Artists and collectors •
Ralph Waddell Douglass 1920, award-winning artist; author, Calligraphic Lettering style; coauthor & illustrator, Mesaland Series of children's books •
Jorge Guillermo 1968, royal spouse to
Princess Christina of the Netherlands and brother-in-law to
Queen Beatrix; noted art collector •
Edgar Everett Martin 1921, cartoonist,
Boots and Her Buddies, reached an audience of 700 newspapers and 60 million readers
Business leaders and economists •
Calvin Bryce Hoover 1922, founder of the field of
comparative economic systems; noted economist and professor,
Duke University; author,
The Economic Life of Soviet Russia in 1931 •
James L. Pate 1963, chairman, chief executive,
Pennzoil-Quaker State Co.; Assist. Secr. of Commerce, spokesman, U.S.
President Gerald Ford; chairman,
Devon Energy Corp.; chief economist,
B.F. Goodrich Corporation •
Harold "Red" Poling 1949, chairman, CEO,
Ford Motor Company •
Theodore P. Shonts 1876, American lawyer; industrialist; chairman,
Panama Canal Commission; railroad president
College presidents and deans •
Charles C. McCracken 1908, president, University of Connecticut (1930–1935); Ph.D., Harvard University •
Thomas H. McMichael 1886, M.A. 1889, President, Monmouth College (1903–1936); moderator, Presbyterian Church of N. America (1915) •
Maurice H. Rees 1904, medical educator, Dean,
U. of Colorado School of Medicine, 1925 to 1945 •
James Stockdale 1946, Vice Admiral,
U.S. Navy; U. S.
Vice-Presidential
candidate; Medal of Honor; President,
Naval War College •
Charles F. Wishart 1894, president,
College of Wooster 1921–1944; Moderator,
Presbyterian General Assembly 1924
Engineers and architects •
Dan Everett Waid 1887, chief architect,
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. of New York; President, New York State Board of Examiners and Registration of Architects (1915–1923); president,
American Institute of Architects (1924–1926);
Fellow, American Institute of Architects •
John Findley Wallace 1872, chief engineer,
Panama Canal project and the
Illinois Central Railroad Journalists and writers •
Fletcher S. Basset 1869, author; founder of the Chicago Folk-Lore Society; American naval officer •
Dean E. Fischer 1958,
Assistant Secretary of State, Public Affairs; spokesman,
U.S. State Department;
journalist,
Time magazine •
Roger J. Fritz 1950,
management consultant,
columnist, international speaker, author of 63 management development and motivational books; 17th president of
Willamette University, Oregon, 1969–1972 •
Jane Kurtz 1973, author of over 40 children's books;
Golden Kite Award (best picture book text); Year's Best Children's Books award (
The Washington Post) •
Chad Simpson 1998, Micro Award,
short and
flash fiction author; Teresa A. White Award, Quiddity International Literary Journal. •
Melissa Scholes Young 1997, noted writer; author; professor of literature
Judges including state supreme courts justices •
John F. Main 1885, Justice, Washington Supreme Court 1912–1942 •
Robert William Porter 1949,
United States chief federal judge; attorney; mayor, Richardson, Texas •
Silas Wright Porter 1879, justice, Kansas Supreme Court (1905–1923); chairman, Republican State Convention •
Lyman B. Sutter 1928, mayor, Long Beach, California; municipal court judge
Military including Medal of Honor recipients •
Reid K. Beveridge 1964,
Brig. Gen. (ret.),
National Guard, U.S.; functionary, Presbyterian Church; journalist •
James K. L. Duncan 1866, Medal of Honor recipient, physician •
Robert Hugo Dunlap 1942, major in
the United States Marine Corps, Medal of Honor recipient •
Stephan T. Johnson 1972,
Major general,
United States Marine Corps •
Philip G. Killey 1963, United States Air Force
Major General;
Adjutant General,
South Dakota National Guard; director,
Air National Guard; Commander,
First Air Force •
George H. Palmer 1861, US Army Medal of Honor recipient
National political leaders •
Mohd Nasir Hashim 1969, member,
Selangor State Assembly,
Kota Damansara, Malaysia; president,
Socialist Party of Malaysia •
William Medcalf Kinsey 1869,
U.S. Representative from
Missouri; circuit court judge; attorney •
Robert Thaddeus McLoskey 1928,
U.S. Representative from Illinois; member,
Illinois House of Representatives •
Ilo Browne Wallace 1911,
Second Lady of the United States; co-founder,
Pioneer Hi-Bred International;
sponsor,
Philosophers and clergy •
Ann Garry 1965, founding director, Center for the Study of Genders and Sexualities; chair of the Department of Philosophy,
California State University, Los Angeles; Humphrey Chair of
Feminist Philosophy,
University of Waterloo; •
Samuel M. Thompson 1924,
philosopher, author of three bestselling textbooks of Philosophy; co-author, Confession of 1967, a major statement of faith of the Presbyterian Church (USA) •
William J. Winslade 1963, author, research principal of
philosophy,
medicine, and
ethics; professor,
philosophy of medicine,
University of Texas Playwrights and actors •
Jim Verraros 2004,
dance musician; actor •
Helen Wagner 1938, actress, star of
As the World Turns; 2004 Lifetime Achievement award,
Academy of Television Arts and Sciences •
William Young 1863, playwright, writer, actor, known for his play adaptation of the novel
Ben-Hur Professional sports •
Francis Louis "Jug" Earp 1921,
N. F. L. player,
Green Bay Packers; inductee,
Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame; player,
N. Y. Yankees football •
Keith Frank Molesworth 1928, Chicago Bears football player; backfield coach,
Pittsburgh Steelers; head coach,
Baltimore Colts; vice president and director of personnel,
Baltimore Colts •
Joe Tait 1959, longtime radio voice,
Cleveland Cavaliers •
Alex Tanney 2011,
N. F. L. quarterback; assistant coach,
Philadelphia Eagles Reformers and activists •
Mary G. Charlton Edholm 1876, noted reformer, journalist, editor •
Martha Lena Morrow Lewis 1892, national lecturer, Women's Christian Temperance Union; organizer,
women's suffrage; first woman member, National Executive Committee, Socialist Party of America •
Robert Wilson McClaughry 1860, Warden,
United States Penitentiary,
Leavenworth, Kansas; early leader in modern penal reform; General Superintendent of Police,
City of Chicago •
Rachel J. Nicol 1868, co-founder, Pi Beta Phi, first secret collegiate society for women patterned after men's fraternities; physician (M.D.) •
Danielle Nierenberg 1995, activist; author; journalist; co-founder/president, Food Tank: The Food Think Tank •
Harriet Shetler 1938, co-founder, (American)
National Alliance on Mental Illness; editor •
Dorothy Vellenga 1959,
Peace Corps volunteer; sociologist; author •
John M. Work 1891, founding member, executive secretary,
Socialist Party of America; author.
Scientists •
Karen Bush 1965, award-winning American biochemist; editor of peer-reviewed scientific journal •
Kennedy J. Reed 1967,
theoretical physicist,
Lawrence Livermore Nat. Lab.; founder,
Nat. Physical Science Consortium (NPSC); Presidential Award, Excellence in Science, Math. and Engineering Mentoring; Fellow,
American Physical Society; Fellow,
American Assn. for the Advancement of Science; •
David Turnbull 1936, chemist, major contributor to solidification theory and glass formation; elected to
National Academy of Sciences; Fellow,
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, awarded the
Japan Prize and the
Franklin Medal State governors, lieutenent governors, senators and representatives •
Robert Hendricks Brink 1968, representative,
Virginia House of Delegates; attorney •
Alfred L. Buchan 1869, member, Wisconsin State Assembly; physician •
Clarence F. Buck 1892, senator, Illinois State Senate; newspaper editor •
Herschel L. Carnahan 1901,
30th Lieutenant Governor of California; attorney •
James R. Carpenter 1889, Wyoming state senator; inventor •
Sarah Bond Hanley 1887,
Illinois State Representative; one of the first two women in the Illinois State Assembly; delegate to the Democratic National Convention 1924; a founding member of Democratic Women's Club in the U.S. •
Robert S. Hamilton 1892, Illinois State Senator, attorney •
Mattie Hunter 1976, senator, Illinois State Senate; Senate Majority Caucus Whip •
James Montgomery Rice 1864, American army colonel; lawyer; member, Illinois House of Representatives; contributed to the founding of the
U. S. National Guard •
James H. Rupp 1940, Illinois state senator; mayor,
Decatur, Illinois, and businessman •
Richard Elihu Sloan 1877,
Governor, Arizona Territory; Assoc. Justice,
Arizona Territorial Supreme Court; judge,
U. S. District Court •
Charles A. Sprague 1910,
Governor, Oregon (1939–1943); editor, publisher,
Oregon Statesman •
Earl W. Vincent 1909, Republican
U.S. Representative,
Iowa 9th congressional district; federal judge; fifth judicial district of Iowa judge •
Jonathan C. Wright 1987, judge, Ill. Circuit Court; member, Ill. House of Rep.; Logan County States Attorney There are about 12,600 living
alumni. ==See also==