List of St. John's University alumni
Appearance
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Notable alumni of St. John's University in New York City include, alphabetically:
- Peter Abbate, member of New York State Assembly
- Joseph P. Addabbo (1925–1986), US Representative from New York (1961–1986)
- Joseph Addabbo, Jr., New York State Senator and New York City Council member
- Haron Amin (born 1979), Afghan diplomat and spokesman for Northern Alliance after September 11 attacks
- Rich Aurilia (born 1971), Major League Baseball player
- James Baba, Ugandan diplomat, politician, and state minister
- Morton Bard, psychologist, trailblazer in crisis intervention, author of The Crime Victim's Book
- Erick Barkley, NBA player selected in first round of 2000 NBA Draft
- Frank Barsalona, music industry talent agent, non-performer inductee in Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
- Bruce R. Bent, inventor of first money market fund
- Leszek Balcerowicz, MBA (1974), architect of the Balcerowicz Plan, Deputy Prime Minister of Poland (1989-1991, 1997-2000), Finance Minister of Poland (1989-1991, 1997-2000), President of the National Bank of Poland (2001-2007), member of the Sejm (1997-2001)
- Walter Berry, NBA basketball player
- Anthony Joseph Bevilacqua, Cardinal and Archbishop of Philadelphia
- Albert H. Bosch, United States House of Representatives
- Harry Boykoff (1922–2001), NBA basketball player
- Keegan Bradley, professional golfer, winner of 2011 PGA Championship
- Adam Braz (born 1981), Canadian soccer player and Technical Director of the Montreal Impact of Major League Soccer
- Ron Brown, US Secretary of Commerce
- Danny Burawa (born 1988), Major League Baseball pitcher
- Gerald Calabrese, Mayor of Cliffside Park, New Jersey (1965-2015), NBA player with Syracuse Nationals (predecessor to Philadelphia 76ers)
- Gerald Cardinale, New Jersey State Senator
- James P. Campbell, President and CEO of General Electric Consumer and Industrial
- Hugh Carey, Governor of the State of New York and US Representative from Brooklyn
- Lou Carnesecca, Hall of Fame basketball coach, St. John's head coach for 24 seasons
- Gregory W. Carman, United States House of Representatives
- Tom Carr, Seattle City Attorney and Boulder City Attorney
- William J. Casey, Director of Central Intelligence Agency
- Ignatius Anthony Catanello (1938–2013), prelate of the Roman Catholic Church
- Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick, judge of New York State Court of Appeals
- Akis Cleanthous (1964-2011), Cypriot Minister of Education and Culture (2007-2008)[1]
- J. Cole, hip-hop recording artist and record producer
- William Colton, member of New York State Assembly
- John Corvino, professor of philosophy at Wayne State University
- Mario Cuomo, Governor of the State of New York, Lieutenant Governor, and Secretary of State
- Dan Donovan, United States House of Representatives, New York's 11th congressional district
- Rachel Daly, professional footballer for England women's national football team and the US' NWSL's Houston Dash
- Nickolas Davatzes, former President and CEO of A&E Network
- Mack David (1912–1993), lyricist and songwriter
- Mel Davis, professional basketball player
- Raymond J. Dearie, US District Judge, Eastern District of New York
- George Deukmejian, Governor of the State of California (1983-1990) and Attorney General (1979-1982)
- Tom J. Donohue, President and CEO of United States Chamber of Commerce
- Conrad B. Duberstein (1915–2005), Chief Judge of US Bankruptcy Court for Eastern District of New York
- George Dzundza, actor
- John Louis Esposito, historian and orientalist
- Clare Farragher (born 1941), member of New Jersey General Assembly (1988-2002)[2]
- Alexander A. Farrelly, Governor of U.S. Virgin Islands
- Paul J. Feiner, Supervisor of the Town of Greenburgh, New York
- Patricia Fili-Krushel, Chair of NBC Universal News Group, Executive V.P. of Administration of Time Warner, CEO of WebMD, President of ABC Television Network, and President of ABC Daytime
- Gardner Fox, comic book writer, creator of original Justice Society, The Flash; novelist
- Mike Francesa, radio personality, "The Sports Pope"
- John Franco, baseball player, captain for New York Mets
- Dan Frisa, United States House of Representatives
- Bill Gaudette, MLS professional soccer player
- Nelson George, author, columnist, filmmaker, music and culture critic, and journalist
- Jacob H. Gilbert (1920–1981), US Representative from New York between 1960 and 1971
- John Girgenti, New Jersey State Senator
- Hy Gotkin (1922–2004), basketball player
- Matt Groenwald, MLS professional soccer player
- Dan Halloran, New York City Council member
- Zendon Hamilton, professional basketball player
- Craig Hansen, MLB professional baseball player
- Maurice Harkless, NBA player for Portland Trail Blazers
- Darryl Hill, basketball player known as "Showtime Hill"
- Daryl Homer (born 1990), Olympic fencer
- George Hu, Taiwanese actor
- Charles Hynes, District Attorney of Kings County, Brooklyn
- Mark Jackson, NBA basketball player
- Harold M. Jacobs (1912–1995), Jewish and civic leader
- Mark Jacoby, Broadway actor
- Jaheim, R&B singer
- Shalrie Joseph, MLS professional soccer player
- Agim Kaba, actor, artist
- Alex Katz (born 1994), baseball player
- Melinda Katz, Queens Borough President
- Margaret M. Keane, Chief Executive Officer and President of Synchrony Financial
- Raymond W. Kelly, Commissioner of New York City Police Department
- D.J. Kennedy (born 1989), NBA basketball player
- John M. Kennedy, Jr., politician from Suffolk County, New York
- Brian Kenny, ESPN sportscaster
- Lawrence Korb, US Assistant Secretary of Defense (1981-1985)
- Boris Kostelanetz (1911–2006), tax lawyer
- John Kresse, NCAA men's basketball coach at College of Charleston
- Andrew Lanza, New York State Senator
- Henry J. Latham, United States House of Representatives
- Peter Le Jacq, a Maryknoll priest
- Raymond Lesniak, New Jersey State Senator
- Andrew Levane, NBA basketball player
- Stanley David Levison, lawyer, activist and advisor to Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
- Steve Levy, 7th County Executive of Suffolk County
- Mark LoMonaco, professional wrestler
- Patrick A. Malone, Chief Supervisory Officer of Garden State Securities Inc.
- Thomas J. Manton, US Congressman and Chair of Queens County Democratic Organization
- John J. Marchi (1921–2009), New York State Senator (1957–2007)
- John McCormac, Mayor of Woodbridge Township, New Jersey
- Darryl "D.M.C." McDaniels, co-founder of hip-hop group Run-D.M.C.
- Al McGuire, NCAA basketball coach and television commentator
- Ed McGuire, assistant general manager and Executive VP of Football Operations San Diego Chargers
- Frank McGuire, NCAA basketball coach at St. John's, North and South Carolina and NBA coach for Philadelphia Warriors
- Brian McNamee, MLB conditioning coach
- Stefani Miglioranzi, soccer player for Los Angeles Galaxy, played in England for Swindon Town
- Michael Montesano, member of New York State Assembly
- Chris Mullin, NBA player, Hall of Famer, head coach of St. John's Red Storm
- Paul O'Dwyer, President of the New York City Council (1974-1977) [citation needed]
- Diarmuid F. O'Scannlain, Judge, US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
- Joe Panik, professional baseball player for San Francisco Giants
- Basil Paterson, New York Secretary of State, N.Y. State Senator, attorney
- Metta World Peace (born 1979), NBA basketball player formerly known as Ron Artest
- Edmund D. Pellegrino, 11th President of The Catholic University of America
- James Pitaro, President of ESPN and Co-Chair, Disney Media Networks
- Harvey Pitt, 26th Chairman of US Securities and Exchange Commission (2001-03)
- Richie Powers, NBA referee (1956-79)
- Charles B. Rangel, US Representative of Manhattan
- Edward D. Re, Chief Judge of US Court of International Trade and US Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs
- Patricia Reilly Giff, author of children's books
- Victor Ricciardi, professor of business
- Wayne Rosenthal (born 1965), Major League Baseball pitcher and coach
- Christopher Ruddy, CEO of Newsmax Media
- Mickey Rutner, Major League Baseball player
- Luke Sabis, musician, film director and actor
- Brent Sancho, MLS professional soccer player
- Diane Savino, New York State Senator
- James J. Schiro (1946– 2014), CEO of PriceWaterhouseCoopers and Zurich Financial Services
- Howie Schwab, eponymous star of ESPN's show Stump the Schwab
- Malik Sealy, NBA basketball player
- Sidney Shapiro (1915–2014), American-born Chinese translator, actor and author
- Bob Sheppard, announcer for New York Yankees, "Voice of the Yankees"
- Ron Silver (1946–2009), Tony Award-winning actor
- Keeth Smart, Olympic fencer, first US fencer to reach #1 world ranking
- Kathryn Smith, first full-time female National Football League coach
- John E. Sprizzo, US District Judge, Southern District of New York
- Stuart Sternberg, financier and principal shareholder and Managing General Partner of the Tampa Bay Rays baseball team
- Norman Sturner (born 1940), real estate developer
- Bruce Sudano, singer-songwriter, record producer and music arranger.[3]
- Matthew Titone, member of New York State Assembly
- Peter J. Tobin, Chief Financial Officer of The Chase Manhattan Corporation
- Daniel P. Tully, chairman emeritus and CEO of Merrill Lynch[4]
- Bob Turner, US Representative for the 9th Congressional District (2011-13) of New York
- Martin Tytell (1913–2008), expert in manual typewriters
- Larry Valencia, Rhode Island State Representative
- Daphne Valerius, filmmaker
- Jimmy Van Bramer, New York City Council member
- Richard Vetere, playwright and screenwriter[5]
- Karina Vetrano, murder victim
- Frank Viola, professional baseball player
- Sal Vulcano, comedian, Impractical Jokers
- Cora Walker, one of the first black women to practice law in New York.[6]
- Bill Wennington, NBA basketball player and author
- Jayson Williams, NBA basketball player and author
- Kevin Williams (basketball), retired NBA basketball player[7]
- Chris Wingert, MLS professional soccer player
- Terence Winter, writer, TV, and film producer, creator of HBO series Boardwalk Empire
- Dagmara Wozniak (born 1988), Olympic saber fencer
- Max Zaslofsky (1925–1985), NBA guard/forward, All-Star, ABA coach[8]
- DJ Zeke, professional DJ
Fictional
References
- ^ "A focus on finance and politics". Cyprus Mail. 2011-04-12. Archived from the original on 2011-04-16. Retrieved 2011-05-02.
- ^ Assemblywoman Clare M. Farragher, backed up by the Internet Archive as of February 25, 1998. Retrieved June 2, 2010.
- ^ Turner, Doak. "Interview With Hit Songwriter Bruce Sudano". Music Dish. www.musicdish.com. Retrieved June 5, 2012.
- ^ Tully, Shawn; McLean, Bethany (February 19, 1996). "Merrill Lynch bulls ahead in this market, Fidelity and Schwab get the headlinges, but unheralded Merrill is thriving". Fortune.
- ^ "Richard Vetere Collection (SUNY Stony Brook University)". Archived from the original on 2012-09-04. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
- ^ Fox, Margalit (2006-07-20). "Cora Walker, 84, Dies; Lawyer Who Broke Racial Ground". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-03-23.
- ^ "Kevin Williams Stats - Basketball-Reference.com". Basketball-Reference.com.
- ^ "Zaslofsky, Max : Jews In Sports @ Virtual Museum". Jewsinsports.org. Retrieved February 3, 2011.