List of University of Connecticut people
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
This is a list of notable alumni and faculty from the University of Connecticut.
Alumni
Arts and entertainment
- Pam Arciero – puppeteer[1]
- Jennifer Barnhart – actor and puppeteer[2][3]
- Michael Bergin – supermodel
- Beau Billingslea – voice actor and former UConn football player
- Tanisha Brito – former Miss Connecticut and Miss Georgia USA[4]
- Sharon Butler — painter and publisher of NYC art journalTwo Coats of Paint
- Mary Cadorette – actor
- Judy Collins – musician
- Lui Collins – folk singer-songwriter[5]
- Tristan Couvares – star of Control TV[6]
- Patrick Earl Hammie – contemporary figurative artist[7]
- Justin Foley – drummer for Killswitch Engage
- Ned Kahn – environmental artist and MacArthur Fellowship recipient[8]
- Jeremy Leven – author, director, producer, and screenwriter[9]
- Forrest McClendon - actor[10]
- Moby – musician
- Donny Marshall - television sports broadcaster
- Bobby Moynihan – actor and comedian[11]
- Julius R. Nasso – film producer
- Peter Niedmann – composer
- Ron Palillo – actor
- Morris Pleasure - composer, musician
- Toni Press-Coffman – playwright
- Meg Ryan – actress
- Skip Schoolnik – film director and producer
- Brian Schulz - Emmy-winning producer and cinematographer
- Rick Sternbach – Emmy-winning illustrator and visual effects artist
- Tony Todd – actor
- Paige Turco – actress
- Robert Wendel – composer and conductor
- Brad Williams – puppeteer
- Dana Wilson – composer and jazz pianist
- Kim Zolciak - participant in The Real Housewives of Atlanta
- Austin Stowell - actor[12]
Authors and journalists
- Elizabeth Bear (Sarah Bear Elizabeth Wishnevsky) – author
- Richard Bernstein – journalist and author
- Leslie Brody – non-fiction author and writing teacher
- P. W. Catanese - author of the Books of Umber and Further Tales Adventures series
- Robert D. Kaplan – journalist and Atlantic Monthly editor
- Bobbie Ann Mason – novelist and literary critic
- Leigh Montville – sports journalist
- Michael North – author and UCLA Professor
- Tim Page - Pulitzer Prize-winning music critic and biographer of Dawn Powell
- Ann Lane Petry – author
- Randall Pinkston - CBS News correspondent[13]
- Joel Rosenberg – author
- Elaine Scarry – author and Harvard University professor
- Lewis Turco – poet and writing teacher
Business and industry
- Doug Bernstein - co-founder of Melissa & Doug toy company
- Robert Diamond – former president and CEO of Barclays Bank
- Clifford Grodd – former president and chief executive of Paul Stuart[14]
- George Harrison – former senior Vice President of Marketing at Nintendo
- Bob Kaufman – president and co-founder of Bob's Discount Furniture
- Edward Kennedy, Jr. - President of the Marwood Group
- Timothy Shriver – Chairman and CEO of Special Olympics; member of Kennedy Family
- William S. Simon - former president and CEO of U.S Operations for Walmart
Diplomacy, government, law, and politics
- Hajim al-Hassani – Speaker of the Iraqi National Assembly under the Iraqi Transitional Government
- Bethany J. Alvord - Judge of the Connecticut Appellate Court[15]
- Bona Arsenault – Canadian Member of Parliament (1945-1957)
- Vanessa Lynne Bryant - U.S. District Judge for the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut
- Richard Calder – senior official at the CIA
- Tansu Çiller – Prime Minister of Turkey (1993-1996), the first female to hold the position
- Eric D. Coleman - Deputy President Pro Tempore in the Connecticut Senate
- Carol Ann Conboy – Associate Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court
- Joe Courtney - U.S. Representative for Connecticut's 2nd congressional district
- Alfred V. Covello - Senior U.S. District Judge for the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut
- Bill Curry - political analyst and journalist; two-time Democratic nominee for Governor of Connecticut; advisor to President Bill Clinton
- Emilio Q. Daddario - U.S. Representative for Connecticut's 1st congressional district (1959-1971)
- John A. Danaher III - State of Connecticut Superior Court Judge; Commissioner, Connecticut Department of Public Safety (2007-2010); U.S. Attorney for the District of Connecticut (2001-2002)
- Alexandra Davis DiPentima - Chief Judge of the Connecticut Appellate Court
- Christopher F. Droney - U.S. Circuit Judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit; U.S. Attorney for the District of Connecticut (1993-1997); Mayor of West Hartford, Connecticut (1985-1989)
- Charles A. Duelfer – Leader of the Iraq Survey Group
- J. Michael Farren - Deputy White House Counsel to President George W. Bush (2007-2009)
- Samih Farsoun – academic and Arab-American activist
- C. Frank Figliuzzi - Assistant Director for Counterintelligence, Federal Bureau of Investigation (2011-2012)
- Sam Gejdenson – U.S. Representative for Connecticut's 2nd congressional district (1981-2001)
- Robert Giaimo – U.S. Representative for Connecticut's 3rd congressional district (1959-1981); helped create the National Endowment for the Arts, National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Washington Metro
- Mary Glassman - First Selectman of Simsbury, Connecticut
- Bernard F. Grabowski - U.S. Representative from Connecticut (1963-1967)
- F. Herbert Gruendel - Judge of the Connecticut Appellate Court[16]
- Eliot A. Jardines – Assistant Deputy Director of U.S. National Intelligence for Open Source Intelligence (2005-2008)
- Denise Johnson - Associate Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court
- Joette Katz - Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court(1992-2011)
- Christine E. Keller - Judge of the Connecticut Appellate Court[17]
- Douglas S. Lavine - Judge of the Connecticut Appellate Court[18]
- Martin Looney - Majority Leader, Connecticut Senate
- Konstantina Lukes - Mayor of Worcester, Massachusetts (2007-2010)
- Robert J. Lynn - Associate Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court[19]
- Mark J. Marcus - Former Commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Children and Families and politician.
- Joan G. Margolis - U.S. Magistrate Judge for the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut[20]
- Donna F. Martinez - U.S. Magistrate Judge for the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut[21]
- Brett H. McGurk - Special Adviser to the United States Ambassador to Iraq
- Shaun McNally – Democratic politician
- Thomas Joseph Meskill – Governor of Connecticut (1971-1975); Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (1975-1993); U.S. Representative for the Connecticut's 6th congressional district (1967-1971)
- Chris Murphy – U.S. Senator from Connecticut; U.S. Representative for the Connecticut's 5th congressional district (2007-2013)
- Kathleen Murphy - President, Fidelity Personal Investing, a unit of Fidelity Investments
- Kevin J. O'Connor - U.S. Attorney for District of Connecticut (2002-2006); Associate Deputy Attorney General, Department of Justice (2006); Chief of Staff to the United States Attorney General, Department of Justice (2007); Associate Attorney General of the United States, Department of Justice (2008-2009)
- Richard N. Palmer - Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court
- Rosemary S. Pooler – U.S. Circuit Judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
- Juan Ramirez, Jr. - Judge of the Florida District Court of Appeals, Third District
- William St. Onge - U.S. Representative from Connecticut (1963-1970)
- Ronald A. Sarasin - U.S. Representative for Connecticut's 5th congressional district (1973-1979)
- Pedro Segarra - Mayor of Hartford, Connecticut
- Kevin Sullivan - Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut (2004-2007); President Pro Tempore of the Connecticut Senate (1997-2004)
- David Valesky – member of the New York State Senate
- Christine S. Vertefeuille - Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court in (2000-2010)
- Ariane D. Vuono - Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Appeals Court[22]
- Sam Webb – Chairman of the Communist Party USA
- William A. Webb - U.S. Magistrate Judge for the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina
James G. Conway - former Diplomat and FBI official.
Education
- Stanley F. Battle — educator, author, civic activist and former leader of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, Coppin State University and Southern Connecticut State University
- Scott S. Cowen – president of Tulane University
- Kathleen Musante DeWalt - director of the Center for Latin American Studies – University of Pittsburgh
- Thomas C. Duffy – deputy dean of the Yale School of Music
- Martha Piper – immediate past president and vice chancellor of the University of British Columbia
- Joseph W. Polisi – president of The Juilliard School
- Florence Roisman – Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law professor and social activist
- Timothy Perry Shriver – teacher and philanthropist
- Kevin Swick – early childhood education theorist
Military
- Kenneth North – former United States Air Force Brigadier General
- Paul A. Yost, Jr. – former United States Coast Guard Commandant
- Samuel Jaskilka - former United States Marine Corps General and Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps]]
Science
- Franklin Chang-Diaz – astronaut and physicist
- Howard S. Hoffman (Ph.D 1957) - experimental psychologist
- Benjamin Hsiao (MS 1984) - Chief Research Officer and Vice-President for Research at Stony Brook University, Fellow of the American Physical Society, Fellow of the American Chemical Society, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science[23]
- David Lee – Nobel Prize-winning physicist
- Kevin B. MacDonald – evolutionary psychology theorist
- Richard Mastracchio – astronaut and engineer
- Vijay P. Parashar – oral and maxillofacial radiologist and Associate Professor
- Massimo Pigliucci – outspoken evolutionary theorist and philosopher
- Philip Rubin – CEO and senior scientist at Haskins Laboratories
- James Synott – Senior Design Engineer at NORESCO
- Yuwen Zhang – Professor of Mechanical Engineering at University of Missouri
Sports
Men's basketball
- Jeff Adrien – power forward for the Charlotte Bobcats
- Chuck Aleksinas – former center for the Golden State Warriors
- Ray Allen – 5th pick in the 1996 NBA Draft
- Hilton Armstrong – 12th pick in 2006 NBA Draft, (New Orleans Hornets) forward/center
- Josh Boone – 23rd pick in the 2006 NBA Draft (New Jersey Nets)
- Denham Brown – 40th pick in the 2006 NBA Draft (Seattle SuperSonics)
- Scott Burrell – first American draft pick for MLB and NBA, played in the NBA from 1995–2001
- Caron Butler – 10th pick in 2002 NBA Draft, (Los Angeles Clippers) guard
- Andre Drummond - 9th overall pick in the 2012 NBA Draft by the Detroit Pistons
- Jerome Dyson (born 1987) - player for Hapoel Jerusalem of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Khalid El-Amin – former Chicago Bulls guard
- Rudy Gay – NBA 8th overall pick in 2006 NBA Draft, Memphis Grizzlies guard
- Tate George – former basketball player for the New Jersey Nets and Milwaukee Bucks
- Ben Gordon – 3rd pick in 2004 NBA Draft, Charlotte Bobcats guard
- Daniel Hamilton - 56th pick in 2016 NBA Draft, Oklahoma City Thunder
- Richard Hamilton – 7th pick in 1999 NBA Draft, Chicago Bulls guard
- Toby Kimball – former NBA forward, played for six teams, spent most of his career with the San Diego Rockets
- Travis Knight – former NBA player, 29th pick in 1996 NBA Draft, center
- Bruce Kuczenski – Former NBA forward/center
- Jeremy Lamb - guard for the Houston Rockets
- Ater Majok - 58th pick in the 2011 NBA Draft by the Los Angeles Lakers
- Donyell Marshall – 4th pick in 1994 NBA Draft
- Shabazz Napier - 24th overall pick in the 2014 NBA Draft, Portland Trail Blazers
- Emeka Okafor – 2nd pick in 2004 NBA Draft, center
- Kevin Ollie – former NBA guard, current UConn basketball head coach
- Tom Penders – head men's basketball coach at the University of Houston
- A. J. Price – 52nd pick on the 2009 NBA Draft, point guard for the Washington Wizards
- Cliff Robinson – basketball player for the New Jersey Nets
- Stanley Robinson - 59th pick in the 2010 NBA Draft by the Orlando Magic
- Doron Sheffer - former Israeli basketball superstar
- Chris Smith – former Minnesota Timberwolves guard
- Bob Staak – former Wake Forest University and NBA coach
- Hasheem Thabeet – 2nd pick in the 2009 NBA draft to the Memphis Grizzlies
- Corny Thompson – former NBA forward for the Dallas Mavericks
- Charlie Villanueva – 7th pick in 2005 NBA Draft, (Detroit Pistons) forward
- Jake Voskuhl – center currently playing for the Charlotte Bobcats
- Kemba Walker - 9th pick in the 2011 NBA Draft by the Charlotte Bobcats
- Marcus Williams – 22nd pick in 2006 NBA Draft, (New Jersey Nets) guard
Women's basketball
- Svetlana Abrosimova – formerly forward for the Minnesota Lynx, the Connecticut Sun and the Seattle Storm
- Ashley Battle – 25th overall pick in the 2005 WNBA Draft, currently plays for the New York Liberty
- Sue Bird – point guard for the Seattle Storm, 1st overall pick in the 2002 WNBA Draft, 2x Olympic champion, 4x All-Star[24]
- Swin Cash – forward for the Seattle Storm, 2nd overall pick in the 2002 WNBA Draft
- Tina Charles – 1st overall pick in the 2010 WNBA Draft, center for the Connecticut Sun
- Kalana Greene -forward/guard for the Connecticut Sun
- Charde Houston – Current WNBA player for the Minnesota Lynx
- Asjha Jones – center/power forward for the Connecticut Sun[25]
- Rebecca Lobo – former WNBA player and current ESPN analyst
- Renee Montgomery – point guard for the Connecticut Sun
- Jessica Moore – WNBA player for the Los Angeles Sparks
- Maya Moore - 1st overall pick in the 2011 WNBA Draft, forward for the Minnesota Lynx
- Shea Ralph – drafted in the third round (40th pick) of the 2001 WNBA Draft by the Utah Starzz, currently assistant coach for the University of Connecticut
- Jennifer Rizzotti – former pro basketball player and current University of Hartford women's head coach
- Nykesha Sales – former WNBA player for the Connecticut Sun
- Kelly Schumacher – former WNBA player for the Indiana Fever. 14th overall pick in the 2001 WNBA Draft
- Ann Strother – 15th overall pick in the 2006 WNBA Draft, formerly played for the Atlanta Dream
- Ketia Swanier – 12th overall pick in the 2008 WNBA Draft by the Phoenix Mercury
- Diana Taurasi – 1st overall pick in the 2004 WNBA Draft, guard for the Phoenix Mercury
- Barbara Turner – 11th overall pick in the 2006 WNBA Draft. Currently plays for Mersin Büyükşehir Belediyesi S.K. Women's Basketball
- Tamika Williams – – 6th overall pick in the 2002 WNBA Draft. Formerly played for the Connecticut Sun, currently head coach of the Indian National Team and an analyst for ESPN
- Kara Wolters – former WNBA center for the Houston Comets, currently broadcaster and analyst for Connecticut radio network
Football
- Deon Anderson – former Dallas Cowboys fullback
- Will Beatty - New York Giants offensive tackle
- Tyvon Branch - Oakland Raiders safety
- Cody Brown - NFL linebacker
- Donald Brown – running back for the Indianapolis Colts
- Darius Butler – Indianapolis Colts cornerback
- Marcus Easley - Buffalo Bills wide receiver
- Kirk Ferentz – former UConn linebacker and current University of Iowa football head coach, former University of Maine football head coach, former Cleveland Browns/Baltimore Ravens offensive line coach
- Alfred Fincher – New Orleans Saints linebacker
- Nick Giaquinto – former NFL tailback, member of the Super Bowl XVII champion Washington Redskins
- Byron Jones - Dallas Cowboys cornerback
- Brian Kozlowski – former NFL fullback/tight end
- Greg Lloyd, Jr. - Indianapolis Colts linebacker
- Robert McClain - Atlanta Falcons cornerback
- Dan Orlovsky – Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback
- Kendall Reyes - San Diego Chargers defensive end
- Sam Rutigliano – former Cleveland Browns head coach
- Anthony Sherman - Kansas City Chiefs fullback
- Shane Stafford – Arena Football League quarterback
- Donald Thomas - New England Patriots guard
- Jordan Todman - Jacksonville Jaguars running back
- Lawrence Wilson - New Orleans Saints linebacker
Baseball
- Jesse Carlson – MLB pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays
- Matt Barnes – MLB pitcher for the Boston Red Sox
- Rajai Davis – MLB outfielder for the Cleveland Indians
- Walt Dropo – former all-star Major League Baseball first baseman, 1950 MLB Rookie of the Year Award winner (American League)
- Jeff Fulchino – MLB pitcher for the Houston Astros
- Jason Grabowski – former Major League Baseball player
- Dan Iassogna – Major League Baseball umpire
- L. J. Mazzilli - Minor League Baseball player[26]
- Charles Nagy – former all-star Major League Baseball pitcher
- Mike Olt - MLB infielder
- Jim Penders - UConn baseball coach[27]
- Bob Schaefer – bench coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers and former manager for the Kansas City Royals
- Rollie Sheldon – former MLB pitcher, member of the 1961 and 1962 World Series Champion New York Yankees
- George Springer - MLB outfielder for the Houston Astros
- Pete Walker – former Toronto Blue Jays pitcher and current Toronto Blue Jays Pitching Coach
- Gary Waslewski – MLB pitcher
Men's hockey
- Todd Krygier – former NHL left-winger for the Hartford Whalers, Washington Capitals and Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
Men's soccer
- Kevin Burns – Midfielder for the Columbus Crew
- Chukwudi Chijindu – striker for Chivas USA
- George Fochive – midfielder for the Portland Timbers
- Josh Ford – goalkeeper for Seattle Sounders FC
- Chris Gbandi – former player for FC Dallas
- Julius James – defender for the Columbus Crew
- Andrew Jean-Baptiste – defender for the NY Red Bulls
- Damani Ralph – former Chicago Fire player and current FC Rubin Kazan striker
- Bobby Rhine – former player for FC Dallas
- Toni Stahl – midfielder for the Fort Lauderdale Strikers
- Shavar Thomas – soccer player for the Philadelphia Union
- Kwame Watson-Siriboe – defender for the Chicago Fire
- O'Brian White – striker for Seattle Sounders FC
Women's soccer
- Sara Whalen – Olympic silver medalist
- Niki Cross
Other
- Dan Cramer - rugby player and hockey captain while attending; currently a mixed martial artist for Bellator Fighting Championships; formerly a competitor for the UFC - Ultimate Fighter Season 7 contestant[28]
Faculty
Current
- Gina Barreca – humor author, contributor to The Hartford Courant, blogger for The Chronicle of Higher Education and Psychology Today, and professor of English Literature and feminist theory
- Robert L. Birmingham – Professor of Law
- Ann Charters – Beat scholar who worked with Jack Kerouac to write his biography (Professor of English)
- Kenneth Fuchs – Grammy-nominated composer and former head of the Department of Music (School of Fine Arts)
- Johann Peter Gogarten - evolutionary biologist working on horizontal gene transfer
- Robert A. Gross – historian, author of The Minutemen and their World
- Wally Lamb – best-selling author (Associate Professor of Creative Writing; also a UConn graduate)
- Richard Normand Langlois – economist (Professor of Economics)
- Earl MacDonald - Director of Jazz Studies, jazz composer, arranger, pianist, former musical director for Maynard Ferguson
- Ronald Mallett – researcher in time travel (Professor of Physics)
- Ross Miller – literary critic and biographer for Philip Roth and nephew of playwright Arthur Miller
- Ruth Millikan – philosopher of language (Emeritus Professor of Philosophy)
- Ravindra Nanda - Chair of the Division of Orthodontics at University of Connecticut School of Dental Medicine
- Olu Oguibe – Professor of Painting and author of The Culture Game
- Sam Pickering – teacher portrayed by Robin Williams in Dead Poets Society (Professor of English)
- Joseph Renzulli - gifted education theorist
- Julian Rotter - psychologist who developed social learning theory and locus of control (Emeritus Professor of Psychology)
- Merrill Singer – Medical Anthropologist who was involved in the creation of critical medical anthropology and syndemics theory (Professor of Anthropology)
Former
- Note: Years and official titles are given when possible.
- Ann Beattie - author
- Albert Francis Blakeslee - botanist (when it was still Connecticut Agricultural College)
- Taylor L. Booth - Professor of Computer Science and Engineering
- Francelia Butler - author and renowned expert on children's literature (Professor of English, 1968–1992)
- Lien Chan - former vice president of the Republic of China (Assistant Professor of Political Science, 1967–1968)
- Roy D'Andrade - developer of cognitive anthropology
- Victor Denenberg - developmental psychobiologist
- Richard Eberhart - poet
- James C. Faris - anthropologist (Professor of Anthropology and Near Eastern Studies)
- Brison D. Gooch - historian of 19th century Europe, taught at UC prior to 1973
- J. A. Scott Kelso - neuroscientist (Professor of Psychology and Biobehavioral Sciences)
- Susan Kinsolving - poet
- Myron W. Krueger - computer scientist (Professor of Computer Science, 1974–85)
- Everett Carll Ladd - political scientist, Director of the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research (1964–1999)
- Glenn J. Lesniak - U.S. Army Major General
- Alvin Liberman - speech scientist (Professor of Psychology)
- Ovide F. Pomerleau - psychologist (Professor of Psychiatry [Psychology], 1979-1985)
- Richard Popkin - philosophy historian
- Gideon Rodan - biochemist and osteopath (School of Dental Medicine, 1970 to 1985)
- Charles Schlueter – trumpeter
- Harold Seidman - legendary political scientist and public administration expert (Professor of Political Science, 1971–1984)
- Paul N. Siegel - Marxist (Professor of English Literature)
- Edmund Ware Sinnott - botanist and prolific author (Professor of Botany and Genetics, 1915–1928)
- Ian Stewart - mathematician (Visiting Professor of Mathematics, 1977–1978)
- Rex Warner - author and translator (Professor of Classics, 1962–1973)
- Wayne Worcester – author and journalist (Professor of Journalism)
- Fujia Yang - physicist (Visiting Professor of Physics)
- Xiangzhong "Jerry" Yang – world animal cloning leader and director of the Center for Regenerative Biology (Professor of Animal Science)
Presidents of the University of Connecticut
- Philip E. Austin (1996-2007, 2010-2011)
- Homer D. Babbidge Jr (1962-1972)[29]
- John T. Casteen III (1985-1990)
- John A. DiBiaggio (1979-1985)
- Susan Herbst (2011–Present)
- Michael Hogan (2007-2010)
- Albert N. Jorgensen (1935-1962)[30]
References
- ↑ Passero, Laura (January 25, 2002). "`Between The Lions' Helps Encourage Children To Read". The Courant.
- ↑ "Jen's Biography". Sesame Street.
- ↑ "Endless Possibilities with Puppets". Department of Theatre. University of Utah.
- ↑ Guzman, Karen (August 3, 2002). "A Life's Dream". The Courant.
- ↑ Harris, Craig. "Artist Biography by Craig Harris". All Music.
- ↑ "Recent graduate stars in reality show".
- ↑ "PATRICK EARL HAMMIE". Art News.
- ↑ "Resume". Ned Kahn.
- ↑ "JEREMY LEVEN BIO". Tribute Entertainment Media Group.
- ↑ Rivard, Nicole (2011-05-14). "Tony nominee McClendon credits Norwalk upbringing for his success". Connecticut Post. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
- ↑ Sheridan, Patricia (January 6, 2014). "Patridia Sheridan's Breakfast With ... Bobby Moynihan". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- ↑ http://patch.com/connecticut/berlin/austin-stowell-ready-to-hit-the-big-screen. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - ↑ Archived June 27, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Grimes, William. "Clifford Grodd, the Driving Force at Paul Stuart, Dies at 86", The New York Times, May 26, 2010. Accessed May 27, 2010.
- ↑ "Honorable Bethany J. Alvord Biography". Jud.ct.gov. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
- ↑ "Honorable F. Herbert Gruendel - Biography". Jud.ct.gov. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
- ↑ "Honorable Christine Keller Biography". Jud.ct.gov. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
- ↑ "Honorable Douglas S. Lavine - Biography". Jud.ct.gov. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
- ↑ "New Hampshire Judicial Branch - Supreme Court - Associate Justice Robert J. Lynn". Courts.state.nh.us. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
- ↑ "Joan G. Margolis Judge Profile". martindale.com. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
- ↑ "Biography - Judge Donna F. Martinez | District of Connecticut | United States District Court". Ctd.uscourts.gov. 1994-02-08. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
- ↑ "Associate Justice Ariane D. Vuono". Mass.gov. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
- ↑ "Benjamin S. Hsiao Named Vice President for Research at Stony Brook University". Retrieved 12 July 2012.
- ↑ Livnat, Arie (December 16, 2010). "No. 1 WNBA Draft pick Sue Bird headed to Ramle". Haaretz. Retrieved December 20, 2010.
- ↑ Asjha Jones profile, Women's National Basketball Association. Accessed September 6, 2007.
- ↑ "Ex-UConn 2B LJ Mazzilli At Home With Brooklyn Cyclones". Hartford Courant. July 12, 2013. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
- ↑ Viera, Mark (June 3, 2010). "At UConn, Success Makes Baseball Fun Again". NYTimes.com. Archived from the original on July 5, 2014. Retrieved July 5, 2014.
- ↑ "Dan Cramer UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ DR. HOMER BABBIDGE JR., 58, NOTED CONNECTICUT EDUCATOR - NYTimes.com
- ↑ President's Office records, 1935-1962: Albert N. Jorgensen, 1935-1962. (Downloadable archival material, 1935) [WorldCat.org]
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