List of Alpha Tau Omega brothers
This is a list of Alpha Tau Omega brothers who have achieved notability.
Main article: Alpha Tau Omega
Astronauts
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Business
- J. Mark Barnes: Indiana State University; Chief Operating Officer of Volkswagen of America
 - Robert J. Barreto: Clemson University '79; entrepreneur; CEO of GBS Building Supply Company; Executive VP of Mergers and Acquisitions of Iron Mountain Records Management Co.
 - David Bohnett: USC; technology entrepreneur; co-founder of GeoCities
 - Sam Calgione: Muhlenberg College 1992; founder of Dogfish Head Brewery
 - Edwin. M Crawford: Auburn '71; CEO of Caremark RX
 - Walt Ehmer: Georgia Tech; CEO of Waffle House
 - Frank Fahrenkopf: Nevada-Reno '59; President and CEO of the American Gaming Association
 - Frank Fertitta III: USC '81; CEO of Station Casinos in Las Vegas, Nevada; owns UFC; co-owner of PRIDE FC Worldwide Holdings
 - Gerald J. Ford: Southern Methodist '66; CEO of Golden State Bancorp
 - Richard S. Fuld, Jr.: Colorado '69; CEO of Lehman Brothers Holdings
 - Daniel E. Gill: Northwestern University 1958; former Chairman and President of Bausch & Lomb
 - Richard C. Green: Southern Methodist '76; CEO of Aquila Corporation
 - Matthew J. Hart: Vanderbilt University '74; former President, COO, and CFO of Hilton Hotels
 - James P. Hoffa: Michigan State 1963; President of Teamsters Union; Jimmy Hoffa's son
 - John Jennings: President of Associated Builders and Contractors
 - Michael Jones: Superintendent of the Illinois Lottery
 - J. Erik Jonsson: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; founder of Texas Instruments
 - Michael J. King: Pennsylvania State University; Bursar of Lehigh University
 - George Irl Lazenby, IV: University of Alabama; CEO of Emdeon (2007–present?)
 - Earl T. Leonard Jr.: University of Georgia; Senior Vice President for Coca-Cola
 - Julius Curtis Lewis, Jr.: University of Georgia; President of J.C. Lewis Enterprises and Lewis Broadcasting Corp.
 - M Ryan Magnesen: Indiana University, Bloomington; Vice President of Morgan Stanley
 - Richard Allen Manley Jr.: Colby College 1983; Boston bond lawyer[1][2]
 - Billy Joe "Red" McCombs: University of Texas; former owner of Minnesota Vikings; namesake of McCombs School of Business
 - Shishir Mehrotra: MIT; founder of Centrata; head of YouTube engineering, product management, and user experience at Google
 - William Mitchell: Lamar University 1958; Texas Instruments Vice Chairman (retired)
 - Gregory R. Page: University of North Dakota; President and CEO of Cargill, Inc.
 - Lewis E. Platt: Cornell 1965; former CEO of Hewlett-Packard
 - Bernard Ramsey: University of Georgia; philanthropist
 - C. Dowd Ritter: Birmingham-Southern '69; CEO of Regions Financial Corporation
 - Joseph Wilson Rodgers Jr.: Georgia Institute of Technology; owner of Waffle House
 - Francis M. Scicco: Worcester Poly '68; CEO of Arrow Electronics
 - Christopher A. Sinclair: University of Kansas '71; CEO of Mattel
 - Elton B. Stephens: Birmingham-Southern; founder of EBSCO Industries
 - David M. Thomas: Florida '71; CEO of IMS Health
 - James E. Thompson: San Jose State University; founder, Chairman, and CEO of the Crown Worldwide Group
 - John A. Young: Oregon State University 1953; President and CEO of Hewlett-Packard (retired)
 
Education
- Jason R. Barr: former Associate Dean, Administration and Planning, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine
 - James Borsig: President of Mississippi University for Women
 - Al Bowman: President of Illinois State University
 - Peter J. Cistone: professor and former Dean of the College of Education, Florida International University, Miami
 - Kevin Clayton: interim president of Lehigh University[3]
 - Dr. Gilbert Fowler: Dean of Honors College at Arkansas State University
 - Jack Hawkins, Jr.: Chancellor of Troy University
 - Frank Hereford: former President of the University of Virginia
 - Robert Kaplan: Asst. Dean of the College of William & Mary Law School
 - Robert Mittelstaedt: Tulane; former Vice Dean of Wharton School; Dean of W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University
 - William Muir: Kansas State; Assistant Vice President of Kansas State University
 - Stephen C. O'Connell: sixth President of the University of Florida (1967–1973)
 - Santa J. Ono: president of University of Cincinnati
 - Robert L. Potts: first Chancellor of Arkansas State University
 - Howell W. Todd: CEO of South Dakota Board of Regents, 1989-94; President of Mississippi College, 1994-2001
 
Entertainment and media
- John Besh: celebrity chef
 - Anthony Michael Brooks: world champion Rubik's Cube solver
 - Bugs Bunny: animated Warner Brothers character; initiated in 1947 at University of Kentucky; Warner Bros endorses Bugs as an actual member[4]
 - Dieter (Dominic Dieter): radio personality; co-host of Rover's Morning Glory
 - Dana Elcar: film and TV actor best known for his supporting role on MacGyver
 - Hunter Ellis: reality TV star; host of History Channel's Tactical to Practical
 - Rob Estes: actor, Melrose Place, Silk Stalkings, 90210
 - Guy Fieri: Food Network star; host of Guy's Big Bite and Diners, Drive-In's, and Dives; Nevada-Las Vegas
 - Kent Buxton: rapper aka MC Buttson
 - Brad Fiorenza: MTV's The Real World: San Diego cast member
 - Christopher Fitzgerald: Broadway and film actor
 - Shelby Foote: novelist and Civil War historian
 - Cork Graham: combat photographer imprisoned in Vietnam for illegally entering the country while looking for treasure buried by Captain Kidd
 - Bob Guiney: Bob the Bachelor from The Bachelor 4
 - Andrew Haug: Australian radio announcer; drummer for Contrive; considered by many to be the Howard Stern of Australia
 - Jack Ingram: country music performer
 - Matt Jones: Broadway producer who headed the adaptation of Requiem for a Dream
 - Greg Kinnear: Talk Soup host; 1998 Academy Award nominee
 - Bert Kreischer: stand-up comedian, actor, and reality television host; known as "The Machine"
 - Art Linkletter: television personality; author, Kids Say The Darndest Things
 - Elmer Lower: former president of ABC News
 - Frank Marshall: film producer and director; co-founder of Amblin Entertainment
 - Garry Marshall: film director; Pretty Woman, Overboard), television producer (Happy Days and Laverne & Shirley; used ATO in the latter seasons of Happy Days several times, and an ATO fraternity paddle can be seen hanging on the wall of "Arnold's"
 - Jon Meacham: Editor of Newsweek; bestselling author; commentator on politics, history, and religious faith in America
 - Jesse Pasley: hip hop artist
 - Kony Sandusky: rapper
 - Forrest Sawyer: ABC News, Nightline
 - Adam Schroeder: Warner Brothers and FOX New Regency movie producer; Chronicle, The Truman Show, Clueless[5]
 - Elliot Segal: radio DJ and host of Elliot in the Morning
 - Grant Show: actor, Melrose Place
 - Benjamin R. Smith: author; movie producer; writer of Carousel; co-writer of the screenplay by the same name with Richard O'Sullivan
 - Stryker: radio DJ and co-host of the radio show Loveline
 - Vinnie Vozzo: guitarist; musician; American Idol finalist, 2010
 - Tennessee Williams: Pulitzer Prize winner for A Streetcar Named Desire
 - Reynolds Wolf: CNN meteorologist
 
Legal
- John Morgan: founder of nationwide personal injury law firm Morgan & Morgan
 - Richard H. Bryan: former US Senator and Nevada Governor (Nevada-Reno); former Nevada Attorney General
 - Frank Cassas: listed as one of the "Best Lawyers in America" (Nevada-Reno)
 - Frank Fahrenkopf: former Chair of the Republican National Committee (Nevada-Reno); former President and CEO of the American Gaming Association; founded the law firm Fahrenkopf, Mortimer, Sourwine, Mousel and Sloane
 - Procter Ralph Hug, Jr.: Judge, Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (Nevada-Reno)
 - Steven R. Kosach: current Washoe County District Court Judge (Nevada-Reno)
 - Ron Motley: trial lawyer; one of the lead attorneys in tobacco settlement, Union Carbide India; University of South Carolina
 - Mark NeJame: criminal defense lawyer; founder of NeJame Law; CNN legal analyst; notable cases include those of Tiger Woods, Casey Anthony, Lou Pearlman, and University of Florida
 - Eli Northrup: criminal defense attorney; rapper
 - William J. Raggio: Nevada State Senator (Nevada-Reno); former D.A. of Washoe County in Nevada (1958–1970)
 - Jim Santini: US Congressman, State of Nevada (Nevada-Reno); former Nevada district court judge
 - Grant Sawyer: Governor of Nevada, 1959-1967 (Nevada-Reno); co-founded Lionel Sawyer & Collins in 1967, which before its closing was the largest private law firm in Nevada
 - William L. Summers: criminal defense lawyer; past President of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers; notable cases include Carrollton, Kentucky bus collision and New Mexico State Penitentiary riot
 - Michael Waddington: court martial defense lawyer; notable cases include Bagram torture and prisoner abuse scandal, the Iron Triangle murder case (William B. Hunsaker), the Maywand District killings, and the Mahmudiyah killings
 
Military
- William E. Berry: University of Mississippi; Colonel, Army (retired); past ATO National Fraternity President
 - George S. Rentz: recipient of the Navy Cross
 - Holland Smith: Auburn University; General, USMC; the "father" of modern US amphibious warfare
 - Charles F. Wald: North Dakota State; General, USAF (retired); EUCOM Deputy Commander 2002-2006
 
Politics
- Lee Atwater: Chair of the Republican National Committee
 - Birch Bayh: US Senator (Indiana)
 - Richard H. Bryan: former US Senator and Nevada Governor (Nevada-Reno)
 - C. Farris Bryant: Governor of Florida 1961-1965; University of Florida
 - George C. Butte: jurist and Texas politician
 - Alberto "Al" Cardenas: political lobbyist; Florida Atlantic University
 - Frank Cassas: listed as one of the "Best Lawyers in America" (Nevada-Reno)
 - Lawton Chiles: US Senator; Governor of Florida 1991-1998; University of Florida
 - Federico Clerici: Congressman in Argentina, 1986-1993
 - Nathan Deal: Governor of Georgia; Mercer University
 - Andrew Durham: Head of NASA Communications; President of Nigeria University of Kentucky in Lexington, Kentucky
 - James Eastland: US Senator from 1942-1979; Senate Pro Tempore, 1972–1979
 - Frank Fahrenkopf: Chair of the Republican National Committee; president and CEO of the American Gaming Association (Nevada-Reno)
 - Sam Gibbons: Congressman
 - Matt Griffin: current Deputy Secretary of State of the State of Nevada (Nevada-Reno)
 - Stephen H. Grimes: Chief Justice of the Florida Supreme Court; University of Florida
 - Edward J. Gurney: US Senator, Florida
 - Lee H. Hamilton: US Congressman, Indiana
 - Spessard Holland: US Senator; Governor of Florida; University of Florida
 - Roy M. Huffington: Ambassador to Austria, 1990-93; named Ambassador of the Year in 1992 by the Diplomatic Club of Vienna
 - Procter Ralph Hug, Jr.: Judge, Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (Nevada-Reno)
 - Willis B. Hunt Jr.: Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia; Emory University
 - Harry A. Johnston: US Congressman, Florida
 - Robert H. Johnson: state senator from Rock Springs, Wyoming; University of Wyoming
 - Kurt Kelly: State Representative dist. 24 Florida; Florida State University
 - Jack Kemp: 1996 candidate for US Vice President; former US Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
 - Tom Kindness: US Congressman, Ohio; University of Maryland, College Park
 - Steven R. Kosach: Washoe County District Court Judge; former member of the championship '65 baseball team of the University of Nevada; earned two silver stars in Vietnam (Nevada-Reno)
 - Clarence D. Long: US Representative, 1963-1985
 - Michael Mansfield: US Senate Majority Leader, 1961-1977
 - Mel Martinez: US Senator, Florida; honorary initiate in Spring 1997, Eta Rho chapter; sponsored by ATO's former National President Bruce O'Donoghue to help Martinez further his political career; this special initiation helped him gain local office in Orange County, Florida, which he then used to catapult to national prominence
 - Larry McDonald: Georgia Congressman; killed on Korean Air Flight 007
 - Harry Mitchell: US Congressman, Arizona
 - Stephen C. O'Connell: Justice and Chief Justice, Florida Supreme Court (1955–1967); President of the University of Florida (1967-1973)
 - John E. Porter: Congressman, Illinois
 - William J. Raggio: Nevada State Senator (Nevada-Reno)
 - Jim Santini: US Congressman, Nevada (Nevada-Reno)
 - Grant Sawyer: Governor of Nevada, 1959-1967 (Nevada-Reno)
 - Eric Simons: Jackson Township trustee
 - Alan K. Simpson: US Senator, Wyoming
 - Charles H. Smelser: former Maryland State Senator; University of Maryland, College Park
 - James C. Smith: former Florida Attorney General and Florida Secretary of State; Florida State University
 - J. Christopher Stevens: former US Ambassador to Libya (June - September 2012); killed in the U.S. Consulate attack in Benghazi
 - Lindsay C. Stevens: US Representative, 1925-1940
 - James Stockdale: 1992 Independent vice-presidential nominee
 - John S. Tanner: US Congressman from Tennessee; University of Tennessee
 - Ken Tedford: Mayor of the City of Fallon in Nevada (Nevada-Reno)
 
Religion
- James Milton Richardson: fifth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas, 1965–1980; national chief (president) of ATO, 1952–1956
 
Science
- Vannevar Bush: physicist; WWII advisor; architect of modern government science policy
 - Arthur Holly Compton: physicist and Nobel Prize winner
 - Karl Compton: physicist and influential science advisor in World War II; President of MIT
 
Sports
- John Ayers: NFL football player, 1977–1987
 - Dom Capers: defensive coordinator, Green Bay Packers; former NFL head coach
 - Chris Capuano: MLB pitcher, Los Angeles Dodgers
 - Bud Collins: tennis announcer, author
 - Cris Collinsworth: former NFL wide receiver, sports anchor
 - Lee Corso: sports commentator, football coach
 - Len Dawson: NFL Hall of Famer, Super Bowl IV MVP, sports anchor
 - Ted DiBiase: "The Million Dollar Man"; former WWF wrestler
 - Gerry Fraley: Dallas morning news sports reporter; former college athlete
 - Terry Funk: pro wrestler
 - Mike Droese: "Duke The Dumpster"; former WWE wrestler
 - Joe Girardi: New York Yankees current manager and former catcher; former Florida Marlins manager
 - Steve Gleason: NFL football player, 2000-2008
 - Lucas Glover: Clemson University; PGA Tour golfer; winner of the 2009 US Open
 - Curt Gowdy: sports broadcaster for five decades; seven Super Bowls and 14 World Series
 - Lou Groza: NFL Hall of Famer
 - Joe B. Hall: former head basketball coach of the University of Kentucky Wildcats (1978 National Champions)
 - Bill Ireland: University of Nevada; Las Vegas Baseball Coach 1960-1967; UNLV's first Athletic Director; the "father of UNLV athletics" (Nevada-Reno)
 - Keith Jackson: sports commentator, ABC
 - Tommy John: Major League baseball pitcher; four-time All Star team; initiated in 1964; Indiana State University
 - James Davis Josey: track and field athlete: 100, 200, and 400 meter dash finalists for Olympics (Mississippi State University)
 - Ed Jucker: former head coach of the University of Cincinnati Bearcats basketball team; coached the team to two national championships in the 1960-61 and 1961-62 seasons
 - Ernie Koy: Texas Longhorns, 1963 National Champions; Pro Bowl running back for New York Giants
 - William Little: known as the "father of Southern football"; introduced football at the University of Alabama
 - Joel McNulty: All Time Big Ten Conference men's track and field winner; two record-setting and one other win, 1952-1953
 - Magnum T.A.: "Terry Allen"; Former WWF pro wrestler
 - Curt Miller: head coach of Indiana University women's basketball
 - Jim Mora: former head coach of the New Orleans Saints
 - Victor Oladipo: NCAA 1st Team All-American for the Indiana Hoosiers
 - Rob Pannell: all-time NCAA Division 1 men's lacrosse scoring leader at Cornell University
 - Roger Reina: former UPenn wrestling coach
 - Mike Schellin: boxer 1966-68; University of Nevada Hall of Fame; undefeated 32-0 at Nevada; three-time California Collegiate Boxing Conference titles; two-time winner of the Julius LaRowe Memorial Trophy; runner-up at the 1968 Western Regional Olympic Trials (Nevada-Reno)
 - Brandon Slay: gold medalist at Sydney Olympics in wrestling
 - Steve Spurrier: head coach of the University of South Carolina Gamecocks; Heisman Trophy winner 1966 at University of Florida; former Florida head coach; 1996 National Championship
 - Brad Stevens: Head Coach of the Boston Celtics; former Head Coach of Butler Bulldogs basketball team; DePauw University
 - Jason Szuminski: MLB baseball player (San Diego Padres) - 1st major league athlete drafted from MIT
 - Robby Thompson: second baseman for the San Francisco Giants, 1986-1996; winner of the Willie Mac Award in 1991
 - Jim Tressel: former head coach of the Ohio State Buckeyes (2002 National Champions)
 - Matt Valenti: two-time NCAA national champion wrestler
 - Chandler Worthy: WR for the Houston Texans, 2015-present
 - Jack Youngblood: NFL Hall of Fame
 
References
- ↑ "Richard A. Manley Jr. - Professionals - Edwards Wildman". Retrieved 2014-07-06.
 - ↑  "Colby Alumni Community - List of Donors". Colby College. Retrieved 2014-07-06. 
...everyone who's made a Colby Fund gift since July 1, 2013 ... Richard A. Manley Jr. '83, P'13, '17
 - ↑ "Bernards man named interim president of Lehigh University". New Jersey Hills. 10 July 2014.
 - ↑ http://www.kentuckyifc.com/Chapters/Alpha%20Tau%20Omega.html
 - ↑ "Adam Schroeder". IMDb.
 
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