•
Jeremiah F. Sullivan – Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court of California •
Stephen M. White –
United States Senator from California from 1893 to 1899 (attended, did not graduate) •
Edward John O'Dea –
Bishop of Seattle (attended, did not graduate) •
John Joseph Montgomery, 1873 – aviation pioneer •
Joseph Richard Slevin – second curator of herpetology at the
California Academy of Sciences •
Charles H. Strub, 1902 – dentist and sports entrepreneur •
Francis Joseph McCarty – experimenter •
Daniel J. Callaghan, 1907 – United States Navy admiral, Medal of Honor recipient •
Dutch Ruether – MLB player, pitcher in three World Series •
Frederic B. Butler, 1913 – United States Army general •
William Callaghan, 1914 – United States Navy admiral, first commanding officer of •
Joseph Kurihara –
Japanese American internee who renounced his American citizenship (attended, did not graduate) •
Raymond L. Sullivan, 1924 – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of California •
Joseph E. Tinney, 1927 – attorney and politician •
André Laguerre – managing editor of
Sports Illustrated from 1960 to 1974 •
Richard Egan, 1939 – actor •
Rene Herrerias, 1944 – college basketball player and head coach •
Ivan L. Slavich Jr., 1945 – United States Army colonel •
Jim Mangan, 1946 – MLB catcher •
Joe McNamee, 1946 – NBA player •
John Jay O'Connor, 1947 – lawyer and husband of former Supreme Court Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor •
George Moscone, 1947 – 37th
Mayor of San Francisco •
Leo T. McCarthy, 1948 – 43rd
Lieutenant Governor of California •
William H. Briare, 1948 – 18th
Mayor of Las Vegas •
Bradford Dillman, 1949 – actor •
Pat Malley, 1949 – college football player at
Santa Clara University, head coach and athletic director •
John Paul Getty Jr. – philanthropist (attended, did not graduate) •
Gordon Getty, 1951 – businessman and composer •
George Stanley, 1951 – award-winning poet and member of the
San Francisco Renaissance •
Jerry Brown, 1955 – 34th and 39th
Governor of California •
Fred LaCour, 1956 – professional basketball player •
Adrian Buoncristiani, 1958 – college basketball coach •
Paul Pelosi – businessman and husband of
Nancy Pelosi (attended, did not graduate) •
Dan Fitzgerald, 1959 – college basketball coach and athletic director at
Gonzaga University •
Gil Haskell, 1961 – football coach,
offensive coordinator for the
Seattle Seahawks from 2000 to 2008 •
Mike Nevin, 1961 – politician •
James F. O'Connell, 1961 – Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at the
University of Utah •
Tim Tierney, 1961 – college football player and coach •
Abe Jacob, 1962 – sound designer and audio engineer •
Al Saunders, 1964 –
academic All-American football player at
San Jose State University, NFL head coach for the
San Diego Chargers •
Charles Parks, 1964 – professional basketball player •
Bob Portman, 1965 – college basketball player at
Creighton University, NBA player, forward for the
Golden State Warriors •
Laurence Yep, 1966 – author •
Robert Francis Christian,
O.P., 1966 – auxiliary bishop of the
Archdiocese of San Francisco •
Marshall Kilduff, 1967 – investigative reporter •
Paul Otellini, 1968 – President and CEO of
Intel •
Dan Fouts, 1969 – NFL player, quarterback for the
San Diego Chargers, NFL Hall of Fame, six time
Pro Bowler •
Gerald Posner, 1971 – investigative journalist •
Len Salvemini, 1971 – professional soccer player •
Mark Stahl, 1971 – professional soccer player •
Kevin Shelley, 1973 –
California Secretary of State from 2003 to 2005 •
Dan Salvemini, 1975 – professional soccer player and member of 1980 US Olympic team •
Kevin Rodney Sullivan, 1976 – film and television actor and director •
James Houghton, 1976 – Director of Drama at the
Juilliard School •
Kevin V. Ryan, 1976 –
United States Attorney for the Northern District of California from 2002 to 2007 •
Eugene Gloria, 1977 – poet •
Bartlett Sher, 1977 – Tony Award-winning stage director, known for directing the 2008 Broadway revival of
South Pacific •
Anthony Cistaro, 1981 – actor •
Francis Jue, 1981 – actor •
Luke Brugnara, 1981 – businessman, casino mogul •
Jonathan Moscone, 1982 – theater director •
Robert Hewitt Wolfe, 1983 – television producer and screenwriter •
Luke Brugnara, 1983 – commercial real estate investor and developer •
Derek Lam, 1984 – fashion designer •
Levy Middlebrooks, 1984 – professional basketball player •
Stephen McFeely, 1987 – screenwriter and producer •
Al Madrigal, 1989 – comedian, writer, actor, and producer •
Mark Farrell, 1992 – 44th Mayor of San Francisco •
Gwendoline Yeo, 1994 –
Singaporean actress •
Anthony Buich, 1996 – professional football player •
Dan Kaminsky, 1996 – computer security researcher •
Beth Spotswood, 1996 – writer •
Igor Olshansky, 2000 – NFL player, defensive lineman for the
Miami Dolphins •
Luke Whitehead – professional basketball player (attended, did not graduate) •
Honey Mahogany, 2002 – activist, politician, drag performer, and singer •
Darren Criss, 2005 – musician, actor, singer-songwriter, and composer •
Jeff Cosgriff, 2006 – professional soccer player •
Jill Costello, 2006 – activist for lung cancer awareness and research •
Molly McGrath, 2007 – sportscaster and studio host at
ESPN •
Steven Zhu, 2007 – professional DJ and singer •
Zac Lee, 2005 – professional football player •
Eleanor Columbus, 2007 – film producer •
Jamize Olawale, 2008 – NFL player, fullback for the
Dallas Cowboys •
Paul Toboni, 2008 – President of Baseball Operations for the
Washington Nationals •
Brendan Daly, 2009 – professional rugby player •
Colin Woodell, 2010 – actor •
Nicholas Miller, 2009 – professional DJ (
ILLENIUM) •
Jacqueline Toboni, 2010 – actress •
Matt Krook, 2013 – MLB player, pitcher for the
New York Yankees •
Andrew Vollert, 2013 – NFL player, tight end for 5 NFL teams •
Teddye Buchanan, 2020 – NFL player, linebacker for the
Baltimore Ravens •
Beau Gardner, 2020 – College football player, long snapper for the
Georgia Bulldogs ==See also==