- Source: List of Antioch College people
This page lists notable alumni and former students, faculty, and administrators of Antioch College.
Alumni
= Art, architecture, and engineering
=Emma Amos (B.A. 1968), postmodernist African-American painter and printmaker
Kathan Brown (B.A. 1958), printmaker, writer, lecturer, entrepreneur and founder of Crown Point Press
Wendyn Cadden (B.A. 1968), printmaker, activist, co-founder of Women's Press Collective, Oakland
Peter Calthorpe (B.A. 1972), architect, urban designer, urban planner, and author; founding member of the Congress for the New Urbanism
Jewell James Ebers (1946), electrical engineer
Wendy Ewald (B.A. 1974), photographer, professor at Duke University
Carole Harmel (B.A. 1969), photographer, artist, educator, co-founder of Artemisia Gallery women's cooperative in Chicago (1973)
Peter Jacobs (B.A. 1961), landscape architect, Emeritus Professor of Landscape Architecture, Université de Montréal, awarded Order of Canada
Brian Shure (B.A. 1974), has taught in the printmaking department at Rhode Island School of Design since 1996
Leilah Weinraub (2003), filmmaker, conceptual artist
= Activists
=John Bachtell (1978), chairman of the Communist Party USA
Olympia Brown (1860), suffragist, women's rights activist, minister
Mariana Wright Chapman (ca. 1857), social reformer, suffragist
Lucy Salisbury Doolittle (1832–1908), philanthropist
Leo Drey (1939), conservationist
Philip Isely (1937), peace activist, writer and founder of WCPA and GREN/EFM
Jeff Mackler (1963), national secretary of Socialist Action
José Ramos-Horta (1984), co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007, East Timor independence activist, Head of the United Nations Integrated Peacebuilding Office in Guinea-Bissau, former Prime Minister and President of East Timor
Marty Rosenbluth (1999), immigration attorney and civil rights activist
Coretta Scott King (1951), human rights activist and wife of Martin Luther King Jr.
Frances Cress Welsing (1957), psychiatrist and author of The Isis Papers
= Business
=Warren Bennis (1951), distinguished Professor of Business Administration at the University of Southern California; Chair of the Advisory Board of the Harvard University Kennedy School's Center for Public Leadership; author of more than 30 books on leadership
Margaret Isely, businesswomen, founder of the health food chain Natural Grocers
Theodore Levitt (1949), economist, Harvard Professor
Jay W. Lorsch (1955), Louis Kirstein Professor of Human Relations at the Harvard Business School
= Education
=Edythe Scott Bagley (1947), Professor of Theater and Performing Arts, Cheyney University of Pennsylvania
Drucilla Cornell (1978), philosopher, feminist theorist, and legal theorist
Shelton H. Davis (1965), public-interest anthropologist
Lisa Delpit (1974), author of Other People's Children; director of the Center for Urban Educational Excellence
Frances Degen Horowitz (B.A. 1954), educator and psychologist, President Emerita of City University of New York Graduate School and University Center
Deborah Meier (1954), educator, considered the founder of the modern small schools movement
Tom Mooney (B.A. 1975), labor leader and teacher
Brian Shure (B.A. 1974), teaching in the printmaking department at Rhode Island School of Design since 1996
James A.F. Stoner (B.S. in engineering science in 1959), holder of James A.F. Stoner Chair in Global Quality Leadership at Fordham University, author
= Entertainment
=Idris Ackamoor (1973), musician, founder of jazz collective The Pyramids
Peter Adair (1967), filmmaker
Peggy Ahwesh (1978), filmmaker and video artist
Ray Benson (1974), front man of Asleep at the Wheel, actor and voice actor
Nick DeMartino, former Senior Vice President, Media and Technology for the American Film Institute
Nathaniel Dorsky (1943), video artist and author
Suzanne Fiol, founder of ISSUE Project Room
John Flansburgh (1983), singer/songwriter, They Might Be Giants
Herb Gardner (1958), playwright
Miles Goodman (1972), film composer and record producer
Theo Hakola (1977), singer/songwriter/musician and novelist
John Hammond Jr., blues guitarist/vocalist
Victoria Hochberg (1964), film/television writer/director
Ken Jenkins (1963), actor on Scrubs
Nick Katzman, blues musician
Jorma Kaukonen (1962), guitarist/vocalist, Jefferson Airplane, Hot Tuna
John Korty (1959), TV and screenwriter, Emmy for The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, Oscar for documentary of Japanese internment camps
Peter Kurland, Academy Award-nominated sound mixer
Arthur Lithgow (1938), actor, director, pioneer of regional theater
Alan Lloyd, composer closely associated with the works of Robert Wilson
Leonard Nimoy (MA 1977), actor, film director, poet, musician and photographer; played the role of Mr. Spock in the original Star Trek TV series
Julia Reichert (BA 1970), documentary filmmaker, director, producer, Academy Award Winner- Documentary film
Linda Reisman (BA 1980), film producer
Cliff Robertson (1946), Academy Award-winning actor
Rod Serling (1950), creator of The Twilight Zone TV series
Louise Smith (BA 1977), playwright and actress; Obie Award recipient
Jay Tuck (1968), television producer for ARD German television, author
David Wilcox, folk musician and singer-songwriter
Mia Zapata (1989), lead singer of The Gits
= Government
=Chester G. Atkins (1970), former United States Representative
Joseph H. Ball (1929), journalist, politician and businessman, United States Senator
Bill Bradbury (1960), Oregon Secretary of State
Lynn J. Bush (1948), Senior Judge for the United States Court of Federal Claims
LaDoris Cordell (BA 1971), retired judge of the Superior Court of California
John de Jongh (1981), United States Virgin Islands Governor
LaShann Moutique DeArcy Hall (1992), District Judge for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
Hattie N. Harrison, member of the Maryland House of Delegates
Joanne Head, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives
A. Leon Higginbotham Jr. (1949), civil rights advocate; author; Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1977–1993), and of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1964–1977); Chief Judge of the Third Circuit from 1990 to 1991; received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1995
J. Warren Keifer, prominent U.S. politician during the 1880s, 30th Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
Gail D. Mathieu (1973), B.A., current United States Ambassador to Namibia and former United States Ambassador to Niger
Eleanor Holmes Norton (1960), Congressional Delegate, representing the District of Columbia; Chair, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 1977–1981 (first female Chair is USEEOC); Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center (1982–2019)
Americus V. Rice, Civil War general, U.S. Representative
E. Denise Simmons, mayor of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the first openly lesbian African-American mayor of an American city
Richard Socarides (BA 1976), political strategist, commentator
Webster Street, Arizona Territorial Judge
= Literature and journalism
=Lawrence Block (1960), author
Peg Bracken (1940), humorist
Eliza Archard Conner (1838–1912), journalist, lecturer, and feminist
James Galvin (1974), poet and author
Michael Goldfarb (1972), author and journalist
Jaimy Gordon (1966), author of Lord of Misrule, winner of the National Book Award
Karl Grossman (1964), journalist and author
Virginia Hamilton (1957), children's books author and MacArthur Fellow
Peter Irons (1966), legal historian and author
Laurence Leamer (1964), author and journalist
Franz Lidz (1973), journalist and author whose memoir, Unstrung Heroes, became a 1995 feature film directed by Diane Keaton
Sylvia Nasar (1970), author, A Beautiful Mind
Cary Nelson (1967), higher education activist, author
Gregory Orr, poet and author
Tito Perdue, novelist, attended Antioch (1956–57) but was sent down before graduation for cohabiting with a fellow student who was not yet his wife
Marc Anthony Richardson (1995), novelist and artist, American Book Award winner for Year of the Rat
John Robbins (1976), author of Diet for a New America; pioneer environmentalist; veganism advocate
Bianca Stone (2006), poet and visual artist
Mark Strand (1957), poet
Nova Ren Suma (1997), author of young adult novels
Ed Ward, journalist, writer, historian of rock
Terri Windling (1979), influential mythic fiction and speculative fiction editor, author and artist
= MacArthur Fellows
=Tim Barrett (B.A. 1973), papermaker
Lisa Delpit (B.A. 1974), education reform leader
Wendy Ewald (B.A. 1974), photographer
Stephen Jay Gould (B.S. 1963), paleontologist; professor at Harvard University
Virginia Hamilton (attended 1952–55), writer
Sylvia A. Law (B.A. 1964), human rights lawyer
Deborah Meier (attended 1949–1951), education reform leader
Mark Strand (B.A. 1957), poet and writer
= Science and medicine
=Barbara Almond (B.S. 1959), psychiatrist and psychoanalyst
Joseph Young Bergen (1872), botanist
Mario Capecchi (B.S. 1961), PhD Harvard University, co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2007
Don Clark (1953), clinical psychologist, author
Leland C. Clark Jr. (B.S. 1941), PhD, biochemist and inventor
George W. Comstock (1937), physician, public health expert, lead researcher in seminal studies demonstrating the effectiveness of isoniazid for treating latent tuberculosis infection
William A. Gamson (1946), sociologist, president of American Sociological Association
Clifford Geertz (1950), PhD. Harvard, Professor of Social Science, Univ. of Chicago and Princeton Univ.
Stephen Jay Gould (1963), Harvard professor, geologist, evolutionary biologist, author
Robert Manry (1949), nautical explorer
Richard Pillard (1955), professor of psychiatry at Boston University; first openly gay psychiatrist in the U.S.
Allan Pred (1957), geographer
Sonya Rose (1958), sociologist and historian
Joan Steitz (1963), molecular biologist and Sterling Professor at Yale University; 2018 Lasker Award recipient, Harvard PhD
Judith G. Voet (B.S. 1963), professor of chemistry and biochemistry at Swarthmore College; author of several widely used biochemistry textbooks, PhD, University of Pennsylvania
= Technology
=Brian Aker (B.S. 1994), open-source hacker
Faculty
Irwin Abrams, professor of history, pioneer in the field of peace research
Tony Conrad, video artist, experimental filmmaker, musician, composer, sound artist, teacher, and writer
Louis C. Fraina, professor of economics, founding member of the Communisty Party in the United States
G. Stanley Hall, professor of English and philosophy; first president of the American Psychological Association and Clark University
Horace Mann, founding president of Antioch College and "father of American education"
Arthur Ernest Morgan, president of Antioch and chairman of Tennessee Valley Authority
Edward Orton, Sr., first president of the Ohio State University
Mary Tyler Peabody Mann, author and educator
Cecil Taylor, pianist and poet, pioneer of free jazz
Hendrik Willem van Loon, historian, geographer, journalist, author
References
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