List of University of Missouri alumni
This is a list of notable alumni of the University of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri.
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.
Academic
- Terry H. Anderson (MA 1973), Professor of history at Texas A&M University
- Thomas Curtright (BS 1970, MS 1970), Professor of Physics at University of Miami
- Robert P. Foster (MA, Ph.D.), President of Northwest Missouri State University (1964–1977)
- Uel W. Lamkin (attended), President of Northwest Missouri State University (1921–1945)
- Robin Luke (Ph.D. Business Administration and Marketing), Professor and Department Head, Marketing Department, Missouri State University; previously a 1950s pop music singer, best known for the 1958 hit "Susie Darlin'"
- John C. McManus (Ph.D.), military historian, author, and professor of military history at the Missouri University of Science and Technology
- Francis Joseph Mullin, president of Shimer College[1]
- Donald E. Pease (BA 1968, MA 1969,) Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Dartmouth College
- Mason Vaugh (B.S. 1919, B.Eng 1921), founder and Head of the Department of Agricultural Engineering in Allahabad Agricultural Institute[2]
- Todd Whitaker (B.S. 1981, M.Ed. 1985, Ph.D. 1992), Professor of Educational Leadership, Indiana State University
Arts, film, and literature
- Stephen Morehouse Avery, Hollywood screenwriter
- Tom Berenger, actor
- Linda Bloodworth-Thomason, writer and television producer
- Neal E. Boyd (BA 2001), musician; winner of 2008 America's Got Talent
- Brent Briscoe MU 1984, actor[3]
- Hal Call, pioneering LGBT rights activist and gay publisher/pornographer
- Kate Capshaw (BS 1975, MEd 1977, ΑΔΠ), actress, Willie Scott in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
- Chris Cooper (BGS 1976), Academy Award-winning actor, Adaptation
- Candice Crawford (BJ 2009, ΠΒΦ), Miss Missouri and Miss USA finalist; reporter for KDAF-TV
- Sheryl Crow (BS Ed 1984, ΚΑΘ, ΟΔΚ, SAI), musician, singer songwriter
- Jeffery Deaver (BJ 1972), author Lincoln Rhyme series
- Hope Driskill (BA 2012, ΧΩ), Survivor: Caramoan, Miss Missouri USA 2011 and Miss USA Top 16 finalist
- Dave Fogel (ΣΧ, Radio Disc Jockey)
- Jon Hamm (BA 1993), actor, Don Draper of AMC's Mad Men
- William Least Heat-Moon (BA 1961, MA 1962, PhD 1973, BJ 1978, ΤΚΕ), author
- Rebecca Johns (BA 1993, BJ 1993), author
- David Koechner, actor, Todd Packer of The Office, Champ Kind of Anchorman
- Robert Loggia (BJ 1951 ΑΣΦ), actor, Jagged Edge, Big, Scarface, The Sopranos
- Harris Merton Lyon, short-story writer
- Richard Matheson (BJ 1949, ΦΜΑ), screenwriter, author of I Am Legend, The Shrinking Man, What Dreams May Come
- Marijane Meaker (BA 1949 ΑΔΠ), novelist
- Greg Miller, IGN cast member, host of Up at Noon[4]
- Pamela Morsi, author
- Suniti Namjoshi, writer
- Brad Pitt (ΣΧ, Journalism School, remains one credit short of graduation), actor[5]
- James Rollins, aka James Czajkowski, author of the bestselling Sigma Force series[6]
- SallyAnn Salsano, producer and creator of reality television shows for MTV including Jersey Shore
- Ed Sanders (dropout 1958), poet, lead singer of the Fugs, social activist, author
- George C. Scott, Academy Award-winning actor, Patton, Dr. Strangelove, The Hustler, Anatomy of a Murder
- Beatriz Sheridan, Mexican telenovela producer/director noted for her work on Televisa
- Mort Walker (BA 1948, ΚΣ), cartoonist; a life-sized bronze statue of his creation Beetle Bailey sits in front of alumni center; restaurant in student center is named Mort's
- George Woodward Warder (BA circa 1866), eccentric lawyer, real estate speculator, poet, philosopher, cosmologist
- John Edward Williams (PHD 1954), recipient of National Book Award, author of Stoner and Augustus
- Tennessee Williams (ΑΤΩ), playwright, The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Athletics
Baseball
- Phil Bradley, former MLB player, also played football
- Skip Caray, former broadcaster for the Atlanta Braves; son of Harry Caray
- Jeff Cornell, former MLB pitcher
- Aaron Crow, MLB pitcher; currently a free agent
- John Dettmer, former MLB pitcher
- David Freese, MLB third baseman for the Los Angeles Angels, 2011 NLCS and World Series MVP and Babe Ruth Award winner for St. Louis Cardinals[7]
- Kyle Gibson, pitcher for the Minnesota Twins
- Ian Kinsler, current All-Star MLB second baseman, Detroit Tigers
- Dave Otto, former MLB pitcher
- Max Scherzer, MLB All-Star pitcher for the Washington Nationals, 2013 AL Cy Young Award winner (Detroit Tigers)
- Jerry Schoonmaker, former MLB outfielder, also played football
- Art Shamsky, former MLB outfielder and Israel Baseball League manager
- Mike Shannon (attended), former MLB infielder and current broadcaster
- Sonny Siebert, former MLB pitcher
- Dave Silvestri, former MLB infielder
- Gene Stephenson, current Wichita State University baseball head coach, also played football
- Nick Tepesch, pitcher for the Texas Rangers
Basketball
- Jabari Brown, current CBA player for Foshan Dralions
- John Brown, former NBA player
- DeMarre Carroll, current NBA player for Toronto Raptors
- Jordan Clarkson, current NBA player for Los Angeles Lakers
- Marcus Denmon, TBL player for the Istanbul BB
- Keyon Dooling, former NBA player for Boston Celtics
- Larry Drew, former NBA player, former head coach for Atlanta Hawks and Milwaukee Bucks
- Al Eberhard, former NBA player
- Kim English, former NBA player
- Thomas Gardner, former NBA player for Atlanta Hawks
- Linas Kleiza, former NBA player who is currently a free agent
- Gary Leonard, former NBA player
- Anthony Peeler, former NBA player
- Phil Pressey, current NBA player for Boston Celtics
- Kareem Rush, former NBA player
- Doug Smith, former NBA player
- Norm Stewart (BA 1956, ΒΘΠ), All-American and former head coach at Northern Iowa (1961–67) and Mizzou (1967–99)
- Steve Stipanovich, former NBA player
- Jon Sundvold, former NBA player
Football
- Bud Abell, former American Football League player for the Kansas City Chiefs[8]
- Danario Alexander, current NFL player for San Diego Chargers[9]
- Russ Ball, Vice President of Football Administration/Player Finance of the Green Bay Packers
- Gary Barnett (1969, ΒΘΠ), former head football coach at Northwestern and Colorado
- Dwayne Blakley, current NFL player for Tennessee Titans[10]
- Justin Britt, current offensive lineman for the Seattle Seahawks
- Colin Brown, current NFL player for Buffalo Bills
- Lloyd Carr (KΣ), former head coach University of Michigan
- Byron Chamberlain, former NFL player[11]
- Paul Christman (KΣ), College Football Hall of Famer, former NFL player and broadcaster
- Chase Coffman, John Mackey Award winner
- DeMontie Cross, current assistant coach with the Wisconsin Badgers
- Chase Daniel, current NFL player for the Philadelphia Eagles
- Robert Delpino, former NFL player
- Kony Ealy, current defensive lineman for the Carolina Panthers
- Brad Edelman, former NFL player
- Atiyyah Ellison, current NFL player for the Kansas City Chiefs
- Don Faurot (1924 Farmhouse), MU coach and player[12]
- Ron Fellows, former NFL player
- Will Franklin, former NFL player
- Blaine Gabbert, current NFL player for San Francisco 49ers
- Andrew Gachkar, current NFL player with San Diego Chargers
- Justin Gage, former NFL player
- E.J. Gaines, current NFL player for Los Angeles Rams
- Tony Galbreath, former NFL player
- Markus Golden, NFL player for Arizona Cardinals
- Mel Gray, former NFL player
- Dorial Green-Beckham, NFL player for Tennessee Titans
- Ziggy Hood, NFL player for Jacksonville Jaguars
- Harry Ice (ΒΘΠ), MVP of 1942 Sugar Bowl, longtime member of athletic department
- Brad Imes, former football player; appeared on The Ultimate Fighter 2, retired professional mixed martial arts fighter[13]
- Jim Jennings, former NFL player
Mario Johnson, former NFL player for the New York Jets
- Mike Jones, former NFL player
- Henry Josey, former NFL player
- Jim Kekeris, former NFL player
- Jim Leavitt, former head coach of the University of South Florida
- Leo Lewis, former NFL player
- Rick Lyle, former NFL player
- Bill McCartney, former head coach of the University of Colorado
- Jeremy Maclin, NFL player for Kansas City Chiefs
- Henry Marshall, former NFL player
- Steve Martin, former NFL player
- John Matuszak, former NFL player
- Ron McBride, former NFL player
- Erik McMillan, former NFL player
- William Moore, NFL player for Atlanta Falcons
- Mitch Morse, NFL player for Kansas City Chiefs
- C. J. Mosley, current NFL player for Cleveland Browns
- Damien Nash, former NFL player
- Brock Olivo, former NFL player
- Gus Otto (ΒΘΠ), former NFL player
- Francis Peay, former NFL player
- Kurt Petersen, former NFL player
- Johnnie Poe, former NFL player
- Shane Ray, NFL player for Denver Broncos
- Howard Richards (Kappa Alpha Psi), former NFL player, Dallas Cowboys
- Johnny Roland (Kappa Alpha Psi), former NFL coach and player
- Martin Rucker, NFL player for Philadelphia Eagles
- Andy Russell, former NFL player
- Jerome Sally, former NFL player
- Michael Sam, former NFL player for St. Louis Rams, first openly gay player in NFL
- George Seals, former NFL player
- Aldon Smith, current NFL player for San Francisco 49ers
- Brad Smith, current NFL player for Philadelphia Eagles
- Justin Smith, current NFL player San Francisco 49ers
- Otis Smith, former NFL player
- Ray Smith, NFL player
- Hugh Sprinkle, NFL player
- Stryker Sulak, current NFL player for Green Bay Packers
- Morris Towns, former NFL player
- Bruce Van Dyke, former NFL player
- L'Damian Washington, current wide receiver for the San Francisco 49ers
- Russ Washington, former NFL player
- Sean Weatherspoon, current NFL player for Atlanta Falcons[14]
- Roger Wehrli, 7-time Pro Bowl NFL player and Pro Hall of Fame
- Bill Whitaker, former NFL player
- James Wilder, former NFL player
- Kellen Winslow, college and Pro Hall of Fame player
- Eric Wright, former NFL player
Other
- Ben Askren, two-time NCAA Wrestling Champion (2006,2007); 2008 US Olympics team member; professional MMA fighter; former Bellator Welterweight Champion[15]
- Dick Ault, Olympic hurdler
- Evan Bourne, current professional wrestler
- Christian Cantwell, current world-class shot putter, 2004 IAAF World Indoor Champion, 2008 Olympic silver medalist, 2009 IAAF World Outdoor Champion
- Michael Chandler, 2009 NCAA Wrestling All-American (5th place 157 lbs.), current Bellator Lightweight Champion[16]
- J'den Cox, 2x NCAA champion wrestler, 2016 Olympic bronze medalist in the 86kg weight class for freestyle wrestling
- Carl Edwards, NASCAR drive and 2007 Busch Series Champion (attended but did not graduate)[17]\
- Sammie Henson, two-time NCAA Wrestling Champion; 1998 World Freestyle Wrestling Champion; 2000 Olympic silver medalist; 2006 world bronze medalist at age 36
- Derrick Peterson (AKΛ), current professional runner, 2004 Olympian
- J.P. Reese, two-time NCAA Wrestling Championships qualifier (2002 and 2003); current professional MMA fighter[18]
- Gene Snitsky, current professional wrestler
- Mike Whitehead (attended), three-time All-American wrestler; current professional MMA fighter[19]
- Tyron Woodley, 2-time NCAA Division I All-American wrestler; current mixed martial artist in the Welterweight division and champion for the Ultimate Fighting Championship[20]
Business
- Tom Carnahan (JD 1995), founder of Wind Capital Group developer of wind farms
- Andrew Cherng (MS 1972), founder of Panda Express and chairman of Panda Restaurant Group
- James H. Faulkner, Alabama politician, newspaper publisher, and business leader
- Alan C. Greenberg[21] (BS BA 1949, ZBT), Chairman, Bear Stearns Companies
- Edward D. "Ted" Jones (1947), managing partner of Edward Jones Investments
- R. Crosby Kemper (AB 1914, ΒΘΠ), former President and Chairman, United Missouri Bancshares
- R. Crosby Kemper, Jr. (AB 1949, ΒΘΠ), former President and Chairman, United Missouri Bancshares
- Oliver Winfield Killam (Law 1898), South Texas oil industrialist; former Oklahoma state legislator
- Richard Kinder (BA 1966, JD 1968, ΣN, QEBH), Chairman and CEO of Kinder Morgan; former President of Enron; net worth of $10.2 billion; #39 on 2013 Forbes 400 list of richest Americans[22]
- E. Stanley Kroenke (BS BA 1971, MBA 1973), Chairman of THF Realty; owner of NBA's Denver Nuggets and NHL's Colorado Avalanche; co-owner of NFL's St. Louis Rams; majority shareholder Arsenal FC; net worth of $3.5 billion, tied for #105 on 2008 Forbes 400 list of richest Americans
- Kenneth Lay (BA 1964, MA 1965, ΒΘΠ, ΟΔΚ, ΦΒΚ), former CEO of Enron
- Harry J. Lloyd (BJ 1950, TKE), founder of House of Lloyd and the upscale Loch Lloyd village and country club near Kansas City
- David C. Novak (BJ 1974, ΔΥ), Chairman, CEO, and President, Yum! Brands, Inc.
- Rodger O. Riney[23] (BS CiE 1968, MBA 1969, XE), founder of Scottrade, deep-discount brokerage firm
- Matthew K. Rose (BS BA 1981, ΛΧΑ), Chairman, CEO, and President, Burlington Northern Santa Fe
- Roger Straus (1917–2004), co-founder and chairman of Farrar, Straus and Giroux
- Samuel M. Walton (BA 1940, ΒΘΠ, QEBH), founder of Walmart
Journalism
- John Anderson (BJ 1987), ESPN SportsCenter host
- Douglas F. Attaway (1910–1994), publisher of since defunct Shreveport Journal and former owner of KSLA-TV, the CBS affiliate in Shreveport, Louisiana
- Gerald M. Boyd, former Managing Editor of the New York Times, first African-American metropolitan editor and managing editor of the New York Times
- Barney Calame (ΒΘΠ), Public Editor, New York Times
- Jann Carl (BJ 1982, KKΓ), weekend anchor, correspondent, Entertainment Tonight
- Papa Joe Chevalier, host of the nationally syndicated Papa Joe Show on the Sporting News Radio Network until 2005[24]
- Sophia Choi, CNN Headline News anchor
- Clifton C. Edom (BJ 1946), Mizzou photojournalism educator and co-founder of Pictures of the Year, Missouri Photo Workshop, and Kappa Alpha Mu
- Clarence Faulk (BJ c. 1931), publisher of Ruston Daily Leader, founder of radio station KRUS, and diversified businessman in Ruston, Louisiana
- Pat Forde, Yahoo Sports columnist
- Martin Frost (BJ 1964, ZBT), political commentator, Fox News Channel
- Major Garrett (BJ 1984), national correspondent, Fox News Channel
- Mike Hall, first winner of the ESPN "Dream Job" series
- Sarah Hollins, (BA 2013), Miss Nebraska USA 2016, TV Personality
- Robert Horner (BJ 1970), president of NBC News Channel
- Juliet Huddy, Fox News Channel host
- Walter E. Hussman, Sr. (1906–1988), owner of newspaper chain in south Arkansas, including Arkansas Democrat-Gazette in Little Rock, cable systems, and radio stations
- Jeffrey Crawford Jones, radio host
- James J. Kilpatrick (BJ 1941), conservative columnist[25][26]
- Michael Kim, ESPNEWS host
- Ah Jook Ku (1935), former Associated Press correspondent, first Asian American female reporter for the Honolulu Star-Bulletin[27]
- Jim Lehrer[28] (ΣΔΧ award), PBS news anchor
- David Limbaugh (BA 1975, JD 1978), political commentator and author
- Andrea Mackris, Fox News television producer
- Joel Meyers, ports play-by-play voice
- Thomas Franklin Fairfax Millard (ΒΘΠ), journalist
- Russ Mitchell (BJ 1982), weekend anchor, CBS Evening News
- Jonathan Murray (BJ 1977), executive producer and co-creator of MTV's The Real World
- Lisa Myers (BJ 1973), former senior investigative correspondent, NBC News
- Ken Paulson, editor, USA Today
- Chuck Roberts (BJ 1971), CNN news anchor
- Ben Robertson (1926), WW II war correspondent,New York Herald Tribune; author
- Charles Griffith Ross, press secretary for President Harry S. Truman
- Jon Scott, Fox News Channel anchor
- Brad Sham (BJ 1970, AEΠ), Dallas Cowboys Radio Network host
- Edgar Snow (ΒΘΠ), main Western journalist in Mao's China
- Lee Strobel (BJ 1974), journalist and author of The Case for Christ series
- Bob Sullivan - New York Times Bestseller and founding member of MSNBC
- Wright Thompson, ESPN senior writer
- Elizabeth Vargas (BJ 1984), former ABC News anchor/correspondent and 20/20 co-anchor
- Matt Winer (BJ 1991, ΠKA), ESPN SportsCenter host
Government and law
- Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash (PHD 1983), also known as Chemical Sally; Iraqi scientist and microbiologist; former member of Iraq's Revolutionary Command Council
- Emily Newell Blair, writer, suffragist, national Democratic Party political leader, co-founder of the League of Women Voters, feminist
- Russ Carnahan (BS 1979, JD 1983, KA), U.S. Congressman[29]
- Paul Coverdell (ΦΚΨ), former U.S. Senator (GA); died 2000
- William S. Cowherd (1881, ΒΘΠ), former Democratic mayor of Kansas City, Missouri in 1892–1893 and U.S. Congressman from Missouri in 1897–1905
- William B. Cravens (1893, ΒΘΠ), former U.S. Representative from Missouri
- Thomas T. Crittenden, Jr. (1882, ΒΘΠ), former mayor of Kansas City, Missouri from 1908–1909
- Elgin English Crull (1930, Kappa Sigma), longest serving city manager of Dallas, Texas to date (1952–1966); city manager when Kennedy was assassinated
- Randy "Duke" Cunningham, former U.S. Congressman from California who resigned in 2005 amid a massive bribery scandal
- Gen. Donald Dawson (1932, ΒΘΠ), former aide to President Truman, Curator of the Truman Presidential Library
- Hon. Harsha de Silva (MA and PhD, 1993), Sri Lankan Member of Parliament
- Martin Frost[30] (BJ 1964, ZBT), former U.S. Congressman
- Nicole Galloway (Master's degree in business administration), State Auditor of Missouri
- Hon. John R. Gibson (BA 1949, JD 1952, TKE, QEBH, ΟΔΚ, ΦΒΚ), Senior Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
- Jack Goodman (BA 1995, JD 1998), State Senator, practicing attorney in Mount Vernon, MO
- Sam Graves (BS 1986, AΓΣ), U.S. Congressman[31]
- Bob F. Griffin (JD 1958), Speaker of Missouri House of Representatives for 15 years[32]
- Jason Grill, Missouri House of Representatives (2006–2010)
- Chuck Gross (BA 1981, MPA 1982), Missouri State Senator
- Kate Hanley, née Keith (BA 1965, BS 1965, ΦΒΚ), Virginia politician
- Martin Heinrich (BS 1995), former U.S. Congressman and current U.S. Senator from New Mexico
- Jay Houghton, Republican member of the Missouri House of Representatives
- Kenny Hulshof (BA 1980, Farmhouse), former U.S. Congressman
- Fred W. Jones, Jr. (BA), city, district, and state circuit judge from Ruston, Louisiana[33]
- James P. Kem (1910, ΒΘΠ), United States Senate from Missouri, 1947 to 1953
- Jason Klumb (JD 1993), Regional Administrator of the U.S. General Services Administration
- Lloyd E. Lenard (MS, advertising and merchandising), Caddo Parish (Louisiana) commissioner; businessman; author
- Rush Limbaugh, Sr. (1914), attorney, civic leader, Republican member of the Missouri House of Representatives, and patriarch of the Limbaugh family
- Stephen N. Limbaugh, Sr. (1951 ΒΘΠ), U.S. Federal District Court Judge; former president of the Missouri Bar Association
- Jon Lindgren, Mayor of Fargo, North Dakota, 1978–1994; pioneering LGBT supporter
- Jerry Lon Litton, (B.S. Journalism 1961, AΓP) National Secretary of the Future Farmers of America, U.S. Representative from Missouri's 6th Congressional District (1972-1976), killed in a plane crash after winning the 1976 Democratic Nomination for U.S. Senator from Missouri, favored to be the Democratic nominee for President, Host of the T.V. show Dialogue with Litton
- Claire McCaskill (AB 1975, JD 1978, ΚΑΘ, QEBH), former Missouri State Auditor and current senior U.S. Senator from Missouri
- Walter McCormick (BJ 1976; JD 1979; ATΩ, OΔK, Mystical 7), President and CEO of United States Telecom Association; former general counsel of U.S. Department of Transportation; U.S. Senate Commerce Committee
- James B. Potter, Jr., Los Angeles City Council member, 1963–71
- Clarke Reed, Mississippi state Republican chairman, 1966 to 1976; instrumental in the nomination of Gerald R. Ford, Jr., at the 1976 Republican National Convention in Kansas City; Greenville, Mississippi businessman[34][35]
- Jody Richards, Democratic member of the Kentucky House of Representatives and former speaker of the Kentucky House of Representatives
- Thomas L. Rubey (1885, ΒΘΠ), former U.S. Representative from Missouri
- Sally Shelton-Colby, Ambassador to Grenada and Barbados 1979-1981
- Tom Shively, Democratic member of the Missouri House of Representatives
- Ike Skelton (AB 1953, JD 1956, ΣΧ, ΦΒΚ, QEBH), former U.S. Congressman; former Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee
- Kimbrough Stone (1895, ΒΘΠ), judge of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
- Carl M. Vogel, member of both houses of the Missouri State Legislature; from Jefferson City
Governors
- James T. Blair, Jr., former Missouri Governor
- Mel Carnahan, former Missouri Governor, only person elected U.S. Senator posthumously
- John M. Dalton (ΦΓΔ), former Missouri Governor[36]
- Forrest C. Donnell (KΣ, ΦΔΦ, ΦΒK, ΘKΝ, QEBH), former Missouri Governor
- Eric Greitens Governor Elect of Missouri
- Warren E. Hearnes (QEBH), former Missouri Governor, namesake of the Hearnes Center
- William Jayne, first Governor of Dakota Territory
- Tim Kaine (QEBH), former Governor of Virginia
- Ted Kulongoski (undergraduate and law degrees), Governor of Oregon[37]
- Jay Nixon, current Governor of Missouri
- Guy B. Park (ΒΘΠ), former Missouri Governor
- Roger B. Wilson, former Missouri Governor
Military
- Gen. Fred F. Castle Jr. (1970 and 1977), United States Military Vietnam War and Gulf War
- Major General Roger E. Combs (1968 and 1975), Assistant Adjutant General-Air Missouri National Guard, Director of Strategic Plans and Policy (J-5), National Guard Bureau
- Gen. Enoch Crowder (1886, ΒΘΠ), United States Military Spanish–American War, Philippine–American War, World War I general
- Lt General Mark A. Ediger (1978), Surgeon General of the United States Air Force
- Colonel Arthur D. Simons (1941), United States Military, with distinguished service in World War II, Korean War, and Vietnam War; ranger patriarch; leader of the Son Tay Raid
- Rear Admiral Kelly E. Taggart (1955), second Director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Commissioned Officer Corps
- Lieutenant Stephen W. Thompson, first person in US military history to shoot down an enemy aircraft
- Colonel F. D. Wickham (1893, ΒΘΠ), United States Army Spanish–American War, Philippine–American War, World War I; helped found Kappa Kappa Psi band fraternity at Oklahoma A&M College
Science and technology
- Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash (PhD 1983), WMD Scientist for Saddam Hussein, one of the 55 most wanted Iraqis post-Coalition invasion
- William F. Baker (BS CiE '75), chief structural engineer of the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest man-made structure[38]
- Gerald J. Fishman (BS 1965, AEΠ), research astrophysicist specializing in gamma-ray astronomy
- Linda Godwin (MS 1976, PhD 1980), NASA astronaut
- Ernest Lenard Hall (BS EE 1965, MS 1966, PhD 1971), roboticist
- William T. Kane (PhD., 1966), physicist in the field of fiber optics
- William Langston Founder and Chief Executive Officer of the Parkinson's Institute and Clinical Center in Sunnyvale, California
- Richard N. Richards (BS ChE 1969, ΛΧΑ), NASA astronaut
- Herschel Roman (PhD 1942), early pioneer in yeast genetics[39]
- William C. Schwartz (MA 1951), physicist, laser pioneer, and founder of International Laser Systems
- Thomas Jefferson Jackson See (BS 1889, Valedictorian), controversial astronomer; critic; opponent of Einstein
- Harlow Shapley (AB in 1910, AM in 1911), astronomer; used RR Lyrae stars to correctly estimate the size of the Milky Way Galaxy and the sun's position within it
- Larry Smarr (BA 1970, MS 1970), physicist; founding director of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications
- William Jasper Spillman (B.S. 1886, M.S. 1890), wheat geneticist, founder, agricultural economics[40]
- Debbye Turner (DVM 1991), veterinarian and former Miss America
Social sciences
- Thomas Swain Barclay (BA 2015, ΒΘΠ), professor of political science at Stanford University
- Ritch Savin-Williams (BA 1971), professor of developmental psychology at Cornell University; prolific sexual orientation researcher
- Karen Marie Shelton (BA 1973 ΑΞΔ – Alpha Xi Delta), internet (HairBoutique.com) and telephony (T&S Software) entrepreneur[41]
Other
- Thomas Doty, suicide bomber
References
- ↑ Presidents and Deans of American Colleges and Universities. 1952. p. 223.
- ↑ http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/invent/3130.pdf
- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0109785/bio
- ↑ http://mizzoumagarchives.missouri.edu/2012-Winter/profiles/greg-miller/index.php
- ↑ http://www.mizzou.com/s/1002/index.aspx?sid=1002&gid=1&pgid=325
- ↑ "James Rollins". Amazon.
- ↑ http://www.nj.com/mets/index.ssf/2011/10/st_louis_cardinals_-_texas_ran.html
- ↑ "Bud Abell". databaseFootball.com. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
- ↑ "Danario Alexander". The Football Database. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
- ↑ "Dwayne Blakley". databaseFootbal.com. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
- ↑ "Byron Chamberlain". databaseFootball.com. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
- ↑ The Savitar. University of Missouri Archives. 1922. p. 411.
- ↑ "Brad Imes MMA Bio". Retrieved 2014-01-01.
- ↑ "Sean Weatherspoon". Pro-Football-Reference.Com. Retrieved October 3, 2012.
- ↑ "Ben Askren MMA Bio". Retrieved 2014-01-01.
- ↑ "Michael Chandler MMA Bio". Retrieved 2014-01-01.
- ↑ http://www.columbiatribune.com/sports/carl_edwards/carl-edwards-the-hometown-hero-who-never-left/article_ee4a6be6-99d5-5a97-bf6b-ccdf8222b9a2.html
- ↑ "JP Reese MMA Bio". Retrieved 2014-01-01.
- ↑ "Mike Whitehead UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014-01-01.
- ↑ "Tyron Woodley UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014-01-01.
- ↑ The Savitar. University of Missouri Archives. 1948. p. 267.
- ↑ Richard Kinder Forbes 400
- ↑ The Savitar. University of Missouri Archives. 1968. p. 497.
- ↑ Savitar. University of Missouri. 1968. p. 347.
- ↑ Richard Goldstein, "James. J. Kilpatrick, Conservative Voice in Print and on TV, Dies at 89", New York Times, August 16, 2010.
- ↑ Missouri Honor Medals by Year (accessed August 17, 2010).
- ↑ Adamski, Mary (August 21, 2007). "Star-Bulletin reporter pushed for free press". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved September 4, 2007.
- ↑ The Savitar. University of Missouri Archives. 1956. p. 232.
- ↑ The Savitar. University of Missouri Archives. 1978. p. 342.
- ↑ The Savitar. University of Missouri Archives. 1962. p. 312.
- ↑ The Savitar. University of Missouri Archives. 1983. p. 342.
- ↑ Griffin's legacy tarnished by charges Ex-speaker's bribery and racketeering trial is set to begin Monday – The Kansas City Star – May 11, 1997
- ↑ "Judge Profile: Fred W. Jones, Jr.". martindale.com. Retrieved June 20, 2015.
- ↑ "Sid Salter, GOP pioneer Clarke Reed faces post-crash surgeries, June 25, 2010". DeSoto Times Tribune. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
- ↑ "Tom Bassing, "Reed-Joseph's clients worldwide rely on its ability to make noise — lots of it: Greenville company's clients worldwide rely on its ability to make noise — lots of it," August 12, 2013". Greenville Delta Democrat Times. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
- ↑ The Savitar. University of Missouri Archives. 1921. p. 128.
- ↑ "About Governor Kulongoski". State of Oregon. September 5, 2008. Retrieved November 7, 2008.
- ↑ http://www.som.com/content.cfm/william_f_baker
- ↑ Gartler, Stanley; David Stadler (September 1990). "Herschel L. Roman" (PDF). Genetics. Bethesda, Maryland: Genetics Society of America. 126 (1): 1–3. ISSN 0016-6731. Retrieved November 7, 2008.
- ↑ William J. Spillman and the birth of agricultural economics
- ↑ Karen Marie Shelton (October 25, 2006). "Sorority Hair: Memories Of Alpha Xi Delta". HairBoutique News Site. HairBoutique.com. Retrieved March 19, 2008.
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