List of St. Anthony Hall members

St. Anthony Hall, also known as the fraternity of Delta Psi, was founded at Columbia University on January 17, 1847 and has eleven active chapters.[1]

Some notable member

Arts and architecture

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
Chester Holmes Aldrich Columbia architect, partner in Delano and Aldrich, Director of the American Academy in Rome [2]
Winslow Ames Columbia art historian, author, academic, and director of the Museum of Modern Art [3][4]
Bill Bamberger UNC documentary photographer
J. Cleaveland Cady Trinity architect, designer of Metropolitan Opera, American Museum of Natural History [2]
Duncan Candler Columbia architect, designer for John D. Rockefeller Jr. and Edsel Ford (Skylands) [2]
Stockton B. Colt Columbia architect designed the Emmett Building and the Barclay Building [2]
J. Cleaveland Cady Trinity architect, designer of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City [2]
Rockwell King DuMoulin Columbia architect, professor and department chair at the Rhode Island School of Design [3]
John Eaton Yale jazz pianist, and originator of series John Eaton Presents the American Popular Song on PBS
Frank Howell Holden M.I.T. architect, director of interior designs for Macy & Co. stores [5]
Goodhue Livingston Columbia architect of the Hayden Planetarium, Knickerbocker Hotel, Rikers Island Penitentiary, Palace Hotel [2]
Brander Matthews Columbia first full-time professor of dramatic literature (aka drama) at an American university [6]
George Carnegie Palmer Columbia architect of New York State Education Building and numerous college and public buidlings [7]
Edmund R. Purves Pennsylvania architect, executive of American Institute of Architects 1949-1960, WWI Croix de Guerre and Verdun Medal [8]
William Hamilton Russell Columbia architect of New York City's Beaver Building, Mecca Masonic Temple and The Langham [2]
Charles Green Shaw Yale artist, significant figure in American abstract art, novelist, poet, journalist, and writer [9]
Peter L. Shelton Pennsylvania architect, winner of the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum National Design Award [10]
Samuel Breck Parkman Trowbridge Trinity architect, designer of the current New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street [11]
John Rhea Barton Willing Pennsylvania music enthusiast and violin collector, included in Ward McAllister's "Four Hundred" [2]

Athletics

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
Bill Carr Pennsylvania 1932 Summer Olympics 2× Gold Medal track and field, inducted into National Track and Field Hall of Fame
Britton Chance Pennsylvania 1952 Summer Olympics Gold Medal yachting, helped develop spectroscopy, received National Medal of Science [10]
Eugene "Gene" Clapp III Pennsylvania 1972 Summer Olympics Silver Medal in men's eight
Anson Dorrance UNC soccer coach, inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame [12][13]
Truxtun Hare Pennsylvania 1900 Olympics Gold Medal tug of war, Silver Medal hammer throw. 1904 Olympics Bronze Medal decathlon.

College Football All-American Team, Football Hall of Fame

[14]
Wendell Mottley Yale 1964 Summer Olympics Silver Medalist 400 m, Bronze Medalist 4 × 400 m relay for Trinidad and Tobago,

Trinidad and Tobago House of Representatives

[15]
Mary O'Connor Yale 1980 Summer Olympics women's eight rowing team, Congressional Gold Medal, chair of Orthopedics at Mayo Clinic [13]
Chris O'Loughlin Pennsylvania 1992 Summer Olympics fencing
Herbert H. Ramsay Yale president of the United States Golf Association, attorney [2]
Charlie Scott UNC Olympic Gold Medal basketball, pro basketball player, Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame [16][12]
Phillip Stillman Yale Yale football team, first-team 1894 College Football All-America Team, president of F. W. Stillman Company [2]
Anne Warner Yale 1976 Summer Olympics Bronze Medal rowing
Josh West Yale 2008 Olympics Silver Medal rowing eight for Great Britain, World Rowing Championships Silver Medal 2002 & 2003

with the British Four, Bronze Medal 2007 with the British Eight

Business and industry

Name Original

Chapter

Notability Reference
Bill Backer Yale advertising executive, lyricist, created Coca-Cola campaign featuring "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing".
Hans W. Becherer Trinity president and CEO of John Deere [17]
Marshall Latham Bond Yale mining engineer, Jack London's landlord in Alaska [18]
Jonathan Bryan Virginia vice president of the Richmond-Ashland Railway Company, president of Bryan, Kemp & Co. brokerage firm [19][2]
George H. Bull Columbia president of the Saratoga Racing Association and the Empire City Race Track [20][2]
William E. Carter Pennsylvania stockbroker, polo player, Titanic survivor [2]
Arthur L. Church Pennsylvania engineer, secretary and assistant treasurer of Baldwin Locomotives Works [21][2]
Frank Hamilton Clark Pennsylvania president of the Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad [2]
Martin W. Clement Trinity president of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company from 1935–1948 [2]
Robert Habersham Coleman Trinity Gilded Age "Coal King," scion of the family that owned the Cornwall Iron Furnace [18]
Harry B. Combs Yale aviation pioneer, oversaw creation of the Air Traffic Control system [22]
Henry M. Crane M.I.T. consulting engineer General Motors, president Crane Motor Car Company [23][2]
Russ Dallen Mississippi financial advisor, economist, international lawyer, journalist, and head of Caracas Capital Markets
Alfred Dater Yale vice chairman Connecticut Power Company, general manager and chairman Stamford Gas & Electric [24][2]
Clarence B. Davison Yale director of New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange [25][2]
D. LeRoy Dresser Columbia banker, merchant, brother-in-law of George Washington Vanderbilt II [2]
James F. Fargo Williams president of American Express, originated travelers check system [26][2]
Stuyvesant Fish Columbia president of the Central Illinois Railroad [6]
William Perkins Foss Jr. Yale board chairman of Rock Trap Company 1930 - 1957 [27]
Albert Francke Yale New York Stock Exchange governor [28][2]
Schuyler Hamilton Jr. Columbia brick manufacturer, mining engineer, architect [18]
Samuel Frederic Houston Pennsylvania president Real Estate Trust Company of Philadelphia, president Guaranty Trust and Safe Deposit Company,

chairman of the board Pennsylvania Sugar Company

[29][2][30]
Colin M. Ingersoll, Jr. Yale commissioner of real estate and chief engineer New York, New Hampshire, and Hartford Railroad [31][32][2]
Rudolph H. Kissel Columbia investment banker, partner in Kissel, Kinnicutt & Co.(later Kidder, Peabody & Company) [33][2]
Eugene Clapp Columbia chief engineer Port of Havana Docks Company, deputy chief engineer Cape Code Canal, division engineer

New York Rapid Transit Commission, chief engineer Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company

[34]
Robert C. Lea Pennsylvania partner in Rock Wool Insulation Company (now Rockwool International) [35][2]
Arthur L Lesher Columbia president of the textile firm Lesher, Whitman & Co, Inc., treasurer of Vassar College [36][2]
V. Everit Macy Columbia industrialist and philanthropist, president of the National Civic Federation [37]
William D. Nielson Pennsylvania president of Elmira and Williamsport Railroad, attorney [38]
William Beach Olmsted Jr. Yale director and vice-president American Viscose Corporation [39]
Rutherford Stuyvesant Pierrepont Columbia executive with Keokee Consolidated Coal and Coke Company, director of Bank of America [40][2]
Moncure Robinson Jr. Pennsylvania director Baltimore Steam Packet Company (aka the Bay Line Railroad) [41][18][2]
Frank Roosevelt Trinity co-founder of the Roosevelt Organ Works [42][2][43]
Edwards Ogden Schuyler Columbia member of the stock exchange with Trippe, Schuyler & Co. [44][2]
Francis Alexander Shields Jr. Pennsylvania executive with Revlon and Estee Lauder, father of Brooke Shields
John B. Stewart Virgininia manager of Charles D. Barney & Co. (later known as Smith Barney) [45][18]
John H. Stewart Yale investment banker, vice president Continental Illinois Company, Lawrence Stern & Company, and Cassett & Company [46]
Charles Sumner Williams M.I.T. chairman and vice-president of Thomas A. Edison Inc., vice president Motion Picture Specialty Corporation [47]
John Borland Thayer III Pennsylvania treasurer and financial vice president of the University of Pennsylvania, survivor of the Titanic [48]
Frederick Ferris Thompson Williams prominent banker who helped found the banks known today as Citibank and JP Morgan Chase [18]
Henry R. Towne Pennsylvania co-founder of Yale locks, president Society of American Engineers, director Federal Reserve Bank of New York [49][2]
John Henry Towne M.I.T. chairman of Yale & Towne Manufacturing Co. [50][2]
Juan Terry Trippe Yale aviation pioneer, founder of Pan Am [51]
Arthur Turnbull Columbia governor of New York Stock Exchange, partner in brokerage firm Post & Flagg, vice president/treasurer

United States Mortgage and Trust Company, member of the Chicago Board of Trade

[52][2]
Frederick William Vanderbilt Yale director of the New York Central Railroad, philanthropist [6]
George Herbert Walker IV Pennsylvania managing director of Lehman Brothers.Second cousin to U.S. President George W. Bush [53]
H. Walter Webb Columbia vice president Wagner Palace Car Co.; executive with the New York Central Railroad [18]
Richard Thornton Wilson Jr. Columbia banker, president of the Saratoga Racing Association, prominent thoroughbred horse owner [2]
Richard Davis Wood Pennsylvania banker, merchant, manufacturer, and railroad director [54][2]

Clergy

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
E. Otis Charles Trinity Episcopal Bishop, first Christian bishop to publicly come out as gay
William Croswell Doane Burlington 92nd Bishop of the Episcopal Church in America, 1st Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Albany [55][6]
Charles Betts Galloway Mississippi Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South [18]
Mark Hollingsworth Jr. Trinity 11th Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio, founder of Epiphany at Sea
David Elliot Johnson Trinity Bishop of Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts [56]
James S. Johnston Virginia Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of West Texas [2]
Henry Steel Olcott Columbia co-founder and first president of the Theosophical Society, first prominent American to convert to Buddhism [18]
Arthur E. Walmsley Trinity Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut
Preston Washington Williams minister of Memorial Baptist Church in Harlem, New York, co-founder of the Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement [57]

Diplomacy and government

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
Robert Adams Jr. Pennsylvania U.S. Minister to Brazil 1889–1890, U.S. House of Representatives for Pennsylvania 1893–1906 [6][18]
Albert B. Fay Yale U.S. Ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago 1976–1977 [58]
Clinton Hart Merriam Yale father of mammalogy, first chief of the Division of Economic Ornithology and Mammalogy of the United States Department of Agriculture [6][18]
Vance C. McCormick Yale Chair of the American delegation at the Treaty of Versailles under President Woodrow Wilson [2]
Thomas Nelson Page W&L U.S. Ambassador to Italy 1913–1919, novelist who popularized the plantation genre [18]
Michael J. Petrucelli Trinity Deputy director and acting director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services of the Department of

Homeland Security, founder of Clear Path Immigration

[59]
Nathaniel P. Reed Trinity Assistant Secretary U.S. Department of Interior for Fish, Wildlife and National Parks. Co-wrote Endangered Species Act
Cornelius V. S. Roosevelt MIT Head of the CIA Technical Services Division and grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt [60]
John A. Shaw Williams Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for International Technology Security, Assistant Secretary of State [61][62]
Edward Stettinius Jr. Virginia U.S. Secretary of State 1943-1945, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations 1945–1946, Chairman U.S. Steele
Strobe Talbott Yale U.S. Deputy Secretary of State. president of the Brookings Institution [60][63]
T. Tileston Wells Columbia Consul General for Romania in New York, attorney [2]
Stewart L. Woodford Columbia U.S. Ambassador to Spain 1897-98, Lt Governor of New York 1867–68, U.S. House of Representatives from

New York 1873–1874

[58][6]
Luke Edward Wright Mississippi U.S. Governor General of the Philippines 1904–1906, U.S. Ambassador to Japan 1906–1907, U.S. Secretary

of War 1908–1909

[18]

Law and judiciary

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
John Cromwell Bell Jr. Pennsylvania Chief Justice and justice Supreme Court of Pennsylvania 1950-1972, Governor of Pennsylvania 1957 [58]
Risden Tylor Bennett Cumberland North Carolina Superior Court Justice, U.S. House of Representative from North Carolina 1883–1887 [64]
Charles Clark Mississippi Chief Justice Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals [65]
John T. Downey Yale Connecticut Superior Court Judge, former CIA flyer imprisoned in China for over two decades [66]
Jeffrey Konta Yale attorney with William Randolph Hearst organization, World Film Corporation, and Lewis J. Selznick [67]
Andrew Roraback Yale Connecticut Superior Court Judge, Connecticut State Senate 2000–2008, Connecticut General Assembly 1994–2000 [68]
Richard Smith Whaley Virginia Senior Judge of the United States Court of Claims, U.S. House of Representative from South Carolina 1913–1921 [2]
J. Harvie Wilkinson III Yale Federal Judge Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals [69]
Charles H. Wiltsie Rochester attorney, author of legal treatises including the standard on Mortgage Law [70]
Julian M. Wright M.I.T. Judge Advocate in the International Court in Cairo, Egypt [2]

Media and entertainment

Name Original Chapter Nobility Refernence
Edward Downes Columbia host of The Metropolitan Opera Quiz on the Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts, musicologist and music critic
John Eaton Yale originator of John Eaton Presents the American Popular Song on PBS, jazz pianist
Alex Gibney Yale Oscar and Emmy winning film director and producer [71]
Fred Graham Yale chief anchor and managing editor of Court TV, legal correspondent for CBS News. Received a Peabody Award in 1974
Rachael Horovitz UNC producer known for Moneyball (film) and Patrick Melrose (TV) [72]
Andrew Levy Columbia humorist and commentator with Fox News, associate producer for NBC news, executive with the Directors Guild of America
Jeff MacNelly UNC three-time Pulitzer Prize–winning editorial cartoonist and creator of the comic strip Shoe [73][74]
Tinsley Mortime Columbia New York socialite and reality television personality, known for The Real Housewives of New York City [75]
Eric Shansby Yale cartoonist for various American periodicals, including the Washington Post
Fredrik Stanton Williams filmmaker, author, newspaper publisher [76]

Medicine and science

Name Original Chapter Nobility Reference
Glover Crane Arnold Columbia instructor of anatomy at Bellevue Medical Collage [2]
Britton Chance Pennsylvania father of redox sciences, helped develop spectroscopy, received National Medal of Science, director of the

Eldridge Reeves Johnson Foundation for Medical Physics, 1952 Summer Olympics Gold medalist in Yachting

[10]
Mary O'Connor Yale chair and professor of Orthopedics at Mayo Clinic, first director of the Center for Musculoskeletal Care at the

Yale School of Medicine, 1980 Summer Olympics women's eight rowing team, Congressional Gold Medal

[13]
Sylvanus Albert Reed Columbia physicist, received Collier Trophy for invention of the Reed metal airplane propeller [77]
Rudolph August Witthaus Columbia physician and toxicologist expert, professor of chemistry and toxicology at Cornell [18]

Military

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
John Baptiste Bernadou Pennsylvania U.S. Navy officer during the Spanish–American War. Namesake of the destroyer USS Bernadou [18]
William P. Biddle Pennsylvania Major General and 11th Commandant of the United States Marine Corps [18]
Cecil Clay Pennsylvania Medal of Honor recipient, Captain of Company K in the 58th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment [18]
Charles Edison M.I.T. United States Secretary of the Navy, Governor of New Jersey 1941–1944, son of Thomas Alva Edison [58]
Hamilton Fish II Columbia Sergeant 1st U.S. Volunteer Cavalry Regiment (Rough Riders), killed during the Spanish–American War .[78]
William "Bull" Halsey Jr. Virginia U.S. Navy officer, commander of the U.S. Third Fleet in the Pacific War in World War II [79][60]
Lansing McVickar M.I.T. Colonel of 318th Regiment, recipient of Bronze Star, Croix de Guerre, Silver Star, Distinguished Service Cross [80]
Truman Handy Newberry Yale U.S. Secretary of the Navy 1908–1909, U.S. Senator from Michigan 1919–1922 [18]
Elwell Stephen Otis Rochester General during the Civil War, Indian Wars, Spanish–American War and the Philippine–American War [6]
Chauncey Stillman Columbia squadron air combat intelligence officer during World War II, director of the Freeport Minerals Company
William McNeill Whistler Columbia Confederate soldier and surgeon, expatriate surgeon, brother of artist James Whistler [18]
Charles W. Whittlesey Williams Medal of Honor recipient who led the "Lost Battalion" World War I [81]
William M. Wright Yale Army Lt. General, recipient French Croix de Guerre, Order of the Rising Sun, Order of Saint Michael and Saint George [18]

Nonprofits and academics

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
E. Digby Baltzell Pennsylvania sociologist, academic, and author credited with popularizing the term WASP or White Anglo-Saxon Protestant [82][60]
Robert P. DeVecchi Yale International Rescue Committee president and CEO [83]
William Fincke Yale founded Brookwood Labor College and the Manumit School, Presbyterian minister, All-American football player [2]
Frederick D. Losey Rochester head of rhetoric and public speaking at Syracuse University, professor of English and public speaking at University of Alabama, editor and author of Complete Poetic and Dramatic Works of Shakespeare, elocutionist and performer [2]
James Gustave Speth Yale co-founder of the Natural Resources Defense Council, dean of the Yale Forestry School [15]
S. Frederick Starr Yale founder of Central Asia-Caucus Institute, president of Oberlin College, co-founder Louisiana Repertory Jazz Ensemble
James Graham Phelps Stokes Columbia founding member Intercollegiate Socialist Society, founder of Hartley House, socialist writer, political activist, and philanthropist, president Nevada Central Railroad [2]

Politicians

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
Joseph W. Alsop IV Yale Connecticut State House of Representatives 1907–1909, Connecticut State Senate 1909–1913 [58]
Joseph Weldon Bailey Mississippi U.S. Senate 1901–1913, U.S. House of Representative from Texas 1891–1901, U.S. House Minority Leader 1897–1899 [6]
Nick Bain Mississippi Mississippi State House of Representatives 2012 to present
Risden Tylor Bennett Cumberland U.S. House of Representative from North Carolina 1883–1887, North Carolina Superior Court Justice [18]
Harry F. Byrd Jr. Virginia U.S. Senator from Virginia 1965–1983 [84]
Thomas C. Catchings Mississippi U.S. House of Representatives Mississippi 1885–1900, Mississippi Attorney General 1877–1885 [6][18]
Walker Lucas. Clapp Mississippi Speaker of the Tennessee House of Representatives 1887–1891, Mayor of Memphis 1895–1898 [2]
Joseph S. Clark Jr. Pennsylvania U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania 1957–1969, Mayor of Philadelphia 1952–1956
E. Harold Cluett Williams U.S. House Representatives from New York 1937–1943, National War Work Council 1918 [2]
Thomas C. Coffin Yale U.S. House Representatives from Idaho 1933–1934 [85]
Lawrence Coughlin Yale U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania 1969–1993
Charles S. Dewey Yale U.S. House of Representatives from Illinois 1941–1942. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury [58]
Charles Edison M.I.T. Governor of New Jersey 1941–1944, U.S. Secretary of the Navy, son of Thomas Alva Edison [58]
Charles James Faulkner Virginia U.S. Senator from West Virginia 1887–1899 [6][18]
Hamilton Fish II Columbia U.S. House of Representatives from New York 1909–1911, Speaker of the New York State Assembly [6]
Eric Garcetti Columbia Mayor of Los Angeles, California [86][87]
Albert Taylor Goodwyn Virginia U.S. House of Representative from Alabama 1895–1896 [18]
Robert Ray Hamilton Columbia New York State Assembly 1881, 1886–1891 [2]
Rounsaville S. McNeal Mississippi Mississippi House of Representatives 2016–2020 [88]
John M. Mitchell Columbia U.S. House of Representatives from New York 1896–1899 [6][18]
Hernando Money Mississippi U.S. House of Representatives from Mississippi 1875–1885 [6][18]
William Fellowes Morgan Sr. Pennsylvania New Jersey General Assembly 1906, a pioneer the use of refrigeration in warehouses [89]
Edward de Veaux Morrell Pennsylvania U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania 1899–1906 [18]
Wendell Mottley Yale Trinidad and Tobago House of Representatives serving as Minister of Finance, 1964 Summer Olympics medalist [90]
James B. Murray Yale Virginia House of Delegates 1974–1982 [91]
James Breck Perkins Rochester U.S. House of Representatives from New York 1901–1910, New York State Assembly [18]
Charles A. Peabody Jr. Columbia New York State Assembly 1876, attorney [2][18]
Andrew Roraback Yale Connecticut Senate 2000–2022, Connecticut House of Representatives 1994–2000, Connecticut Superior Court Judge [92]
William S. Reyburn Yale U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania 1911–13, Pennsylvania House of Representatives 1909–11 [58]
Daniel Lindsay Russell UNC Governor of North Carolina 1897–1901, U.S. House of Representative from North Carolina 1879–1881 [2]
Francis Sargent MIT Governor of Massachusetts 1969–1975
Willard Saulsbury Jr. Virginia U.S. Senator from Delaware 1913–1919, Senate President pro tempore 1915–1919 [18]
Walter Sillers Jr Mississippi Mississippi House of Representatives 1916–44; Speaker of the Mississippi State House of Representatives 1944 [58]
D. French Slaughter Jr. Virginia U.S. House of Representatives from Virginia 1985–1991 [93]
James Luther Slayden W&L U.S. House of Representatives from Texas 1897–1903 [2]
Lawrence "Lon" Vest Stephens W&L Governor of Missouri 1897–1903 [18]
Gerry Studds Yale U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts 1973–1996; first openly gay Congressman
William V. Sullivan Mississippi U.S. Senator from Mississippi 1898–1901, S. House of Representatives from Mississippi 1897–1898 [6]
John V. Tunney Yale U.S. House of Representatives from California 1965–1970. U.S. Senator from California 1970–1976 [94]
J. Mayhew Wainwright Columbia U.S. House of Representatives from New York 1923–1931, U.S. Assistant Secretary of War from 1921–1923 [58]
Malcolm Wallop Yale U.S. Senator from Wyoming 1977–1995, Earl of Portsmouth, Wyoming State Senate 1973–1976
Hugh L. White Mississippi Governor of Mississippi from 1936–1940 and 1952–1956 [95]
William Madison Whittington Mississippi U.S. House of Representatives from Mississippi 1925–1951 [2]
Anthony A. Williams Yale Mayor of Washington, D.C. 1999–2007 [63]

Writers and journalists

Name Original Chapter Notability Reference
C. D. B. Bryan Yale author, journalist and academic, winner of a Peabody Award and the Harper Prize [96]
Jay Carney Yale White House Press Secretary 2011–2014, bureau chief for Time 1988–2008, CNN commentator 2014–2015
George Crile III Trinity journalist associated with three decades at CBS News. Author of Charlie Wilson's War [97]
Tracy Deonn UNC author, received a 2020 Coretta Scott King Award-John Steptoe Award for New Talent for her debut novel Legendborn [98]
Max Forrester Eastman Williams socialist writer and patron of the Harlem Renaissance [2]
Peter Gammons UNC columnist for Sports Illustrated and The Boston Globe, and ESPN commentator [99][60]
William Douglas Gordon Virgina editor Richmond Times-Dispatch, editor Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch, music and drama critic, attorney [100][2]
Isaac Austin Henderson Williams novelist and publisher of the New York Evening Post [18]
Robert Hillyer Trinity poet, won Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for "Collected Verse" in 1934 [101]
Robert W. Jones Rochester journalist, associated editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer, editor Housekeeping magazine [102]
Charles Kuralt UNC journalist and writer, known for his long career with CBS News, winner of 12 Emmy Awards and 2 Peabody Awards [74][60]
John H. Lahr Yale theater critic, author, playwright, senior drama critic of The New Yorker 1992-2013, won a Tony Award, National

Book Critics Circle Award, Lambda Literary Award, and American Academy of Arts and Letters Award

Harold A. Lamb Columbia historian, screenwriter, and novelist. [103]
Lewis H. Lapham Yale writer, founder of Lapham's Quarterly, editor of Harper's Magazine [60]
Charles M. Meredith III Pennsylvania owner and publisher of the Quakertown Free Press, Emmaus Free Press, Indian Valley Echo [104][105]
Thomas Nelson Page W&L novelist who popularized the plantation genre. US Ambassador to Italy, 1913–1919 [6][18]
Mara Rockliff Brown author of books for children [106]
Charles Green Shaw Yale writer for The New Yorker and Vanity Fair, poet, children's book author, novelist. abstract painter [9]
Stephen G. Smith Pennsylvania writer, editor in chief of the National Journal, senior-editor at Newsweek, Time, and U.S. News & World Report [107]
John Lawson Stoddard Williams poet, theologian, lecturer and bestselling author of international travelogues. [18]
Melanie Sumner UNC novelist and academic, received a Whiting Award for her first novel, Polite Society (1995) [108]
Edward Sims Van Zile Trinity journalist, writer of novels, short stories and biographies [109]
Loudon Wainwright Jr. UNC writer and editor of Life magazine, author [74]
Naomi Wolf Yale writer, political consultant, feminist
Jonathan Yardley UNC Pulitzer Prize winning book critic with the Washington Post [12]

See also

References

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  4. Thorpe, T. A. D. (2020). "The History of the Three Volumes of 'The History of Delta Psi'". The Review. St. Anthony Hall. Fall: 4–5.
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