Academic •
Philip Milledoler Brett, president of
Rutgers University •
Francis Patrick Garvan, dean of
Fordham University School of Law; later head of the Chemical Foundation, which played a role in the founding of the
American Institute of Physics and the
National Institutes of Health; remains the only non-scientist to win the Priestley Medal, the highest honor conferred by the
American Chemical Society (ACS) for distinguished service in the field of chemistry
Business •
Chester Carlson, physicist and former engineer at Bell Labs; while a student at New York Law School in 1938 invented the
xerography photocopy process •
Arthur G. Cohen, NYC real estate developer, founder of
Arlen Realty & Development Corporation, which became the largest publicly traded REIT; served on boards of
Citicorp, and
John Hancock Mutual Fund •
Maurice R. "Hank" Greenberg, former chairman and CEO of
American International Group (AIG); current chairman and CEO of C.V. Starr and Company •
Leo KoGuan, Chinese American billionaire businessman; co-founder of
SHI International Corp, third largest shareholder in
Tesla, Inc. •
Richard LaMotta, inventor of
Chipwich ice cream sandwich, co-founder of Chipwich Inc., later sold to CoolBrands, and then Dreyer's (
Nestle) •
Marc Lasry, founder and managing partner of
Avenue Capital Group; founder and senior managing director of Amroc, and co-owner of the
Milwaukee Bucks of the
NBA •
J. Bruce Llewellyn, majority owner of Philadelphia
Coca-Cola Bottling Company, co-founder of
100 Black Men of America •
Mario Perillo, aka "Mr. Italy", former chairman and television pitchman for Perillo Tours •
Charles Phillips, CEO of
Infor; former President of
Oracle Corporation and former managing director of
Morgan Stanley •
Joe Plumeri, former chairman and CEO of
Willis Group Holdings, and owner of the
Trenton Thunder •
Cindy Rose, CEO of
Microsoft Western Europe •
Vincent Viola, chairman, owner of Surprise Sports & Entertainment and owner of
Florida Panthers •
Zygmunt Wilf, head of Garden Commercial Properties, and principal owner of the
Minnesota Vikings of the
NFL Civic •
Leo Cherne, executive director of the Research Institute of America; chairman of the executive committee of
Freedom House; chairman of the
International Rescue Committee; served on the U.S. Select Committee for Western Hemisphere Immigrations and the U.S. Advisory Commission on International Education and Cultural Affairs, U.S. President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, and the
Intelligence Oversight Board; awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom by President
Ronald Reagan in 1984 •
Jeffrey Grant, lawyer and minister, went to prison for loan fraud; based on that experience, co-founded the Progressive Prison Ministries and
White Collar Support Group •
Meir Kahane, founder of the
Jewish Defense League, assassinated in Manhattan
Cultural •
Michael H. Hart, author of
The 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Persons in History •
Arthur Hornblow Jr., movie producer nominated four times for
Academy Awards Best Picture •
Arnold Kopelson, won Best Picture Academy Award, a
Golden Globe, and an Independent Spirit Award, all for his production of
Platoon (1986); received a Best Picture Academy Award nomination for his production of
The Fugitive (1993); films have collectively received 17 Academy Award nominations •
Ottalie Mark, musicologist, music copyright expert, and first head of research for
Broadcast Music, Inc. •
Jerry Masucci, record producer, concert and boxing promoter and filmmaker, founded Fania Records (later owned 10 record companies) •
Arthur B. Reeve, mystery author known for the Professor
Craig Kennedy series, published 20 books and 171 short stories, playwright of 20 movies •
Elmer Rice, Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright,
The Adding Machine (1923) and
Street Scene (1929), Class of 1912 •
Judith Sheindlin ("Judge Judy"), New York family court judge, author, and television personality •
Wallace Stevens,
Pulitzer Prize–winning poet,
Collected Works (1955), Class of 1903
Government •
Tom Carr,
Seattle city attorney and Boulder city attorney •
Bainbridge Colby, United States secretary of state under President Woodrow Wilson (1920–1921) •
Grenville T. Emmet,
U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands (1934–1937) and
Austria (1937) •
Stirling Fessenden, chairman (1923–1929) and secretary-general (1929–1939) of the
Shanghai Municipal Council •
James W. Gerard, U.S. ambassador to Germany during World War I, and New York Supreme Court justice •
Seymour Glanzer, first chief of the Anti-Fraud Section of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington, D.C., and one of three original prosecutors in the
Watergate Scandal •
Stephen Harding, member of the
Connecticut State Senate, minority leader since 2024 •
David N. Kelley, US attorney for the Southern District of New York (2003–2005) •
Andrew McCarthy, columnist for
National Review, assistant US attorney for the Southern District of New York (1986–2003) •
Charles F. Murphy, former NY state senator •
Dan Oates, chief of police, Miami Beach Police Department •
Melissa Osborne, member of the
Connecticut House of Representatives since 2023 •
Ferdinand Pecora, chief counsel to the US Senate's Committee on Banking and Currency following the 1932 election of Franklin D. Roosevelt; led Senate hearings, known as the
Pecora Commission, into the causes of the Wall Street Crash of 1929, which launched a major reform of the American financial system that resulted in the
Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; one of the first members of the Securities Exchange Commission •
Adrian Zuckerman,
U.S. ambassador to Romania (2019–2021)
Judicial •
Joan Azrack,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, 2014–present •
John S. Buttles, associate justice of the
Vermont Supreme Court •
Anthony Cannataro, judge, New York Court of Appeals (2022–present) •
Clarence E. Case, chief justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court •
Albert C. Cohn, New York State Supreme Court justice; father of lawyer
Roy Cohn •
Michael N. Delagi, member of the New York State Assembly and municipal court justice •
Charles M. Egan, vice-chancellor of the New Jersey Chancery Court (1934–1948) •
Charles William Froessel, New York Court of Appeals (1949–1962) •
John M. Gallagher,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (2019–present) •
Louis D. Gibbs, New York state assemblyman, Bronx County Court judge, New York Supreme Court justice •
Thomas Griffith Haight,
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit •
Ernest E. L. Hammer (1884–1970), member of the New York State Assembly and justice of the New York Supreme Court •
John Marshall Harlan II, United States Supreme Court justice 1955–1971 •
Robert Alexander Inch, chief judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York •
David Chester Lewis (1884–1975), lawyer, politician, and judge •
Charles C. Lockwood, New York Supreme Court 2nd District (1932–1947) •
Andrew M. Mead, associate justice, Maine Supreme Judicial Court •
Roger J. Miner, chief judge,
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit •
Samuel Seabury, New York Court of Appeals, chaired the NYC court/police corruption investigations known as the
Seabury Commission •
Judith Sheindlin, Criminal Court Judge, New York •
Henry L. Sherman (1870–1938), justice,
New York State Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department •
Joel Harvey Slomsky, United States District Court judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania •
Saul S. Streit (1897–1983), New York state assemblyman and New York Supreme Court justice •
Myron Sulzberger (1878–1956), lawyer, politician, and judge •
Nicholas Tsoucalas, senior judge, United States Court of International Trade •
Julian M. Wright, judge advocate, International Court,
Cairo Egypt Political •
Robert A. Agresta, council president, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey (2009–2011) •
Henry C. Allen, U.S. congressman from New Jersey (1905–1907) •
Frank Aranow, member of the New York State Assembly (1915–1917) •
Michael Arcuri, former U.S. congressman, New York's 24th district •
Mario Biaggi, U.S. congressman from New York (1969–1988) •
Julio Brady,
lieutenant governor of the United States Virgin Islands (1983–1987), U.S. attorney, attorney general, and territorial court judge in the U.S. Virgin Islands; judge on the Superior Court •
Tiffany Caban, New York City councilmember •
Charles J. Carroll, member of the
New York State Assembly •
Robert C. Carroll, New York state assemblymember •
Harry H. Dale, U.S. congressman from New York (1913–1919) •
Isidore Dollinger, U.S. congressman from New York (1949–1959) •
Eliot L. Engel, U.S. congressman, New York's 16th district •
John J. Fitzgerald, U.S. congressman from New York (1899–1917) •
Otto G. Foelker, U.S. congressman from New York (1908–1911) •
Franklin W. Fort (1880–1937), represented
New Jersey's 9th congressional district 1925–1931 •
Elmer H. Geran, U.S. attorney and U.S. congressman for New Jersey •
Benjamin A. Gilman, U.S. congressman (1973–2003), chair of House Committee on International Relations; former New York assemblyman and assistant attorney general •
Daniel J. Griffin, U.S. congressman from New York (1913–1917) •
Michael Grimm, former U.S. congressman from the 13th Congressional District of New York (Staten Island/Bay Ridge), elected in 2010 •
Clarence E. Hancock, U.S. congressman from New York (1927–1947) •
Francis Burton Harrison, U.S. congressman from New York (1903–1913) and governor-general of the
Philippines (1913–1921) under Woodrow Wilson •
G. Murray Hulbert, U.S. congressman from New York (1915–1918), resigning to become commissioner of docks and director of the port of New York City; elected president of the
Board of Aldermen of New York City (1921), and served as acting mayor during the long illness of Mayor Hylan •
John F. Hylan, New York City mayor (1918–1925) •
Charles D. Lavine, member
New York State Assembly (2004–present) representing the 13th District •
Eugene W. Leake, U.S. congressman from New Jersey (1907–1909) •
Warren I. Lee, U.S. congressman from New York (1921–1923) •
Frederick R. Lehlbach, U.S. congressman from New Jersey (1915–1937) •
Samuel Levy, Manhattan borough president (1931–1937) •
Michael McMahon, Richmond County (
Staten Island) district sttorney •
John Purroy Mitchel, youngest person ever elected mayor of New York City (1914–1917) •
Guy Molinari, U.S. congressman from New York (1981–1989); father of
Susan Molinari, former U.S. congresswoman from New York •
Frederick W. Mulkey, U.S. senator from Oregon, twice elected to finish out the term of other senators who died in office (1907 and 1918; both times, did not seek re-election) •
Irving D. Neustein, member of the New York State Assembly •
Charles F.X. O'Brien (1879–1940), represented
New Jersey's 12th congressional district 1921–1925 •
James Oddo, New York City council member and Republican minority leader •
Thomas Francis Smith, U.S. congressman from New York (1916–1921) •
Martin M. Solomon, New York state senator (1978–1995) •
Oscar W. Swift, U.S. congressman from New York (1915–1919) •
John Taber, U.S. congressman from New York (1923–1963) •
Guy Talarico (born 1955), member of the
New Jersey General Assembly •
William L. Tierney, U.S. congressman from Connecticut (1931–1933) •
Sol Ullman, member of the New York State Assembly •
Robert F. Wagner, chairman of the National Labor Board; United States senator from New York 1927–1949, introduced and won passage of the
National Labor Relations Act, or Wagner Act; father of
Robert F. Wagner Jr., mayor of New York City •
Alton Waldon, U.S. congressman from New York (1986–1987) •
James J. Walker, New York assemblyman, Senate majority leader, and New York City mayor (1926–1932) •
Royal H. Weller, U.S. congressman from New York (1923–1929) •
David T. Wilentz, attorney general of New Jersey (1934–1944) •
Kalman Yeger, New York City councilmember
Sports •
Dawn Aponte, American football executive •
Ashley T. Cole, 1939
New York State World's Fair Commission, chairman of
New York State Racing Commission 1945–1965 •
Walter Dukes, All-American basketball player at Seton Hall University; played for the Knicks, Lakers, Pistons, and
Harlem Globetrotters •
Marvin Powell, former Pro Bowl NFL player with the
New York Jets •
Corrinne Tarver, 1989
NCAA All-Around Gymnastics champion at
Georgia and coach of the
Fisk Lady Gymdogs ==See also==