List of St. Mark's School alumni
Encyclopedia
The following is a list of famous and notable former students of St. Mark's School
St. Mark's School (Massachusetts)
St. Mark’s School is a coeducational, Episcopal, preparatory school, situated on in Southborough, Massachusetts, from Boston. It was founded in 1865 as an all-boys' school by Joseph Burnett, a wealthy native of Southborough who developed and marketed the world-famous Burnett Vanilla Extract . ...

of Southborough, Massachusetts.

A

  • Charles Francis Adams IV
    Charles Francis Adams IV
    Charles Francis Adams IV was a U.S. electronics industrialist. He served as the first president of the Raytheon Company between 1948 and 1960, and again from 1962 to 1964. He served as its chairman between 1960 and 1962, and again from 1964 until 1972...

    , businessman and philanthropist associated with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute
  • Samuel A. Adams
    Samuel A. Adams
    Samuel A. Adams was an analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency who is best known for discovering underestimated Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army troop numbers during the Vietnam War. He eventually retired from the CIA after claiming there was a conspiracy among officials within U.S....

    , '51, crusading CIA official who exposed bad Vietnam intelligence of Defense Department
  • Mark Albion
    Mark Albion
    Mark Albion is an American author of values-based business literature, professor, and social entrepreneur. He received his post-secondary degrees from Harvard University, including a BA in Economics, a joint MA/MBA and a joint PhD in Business Economics from Harvard University and Harvard Business...

    , Harvard Business School
    Harvard Business School
    Harvard Business School is the graduate business school of Harvard University in Boston, Massachusetts, United States and is widely recognized as one of the top business schools in the world. The school offers the world's largest full-time MBA program, doctoral programs, and many executive...

     Professor, American Entrepreneur
  • Matthew Tobin Anderson
    Matthew Tobin Anderson
    Matthew Tobin Anderson, known as M. T. Anderson, is an American author, primarily of picture books for children and novels for young adults. He lives in Boston, Massachusetts.-Biography:...

     '86, writer, winner of National Book Award
    National Book Award
    The National Book Awards are a set of American literary awards. Started in 1950, the Awards are presented annually to American authors for literature published in the current year. In 1989 the National Book Foundation, a nonprofit organization which now oversees and manages the National Book...

  • A. Watson Armour III, American businessman and philanthropist
  • Philip D. Armour III, American businessman
  • Lester Armour, American businessman
  • Robert Douglas Armstrong, founder of the Bank of St. Croix
  • Mohamed Abdo, '09 American Entrepreneur

B

  • Charles L. Bartlett (journalist)
    Charles L. Bartlett (journalist)
    Charles L. Bartlett was awarded the 1956 Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting for his original disclosures that lead to the resignation of Harold E. Talbott as Secretary of the Air Force. He started the Washington D.C...

    , winner of the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting
    Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting
    The Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting has been awarded since 1948 for a distinguished example of reporting on national affairs. The Pulitzer Committee issues an official citation explaining the reasons for the award....

     in 1956

  • Mike Birbiglia
    Mike Birbiglia
    -Professional work:Birbiglia has released three albums, including My Secret Public Journal Live, which was named one of the best comedy albums of the decade by the Onion AV Club....

     '96, comedian
  • Walter Van Rensselaer Berry
    Walter Van Rensselaer Berry
    Walter Van Rensselaer Berry was an American lawyer, diplomat, Francophile, and friend of several great writers.-Biography:Berry was born in Paris, a descendant of the Van Rensselaer family of New York. After attending St...

    , lawyer, friend and mentor of Edith Wharton

  • Ben Bradlee, former editor, The Washington Post
    The Washington Post
    The Washington Post is Washington, D.C.'s largest newspaper and its oldest still-existing paper, founded in 1877. Located in the capital of the United States, The Post has a particular emphasis on national politics. D.C., Maryland, and Virginia editions are printed for daily circulation...

  • Nicholas F. Brady
    Nicholas F. Brady
    Nicholas Frederick Brady was United States Secretary of the Treasury under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, and is also known for articulating the Brady Plan in March 1989.-Early life:...

    , U.S. secretary of the treasury 1988-93; senator from New Jersey in 1982
  • Nicholas Braun
    Nicholas Braun
    Nicholas Joseph "Nick" Braun is an American actor.-Life and career:Braun was born in Bethpage, New York, the son of Elizabeth Lyle and actor Craig Braun...

    , actor,
  • Doug Brown
    Doug Brown (ice hockey)
    Douglas Brown is a former American ice hockey right winger. After playing four seasons with Boston College, Brown was signed as an undrafted free agent by the New Jersey Devils on August 6, 1986....

    , former National Hockey League player
  • Greg Brown
    Greg Brown (hockey)
    Gregory Curtis Brown is a retired professional ice hockey player. He is the brother of former NHL winger Doug Brown. Greg Brown was drafted in the second round, 26th overall, by the Buffalo Sabres in the 1986 NHL Entry Draft. Brown played his prep hockey career at St...

    , former National Hockey League player
  • Edward Burnett
    Edward Burnett
    Edward Burnett was a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts.Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Burnett attended St. Paul's School.He was graduated from St...

    , U.S. representative from Massachusetts

C

  • Wayne Chatfield-Taylor
    Wayne Chatfield-Taylor
    Wayne Chatfield-Taylor was Under Secretary of Commerce and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under President Franklin D. Roosevelt....

    , president of the Export-Import Bank, undersecretary of commerce
  • Blair Clark
    Blair Clark
    Ledyard Blair Clark was a liberal journalist and political activist who played key roles both as a journalist and a political operator. He was general manager and vice president of CBS News from 1961 to 1964, and later became editor of The Nation magazine...

    , journalist, former general manager, CBS News
  • Ernest Amory Codman
    Ernest Amory Codman
    Ernest Amory Codman, M.D., was a pioneering Boston surgeon who made contributions to anaesthesiology, radiology, duodenal ulcer surgery, orthopaedic oncology, shoulder surgery, and the study of medical outcomes....

     pioneering surgeon who made contributions to a variety of specialties and the study of medical outcomes
  • Nick Clements, American theoretical linguist specializing in phonology, notably with CNRS in Paris
  • William G. Congdon
    William G. Congdon
    William Grosvenor Congdon gained notoriety as an artist in New York City in the 1940s, but lived most of his life in Europe....

    , representationalist painter who used Abstract Expressionism
    Abstract expressionism
    Abstract expressionism was an American post–World War II art movement. It was the first specifically American movement to achieve worldwide influence and put New York City at the center of the western art world, a role formerly filled by Paris...

     techniques
  • Thomas Jefferson Coolidge, philanthropist, CIA official, and former trustee of Monticello
    Monticello
    Monticello is a National Historic Landmark just outside Charlottesville, Virginia, United States. It was the estate of Thomas Jefferson, the principal author of the United States Declaration of Independence, third President of the United States, and founder of the University of Virginia; it is...

  • Harry Crosby
    Harry Crosby
    Harry Crosby was an American heir, a bon vivant, poet, publisher, and for some, epitomized the Lost Generation in American literature. He was the son of one of the richest banking families in New England, a member of the Boston Brahmin, and the nephew of Jane Norton Grew, the wife of financier J....

    , poet and founder of the Black Sun Press
    Black Sun Press
    The Black Sun Press was an English language book publisher founded in 1927 as Éditions Narcisse by poet Harry Crosby and his wife Caresse Crosby , American expatriates living in Paris...


D

  • J. Richardson Dilworth
    J. Richardson Dilworth
    J. Richardson Dilworth was a leading businessman best known for being laywer for the Rockefeller family.-Early life and career:...

    , former Yale trustee and benefactor of Yale University
  • Peter Hoyt Dominick, U.S. congressman, then senator for Colorado; US Ambassador to Switzerland
  • Tarah Donoghue
    Tarah Donoghue
    Tarah Donoghue Breed served as the Deputy Press Secretary to Laura Bush, First Lady of the United States from 2006 to 2007. Before she began her work in the First Lady's Office, Tarah worked for Vice President Dick Cheney. Tarah attended Georgetown University for her undergraduate studies, where...

    , former deputy spokesperson, First Lady Laura Bush
    Laura Bush
    Laura Lane Welch Bush is the wife of the 43rd President of the United States, George W. Bush. She was the First Lady of the United States from January 20, 2001, to January 20, 2009. She has held a love of books and reading since childhood and her life and education have reflected that interest...


F

  • Hamilton Fish III
    Hamilton Fish III
    Hamilton Fish III was a soldier and politician from New York State...

    , U.S. congressman from New York, 1920-1945. Elected to College Football Hall of Fame
  • Hamilton Fish V
    Hamilton Fish V
    Hamilton Fish is a publisher, social entrepreneur, environmental advocate, and film producer in New York City. He was born in Washington, D.C. to Hamilton and Julia MacKenzie Fish. He attended schools in New York City and Massachusetts, where he graduated from Harvard University in 1973...

    , American publisher, politician and philanthropist
  • Christopher Forbes
    Christopher Forbes
    Christopher "Kip" Forbes is Vice Chairman of the Forbes Publishing company. He attended St. Mark's School in Southborough, Massachusetts, and Princeton University....

    , American publisher, vice-chairman, Forbes Inc.
  • Robert Forbes, publisher, Forbes Life
  • Tim Forbes
    Tim Forbes
    Timothy C. Forbes is a member of the Forbes publishing family and the son of Malcolm Forbes. The family owns the Forbes magazine chain. Tim Forbes attended St. Mark's School of Southborough, Massachusetts. He graduated from Brown University in 1976....

    , American publisher
  • Peter Hood Ballantine Frelinghuysen, Jr., U.S. representative from New Jersey from 1953 to 1975
  • Rodney P. Frelinghuysen, U.S. representative from New Jersey

G

  • Stephen Galatti
    Stephen Galatti
    Stephen Galatti was for many years the Director General of the AFS, American Field Service. He transformed the AFS from a volunteer medical corps during World Wars I and II into an international educational exchange service that has profoundly transformed the lives of thousands of young people...

    , visionary director general of the American Field Service and educational pioneer
  • David Gardner
    David Gardner
    David Gardner is one of the three founders of The Motley Fool, established in 1993.He attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on a Morehead-Cain Scholarship, graduating in 1988. He was a writer for Louis Rukeyser's Wall Street newsletter before joining the Motley Fool...

    , founder of the Motley Fool
    Motley Fool
    The Motley Fool is a multimedia financial-services company that provides financial solutions for investors through various stock, investing, and personal finance products. The Alexandria, Virginia-based private company was founded in July 1993 by co-chairmen and brothers David and Tom Gardner, and...

  • C. Boyden Gray
    C. Boyden Gray
    Clayland Boyden Gray is a former American diplomat and public servant. He is a member of the board of directors at the Atlantic Council and at The European Institute....

    , White House counsel to President George H. W. Bush
    George H. W. Bush
    George Herbert Walker Bush is an American politician who served as the 41st President of the United States . He had previously served as the 43rd Vice President of the United States , a congressman, an ambassador, and Director of Central Intelligence.Bush was born in Milton, Massachusetts, to...

     then U.S. envoy to the European Union
    European Union
    The European Union is an economic and political union of 27 independent member states which are located primarily in Europe. The EU traces its origins from the European Coal and Steel Community and the European Economic Community , formed by six countries in 1958...

  • Ed Gray, naturalist author and founder of Grays Sporting Journal
  • J. Clark Crew, retired Episcopal Bishop of Ohio

H

  • Mason Hammond
    Mason Hammond
    Mason Hammond , was a Harvard University professor, authority on Latin and the history of Rome and its empire, and former chairman of the board of trustees at St. Mark's School.Professor Hammond's work has proven highly durable...

    , Harvard University classicist and Harvard historian
  • Truxton Hare
    Truxton Hare
    Thomas Truxtun Hare was an American track and field athlete who competed in the hammer throw and All rounder events. He was also an American football player for the University of Pennsylvania from 1897 to 1900. Hare is one of only a handful of men to earn All-American honors during all four years...

    , Olympic athlete; elected to College Football Hall of Fame
  • Harry G. Haskell, Jr.
    Harry G. Haskell, Jr.
    Harry Garner Haskell, Jr. is an American businessman and politician from Wilmington, in New Castle County, Delaware. He is a member of the Republican Party, who served as U.S. Representative from Delaware.-Early life and family:...

    , U.S. representative from Delaware and former president of Abercrombie and Fitch
  • Prince Hashim of Jordan
  • Ingolv Helland
    Ingolv Helland
    Ingolv Helland is a Norwegian portraitist who has developed an international reputation.In the 2007 exhibition for the prestigious BP Portrait Award at the National Portrait Gallery , Helland's self-portrait was one of only 60 artists selected to participate – out of 1870 entries – and his work...

    , portrait artist

K

  • Thomas Kean
    Thomas Kean
    Thomas Howard Kean is an American Republican Party politician, who served as the 48th Governor of New Jersey from 1982 to 1990. Kean is best known globally, however, for his 2002 appointment as Chairman of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, widely known as the...

    , former New Jersey
    New Jersey
    New Jersey is a state in the Northeastern and Middle Atlantic regions of the United States. , its population was 8,791,894. It is bordered on the north and east by the state of New York, on the southeast and south by the Atlantic Ocean, on the west by Pennsylvania and on the southwest by Delaware...

     governor; former chairman of the 9/11 Commission
    9/11 Commission
    The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, also known as the 9/11 Commission, was set up on November 27, 2002, "to prepare a full and complete account of the circumstances surrounding the September 11, 2001 attacks", including preparedness for and the immediate response to...

    ; former president of Drew University
    Drew University
    Drew University is a private university located in Madison, New Jersey.Originally established as the Drew Theological Seminary in 1867, the university later expanded to include an undergraduate liberal arts college in 1928 and commenced a program of graduate studies in 1955...

  • Robert Winthrop Kean, U.S. representative from New Jersey from 1938–1959
  • John Marshall Kernochan
    John Marshall Kernochan
    John Marshall Kernochan was a law professor, composer and music publisher who founded Columbia Law School's Kernochan Center for Law, Media and the Arts...

    , IPR pioneer and founder of Columbia Law School's Kernochan Center for Law, Media, and the Arts
  • Suzanne P. King, US Olympic cross country skier, 1994 and 1998 Olympic games
  • William A. Knowlton
    William A. Knowlton
    General William Allen Knowlton was a United States Army four star general, and a former Superintendent of the United States Military Academy...

    , four star general, former superintendent of West Point

L

  • Storm Large
    Storm Large
    Storm Large is a singer best known as a contestant on the CBS reality television show Rock Star: Supernova.-Personal life:...

    , musician. Her father Henry spent 45 years teaching history and coaching football and baseball before his retirement in 2010.
  • Frederick Lippitt
    Frederick Lippitt
    Frederick Lippitt was an American businessman. He was the scion of a distinguished Rhode Island colonial family, the son of United States Senator Henry F. Lippitt and Lucy Hayes Herron Lippitt. He was the grandson of Governor Henry Lippitt and the nephew of Governor Charles Warren Lippitt. First...

    , Rhode Island philanthropist and major benefactor of Brown University
  • Henry Demarest Lloyd
    Henry Demarest Lloyd
    Henry Demarest Lloyd was a 19th-century American progressive political activist and a forerunner to the later muckraking journalist. He is best remembered for his exposés of the Standard Oil Company, which was written before Ida M...

    , 19th century muck-raking reporter; "the father of investigative journalism"
  • Christian Lorentzen, editor & critic
  • Robert Lowell
    Robert Lowell
    Robert Traill Spence Lowell IV was an American poet, considered the founder of the confessional poetry movement. He was appointed the sixth Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress where he served from 1947 until 1948...

    , poet

M

  • Samuel Mather
    Samuel Mather
    Samuel Mather was born in Cleveland, Ohio and for many years was that city's richest citizen and a major philanthropist, particularly favoring Kenyon College. In 1847 his father had founded the Cleveland Iron Mining Company, and Mather was destined to follow him in the management of this company....

    , Ohio industrialist, philanthropist, and benefactor of Kenyon College
  • Story Musgrave
    Story Musgrave
    Franklin Story Musgrave is an American physician and a retired NASA astronaut. He is currently a public speaker and consultant to both Disney's Imagineering group and Applied Minds in California.-Personal life:...

    , astronaut
  • Peter Melcher, chemist

N

  • Dmitri Nabokov
    Dmitri Nabokov
    Dmitri Vladimirovich Nabokov is an American opera singer and translator. He is the only child of writer Vladimir Nabokov and his wife Vera Nabokov, and is currently executor of his father's literary estate.-Background:...

    , son and translator of Valdimir Nabokov
  • Jordon Nardino
    Jordon Nardino
    Jordon Nardino is a television screenwriter. He has worked on several television series, most notably ABC's Desperate Housewives. He has also worked on Gilmore Girls, Threat Matrix, and, more recently, 10 Things I Hate About You. He graduated from St. Mark's School in 1996 and Georgetown...

    , television writer
  • Eugene Nickerson
    Eugene Nickerson
    Eugene Hoffman Nickerson was the Democratic county executive of Nassau County, New York from 1962 until 1970. Nickerson was the only Democrat to be elected county executive in Nassau County until 2001...

    , federal judge and Nassau County, New York
    Nassau County, New York
    Nassau County is a suburban county on Long Island, east of New York City in the U.S. state of New York, within the New York Metropolitan Area. As of the 2010 census, the population was 1,339,532...

     politician

P

  • Robert William Packwood, Senator from Oregon 1969-1999
  • Frank Parker, painter and confidante of poet Robert Lowell
  • G. Willing "Wing" Pepper, Philadelphia businessman and philanthropist
  • Lars Perkins, creator of Picasa
    Picasa
    Picasa is an image organizer and image viewer for organizing and editing digital photos, plus an integrated photo-sharing website, originally created by Idealab in 2002 and owned by Google since 2004. "Picasa" is a blend of the name of Spanish painter Pablo Picasso, the phrase mi casa for "my...

     photo software
  • Sheffield Phelps
    Sheffield Phelps
    Sheffield Phelps was American businessperson, and a prominent figure in the art community. He was the scion of an old New England family who moved to Washington state and rose to become president of Seafirst Mortgage company, the Seattle Opera Board, and the Pacific Northwest Ballet...

    , Seattle philanthropist and arts patron
  • Joseph Pulitzer III, American publisher
  • Joseph Pulitzer IV, American publisher
  • Ralph Pulitzer
    Ralph Pulitzer
    Influential publisher and socialite Ralph Pulitzer was the son of newspaper magnate Joseph Pulitzer and upon Pulitzer's death acquired control of the New York World, an influential American newspaper...

    , American publisher
  • George Putnam III
    George Putnam III
    George Putnam III is editor and founder of The Turnaround Letter, a newsletter published by New Generation Research, Inc. which deals with investment opportunities related to distressed securities, bankruptcies and turnarounds. He is also president of New Generation Advisers, Inc., which manages a...

     '69, 1990 USA Today's investor of the year; trustee for The Putnam Companies

R

  • Walter Robb, IV '71, President of Whole Foods Market
    Whole Foods Market
    Whole Foods Market is a foods supermarket chain based in Austin, Texas which emphasizes "natural and organic products." The company has been ranked among the most socially responsible businesses and placed third on the U.S...

  • Stuart W. Rockwell, former U.S. Ambassador to Morocco
  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt III, economist
  • George Emlen Roosevelt
    George Emlen Roosevelt
    George Emlen Roosevelt a banker and philanthropist, was a first cousin once-removed of U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt and one of the most prominent railroad financiers of his day, involved in no fewer than 14 railroad reorganizations...

    , financier and philanthropist
  • Philip Roosevelt
    Philip Roosevelt (investment counselor)
    Philip James Roosevelt was a cousin of President Theodore Roosevelt, a Roosevelt family historian, and an investment counselor.Roosevelt attended St...

    , banker
  • William Donner Roosevelt
    William Donner Roosevelt
    William Donner Roosevelt , a grandson of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt and the son of Elliott Roosevelt, was a prominent investment banker and philanthropist. His maternal grandfather was William Donner, a wealthy American businessman...

    , investment banker and philanthropist
  • Emily Rutherfurd
    Emily Rutherfurd
    Emily Rutherfurd is an American actress. She is best known for her role as Christine "New Christine" Hunter on The New Adventures of Old Christine.-Personal life:...

    , television actress

S

  • Peter Saccio, Shakespeare scholar and author, educator
  • Stephen "Laddie" Sanford, international poloist
  • John Sargent
    John Turner Sargent
    John Turner Sargent, Sr. was president and CEO of the Doubleday and Company publishing house from 1963 to 1978, taking over from the previous president, Douglas Black....

    , former president and CEO of Doubleday and Company publisher
  • Eugene Lytton Scott, American tennis player; member of International Tennis Hall of Fame
    International Tennis Hall of Fame
    The International Tennis Hall of Fame is located in Newport, Rhode Island, United States. The hall of fame and honors players and contributors to the sport of tennis and includes a museum, grass tennis courts, an indoor tennis facility, and a court tennis facility.-History:The hall of fame and...

    , founder of the magazine Tennis Week
    Tennis Week
    Tennis Week was an American sports magazine owned by media conglomerate IMG covering the world of tennis.-History:Founded in 1974 by Eugene L. Scott, a former US Davis Cup player who was ranked within the world top 15....

  • John Sculley
    John Sculley
    John Sculley is an American businessman. Sculley was vice-president and president of PepsiCo , until he became CEO of Apple on April 8, 1983, a position he held until leaving in 1993...

    , former president of PepsiCo
    PepsiCo
    PepsiCo Inc. is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Purchase, New York, United States, with interests in the manufacturing, marketing and distribution of grain-based snack foods, beverages, and other products. PepsiCo was formed in 1965 with the merger of the Pepsi-Cola Company...

     and former CEO of Apple Computer
    Apple Computer
    Apple Inc. is an American multinational corporation that designs and markets consumer electronics, computer software, and personal computers. The company's best-known hardware products include the Macintosh line of computers, the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad...

  • John Simpkins
    John Simpkins
    John Simpkins was a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts.Born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, Simpkins attended the public schools of Yarmouth and St. Mark's School, Southboro, Massachusetts....

    , Representative from Massachusetts, 1895–1898

T

  • Robert H. Thayer
    Robert H. Thayer
    Robert Helyer Thayer was an American lawyer, naval officer and diplomat.-Early life:Thayer was born in Southborough, Massachusetts, the son of Rev. William Greenough Thayer , headmaster of St. Mark's School from 1894–1930, and Violet Otis Thayer . He attended St...

    , New York lawyer, diplomat, and intelligence officer
  • Sigourney Thayer
    Sigourney Thayer
    Sigourney Thayer was an American theatrical producer, World War I aviator, and poet.Thayer was born in Southborough, Massachusetts, the son of Rev. William Greenough Thayer, headmaster of St. Mark's School from 1894–1930, and Violet Otis. He was the brother of Robert H...

    , American theatrical producer, World War I aviator and poet
  • Herbert Sears Tuckerman, former Massachusetts state representative and senator
  • Harrison Tweed
    Harrison Tweed
    Harrison Tweed, , was a New York City lawyer and civic leader.-Life and career:Tweed was born in New York City on October 18, 1885. He was the son of Charles Harrison Tweed, the general counsel for the Central Pacific Railroad, Chesapeake and Ohio and other affiliated railroad corporations, and...

    , New York lawyer and bar association officer

V

  • Harold Stirling Vanderbilt
    Harold Stirling Vanderbilt
    Harold Stirling Vanderbilt was an American railroad executive, a champion yachtsman, a champion bridge player and a member of the Vanderbilt family.-Background:...

    , railroad executive, champion yachtsman and champion bridge player

  • William Kissam Vanderbilt II
    William Kissam Vanderbilt II
    William Kissam Vanderbilt II was a motor racing enthusiast and yachtsman and a member of the prominent United States Vanderbilt family.-Biography:...

    , railroad executive, industrialist, yachtsman, Fisher Island founder

W

  • James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr, New York senator from 1915–1927
  • O.Z. Whitehead
    O.Z. Whitehead
    Oothout Zabriskie Whitehead was born in New York City and attended Harvard University. Called "O.Z." or "Zebby", he was a stage star and a prominent character actor who also authored several volumes of biographical sketches of early members of the Bahá'í Faith especially in the West after he...

    , well-known character actor
  • Karl Wiedergott
    Karl Wiedergott
    Karl Wiedergott, born Karl Aloysious Treaton is a German actor. He is noted for his voice work on the long-running Fox sitcom The Simpsons since 1998, voicing background characters and some celebrities such as John Travolta and Bill Clinton...

    , actor, best known for doing voices in the American television show The Simpsons
    The Simpsons
    The Simpsons is an American animated sitcom created by Matt Groening for the Fox Broadcasting Company. The series is a satirical parody of a middle class American lifestyle epitomized by its family of the same name, which consists of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie...

    . His father Fritz is an athletic coach at the school
  • Sean Wilsey
    Sean Wilsey
    Sean Wilsey is the author of the memoir Oh the Glory of It All, which was published by Penguin in 2005. He is the son of Al Wilsey, a San Francisco businessman, and Pat Montandon, a socialite and peace activist, and the stepson of socialite and philanthropist Dede Wilsey...

    , (did not graduate) memoirist
  • Robert Winthrop, conservationist pioneer & former president of Ducks Unlimited
    Ducks Unlimited
    Ducks Unlimited is an international non-profit organization dedicated to the conservation of wetlands and associated upland habitats for waterfowl, other wildlife, and people. It currently has approximately 780,000 members, mostly in the United States and Canada.-Introduction:Ducks Unlimited was...

  • Chalmers B. Wood, senior Foreign Service Officer
    Foreign Service Officer
    A Foreign Service Officer is a commissioned member of the United States Foreign Service. As diplomats, Foreign Service Officers formulate and implement the foreign policy of the United States. FSOs spend most of their careers overseas as members of U.S. embassies, consulates, and other diplomatic...

     and adviser to South Vietnamese government

Y

  • Scott Young, National Hockey League player, St. Louis Blues
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK