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Sloane Crosley ('00): best-selling author; essayist; publicist with Vintage Books; David Grann ('89): journalist and best-selling and staff writer at The New Yorker; Joshua Green ('94): senior national correspondent at Bloomberg Businessweek and a weekly columnist for the Boston Globe
Shaun McNally – former Connecticut State Representative (1987–1992) Chris Murphy – U.S. Senator for Connecticut (2013–present) [1] Lewis Rome – Connecticut State Senate leader (1973–1979) and Republican Party nominee in the 1982 Connecticut gubernatorial election; William St. Onge – former U.S. Representative for CT-2 (1963–1970)
Leo I. Higdon Jr. (M.B.A. 1972) – president of Connecticut College (2006–present); president of the College of Charleston (2001–2006); president of Babson College (1997–2001); dean of Darden Graduate School of Business Administration at the University of Virginia; Mari Ruef Hofer - pioneer in the kindergarten movement
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Adam Moss (1979), editor of New York magazine; Emily Nussbaum (1988), television critic for The New Yorker magazine; Jane Pratt (1984), creator of Sassy and Jane magazines; Tim Riley (1983), NPR critic; author (Tell Me Why, Lennon: Man, Myth, Music); Emerson College journalism professor (aka Tim Mikesell) Carl T. Rowan (1947), journalist
The Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library (/ ˈ b aɪ n ɪ k i /) is the rare book library and literary archive of the Yale University Library in New Haven, Connecticut. It is one of the largest buildings in the world dedicated to rare books and manuscripts and is one of the largest collections of such texts. [ 1 ]
Yale originally planned to name the college after John C. Calhoun, a Yale graduate, U.S. vice president, and secessionist. In deference to Sterling being a Civil War veteran from Connecticut, the university agreed to name the college after Jonathan Trumbull and gave the name Calhoun to another residential college (now re-named Hopper College). [1]
Thomas D. Ritter 1970 – lawyer, lobbyist, and retired politician from Connecticut who was the Speaker of the Connecticut House of Representatives [29] Selden Rodman 1927 – prolific U.S. writer of poetry, plays and prose, political commentary, art criticism, Latin American and Caribbean history, biography and travel writing.