Notable alumni from Willamette include a range of people involved in business, government, education, science, sports, art and entertainment. Perhaps the most notable Willamette graduate is
Dale T. Mortensen, the 2010 winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics. Business leaders include
James Albaugh, president and CEO of
Boeing Integrated Defense Systems, and
Alex J. Mandl, the executive chairman of digital security company
Gemalto. Those in the arts include
Marie Watt, a contemporary artist whose work centers on Native American themes.
Thomas A. Bartlett, president of
American University in Cairo attended Willamette for two years before completing his bachelor of arts at
Stanford University. In his career, he has served as president of the
Association of American Universities, president of
Colgate University and chairman of the board of trustees of the United States–Japan Foundation. Another alum involved in the education arena is
Norma Paulus. Paulus served as Oregon's superintendent of public instruction. Prior to this, she was the first woman to hold statewide elected office in Oregon as secretary of state. Government officials who have graduated from Willamette include members from both the judicial and legislative branches of government. Oregon Supreme Court's first Hispanic American chief justice,
Paul De Muniz, graduated from the College of Law, as did his predecessor,
Wallace P. Carson, Jr. Recent Oregon State Supreme Court justice
Virginia Linder also received her Juris Doctor from Willamette. California Democratic congressman
Sam Farr who served from 1993 through 2017, successfully introduced the 2007 "Oceans Conservation, Education and National Strategy for the 21st Century Act." He attended Willamette for his undergraduate studies.
Mark O. Hatfield, Oregon's former governor and the longest serving Oregon senator, graduated from Willamette and later returned as a professor at his alma mater.
Bob Packwood, former Republican senator graduated from Willamette University in 1954.
Robert Freeman Smith, a Republican, was a state House member from 1960–1972, then served as a United States Congressman from Oregon's 2nd congressional district from 1983 to 1995. After a brief retirement, he returned to Congress in 1997, for a single term. Washington Governor
Jay Inslee earned his J.D. degree from Willamette University.
Lisa Murkowski, a Republican senator from Alaska, also received her J.D. from Willamette University College of Law. Notable alumni in science include
Gerald L. Pearson (Physics 1926) and
Daryl Chapin (Physics 1927), who were co-inventors of the silicon solar cell at AT&T Bell Laboratories in 1954. Notable alumni involved in athletics include
Cal Lee, linebackers coach for the
University of Hawaiʻi football team, who graduated from Willamette in 1970. A graduate of the class of 1999,
Liz Heaston, made history at Willamette as the first woman to play and score in a men's NAIA college football game in 1997.
Tony Barron was a
Major League Baseball player who played for the
Montreal Expos from 1995–1996 and the
Philadelphia Phillies in 1997.
Nick Symmonds won seven
NCAA Division III 800-meter championships during his undergraduate years at Willamette before going on to win the 2008 Olympic Track and Field Trials. ==References==