National Academy of Engineering.
  • John J. Hopfield – spectroscopist and discoverer of the Hopfield bands of molecular oxygen (O2).
  • Robert Jarvik – inventor of the first permanently implantable artificial heart
  • Joel Lebowitzstatistical physicist; member of the National Academy of Sciences
  • William Ralph Maxon – botanist and pteridologist.
  • Evangelia Micheli-Tzanakou – pioneer in neuroelectric systems and biomedical engineering education.
  • Pericles A. Mitkas - computer scientist and Rector of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
  • Story Musgrave – NASA astronaut.
  • V. Parmeswaran Nair - theoretical particle physicist, Distinguished Professor at the City University of New York.
  • Ezra T. Newman – theoretical physicist, winner of the 2011 Einstein Prize.
  • Yude Pan – forest ecologist.
  • Martin A. Pomerantz – astrophysicist, president emeritus of the Bartol Research Institute, and pioneer of Antarctic astronomy.
  • Pierre Ramondstring theorist; winner of the 2004 Oskar Klein Medal.
  • Harry Frederick Recherornithologist; winner of the 1994 D.L. Serventy Medal.
  • Mark Reednanotechnology pioneer, Harold Hodgkinson Chair at Yale University.
  • Elsa Reichmanis – optical and electronic materials; member of the National Academy of Engineering; 2001 recipient of the Perkin Medal.
  • Charles Rosen – robotics; co-founder of Ridge Vineyards.
  • Joel Rosenbaum – cell biologist; winner of the E. B. Wilson Medal.
  • Rainer K. Sachs – theoretical astrophysicist, co-discoverer of the Sachs–Wolfe effect.
  • Pantur Silaban - prominent Indonesian theoretical physicist.
  • Michael Streicher – developer of stainless steels; winner of the W. R. Whitney Award.
  • Sultan bin Salman – first Arab, first Muslim and the youngest person to travel to space.
  • Salvatore Torquato – theoretical scientist who does research at the interface of physics, chemistry, and engineering.
  • José W. F. Valle - Brazilian-Spanish theoretical physicist noted for work on the mass of neutrinos.
  • James Tour – organic chemist and nanotechnologist.
  • Clarence Abiathar Waldo – mathematician and educator known for his role in the 1897 Indiana Pi Bill affair.
  • Sigi Ziering - industrial physicist, businessman, and philanthropist.

Sports[]

Jim Brown
Larry Csonka
  • Will Allen – football player
  • Doc Alexander – football player and coach
  • Gary Anderson – football player, former NFL record holder
  • Carmelo Anthony – basketball player, Portland Trail Blazers
  • Julie Archoska – football player
  • Michael Carter-Williams – basketball player, Orlando Magic
  • Art Baker – football player
  • John Barsha – football player
  • Mathieu Beaudoin - football player
  • Dave Bing – basketball player, current mayor of Detroit, Michigan.
  • Jim Boeheim – basketball player and coach, Syracuse University, member of the National Basketball Hall of Fame
  • Nathan Bombrys – Managing Director of the Glasgow Warriors, a professional Scottish rugby union club
  • Jim Brown – football player, lacrosse player, actor, member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame
  • Keith Bulluck – football player
  • Rob Burnett – football player
  • Delone Carter – football player
  • Irv Constantine – football player
  • Derrick Coleman – basketball player
  • Trevor Cooney — pro basketball player
  • Rakeem Christmas — basketball player
  • DaJuan Coleman — basketball player, free agent
  • John Coleman – baseball player
  • Jim Collins – football player
  • Tom Coughlin – VP football operations, Jacksonville Jaguars
  • Larry Csonka – football player
  • Donovin Darius – football player
  • Al Davis – NFL owner
  • Ernie Davis – football player, Heisman Trophy winner
  • John Desko – lacrosse coach
  • Riley Dixon - NFL punter
  • Sherman Douglas – basketball player
  • Dennis DuVal – basketball player
  • Randy Edsall – college football coach
  • Joe Ehrmann – football player
  • Tyler Ennis—basketball player
  • David Falk – Founder, SFX Basketball Group
  • Mickey Fallon – football player
  • Jonny Flynn – basketball player
  • Dwight Freeney – football player
  • Jim Frugone – football player
  • Gary Gait – lacrosse player
  • Paul Gait – lacrosse player
  • Jonah Goldman – MLB baseball player
  • Jerami Grant – pro basketball player, Detroit Pistons
  • Michael Gbinije — pro basketball player
  • Donté Greene – pro basketball player
  • Tim Green – football player
  • Morlon Greenwood – football player
  • Marvin Harrison – football player
  • Jason Hart – basketball player
  • Qadry Ismail – football player
  • Tanard Jackson – football player
  • Paul Jappe – football player
  • Arthur Jones – football player; currently competing for the NFL on the Colts
  • Chandler Jones – football player; currently playing for the Cardinals
  • Tebucky Jones – football player
  • Wesley Johnson – basketball player
  • Daryl Johnston – football player
  • Dwayne Joseph – football player
  • Kris Joseph – basketball player, Brooklyn Nets
  • Mark Kerr – NCAA Wrestling Champion; retired MMA fighter; 2-time UFC Heavyweight Tournament Winner[22][23]
  • Rob Konrad – football player
  • Jim Konstanty – major league baseball pitcher
  • Floyd Little – football player, Pro Football Hall of Fame
  • Tyler Lydon — basketball player, Denver Nuggets
  • John Mackey – former NFL tight end, has college award named after him
  • Olindo Mare – football player, Carolina Panthers
  • Doug Marrone – football coach
  • Frank Matteo – football player
  • Donovan McNabb – football player, Free Agent
  • Gerry McNamara – basketball player
  • Don McPherson – football player
  • Dave Meggyesy – football player
  • Fab Melo – basketball player
  • Chris McCullough—basketball player
  • Eddie Miller – basketball player
  • Art Monk – football player; NFL Hall of Fame inductee
  • Tim Moresco – football player
  • Joe Morris – football player
  • Larry Morris – football player
  • Lawrence Moten – basketball player
  • Tom Myers – football player
  • Jim Nance – football player
  • Ryan Nassib – football player, New York Giants
  • Doc Oberlander – former baseball player[24]
  • Henry Obst – football player
  • Louis Orr – basketball player
  • Billy Owens – basketball player
  • Markus Paul – football player
  • Greg Paulus – football player and former Duke University basketball player
  • Scott Pioli – NFL executive
  • Casey Powell – lacrosse player
  • Mikey Powell – lacrosse player
  • Ryan Powell – lacrosse player
  • Myer Prinstein – Olympic medalist
  • Andy Rautins – basketball player
  • Jim Ridlon – former professional football player and renowned sports painter and sculptor
  • Jim Ringo – football player
  • Victor Ross – lacrosse player
  • Malachi Richardson—basketball player
  • Mike Rotunda – professional wrestler
  • Greg Sankey – Commissioner, Southeastern Conference
  • Danny Schayes – basketball player
  • Gerhard Schwedes – football player
  • Scott Schwedes – football player
  • Sam Sebo – football player
  • Rony Seikaly – basketball player
  • Wilmeth Sidat-Singh – football and basketball player
  • Kaseem Sinceno – football player
  • Walt Singer – football player
  • Anthony Smith – football player
  • Walt Sweeney – football player
  • Kathrine Switzer – marathon runner
  • Etan Thomas – basketball player
  • Shamarko Thomas – football player
  • David Tyree – football player
  • Dion Waiters – basketball player
  • John Wallace – basketball player
  • Stan Walters – football player
  • Hakim Warrick – basketball player, Phoenix Suns
  • Dwayne Washington – basketball player
  • Otis Wilson – football player
  • Ray Witter – football player
  • Paul Young – Jamaican soccer player/manager
  • Katie Zaferes – triathlete

Entertainment and performing arts[]

Peter Falk
Lou Reed
Jerry Stiller
  • Elfriede Abbe – sculptor[25]
  • Lynn Ahrens – musical theatre lyricist
  • Martin Bandier – Chairman and CEO of Sony/ATV
  • Darryl Bell – actor
  • Craig Borten – screenwriter
  • Paul Bouche – TV Host "A Oscuras Pero Encendidos'; television producer
  • Eric Bress – film director and screenwriter
  • Tim Calpin – screenwriter
  • Warren Casey – writer, lyricist, screenwriter
  • Felix Cavaliere – singer with The Rascals
  • Priscilla Chan – singer
  • Clairo - lo-fi pop sensation (currently attending, on break)
  • Dick Clark – host of American Bandstand; television producer
  • Ken Goldstein – musician known as "Jack Dempsey"; author
  • John Curran – film director and screenwriter
  • Doug Davis, entertainment lawyer and Grammy Award-winning producer
  • Taye Diggs – actor
  • Heather Dubrow – actress; cast member on The Real Housewives of Orange County
  • Zach Tyler Eisen - voice actor; voice of Aang on Avatar: The Last Airbender
  • Peter Falk – actor
  • Gary Farmer – actor
  • Vera Farmiga – actress
  • Judy Freudberg – screenwriter
  • Jami Gong – stand-up comedian
  • Carl Gottlieb – screenwriter; vice-president of the Writers Guild of America, West
  • Peter Guber – CEO of Mandalay Entertainment and Co-owner of the Golden State Warriors
  • Dan Gurewitch – writer
  • Jay Harrington – actor
  • Elizabeth Hendrickson – actress
  • Bob Holz - musician
  • Miriam Hopkins – actress
  • Garland Jeffreys – musician
  • Miss Jones – radio DJ and singer
  • Irma Kalish - television writer
  • Joe Klotz – film editor
  • Lisa Lampanelli – comedian
  • Frank Langella – actor Frost/Nixon
  • Meg LeFauve – screenwriter Inside Out (2015 film), Captain Marvel (film)
  • Sheldon Leonard - film and television actor, producer, director, and writer
  • Riki Lindhome – actress
  • Sam Lloyd – actor, musician
  • Frank Marion – motion picture pioneer
  • Andy Mineo – rapper, singer, producer, director, actor and minister
  • Neal McDonough – actor
  • Sterling Morrison – musician
  • Jessie Mueller – Tony-winning actress
  • Suzanne Pleshette – actress
  • Mike Pollock – voice actor
  • Lou Reed – musician
  • Kevin Michael Richardson – actor
  • Sam Roberts - radio broadcaster
  • Doug Robinson - television producer
  • Maria Sansone – television presenter
  • Ken Schretzmann - film editor
  • Reid Scott – actor
  • Tom Everett Scott – actor
  • Aaron Sorkin – Emmy- and Academy Award-winning screenwriter A Few Good Men, The Social Network, The West Wing, Moneyball
  • Lexington Steele – actor, director, and owner of Mercenary Motion Pictures and Black Viking Pictures Inc.
  • Jerry Stiller – actor
  • Habib Tabani – Pakistani ghazal singer and industrialist
  • Arielle Tepper – Broadway producer
  • Mark Tinker – television producer/director
  • Stephen A. Unger – executive recruiter, media and entertainment business
  • Jimmy Van Heusen – Academy Award-winning composer
  • Bill Viola – video artist
  • Michael H. Weber – screenwriter (500) Days of Summer, The Spectacular Now, The Fault in Our Stars, Paper Towns
  • Peter Weller – actor
  • Vanessa Williams – singer, songwriter, actress, dancer, Miss America
  • Pete Yorn – musician

Fictional characters[]

  • Rachel Green - protagonist of hit sitcom Friends
  • Winston Schmidt - protagonist of hit sitcom New Girl
  • Nick Miller - protagonist of hit sitcom New Girl
  • Patrick Warburton - protagonist of hit sitcom Rules_of_Engagement_(TV_series)
  • Terry Jeffords - revealed on Brooklyn Nine-Nine to have played football while attending Syracuse University

Other[]

  • Alexandra Curtis – Miss Rhode Island 2015
  • Marc S. Ellenbogen – diplomat, philanthropist, President, Prague Society for International Cooperation
  • Borys Gudziak – Catholic Bishop, Metropolitan-Archbishop of Philadelphia (Ukrainian Greek Catholic) [26]
  • Michael Yeung Ming-cheung – Catholic Bishop, eighth Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong
  • John Zogby – pollster, Zogby International
  • Neilia Hunter Biden - teacher, first wife of Joe Biden

Notable educators[]

  • William Alston – philosopher.
  • Julia Alvarez – poet, novelist, and essayist.
  • Richard Arnowitt – theoretical physicist.
  • Donna Arzt – attorney and legal scholar.
  • Abhay Ashtekar – theoretical physicist and creator of the Ashtekar variables for quantum gravity.
  • Ernst Bacon – prolific composer.
  • A. P. Balachandran – theoretical particle physicist.
  • Peter Bergmann – won the Einstein Prize for research on quantum gravity.
  • Catherine Bertini
  • Howard Boatwright – Music School dean.
  • Philip Booth – poet.
  • Mark Bowick - theoretical physicist noted for work in particle physics and condensed matter physics.
  • Zachary Braiterman - philosopher and religious studies scholar
  • Arthur C. Brooks
  • Lori Brown – architect and associate professor
  • Horace Campbell, Department of African American Studies and Department of Political Science
  • Simon Catterall - theoretical physicist specializing in elementary particles.
  • Massimo Carmassi – architect.
  • Bill Cole – musician, author (Department of African American Studies)
  • Raymond Carver – short story writer.
  • David Crane – former Chief Prosecutor for Special Court of the Sierra Leone
  • Junot Diaz – writer
  • Geoffrey C. Fox – theoretical physicist and computer scientist.
  • Joshua N. Goldberg – theoretical physicist noted for work on general relativity.
  • John Langston Gwaltney – African American professor of anthropology, author of Drylongso: A Self Portrait of Black America.
  • Per Brinch Hansen – computer scientist.
  • Douglas Holtz-Eakin – former Director of the U.S. Congressional Budget Office (2003–2005), and chief economic policy adviser to U.S. Senator John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign.
  • Mary Karr – writer and poet.
  • Bruce Kingma
  • Arthur Komar – theoretical physicist.
  • Melvin Lax – theoretical physicist and member of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Cristina Marchetti - theoretical physicist specializing in soft condensed matter physics; member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.
  • Donald Marolf – theoretical physicist who has worked on quantum gravity and relativity.
  • Roscoe C. Martin (1903-1972) – Professor of Political Science at Syracuse University from 1949 to 1972.
  • Janis Mayes – Author, literary critic.
  • Daniel Patrick Moynihan – Senator from New York, political scientist
  • Ivan Meštrović – sculptor and artist
  • Micere Mugo – poet and playwright (Department of African American Studies, Department of Literature)
  • Ei-ichi Negishi – chemist, winner of the 2010 Nobel Prize.
  • Fritz Rohrlich - theoretical physicist, pioneer of quantum electrodynamics.
  • Alexander Rosenberg
  • Peter Saulson - experimental physicist noted for work on gravitational wave astronomy.
  • George Saunders – writer.
  • Milton Sernett – historian, author (Department of African American Studies, Department of History)
  • Delmore Schwartz – poet.
  • Huston Smith – religious studies scholar
  • Lee Smolin – theoretical physicist noted for work on quantum gravity.
  • Rafael Sorkin – theoretical physicist noted for work on quantum gravity.
  • Eileen Strempel – soprano, Associate Dean of Graduate Studies, Associate Professor of Fine Arts
  • George Sudarshan – theoretical physicist, winner of the Dirac Prize.
  • Robert Thompson – media historian
  • Mark Trodden – theoretical cosmologist.
  • Douglas Unger - novelist
  • Gabriel Vahanian – theologian, noted figure in the Death of God movement in 1960s
  • Peter Van Inwagen
  • Kameshwar C. Wali – theoretical physicist, author
  • Johan Wiklund – Entrepreneurship professor and the Al Berg Chair at the Whitman School
  • Frances Willard – 19th century educator, temperance reformer, and women's suffragist
  • Tobias Wolff – writer

Notable commencement speakers & honored guests[]

  • 2018 – Mary C. Daly, Economist and President San Francisco Fed
  • 2018 – Kathrine Switzer, Athlete, Author and Activist (’68, G’72)
  • 2017 – Vernon Jordan, African-American Lawyer, Business Executive, and Civil Rights Activist
  • 2016 – Donald Newhouse, President, Advance Publications
  • 2015 – Mary Karr, Poet and Essayist
  • 2014 – David Remnick, Editor-in-Chief, New Yorker
  • 2013 – Nicholas Kristof, New York Times Columnist
  • 2012 − Aaron Sorkin, American screenwriter, producer, and playwright
  • 2011 – J. Craig Venter, American biologist and entrepreneur, President of J. Craig Venter Institute
  • 2010 – Jamie Dimon, CEO JPMorgan Chase & Co.
  • 2009 – Joseph R. Biden Jr., Vice President of the United States of America
  • 2008 – Bob Woodruff, ABC News journalist
  • 2007 – Frank McCourt, author/Pulitzer Prize winner
  • 2006 – Billy Joel, composer and singer
  • 2005 – Jane Goodall, primatologist, ethologist and anthropologist
  • 2004 – Phylicia Rashad, actress
  • 2003 – Bill Clinton, former U.S. President, 1993–2001
  • 2002 – Rudolph Giuliani, former Mayor of New York City, 1994–2001
  • 2001 – Eileen Collins, American astronaut
  • 2000 – Ted Koppel, American journalist
  • 1999 – Charles Schumer, U.S. Senator (D-NY), 1999–present
  • 1998 – Robert Fulghum, author, essayist
  • 1996 – Steve Kroft, journalist, long-time correspondent60 Minutes[27]
  • 1995 – Donna Shalala, Secretary of Health and Human Services, 1993–2001
  • 1994 – Kurt Vonnegut, novelist
  • 1990 – William Safire, journalist
  • 1989 – Daniel Patrick Moynihan, U.S. Senator (D-NY)
  • 1988 – Malcolm Forbes
  • 1986 – Mario Cuomo, Governor of New York
  • 1983 – Daniel Boorstin, Director, Library of Congress
  • 1982 – Ted Koppel, journalist
  • 1981 – Alexander Haig, U.S. Secretary of State, 1981–1982
  • 1980 – Bill Moyers, journalist
  • 1979 – Tom Brokaw, journalist
  • 1978 – William Safire, journalist
  • 1973 – Edward M. Kennedy, U.S. Senator (D-MA), 1962–2009
  • 1969 – William F. Buckley, journalist
  • 1968 – Walter Cronkite
  • 1966 – Nelson Rockefeller, Governor of New York, 1959–1973
  • 1965 – Robert F. Kennedy, U.S. Senator (D-NY), 1965–1968
  • 1964 – Lyndon B. Johnson, then U.S. President[28]
  • 1961 – Ayn Rand, novelist
  • 1960 – Harry S. Truman, former U.S. President, 1945–1953
  • 1959 – Robert Frost, poet
  • 1957 – John F. Kennedy, U.S. Senator (D-MA), 1953–1960
  • 1937 – Herbert Hoover, former U.S. President, 1929–1933
  • 1930 – Franklin D. Roosevelt, Governor of New York, 1928–1932

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "2018 Annual Report" (PDF). comptroller.syr.edu. Retrieved 2019-01-01.
  2. ^ Smalley, Frank, ed. (1911). Alumni Record and General Catalogue of Syracuse University (1872-1910), including Genesee college (1852-1871) and Geneva medical college (1835-1872). Syracuse, N.Y.: Alumni Association of Syracuse University. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Eliphalet Remington Syracuse University Endowment". Bangor Daily Whig and Courier. Bangor, Maine. 21 June 1871. p. 1. Retrieved 27 November 2020 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  4. ^ "MusicalAmerica - New Artist of the Month: Composer Nilo Alcala". www.musicalamerica.com. Retrieved 2018-09-18.
  5. ^ "The prime of composer Nilo Alcala - Vera Files". Vera Files. Retrieved 2018-09-18.
  6. ^ Nepales, Ruben V. "Grammy-nominated chorale to premiere UP alumnus'composition". Retrieved 2018-09-18.
  7. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2009-04-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ "James Bishop". Annemarie Verna Gallery. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  9. ^ Lois Lambert Gallery, Santa Monica, California Archived 2015-10-17 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "History of Syracuse University - Syracuse University". Archived from the original on 2008-10-20. Retrieved 2006-05-18.
  11. ^ Bulletin of Syracuse University (April 1907).[1], Page 132.
  12. ^ Neville, Anne (April 18, 2020). "John Pfahl, 81, world renowned photographer focused lens on Buffalo". The Buffalo News. Retrieved 20 February 2021.
  13. ^ "Richard Menschel Weds Ronay Arlt". The New York Times. August 22, 1974. Retrieved February 15, 2018.
  14. ^ "Putting a Fortune in Sound Shore Bluffs". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 1907-07-13. p. 19. Retrieved 2021-07-06.
  15. ^ "AAFA Bio - Dean Albert Alvord". www.alfordassociation.org. Retrieved 2021-07-06.
  16. ^ Epsilon, Delta Kappa (1900). Catalogue of the Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity ... Council publishing Company.
  17. ^ http://www.johnkatkoforcongress.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Katko-Bio-8-12-14.pdf
  18. ^ "Greigg, Stanley Lloyd, (1931–2002)". Biographical Directory of the United States College. Retrieved August 30, 2012.
  19. ^ Russell, Mallory (August 28, 2012). "Former Ogilvy Creative Director Russ Alben Dies". Advertising Age. Retrieved October 2, 2012.
  20. ^ DeLong, Thomas A. (1996). Radio Stars: An Illustrated Biographical Dictionary of 953 Performers, 1920 through 1960. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-2834-2. P. 53.
  21. ^ "Burns, Marilyn 1941". www.encyclopedia.com. Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  22. ^ "Mark Kerr UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014-01-01.
  23. ^ "The Hit List: NCAA Division I Wrestling Champions Who Have Competed in MMA".
  24. ^ "Doc Oberlander Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 3, 2012.
  25. ^ "Artist biographies" (PDF). Arizona Timebank. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 23, 2011. Retrieved June 13, 2011.
  26. ^ , Wikipedia, 2019-07-23, retrieved 2019-09-15
  27. ^ "'60 Minutes' journalist speaks at SU graduation". The Ithaca Journal. AP. 13 May 1996. p. 12. Retrieved 17 January 2021 – via Newspapers.com open access.
  28. ^ Johnson, Lyndon B. (August 5, 1964). Remarks on Vietnam at Syracuse University (Speech). Syracuse University Graduation Ceremony. Syracuse, New York: Miller Center (from Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum). Retrieved 7 June 2020.
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