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Ready Player Me | Table of Content | '''Ready Player Me''', History, Platforms, Ready Player Me, PlayerZero, References |
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Capture of Dadra and Nagar Haveli | # | redirect Annexation of Dadra and Nagar Haveli |
Capture of Dadra and Nagar Haveli | Table of Content | # |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | AFC submission |
Amita Gupta, MD, MHS, is a physician and clinical researcher known internationally for her work to improve health outcomes among patients living with HIV, tuberculosis (TB), and other infectious diseases that impact human health. Her research portfolio is conducted globally particularly in India and Sub-sarahan Africa.
The Florence Sabin Professor of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, Dr. Gupta is the 7th Director of the Johns Hopkins Division of Infectious Diseases, and the first woman to hold that position. Gupta holds a joint appointment in the Department of International Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and also is the founder and Faculty Co-chair of the Gupta-Klinsky India Institute at Johns Hopkins University. Board certified in infectious diseases, she is an HIV primary care provider and an infectious diseases attending physician for both in-patient and out-patient consultation at Johns Hopkins Hospital. She has mentored more than 60 early career researchers in the U.S. and in India. |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | Early Life and Education | Early Life and Education
Gupta is the first child of Rajiv L. and Kamla Gupta who immigrated to the U.S. from India in 1968. She was raised in the U.S., England, and France and is older sister to Vanita Gupta
Gupta graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Cambridge, Massachusetts) in Material Science engineering in 1991 and received an MD from Harvard Medical School in 1997. She completed residency training in Internal Medicine and Primary Care at the University of California, San Francisco—San Francisco General Hospital in 2000.
Following her residency, Gupta joined the Epidemic Intelligence Service at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in the Foodborne and Diarrheal Diseases Branch (Atlanta, Georgia). In 2005 she completed a post-doctoral fellowship training in Infectious Diseases at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and she earned a master’s degree in Health Science and Clinical Investigation from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in 2006. |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | Research and Career | Research and Career
Gupta’s formal education and professional career launched in the height of the HIV epidemic. She served as a public health officer for the AIDS Bureau of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, an HIV counselor at the AIDS Action Committee (Boston), HIV women’s health policy consultant for the Medical Foundation (Boston), and a health outreach worker at homeless women’s shelter. She received training at Alaskan Native American Health Service (Sitka, Alaska), conducted perinatal and early infant mortality research at Francisco Marroquin Medical School and Centro (San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala), and conducted breast and cervical cancer outcomes research while in medical school.
She specializes in clinical trials of preventive therapies and treatments for infectious and noncommunicable diseases. She is among few researchers worldwide who studies disease in adults and in understudied populations including infants, children, adolescents, and pregnant and postpartum women. Her research is conducted primarily in India. Research topics include tuberculosis (TB) and HIV, prevention and treatment of infectious and chronic diseases, TB biomarker identification, antimicrobial resistance, and treating infectious diseases among pregnant and postpartum women.
Gupta is an internationally-renowned clinical scientist who leads and collaborates in high profile global research efforts. She is a lead investigator multi-country HIV and tuberculosis clinical trials conducted by the ACTG Network, and the IMPAACT Network, sponsored by the U.S. National Institutes of Health. She is co-leader of the Johns Hopkins Baltimore-India Clinical Trials Unit, a collaborative of 3 clinical research sites (Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, BGJMC in Pune, India, and YRG CARE in Chennai, India) conducting clinical trials and observational studies. She is a leader in the Regional Prospective Observational Research on Tuberculosis (RePORT) International, an 8-country effort jointly sponsored by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and national research entities in host countries to advance tuberculosis science, strengthen TB research capacity and infrastructure in high TB burden settings, and foster collaboration among high burden countries and internationally, with the aim of carrying out a wide range of basic and clinical research that can lead to clinically important TB biomarkers, vaccines, drugs, and diagnostics. Since 2015, she has served as the U.S. Chair for the RePORT India consortium, which is a consortium of 15 Indian and U.S. institutions, supported by India’s Department of Biotechnology and the U.S. National Institutes of Health. |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | Johns Hopkins Gupta-Klinsky India Institute | Johns Hopkins Gupta-Klinsky India Institute
In 2000, she worked with Johns Hopkins leadership, faculty and staff to establish the Johns Hopkins Gupta-Klinsky India Institute. The Institute aims to mobilize Johns Hopkins faculty, staff, students and alumni to work with partners in India to improve society through research, education, policy and practice. Some initiatives include conference convenings, breakthrough grants, student exchange programs, career development fellowships as well as multidisciplinary research initiatives. |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | Current and Past Appointments | Current and Past Appointments
Florence Sabin Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Professor of Public Health, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Director, Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Faculty Co-Chair, Gupta-Klinsky India Institute
Fellow, Infectious Diseases Society of America
Principal Investigator and Director, Johns Hopkins-India Clinical Trials Unit
Advisory Council Member, National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of for Health
Executive Committee, Regional Prospective Observational Research on Tuberculosis (RePORT) International TB Research Consortium
United States Chair, Executive Committee, RePORT India Regional Research Consortium
Governing Board of the Indo-U.S. Science & Technology Forum
Association of American Universities’ Task Force on Expanding United States-India Partnerships.
Founder’s Circle member of Indiaspora |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | Awards | Awards
2022: Treatment Action Group, Research in Action Award which honors activists, scientists, and leaders for their efforts to end HIV, tuberculosis, and hepatitis C across the U.S. and around the world.
2018: Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Hopkins Hero Award, in recognition of contributions to medicine made during the first 125 years of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
2007 Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Clinician Scientist Award |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | Selected Publications | Selected Publications
Gupta is an author of more than 300 research publications on the prevention, diagnosis, treatment, of infectious diseases and factors that complicate disease treatment and management.
Gupta A, Montepiedra G, Aaron L, Theron G, McCarthy K, Bradford S, Chipato T, Vhembo T, Stranix-Chibanda L, Onyango-Makumbi C, Masheto GR, Violari A, Mmbaga BT, Aurpibul L, Bhosale R, Mave V, Rouzier V, Hesseling A, Shin K, Zimmer B, Costello D, Sterling TR, Chakhtoura N, Jean-Philippe P, Weinberg A. Isoniazid preventive therapy in HIV-infected pregnant and postpartum women. N Engl J Med. 2019 Oct 3;381(14):1333-1346. PMID: 31577875.
Gupta A, Hughes MD, Garcia-Prats AJ, McIntire K, Hesseling AC (2019) Inclusion of key populations in clinical trials of new antituberculosis treatments: Current barriers and recommendations for pregnant and lactating women, children, and HIV-infected persons. PLoS Med 16(8): e1002882. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002882. PMID: 31415563; PMCID: PMC6695091.
Gupta A, Swindells S, Kim S, Hughes MD, Naini L, Wu X, Dawson R, Mave V, Sanchez J, Mendoza A, Gonzales P, Kumarasamy N, Comins K, Conradie F, Shenje J, Fontain SN, Garcia-Prats A, Asmelash A, Nedsuwan S, Mohapi L, Lalloo UG, Ferreira ACG, Mugah C, Harrington M, Jones L, Cox S, Smith B, Shah NS, Hesseling AC, Churchyard G, ACTG 5300/IMPAACT I2003 PHOENIx Feasibility study team. Feasibility of identifying household contacts of rifampin- and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cases at high risk of progression to tuberculosis disease. Clin Infect Dis. 2019 Mar 28. pii: ciz235. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciz235. [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 30942853
Swindells S, Ramchandani R, Gupta A, Benson CA, Leon-Cruz J, Mwelase N, Jean Juste MA, Lama JR, Valencia JV, Omoz-Oarhe A, Supparatpinyo K, Masheto G, Mohapi L, da Silva Escada RO, Mawlana S, Banda P, Severe P, Hakim J, Kanyama C, Langat D, Moran L, Andersen J, Fletcher CV, Nuermberger E, Chaisson RE for the BRIEF TB/A5279 Study Team. One month of rifapentine plus isoniazid to prevent HIV-related tuberculosis. N Engl J Med. 2019;380:1001-1011. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1806808.
Queiroz ATL, Vinhaes CL, Fukutani ER, Gupte AN, Kumar NP, Fukutani KF, Arriaga MB, Sterling TR, Babu S, Gaikwad S, Karyakarte R, Mave V, Paradhkar M, Viswanathan V, Gupta A, Andrade BB, Kornfeld H; RePORT Brazil; RePORT India Consortia. A multi-center, prospective cohort study of whole blood gene expression in the tuberculosis-diabetes interaction. Sci Rep. 2023 May 12;13(1):7769. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-34847-9. PMID: 37173394; PMCID: PMC10180618.
Robinson ML, Johnson J, Naik S, Patil S, Kulkarni R, Kinikar A, Dohe V, Mudshingkar S, Kagal A, Smith RM, Westercamp M, Randive B, Kadam A, Babiker A, Kulkarni V, Karyakarte R, Mave V, Gupta A, Milstone AM, Manabe YC. Maternal Colonization Versus Nosocomial Transmission as the Source of Drug-Resistant Bloodstream Infection in an Indian Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: A Prospective Cohort Study. Clin Infect Dis. 2023 Jul 5;77(Suppl 1):S38-S45. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciad282. PMID: 37406039; PMCID: PMC10321698. |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | References | References |
Draft:Amita Gupta, MD, MHS | Table of Content | AFC submission, Early Life and Education, Research and Career, Johns Hopkins Gupta-Klinsky India Institute, Current and Past Appointments, Awards, Selected Publications, References |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Clark Boulevard Public School | [[:Clark Boulevard Public School]] | :Clark Boulevard Public School
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Redirect to Peel District School Board. Elementary school with no indication of notability. Sources are all local routine coverage. JTtheOG (talk) 19:25, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Education, Schools, and Canada. JTtheOG (talk) 19:25, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Redirect to Peel District School Board All routine outside the mention about school attendance, which is in no way a defining characteristic for a K-5 school article. Nathannah • 📮 21:39, 1 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Clark Boulevard Public School | Table of Content | [[:Clark Boulevard Public School]] |
Curtisy | short description | Gavin Curtis (), known professionally as Curtisy, is an Irish rapper from Tallaght. |
Curtisy | Early life | Early life
Curtis grew up in Jobstown, Tallaght. |
Curtisy | Career | Career
Curtisy became popular on Soundcloud and during the Covid lockdowns. In January 2022 he released "Men on a Mission," a collaboration with Ahmed, With Love.
He cites Earl Sweatshirt, Kojaque and Wiki as influences.
Curtisy released What Was The Question, his first album, in 2024, which reached #3 on the Irish Independent Albums Chart and was nominated for the Choice Music Prize. The Irish Times praised it, saying "For someone at the start of a creative career, it’s a brilliantly accomplished album. The sound and feel, if not coming wholly from the depths of the wooziness of pandemic-era lockdowns, is certainly informed by a sort of existentialism or purgatorial state. And yet it’s neither wallowing nor a drag." His mixtape Beauty In The Beast followed in 2025. |
Curtisy | Discography | Discography
Albums
What Was The Question (2024)
Mixtape
Beauty In The Beast (2025) |
Curtisy | PErsonal life | PErsonal life
Curtis still lives in his family home, in a garden shed, due to the high price of housing in Ireland. |
Curtisy | References | References |
Curtisy | External links | External links
Curtisy on Soundcloud
Curtisy on Bandcamp
Category:Date of birth missing (living people)
Category:21st-century Irish musicians
Category:21st-century rappers
Category:Living people
Category:Musicians from Dublin (city)
Category:Irish male rappers
Category:People from Tallaght |
Curtisy | Table of Content | short description, Early life, Career, Discography, PErsonal life, References, External links |
Category:People from Ulukhaktok | [[Category:People by populated place in the Northwest Territories | Ulukhaktok
Category:Ulukhaktok |
Category:People from Ulukhaktok | Table of Content | [[Category:People by populated place in the Northwest Territories |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Fred VII (3rd nomination) | [[:Fred VII]] | :Fred VII
AfDs for this article:
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
No reliable sources. All the so-called references are GI Joe publications. Clarityfiend (talk) 19:29, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Fictional elements-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 19:29, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Comics and animation-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 19:30, 1 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Fred VII (3rd nomination) | Table of Content | [[:Fred VII]] |
Category:Transport in Ulukhaktok | [[Category:Ulukhaktok]] | Category:Ulukhaktok
Ulukhaktok
Ulukhaktok |
Category:Transport in Ulukhaktok | Table of Content | [[Category:Ulukhaktok]] |
Veronica Terriquez | Short description | Veronica Terriquez (born 1971/1972) is a Chicana sociologist, professor, and social justice activist who since June 2021 has been director of the Chicano Studies Research Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. Additionally, she is professor of urban planning, Chicana/o studies, and Central American studies. She is specialized in social inequality and civic engagement among racial minorities, although mostly under the purview of Latino studies. |
Veronica Terriquez | Biography | Biography
In 1971 or 1972, she was born to undocumented Mexican immigrants in the United States. In 1993, she graduated from Alverno High School and earned $500 from the Avery Dennison Leadershio Scholarship to attend Harvard University. As a senior in 1996, she participated in a march on Washington D.C., a protest for various Latino issues. In a statement to the Boston Sunday Globe, she lamented the lack of Latinos in higher education. She graduated from Harvard with a bachelor's degree in sociology, the University of California, Berkeley with a master's in education, and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) with a PhD in sociology. By 2012, she had joined the faculty of the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC). Her research and activism has engaged unions, community organizations, and local governments.
On July 1, 2021, she succeeded Chon Noriega as the first female director of the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center (CSRC). She was also appointed to professorships at the Luskin School of Public Affairs and UCLA College, leaving her position as associate professor of sociology at UCSC. In 2022, CSRC in collaboration with the UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute established the Latina Futures 2050 Lab, dedicated to policy research regarding Latinas in fields like education and law and promoting their involvement in politics. On November 3, a commencement ceremony was held in which the project received $15 million from the 2023-2024 state budget; among the attendees were California politicians María Elena Durazo, Sabrina Cervantes, Wendy Carrillo, and Isaac Bryan. As of February 2025, she was professor of urban planning, Chicana/o studies, and Central American studies. |
Veronica Terriquez | Works | Works
Additionally editing the 20th volume of , her bibliography includes: |
Veronica Terriquez | Awards and honors | Awards and honors
Source:
Fellow (2020-2021) of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
University Faculty Award (2021) by the American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education
Award for Public Sociology in International Migration (2021) by the American Sociological Association |
Veronica Terriquez | See also | See also
Excelencia in Education |
Veronica Terriquez | References | References |
Veronica Terriquez | External links | External links
at The Conversation
at JSTOR
at PBS SoCal
Category:20th-century births
Category:Living people
Category:Chicano
Category:American community activists
Category:Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni
Category:UC Berkeley Graduate School of Education alumni
Category:University of California, Los Angeles alumni
Category:University of California, Santa Cruz faculty
Category:UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs faculty
Category:American women sociologists
Category:Sociology educators
Category:American academics of Mexican descent |
Veronica Terriquez | Table of Content | Short description, Biography, Works, Awards and honors, See also, References, External links |
List of Lehigh University people | short description | |
List of Lehigh University people | Presidents | Presidents
thumb|right|Deming Lewis was the university's tenth president from 1964 to 1982 and was in charge of the construction of most of the modern campus
No. Name Tenure Notes 1. Henry Coppée 1866–1875 Mexican–American War veteran and President of the Aztec Club of 1847. Christmas Hall renovated, Packer Hall and President's house constructed. 2. John McDowell Leavitt 1875–1880 Episcopal priest, lawyer and journalist. Linderman Library constructed. 3. Robert Alexander Lamberton 1880–1893 Lawyer. Coppee Hall and Chandler-Ullmann constructed. Phi Beta Kappa founded. 4. Thomas Messinger Drown 1895–1904 Created MIT's chemical engineering program. Led school through Panic of 1893. Williams Hall constructed. - William H. Chandler 1904–1905 Chandler, a professor at the university, served as acting president after Drown's sudden death during a surgery. 5. Henry Sturgis Drinker 1905–1920 Class of 1871, first alumnus to hold position. Fritz Lab, Drown Hall, Coxe Lab, Taylor Hall, Taylor Gym, Taylor Stadium, and Lamberton Hall constructed. Split school into colleges. - Natt M. Emery 1920–1922 Drinker resigned in 1920. His vice president, Natt M. Emery, served as acting president until 1922. 6. Charles Russ Richards 1922–1935 Graduate school opened to women, Alumni Memorial constructed. 7. Clement C. Williams 1935–1944 University of Iowa's dean of engineering, Richards and Drinker dorms built. Retired in 1944. 8. Martin Dewey Whitaker 1946–1960 Manhattan Project alumni. Dravo, McClintic-Marshall, and Centennials I dorms built. Whitaker Lab built. 9. Harvey A. Neville 1961–1964 First and only elected president. 10. Deming Lewis 1964–1982 Bell Labs alumnus. Maginnes Hall, Whitaker Lab, Mart Science and Engineering Library, Sinclair Lab, the Seeley G. Mudd Building, Neville Hall, Rathbone Dining Hall, Centennial II, Brodhead, Trembley Park, Saucon Village dorms, and the Philip Rauch Field House, and the Stabler center constructed. 11. Peter Likins 1982–1997 Purchased Mountaintop Campus from Bethlehem Steel. Demolished Taylor Stadium to make room for Rauch and Zoellner Halls. Resigned to become an advisor to George H.W. Bush. - William C. Hittinger 1997–1998 Class of 1944. A 22-year veteran of the board of trustees. Selected as interim President after Likins resigned. 12. Gregory C. Farrington 1998–2006 Helped raise $250 million for the endowment of professors as well as another $75 million for the recruitment of new professors. 13. Alice P. Gast 2006–2014 First female president. Opened Lehigh's Stabler Campus. in 2010 named to the post of science envoy by Hillary Clinton. Resigned to be named President of the Imperial College London. - Kevin L. Clayton 2014–2015 Alumnus from large family of alumni, 22-year veteran of the board of trustees. 14. John D. Simon 2015–2021 Former provost of the University of Virginia. Established the College of Health. SouthSide Commons, Singleton, Hitch, and Maida dorms constructed. 15. Joseph J. Helble 2021–present Class of 1982. Renamed Packer Hall to Clayton Hall. Lehigh's Business Innovation Building constructed. |
List of Lehigh University people | Notable faculty | Notable faculty
Ferdinand P. Beer
Michael Behe
Donald T. Campbell
Huai-Dong Cao
Fazıl Erdoğan - Member of the National Academy of Engineering
Maurice Ewing
Dan M. Frangopol
Lawrence H. Gipson
Joseph I. Goldstein
John Grogan
John E. Hare
Joachim Grenestedt
Terry Hart
Daniel Chonghan Hong
Thomas Hyclak
George Rankine Irwin
Stanley J. Jaworski
Derrick Henry Lehmer
Alexander Macfarlane
Gordon Moskowitz
Ronald Rivlin
Miles Rock
Rajan Menon
Dork Sahagian- Nobel Laureate
Greg Strobel
Miranda Teboh-Ewungkem
André Weil
Ricardo Viera
Stephanie Powell Watts
George D. Watkins, member of the National Academy of Sciences
Albert Wilansky, discoverer of the mathematical property of Smith numbers |
List of Lehigh University people | Alumni | Alumni |
List of Lehigh University people | Academia | Academia
David Bader (BSCompE, 1990; MSEE, 1991), Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at the New Jersey Institute of Technology and former Georgia Tech professor
Anthony G. Collins (D.Eng. Civil Eng., 1982), former Clarkson University president
Peter Feaver (BA, 1983), Duke University professor and former member of the National Security Council in the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations
James D. Foley (BSEE, 1964), Georgia Tech professor and co-author, Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice
Kenneth French (Mech. E., 1976), Dartmouth College finance department chairman and American Finance Association president
Robert L. Ketter, former University of Buffalo president
Andrew H. Knoll (1973), Harvard University paleontologist and geologist and member of the National Academy of Sciences
Ted London (BS Mech. Eng 1985), Base of the Pyramid expert at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business and William Davidson Institute senior research fellow
Robert J. Nemiroff (1987), Michigan Technological University professor of physics and co-founder of the Astronomy Picture of the Day and Astrophysics Source Code Library
Paul C. Paris (1955), Washington University in St. Louis professor emeritus and expert on fracture mechanics and material fatigue
Walter C. Pitman, III (1956), Columbia University professor emeritus and expert on sea floor spreading
James R. Rice (1962), Harvard University physicist and professor and member of the National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Engineering.
Herman Schneider (1894), University of Cincinnati former president and developer of cooperative education
James E. Talmage (Geology, 1884), University of Utah former president, author, and LDS apostle
John Texter (1949), Eastern Michigan University professor emeritus, author, inventor, and co-founder of Strider Research Corporation
Paul Torgersen (B.S. Industrial Engr., 1953), former |
List of Lehigh University people | Architecture | Architecture
Roland E. Borhek (1883), designed the Rialto Theater and other buildings
Wallis Eastburn Howe (1889), architect |
List of Lehigh University people | Business | Business
William Amelio (BS Chem. Eng., 1979), Avnet CEO and former Lenovo CEO
Tom Bayer, Reserve Bank of Vanuatu director
Patrice Banks, Girls Auto Clinic founder and author
Bob Born (1944), Just Born president
William Butterworth, Deere and Company president and chairman
Steve Chang, Trend Micro co-founder and former CEO
Stacey Cunningham (BS Industrial Engineering, 1996), 67th president of the New York Stock Exchange
Jack Dreyfus (1934), Dreyfus Fund founder
Cathy Engelbert (1986), former Deloitte U.S. president and current WNBA commissioner
Murray H. Goodman, real estate developer
Eugene Grace (1899), former Bethlehem Steel president
Richard Hayne (BA Anthropology 1969), Urban Outfitters, Anthropologie, and Free People co-founder
Marc Holtzman (1982), Barclays Capital vice chairman and Kazkommertsbank chairman
Lee Iacocca (Industrial Eng. 1945, Hon D.Eng. 1965), former Chrysler chairman
Kevin J. Kennedy (1978), Avaya CEO
John E. McGlade, Air Products chairman, president, and CEO
Reginald Lenna (BS Industrial engineering, 1936), Blackstone Inc. CEO
Edward Avery McIlhenny (1896), McIlhenny Company CEO]
Henry H. Minskoff, real estate developer
James Ward Packard (Mech. E., 1884), Packard co-founder
John R. Patrick (BS Electrical engineering, 1967), former IBM vice president
Joseph R. Perella (BS Business & Economics 1964), former investment banking chairman at Morgan Stanley
Paul Zane Pilzer (BA Journalism 1974), economist
Barry Rosenstein (BA, 1981), hedge fund manager
Fredrick D. Schaufeld (BA Government 1981), entrepreneur and venture capital investor
Tsai Shengbai (1919), Mayar Silk Mills president and developer of the modern silk industry in China
Fred Trump Jr. (1960), Trans World Airlines pilot and former executive and maintenance worker at The Trump Organization; older brother of Donald Trump, the 45th President of the United States
Robert Zoellner (BS 1954), investor and stamp collector, the second person to have assembled a complete collection of United States postage stamps, and benefactor and namesake of the school's Zoellner Arts CenterStaff. "Robert E. Zoellner '54 dies at age 82", Lehigh University, December 31, 2014. Accessed December 31, 2014. "Zoellner, who graduated from Lehigh in 1954 with bachelor's degrees in electrical engineering and engineering physics and later served as a Lehigh trustee, was a lifelong supporter of the university. In the early 1990s, he and his wife Victoria committed $6 million to establish the Zoellner Arts Center, a 105,000-square-foot performing arts venue on the Asa Packer campus that brought measurable change to the university and provides students and the surrounding community with unique opportunities for learning, performing and the visual arts." |
List of Lehigh University people | Entertainment | Entertainment
Dick Berg (1942), screenwriter
Jim Davidson (1985), actor, Pacific Blue
Brooke Eby, business development manager and social media personality
Paul Guilfoyle (1972), actor, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
Maria Jacquemetton (BA English, 1983), Emmy, Golden Globe, Writers Guild of America, and Peabody Award-winning writer and supervising producer of Mad Men
Don Most (1972), actor, Happy Days (attended but did not graduate)
Ian Riccaboni, host of All Elite Wrestling's Ring of Honor
Louis Clyde Stoumen (1939), Academy Award-winning director and producer |
List of Lehigh University people | Journalism and literature | Journalism and literature
Martin Baron (BA Journalism and MBA, both 1976), Washington Post editor and former Boston Globe editor
Tracy Byrnes (1993), Fox Business television reporter
William E. Coles, Jr. (BA English, 1953), novelist and professor
Richard Harding Davis (1886), war correspondent, journalist, and writer of fiction and drama
Robert Gibb (MA English, 1976), poet, short-story writer, essayist, critic, editor, and professor
Michael Golden (1971), The International Herald Tribune publisher and vice chairman of The New York Times Company
William P. Gottlieb (BS business and economics, 1939), jazz author and photographer
Russell Lee (1925), photojournalist
Edwin Lefèvre (1893), one of the first journalists specialized on covering business
David A. Randall (English, 1928), book dealer and librarian
Len Roberts (PhD English, 1976), poet, translator, and professor
Stephanie Ruhle (1997), MSNBC anchor and NBC News correspondent
Michael Smerconish (BA Government, 1984), author and radio commentator
Andrea Tantaros (2001), former Fox News Channel co-host and political contributorOn Air Personalities
Les Whitten (BA English and Journalism, 1950), investigative reporter and novelist |
List of Lehigh University people | Law | Law
Edward N. Cahn (1955), United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania judge; The Edward Cahn Federal Building and Courthouse was named in his honor.
Robert L. Clifford (1946), New Jersey Supreme Court associate justice
James Cullen Ganey (1920), United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit judge
Ronald A. Guzman (1970), United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois judge
Alina Habba (2005), attorney for former U.S. president Donald Trump
Edwin Kneedler (1967), deputy solicitor general of the United States
Paul Lewis Maloney (1972), United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan judge
Malcolm Muir (1935), United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania judge
Maryellen Noreika (1988),United States District Court for the District of Delaware judge
Donald F. Parsons (1973), Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware vice chancellor
Stephen Victor Wilson (1963), United States District Court for the Central District of California judge |
List of Lehigh University people | Medicine | Medicine
Harry J. Buncke, plastic surgeon called the "father of microsurgery"
Steven J. Burakoff, cancer specialist and head of Mount Sinai Medical Center's cancer institute
Frank L. Douglas, former TheVax Genetics Vaccine Company CEO and founder and first executive director of MIT's Center for Biomedical Innovation
Stephen K. Klasko, Jefferson Health CEO
Gail Saltz, psychiatrist and television commentator
Sandra Welner, specialist in disabled women's healthcare |
List of Lehigh University people | Military | Military
Ralph Cheli (1941), USAAF, awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously for valor in World War II
General Timothy D. Haugh (BA 1991), USAF, Director, National Security Agency
Colin J. Kilrain (1982), U.S. Navy SEAL, anti-terrorism expert, military attache to Mexico, PACCOM Special Ops Commander, NATO Special Ops Commander
David M. Peterson (1915), fighter ace with the Lafayette Escadrille and U.S. Army Air Service credited with six victories, twice awarded the Distinguished Service Cross
Edwin H. Simmons USMC (1942), veteran of the Battle of Chosin Reservoir and USMC chief historian
Franklin C. Spinney (BS Mech. Eng, 1967), U.S. Air Force Reserve and military analyst
John H. Tilelli, Jr. (MBA 1972), U.S. Army vice chief of staff |
List of Lehigh University people | Politics | Politics
Pongpol Adireksarn (1964), Deputy Prime Minister of Thailand
William David Blakeslee Ainey, U.S. Congressman
Ali Al-Naimi (BS Geology 1962), Saudi Arabia Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources and Aramco chairman
Carville Benson (1890), U.S. Congressman
William A. Collins, Connecticut State Representative and four-term mayor of Norwalk, Connecticut
Charlie Dent (MPA, 1993), U.S. Congressman
Geoff Diehl (1992), Massachusetts House of Representatives member
Clarence Ditlow III, (Bachelor of Science (BS) Chemical Engineering), advocate for automotive safety
Manuel V. Domenech (1888), Ponce, Puerto Rico member and Treasurer of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico
Lori Ehrlich (1985),Massachusetts House of Representatives member
Peter D. Feaver (BA, 1983), member of the National Security Council in the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations and Duke University professor
Robert L. Freeman (MA History, 1984), Pennsylvania House of Representatives memberOfficial Pennsylvania House of Representatives Profile
Walter O. Hoffecker (1877), U.S. Congressman
Robert A. Hurley (1917), 73rd governor of Connecticut
Leonard Lance (Bachelor of Arts (BA), 1974), U.S. Congressman
Norton Lewis Lichtenwalner, U.S. Congressman
Jennifer Mann (1991), Majority Caucus Secretary and member of Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Robert Martin (Master of Arts (MA) History, 1971), New Jersey State Senator
Paul F. McHale, Jr. (Bachelor of Arts (BA) Government, 1972), Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and former U.S. Congressman
Rufus King Polk (1887), U.S. Congressman
Donald L. Ritter (Bachelor of Science (BS) Metallurgy, 1961), former U.S. Congressman
Richard Schmierer (1974), U.S. ambassador to Oman
David Sidikman (1956), New York State Assembly member
Donald Snyder (MBA 1976), Pennsylvania House of Representatives Majority Whip
Edward J. Stack (1931), U.S. Congressman
Guy Talarico (B.S.), New Jersey General Assembly memberAssemblyman Guy F. Talarico, New Jersey Legislature, backed up by the Internet Archive as of February 25, 1998. Accessed June 13, 2010.
Joseph Uliana (1987), Pennsylvania State Representative and State Senator
Richard Verma (BS Industrial engineering, 1990), U.S. ambassador to India
Francis E. Walter (1916), U.S. Congressman |
List of Lehigh University people | Pulitzer Prize winners | Pulitzer Prize winners
Martin Baron (1976), editor of The Washington Post, former editor of The Boston Globe, 2003 Pulitzer Prize winner
Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe (1886) 1925 Pulitzer Prize winner
Joe Morgenstern (BA English, 1953), 2005 Pulitzer Prize winner |
List of Lehigh University people | Science and engineering | Science and engineering
Ali Al-Naimi (BS Geology, 1962), Saudi Aramco CEO and Saudi Arabia's Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources
Walter C. Bachman (1933), chief engineer at Gibbs & Cox and ship propulsion expert
John-David F. Bartoe (BS Physics 1966), Space Shuttle astronaut and International Space Station research manager for NASA
Stephen James Benkovic (1960), chemist
William Bowie (C.E. 1895), geodetic engineer and namesake of Bowie Seamount
Morris Llewellyn Cooke (BS Mech. E., 1895), rural electrification leader during the 1920s and 1930s
Paul Corkum (PhD Theoretical Physics, 1972), attosecond physics and laser science expert
Albert P. Crary (MS Physics), Antarctic explorer
Harry Diamond, engineer who developed Proximity Fuse
Philip Drinker (Chem Eng., 1917), co-inventor of the modern respiratorDistinguished Alumni
Lt. Col. Terry Hart, USAF (BS Mech. E., 1968, Hon. D.Eng., 1988), NASA Space Shuttle astronaut
Captain Nicholas H. Heck (AB 1903, BSCE 1904), geophysicist, seismologist, oceanographer, hydrographic surveyor, and United States Coast and Geodetic Survey officer
Lester Hogan (PhD Physics 1950), microwave and semiconductor pioneer
Gary G. Lash (MS, PhD 1980), geologist known for Marcellus Shale calculations
Bill Maloney (1980), mine drilling expert and participant in the Plan B rescue of miners during the 2010 Chilean mine disaster
Daniel McFarlan Moore (1889), Moore Light inventor
William S. Murray (1895), electrical power generation and railroad electrification expert
Jesse W. Reno (BS Mech Eng., 1883), builder of the world's first escalator
Robert Serber (BS Engineering physics, 1930), physicist in the Manhattan Project
Lewis B. Stillwell (1885), expert on electrical distribution, President of the IEEE and 1935 winner of the IEEE Edison Medal
John Texter (1949; BSEE, 1971; MS Chem, 1973; MS Mathematics, 1976; PhD Chemistry, 1976), engineer and scientist in applied dispersion technology and small particle science, co-initiator of polymerized ionic liquids, and designer of thermodynamically stable dispersions
John M. Thome (1870), director of the Argentina's national observatory, Observatorio Astronómico de Córdoba
Richard Hawley Tucker (BS Civil Eng., 1887), astronomer; namesake of Tucker Crater on the Moon
Claude Allen Porter Turner (BS Civil Eng., 1890), developed early reinforced concrete techniques
Aneesh Varma (2006), founder of Aire and expert on behavior prediction algorithms
William Wiswesser (1936; honorary doctorate 1970), chemist and pioneer in chemical informatics and inventor of Wiswesser line notation
J. Lamar Worzel (1941), geophysicist and oceanographer
Zhou Ming-Zhen, Chinese paleontologist, Chinese Academy of Sciences academic and recipient of the Romer-Simpson Medal |
List of Lehigh University people | Sports | Sports
Rabih Abdullah (1998), former professional football player, Chicago Bears, New England Patriots, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Joe Alleva (BS finance, 1975; MBA, 1976), Louisiana State University athletic director and former Duke University athletic director
Craig Anderson (1960), former professional baseball player, New York Mets and St. Louis Cardinals
Lon Babby (BA Political Science, 1973), Phoenix Suns presidentCohen, Paula Hubbs. "Attorney of the Month: Lon Babby," Attorney At Law Magazine (Greater Phoenix Edition), March 2011.
Adam Bergen (2004), professional football player, Arizona Cardinals and Dallas Cowboys
Jordan Cohen ('20), Israel Basketball Premier League player
Snooks Dowd, former professional baseball player
Cathy Engelbert (1986), WNBA Commissioner
Sam Fishburn, professional baseball player
John Fitch (BS Civil Eng., 1938), winner of Mille Miglia and Argentine Grand Prix
Paul Hartzell (1976), former professional baseball player, Baltimore Orioles, California Angels, and Minnesota Twins
Bill Hoffman, football player
Al Holbert (Mech. E. 1968), five-time IMSA GT Champion and member of International Motorsports Hall of Fame
John Hill (1972), former professional football player, New York Giants and New Orleans Saints
Jarrod Johnson (1991), former professional football player, Pittsburgh Steelers and San Diego Chargers
Steve Kreider (1978), former professional football player, Cincinnati Bengals
Tim Mayer (1991), IMSA chief operating officer
CJ McCollum (BA Journalism, 2013), first Lehigh basketball player to be selected in the NBA draftOlojede, Zion. "Lehigh alum CJ McCollum named Kia NBA Most Improved Player," Lehigh University Athletics, Friday, April 22, 2016.
Kim McQuilken (1973), former professional football player, Atlanta Falcons and Washington Redskins
Rich Owens (1994), former professional football player, Miami Dolphins, Kansas City Chiefs, Seattle Seahawks, and Washington Redskins
Vincent "Pat" Pazzetti (1912), member of College Football Hall of Fame
Roger Penske (1959), NASCAR and IRL team owner, member of International Motorsports Hall of Fame, and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom
Will Rackley (BA Design, 2011), professional football player, Jacksonville Jaguars"Lehigh senior student-athletes conclude college careers," Lehigh University, Tuesday, May 24, 2011.
Julius Seligson (1930), NCAA and ITA national tennis champion and member of ITA Hall of Fame
Scott Semptimphelter, football player
Lake Underwood (Mech. E.), professional sports car racer
Bobby Weaver (1981), gold medal winner, wrestling, 1984 Summer Olympics
Finn Wentworth (1980), former New Jersey Nets owner and YankeeNets president
Adam Williamson (2005), Major League Soccer soccer player, New England Revolution
Matt McBride (2006), Major League Baseball player, Oakland Athletics
Levi Stoudt (2020), Major League Baseball player, Baltimore Orioles
Mason Black (2021), Major League Baseball player, San Francisco Giants
Ryan Spadola, former National Football League wide receiver
Kevin Jefferson, former National Football League linebacker
Marty Horn, former National Football League quarterback |
List of Lehigh University people | References | References
Lehigh University faculty |
List of Lehigh University people | Table of Content | short description, Presidents, Notable faculty, Alumni, Academia, Architecture, Business, Entertainment, Journalism and literature, Law, Medicine, Military, Politics, Pulitzer Prize winners, Science and engineering, Sports, References |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Short description | thumb|610's word mark logo
Team 610, "The Crescent Coyotes," is a FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) Team consisting of students from Crescent School in Toronto, Canada. Founded in 2000, team 610 is the second oldest FRC team in Canada after Team 188 "Blizzard" from Woburn Collegiate Institute in Toronto. Since its founding, 610 has won 18 blue banners for various tournament victories and awards. This includes a victory at the 2013 FIRST Championship at the Edward Jones Dome in St Louis, Missouri. Earning the title of world champions in the game Ultimate Ascent with robot "Tasmanian Devil" led by alliance captain Team 1241 (Theory6) and 1st pick Team 1477 (Texas Torque). |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2002 "Zone Zeal" | 2002 "Zone Zeal"
In 2002, the FRC game was Zone Zeal. Its rules are summarized on the Orlando Regional website like so: "Each two minute match began with the 24″ x 48″ field broken up into 5 zones. Four robots started on the playing field and were paired in alliances of two. There were two robots at diagonally opposite corners, 10 soccer balls in each driver station area, 20 soccer balls centered along each side of the field, and three moveable goals weighing approximately 130 lbs each in the center zone. Robots raced around the playing field trying to gather balls, place them into goals, place the goals in their scoring zone, and return their robot to their starting zone before the two minutes elapsed." |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Coyabot III | Coyabot III
In 2002 Team 610 competed with Coyabot IIalt=FRC Team 610 posing with Canadian Prime Minister Steven Harper by invitation after winning 2013 world championships|thumb|FRC Team 610 with Canadian Prime Minister Steven Harper |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Canadian Regional | Canadian Regional |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Qualification Match Results | Qualification Match Results
+MatchRed AllianceBlue AllianceRed ScoreBlue Score610 ResultQuals 93789189146104322LQuals 173792916105782028WQuals 258546102297713429WQuals 446106417818632032L |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Playoff Results | Playoff Results |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | World Championships | World Championships |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Qualification Match Results | Qualification Match Results |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Playoff Results | Playoff Results |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2003 "Stack Attack | 2003 "Stack Attack |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Canadian Regional | Canadian Regional |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Qualification Match Results | Qualification Match Results |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Playoff Results | Playoff Results |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | World Championships | World Championships |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Qualification Match Results | Qualification Match Results |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Playoff Results | Playoff Results |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2004 "FIRST Frenzy: Raising the Bar" | 2004 "FIRST Frenzy: Raising the Bar" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2005 "Triple Play" | 2005 "Triple Play" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2006 "Aim High" | 2006 "Aim High" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2007 "Rack ‘n Roll" | 2007 "Rack ‘n Roll" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2008 "FIRST Overdrive" | 2008 "FIRST Overdrive" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2009 "Lunacy" | 2009 "Lunacy" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2010 "Breakaway" | 2010 "Breakaway" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2011 "Logo Motion" | 2011 "Logo Motion" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2012 "Rebound Rumble" | 2012 "Rebound Rumble" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2013 "Ultimate Ascent" | 2013 "Ultimate Ascent" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2014 "Aerial Assist" | 2014 "Aerial Assist" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2015 "Recycle Rush!" | 2015 "Recycle Rush!" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2016 "FIRST Stronghold" | 2016 "FIRST Stronghold" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2017 "FIRST STEAMWorks" | 2017 "FIRST STEAMWorks" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2018 "FIRST Power Up" | 2018 "FIRST Power Up" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2019 "Destination: Deep Space" | 2019 "Destination: Deep Space" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2020 "Infinite Recharge" | 2020 "Infinite Recharge" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2021 "Infinite Recharge" | 2021 "Infinite Recharge" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2022 "Rapid React" | 2022 "Rapid React" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2023 "Charged Up" | 2023 "Charged Up" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2024 "Crescendo" | 2024 "Crescendo" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | 2025 "Reefscape" | 2025 "Reefscape" |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | References | References |
Draft:Team 610 (FRC) | Table of Content | Short description, 2002 "Zone Zeal", Coyabot III, Canadian Regional, Qualification Match Results, Playoff Results, World Championships, Qualification Match Results, Playoff Results, 2003 "Stack Attack, Canadian Regional, Qualification Match Results, Playoff Results, World Championships, Qualification Match Results, Playoff Results, 2004 "FIRST Frenzy: Raising the Bar", 2005 "Triple Play", 2006 "Aim High", 2007 "Rack ‘n Roll", 2008 "FIRST Overdrive", 2009 "Lunacy", 2010 "Breakaway", 2011 "Logo Motion", 2012 "Rebound Rumble", 2013 "Ultimate Ascent", 2014 "Aerial Assist", 2015 "Recycle Rush!", 2016 "FIRST Stronghold", 2017 "FIRST STEAMWorks", 2018 "FIRST Power Up", 2019 "Destination: Deep Space", 2020 "Infinite Recharge", 2021 "Infinite Recharge", 2022 "Rapid React", 2023 "Charged Up", 2024 "Crescendo", 2025 "Reefscape", References |
Draft:Skraban–Deardorff syndrome | AfC submission | Skraban–Deardorff syndrome is a rare genetic disorder caused by mutations of the WDR26 gene. |
Draft:Skraban–Deardorff syndrome | References | References |
Draft:Skraban–Deardorff syndrome | Table of Content | AfC submission, References |
Draft:King-Kong | AfC submission/draft | Lb
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