|
< Return
to Presidential Search Page
Alumni of St. Lawrence University
Relatively speaking, it’s a small group, only about 30,000 people worldwide.
But they’re absolutely amazing
people and they’ve been at the
lead of every profession one can imagine. What’s even more impressive
is their enthusiasm to help fellow Laurentians. Any member of the
Laurentian family can count on any other member, at any time, for any
reason. The St. Lawrence alumni understand the concept of “Laurentian
for Life” and show their loyalty to fellow alumni, current students and
the University.
Among St. Lawrence alumni in contemporary leadership roles:
Susan M. Collins '75 |
Susan M. Collins ’75 was elected to represent the State of Maine in the
United States Senate in 1996 and was re-elected to a second term in
2002.
Hollywood icon, author and diplomat Kirk
Douglas’39 may be the
most famous alumnus. His well-known story from rags to riches has
long earned him high regard. His generosity to the University and other
educational and child welfare causes confirms his legacy as one of his
generation’s most thoughtful philanthropists.
Tracey S. McNamara ’76 is a veterinary pathologist who first identified
the West Nile virus, a discovery credited by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention as saving many lives.
Jeff Boyd ’78 is president and CEO of Priceline.com. He earned his law
degree from Cornell Law School in 1981 and began a career in private
and corporate law before taking his place in the new world of Internet
marketing.
Elinor Tatum ’93 publishes The Amsterdam News, the oldest continuously
published black newspaper in New York City.
Viggo Mortensen '80 |
Journalist Martha MacCallum ’86 is an anchor with FOX News
Channel, joining FNC in January 2004. Martha hosts “The Live Desk
with Martha MacCallum.”
Author Lorrie Moore ’78 is the author of two novels and three collections
of stories, the most recent of which, Birds of America, was a
National Book Critics’ Circle Award finalist and the winner of the Irish
Times International Prize for Literature. She has also edited several
anthologies and written two children’s books.
NASA senior scientist Dean
Eppler ’74 develops space suits, creates
research windows for the International Space Station, and leads science
operations and logistics concept development for advanced planetary
exploration programs.
Jay Ireland ’77 is president and CEO of GE Asset Management
Incorporated, and immediate past president of NBC Universal Television
Stations, with overall executive responsibility for the operations of
NBC Universal’s 30 owned-and-operated NBC television stations and
16 Telemundo television stations.
As Vice-President/Chief Astronomer of the Franklin
Institute Science Museum/Fels Planetarium in Philadelphia,
the alignment of the stars and planets has an even greater
impact on Derrick Pitts ’78’s life
than
it does on most people’s — it’s the subject of his daily
work. He is host
of the WHYY-FM public radio programs “SkyTour” and “SkyTalk.”
Elinor Tatum '93 |
Marion Roach Smith ’77 is the author Roots of Desire: The Myth,
Meaning, and Sexual Power of Red Hair and of Another Name for
Madness, a memoir of her family’s struggle with her mother’s
Alzheimer’s disease, and the co-author of Dead Reckoning: The
New Science of Catching Killers. A commentator on National Public
Radio and the host of her own radio show on Sirius Radio, she has
been published in numerous national magazines.
Mitch Thrower ’90 is co-owner of Triathlete magazine and co-founder
of Active.com, which offers on-line registration for more than 5,000
athletic events, and founder, CEO and general manager of Active.com
Europe.
Joseph Lekuton ’91 left his native Kenya for the first time when he
traveled to St. Lawrence to study economics and government. Formerly
a teacher at the Langley School in northern Virginia and now a member
of the Kenyan Parliament, he remains actively involved in community
development projects in rural Kenya.
Viggo Mortensen ’80 is a poet, painter, photographer, activist and
actor. Mortensen has published 16 books of his poems, photographs
and paintings and produced 16 CDs of music and spoken word. He
founded and supports Perceval Press, an independent enterprise that
publishes art, words and music from people all over the world.
Former Saint women’s hockey star Gina
Kingsbury ’04 became the
third Saint athlete to earn an Olympic gold medal in 2006,
when she was part of the Canadian women’s hockey team’s gold medal win
over Sweden.
|