List of Temple University people
This is a list of notable faculty and alumni of Temple University, a comprehensive public research university in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Presidents
The followings have served as president of Temple University:[1][2]
| No. | Image | President | Term start | Term end | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1
|
Russell Conwell | October 14, 1887 | December 6, 1925[a] | ||
2
|
Charles Ezra Beury | January 22, 1926 | August 30, 1941 | ||
3
|
Robert Livingston Johnson | September 17, 1941 | June 30, 1959 | ||
4
|
Millard E. Gladfelter | July 1, 1959 | July 31, 1967 | ||
5
|
Paul R. Anderson | August 1, 1967 | June 30, 1973 | ||
6
|
Marvin Wachman | July 1, 1973 | June 30, 1982 | ||
7
|
Peter J. Liacouras | July 1, 1982 | August 1, 2000 | [3][4] | |
8
|
David Adamany | August 2, 2000 | June 30, 2006 | [5][6][7] | |
9
|
Ann Weaver Hart | July 1, 2006 | June 30, 2012[b] | [8][9][10] | |
acting
|
Richard Englert | July 1, 2012 | December 31, 2012 | [11] | |
10
|
Neil D. Theobald | January 1, 2013 | July 21, 2016[c] | [12] | |
acting
|
Richard Englert | July 21, 2016 | October 11, 2016 | [13] | |
11
|
October 11, 2016 | June 30, 2021 | [14][15] | ||
12
|
Jason Wingard | July 1, 2021 | March 31, 2023 | [16][17][18] | |
13
acting |
JoAnne A. Epps | April 11, 2023 | September 19, 2023[a] | [19][20] | |
14
interim |
Richard M. Englert | September 26, 2023 | October 31, 2024 | [21][22] | |
15
|
John A. Fry | November 1, 2024 | present | [23] |
Table notes:
Faculty
- Theresa A. Powell – vice president of academic affairs[24]
Biology
Business
Communication
English
- Samuel R. Delany – science fiction author
- George W. Johnson – former chair of the Temple Department of English; later President of George Mason University (1979–1996)[25]
- Thomas Kinsella – Irish poet, translator, editor, and publisher; author of numerous volumes of poetry and a translation of the ancient Irish epic The Tain (Táin Bó Cúailnge); while at Temple, he developed a program for students to study in Ireland called "the Irish Experience"
- Sonia Sanchez – poet
- Miles Orvell – cultural historian, editor of the Encyclopedia of American Studies
- Sebastian Castillo
Film
History
- Richard H. Immerman
- Alan McPherson
- David Alan Rosenberg
- Gregory J. W. Urwin
- Russell Weigley
- Ralph F. Young
Law
- Jim Drucker – former Commissioner of the Continental Basketball Association, former Commissioner of the Arena Football League, and founder of NewKadia Comics
- C. Darnell Jones II
- David Kairys
- David G. Post
Mathematics
- Emil Grosswald
- John Allen Paulos – author of Innumeracy: Mathematical Illiteracy and its Consequences
Music
- Katherine Ciesinski
- Rollo Dilworth – choral composer, conductor
- John Douglas – conductor and voice teacher; head of Temple's Opera Theatre program for two decades
- Cynthia Folio – composer, flutist, and music theorist
- Matthew Greenbaum – composer
- Aaron Levinson – Grammy Award-winning producer and musician
- Dick Oatts – saxophonist
- Terell Stafford – trumpet player
Philosophy
Psychology
- Lauren Alloy
- Laurence Steinberg
- Joseph Wolpe – South African psychiatrist and founding figure in behavior therapy
- Rinad Beidas
Religion
Sociology
Sports
- Nikki Franke – fencer and fencing coach
Other disciplines
- Fauzia Ahmad, electrical engineering[26]
- Molefi Asante – scholar, known for popularizing and developing Afrocentricity
- Earl Bradley – pediatrician
- Emile B. De Sauzé – language educator known for developing the conversational method of learning a language
- Happy Fernandez – politician
- Mary Stuart Fisher – radiologist
- John E. Fryer – psychiatrist and gay rights activist, also known as Dr. Henry Anonymous
- Jacob Gershon-Cohen – Professor of Research Radiology and developer of mammography for detecting breast cancer[27]
- Chevalier Jackson – pioneer physician in laryngology and endoscopy
- Leah Modigliani – Associate Professor and Program Director of Visual Studies at Tyler School of Art and Architecture
- Mark L. Nelson – chemist and inventor of Nuzyra, an antibiotic FDA approved in 2018
- Waldo Nelson – "father of pediatrics," longtime editor of The Journal of Pediatrics; author of Nelson Book of Pediatrics
- Lucia V. Streng – chemist
- Ann M. Valentine – chemist
Alumni
Academia
- Katalin Karikó - 2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Rebecca Alpert – activist, Rabbi, and current chair of the religion department
- Edwin David Aponte – author and educator, Vice President for Academic Affairs, Dean of the Faculty, and Professor of Christianity & Culture at Christian Theological Seminary, Indianapolis.
- Leon Bass (Ph.D.) – educator
- John Baugh – linguist known for developing theory of linguistic profiling, Margaret Bush Wilson Professor in Arts and Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis
- Elizabeth D. Peña – Professor and Associate Dean of Faculty Development & Diversity at the University of California, Irvine[28]
- Susan H. Brandt – historian
- David Bressoud (Ph.D) – mathematician, former professor at Pennsylvania State University, DeWitt Wallace Professor of Mathematics at Macalester College
- Linda Darling-Hammond – Charles E. Ducommun Professor of Education at the Stanford University Graduate School of Education, where she launched the School Redesign Network
- Miguel A. De La Torre – Associate Professor of Social Ethics; Director of the Justice and Peace Institute at the Iliff School of Theology; author of several books concerning the marginalized
- Angelo DiGeorge – physician and known for discovery of autoimmune disorder referred to as DiGeorge syndrome. Also, see Temple University School of Medicine, Notable Alumni and Pioneers
- David Drasin – mathematician, specializing in function theory.
- John Esposito – scholar of Middle East and Islamic studies, professor of International Affairs at Georgetown University
- Louis Filler – eminent professor of American Studies
- Gail F. Forrest – spinal cord researcher at Kessler Foundation and New Jersey Medical School
- Ben Goertzel – Chief Scientist of financial prediction firm Aidyia Holdings; Chairman of AI software company Novamente LLC
- Stephen G. Haines – organizational theorist and management consultant
- Thomas Anthony Harris – psychiatrist and author of I'm OK – You're OK
- Martin M. Kaplan (1915–2004) - American virologist and WHO public health official
- Nathan Katz – former professor at Williams College, current Florida International University professor and expert on Jewish communities in India
- Edmund Kornfeld – organic chemist
- Donald Kraybill – expert on the Amish
- Bill Mensch – computer scientist, founder, chairman and CEO of Western Design Center
- Robert K. Merton – sociologist, former professor at Columbia University and Harvard University, former Chairman of the Department of Sociology at Tulane University
- Glenda Price – former president of Marygrove College
- JoAnne Robbins – noted authority on dysphagia, professor at University of Wisconsin
- Charles Coleman Sellers – historian, biographer, and librarian, winner of the Bancroft Prize in 1970
- Stephen Sheehi – Sultan Qaboos bin Said Professor of Middle Eastern Studies, College of William and Mary; author of Foundations of Modern Arab Identity (University Press of Florida, 2004), Islamophobia: The Ideological Campaign Against Muslims (Clarity Press, 2011), and Arab Imago: A Social History of Portrait Photography 1860–1910, (Princeton University Press, 2016).
- Shirley M. Tilghman – former professor and President of Princeton University
- Patrick Henry Tolan - Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), and the Charles S. Robb Professor Emeritus at the University of Virginia.
- Martin A. Pomerantz – physicist, astronomer, Director of Bartol Research Institute, NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal and National Science Foundation's Distinguished Public Servant Award recipient
- Alan Wolfe – political scientist and sociologist on the faculty of Boston College, as director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life
Art
- Laura Marie Greenwood – painter
- Trenton Doyle Hancock – artist
- Andrew Hussie – webcomic artist
- Simmie Knox – presidential portrait painter (Clinton)
- Nicholas Muellner – photographer and writer
- Ralph Rucci – designer
- Paula Scher – designer
- Sarai Sherman – artist
- Aaron Shikler – presidential portrait painter
- Jen Simmons – designer and web developer
- Tammy Stoner – artist and writer
- Ann Wilson – painter
Broadcasting
- Al Alberts – singer, Philadelphia personality on WPVI-TV
- Bob Brinker – financial talk radio host for Citadel Media
- Tony Bruno – sports radio talk show host on ESPN, Fox Sports Radio, and Sporting News Radio
- Howard Bryant – senior writer for ESPN.com and ESPN The Magazine
- Pat Callahan – host of This Week in Pro Football on 950 ESPN
- Steve Capus – president, NBC News
- John Clark – sports anchorman for NBC 10 news
- Fritz Coleman – weather anchor, KNBC-TV news
- Marsha Cooke – executive producer, ESPN Films, 30 for 30
- Tracy Davidson – news presenter for NBC 10 news
- Jerry Del Colliano – radio/TV broadcaster, digital media expert, USC professor, author
- Vince DeMentri – anchorman for NBC 10 news
- Ray Didinger – award-winning sports journalist, Pro Football Hall of Famer writer.
- Nick Gillespie – author, journalist, editor at reason.com
- Tamron Hall – MSNBC anchor
- Marc Lamont Hill – academic, journalist, author, activist, and television personality, Our World with Black Enterprise and online HuffPost Live host, BET News correspondent and a CNN political commentator
- John Kincade – sports radio talk show host on ESPN Radio
- Mark Levin – conservative author, lawyer, and radio talk show host on WABC
- Marty Moss-Coane – host, daily WHYY-FM local public radio show Radio Times
- Hiro Muramoto – Japanese cameraman for Reuters, killed while covering the 2010 Thai political protests
- Kevin Negandhi – ESPN anchor
- Ronn Owens – radio talk show host
- Ed Sciaky – disc jockey
- Gene Shay – disc jockey
- Terry Smith – broadcaster, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
- Dyana Williams – radio and television personality, journalist, and celebrity media coach
- Marc Zumoff – sportscaster, Comcast Sportsnet, Philadelphia 76ers
Business
- John Carrig – former COO and president for ConocoPhillips
- Sam Greenblatt – Vice President of Technology and Architecture in Enterprise Solution Group of Dell
- Jai Gulati – CEO of Systel
- Lewis Katz – businessman, philanthropist, newspaper publisher, former co-owner of The Philadelphia Inquirer
- Larry Miller – president of Jordan Brand, former president of Portland Trail Blazers
- Rosemary Reed Miller – owner Toast and Strawberries, Washington D.C. fashion boutique
- Ash Vasudevan – founding Managing Partner of Edge Holdings
Film, theatre, and television
- Kalen Allen – actor and internet personality discovered by Ellen DeGeneres while at Temple
- Keith Andes – actor
- Darcy Antonellis – major film studio executive
- Joe Augustyn – screenwriter, producer
- David Brenner – standup comedian, actor, author, filmmaker
- Richard Brooks – Academy Award-winning Hollywood filmmaker
- Quinta Brunson – actor, comedian
- Cody Calafiore – model, actor, runner up of Big Brother 16, winner of Big Brother 22
- Dennis Christopher – actor
- Bryan Terrell Clark – Broadway actor
- Bill Cosby – actor, comedian
- Nicholas P. Dallis – soap comic writer
- Colman Domingo – 2-time Academy Award nominated actor
- Norman Fell – comic actor best known for Three's Company (attended Theatre Dept. classes)
- Jason Winston George – actor, Sunset Beach, Platinum
- Johnny Ray Gill – actor, independent filmmaker (NBC's Harry's Law)
- William Goldenberg – Academy Award-winning Hollywood film editor
- Veronica Hamel – actress, known for playing Joyce Davenport on the television series Hill Street Blues
- Lois Hamilton – actress
- Tim Heidecker – comedian and co-creator of Tom Goes to the Mayor and Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!
- Debra Hill – film producer and screenwriter[29]
- Tigre Hill – film director/producer
- Saba Homayoon – actress
- Irvin Kershner – film director, Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
- Bruce Mailman – theatre producer and founder of The Saint
- William Marchant – playwright and screenwriter
- Adam McKay – Emmy-nominated director of Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004), Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006), and Step Brothers (2008), Academy award-winning writer of The Big Short
- Kunal Nayyar – actor (Raj on CBS' The Big Bang Theory)
- Eric Owens – American operatic bass-baritone
- Nadia Parfan – Ukrainian film director and creative producer
- Robert Prosky – actor
- Da'Vine Joy Randolph – Academy Award-winning actress
- Herbert Rudley – actor
- Bob Saget – comedian, game show host, Full House
- Michael Schoeffling – actor (Jake Ryan in Sixteen Candles)
- Peter Shub – actor, clown, and circus producer
- Svetlana Shusterman – from MTV's The Real World Key West
- James Riordan – actor, Broadway, Television and Film actor
- Tom Sizemore – actor
- Hugh Panaro – Broadway actor
- Paul F. Tompkins – actor, comedian
- Dan Trachtenberg – film director of 10 Cloverfield Lane, and co-host The Totally Rad Show
- Eric Wareheim – comedian and co-creator of Tom Goes to the Mayor and Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!
- Patricia Wettig – Emmy Award and Golden Globe Award-winning actress, thirtysomething, Brothers & Sisters, Prison Break
- Christopher Wilkinson – Academy Award-nominated screenwriter, producer, and director
- Jesse Williams – actor (Jackson Avery on Grey's Anatomy)
- Danny Woodburn – actor (Mickey on Seinfeld)
Government
- Mari Carmen Aponte – U.S. Ambassador to Panama
- Edward J. Bonin – Republican U.S. Congressman for Pennsylvania
- M. Julian Bradley - first African-American Republican elected to Wisconsin State Senate
- Frederick C. Branch – first African-American U.S. Marine Corps officer
- Horace J. Bryant – first African American to serve in a State Cabinet position in New Jersey
- Jamira Burley – Municipal leader, national campaign deputy director
- Michael E. Busch – Speaker of the Maryland House of Delegates
- Jim Cawley – Lt. Governor of Pennsylvania
- Robert Coughlin – longstanding Republican Pennsylvania representative to United States House of Representatives
- Mae E. De Vincentis – former United States Department of Defense official and the vice director for the Defense Logistics Agency
- Harold L. Ervin – judge on the Superior Court of Pennsylvania
- Edwin Duing Eshleman – former Republican congressman
- Thomas M. Foglietta – U.S. Congressman and United States Ambassador to Italy
- Vincent Fumo – Democratic Pennsylvania state senator
- Tom Gannon – Pennsylvania State Representative for the 161st legislative district (1979–2006)
- Hage Geingob – President of the Republic of Namibia (March 21, 2015 – February 4, 2024)
- Nikoloz Gilauri – Prime Minister of Georgia
- Joseph M. Gladeck, Jr. (B.S. 1972) – Pennsylvania State Representative 1979–2000.[30]
- Camillo Gonsalves (B.A. in Journalism) – Permanent Representative of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines to the United Nations
- Theo-Ben Gurirab – President of the United Nations General Assembly, 1999–2000; Speaker of the National Assembly of Namibia since 2005[31]
- Stephen Hahn – Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration
- Allison Hepler – state representative[32]
- Joe Hoeffel – former Democratic congressman
- Malcolm Hoenlein – executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations;[33] founding executive director of the Greater New York Conference on Soviet Jewry and the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York
- Vincent Hughes – Pennsylvania state senator (Democrat)
- Zambry Abdul Kadir – current Menteri Besar of Perak, Malaysia, from political party UMNO
- Kathleen Kane – first woman Attorney General of Pennsylvania, also convicted of felony perjury[34]
- Paul E. Kanjorski – U.S. Congressman, representing Pennsylvania's 11th district[35]
- Guy Kratzer – Pennsylvania State Senator (1983-1986)
- Kadida Kenner – founder and CEO of the New Pennsylvania Project
- Jerome Kurtz – Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (1977–1980)[36]
- David See-Chai Lam OC, CVO, OBC, (林思齊) – 25th Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, Canada
- Joseph Lazarow – Mayor of Atlantic City, New Jersey, 1976–1982[37]
- Bryan Lentz – private attorney; former Pennsylvania State Representative for the 161st legislative district (2007–2010); Democratic nominee for U.S. Representative for Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district
- Joseph Melrose – former U.S. Ambassador to Sierra Leone, currently a professor at Ursinus College
- Bernard T. Mittemeyer – lieutenant general and former Surgeon General of the United States Army.
- Francis J. Myers – former U.S. Senator and congressman, Pennsylvania
- Joseph M. Pratt – U.S. congressman from Philadelphia (1944-1945)[38]
- R. K. Raghavan IPS – former Director of the Central Bureau of Investigation, India
- Pallam Raju – former Cabinet Minister of India for Human Resources Development
- Charles W. Sandman, Jr. – represented New Jersey's 2nd congressional district, 1967–1975; unsuccessful candidate for Governor of New Jersey in 1973[39]
- Jim Saxton – U.S. Congressman representing New Jersey's 3rd congressional district
- Jacob Seidenberg – chairman of the Federal Services Impasses Panel
- Younes Sekkouri – Moroccan Minister of Economic Inclusion, Small Business, Employment and Skills[40]
- Martin J. Silverstein – United States Ambassador to Uruguay
- John F. Street – former Mayor of Philadelphia
- Nao Takasugi – California State Assembly
- Johnny Young – U.S. Ambassador to Slovenia (2001-2004), U.S. Ambassador to Bahrain (1997-2001), U.S. Ambassador to Togo (1994-1997), U.S. Ambassador to Sierra Leone (1989-1992)
- Mary Kay Costello – federal judge for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
Literature
- Sharmi Albrechtsen – author, blogger
- Ben Bova – science fiction author
- Frank Brookhouser – journalist, columnist, and author
- Tony Campolo – author, pastor, and speaker
- Anita Cornwell – author
- Eric Corey Freed – architect, author, public speaker
- Jeffrey Gitomer – author, speaker, business trainer
- David Goodis – crime fiction writer
- Helene Hanff – writer
- Tom McHale – novelist
- Ted Polhemus – writer, photographer, and anthropologist
- Jeffrey Robinson – author
- William Gardner Smith – author and journalist
- Jerry Spinelli – writer
- Lamont B. Steptoe – poet, photographer, and publisher
- Tony Trov – science fiction writer
- Johnny Zito – science fiction writer
Music
- Irving Berlin (honorary degree 1954) – songwriter
- Rubén Colón Tarrats – orchestra director
- Abbie Conant–- classical trombonist
- Norman Connors – musician, composer, arranger, and producer
- Evelyn Simpson Curenton – composer
- Diplo, born Thomas Wesley Pentz – DJ, producer, rapper, and songwriter
- Alix Dobkin – singer/songwriter
- Pat Finnerty – musician, guitarist, and songwriter
- Joe Genaro – musician, guitarist, and songwriter with the Dead Milkmen
- Ariana Ghez – classic oboist
- Alex G – musician, guitarist, and songwriter
- Julie Gold – songwriter, Grammy Award winner
- Daryl Hall – musician
- Marc-André Hamelin – pianist
- Jared Hasselhoff – bassist in band The Bloodhound Gang
- Mark Kramer – musician, producer-engineer, Mark Kramer Trio
- Fred Mascherino – musician, Taking Back Sunday, Breaking Pangaea
- Joe Masteroff – Tony Award-winning playwright
- Bill McGlaughlin – composer, conductor, radio host of Exploring Music and Saint Paul Sunday
- John Oates – musician
- Eric Owens – opera singer
- Billy Paul – Grammy Award winner and R&B singer, known for his number one single "Me and Mrs. Jones" and War of the Gods
- James Poyser – Grammy Award winning keyboardist, songwriter, and producer
- Fayette Pinkney – original member of The Three Degrees
- Jimmy Pop – lead singer of The Bloodhound Gang
- Jill Scott – R&B/soul artist
- Debbie Sledge – singer and member of the disco/R&B group Sister Sledge
- Joni Sledge – singer and member of the disco/R&B group Sister Sledge
- Kathy Sledge – singer and member of the disco/R&B group Sister Sledge
- Kim Sledge – singer and member of the disco/R&B group Sister Sledge
- Allan Slutsky – Grammy Award-winning producer and musician
- Jeffrey Solow – Grammy nominated classical cellist
- Terell Stafford – professional jazz trumpet player
- Tim – Korean ballad singer
- Kenneth Thompkins - principal trombonist, Detroit Symphony Orchestra[41][42]
- Susan Werner – singer-songwriter
- Danny Kirk – musician, ADALIE
Other
- John C. Allen – roller coaster designer
- Howard Bryant – sports journalist and columnist
- Ted Bundy – serial killer
- Wesley E. Craig – US Army major general[43]
- Reed Erickson – transgender activist, engineer, and philanthropist
- Richard L. Fox – tax attorney
- Judith E. Glaser – author and organizational anthropologist
- E. Urner Goodman – early leader of the Boy Scouts of America
- George E. Hargest – noted philatelic and member of the American Philatelic Society Hall of Fame.
- Donniel Hartman – Israeli rabbi
- Linda and Terry Jamison – "The Psychic Twins"
- Steven Levy – writer for Wired and author of Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution[44]
- Shantrelle P. Lewis – curator, historian, critic and filmmaker
- Georgia L. McMurray - activist
- Maralyn Lois Polak – journalist and author
- Jack Posobiec – alt-right political activist
- Stephen Starr – celebrity restaurateur
- Walter L. Stewart Jr. – US Army major general[45]
- Gary Tabach – retired United States Navy captain, the first Soviet-born citizen to be commissioned an officer in the Armed Forces of the United States
- John Thomas Taylor – congressional lobbyist for the American Legion
- Salvatore Testa - Italian American hitman for the Philadelphia crime family
- Michael van der Veen – attorney, who represented former President Donald Trump during his second impeachment trial
- Diana Vincent – jewelry designer
- James West – inventor, primarily of microphones
- Edith Windsor – Plaintiff in United States v. Windsor
- Cheng Li-wun – Chairwoman of Kuomingtang
Philosophy
- Herman T. Tavani — scholar in ethics, and Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Rivier University, and a recipient of the Weizenbaum Award[46]
Sports
Baseball
- Bobby Higginson – Major League Baseball outfielder, Detroit Tigers
- John Marzano – MLB catcher, sports analyst
- Cam Schlittler - MLB pitcher, New York Yankees
- Harry Shuman – MLB pitcher, Pittsburgh Pirates[47]
- Ed Wade – MLB executive, Philadelphia Phillies
Football
- Robby Anderson – National Football League wide receiver, New York Jets
- Matt Balasavage – NFL tight end, Baltimore Ravens
- Stan Batinski – NFL offensive guard, Detroit Lions
- Todd Bowles – NFL head coach, New York Jets
- Raheem Brock – NFL defensive end, Indianapolis Colts
- Brian Broomell – Canadian Football League quarterback
- Tim Brown – CFL running back
- Lem Burnham – NFL defensive end, Philadelphia Eagles, did not play Temple, earned Ph.D at Temple
- Henry Burris – CFL quarterback, Ottawa Redblacks
- Jim Callahan – former Continental Football League player and writer
- Larry Chester – NFL defensive tackle, Miami Dolphins
- Jim Cooper – NFL offensive tackle, Dallas Cowboys
- Mike Curcio – NFL linebacker, Philadelphia Eagles and Green Bay Packers
- Dion Dawkins – NFL offensive tackle, Buffalo Bills
- Derek Dennis – American football offensive lineman
- Randy Grossman – NFL tight end, Pittsburgh Steelers
- Tom Hanson – NFL halfback, Philadelphia Eagles
- James Harris – NFL defensive end, Oakland Raiders
- Mike Jarmoluk – NFL defensive tackle, Philadelphia Eagles
- Lance Johnstone – NFL defensive end, Minnesota Vikings
- Alex Joseph – NFL linebacker, San Francisco 49ers
- Bucko Kilroy – NFL defensive tackle, Philadelphia Eagles
- Dan Klecko – NFL fullback, Philadelphia Eagles
- Joe Klecko – NFL Hall of Fame defensive tackle, New York Jets; father of Dan Klecko
- Terrance Knighton – NFL defensive tackle, Denver Broncos
- Bill Manlove – NCAA Division III National Championship coach
- Tyler Matakevich – NFL linebacker, Pittsburgh Steelers, 2015 Bronko Nagurski Trophy and Chuck Bednarik Award Winner
- Jason McKie – NFL fullback, Chicago Bears
- Brandon McManus – NFL placekicker, Denver Broncos, Green Bay Packers
- Nick Mike-Mayer – NFL placekicker, Atlanta Falcons
- James Nixon – NFL cornerback, Green Bay Packers
- James Parrish – former professional football player
- Bernard Pierce – NFL running back, Jacksonville Jaguars
- Haason Reddick – NFL linebacker, Arizona Cardinals, Carolina Panthers, Philadelphia Eagles
- Britt Reid – former assistant coach in the NFL
- Kevin Ross – NFL cornerback, Kansas City Chiefs
- Sarah Schkeeper – WFA Guard, New York Sharks
- Leslie Shepherd – NFL wide receiver, Washington Redskins
- Al Singleton – NFL linebacker, Dallas Cowboys
- David Smukler – NFL fullback, Philadelphia Eagles
- Rod Streater – NFL wide receiver, Oakland Raiders
- Rian Wallace – NFL linebacker, Pittsburgh Steelers
- Steve Watson – NFL wide receiver, Denver Broncos
- Muhammad Wilkerson – NFL defensive end, New York Jets
- Avery Williams – CFL linebacker, Montreal Alouettes
- Tavon Young – NFL cornerback, Baltimore Ravens
Fencing
- Kamali Thompson – Team USA fencer
Basketball
- Lavoy Allen – NBA player, Indiana Pacers
- Rick Brunson – NBA player, Philadelphia 76ers
- Duane Causwell – NBA player, Sacramento Kings, Miami Heat
- Mardy Collins – NBA player, New York Knicks
- Candice Dupree – WNBA player, Phoenix Mercury
- Feyonda Fitzgerald – WNBA player
- Mel Greenberg – Women's Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, reporter for Philadelphia Inquirer
- Kamesha Hairston – WNBA player, Connecticut Sun
- Donald Hodge – NBA player, Dallas Mavericks
- Marc Jackson – professional basketball player in Europe, former NBA player
- Steve Javie – NBA referee
- Eddie Jones – NBA player, Los Angeles Lakers, Miami Heat, Charlotte Hornets, Memphis Grizzlies, Dallas Mavericks, 3× NBA All-Star
- Mark Macon – NBA player, Denver Nuggets, Detroit Pistons
- Aaron McKie – NBA player, Los Angeles Lakers, Philadelphia 76ers, former Temple Owls men's basketball head coach
- Bill Mlkvy – NBA player, Philadelphia Warriors
- Shey Peddy – WNBA player, Washington Mystics, Phoenix Mercury
- Tim Perry – NBA player, Phoenix Suns, Philadelphia 76ers
- Pepe Sánchez – NBA player, Olympic gold medalist for Argentina
- Terence Stansbury – NBA player, Indiana Pacers, Seattle SuperSonics
- Mark Strickland – NBA player, Miami Heat, Denver Nuggets, Atlanta Hawks
- Khalif Wyatt – Israeli Basketball Premier League player, Hapoel Holon
Other sports
- Marcus McElhenney – Olympic bronze medalist, rowing
- Benny McLaughlin – National Soccer Hall of Fame
- Zach Pfeffer – soccer player
- Mackenson Altidor – soccer player
- Allen Rosenberg – rower and rowing coach
- Jason Read – Olympic gold medalist, rowing
- Eric Semborski – National Hockey League emergency goaltender, Chicago Blackhawks and Philadelphia Flyers
- Gabe Sapolsky – professional wrestling booker, part founder of Ring of Honor and Full Impact Pro
- Geoffrey Sisk – former PGA Tour golfer
- Gil Stein – commissioner of the National Hockey League, 1992–1993
Fictional alumni
- Toby Flenderson – character in the television series The Office; has a degree in social work from Temple University
- Stanley Sugerman – character played by Adam Sandler in the 2022 film Hustle[48]
References
- ^ "Past Presidents". Temple University.
- ^ Snyder, Susan; Bohnel, Steve (July 21, 2016). "Deal struck for Temple president's resignation". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- ^ Pothier, Dick (December 18, 1981). "Temple names Liacouras president; law dean will take office in summer". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
Wachman, president of Temple for nine years, will retire June 30, and Liacouras will take over the presidency then.
- ^ "Former head of Wayne State is new president of Temple". The Philadelphia Inquirer. May 18, 2000. p. 19 – via newspapers.com.
Temple University's trustee board yesterday unanimously elected David Adamany, former Wayne State University president, as Temple's eighth president. On Aug. 2, he will succeed Peter Liacouras, who is retiring after 19 years.
- ^ "Board of Trustees Minutes" (PDF). Temple University. May 17, 2000.
- ^ "David Adamany" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 8, 2023.
- ^ "Obituary: David Adamany, former Temple president, 80 - Philadelphia Gay News". epgn.com. Retrieved September 26, 2025.
- ^ Kressle, Thomas R. (May 5, 2006). "President of UNH accepts job at Temple". Foster's Daily Democrat.
- ^ King, Larry (March 23, 2007). "Temple installs its 1st female president". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- ^ "President Ann Weaver Hart to step down June 30, 2012". Temple University. September 9, 2011.
- ^ "Richard M. Englert to serve as Temple's acting president". Temple University. May 23, 2012.
- ^ "Trustees approve Neil Theobald as Temple's 10th president". Temple University. August 7, 2012.
- ^ "PUBLIC SESSION – SPECIAL MEETING" (PDF). Temple University. July 21, 2016.
- ^ "Englert appointed Temple president". Temple University. October 11, 2016.
- ^ "Richard M. Englert announces plans to retire as Temple president". Temple University. July 7, 2020.
- ^ "Temple University names Dr. Jason Wingard as next president". Temple University. June 8, 2021.
- ^ Morgan, Mitchell (March 28, 2023). "Message to the University Community". Temple University.
- ^ "Temple University inaugurates its first Black president". WPVI-TV. September 16, 2022.
- ^ "Temple University announces JoAnne Epps as acting president". Temple University. April 11, 2023.
- ^ "Temple University President JoAnne Epps Dies Suddenly at Campus Service". Women In Academia Report. September 20, 2023.
- ^ "Richard Englert named Temple interim president". Temple University. September 26, 2023.
- ^ "Richard M. Englert is appointed as president". Temple University. September 27, 2023.
- ^ "Temple University appoints its 15th president, higher education leader John Fry". Temple University. July 3, 2024.
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