List of Purdue University people
Here follows a list of notable alumni and faculty of Purdue University.
- This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
Notable alumni
Academia
College chancellors, presidents and vice-presidents
- Robert Altenkirch – President of the New Jersey Institute of Technology
- Tony Frank – President, Colorado State University
- Richard J. Grosh – former President of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
- Arthur G. Hansen – former President of the Georgia Institute of Technology and Purdue University
- Edwin D. Harrison – former President of the Georgia Institute of Technology
- Renu Khator – Chancellor of the University of Houston System and President of the University of Houston
- Dorothy Leland – President, Georgia College & State University
- Duane Litfin – President, Wheaton College
- Sally Mason – President of the University of Iowa, former Provost of Purdue University
- Hanna Nasser – former President of Birzeit University, political figure
- Sunder Ramaswamy - President of the Monterey Institute of International Studies
- Kenneth "Buzz" Shaw – Chancellor of Syracuse University
- Gary Allan Sojka – President of Bucknell University
- Hugo F. Sonnenschein – economist and educational administrator, President of the University of Chicago
- James J. Stukel – former President of the University of Illinois
- Blake Ragsdale Van Leer – former President of the Georgia Institute of Technology
- Larry N. Vanderhoef – Chancellor of the University of California, Davis
- Brent W. Webb – academic vice president of Brigham Young University
- John T. Wolfe Jr. – former President of Savannah State University
Deans
- Srinivas Aravamudan – Dean of the Humanities, Duke University
- Arthur J. Bond – Dean of the School of Engineering and Technology at Alabama A&M University and civil rights activist
- Domenico Grasso – Dean of the College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences, University of Vermont
- R. Pete Vanderveen - Dean of the School of Pharmacy, University of Southern California
- Paul Weber – Dean of Faculties and interim president of the Georgia Institute of Technology
Professors
- Nolan B. Aughenbaugh – Antarctic explorer and Professor Emeritus of Geological Engineering at the University of Mississippi
- Dr. Lisa Bailey – IB Psychology professor at Lausanne Collegiate School
- James R. Barker – professor of Organizational Theory and Strategy, Waikato University
- Michael Baye – Bert Elwert Professor of Business Economics, Indiana University
- L. W. Beineke – professor of graph theory at Indiana University – Purdue University Fort Wayne
- Ronald A. Bosco – expert on Ralph Waldo Emerson, Puritan homiletics and poetics
- Ronald Breaker - Henry Ford II Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology at Yale University
- Monty Buell – chair of the Department of History and Philosophy at Walla Walla University
- George Casella – statistician at Rutgers University, Cornell University, and the University of Florida
- James Samuel Coleman – author of the Coleman Report on the sociology of education
- Carl W. Condit – architectural historian, Northwestern University
- Clarence Cory - the first Professor in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering at UC Berkeley; received BME degree from Purdue University in 1889 at the age of 16 and a Doctor of Engineering degree from Purdue University in 1914
- Bruce E. Dale – Professor of Chemical Engineering, Michigan State University
- Kenneth E. deGraffenreid – Professor of Intelligence Studies, Institute of World Politics
- Victor Denenberg – developmental psychobiologist
- Ralph Faudree – mathematician, combinatorialist, provost at University of Memphis
- James Fieser – professor of philosophy at the University of Tennessee at Martin
- Allan Friedman – Guy L. Odom Professor of Neurological Surgery at Duke University Medical Center
- Leslie Glasgow - biologist and conservationist at Louisiana State University; assistant Secretary of the Interior from 1969 to 19790
- Kevin Granata – Adjunct Professor, Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics and Mechanical Engineering at Virginia Tech; victim of the Virginia Tech massacre
- Michael T. Goodrich – mathematician, computer scientist, department chair at the University of California, Irvine
- Larry D. Hinzman – Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Director International Arctic Research Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks
- Larry Howell – professor of mechanical engineering, Brigham Young University
- Roger G. Ibbotson – professor of finance, Yale School of Management
- Richard Ian Kimball – professor of history, Brigham Young University
- Benn Konsynski – Goizueta Business School, Emory University
- Lawrence Landweber – John P. Morgridge Professor Emeritus of Computer Science at the University of Wisconsin–Madison
- Arthur H. Lefebvre – professor; Head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering between 1976–1993; pioneer of gas turbine technology and developer of fuel spray technology; professor at Cranfield University, UK
- G. V. Loganathan – Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Virginia Tech; victim of the Virginia Tech massacre
- Donald Matthews – political scientist, University of Washington
- James McDonald – economist at Brigham Young University
- Deborah E. McDowell, English professor and author
- Scott A. McLuckey – John A. Leighty Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at Purdue University
- Dorothy Runk Mennen - Theatre professor, author and Founding president of the Voice and Speech Trainers Association.
- Gary Milhollin – law professor, anti–nuclear weapons activist
- William F. Miller – vice president and provost, Stanford University
- Scott Minnich – associate professor of microbiology at the University of Idaho
- Toby Moskowitz – financial economist, University of Chicago
- David Mount – computer scientist, University of Maryland
- J. Keith Murnighan – Harold H. Hines Jr. Distinguished Professor of Risk Management at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University
- Donna J. Nelson – chemistry professor; Nelson Diversity Surveys author, scientific workforce scholar (Postdoctorate 1980–1983)
- Robert W. Newcomb – professor of electrical engineering at the University of Maryland
- Dallin D. Oaks – linguistics professor at Brigham Young University
- Peter N. Peregrine – anthropologist and archaeologist
- Larry L. Peterson – computer scientist at Princeton University
- Ronald L. Phillips – biologist, University of Minnesota
- T. Pradeep – Professor of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India
- Steven Pray – Bernhardt Professor of Nonprescription Products and Devices at Southwestern Oklahoma State University
- John C. Reynolds – computer scientist
- Sherwin Rosen – labor economist
- Lyle F. Schoenfeldt – business management professor, known for a standard textbook on human resources
- Granville Sewell – mathematician and intelligent design advocate
- Thomas B. Sheridan – Professor of Mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, pioneer of robotics and remote control technology
- Carolyn Sherif – social psychologist
- Stephen C. Smith – PhD, Sociology professor and researcher. Also practicing family therapist
- Murray Sperber – Professor Emeritus of English and American Studies at Indiana University, author of several books on college sports
- Yizhi Jane Tao – Rice University biochemist who mapped the structure of the influenza A virus nucleoprotein to an atomic level
- James Tour – synthetic organic chemist and nanotechnologist at Rice University
- Ralph von Frese – geophysicist who identified the Wilkes Land mass concentration in Antarctica
- Gregory Weeks – international relations scholar at Webster University Vienna
- Taieb Znati – computer scientist, University of Pittsburgh
Science and technology
Astronauts and aviators
- Neil Armstrong – Gemini 8, Apollo 11; first man to walk on the Moon
- John Blaha – STS-29, STS-33, STS-43, STS-58, STS-79, STS-81
- Roy D. Bridges – STS-51-F
- Mark N. Brown – STS-28, STS-48
- John H. Casper – STS-36, STS-54, STS-62, STS-77
- Eugene Cernan – Gemini 9A, Apollo 10, Apollo 17; most recent man to walk on the Moon
- Roger Chaffee – killed in Apollo 1 accident
- Richard O. Covey – STS-51-I, STS-26, STS-38, STS-61
- Andrew J. Feustel – STS-125, STS-134
- Guy S. Gardner – STS-27, STS-35
- Henry C. Gordon – Air Force colonel selected for Boeing X-20 Dyna-Soar program
- Virgil I. Grissom – second American in space, Gemini 3, killed in Apollo 1 accident
- Guy Gruters – fighter pilot and prisoner of war in the Vietnam War
- Gregory J. Harbaugh – STS-39, STS-54, STS-71, STS-82
- Iven Carl Kincheloe, Jr. – flying ace of the Korean War, first pilot to fly above 100,000 feet (30,480 m)[1]
- Michael J. McCulley – STS-34
- Gary E. Payton – STS-51-C
- Mark L. Polansky – STS-98, STS-116, STS-127
- Jerry L. Ross – STS-61-B, STS-27, STS-37, STS-55, STS-74, STS-88, STS-110; holds the US record for spaceflights
- Karl Schoen – one of the first U.S. flying aces of World War I
- Loren J. Shriver – STS-51-C, STS-31, STS-46
- Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger – pilot of US Airways flight 1549 which successfully ditched in the Hudson River
- Scott D. Tingle – astronaut selected in 2009
- Janice E. Voss – STS-57, STS-63, STS-83, STS-94, STS-99
- Charles D. Walker – STS-41-D, STS-51-D, STS-61-B
- Mary E. Weber – STS-70, STS-101
- Donald E. Williams – STS-51-D, STS-34
- David A. Wolf – STS-58, STS-86, Mir 24, STS-89, STS-112, STS-127
Engineers
- Stephen Bechtel, Jr. – Chairman emeritus of Bechtel Group
- Don R. Berlin – chief designer of several military aircraft of World War II
- Orestes H. Caldwell – one of the first five members of the Federal Radio Commission
- Abraham Burton Cohen – civil engineer notable for designing record-breaking concrete bridges such as the Tunkhannock Viaduct
- John P. Costas – electrical engineer, inventor of the Costas loop and the Costas array
- Andrew Crowe - chemical engineer, first African American director at Eli Lilly
- Dave Delich – electrical engineer
- Andrea L. DeMaria – Public Health, College of Charleston[2]
- Wayne Hale – NASA engineer
- Richard E. Hayden — acoustics engineer, won the Wright Brothers Medal in 1973 for a research paper on noise reduction for STOL aircraft
- John H. McMasters – aeronautical engineer
- John Joseph Martin – mechanical engineer, author of Atmospheric Entry
- Elwood Mead – Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation for construction of Grand Coulee, Hoover and Owyhee Dams; namesake of Lake Mead.
- Daniel Raymer – aerospace engineer
- Henry Sampson – inventor and nuclear engineer
- Games Slayter – chemical engineer, inventor of fiberglass
- Brandon Wuest - Google Software Engineer & Stereoscopic Sightseer[3]
Researchers
- Robert C. Baker – inventor of the chicken nugget
- Myron L. Bender – biochemist, recipient of the Midwest Award of the American Chemical Society
- Seymour Benzer – physicist and biologist, winner of the Wolf Prize in Medicine in 1991
- Henry Luke Bolley – botanist, plant pathologist, and football coach
- Richard Bootzin – clinical and research psychologist
- Robert D. Cess – atmospheric scientist
- Rita R. Colwell – environmental microbiologist and scientific administrator; Director of National Science Foundation
- Charles Albert Crampton – chemist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Internal Revenue Bureau; first mayor of Somerset, Maryland
- Ward Cunningham – inventor of the wiki concept
- Harry K. Daghlian, Jr. – physics, the first peacetime fatality of nuclear fission
- Joel Emer – microprocessor architect and Intel Fellow
- Dan Farmer – computer security researcher
- Martin Feinberg – mathematician and chemical engineer
- Elizabeth J. Feinler – information scientist and Internet pioneer
- Gloria Niemeyer Francke – pharmacist and science writer
- William H. Gerstenmaier – associate administrator at NASA
- Norman E. Gibbs – software engineering researcher
- Jonathan Grudin – researcher of human–computer interaction and computer-supported cooperative work
- Kun-Liang Guan – biochemist
- Clarence Hansell – research engineer who pioneered investigation into the biological effects of ionized air
- Obed Crosby Haycock – researcher of the upper atmosphere
- Jesse E. Hobson – director of SRI International
- Deng Jiaxian – physicist, "father of the Chinese A-bomb"
- Bradford Keeney – psychotherapist, ethnographer, cybernetician
- Gene Kim – information technology researcher
- Gerhard Klimeck – nanotechnologist
- Harry Kloor – physicist, chemist, screenwriter
- Bertram Kostant – mathematician
- Markus Kuhn – computer scientist
- Matthew Luckiesh – "Father of the Science of Seeing"[4]
- Robert W. Lucky – electrical engineer, inventor, and research manager
- Andrew Majda – ISI highly cited researcher in mathematics
- Herbert Newby McCoy – chemist
- Elwood Mead – former Head, Bureau of Reclamation; oversaw the construction of Hoover Dam
- Marilyn T. Miller – pediatric ophthalmologist
- Ben Roy Mottelson – Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1975
- Ian Murdock – founder of the Debian Project
- David E. Nichols – pharmacologist, world-renowned expert on psychedelics, founder of the Heffter Institute
- Alex Golden Oblad – chemist and chemical engineer who worked on catalysis
- Edward Mills Purcell – Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1952
- C. N. R. Rao – solid-state and materials chemist
- Malcolm Ross – director of the US Navy manned balloon program Project Strato-Lab; set the current altitude record for manned balloon flight with Victor Prather in 1961
- Yitang Zhang – mathematician known for his work with twin primes
- Ming-Ming Zhou – structural and chemical biologist
Arts and entertainment
- Robert K. Abbett – book-cover illustrator and outdoor painter
- George Ade – humorist
- Ted Allen – food and wine connoisseur on the Bravo Channel's Emmy-winning television program Queer Eye; writer, author and TV host
- Max Armstrong – agriculture broadcaster in Chicago
- Donald Bain – author and ghostwriter (Murder, She Wrote, Coffee, Tea or Me)
- Monte Blue – actor of the silent film era, later a character actor
- Jack Cashill – author, journalist, blogger, contributor to WorldNetDaily
- Kenneth Choi - actor, known for his role as Jim Morita in Captain America: The First Avenger, also Red Dawn and sitcoms
- Kate Collins – author (Flower Shop Mysteries)
- Thomas James De la Hunt – Indiana historian and columnist
- Eric Dill – musician, member of the band The Click Five
- Simone Elkeles – young-adult romance writer
- Dick Florea – television personality in Fort Wayne, Indiana
- William R. Forstchen – novelist
- Jim Gaffigan – comedian and actor, appeared in an episode of HBO's Sex and the City; best known for his Comedy Central Presents specials, a recurring role on My Boys, and several nationwide commercials
- JoAnn Giordano – textile artist
- Mass Giorgini – punk rock producer of bands such as Rise Against and Anti-Flag and bassist for Screeching Weasel and Squirtgun
- Gerald Jay Goldberg – novelist
- Harold Gray – creator of Little Orphan Annie comic strip
- Jeff Grubb – author and game designer
- Gabriel Gudding – essayist and poet
- Moira Gunn - host of National Public Radio programs Tech Nation and BioTech Nation
- John Guzlowski – author
- Jack Horkheimer – host of astronomy television program Jack Horkheimer: Star Gazer[5]
- Rick Karr – journalist
- Callie Khouri – screenwriter, director, and film producer; Academy Award and Golden Globe winner
- Jane King – business journalist
- Michael King – political commentator, columnist, television producer
- Harry Kloor – screenwriter, physicist, chemist
- Mercedes Lackey – fantasy novelist
- Wayne Lamb, Broadway and television dancer and Professor Emeritus of Theatre
- John T. McCutcheon – cartoonist, recipient of a Pulitzer Prize in 1931
- Jaime Martínez Tolentino – writer
- Hoshang Merchant – poet
- Felicia Middlebrooks – radio news broadcaster
- Gavin Mikhail - pianist, singer-songwriter
- Karen Marie Moning – novelist
- Tom Moore – director, nominated for three Primetime Emmys; best known as the director of Night Mother (with Kathy Bates and Anne Pitoniak) which won the Pulitzer prize, and for which he received his second Tony nomination, and for the original Grease, which ran for eight years and is one of the longest running shows in the history of Broadway
- Ray Morrison - short story writer
- Armand Navabi – nerdcore hip hop rapper
- Carrie Newcomer – singer and songwriter
- Clifton Nicholson – sculptor and jewelry designer
- Mark O'Hare – writer and cartoonist who has worked on various Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network programs
- Chubby Parker – folk musician
- Jim Payne – news anchor
- George Peppard (attended) – actor, best known for his role as John "Hannibal" Smith on The A-Team and Paul Varjak, Audrey Hepburn's love interest in Breakfast at Tiffany's
- Bob Peterson – animator, screenwriter, director and voice actor at Pixar
- Julian Phillips – Emmy Award winner, co-host of weekend Fox & Friends, Fox TV
- Carol Plum-Ucci – young-adult novelist and essayist
- Pat Proctor – wargame developer, U.S. Army lieutenant colonel
- Maya Rockeymoore – political writer, commentator, and scholar
- Bruce Rogers – typographer, inventor of the Centaur typeface
- Dulquer Salmaan – film actor and businessman
- Dave Schulthise – punk rock bass guitarist for the Dead Milkmen
- Mark William Shaw – network television personality, author, lawyer
- Gary Mark Smith – artist, author, master global street photographer
- Richard Sprague – author and researcher of the John F. Kennedy assassination
- Martha Hopkins Struever – dealer and scholar of American Indian art
- Elizabeth Stuckey-French – short story writer and novelist
- Booth Tarkington – novelist
- Stephanie S. Tolan – children's book author
- Martin Walls – poet
- Don West – pitchman, television personality, wrestling broadcaster
- Lebbeus Woods – artist and architect
Business and industry
- Sam Allen - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Deere & Company
- Chuck Armstrong – president of the Seattle Mariners
- Joyce Beber – advertising executive, promoter of hotelier Leona Helmsley
- Stephen Bechtel, Jr. – Chairman Emeritus and Director of Bechtel Group, Inc.
- Lawrence “Sonny” Beck - President of Beck’s Superior Hybrids, largest family-owned seed company in the United States
- Paul Bevilaqua – Chief Engineer, Advanced Development Projects, Lockheed Martin Skunk Works
- Gordon Binder - former CEO of Amgen (1988-2000).
- Michael Birck – Chairman and Founder of Tellabs, Inc.
- Charles F. Bowman – co-founder of Orville Redenbacher's Gourmet Popping Corn
- Beth Brooke – Global Vice Chair of Public Policy for Ernst & Young
- Susan Bulkeley Butler – first female partner at Accenture and author of Become the CEO of You, Inc.
- Herman Cain (MS '71) - businessman, politician, and columnist; former chairman and CEO of Godfather's Pizza
- James Cash, Jr. – member of the boards of directors at General Electric, Microsoft, and Walmart
- JoMei Chang – co-founder of Tibco Software
- Allen Chao – co-founder of Watson Pharmaceuticals
- Richard E. Dauch – co-founder of American Axle & Manufacturing
- Rodger Dean Duncan – author and business consultant
- Michael L. Eskew – Chairman and CEO, UPS
- Gen Fukunaga – President of FUNimation
- Jeffery R. Gardner – President, Chief Executive Officer, and Chief Operating Officer of Windstream Corporation
- Frank Gruber – founder of Tech Cocktail
- Lynn A. Harden - President, Potentiate, LLC, nonprofit capacity building and sustainability worldwide
- Gerald D. Hines (BSME 1948) – real estate developer and principal of Hines
- William A. Koch – developer of Holiday World & Splashin' Safari
- Keith J. Krach – President of 3points LLC; co-founder of Ariba Inc., served as Chairman and CEO
- Brian Lamb – co-founder, Chairman, and CEO of C-SPAN
- Howard Lance – chairman, president, and CEO of Harris Corporation
- Marshall Larsen – former chairman, president, and CEO of Goodrich Corporation
- Cook Lougheed – entrepreneur and philanthropist
- Bala S. Manian – medical technology entrepreneur
- Preston McAfee – economist at Google
- Steven McGeady – former Intel executive
- Wade Miquelon – Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer for Walgreens
- Herman H. Pevler – former president of the Norfolk and Western Railway and of the Wabash Railroad
- Orville Redenbacher – business leader and agriculturalist of popcorn fame
- Donald Rice – CEO of Agensys and boardmember of Wells Fargo Bank
- Lee Schmidt – golf course architect, co-founder of Lee-Schmidt Design, Inc.
- Edmund Schweitzer – President of Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories
- Carlos Septién – CEO of Grupo Elektra and Banco Azteca
- Ruth Siems – home economist with General Foods, inventor of Stovetop Stuffing
- Venu Srinivasan – chairman of TVS Motor
- Don Thompson – CEO of McDonald's[6]
- James A. Thomson – President and Chief Executive Officer, Rand Corporation
- Gregory Wasson – President and Chief Operating Officer, Walgreens corporation
- Sanjiva Weerawarana - co-founder, Chairman and CEO of WSO2
Government and law
National office
- Akinwumi Adesina, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development for Nigeria
- Rashid al-Rifai – ambassador and government minister in Iraq
- Donald W. Banner - former U.S. Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks[7]
- Joe L. Barton – U.S. Representative from 6th District of Texas (R)
- Birch Bayh – former United States Senator from Indiana (D)
- Earl L. Butz – former Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture (R)
- Bob Charles – former member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Curt Clawson- U.S. Representative from Florida's 19th congressional district (R)
- Chuck Conner – Acting Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture
- Margaret E. Curran – United States Attorney for Rhode Island
- Harry Allison Estep – Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania (R)
- Mauricio Fernández Garza – former Mayor of San Pedro Garza García (1989–1991) and former Mexican Senator from Nuevo León (1994–2000)
- Gary A. Grappo – U.S. Ambassador to Oman
- John H. Hager – Lieutenant Governor of Virginia, U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education (R)
- Keith Hall – former Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Clifford M. Hardin - former Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture (R)
- Ralph Harvey – U.S. Representative from Indiana (R)
- Adnan Kahveci – Turkish Minister of State and Minister of Finance, founding member of the Motherland Party
- Suwat Liptapanlop – government minister in Thailand
- David McKinley – U.S. Representative for West Virginia (R)
- Anthony W. Miller - United States Deputy Secretary of Education
- Marwan Muasher – Deputy Prime Minister, Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
- Essam Sharaf - former Prime Minister of Egypt
- Ann Stock – U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs
- Kevin Sullivan – White House Communications Director
- Claude R. Wickard – former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture
- Richard Llewellyn Williams – first U.S. Ambassador to Mongolia
Military
- Terry M. Cross – former Vice Commandant of the United States Coast Guard
- Nelson F. Gibbs – U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Air Force
- Thomas C. Hruskocy (Class of 1965) - Brigadier General United States Air Force 1990 - 93
- Sun Liren – Chinese Nationalist General who excelled in the Burma Campaign during World War II
- Carter B. Magruder – four-star General, U.S. Army
- B. J. Penn – former Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Navy
- Carol M. Pottenger – Vice Admiral, U.S. Navy
- Jerald D. Slack – U.S. Air National Guard Major General, Adjutant General of Wisconsin
- Carol I. Turner – former Chief of the United States Navy Dental Corps
- James C. Van Sice – former Superintendent of the U.S. Coast Guard Academy
- Russell R. Waesche – Commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II
Sub-national office
- Allen Alley – Oregon Republican Party chairman
- Ron Alting – Indiana State Senator (R)
- Brian Bosma – Speaker of the Indiana General Assembly
- Robert J. Burkhardt – former Secretary of State of New Jersey (D)
- Suzanne Crouch – member of the Indiana House of Representatives
- Jim Davis – member of the Indiana House of Representatives
- Sue Ellspermann – Lieutenant Governor of Indiana (R)
- Kirk Fordice – former Governor of Mississippi (R)
- Kent Gaffney – former member of the Illinois House of Representatives (R)
- Jerry E. Hinshaw (Class of 1940) - former member of the Arkansas House of Representatives (R)
- Ralph S. Johnson (Class of 1930) – aviator; former member of the Wyoming House of Representatives (R)
- Delores G. Kelley – Maryland State Senator (D)
- Sheila Klinker – member of the Indiana House of Representatives (D)
- J. Tom Lendrum – member of the Ohio House of Representatives (R)
- Harry G. Leslie – former Governor of Indiana (R)
- Alan Olsen – Oregon State Senator (R)
- Scott Reske – member of the Indiana House of Representatives (D)
- Darlene Senger – member of the Illinois House of Representatives (R)
- Wayne Townsend – member of both houses of the Indiana legislature and the Democratic candidate for governor in 1984 (D)
- Frank Watson – member of the Illinois Senate (R)
Local office
- Robert G. Abboud – village president of Barrington Hills, Illinois. 2008 candidate for U.S. Congress (D)
- Robert E. Armstrong – former mayor of Fort Wayne, Indiana (R)
- Isaac Colton Ash, Los Angeles, California, City Council member
- Jane Baker - first female mayor of San Mateo, California
- John J. Barton – former mayor of Indianapolis, Indiana (D)
- Marty Blum – former mayor of Santa Barbara, California
- Elgin English Crull - longest serving city manager of Dallas, Texas to date (1952 to 1966); was city manager when John F. Kennedy was assassinated
- A.E. Henning, Los Angeles, California, City Council member, 1929–33
- Robert J. LaFortune, former mayor of Tulsa, Oklahoma
- Thomas McDermott, Jr. – mayor of Hammond, Indiana (D)
- Satish Mohan – former town supervisor of Amherst, New York
- Bart Peterson – former mayor of Indianapolis, Indiana (D)
- Matthew Plomin - former city councilor in West Lafayette, Indiana (R)
- David H. Rodgers – former mayor of Spokane, Washington (R)
Other political and legal figures
- Nels Ackerson – lawyer, 2008 candidate for U.S. Congress from Indiana (D)
- Uthum Herat – Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka and Alternate Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund.
- Jeffrey M. Lacker – president of Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
- Fred Meyer (Class of 1949) - state chairman of the Texas Republican Party, 1988 to 1994; Dallas businessman
- Marilyn Quayle – lawyer, novelist, and political figure, wife of former U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle
- Lou Zaeske - leader of English-only movement and advocated for Czech ethnic causes
- Katherine Pilot - 2011 candidate for U.S. Congress from California (I)
- Charles Mok - Hong Kong Legislative Council member
Sports
Baseball
- Bernie Allen - 12-year career infielder with the Minnesota Twins, Washington Senators, New York Yankees and Montreal Expos; also played for the Boilermakers
- Jermaine Allensworth – former Major League Baseball player
- Roger Bossard – head groundskeeper for the Chicago White Sox, sports turf consultant for MLB, NFL, Major League Soccer
- Jay Buente – relief pitcher for the Florida Marlins
- Michael Duursma – shortstop for the Netherlands national baseball team[8]
- Bob Friend – former MLB pitcher
- Josh Lindblom - relief pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies
- Joe McCabe – former Major League baseball player
- Kevin Plawecki - catcher for the New York Mets
- Moose Skowron – former Major League Baseball player; 6-time All-Star, 5-time World Series Champion
Basketball
- Brian Cardinal – NBA Champion Dallas Mavericks, former professional NBA basketball player from 2000-2012
- Joe Barry Carroll - NCAA Final Four 1980, former NBA basketball player, 1st pick overall in NBA Draft (1980)
- Terry Dischinger – former NBA basketball player, (1962–73) NBA Rookie of the Year; Olympic Gold in basketball (1960)[9]
- Katie Douglas – basketball player in the WNBA
- Ray Eddy - former Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball head coach
- Herm Gilliam - former NBA player, NBA Champion with Portland Trail Blazers 1977; NCAA Finals 1969
- Blair Gullion - former head coach at Earlham College (1927–35), Tennessee Volunteers men's basketball (1935–38), Cornell University (1938–42) and Connecticut Huskies men's basketball (1945-46), Washington University in St. Louis, (1947–59)
- Paul Hoffman - former NBA player, BAA Rookie of the Year (1947), NBA Champion (1948), former general manager for the Baltimore Bullets
- Robbie Hummel - 1st Team All-Big Ten; professional basketball player for the Minnesota Timberwolves
- JaJuan Johnson - Big-Ten Player of the Year; current professional basketball for the Idaho Stampede of the NBA Development League
- Carl Landry - 1st Team All-Big Ten; current professional NBA player for the Sacramento Kings
- Emmett Lowery - former Tennessee Volunteers head coach, 1947-59
- Billy Keller - NCAA Finals 1969, former ABA basketball player, former University of Indianapolis men's basketball coach
- Frank Kendrick - former NBA player and champion (1975), Golden State Warriors
- Alan Major - current head coach of the Charlotte 49ers
- Cuonzo Martin - current head coach of the University of California-Berkeley
- Brad Miller – former NBA basketball player, two-time NBA All-Star
- E'Twaun Moore - 1st Team All-Big Ten; current professional NBA player for the Chicago Bulls
- Rick Mount – three-time All-American at Purdue and two-time Big Ten Player of the Year; NCAA Finals 1969; former American Basketball Association basketball player
- Matt Painter - current Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball head coach, former coach at Southern Illinois University, 5 NCAA Tournament appearances
- Austin Parkinson - current Indiana-Purdue Indianapolis women's basketball head coach
- Glenn Robinson – 1994 NCAA Player of the Year (John R. Wooden Award, Naismith Awards and four other polls), two-time 1st Team Alll-American; former NBA player, 1st pick overall in NBA draft (1994); NBA champion (2005) with San Antonio Spurs
- Amy Ruley – North Dakota State University women's basketball coach
- Dave Schellhase - first-team All-American at Purdue; former Indiana State Sycamores men's basketball head coach, former Minnesota State-Moorhead head coach
- Jerry Sichting - former professional player in the NBA, NCAA Final Four 1980
- Kevin Stallings - current Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball head coach, former coach at Illinois State University
- John Wooden – Basketball Hall of Fame honoree as both player and coach; 10-time NCAA Champion coach at UCLA; 1932 National champion and All-American as player
Football
See also: Purdue Boilermakers football
- Mike Alstott – former NFL and Super Bowl Champion fullback for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Purdue's all-time leading rusher
- Otis Armstrong - former NFL All-Pro running back, Denver Broncos; 1st Team All-American at Purdue, held Purdue single game and career rushing records until surpassed by Mike Alstott
- Cliff Avril – NFL defensive end of the Seattle Seahawks; Champion Super Bowl XLVIII and participated in XLIX
- Ryan Baker - NFL defensive end for the Miami Dolphins, 2009-2012
- Drew Brees – Super Bowl Champion, Super Bowl MVP, All-Pro, Pro Bowl quarterback, New Orleans Saints; Maxwell Award; 2 x Heisman Trophy Finalist; Rose Bowl Game
- Dave Butz – 16-year, 2x Super Bowl Champion NFL Lineman with the Washington Redskins and selected to the all NFL 1980s Team
- Scott Campbell – played quarterback for six seasons for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Atlanta Falcons
- Roosevelt Colvin – 2x Super Bowl Champion, professional football player in the NFL with the Chicago Bears and New England Patriots
- Gary Danielson – former NFL quarterback; current TV announcer, College Football
- Len Dawson – Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback with the Kansas City Chiefs, Super Bowl IV MVP
- Scott Dierking - NFL running back with the New York Jets
- Jim Everett – Pro Bowl NFL quarterback; Saint Louis Rams, New Orleans Saints, San Diego Chargers
- Gilbert Gardner – NFL linebacker, member of the Super Bowl XLI-winning Indianapolis Colts
- Wayne Gift – NFL player
- Bob Griese – Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback with the Miami Dolphins; lead Dolphins to 17-0-0 perfect season; 2x Super Bowl Champion quarterback; College Football Hall of Fame, Rose Bowl Champion quarterback
- Steve Griffin - former NFL and Arena Football League player
- Nick Hardwick - former NFL center of the San Diego Chargers
- Matt Hernandez – NFL offensive tackle
- Mark Herrmann – former NFL quarterback with the Indianapolis Colts and San Diego Chargers; 3-time Bowl game MVP with Purdue
- Paul Humphrey - NFL center for the Brooklyn Dodgers
- Clarence Janecek - NFL offensive guard of the Pittsburgh Pirates
- Dustin Keller – NFL tight end of the Miami Dolphins
- Zbig Kepa – offensive coordinator at William & Mary
- Ryan Kerrigan - NFL linebacker of the Washington Redskins; 1st Team All-American
- Leroy Keyes - NFL running back and defensive back, Philadelphia Eagles; 2 x All-American and 2 x Heisman Trophy Finalist
- Ed Klewicki – Detroit Lions, 1930s
- Jon Krick - Arena Football League player
- John Letsinger – Pittsburgh Pirates, 1933
- Matt Light – NFL left tackle of the New England Patriots; 3x Super Bowl Champion Super Bowl (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX), and participated in XLII
- Jim Looney - NFL linebacker of the San Francisco 49ers
- Lamar Lundy - NFL defensive end, All-Pro and member of the Fearsome Foursome, Los Angeles Rams
- Marc May - NFL tight end of the Minnesota Vikings
- Wave Myers – former coach at Ball State
- Mike Neal - NFL defensive tackle of the Green Bay Packers
- Rob Ninkovich - linebacker for the New England Patriots; has also played for the New Orleans Saints and the Miami Dolphins
- Kyle Orton – quarterback, drafted by the Chicago Bears has played for several NFL teams and currently for the Buffalo Bills.
- Curtis Painter – backup quarterback for the Indianapolis Colts, drafted in 2009 to succeed Peyton Manning
- Shaun Phillips – NFL defensive end of the Tennessee Titans
- Mike Phipps – College Football Hall of Fame former NFL Quarterback, Cleveland Browns, Chicago Bears, Heisman Trophy Runner-up
- Bernard Pollard – NFL safety of the Tennessee Titans
- Ed Rate - former NFL blocking back for the Milwaukee Badgers
- Karl Singer - AFL tackle for the Boston Patriots
- Joe Skibinski - former NFL guard for the Cleveland Browns and Green Bay Packers
- Ed Skoronski – NFL player
- Blane Smith - former NFL linebacker for the Green Bay Packers
- Anthony Spencer – NFL linebacker drafted by the Dallas Cowboys in 2007.
- John Standeford – NFL wide receiver of the Detroit Lions, member of the Super Bowl XLI-winning Indianapolis Colts
- Darryl Stingley – former NFL Wide Receiver with the New England Patriots
- Hank Stram – Pro Football Hall of Fame coach of the Kansas City Chiefs
- Taylor Stubblefield – NCAA Division 1 football career receptions leader, played for the St. Louis Rams
- Michael Terrizzi – played briefly for the San Francisco 49ers
- Keena Turner - 3-time Super Bowl winner at Linebacker with San Francisco 49ers
- Calvin Williams - NFL wide receiver of the Philadelphia Eagles; rookie of the year
- Rod Woodson – Super Bowl Champion (XXXV) Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive back, 11-time Pro-Bowler (at three different positions) and former NFL cornerback
Other sports
- Stephan Bonnar – retired professional mixed martial artist,[10] two-time Golden Gloves Champion, UFC Light Heavyweight Fighter, UFC Hall of Fame member[11]
- David Boudia – Olympic diver (2008, gold 2012)[9]
- Larry Burton – runner (1976)[9]
- Keith Carter - Olympic swimmer (silver, 1948)[9]
- Joe Corso – wrestler (1976)[9]
- Javier Díaz – Olympic swimmer for Mexico (2000, 2004)
- Dick the Bruiser – professional wrestling champion
- Ray Ewry – ten-time Olympic champion in track and field (gold, 1900, 1904, 1906, 1908)[9]
- Jon Fitch – Boilermaker team captain wrestler; professional mixed martial artist, formerly with the Ultimate Fighting Championship[12]
- Cliff Furnas - Olympic runner (1920)[9]
- Ed Glover - Olympic pole-vaulter (bronze, 1906)[9]
- Matt Hamill (attended) - three-time NCAA Division III National Champion in wrestling, silver and gold medalist of the 2001 Summer Deaflympics; mixed martial artist who fought in the Ultimate Fighting Championship;[13] retired
- Lacey Hearn - Olympic athlete (1904)[9]
- Chris Huffins - Olympic decathlete (1996, 2000)[8][14]
- Pariya Junhasavasdikul - Thai professional golfer who plays on the Asian Tour
- Gerald Koh - Olympic swimmer (2000)[8]
- Gyöngyvér Lakos - Olympic swimmer (2000)[8]
- Matt Mitrione – former NFL player and current MMA fighter for the UFC[15]
- Nate Moore - boilermaker team captain wrestler; current MMA competitor, formerly fighting for Strikeforce (mixed martial arts)[16]
- Nedzad Mulabegovic – shot put for Croatia (2012)[9]
- Betty Mullen-Brey – 100-meter butterfly (1956)[9]
- Ryan Newman – driver, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series; 2002 NASCAR Winston Cup Rookie of the Year; 2008 Daytona 500 winner, 2013 Brickyard 400 winner
- Coralie O'Connor – swimming (1952)[9]
- Jake O'Brien - Boilermaker wrestler; current MMA fighter, previously the WEC and the UFC[17]
- Ike Olekaibe - Olympic athlete (2000)[9]
- Carol Pence-Taylor - Olympic swimmer (1948)[9]
- Kara Patterson – Javelin (2012)[9]
- Eric Rodwell – professional bridge player
- Joan Rosazza – Olympic swimmer (silver, 1956)[18]
- Chris Schenkel – sportscaster
- Lauren Sesselmann – Women's Soccer for Canada (2012)[9]
- Doug Sharp – Olympic bobsledder (2002)
- Paul Sliker – former professional freeskier
- Miguel Torres (attended), wrestler; current professional mixed martial arts fighter, former WEC Bantamweight Champion[19]
- Frank Verner - Olympic athlete (1904)[8]
- Fred Wampler – PGA Tour golfer
- Beth Whittall – 100-meter butterfly for Canada (1956)[9]
- Jeanne Wilson-Vaughn - Olympic swimmer (1948)[9]
- Fred Wilt - Olympic runner (1948)[9]
- Howie Williams – gold in basketball (1952)[9]
Other alumni
- Danel W. Bachman – historian of the Latter Day Saint movement
- David A. Bednar – LDS Church Apostle; former President of BYU-Idaho
- Vikram Buddhi – imprisoned for threatening the life of U.S. President George W. Bush
- Theodore M. Burton – LDS Church leader
- Kathy Calvin – chief executive officer, United Nations Foundation
- Russell Mawby – chairman emeritus, W.K. Kellogg Foundation
- William Leonard Pickard – convicted drug trafficker
- Eric Justin Toth – fugitive on the FBI Ten Most Wanted list
- Richard Leroy Walters – homeless philanthropist
Notable faculty
Agriculture
- Gebisa Ejeta - Professor of Agronomy, winner of World Food Prize
- Philip E. Nelson – food scientist, winner of the World Food Prize
Engineering and technology
- Rakesh Agrawal (Professor of Chemical Engineering) - a winner of National Medal of Technology
- Arden L. Bement Jr. (Professor of Nuclear Engineering) - Director of the National Science Foundation, former Director of NIST
- Lonnie D. Bentley – professor of computer and information technology
- Jean-Lou Chameau (Professor of Civil Engineering) - President of California Institute of Technology
- Clarence L. "Ben" Coates (Head of the School of Electrical Engineering) – computer scientist and engineer known for his work on waveform recognition devices, circuit gates and accumulators
- Supriyo Datta (Professor of Electrical Engineering) – researcher of nanoelectronics
- Rui de Figueiredo (Professor of Electrical Engineering)
- Charles Alton Ellis (Professor of Structural Engineering) – designer of the Golden Gate Bridge
- Reginald Fessenden (Professor of Electrical Engineering) - first wireless voice transmission
- W. Kent Fuchs (Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering) - Provost of Cornell University
- Leslie Geddes (Showalter Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biomedical Engineering) - National Medal of Technology recipient
- Frank Bunker Gilbreth, Sr. (lecturer) – industrial engineer
- Lillian Gilbreth (Professor of Industrial Engineering) - efficiency expert, first female member of U.S. National Academy of Engineering
- F.W. Hutchinson – engineer and researcher of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning
- Frank P. Incropera (Professor of Mechanical Engineering) – ISI highly cited researcher on heat transfer
- Leah Jamieson (Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Dean of Engineering) - a winner of Gordon Prize
- Avinash Kak (Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering) – researcher of information processing
- Rangasami L. Kashyap (Professor of Electrical Engineering) – applied mathematician
- Linda Katehi (Professor of Electrical Engineering and Dean of Engineering) - Chancellor of University of California, Davis
- Daniel B. Luten (Instructor in architectural and sanitary engineering) – bridge builder who patented the Luten arch
- Robert E. Machol (Professor of Electrical Engineering) – early writer on systems engineering
- Shimon Y. Nof (Professor of Industrial Engineering)
- Nicholas A. Peppas (Professor of Chemical Engineering) - biochemist and engineer best known for his research in hydrogels for drug delivery
- R. Byron Pipes (Professor of Engineering) - former President of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
- A. Alan Pritsker (Professor of Industrial Engineering) - pioneer in simulation modeling, creator of GERT and SLAM programs
- Vladimir Shalaev (Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and of Biomedical Engineering) – researcher of metamaterials, transformation optics, nanophotonics and plasmonics
- R. Norris Shreve (Professor of Chemical Engineering)
- Shu Shien-Siu (Professor of Engineering Science)
- Mete Sozen (Professor of Structural Engineering)
- Rusi Taleyarkhan (Professor of Nuclear Engineering)
- Yeram S. Touloukian (Professor of Mechanical Engineering) – founder of the Thermophysical Properties Research Center
- Raymond Viskanta – ISI Highly Cited researcher in the field of heat transfer
- Steve Wereley (Professor of Mechanical Engineering) – co-inventor of micro-particle image velocimetry
- Jerry Woodall (Professor of Electrical Engineering) - inventor of first commercially viable red LEDs, a winner of National Medal of Technology
- Henry T. Yang (Professor of Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering and Dean of Engineering) - Chancellor of the University of California, Santa Barbara
Humanities and social sciences
- Dorsey Armstrong – editor-in-chief of Arthuriana
- Louis René Beres – Professor of Political Science
- James A. Berlin – theorist in the field of composition studies and the history of rhetoric and composition theory
- Marianne Boruch – poet and essayist
- Robert X. Browning – Professor of Political Science
- Ronald Verlin Cassill – novelist, short story writer, reviewer, editor, painter, and lithographer
- Philip B. Coulter – political scientist
- Paul Draper – philosopher of religion, editor of the journal Philo
- William H. Gass – novelist and short story writer
- Mark Harris – novelist and biographer
- Djelal Kadir – literature academic
- Brigit Pegeen Kelly – poet
- Robert Melson – political scientist specializing in ethnic conflict and genocide
- Cheryl Mendelson – professor of philosophy, novelist, non-fiction writer
- Alan H. Monroe – creator of Monroe's motivated sequence
- Annie Smith Peck – professor of archaeology and Latin, mountaineer
- Victor Raskin – Professor of Linguistics, founding editor of Humor: International Journal of Humor Research
- W. Charles Redding - professor of communication, "father" of organizational communication
- Gunther E. Rothenberg – military historian
- Kermit Scott – professor of philosophy, advocate for the poor, previously thought to be the namesake of Kermit the Frog
- Michael Stohl – political scientist
Management and economics
- Charalambos D. Aliprantis – economist who introduced Banach space and Riesz space methods in economic theory
- Frank Bass – Professor of Industrial Administration, a founder of marketing science who developed the Bass diffusion model
- Michael A. Campion – Professor of Management, psychologist
- Alok R. Chaturvedi - Professor of MIS, Founder and the Director of SEAS Laboratory of Krannert School of Management
- Elizabeth Hoffman – economist, now Provost of Iowa State University
- Raghavendra Rau – Rothschild Professorship of Finance at the University of Cambridge
- Stanley Reiter – economist
- Vernon L. Smith – Nobel Laureate in Economics in 2002
Pharmacy, health and human sciences
- Sugato Chakravarty – professor of consumer science, Associate Editor of the Journal of Financial Markets
- Lisa Hopp – nursing educator
- Henry L. Roediger III – researcher of psychology and the human memory
- Peter Schönemann – professor of Psychological Sciences
- William H. Starbuck – researcher of cognitive psychology, organizational behavior, and organization theory
- Wei Zheng – pharmaceutical scientist
Science and mathematics
- Shreeram Shankar Abhyankar – Professor of Mathematics, known for his contributions to singularity theory
- Ross H. Arnett, Jr. – entomologist and beetle researcher
- Struther Arnott – molecular biologist and cancer researcher
- Mikhail Atallah – computer scientist, researcher on algorithms and computer security
- Louis Auslander – mathematician
- David Avison – physicist and photographer
- John D. Axtell – chemist, agronomist, a discoverer of high-lysine sorghum
- Harry Beevers – plant physiologist
- Jeffrey Bennetzen – Professor of Genetics
- Elisa Bertino – computer scientist, director of CERIAS
- Dale L. Boger – medicinal and organic chemist
- Carl R. de Boor – assistant professor at Purdue University, won the John von Neumann Prize from the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics in 1996
- Louis de Branges de Bourcia – Professor of Mathematics, proved the Bieberbach conjecture
- Herbert C. Brown – Nobel Laureate in Chemistry in 1979
- Alok R. Chaturvedi - professor in the Department of Computer Sciences; the Director of Purdue Homeland Security Institute; technical lead for the Sentient World Simulation project
- Douglas Comer – computer scientist, Internet pioneer
- R. Graham Cooks – chemist, mass spectrometrist
- Ronald DeVore – mathematician known for approximation theory, wavelet theory, compressive sensing
- Richard Duffin – physicist
- Ahmed K. Elmagarmid – computer scientist, Executive Director of the Qatar Computing Research Institute
- Paul Erdős – Professor of Mathematics, winner of the Wolf Prize in Mathematics in 1983/4
- Harley Flanders – mathematician and textbook author
- Joseph Francisco – atmospheric chemist, President of the American Chemical Society
- Walter Gautschi – mathematician, contributor to numerical analysis
- Jayanta Kumar Ghosh – statistician
- Melvin Hochster – commutative algebraist
- Otto F. Hunziker – early head of Dairy department, supervised construction of Smith Hall
- Meyer Jerison – mathematician known for his work in functional analysis and rings
- Minhyong Kim – mathematician
- Robert R. Korfhage – computer scientist who contributed to information retrieval
- Karl Lark-Horovitz - pioneer in solid state physics, contributed to the invention of the first transistor
- Chris J. Leaver – botanist, now at the University of Oxford
- László Lempert, professor of mathematics, winner of Stefan Bergman Prize, 2001
- Huaxin Lin, professor of mathematics
- Bernard J. Liska – food scientist
- Fred McLafferty – chemist who described the McLafferty rearrangement in mass spectrometry
- Edwin T. Mertz – chemist and biochemist who co-discovered high-lysine corn
- David S. Moore – statistician
- John Ulric Nef – chemist who discovered the Nef reaction
- Ei-ichi Negishi – Professor of Chemistry, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry in 2010
- Albert Overhauser – Professor of Physics, discovered the Overhauser Effect
- Alan Perlis – Professor of Mathematics, the first person to win the Turing Award in 1966
- Justin Jesse Price – mathematician
- John R. Rice – Professor of Computer Science, founding editor of ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software
- Arthur Rosenthal – mathematician, proved the Hartogs–Rosenthal theorem
- Michael G. Rossmann – Professor of Biological Sciences, Member of National Academy of Sciences, mapped human common cold virus, pointed out the Rossmann fold
- Robert G. Sachs – theoretical physicist, director of Argonne National Laboratory
- David Sanders – Professor of Biological Sciences
- Otto Schilling – algebraist
- Julian Schwinger – Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1965
- Freydoon Shahidi – mathematician, a namesake of the Langlands–Shahidi method
- Shen Chun-shan – physicist, president of National Tsing Hua University
- Yum-Tong Siu – professor of mathematics
- Jeffrey H. Smith – algebraic topologist
- Eugene Spafford – Professor of Computer Science and Director of CERIAS, computer security expert
- Lonnie Lee VanZandt – Professor of Physics, formed the molecular biological physics group at Purdue
- Jeffrey Vitter (Professor of Computer Science and Dean of Science, 2002–2008) - a computer scientist known for his work on external memory algorithms, provost of University of Kansas
- Clarence Abiathar Waldo – Professor of Mathematics, noted for his role in defeating the Indiana Pi Bill of 1897
- George W. Whitehead – algebraic topologist who defined the J-homomorphism
- Harvey Washington Wiley – Professor of Chemistry, first FDA commissioner and advocate for the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906
- Arthur Winfree – theoretical biologist, MacArthur Fellow, winner of the Norbert Wiener Prize in Applied Mathematics
- Myron E. Witham – Professor of Mathematics, college football coach
- Arif Zaman – Professor of Statistics, researcher of pseudo-random number generation and computer science
Other
- Richard Blanton – anthropologist and archaeologist
- David A. Caputo – former Dean of the School of Liberal Arts, later president of Pace University
- Amelia Earhart – women's career counselor, aviator
- Joel Fink – Purdue University Theatre, currently Associate Dean of Roosevelt University
- Benjamin Harrison – trustee, President of the United States
- Ruth Lawanson – volleyball assistant coach, Olympic bronze medal in volleyball (1992)[9]
- Charles Major – trustee, novelist[20]
- Gary Lee Nelson – composer
- Jay Nunamaker – researcher of information systems
- Lynn Okagaki – Commissioner of the National Center for Education Research
- John Purdue – founder and namesake
- Timothy Sands – provost, former acting president, materials engineer, President of Virginia Tech
- Mark Smith - Dean of Graduate School, 1984 Olympic fencer.[21]
- Dorothy C. Stratton – first full-time dean of women (1933–1942), Director of the SPARS during World War II
- Lee Watson - Broadway and television lighting designer
- Randy Woodson – former provost, now chancellor of North Carolina State University
- Al G. Wright – former Director of Bands, now Chairman of the Board of the John Philip Sousa Foundation
- Rolv Yttrehus – contemporary classical music composer
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alumni of Purdue University. |
- ↑ "Capt. Iven C. Kincheloe Jr.". The Official Web site of the United States Air Force. Retrieved 2012-08-27.
- ↑ http://hhp.cofc.edu/faculty-staff-listing/demaria-andrea.php
- ↑ http://googledevelopers.blogspot.com/2015/10/bringing-google-cardboard-and-vr-to.html
- ↑ Case Western Reserve University (July 18, 1997). "Luckiesh, Matthew". Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Retrieved January 30, 2013.
- ↑ ""Jack Horkheimer dies at 72; amateur astronomer hosted 'Star Gazer'"". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
- ↑ ""New McDonald's CEO stays true to his roots"". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
- ↑ Hawthorne, Michael (February 11, 2006). "Donald W. Banner". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 2, 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Olympians". Purdue Official Athletic Site. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 "Past Purdue Olympians". Purdue Exponent. July 28, 2012. Retrieved July 28, 2012.
- ↑ Erickson, Matt (24 August 2011). "Munster native Stephan Bonnar draws Kyle Kingsbury at UFC 139 in San Jose". Retrieved 17 January 2014.
- ↑ "Stephan Bonnar UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014.
- ↑ "Jon Fitch UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014.
- ↑ "Matt "The Hammer" Hamill - Official UFC® Fighter Profile". UFC. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
- ↑ Dicker, Ron (December 29, 1999). "For Huffins, the Biggest Challenge Lurks Within". The New York Times. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
- ↑ "Matt Mitrione UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014.
- ↑ "Nate Moore MMA Bio". Retrieved 2014.
- ↑ "Jake O'Brien UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014.
- ↑ "Joan Rosazza Biography and Olympic Results". Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved October 1, 2012.
- ↑ "Miguel Torres MMA Bio". Retrieved 2014.
- ↑ ""The Charles Major Papers"". Retrieved September 15, 2014.
- ↑ Lauren, Westberg (July 28, 2012). "Olympic fencer teaches students, reflects on games". Purdue Exponent. Retrieved July 28, 2012.
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