List of Alpha Tau Omega members
Alpha Tau Omega is an American social fraternity founded at the Virginia Military Institute in 1865. Following is a list of some of the notable Alpha Tau Omega members. Dates are the date of joining.
Academia
- Bob Clement (University of Tennessee), president of Cumberland University and US House of Representatives[1]
 - Karl Taylor Compton: President of MIT
 - John Garland James (VMI): 2nd president of Texas A&M University(1879-1883), president of Texas Military Institute(1868-1879)[2][3][4]
 - Hardaway Hunt Dinwiddie (VMI): 4th president of Texas A&M University(1883-1887)[2]
 - Frank Hereford: former president of the University of Virginia[5]
 - Stephen C. O'Connell: Justice and Chief Justice, Florida Supreme Court (1955–1967) and President of the University of Florida (1967-1973)[6]
 - Santa Ono (Emory, honorary), 28th president of University of Cincinnati and 15th president of University of Michigan[7]
 - Blake R. Van Leer: fifth president of Georgia Institute of Technology, founder of Southern Polytechnic State University, former dean of University of Florida and North Carolina State University[8]
 
Art and architecture
- Lehman "Monk" Ferris, architect[9]
 
Business
- David Bohnett (USC): technology entrepreneur; co-founder of GeoCities[10]
 - Paul J. Brown (Georgia Tech); CEO of Arby's
 - William H. Davidson (Wisconsin, 1924), co-founder and president of Harley-Davidson Motor Company[11][12]
 - Walter G. Ehmer (Georgia Tech): CEO of Waffle House[13]
 - Frank Fahrenkopf (Nevada-Reno 1959): president and CEO of the American Gaming Association[14]
 - Harold Allen Fernald (University of Maine 1954); Vice President CBS (retired)
 - Frank Fertitta III (LSU, 1961): CEO of Station Casinos in Las Vegas, Nevada; owns Ultimate Fighting Championship[15]
 - Gerald J. Ford (Southern Methodist): CEO of Golden State Bancorp
 - Richard S. Fuld Jr. (Colorado) CEO of Lehman Brothers Holdings
 - Richard C. Green (Southern Methodist), CEO of Aquila Corporation
 - Matthew J. Hart (Vanderbilt, 1971), former president, COO, and CFO of Hilton Hotels[11]
 - James P. Hoffa (Michigan State,1960): president of Teamsters Union; Jimmy Hoffa's son[11]
 - Roy M. Huffington (Southern Methodist, 1935), United States Ambassador to Austria[11]
 - J. Erik Jonsson (Rensselaer, 1924): founder of Texas Instruments[11]
 - Donald Keough (Georgia, 1986), president, chief operating officer, and a director of The Coca-Cola Company[11]
 - Julius Curtis Lewis Jr. (University of Georgia): president of J.C. Lewis Enterprises and Lewis Broadcasting Corp.[16]
 - Billy Joe "Red" McCombs (University of Texas, 1959): former owner of Minnesota Vikings; namesake of McCombs School of Business[11]
 - F. James McDonald (GMI-EMI, 1983), former President, CEO, and COO of General Motors[11]
 - Gregory R. Page (North Dakota, 1973): president and CEO of Cargill, Inc.[17]
 - Lewis E. Platt (Cornell 1960): former CEO of Hewlett-Packard[11]
 - Bernard Ramsey (University of Georgia): executive with Merrill Lynch and philanthropist
 - Joe Rogers Jr. (Georgia Tech, 1965), CEO of Waffle House[11]
 - John Schnatter, founder of Papa John's[12]
 - Christopher A. Sinclair (University of Kansas): CEO of Mattel
 - Elton Bryson Stephens Sr. (Birmingham-Southern): founder of EBSCO Industries
 - James E. Thompson (San Jose State, 1959): founder, chairman, and CEO of the Crown Worldwide Group[11]
 - Edward Magruder Tutwiler (VMI, 1865): President Tutwiler Coal, Coke & Pig Iron Co., Birmingham, Al.[18][19]
 - John A. Young (Oregon State, 1950): former president and CEO of Hewlett-Packard[11]
 
Entertainment
- John Besh: celebrity chef[20]
 - Roman Bohnen (Minnesota 1920), stage and film actor[11]
 - Anthony Michael Brooks (Missouri), world champion Rubik's Cube solver[21]
 - Loring Buzzell: music publisher and record label executive
 - Bud Collins (Baldwin-Wallace, 1948), tennis announcer and author[11]
 - T. S. Cook (Denison, 1969), Oscar and Golden Globe-nominated screenwriter[11]
 - Dana Elcar (Michigan, 1949), film and TV actor best known for his supporting role on MacGyver[11]
 - Hunter Ellis: reality TV star; host of History Channel's Tactical to Practical[22]
 - Rob Estes (Southern California, 1983), an actor known for Melrose Place, Silk Stalkings, and 90210[11]
 - Guy Fieri (Nevada-Las Vegas, 1988), Food Network star; host of Guy's Big Bite and Diners, Drive-In's, and Dives[11][12]
 - Brad Fiorenza: MTV's The Real World: San Diego cast member[23]
 - Christopher Fitzgerald: Broadway and film actor[24]
 - Paul Gilmartin (Indiana, 1982), comedian and television host[11]
 - Curt Gowdy (Wyoming, 1939), sports broadcaster[11]
 - Bob Guiney (Michigan State, 1990), Bob the Bachelor from The Bachelor 4[25]
 - Andrew Haug: radio announcer; drummer for Contrive
 - Jack Ingram (Southern Methodist), country music performer[26]
 - Keith Jackson (Washington State, 1952), sports broadcaster who won sports Emmys in 1995 and 1997[11]
 - Anthony Jeselnik (Tulane), standup comedian, writer, and actor
 - Greg Kinnear (Arizona, 1983), Talk Soup host; 1998 Academy Award nominee[11]
 - Bert Kreischer (Florida State, 1982), stand-up comedian, actor, and reality television host; known as "The Machine"[11][12]
 - Art Linkletter (San Diego State, 1951), television personality; author, Kids Say The Darndest Things[11]
 - Elmer Lower (Missouri) former president of ABC News[27]
 - Frank Marshall (UNCA, 1965), film producer and director; co-founder of Amblin Entertainment[11]
 - Garry Marshall (Northwestern, 1953), film director and television producer known for Happy Days and Laverne & Shirley[11]
 - Forrest Sawyer (Florida, 1968), Emmy-winning newscaster with ABC News and Nightline[11]
 - Adam Schroeder: Warner Brothers and FOX New Regency movie producer; Chronicle, The Truman Show, Clueless[28]
 - Elliot Segal: radio DJ and host of Elliot in the Morning
 - Grant Show (UCLA, 1984), actor known for Melrose Place[11]
 - Stryker (DJ): radio DJ and co-host of the radio show Loveline
 - Reynolds Wolf: CNN meteorologist
 
Law
- Stephen H. Grimes (University of Florida): Chief Justice of the Florida Supreme Court[29]
 - Procter Ralph Hug Jr. (Nevada-Reno): Judge, Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit[30]
 - Willis B. Hunt Jr. (Emory University): Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia
 - John Morgan (Florida, 1975), founder of the law firm Morgan & Morgan[11]
 - Page Morris, US House of Representatives and Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota[31][18]
 - Stephen C. O'Connell: Justice and Chief Justice, Florida Supreme Court (1955–1967) and President of the University of Florida (1967-1973)[6]
 - Erskine Mayo Ross (VMI 1865): attorney and Judge of the U. S. Circuit Court California[19]
 - James C. Smith (Florida State University) former Florida Attorney General and Florida Secretary of State[32]
 - William L. Summers: criminal defense lawyer; past President of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers[33]
 - Michael Waddington: court-martial defense lawyer
 
Literature and journalism
- Shelby Foote: novelist and Civil War historian[34]
 - Gene Fowler (Colorado, 1911), author and screenwriter[11]
 - Cork Graham: novelist and combat photographer
 - Jack McCallum (Muhlenberg ’68), novelist and writer for Sports Illustrated[11]
 - Jon Meacham: editor of Newsweek; bestselling author; commentator on politics, history, and religious faith in America
 - Tennessee Williams (Missouri, 1930), Pulitzer Prize winner for A Streetcar Named Desire[11]
 
Military
- Frank Bowman (Duke University): Admiral, USN (retired); former Chief of Naval Personnel and director of Naval Nuclear Propulsion
 - George S. Rentz (Gettysburg College): United States Navy Chaplain Corps and commander in the United States Navy
 - Holland Smith (Auburn University): General, USMC; the "father" of modern US amphibious warfare[35]
 - James Stockdale (Monmouth, 1989) vice admiral and vice-presidential nominee in 1992[11]
 - Charles F. Wald (North Dakota State): General, USAF (retired); EUCOM Deputy Commander 2002-2006[36]
 
Politics
- Lee Atwater (Newberry, 1970), Chair of the Republican National Committee[11]
 - Birch Bayh (Purdue, 1946): US Senate from Indiana[11]
 - Richard Bryan (Nevada-Reno, 1956): former US Senate and Nevada Governor[11][14][9]
 - C. Farris Bryant (University of Florida): Governor of Florida 1961-1965[37]
 - George C. Butte: jurist and Texas politician[38]
 - Al Cárdenas (Florida Atlantic University) political lobbyist
 - Lawton Chiles (University of Florida, 1949) US Senate; Governor of Florida 1991-1998[11][39]
 - Bob Clement (University of Tennessee), US House of Representatives and president of Cumberland University[1]
 - Nathan Deal (Mercer University, 1966): Governor of Georgia[40]
 - James Eastland (Vanderbilt, 1926), US Senate from 1942-1979; Senate Pro Tempore, 1972–1979[11]
 - T. Cooper Evans, US House of Representatives[39]
 - Frank Fahrenkopf: Chair of the Republican National Committee; president and CEO of the American Gaming Association[41]
 - Sam Gibbons: US House of Representatives[39]
 - Dwight Griswold (Nebraska, 1913), Governor of Nebraska and U.S. Senate[11]
 - Edward Gurney: US Senate, Florida
 - Lee H. Hamilton DePauw, 1949), US House of Representatives, Indiana[11]
 - Thomas Gordon Hayes (VMI 1866): Maryland Senate, Mayor of Baltimore, and U. S. District Attorney[42]
 - Spessard Holland (Emory, 1909): US Senate; Governor of Florida[11]
 - Roy M. Huffington (Southern Methodist, 1935), US Ambassador to Austria[11]
 - Harry Johnston, US House of Representatives, Florida
 - Kurt Kelly (Florida State University): State Representative dist. 24 Florida
 - Jack Kemp (Occidental, 1954), United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and professional football player[11]
 - Tom Kindness (University of Maryland, College Park): US House of Representatives, Ohio[43]
 - Clarence D. Long (Washington & Jefferson,1930), US House of Representatives[11]
 - Mike Mansfield (Montana, 1938), US Senate Majority Leader, 1961-1977[11]
 - Mel Martínez: US Senate and United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
 - Larry McDonald: U.S. House of Representatives; killed on Korean Air Flight 007
 - Harry Mitchell: US House of Representatives, Arizona
 - Page Morris, US House of Representatives and Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota[31][18]
 - Robert L. Owen (Washington & Lee,1874), US Senate[11]
 - John Porter (MIT, 1954), US House of Representatives, Illinois[44]
 - William Raggio (Nevada-Reno): Nevada State Senator[9]
 - James David Santini (Nevada-Reno): US House of Representatives, State of Nevada; former Nevada district court judge[9]
 - Grant Sawyer (Nevada-Reno): Governor of Nevada, 1959-1967[9]
 - Alan K. Simpson (Wyoming, 1960), US Senate, Wyoming[11][39]
 - Milward Simpson (Wyoming,1918), Governor of Wyoming and US Senate[11]
 - Charles H. Smelser ( University of Maryland, College Park), Maryland State Senator[45]
 - James C. Smith (Florida State University) former Florida Attorney General and Florida Secretary of State
 - John Wesley Snyder (Vanderbilt, 1915), United States Secretary of the Treasury[11]
 - J. Christopher Stevens (UC Berkeley, 1979), former US Ambassador to Libya; killed in the U.S. Consulate attack in Benghazi[11]
 - John S. Tanner (University of Tennessee): US House of Representatives from Tennessee[1]
 - Bill Torrey (St. Lawrence, 1957), general manager for the Oakland Seals, New York Islanders, and Florida Panthers[11]
 - Lindsay C. Warren (UNC, 1907), Comptroller General of the United States and U.S. House of Representatives[11]
 - James G. Watt (Wyoming, 1957), U.S. Secretary of the Interior[11]
 
Religion
- Hazen Graff Werner (Albion College) bishop in the United Methodist Church from 1948 to 1968
 
Science
- Vannevar Bush: physicist; WWII advisor; architect of modern government science policy
 - Sonny Carter (Alpha Theta): NASA astronaut[46]
 - Arthur Compton: physicist and Nobel Prize winner
 - Charles Duke: NASA astronaut
 - Ferid Murad: physician and pharmacologist; Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1998
 - Robet F. Overmyer (Baldwin Wallace University): NASA astronaut
 - Edwin Blake Payson: Botanist[47]
 - Garrett Reisman (University of Pennsylvania): NASA astronaut[48]
 - David Wolf (Purdue University): NASA astronaut[49]
 
Sports
- John Ayers: NFL football player, 1977–1987
 - David Butz (Purdue, 1972) NFL football player, St Louis Cardinals & Washington Redskins, Super Bowl Champion[11]
 - Dom Capers: defensive coordinator, Green Bay Packers; former NFL head coach
 - Chris Capuano (Duke), MLB pitcher, Los Angeles Dodgers[50]
 - Cris Collinsworth (Florida, 1985), former NFL wide receiver, sports anchor[11]
 - Lee Corso (Florida State, 1954), sports commentator, football coach[11]
 - Len Dawson (Purdue, 1955), NFL Hall of Famer, Super Bowl IV MVP, sports anchor[11]
 - Everett Dean (Indiana, 1918), college basketball and baseball coach[11]
 - Paul Dee: former University of Miami athletics director[51]
 - Ted DiBiase: "The Million Dollar Man"; former WWF wrestler[12]
 - Terry Donahue (San Jose State, 1963), head football coach at the University of California[11]
 - Mike Droese: "Duke The Dumpster"; former WWE wrestler
 - Terry Funk: pro wrestler
 - Joe Girardi: New York Yankees former manager and catcher; former Florida Marlins manager[52]
 - Steve Gleason (Washington State, 1996), NFL football player, 2000-2008[11]
 - Lucas Glover (Clemson University): PGA Tour golfer; winner of the 2009 US Open[53]
 - Lou Groza (Ohio State, 1943), NFL Hall of Famer[11]
 - Joe B. Hall (Kentucky, 1948), former head basketball coach of the University of Kentucky Wildcats who were the 1978 National Champions[11]
 - Pete Henry (Washington & Jefferson, 1916), football player, coach, and athletic administrator[11]
 - Tommy Herr (Delaware, 1974), professional baseball player with the St. Louis Cardinals, Minnesota Twins, Philadelphia Phillies, San Francisco Giants, and New York Mets[11]
 - Tony Hulman (Rose-Hulman, 1946), owner of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway[11]
 - Bill Ireland (Nevada-Reno): University of Nevada; Las Vegas Baseball Coach 1960-1967; UNLV's first athletic director; the "father of UNLV athletics"
 - Keith Jackson (Washington State, 1952), sports commentator, ABC[11]
 - Tommy John (Indiana State University, 1954), Major League Baseball pitcher; four-time All-Star team; initiated in 1964[11]
 - Ed Jucker: former head coach of the University of Cincinnati Bearcats basketball team; coached the team to two national championships
 - Jack Kemp (Occidental, 1954), United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and professional football player[11]
 - Ernie Koy Jr.: Texas Longhorns, 1963 National Champions; Pro Bowl running back for New York Giants
 - Frank Kush (Michigan State, 1951), head football coach at Arizona State University, Hamilton Tiger-Cats, and the Baltimore and Indianapolis Colts[11]
 - Magnum T. A.: "Terry Allen"; Former WWF pro wrestler
 - John McKay (Oregon, 1948), head football coach at the University of Southern California and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers[11]
 - Joel McNulty: All Time Big Ten Conference men's track and field winner; two record-setting and one other win, 1952-1953
 - Derek Miles, pole vaulter[54]
 - Curt Miller: head coach of the WNBA's Connecticut Sun
 - Jim Mora (Occidental, 1955), former head coach of the New Orleans Saints[11]
 - Dorian O'Daniel, professional football player[12]
 - Victor Oladipo: NCAA 1st Team All-American for the Indiana Hoosiers[12]
 - Rob Pannell: all-time NCAA Division 1 men's lacrosse scoring leader at Cornell University
 - Roger Reina: former UPenn wrestling coach
 - Joe Schoen (DePauw University): NFL general manager (New York Giants, Buffalo Bills), NFL scout (Miami Dolphins, Carolina Panthers)
 - Brandon Slay: gold medalist at Sydney Olympics in wrestling
 - Steve Spurrier (Florida, 1966), head coach of the University of South Carolina Gamecocks; Heisman Trophy winner 1966 at University of Florida; former Florida head coach; 1996 National Championship[11]
 - Brad Stevens (DePauw University): NBA general manager, head coach (Boston Celtics), NCAA head coach (Butler Bulldogs)[12]
 - Jason Szuminski: MLB player (San Diego Padres), 1st major league athlete drafted from MIT
 - Robby Thompson: MLB player (San Francisco Giants), MLB coach, manager (San Francisco Giants, Cleveland Indians, Seattle Mariners)
 - Tommy Townsend, (Florida, 2016), professional football player[11]
 - Jim Tressel: former head coach of the Ohio State Buckeyes who were the2002 National Champions
 - Matt Valenti: two-time NCAA national champion wrestler
 - Chandler Worthy: WR for the Houston Texans, 2015–present
 - Jack Youngblood (Florida, 1971), NFL Hall of Fame[11]
 
Fictional members
- Bugs Bunny (University of Kentucky, 1947), animated Warner Brothers character; Warner Bros endorses Bugs as an actual member[55]
 
References
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