Prominent Colgate Alumni
Transcription
Prominent Colgate Alumni
this is colgate (Getty Images-Orlando Magic) www.cbsnews.com Mark Murphy ‘77 Adonal Foyle ‘98 Andy McDonald ‘00 Jeff Fager ‘73 Bob Woodruff ‘83 Andy Rooney ‘42 Prominent Colgate Alumni • Mel Damski ’68, director, producer, writer (Ally McBeal, The Practice, M*A*S*H) • Theordore M. Griffin ‘93, screenwriter (Ocean’s Eleven) • Robert K. Rodat ‘75, screenwriter (Saving Private Ryan) • Jeff Sharp ’89, producer (Proof, You Can Count on Me, Boys Don’t Cry) Business • Everett Baldwin ’54, retired CEO, Welch Foods • Stephen B. Burke ’80, president of Comcast Cable • Charles “Chase” Carey ’76, president and CEO, DirecTV Group • Bennett Cohen ’73, co-founder and president, Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream • (D) John M. Fox ’34, founder and president, Minute Maid Corp.; former president, United Fruit (Chiquita) • Harold Selmer Jensen ’34, research chemist; held patents for Woolite, Griffin Shoe Polish • Robert W. Jones ’72, vice chairman of investment banking, Morgan Stanley • Harry Mariani ’59, president, Banfi Vintners • J. Richard Munro ’57, former head of Time Inc.; director, Exxon Mobil • Ed Werner ’71 and John Haney ’72, inventors of Trivial Pursuit Sports Government • A. Peter Burleigh ’63, U.S. ambassador to the Phillipines • James Holmes ’65, former U.S. ambassador to Latvia, now State Department special adviser • Peter Peyser ’43, former U.S. congressman 1971-77, 1979-83 Journalism • Ken Bader ’71, senior producer, The World (WGBH, PRI, BBC) • Ken Baker ’92, author; former People journalist • Gloria Borger ’74, U.S. News & World Report, Washington Week, CBS special correspondent • Jeff Fager ’73, executive producer, 60 Minutes • Andy Rooney ’42, CBS-TV: 60 Minutes commentator, columnist • Bob Woodruff ’83, ABC News anchor Science/Medicine • Thaddeus “Tad” Brown ’86, current CEO of Houston Rockets • Mark van Eeghen ’74, former running back, Oakland Raiders • Rich Erenberg ’84, former running back, Pittsburgh Steelers • Andrew S. Esocoff ’79, director of ABC Sports’ Monday Night Football • Adonal Foyle ’98, center, Orlando Magic • Howard Ganz ’63, attorney for Major League Baseball; partner in Proskauer, Rose LLP • Marvin Hubbard ’68, former fullback, Oakland Raiders • Howard Katz ’71, former president, ABC Sports • Andy McDonald 2000, St. Louis Blues • Mark Murphy ’77, former safety, Washington Redskins, current President of Green Bay Packers • Steve Poapst ’91, St. Louis Blues • Eugene Robinson ’85, safety, played for Carolina Panthers, Atlanta Falcons, Green Bay Packers, Seattle Seahawks • Ken Schanzer ’66, president of NBC Sports • Ernest Vandeweghe ’49, former surgeon for L.A. Lakers • Douglas Wilson ’57, ABC Sports producer • R. Peter Altman ’55, president, American Pediatric S urgical Association • (D) Oswald Avery 1900, helped lead groundbreaking DNA research • Harvey Berger ’72, CEO, Ariad Pharmaceuticals Inc. • Dr. Henry Nadler ’57, former vice president, American Health Care Systems • Dr. Bernard Siegel ’53, surgeon, author, speaker Note: (D) indicates deceased. • H. Guyford Stever ’38, former head of National Science Foundation/NASA Colgate Men’s Lacrosse o partiot league lacrosse member www.GoColgateRaiders.com The Arts 31 This is Colgate Colgate University began when “13 men with 13 dollars and 13 prayers” convened in 1819 in what was then the frontier settlement of Hamilton, New York, to found an educational society that chartered an institution of learning. For most of the 19th century, it was known as Madison University, because of its location in Madison County. In 1890, the university was renamed Colgate University to honor William Colgate, an early benefactor and longtime supporter. The Community The picturesque 515-acre Colgate campus is located in the village of Hamilton, near the geographic heart of New York State at the northern end of the Chenango Valley. The village, founded in 1795 and incorporated in 1816, is named for Alexander Hamilton. The site of the village is on territory ceded by the Iroquois Indians to the State of New York following the American Revolution. Elisha Payne, who led the first settlers from New England, is remembered as the village’s founder. By the 1820s, the village was a thriving trading center for an extensive farming area. The Chenango Canal, completed in 1836, put the village on the water route between the Erie Canal at Utica and the Susquehanna River at Binghamton. The railroad, which replaced the canal in the 1870s, was supplanted by a highway in the 1940s. The major industry has been Colgate University, and Hamilton remains a small and essentially rural community, little changed in size and character in the past century. The current population of the village is 32 estimated to be between 2,100 and 2,400 (excluding Colgate students). Personal Contact Many students comment that “Colgate is the right size.” It is an institution of approximately 2,750 undergraduates and 242 full-time faculty (average class size is 19 students; student-to-faculty ratio is 10:1). Colgate is slightly larger than most liberal arts colleges, which enables the university to offer more academic specialties and crossdisciplinary programs. While Colgate is small enough to ensure student access to research equipment and opportunities to work closely with faculty, it is large enough to support a broad range of academic programs and campus events to create a satisfying residential experience. Academic Life Encouraging high intellectual standards and cooperation among peers, Colgate offers 51 majors across the arts, humanities, sciences, and social sciences, as well as an interdisciplinary liberal arts core curriculum of four courses, and student-faculty collaborative research projects. Students who succeed at Colgate share certain characteristics: innate curiosity, the motivation to learn, a willingness to take intellectual risks, and the capacity to undertake a rigorous program in the liberal arts and sciences. Admission Profile (Class of 2010) Typically, Colgate enrolls approximately 730 first-year students from among more than 7,800 applicants, the second largest applicant pool in Colgate history. Admitted students from public secondary schools ............................................... 68 percent Admitted students ranking in top 20 percent of high school class.95 percent* Average SAT of admitted students.13851 Average GPA of admitted students..3.71 Harlem Renaissance Center; and college-owned apartments. Some juniors and seniors students live in fraternities and sororities. A lottery is held for seniors who may wish to live off campus in privately owned residences. Record of Success The middle 50% of accepted students scored between: Verbal SAT..................................650-740 Math SAT....................................660-740 ACT composite . ........................... 29-33 More than 95 percent of Colgate’s graduates who pursue jobs are successful in finding fulltime employment within one year of graduation. The majority of Colgate students engage in the career development process early, and most seniors begin their job or graduate school search early during their senior year. Financial Aid Athletics and Recreation Colgate provides financial assistance to outstanding students accepted for admission whose personal and family resources are inadequate to meet the costs of a Colgate education. More than 45 percent of entering Colgate students receive some sort of financial aid in the form of a grant, guaranteed loan, or job. The university is committed to meeting the financial need of all admitted students while keeping loan amounts to a minimum. With the use of generous grant programs as need-based aid, Colgate continues to be a national leader in graduating students with the least amount of debt incurred for student loans. Colgate is one of the few highly selective national liberal arts colleges with Division I athletics. In the past decade, Colgate studentathletes have been recognized 36 times as Patriot League Scholar Athlete and 49 times as Academic All-America. Seventeen percent of all students participate in intercollegiate athletics. Eighty percent of students play in 23 intramural and 20 club sports. A member of the Patriot League, Colgate fields 25 men’s and women’s varsity teams that compete in the Patriot League against teams from American University, Army, Bucknell University, College of the Holy Cross, Lafayette College, Lehigh University and Navy. The Raiders also compete against other highly selective institutions, including Ivy League schools. Residential Life Housing is guaranteed at Colgate for four years and most students take advantage of a variety of housing options, which include traditional corridorstyle halls, suites, college-theme houses such as Outdoor Education and the Colgate Men’s Lacrosse o partiot league lacrosse member In its second decade of combining academic and athletic excellence, the Patriot League sponsors 23 sports – 11 for men and 12 for women. Initially started as a NCAA Division I-AA football conference in 1986, the Patriot League became an all-sport conference in 1990 and includes American, Army, Bucknell, Colgate, Holy Cross, Lafayette, Lehigh and Navy as full members, and Fordham and Georgetown as associate members in football. These institutions are among the oldest and most prestigious in the nation and their alumni have, and continue to play leadership roles in shaping our country. Since 1998, the Patriot League has ranked first each year among all Division I conferences awarding athletic aid in the NCAA Graduation Success Rate report. In addition, the Patriot League finished as one of the nation’s leaders in the NCAA Academic Progress Report (APR) among all Division I conferences awarding athletic aid. The APR is used to measure academic eligibility, retention and graduation of studentathletes. Patriot League student-athletes and teams continue to enjoy success at the national level, with opening round victories coming in several NCAA Championships, including wins in men’s basketball during the 2005 and 2006 seasons, a championship game appearance in both football and men’s la crosse, and a sixth-place individual finish at the NCAA Cross Country Championship. The Patriot League’s mission is simple, to provide successful competitive athletic experiences while maintaining high academic standards, and to prepare its student-athletes to be leaders in society. During the 2006-07 year, Patriot League student-athletes and teams have accomplished the following; • Fourteen Patriot League studentathletes were named ESPN The Magazine Academic All-Americans. • A total of 54 Patriot League studentathletes earned ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District honors. • American field hockey spent the entire season ranked in the top-20 in the NFHCA national poll. • Three Patriot League field hockey student- athletes were named NFHCA All-Americans including American’s Camila Infante and Denise Infante on the Second-Team and American’s Irene Schickhardt on the Third-Team. • Colgate’s Mike Gallihugh led the Football Championship Subdivision in tackles and was a finalist for the Buck Buchanan Award. • Lehigh was the first team in Patriot League history to receive a first-round bye in the NCAA Men’s Soccer Tournament and the second to advance to the third round. • The Patriot League had two teams win a game in the NCAA Men’s Soccer Tournament for the first time in its history (Bucknell and Lehigh), with 2006 being the second year it sent multiple teams to the postseason. • Lehigh women’s soccer studentathlete Daniela Molina was selected to play for the Colombian National Team at the World Cup. • Navy women’s soccer owned the longest winning streak among NCAA Division I schools, posting 19-straight victories, and captured its first NCAA Tournament victory. • Colgate goalkeeper David Cappuccio posted the second-longest shutout streak in NCAA men’s soccer history. • Navy goalkeeper Lizzie Barnes posted the seventh-longest shutout streak in NCAA women’s soccer history. • American volleyball twin freshmen Ann and Clair Recht were featured on national morning shows for setting the record of being the tallest female twins in the Guinness Book of World Records. • The Patriot League had two postseason participants in the sport of women’s basketball for the first time since 2002 with Holy Cross playing in the NCAA Tournament and Bucknell in the WNIT. • Holy Cross’ Keith Simmons was named All-America Honorable Mention by the Associated Press in the sport of men’s basketball. • Navy’s Paul Harris earned AllAmerica status after finishing sixth in the 800 meters at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championship. • Four different men’s lacrosse teams spent time in the national polls, including Army, Bucknell, Colgate and Navy. Navy ended the year ranked a Patriot Leaguebest eighth in the nation. • Three Patriot League student-athletes were chosen in the Major League Lacrosse Draft. Navy’s Billy became the highest drafted Patriot League student-athlete into the MLL as the fifth pick. • Four Patriot League student-athletes were named USILA All-Americans including Navy’s Billy Looney on the First-Team and Navy’s Jordan DiNola and Colgate’s Colin Hulme and Brandon Corp as Honorable Mentions. • Bucknell’s Nick Sciubba ended the year ranked first in the nation in goals against average and save percentage in the sport of men’s lacrosse. • Seventeen Patriot League rowers were named CRCA National Scholar- Athletes. • Bucknell’s Katherine BrewsterDuffy and Navy’s Lindsey Spiese were named CRCA All-Americans. • Five Patriot League studentathletes were selected in the MLB draft including Army’s Nick Hill and Milan Dinga, Bucknell’s Jason Buursma and Navy’s Mitch Harris and Jonathan Johnston. • Lehigh’s Kate Marvel ranked first in the nation in triples per game in the sport of softball, while Lehigh as a team ranked first in the same category. • Navy’s Kevin Teague became the first male diver in Patriot League history to win four consecutive 1-meter and 3-meter Patriot League Championship titles and to be named Patriot League Diver of the Meet four times. 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