List of Rhodes Scholars
Appearance
Below is a list of Rhodes Scholars covering notable people who are also Rhodes Scholarship recipients, sorted by year and surname. See also: Category:Rhodes scholars
Key to the columns in the main table:
Column label | Description of Column contents |
---|---|
Name | The name of the scholarship recipient, including link to their Wikipedia page. (As this is a list of notable people, all are eligible for a Wikipedia page.) |
University | The University where the eligible studies were performed. Note that under the terms of Rhodes' will, there are only 14 regions which nominate candidates - see Rhodes Scholarship#Allocations. |
Oxford College | The Oxford College where the studies supported by the scholarship were performed. |
Year | The year in which the scholarship was awarded. |
Notability | A brief summary (max. 2 lines) of the recipient's notability - detailed information appears on the recipient's Wikipedia page. |
Name |
University |
Oxford College |
Year |
Notability |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Behan | Melbourne | Hertford | 1904 | Lawyer and academic (University and Trinity Colleges)[1] |
Norman Jolly | Adelaide | Balliol | 1904 | Forester who played First-class cricket for Worcestershire[2] |
John J. Tigert | Vanderbilt | Pembroke | 1904 | U.S. Commissioner of Education (1921–1928), President of the University of Florida (1928–1947)[3] |
Philip Robertson | Victoria (NZ) | Trinity | 1905 | New Zealand chemist, university professor and writer[4] |
Roy Robinson | Adelaide | Magdalen | 1905 | The first Baron Robinson, regarded as the chief architect of state forestry in Great Britain[5] |
Carl Brinkmann | [6] | Queen's | 1904 | German sociologist and economist[7] |
Warren Ault | Baker | Jesus | 1907 | Historian, who taught at Boston University from 1913 to 1957, becoming Huntington Professor of History[8] |
Clarence H. Haring | Harvard | New College | 1907 | American historian |
Alain LeRoy Locke | Harvard | Hertford | 1907 | Philosopher, writer, educator and Harlem Renaissance patron[9] |
Neal Macrossan | Queensland[6] | Magdalen | 1907 | Chief Justice of Queensland 1946–1955[10] |
Frank E. Holman | Utah | Exeter | 1908 | President of the American Bar Association (1948)[11] |
Henry Fry | Adelaide | Balliol | 1909 | Physician and anthropologist[12] |
Albrecht Graf von Bernstorff | Germany[6] | Trinity | 1909 | German diplomat, executed for conspiracy against Hitler in 1945 |
Marius Barbeau | Laval | Oriel | 1910 | Canadian ethnographer and folklorist[13] |
Elmer Davis | Franklin College | Queen's[14] | 1910 | American newsman, Director of the U.S. Office of War Information during World War II[15] |
Ralph Hartley | Utah | St John's | 1910 | Inventor of the Hartley oscillator, Mathematician, and winner of the IRE Medal of Honor (1946)[16] |
Jan Hofmeyr | Cape Town | Balliol | 1910 | Academic, public administrator, and South African liberal politician |
Earnest Hooton | Lawrence | University | 1910 | American physical anthropologist |
Edwin Hubble | Chicago | Queen's | 1910 | American astronomer |
John Ransom | Vanderbilt | Christ Church | 1910 | Poet |
Frank Aydelotte | Indiana | Brasenose | 1911 | President of Swarthmore College (1921–1940) |
Cecil Madigan | Adelaide | Magdalen | 1911 | Explorer and geologist[17] |
Edmund Herring | Melbourne | New College | 1912 | Australian Army general, barrister, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria, Lieutenant governor of Victoria[18] |
Frido von Senger | [6] | St John's | 1912 | German General in WWII |
Brand Blanshard | Michigan | Merton | 1913 | Philosopher |
Henry Brose | Adelaide | Christ Church | 1913 | Physicist, academic, pathologist, biochemist[19] |
Charles R. Clason | Bates College | Christ Church | 1914 | U.S. Congressman (Massachusetts) (1937–1949) |
Wilfrid Kent Hughes | [6] | Christ Church | 1914 | Australian soldier, Olympian and Olympic Games organiser, author, and federal and state government minister[20] |
Norman Manley | Jamaica | Jesus | 1914 | Chief Minister of Jamaica 1955–1959, Premier of Jamaica 1959–1962 |
Wilder Penfield | Princeton | Merton | 1914 | Canadian neurosurgeon |
Fred Paterson | Queensland | Merton | 1918 | The only Australian Communist politician ever to win an election[21] |
John Monk Saunders | Washington[6] | Magdalen | 1918 | Screenwriter of Wings and The Dawn Patrol |
Roland Michener | Alberta | Hertford | 1919 | Governor General of Canada (1967–1974), lawyer, politician |
John Marshall Harlan II | Princeton | Balliol | 1920 | Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1955–1971) |
Howard Florey | Adelaide | Magdalen | 1921 | Australian pharmacologist, Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1945 (for penicillin)[22] |
Keith Hancock | Melbourne | Balliol | 1921 | Historian, academic, biographer |
William Stevenson | Princeton | Balliol | 1922 | American Olympic gold medalist in 1924 (Paris), President of Oberlin College (1946–1961), U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines (1961–1965) |
Leonard Huxley | Tasmania | New College | 1923 | Australian physicist |
Arthur Porritt | Otago | Magdalen | 1923 | New Zealand physician, military surgeon, statesman, athlete, Governor-General of New Zealand (1967–1972) |
Hervey M. Cleckley | Georgia | University | 1924 | Psychiatrist, pioneer in the field of psychopathy, co-author of The Three Faces of Eve |
John Niemeyer Findlay | Pretoria | Balliol | 1924 | Philosopher, Gifford lecturer. Meinong, Hegel, Husserl and Wittgenstein scholar |
John Eccles | Melbourne | Magdalen | 1925 | Australian scientist (neurophysiologist), Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1963, for his work on the synapse |
J. William Fulbright | Arkansas | Pembroke | 1925 | U.S. Senator for Arkansas (1945–1974), originator of the Fulbright Fellowship program |
William Vaughn | Vanderbilt University | Christ Church College | 1925 | Chairman and CEO of Eastman Kodak |
Robert J. Van de Graaff | Alabama | Queen's | 1925 | Physicist, Inventor, Academic (M.I.T. & Princeton), Inventor of the eponymous Van de Graaff generator |
George Paton | Melbourne | Magdalen | 1926 | Vice Chancellor University of Melbourne (1951–1968) |
Wilfrid Kalaugher | Victoria (NZ) | Balliol | 1927 | New Zealand athlete, scholar and teacher |
Holbrook Mann MacNeille | Swarthmore | Balliol | 1928 | Mathematician, Academic, Scientific Director Office of Scientific Research and Development |
John Platts-Mills | Victoria (NZ) | Balliol | 1928 | New Zealand Barrister, QC, British Labour Party politician |
Robert Penn Warren | Vanderbilt | New College | 1928 | American poet and critic |
Cleanth Brooks | Vanderbilt & Tulane | Exeter | 1929 | American literary critic |
George Stanley | Alberta | Keble | 1929 | Canadian historian, designer of Canadian flag, Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick |
Charles Herbert Little | Toronto | Brasenose | 1930 | Director of Canadian Naval Intelligence during World War II |
"Fritz" Schumacher | Bonn and Berlin[6] | New College | 1930 | Economist, statistician, author, social theorist, public speaker |
Carl Albert | Oklahoma | St Peter's | 1931 | Speaker of U.S. House of Representatives (1971–1977), U.S. Congressman (Oklahoma), 1947–1977 |
Bram Fischer | Bloemfontein | New College | 1931 | Anti-apartheid activist and lawyer |
Ted Jolliffe | Toronto | Christ Church | 1931 | Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario (1943–1945, 1948–1951) |
Jack Lovelock | Otago | Exeter | 1931 | 1500 metre Olympic Gold medallist in 1936 Berlin Olympics |
Dean Rusk | Davidson | St John's | 1931 | U.S. Secretary of State, 1961–1969 |
Adam von Trott zu Solz | Göttingen | Balliol | 1931 | German diplomat and anti-Nazi patriot, executed in 1944 |
James Munro Bertram | Auckland | New College | 1932 | New Zealand journalist, writer, relief worker, prisoner of war and university professor |
Geoffrey Cox | Otago | Oriel | 1932 | New Zealand newspaper and television journalist |
David Lewis | McGill | Lincoln | 1932 | Member of parliament and leader of the New Democratic Party of Canada (1971–1975) |
W. L. Morton | Manitoba | St John's | 1932 | Canadian historian |
Ivan A. Getting | M.I.T. | Merton | 1933 | American weapons scientist and co-inventor of GPS technology |
Daniel Boorstin | Harvard | Balliol | 1934 | U.S. Librarian of Congress (1975–1987) |
Max Gluckman | Transvaal[6] | Exeter | 1934 | South African-British-Israeli social anthropologist |
Wilbur Jackett | Saskatchewan | Queen's | 1934 | Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Canada (1971–1979) |
George C. McGhee | SMU | Queen's | 1934 | U.S. Ambassador to Turkey (1952–1953) and to Germany (1963–1968) |
John Templeton | Yale | Balliol | 1934 | Businessman and founder of Templeton College, Oxford |
Arnold Smith | Ontario[6] | Christ Church | 1935 | First Secretary-General of the Commonwealth |
Walter H. Stockmayer | M.I.T. | Jesus | 1935 | American polymer chemist |
Mervyn Austin | Melbourne | Christ Church | 1936 | Australian Headmaster (Newington College) and Professor of Classics and Ancient History (UWA) |
Gordon A. Craig | Princeton | Balliol | 1936 | American historian and OSS veteran |
Dan Davin | Otago | Balliol | 1936 | New Zealand novelist and head of Oxford University Press |
George Ignatieff | University of Toronto | Trinity | 1936 | Russian born Canadian diplomat, President of the UN Security Council (1968–69) |
Philip Mayer Kaiser | Wisconsin | Balliol | 1936 | U.S. Ambassador to Mauritania (1961–1964), Hungary (1977–1980), and Austria (1980–1981), ASL for International Affairs (1949–1953), Special Assistant to Governor Averell Harriman (1955–1959) |
John B. Oakes | Princeton | Queen's | 1936 | New York Times editor of the editorial page, 1961–1976 |
Walt Whitman Rostow | Yale | Balliol | 1936 | Special Assistant for National Security Affairs (1966–1969), Deputy Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, 1961 |
Richard Luyt | Cape Town | Trinity | 1937 | Soldier, statesman and principal and vice-chancellor of the University of Cape Town |
Howard K. Smith | Tulane | Merton | 1937 | Broadcast journalist |
Byron White | Colorado | Hertford | 1938 | Football player, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, 1962–1993 |
Dominic Mintoff | Malta[23] | Hertford | 1939 | Prime Minister of Malta, 1955-1957 & 1971-1984 |
Jack Davis | British Columbia | St. John's | 1939 | Canadian Minister of the Environment (1968–1974), B.C. Minister of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources (1986–1991) |
Zelman Cowen | Melbourne | New College | 1941 | Australian jurist and academic, Governor General of Australia (1977–1982) |
John Ridley | Canterbury | University | 1946 | New Zealand civil engineer and Member of Parliament |
Paul J. Bohannan | Arizona | Queen's | 1947 | American social anthropologist |
Alastair Gillespie | McGill | Queen's | 1947 | Canadian politician, cabinet minister |
James Hester | Princeton | Pembroke | 1947 | First Rector of the United Nations University, President of New York University |
Nicholas Katzenbach | Princeton | Balliol | 1947 | U.S. Attorney General (1965–1966), U.S. Under-Secretary of State (1966–1969) |
Robert Q. Marston | Virginia Military Institute | 1947 | Director, National Institutes of Health (1968–1973), President of University of Florida (1974–1984)[24] | |
Bernard W. Rogers | U.S. Military Academy | University | 1947 | American general, Supreme Allied Commander, NATO |
William Jay Smith | Washington University in St. Louis | [25] | 1947 | United States Poet Laureate (1968–1970) |
Stansfield Turner | U.S. Naval Academy | Exeter | 1947 | American admiral, Director of Central Intelligence (1977–1981) |
Guy Davenport | Duke | Merton | 1948 | American writer and man of letters |
Renfrey Potts | Adelaide | Queen's | 1948 | Applied mathematician, defined the Potts model |
Eric Prabhakar | India[6] | Christ Church | 1948 | Indian representative in the 1948 Olympic Games Men's 100 metres.[26] |
Robert Burchfield | Victoria (NZ) | Magdalen | 1949 | New Zealand lexicographer, editor of the Oxford English Dictionary |
Peter Durack | Western Australia | Lincoln | 1949 | Australian politician, Commonwealth Attorney General, author |
John Turner | British Columbia | Magdalen | 1949 | Liberal Party of Canada leader and Prime Minister of Canada, 1984 |
James H. Billington | Princeton | Balliol | 1950 | Academic, Historian, Librarian of U.S. Congress, 1987- |
John Brademas | Harvard | Brasenose | 1950 | U.S. Congressman (Indiana) 1959-1981, President of New York University 1981-1992 |
Tanjore R. Anantharaman | India[6] | Trinity | 1951 | Indian metallurgist |
Thomas A. Bartlett | Oregon[6] | University | 1951 | President, American University in Cairo, 1963–1969, Interim President 2002-2003; Chancellor University of Alabama System, 1981–1989; Chancellor State University of New York, 1994–1996 |
Richard N. Gardner | Harvard and Yale | Balliol | 1951 | U.S. Ambassador to Italy (1977–1981) and Spain (1993–1997), Academic |
Stuart Hall | Jamaica[6] | Merton | 1951 | British cultural theorist |
A. Walton Litz | Princeton | Merton | 1951 | Professor of English Literature at Princeton (1956–1993), literary historian and critic, author, editor |
James Gobbo | Melbourne | Magdalen | 1952 | Victorian Supreme Court Judge and Governor of Victoria |
John Searle | Wisconsin[6] | Christ Church | 1952 | American philosopher |
Charles Taylor | McGill | Balliol | 1952 | Philosopher. Winner of the Kyoto and Templeton prizes |
Hugh Templeton | Otago | Balliol | 1952 | New Zealand diplomat, politician and member of parliament |
Guido Calabresi | Yale | Magdalen | 1953 | American legal academic, Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, Professor and Dean at Yale Law School |
Ronald Dworkin | Harvard | Magdalen | 1953 | American legal philosopher, Academic |
Edward de Bono | Malta[23] | Christ Church | 1953 | Maltese writer; psychologist; author |
Julian Ogilvie Thompson | Diocesan College | Worcester | 1953 | South African Businessman, former chairman of De Beers and Anglo American |
Frank Wells | Pomona College | St. John's | 1953 | President of Warner Brothers and The Walt Disney Company |
Bob Hawke | Western Australia | University | 1953 | World record for the fastest consumption a yard glass of beer, President ACTU 1969-1979, Prime Minister of Australia 1983-1991 |
Laurie Ackermann | Cape Province[6] | Worcester | 1954 | Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa |
Leonard Hoffmann | Cape Town | Queen's | 1954 | UK Lord of Appeal in Ordinary |
Norman Cantor | Manitoba and Princeton | Oriel | 1954 | Canadian historian of the Middle Ages |
Richard Lugar | Denison | Pembroke | 1954 | U.S. Senator for Indiana, 1977- |
Paul Sarbanes | Princeton | Balliol | 1954 | U.S. Senator for Maryland, 1977–2007 |
Robert Paxton | Washington & Lee | Merton | 1954 | Historian, academic |
Ranjit Roy Chaudhury | India[6] | Magdalen | 1955 | Medical scientist |
John H. Morrison | New Mexico | University | 1955 | Senior partner, Kirkland & Ellis, and President of the Association of American Rhodes Scholars |
Reynolds Price | Duke | Merton | 1955 | Poet and novelist |
Johan Steyn | Cape Province[6] | University | 1955 | UK Lord of Appeal in Ordinary |
Ian Wilson | Adelaide | Magdalen | 1955 | Solicitor, company director, former Australian politician, Minister for Home Affairs and Environment, Minister for Aboriginal Affairs |
Neal Blewett | Tasmania | Jesus | 1956 | Australian academic, professor of politics, politician, cabinet minister, UK High Commissioner, etc. |
Virendra Dayal | India[6] | University | 1956 | Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations |
Elliott H. Levitas | Emory | University | 1956 | U.S. Congressman (Georgia), 1975–1985 |
Neil Leon Rudenstine | Princeton | New College | 1956 | Educator, President of Harvard University, 1991–2001 |
Arthur Kroeger | Alberta | Pembroke | 1956 | Canadian civil servant and diplomat, Chancellor of Carleton University, 1993–2002 |
Ranjit Bhatia | India[6] | Jesus | 1957 | Indian Olympic athlete |
Erich S. Gruen | Columbia | Merton | 1957 | Austrian-American classical scholar |
Rex Nettleford | Jamaica[6] | Oriel | 1957 | Vice-Chancellor of the University of the West Indies, author, dance director |
Robert I. Rotberg | Princeton | University | 1957 | American political scientist |
Aaron Sloman | Cape Town | Balliol | 1957 | Philosopher, AI researcher, Cognitive Scientist. |
Michael Fried | Princeton | Merton | 1958 | American art historian and critic |
Kris Kristofferson | Pomona | Merton | 1958 | American actor and musician |
Joseph Nye, Jr. | Princeton | Exeter | 1958 | American political scientist; Chairman National Intelligence Council (1993–1994); ASD for International Security Affairs (1994–1995); Dean, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard |
Jonathan Kozol | Harvard | Magdalen | 1958 | American writer and social activist |
Manmohan Malhoutra | Delhi | Balliol | 1958 | Assistant Secretary-General of the Commonwealth |
Richard Deane Terrell | Adelaide | Magdalen | 1959 | Econometrician and Vigneron, Vice-Chancellor, Australian National University, 1994–2000, Chairman, IELTS (Aust.) Pty Ltd 2002-2007, Chairman AARNET Pty Ltd 2002-, Chairman General Sir John Monash Foundation Investment Committee 2003-, CEO Quarry Hill Wines 2000- |
Desmond Morton | Royal Military College of Canada | Keble | 1959 | Historian and author |
Peter M. Dawkins | U.S. Military Academy | Brasenose | 1959 | 1958 Heisman Trophy Winner, Brigadier General, US Army (Ret. 1983), Chairman and CEO of Diversified Distribution Services, Travelers Group |
Shahid Javed Burki | Government College | Christ Church | 1960 | Economist, Finance Minister of Pakistan |
Richard F. Celeste | Yale | Exeter | 1960 | Governor of Ohio (1983–1991), Director of the Peace Corps, U.S. Ambassador to India, President of Colorado College |
Girish Karnad | Karnatak | Lincoln and Magdalen | 1960 | Indian Kannada-language playwright, film actor and director, screenwriter |
Lester C. Thurow | Williams | Balliol | 1960 | American economist and author, professor of economics at MIT |
Paul B. Van Buren | South Dakota | University | 1960 | A principal attorney for Pacific Telesis Group during the breakup of the Bell System, former chairman of The University of South Dakota Foundation |
David Souter | Harvard | Magdalen | 1961 | Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, 1990–2009 |
Rex Adams | Duke | Merton | 1962 | Chairman of the Board of PBS, Dean of the Fuqua School of Business, Duke University |
David B. Frohnmayer | Harvard | Wadham | 1962 | President of the University of Oregon, 1994-; Attorney General of Oregon, 1980–1991 |
Bryan Gould | Auckland | Balliol | 1962 | New Zealand born British politician, academic, Vice-Chancellor University of Waikato |
David Hodgson | Sydney | University | 1962 | Australian judge |
Paul Bamberg | Harvard | Balliol | 1963 | Senior Lecturer of Mathematics and Physics at Harvard University, Co-founded Dragon Systems and headed the research department that created Dragon NaturallySpeaking |
David Boren | Yale | Balliol | 1963 | Governor of Oklahoma, 1975–1979); U.S. Senator for Oklahoma, 1979–1994; President of the University of Oklahoma |
Walter B. Slocombe | Princeton | Balliol | 1963 | U.S. Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, 1994–2001, Senior Advisor for National Defense for the CPA, Baghdad, 2003 |
John Edgar Wideman | Pennsylvania | New College | 1963 | American writer, two-time recipient of PEN/Faulkner award |
Marcel Massé | McGill | Unknown | 1963 | Canadian civil servant and politician. Clerk of the Privy Council, president of the Treasury Board and member of cabinet. |
David R. Woods | Rhodes University | University | 1963 | Vice-Chancellor of Rhodes University |
R. James Woolsey | Stanford | St John's | 1963 | Director of Central Intelligence, 1993–1995 |
Montek Singh Ahluwalia | St. Stephen's | Magdalen | 1964 | Indian economist, first independent evaluator of IMF, Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission of India |
Robin Boadway | Royal Military College of Canada | Exeter | 1964 | Canadian economist and author |
Shaukat Hameed | University of the Punjab | Balliol | 1964 | Rector, GIK Institute, Director General Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, Pride of Performance Recipient |
Dyson Heydon | Sydney | University | 1964 | High Court Judge of Australia |
Larry Pressler | South Dakota | St Edmund | 1964 | American politician, U.S. Senator for South Dakota, 1979–1997 |
Wasim Sajjad | Army Burn Hall College | Wadham | 1964 | Pakistani politician and lawyer, Interim President of Pakistan, Chairman of the Senate |
J. Gustave Speth | Yale | Balliol | 1964 | Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme, 1993–1999, Dean of School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale |
Bill Bradley | Princeton | Worcester | 1965 | American politician, NBA star, U.S. Senator for New Jersey, 1979–1997, and Democratic presidential candidate, 2000 |
Aftab Seth | India[6] | Christ Church | 1965 | Indian Ambassador to Japan |
Daryl Williams | Western Australia | Wadham | 1965 | Australian politician, Liberal Member of the House of Representatives, 1993–2004, Attorney-General of Australia 1996-2003 |
Wesley Clark | U.S. Military Academy | Magdalen | 1966 | United States Army general, Supreme Allied Commander, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, 1997–2000; Democratic presidential candidate, 2004 |
A. Michael Spence | Princeton | Magdalen | 1966 | Canadian economist, Nobel Prize in Economics for 2001 |
Thomas Frerking | Harvard | Trinity | 1966 | Abbot, Abbey of St. Mary and St. Louis |
David E. Kendall | Wabash | Worcester | 1966 | American lawyer, President Clinton's personal lawyer |
Terrence Malick | Harvard | Magdalen | 1966 | American film director of The Thin Red Line, Badlands, and The New World |
Thomas H. Allen | Bowdoin | Wadham | 1967 | American politician, U.S. Congressman (Maine), 1997–2009 |
John Doyle | Adelaide | Magdalen | 1967 | Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia, 1995- |
Deepak Nayyar | India[6] | Balliol | 1967 | Vice Chancellor of Delhi University |
Stephen A. Oxman | Princeton | New College | 1967 | U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European and Canadian Affairs, 1993–1994, President of the Board of Trustees of Princeton University, 2006–present.[27] |
Dennis C. Blair | U.S. Naval Academy | University | 1968 | Retired 4-star Admiral, current Director of National Intelligence, President of the Institute for Defense Analyses and former Commander in Chief of U.S. Pacific Command |
Colin Bundy | University of the Witwatersrand | Merton | 1968 | Vice Chancellor Witwatersrand (1997–2001); Principal SOAS (2001–06); Deputy Vice Chancellor London (2003–06); Warden Green College (2006–08); Principal Green Templeton College (2008-) |
Peter Cameron | Queensland | Balliol | 1968 | Mathematician, academic |
Peter Conrad | Tasmania[6] | New College | 1968 | Academic (English literature) |
Robert McCallum, Jr. | Yale | Christ Church | 1968 | American lawyer, U.S. Associate Attorney General, 2003- |
Rex Murphy | Memorial University | St Edmund | 1968 | Canadian commentator |
Robert Reich | Dartmouth | University | 1968 | American commentator and author, U.S. Secretary of Labor, 1993–1997 |
Boisfeuillet Jones, Jr. | Harvard | Exeter | 1968 | Publisher and CEO of The Washington Post |
Bill Clinton | Georgetown | University | 1968 | American politician, 42nd President of the United States, 1993–2001, Governor of Arkansas, 1979-1981 & 1983-1993 |
G. L. Peiris | Colombo | University | 1968 | Sri Lankan politician, 11th Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sri Lanka, 2010 - present[28] |
William A. Fletcher | Harvard | Merton | 1968 | Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit |
Chris Laidlaw | Otago | Merton | 1968 | New Zealand All Black, diplomat, MP, talk radio host, author, Human Rights Commissioner and Race Relations Conciliator |
Strobe Talbott | Yale | Magdalen | 1968 | American diplomat and journalist, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State (1994–2001), President of the Brookings Institution |
Ira Magaziner | Brown | Balliol | 1969 | White House Senior Aide, 1993–1999, originator of ICANN |
Selwyn Maister | Canterbury | Magdalen | 1969 | New Zealand Olympic field hockey player (1976) |
Bob Rae | Toronto | Balliol | 1969 | Canadian politician, former Premier of Ontario |
Danny Williams | Memorial University | Keble | 1969 | Lawyer and businessman, Canadian politician, Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador |
David Vernon Williams | Victoria (NZ) | Balliol | 1969 | New Zealand barrister, solicitor and academic |
James Fallows | Harvard | Queen's | 1970 | American writer (The Atlantic Monthly) |
Kenneth Hayne | Melbourne | Exeter | 1970 | Australian barrister, solicitor and judge: Supreme Court of Victoria (1992–95); Court of Appeals division of the Supreme Court of Victoria (1995–97); Puisne Justice of the High Court of Australia (1997-) |
Geoffrey Robertson | Sydney | University | 1970 | Barrister and international human rights activist |
Richard H. Trainor | Brown and Princeton | Merton | 1970 | Principal of King's College London |
Franklin Raines | Harvard | Magdalen | 1971 | Chairman and CEO of Fannie Mae, 1999–2004; Director of the Office of Management and Budget, 1996–1998 |
Kurt Schmoke | Yale | Balliol | 1971 | Mayor of Baltimore, 1987–1999; Dean of Howard University School of Law |
James R. Atlas | Illinois[6] | New College | 1971 | American writer (The New Yorker) |
Geoff Gallop | Western Australia | St John's | 1972 | Academic, Premier of Western Australia, 2001–2006 |
Michael Kinsley | Harvard | Magdalen | 1972 | American journalist (Los Angeles Times), founder of Slate magazine, editor of The New Republic |
Don Siegelman | Georgetown and University of Alabama | TBD | 1972 | Governor of Alabama |
Tom Birmingham | Harvard | Exeter | 1972 | President of the Massachusetts Senate, Candidate for Democratic nomination for Governor of Massachusetts, 2002 |
Kim Beazley | Western Australia | Balliol | 1973 | Australian politician, Former Deputy Prime Minister of Australia and Leader of the Opposition |
Paul Blustein | Wisconsin[6] | Merton | 1973 | American author and journalist (The Washington Post) |
E. J. Dionne | Harvard | Balliol | 1973 | American journalist and Washington Post columnist |
Richard N. Haass | Oberlin | Wadham & St. Anthony's | 1973 | President of the Council on Foreign Relations, Director of the Policy Planning Staff at the U.S. Department of State, 2001–2003 |
Frank Klotz | U.S. Air Force Academy | Trinity | 1973 | U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General, first Commander Air Force Global Strike Command |
Alex Sceberras Trigona | Malta[23] | Oriel | 1973 | Foreign Minister of Malta 1981-1987 |
Rod Eddington | Western Australia | Lincoln | 1974 | Former CEO of British Airways, Director of News Corporation |
Charles Thomas McMillen | Maryland | University | 1974 | U.S. Olympian, NBA basketball player, U.S. Congressman (Maryland), 1987–1993 |
Walter Isaacson | Harvard | Pembroke | 1974 | Author, President of the Aspen Institute, Managing Editor of Time magazine (1995–2001), Chairman and CEO of CNN |
Elliot F. Gerson | Connecticut[6] | Magdalen | 1974 | American Secretary of the Rhodes Trust, Vice President of the Aspen Institute, Deputy Attorney General of Connecticut |
Edwin Cameron | Stellenbosch University | Keble | 1975 | Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, African National Congress lawyer and AIDS activist |
Mike Fitzpatrick | Western Australia | St. John's | 1975 | Australian businessman, sporting administrator and former Australian rules footballer |
Larry Sabato | Virginia and Princeton | Queen's | 1975 | American political scientist and director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics |
Russ Feingold | Wisconsin | Magdalen | 1975 | U.S. Senator for Wisconsin, 1993- |
Michael L'Estrange | Sydney | 1975 | Australian diplomat and senior public servant | |
Michael Sandel | Brandeis | Balliol | 1975 | American political philosopher and professor at Harvard University |
Mel Reynolds | Illinois | Lincoln | 1975 | U.S. Congressman (Illinois), 1993–1995 |
John Hood | Auckland | Worcester | 1976 | New Zealand businessman, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford 2004-2009 |
Clayton Christensen | BYU | Queens | 1977 | Harvard Business School Professor, author |
Randall Kennedy | Princeton | Balliol | 1977 | Harvard Law School Professor |
James Belich | Victoria (NZ) | Nuffield | 1978 | New Zealand revisionist historian |
Pat Haden | USC | University | 1978 | Won Rose Bowl MVP as quarterback at USC, played with the Los Angeles Rams, currently the Athletic Director at his Alma Mater- USC |
Jack Phillips | McGill[6] | Balliol | 1978 | American Political Advisor and Inventor |
Malcolm Turnbull | Sydney | Brasenose | 1978 | Australian lawyer, banker and politician. Former Minister for Environment and Water Resources. Former Leader of the Australian Liberal party. |
David Naylor | Toronto | Hertford | 1979 | Canadian medical researcher, President of the University of Toronto |
Nancy-Ann Min DeParle | Tennessee | Balliol | 1979 | Administrator of the U.S. Health Care Financing Administration, 1997–2000, director of White House Office of Health Reform, 2009- |
Stephen Gumley | Tasmania | St. Catherine's | 1979 | Chief Executive Officer of the Defence Materiel Organisation (Australia) |
Robert Maloney | Harvard | Magdalen | 1979 | Ophthalmologist, LASIK specialist, Extreme Makeover ophthalmologist |
Don Elder | Canterbury | Wolfson | 1980 | New Zealand engineer and businessman |
Clark Ervin | Harvard | St Catherine's | 1980 | Former Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security |
Elsdon Storey | Melbourne | Magdalen & Wolfson | 1980 | Australian neurologist |
Tony Abbott | Sydney | Queen's | 1981 | Australian politician, Former Minister of health and aging. Leader of Australian Liberal Party |
Nicholas D. Kristof | Harvard | Magdalen | 1981 | New York Times reporter and columnist, 2-time Pulitzer Prize winner |
Simon Upton | Auckland | Wolfson | 1981 | New Zealand politician and member of Parliament |
Benedict Kingsbury | Canterbury | Balliol | 1982 | New Zealand legal scholar, author and researcher, Professor at New York University |
Heather Wilson | U.S. Air Force Academy | Jesus | 1982 | U.S. Congresswoman (New Mexico), 1998- |
Christopher Eisgruber | Princeton | University | 1983 | Provost of Princeton University[29] |
David Frederick | Pittsburgh | 1983 | Successful Appellate Attorney who has argued over 21 cases before the United States Supreme Court | |
Bill Halter | Stanford | St John's | 1983 | Arkansas Lt. Governor |
Elizabeth Kiss | Davidson | Balliol | 1983 | President of Agnes Scott College |
David Vitter | Harvard | Magdalen | 1983 | U.S. Senator (Louisiana), 2005- |
Richard Flanagan | Tasmania | Worcester | 1984 | Australian author, winner of the 2002 Commonwealth Writers Prize |
Brian Greene | Harvard | Magdalen | 1984 | American physicist and string theorist |
Christopher Hedrick | Stanford | Magdalen | 1984 | Peace Corps/Senegal Country Director, former President and CEO of Intrepid Learning Solutions |
Robert Malley | Yale | Magdalen | 1984 | Director for Near East and South Asian Affairs, National Security Council, 1997–2001 |
George Stephanopoulos | Columbia | Balliol | 1984 | Moderator of ABC's This Week and communications director for Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign |
Roosevelt Thompson | Yale | St John's | 1984[30] | Community activist, Little Rock, Arkansas |
Peter Rathjen | Adelaide | New College | 1985 | Australian stem cell scientist, Deputy Vice-Chancellor(Research), University of Melbourne 2006- |
Ronald J. Tenpas | Michigan State[6] | Balliol | 1985 | Associate Deputy Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice, 2005- |
Naomi Wolf | Yale | New College | 1985 | American author and feminist social critic |
Bryan Horrigan | Queensland | University | 1986 | Australian researcher, consultant, commentator and professional speaker on specialised legal, business, and governmental topics |
Susan Rice | Stanford | New College | 1986 | U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, 1997–2001, and United States Ambassador to the United Nations, (2009–present) |
Graham Steele | Manitoba | St Edmund | 1986 | Minister of Finance of Nova Scotia (July 2009–Present), Member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly (2001–Present) |
Joseph M. Torsella | Pennsylvania | New College | 1986 | President and CEO of the National Constitution Center 2006- |
David Chalmers | Adelaide | Lincoln | 1987 | Australian philosopher of mind |
Jim Collins | Holy Cross | Balliol | 1987 | MacArthur "genius" bioengineer and inventor |
Atul Gawande | Stanford | Balliol | 1987 | Surgeon and New Yorker medical writer |
Sagarika Ghose-Sardesai | St. Stephen's College, Delhi | Magdalen and St. Antony's | 1987 | Indian journalist |
David Kirk | Otago | Worcester | 1987 | Captain of the New Zealand All Blacks who won the inaugural Rugby (Union) World Cup in 1987; CEO of Fairfax Media, 2005–2008 |
Jacob Weisberg | Yale | New College | 1987 | Journalist and editor of Slate magazine |
Ngaire Woods | Auckland | Balliol | 1987 | New Zealand-born British academic |
Richard Drayton | Harvard | Balliol | 1988 | Historian, Rhodes Professor of Imperial History |
Ceri Evans | Otago | Worcester | 1988 | New Zealand football (soccer) player, forensic psychiatrist |
Brad Carson | Baylor | Trinity | 1989 | U.S. Congressman (Oklahoma), 2001–2005 |
Arthur Mutambara | Zimbabwe | Merton | 1991 | Zimbabwean politician who became President of one faction of the Movement for Democratic Change in 2006 |
Cory Booker | Stanford | Queen's | 1992 | Mayor of Newark, New Jersey |
Noah Feldman | Harvard | Christ Church | 1992 | American author, Harvard University law professor, constitutional adviser to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, 2003–2005 |
Nikolas Gvosdev | Florida[6] | St Antony's | 1992 | Editor of The National Interest |
Piyush "Bobby" Jindal | Brown | New College | 1992 | Governor of (Louisiana) 2008-, U.S. Congressman (Louisiana), 2005–2007, U.S. Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services, 2001–2004, President of the University of Louisiana System, 1999–2001 |
Sanjeev Sanyal | Delhi | St John's | 1992 | Asian economist, banker and conservationist |
Peter Beinart | Yale | University | 1993 | Editor of The New Republic |
Eric Garcetti | Columbia | Queen's | 1993 | President of the Los Angeles City Council |
Randal Pinkett | Rutgers | Keble | 1994 | President and CEO of BCT Partners, and winner of The Apprentice 4 |
Rachel Maddow | Stanford | Lincoln | 1995 | Host of The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC |
Alexander Straub | Darmstadt and Cornell | St John's | 1996 | London-based German Entrepreneur and Financier |
Simon Chesterman | Melbourne[31] | Magdalen | 1997 | International law professor and author |
Michael Fullilove | Sydney and NSW | Balliol | 1997 | Australian author and foreign policy commentator |
Simon Hollingsworth | Tasmania[32] | Exeter | 1997 | Australian Olympic (1992, 1996) and Commonwealth Games (1990, 1994) athlete (400m hurdles) |
Annette Salmeen | UCLA | St John's | 1997 | 1996 American Olympic gold medalist in swimming |
Rachel Simmons | Vassar | Lincoln | 1998 | American author of Odd Girl Out: The Hidden Culture of Aggression in Girls (Harcourt, 2002) |
Ben Cannon | Washington University in St. Louis | Corpus Christi | 1999 | Oregon State Representative |
Marc Kielburger | Harvard | University | 1999 | Canadian humanitarian and activist, Free The Children |
Meghana Narayan | Bangalore | Oriel | 2000 | International Swimming Champion |
Fasi Zaka | Peshawar | Somerville | 2001 | Pakistani Political Columnist, Satirical TV Show Host, Radio Talkshow Host and Award Winning Advertiser |
Jonah Lehrer | Columbia | Wolfson | 2003 | Editor of Seed. Author of Proust Was a Neuroscientist and The Decisive Moment |
Jared Cohen | Stanford | St John's | 2004 | Youngest member of U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's Policy Planning staff |
Rosara Joseph | Canterbury | St John's | 2005 | New Zealand Commonwealth Games (2006) and Olympic (2008) cyclist |
Myron Rolle | Florida State | St Edmund Hall | 2008 | All-ACC defensive back for Florida State Seminoles; selected by the Tennessee Titans in the 6th round of the 2010 NFL Draft |
References
- ^ A. G. L. Shaw, Behan, Sir John Clifford Valentine (1881 - 1957), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 247-248. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
- ^ N. B. Lewis, Jolly, Norman William (1882 - 1954), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 9, Melbourne University Press, 1983, p. 504. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
- ^ John J. Tigert. Past Presidents, University of Florida. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
- ^ Brian R. Davis, 'Robertson, Philip Wilfred 1884-1969, Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, Volume Four (1921-1940), 1998, updated 22 June 2007. Retrieved 2010-03-20.
- ^ L. T. Carron, Robinson, Sir Roy Lister (Baron Robinson) (1883 - 1952), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 11, Melbourne University Press, 1988, p. 427. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac As yet, unable to determine which University.
- ^ Carl Brinkmann, Microsoft® Encarta®, archived at www.webcitation.org. Retrieved 2010-03-20.
- ^ "Warren O. Ault 1907–1989: A Jesus College Cententarian". JCR: 27. 1992/1993.
{{cite journal}}
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(help) - ^ Christopher Buck, 'Alain Locke: faith and philosophy', Kalimat Press, Los Angeles, 2005, pp.xiv,2,15-16,71,110. Retrieved 2010-03-20.
- ^ P. D. Connolly, Macrossan, Neal William (1889 - 1955), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 15, Melbourne University Press, 2000, pp 278-279. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ Holman, Frank E. (1886-1967), HistoryLink.org Essay 7723, retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ Philip Jones, Fry, Henry Kenneth (1886 - 1959), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 14, Melbourne University Press, 1996, pp 230-231. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ Marius Barbeau, The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2010-03-20.
- ^ Elmer Davis's time at Oxford was cut short when his father was taken ill and eventually died.
- ^ Elmer Davis, www.coutant.org
- ^ RVL Hartley, transmission expert, Obituary, News of the IEEE, 1970, p. 125
- ^ L. W. Parkin, Madigan, Cecil Thomas (1889 - 1947), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 10, Melbourne University Press, 1986, pp 374-376. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ Geoff Browne, 'Herring, Sir Edmund Francis (Ned) (1892-1982)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 17, Melbourne University Press, pp 520-523.
- ^ John Jenkin, Brose, Henry Herman Leopold Adolph (1890 - 1965), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 13, Melbourne University Press, 1993, pp 269-270. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ I. R. Hancock, Kent Hughes, Sir Wilfrid Selwyn (1895 - 1970), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 15, Melbourne University Press, 2000, pp 6-7. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ Diane Menghetti, Paterson, Frederick Woolnough (Fred) (1897 - 1977), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 15, Melbourne University Press, 2000, pp 574-576. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ Fenner, Frank (1996). "Florey, Howard Walter (Baron Florey) (1898-1968)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. vol. 14. Melbourne University Press. pp. 188–190.
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b c As of 2007, Malta and Singapore no longer nominate candidates for Rhodes scholarships. Different constituencies have been suspended or removed from the scholarship scheme for different reasons, according to the guidelines of the Will and the decisions of the Trustees.
- ^ University of Florida, Past Presidents, Robert Q. Marston (1974-1984. Retrieved 2009-07-15.
- ^ http://library.wustl.edu/units/spec/archives/facts/rhodes-scholars.html
- ^ Eric Prabhakar], 1948 Olympic Games
- ^ Chanakya Sethi, "Oxman '67 named trustees chair", The Daily Princetonion, May 26th, 2005, retrieved 2008-12-07.
- ^ http://www.asiantribune.com/news/2010/06/04/globalization-sri-lanka-issues-minister-peiris-versus-%E2%80%98-rest%E2%80%99
- ^ Christopher L. Eisgruber, Program in Law and Public Affairs, Princeton University, retrieved 2008-10-15.
- ^ Thompson was killed in an automobile accident before taking up residence at St John's.
- ^ http://www.unimelb.edu.au/unisec/calendar/honcausa/rhodes.html
- ^ "Annual Report 1997" (PDF). University of Tasmania. June 1998. Retrieved 26 August 2009.