List of Bucknell University alumni
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This list of Bucknell University alumni includes graduates and former students of Bucknell University.
- Peter Balakian, author and poet, Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor of Humanities at Colgate University, winner of the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
- Samuel Zane Batten, professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy and Practice
- P. George Benson, twenty-first president of the College of Charleston
- Edward McNight Brawley, first African-American graduate, co-founder and president of Selma University and Morris College
- Charles E. Bunnell, first president of the University of Alaska
- Steven T. DeKosky, Dean of the University of Virginia School of Medicine
- Dennis A. Dougherty, George Grant Hoag Professor of Chemistry at California Institute of Technology
- Murray Edelman, Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
- Frank A. Golder (1877–1929), historian of Russian and a key builder of the Hoover War Library[1]
- Mary W.M. Hargreaves, author, professor of history at the University of Kentucky, and associate editor/coeditor of The Papers of Henry Clay, volumes I through VI (Kentucky, 1959–1981)
- Marc Hauser, author, professor, and Director of the Cognitive Evolution Lab at Harvard University
- David Jayne Hill, second president of the University of Rochester
- Ronald D. Liebowitz, ninth president of Brandeis University, sixteenth president of Middlebury College
- Marty Makary, Mark Ravitch Chair in Gastrointestinal Surgery at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and Professor of Surgery and Public Health at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
- David Nasaw, author, historian, and Pulitzer Prize finalist. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. Distinguished Professor of History, City University of New York
- Douglas Noll, bioengineer, Ann and Robert H. Lurie Professor of Bioengineering at University of Michigan
- George Morris Philips, principal of West Chester University from 1881 to 1920
- Robert A. Scott, ninth president of Adelphi University
- Amos Smith, Rhodes-Thompson Professor of Chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania
- Bruce Smith, Professor of English at Syracuse University
- John Stasko, Regents Professor of Interactive Computing at Georgia Tech
- J.D. Trout, Calamos Professor of Philosophy at Illinois Institute of Technology
- Barbara F. Walter, Rohr Professor of International Affairs at the University of California, San Diego, member of Council on Foreign Relations[2]
Business

- Ted Ammon, New York financier
- Kunitake Andō, President & Group Chief Operating Officer of Sony Corporation
- Ronald S. Baron, New York financier, founder of Baron Funds
- Charles Brandes, Founder, Brandes Investment Partners
- Todd G. Buchholz, economist, investment manager, author, lecturer, and former White House director of economic policy; awarded the Allyn Young Teaching Prize by the Harvard University Department of Economics
- Jane T. Elfers, CEO of The Children's Place, former CEO of Lord & Taylor
- Jessica Jackley, cofounder of Kiva.org
- Richard Johnson, founder of hotjobs.com
- Kenneth Langone, helped secure capital for co-founders of Home Depot, and former director of the New York Stock Exchange
- Doug Lebda, founder & CEO of LendingTree
- Jessica Livingston, cofounder of YCombinator
- Marc Lore, president & CEO of Walmart Ecommerce; founder & CEO of Jet.com
- Takeo Shiina President of IBM Japan, and vice-president of IBM
- Greg Skibiski Founder, former CEO & Chairman of Sense Networks
- Trisha Torrey, entrepreneur, author, and founder and director of AdvoConnection and the Alliance of Professional Health Advocates
- David Wood, leader of the Dell computer take-back campaign
- George Young, General Manager of the New York Giants (1979–1997), named NFL Executive of the Year five times
Entertainment
Film and television
- Gbenga Akinnagbe, actor; plays Chris Partlow on HBO's The Wire
- Chris Bender, co-produced movies such as the American Pie series, The Hangover, and others
- John Bolger, actor
- William Bramley actor[3]
- Edward Herrmann, actor
- Evan Coyne Maloney, webmaster/documentary filmmaker
- Robert Mandel, film director and producer, dean of the AFI Conservatory
- Les Moonves, former CBS chairman and CEO
- Nyambi Nyambi, actor; plays Samuel on Mike & Molly
- J.C. Spink, Hollywood talent manager and executive producer of The Hangover franchise
- Ralph Waite, actor
- Bill Westenhofer, Winner of the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects in 2008 (The Golden Compass) and 2013 (Life of Pi)
Music
- Paul Althouse, opera singer
- Bill Challis, pioneering jazz arranger (Jean Goldkette, Paul Whiteman, Bix Beiderbecke)
- Kristen Henderson, founder, guitarist and songwriter of Antigone Rising, co-author of Times Two: Two Women in Love and The Happy Family They Made (Simon & Schuster, 2011), named to Buzzfeed's Most Powerful LGBT Icons and Allies List
- Bruce Lundvall, President and CEO of The Blue Note Label Group, including Blue Note Records
- Martin Rubeo, musician and founder of alternative rock band Gramsci Melodic
Other
- Billy McFarland, convicted fraudster and founder of Fyre Festival. Attended Bucknell for one semester.
- John McPherson, Close to Home cartoonist
- Garrett Neff, fashion model
Government

Legislators
- Diane B. Allen, New Jersey State Senator, Legislative District 7
- Lemuel Amerman, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania (1891–1893)
- Rob Andrews, U.S. Representative from New Jersey (1990–2014)
- J. Thompson Baker, U.S. Representative from New Jersey (1913–1915), founder of Wildwood and Wildwood Crest, designed and built the J. Thompson Baker House
- Ward R. Bliss, member of Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1889–1905), Majority Leader (1903–1904)
- Charles H. Ealy, president pro tempore of the Pennsylvania State Senate (1941–1944)
- Ivor D. Fenton, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania
- Benjamin K. Focht, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania
- Matt Gabler, member of Pennsylvania House of Representatives
- Lincoln Hulley, member of Florida Senate, District 28
- John A. Giannetti, member of Maryland Senate, District 21
- Norman J. Levy, member of New York State Senate, (1971–1998)
- Alexander McDonald, U.S. Senator from Arkansas (1868–1871)
- Ruth McNamee, member of the Michigan House of Representatives
- Thomas J. Philips (1846–1939), member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives[4]
- William Shadrack Shallenberger, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania (1877–1883)
- Simon Peter Wolverton, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania (1891–1895)
Attorneys and judges
- Thomas J. Baldrige, Attorney General of Pennsylvania, Superior Court judge and president judge
- Matthew Bogdanos, New York City Assistant District Attorney, and author
- Brynja McDivitt Booth, Justice of the Supreme Court of Maryland
- Charles E. Bunnell, Judge of the United States Territorial Court for the Alaska Territory
- John Warren Davis, Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
- Julie Grow Denton, Judge of the New York Supreme Court, Oneida County
- Oliver Booth Dickinson, Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
- Frederick Voris Follmer, Judge of the United States District Courts for the Eastern, Middle, and Western Districts of Pennsylvania, Chief Judge of the Middle District of Pennsylvania
- Gitanjali Gutierrez, first lawyer to meet with a detainee at Guantanamo Bay, Information Commissioner for Bermuda
- Robert Dixon Herman, Judge of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
- William Hoeveler, Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, presided over Manuel Noriega trial
- Albert Williams Johnson, Judge of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
Mayors
Diplomats
- David Jayne Hill, diplomat, ambassador, and writer
- William Braucher Wood, former U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan
Activists
- Ye Htoon, Burmese political dissident
Other
- Theodore R. Beale, Republican activist and writer
- Ben T. Elliott, director of speech writing during President Ronald Reagan's administration
- Jay Fisette, member of Arlington County, Virginia's Board of Supervisors
- Dan Oates, Aurora, Colorado, Police Chief
- Norman Thomas, six-time US presidential candidate for the Socialist Party of America from 1928 to 1948
- Janet Woodcock, physician and Commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Journalism
- Jim Vicevich, Radio talk show host of WTIC-AM's Sound Off Connecticut
Literature
- Peter Balakian, author and poet, winner of the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
- David Kahn, historian, journalist, and writer, author of The Codebreakers
- Michael Malice, author, columnist, and media personality
- Philip Roth, author, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, and recipient of the National Humanities Medal and the Man Booker International Prize, among many other honors.
- Betsy Sholl, poet laureate of Maine, 2006–2011
- Bruce Smith, poet
- Lewis Edwin Theiss, author of 44 books for boys
- Nancy Wood, poet and photographer
Medical
- Shaw Loo, Burma's first physician
- Bonnie Spring, professor of preventive medicine, psychology and psychiatry at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Military
- Martin Blumenson, military historian and author
- Charles I. Carpenter, first Chief of Chaplains of the United States Air Force
- Susan J. Crawford, lawyer and judge who served as the Convening Authority for the Guantanamo military commissions, chief judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, Inspector General of the Department of Defense; also Chair of Bucknell Board of Trustees
- Stephen J. Maranian, Retired United States Army major general and the highest ranking Armenian American to serve in the U.S. Army.
- Lewis Merrill, Union Army general. Attended prior to entering West Point.
- George H. Ramer, United States Marine Lieutenant, posthumously received the Medal of Honor on January 7, 1953
- Theodore Van Kirk, Enola Gay Navigator on August 6, 1945
- Lawrence Wilkerson, retired Army colonel, former chief of staff to Colin Powell, vocal critic of the Iraq war. Attended for three years before volunteering for service in Vietnam


