List of Washington University alumni
-
The following persons are well-known alumni, living and deceased, of Washington University in St. Louis.
Arts and literature
- Edward Shepherd Mead (AB 1936): playwright ("How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying")
- David Merrick (AB 1934): Broadway producer
- Dan Nadel (AB 1998): Co-founder and editor of arts magazine The Ganzfeld and publisher PictureBox, Inc., 2005 Grammy award winner[3][4]
- Oliver Nelson (student 1954-1957): jazz musician and composer
- David McCheyne Newell: naturalist, writer
- Frank Nuderscher: American Impressionist painter and muralist
- J. D. Parran (AM 1971): jazz musician
- Dan Piraro: cartoonist of "Bizarro", (attended but dropped out)
- Robert Quine (JD 1968): rock guitarist
- Harold Ramis (AB 1966): film actor, writer and director
- Eugene B. Redmond (MA 1966): poet, critic, civil-rights activist[5]
- Carolyne Roehm (AB 1973): designer
- Irma S. Rombauer (AB): co-author of The Joy of Cooking
- Bryan Rowles (AB 1975) Creative Director, Gold Lion Winner 2008
- Allen Rucker: television writer and novelist
- Peter Sarsgaard (AB 1993): actor
- Steven Sater: Broadway lyricist, playwright, and poet
- Peter Saul (BFA 1956): Painter
- Allan Trautman (AB 1976): Actor, puppeteer
- Jeff Tremaine (AB 1990): director, producer
- Andrew Volpe: Lead singer and rhythm guitarist for rock band Ludo.
- Lauren Weinstein (AB 1998): cartoonist
- Luke Whisnant (MFA 1982): novelist, short story writer
- Mary Wickes (AB 1930): stage and film actress
- Tennessee Williams (student 1936-37): playwright
- Olly Wilson (AB 1959): composer[6]
Architecture and design
- Charles Eames: designer, architect, filmmaker (Was expelled for his prediliction towards modern architecture)
- Hugh Ferriss (B.Arch 1911, M.Arch 1928): architect
- Alan Goldberg (1954) architect
- George Hellmuth (B.Arch 1928, M.Arch 1931): architect; cofounder of Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum
- George Kassabaum (B.Arch 1947): architect; former president of American Institute of Architects; cofounder of Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum
- Gyo Obata (B.Arch 1945): architect; cofounder and chairman of Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum
- James F. O'Gorman (B.Arch 1956): architectural historian and author
- Jack Summerford (1965): designer; founder of Summerford Design, Inc.; writer; featured in Communication Arts, Graphis, AIGA
- C. P. Wang (M.Arch 1973): architect for Taipei 101, the world's tallest building as of 2005[7]
Business
- Stan A. Askren (MBA 1987): president and CEO of HNI Corporation
- William Bay (BA): President and CEO of Mel Bay
- Randy Bean (BA 1978): managing partner and co-founder of NewVantage Partners LLC
- John H. Biggs (PhD): former CEO of TIAA-CREF
- Melvin F. Brown (AB 1957, JD 1961): former CEO of Deutsche Financial Services
- Andrew M. Bursky (AB 1978, BSChE 1978, MSChE 1978): CEO of Atlas Holdings LLC
- Carl M. Casale (MBA): executive vice president, North America Commercial division of Monsanto Company
- David P. Connor (BA): CEO of Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation
- William H. Danforth (AB 1892): founder of Ralston Purina
- Charles H. Dolson (AB): president and CEO of Delta Air Lines (1965–1970)
- Arnold Donald (BSME 1977): founder and former CEO of Merisant
- John Dubinsky (AB 1965, MBA 1967): former CEO of Mercantile Bancorporation
- Thomas J. Feichtinger (BS 1986): Global Director for General Motors Corporation
- Steve Fossett (MBA 1968): options trader, balloonist, and adventurer
- Sam Fox (BSBA 1951): founder, chairman, CEO, and owner of Harbour Group Industries
- Steven Fradkin (BA 1984): CFO of Northern Trust
- Don Frahm (BSBA 1953): former chairman and CEO of The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.
- Avram Glazer (BSBA 1982): president and CEO of the Zapata Corporation and joint chairman of Manchester United
- James Hance, Jr. (MBA): chairman of Sprint Nextel and former CFO of Bank of America (1998–2004)
- Earle Harbison (AB 1948): former president and COO of Monsanto Company
- Robert Hernreich (AB 1967): Co-Owner Sacramento Kings
- Jerald Kent (BSBA 1978, MS 1979): founder and former CEO of Charter Communications
- Jeff Lebesch (BS 1979): co-founder of New Belgium Brewing Company
- Steven F. Leer (MBA 1977): chairman and CEO of Arch Coal
- Wei-Shan Lin (MBA 1976): President of Tatung Company
- Stanley Lopata (AB 1935): founder and former chairman of Carboline
- Douglas Lowenstein (AB 1973): president and CEO of Private Equity Council, founder and former president of Entertainment Software Association
- W. Patrick McGinnis (MBA 1972): president and CEO of Nestle Purina Petcare Company
- Howard J. Morgens (AB): president and CEO of Procter & Gamble
- Edward Mueller (MBA): president and CEO of Qwest Communications
- Charles Nagel (JD 1872): United States Secretary of Commerce and Labor; founder of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
- Dave Peacock (MBA 2000): CEO of Anheuser-Busch
- Andrew Puzder (JD 1978): CEO of CKE Restaurants
- William Shaw (MBA 1972): president and COO of Marriott International Inc.
- Louis B. Susman (JD 1962): vice chairman of Citigroup Global Markets
- Jack C. Taylor (student through 1944): founder of Enterprise Rent-A-Car; no. 14 on Forbes 400 Richest Americans in 2006
- Ann Rubenstein Tisch (AB 1976) Anchor of Today Show, member of Tisch family
- William G. Tragos (AB 1956): former chairman and CEO of TBWA Advertising, Inc.
- Arnold Zetcher (BSBA 1962): chairman, president and CEO of Talbots
- George Zimmer (AB 1970): founder of Men's Wearhouse
- Jim Weddle (AB 1977, MBA): managing partner at Edward Jones Investments
- Gary Wendlandt (BS 1972): current CIO of New York Life Investment Management and former CIO of MassMutual
- John B. Whyte (attended two years in 1950s): Developer of Fire Island Pines, New York
- Brian Willison (BFA 1995): Executive Director of Parsons Institute for Information Mapping
- Lewis Wolff (MBA 1961): hotel developer and owner of the Oakland Athletics
Education and academics
- James F. Barker (AM 1973): president of Clemson University
- Jessie Bernard (Ph.D. 1935): sociologist and noted feminist scholar[8]
- Ewald W. Busse (M.D.) former dean of the Duke University School of Medicine
- Zhangliang Chen (PhD 1982): prominent Chinese scientist; president of China Agricultural University; member of the National People's Congress
- Ron Chew (BA 2002) Community activist, journalist, former director, Wing Luke Asian Museum
- Thomas Lamb Eliot (AB 1862, AM 1866): founding board member and president of Reed College
- Henry Ware Eliot (AB 1863): father of poet T. S. Eliot; former president of the Academy of Sciences of St. Louis
- Richard F. Giese (AM 1976): president of Mount Union College
- Ronald J. Gilson (BA 1968): Charles J. Meyers Professor of Law and Business at Stanford University
- Nathan O. Hatch (AM 1972, PhD 1974): president of Wake Forest University
- Raelynn Hillhouse (AB): novelist, political scientist, national security expert
- Edward Singleton Holden (SB 1866): fifth president of the University of California; director of the Lick Observatory
- Robert C. Kolodny (MD 1969): author of numerous books on human sexuality
- Joyce Ladner (AM 1966, PhD 1968): sociologist and activist
- Dolores Baja-Lasán (PhD 1959): chancellor of the Philippine Women's University System
- Max Lerner (AM 1925): intellectual, critic, and author
- Donald Livingston (PhD 1965): renowned constitutional scholar
- Walter E. Massey (AM 1966, PhD 1966): president of Morehouse College
- Richard McKelvey (MA 1967): Political Scientist, specialized in mathematical theories of voting
- Horace Mitchell (AB 1968, MA 1969, PhD 1974): president of California State University Bakersfield
- Hiro Mukai (BS 1972): author of leading books on systems engineering
- Daniel Nathans (MD 1954): former president of Johns Hopkins University
- H. Richard Niebuhr (AM 1917): theologian
- Hitendra Patel (BSEE 1987, Ph.D. 1993): Chair of Innovation and Global Director of Action Learning Program at the Hult International Business School and Managing Director of the IXl Center
- Charles Van Ravenswaay (AB 1933, AM 1934): historian
- Abram L. Sachar (AB 1920, AM 1920): founding president of Brandeis University
- Ja Song (M.B.A. 1962, D.B.A. 1967): President of Yonsei University; Korean Minister of Education
- Barry Spizer (BS 1977): past president of the CCIM Institute of the National Association of Realtors
- Chia-Wei Woo (MA, PhD): founding president of The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; first Asian American to head a major U.S. university (San Francisco State University)
Journalism and media
Politics, law, and government
- Carl J. Artman (JD): Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs, and head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs 2007–08.
- John C. Bates (BA 1863): served as Chief of Staff of the United States Army in 1906.
- Ben Cannon (AB 1999): State Representative to the Oregon House of Representatives, 2006–present, and Rhodes Scholar
- Henry S. Caulfield (JD 1895): Governor of Missouri, 1929–1933
- Clark M. Clifford (LLB 1928): U.S. Secretary of Defense, 1968–69; former presidential advisor
- Earl Thomas Coleman (JD 1969): U.S. congressman from Missouri, 1977–1993
- Phoebe Couzins (LLB 1871): first female U.S. Marshal; feminist; leader in the Women's Suffrage Movement
- Edward Coke Crow (LLB 1879): 23rd Attorney General of Missouri from 1897–1905, advisor to Missouri Governor Lloyd Crow Stark (1937–1941)
- Joseph Cunningham (JD 1952): former justice Supreme Court of Illinois
- Hal Daub (BS 1963): U.S. congressman from Nebraska, 1981–1989; mayor of Omaha, 1995–2001
- Dwight F. Davis (LLB): founder of Davis Cup, and 49th US Secretary of War
- Alexander Monroe Dockery (MD 1865): Governor of Missouri, 1901–1905
- Alan J. Dixon (LLB 1949): U.S. Senator from Illinois, 1981–93
- Leonidas C. Dyer (JD 1893): U.S. congressman from Missouri, 1915–1933
- Edward Cranch Eliot (AB 1878, LLB 1880, AM 1881): former president of the American Bar Association
- Sam Fox (AB 1951): former United States Ambassador to Belgium
- David R. Francis (AB 1870): mayor of St. Louis, 1885–89; Governor of Missouri, 1889–93; U.S. Secretary of Interior, 1896–97; U.S. Ambassador to Russia
- Raymond W. Gruender (JD/MBA 1987): current judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
- Jean Constance Hamilton (JD 1971): current judge, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri
- Moses W. Harrison II (JD 1958): retired chief justice, Supreme Court of Illinois
- Harry B. Hawes (JD 1896): U.S. Senator from Missouri, 1926–1933
- Chic Hecht (BS 1949): U.S. Senator from Nevada, 1983–89
- Andrew J. Higgens (JD 1948): retired chief justice, Supreme Court of Missouri
- Thomas C. Hennings, Jr. (JD 1926): U.S. Senator from Missouri, 1951–1960
- William L. Igoe (JD 1902): U.S. congressman from Missouri, 1913–1921
- Alphonso Jackson (JD 1972): U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, 2004–2008
- Chris Koster (MBA 2002): Attorney General of Missouri
- Jasna Matić (MBA 2001): Minister of Telecommunications and Information Society of Serbia
- Victor J. Miller (JD): mayor of St. Louis, 1925 to 1933
- John Francis Nangle (JD 1948): former chief judge, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, 1983–1990
- Roscoe C. Patterson (JD 1897): US Senator from Missouri, 1929–1935
- Catherine D. Perry (JD 1981): current judge, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri
- Tony Ribaudo (1962): majority leader of the Missouri House of Representatives, 1977–1997
- Kenneth J. Rothman (AB, JD): Lieutenant Governor of Missouri, 1981–1985
- Steven Rothman (JD 1977): US Congressmen from New Jersey, 1997–present
- David Rubenstein (activist) (BA 1981): advocate, founding executive director Save Darfur Coalition
- Phyllis Schlafly (AB 1944, JD 1978): author,lawyer, conservative and antifeminist activist
- Philip D. Shelton (JD 1972): president and executive director of the Law School Admissions Council (LSAC)
- Mike Simpson (DDS 1977): U.S. congressman from Idaho, 1999–present
- Rodney W. Sippel (JD 1980): current judge, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri
- Luther Ely Smith (JD 1897): founder of Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
- Ralph Tyler Smith (JD 1940): U.S. Senator from Illinois, 1969–1970
- Adam Shapiro (AB 1993): co-founder of the International Solidarity Movement
- Selden P. Spencer (JD 1886): U.S. Senator from Missouri, 1918–1925
- Leonor Sullivan (1923): first U.S. congressional representative from Missouri, 1953–1977
- Louis Susman (JD): current United States Ambassador to Great Britain
- Eben Swift: U.S. Army Major General
- Jim Talent (AB 1978): U.S. Senator from Missouri, 2003–2007
- Richard B. Teitelman (JD 1973): current justice, Supreme Court of Missouri
- James R. Thompson (AB 1956): Governor of Illinois, 1977–1991
- Raymond Tucker (BS 1920): mayor of St. Louis, 1953–1965
- Tarisa Watanagase (PhD): governor of the Bank of Thailand, 2006
- William H. Webster (JD 1949): 14th director of the CIA and the 6th director of the FBI
- Xenophon P. Wilfley (JD 1899): U.S. Senator from Missouri, 1918
- George Howard Williams (JD 1897): U.S. Senator from Missouri, 1925–1926
- Shien Biau Woo (PhD 1964): Asian American political activist; former Lieutenant Governor of Delaware
- Chen Zhangliang (PhD 1987): Vice Governor of Guangxi, People's Republic of China
Science, engineering, and medicine
- J. Michael Bailey (AB 1979): psychologist, professor, well-known researcher on sexual orientation
- Geoffrey Ballard (PhD 1963): developed Fuel cells; member of Order of Canada; founder of Ballard Power Systems
- Lt. Col. Robert Behnken (BSPhy 1992, BSME 1992): NASA Astronaut
- Corinne Bott-Silverman (AB 1975): first female cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic
- Ewald W. Busse (M.D.) dean of the Duke University School of Medicine (1974–1982)
- Clyde Cowan (AM, PhD 1949): co-discoverer of the neutrino
- Elizabeth A. Craig, biochemistry professor at University of Wisconsin-Madison and member of the National Academy of Sciences.
- Arnold W. Donald (BS): President and CEO of Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
- Eugene Foster (MD 1951): researcher who discovered the DNA link between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemmings
- Eric Green (MD PhD 1987): Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute
- Lee Harrison III (BFA 1952, BS 1959): engineer; Emmy winner for invention of computer animation
- Julian Hill (BS 1924): chemist; co-inventor of nylon
- Charlotte Jacobs (MD 1972): noted clinical oncologist, former director of the Clinical Cancer Center at Stanford University
- Edwin Krebs (MD 1943): Nobel laureate in medicine for work with protein phosphorylation as a biological regulatory mechanism
- J. C. R. Licklider (BS 1937): pioneer in computer science and artificial intelligence
- W. E. Moerner (BS 1975) : Stanford University professor; pioneer in single molecule spectroscopy and member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Ben Moreell (BS 1913): U.S. Navy admiral; founder of the Navy's Seabees construction battalions
- Daniel Nathans (MD 1954): Nobel laureate in medicine for the discovery of restriction enzymes; awarded National Medal of Science
- Michael E. Phelps (PhD 1970): developed PET scan
- Alton Ochsner (MD): surgeon and medical researcher at The Ochsner Clinic in New Orleans
- Harry Ringermacher (BS 1968, MS 1977, PhD 1980): physicist; awarded the Mensa International Copper Black Award for groundbreaking work in infrared imagery
- Joseph Edward Smadel (MD): inaugural recipient of the Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research
- John C. Sommerer (BSSSM 1979, MS 1979), Director of Science and Technology at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
- Sol Spiegelman (PhD 1944): molecular biologist
- Harvey Silverman (AB 1974, DMD 1978): pioneer in cosmetic dentistry; inventor of Perfect Smile, Rapid White, and White Light tooth whiteners
- Earl Sutherland (MD 1942): Nobel laureate in medicine for elucidating the mechanisms of the actions of hormones
- Kenneth S. Wagoner (MA, 1934; PhD 1938), experimental psychologist
- Michael J. Wendl (1958) engineering in terrain following technology and energy management theory
- Walter Wyman (MD 1873): 3rd US Surgeon General
Sports
References
- ^ McLellan, Dennis. "ST. LOUIS: Robert Culp". STLtoday.com. http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/deathsobituaries/story/C43FD8DBAD33FC4C862576F1000B1B34?OpenDocument. Retrieved 2010-03-25.
- ^ The Paley Center for Media | She Made It | Caryn Mandabach
- ^ [1]
- ^ http://www.cartoonstudies.org/faculty/faculty.html
- ^ Eugene B. Redmond - Department of English @ SIUE
- ^ Eileen Southern, "Olly Wilson: The Education of a Composer," The Black Perspective in Music, vol. 6, no. 1 (Spring 1978), pp. 56-70.
- ^ Washington University in St. Louis Magazine
- ^ Robert McG. Thomas, Jr., "Jessie Bernard, 93: Ideas Inspired Feminists," New York Times, 11 Oct. 1996.