List of College of Wooster people
This page lists notable alumni and former students, faculty, and administrators of the College of Wooster.
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.
Alumni
Academia
- Karl Taylor Compton, Philosophy (1908), President of MIT 1930-1948; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Wayne A. Cornelius, Political Science (1967), founder of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at the University of California, San Diego
- Frederick Hinitt, Doctor of Divinity (1902), Presbyterian pastor; President of Centre College and Washington & Jefferson College
- Isaac C. Ketler, Presbyterian scholar, founder of Grove City College
- Shannon Boyd-Bailey McCune (1935), geographer and university administrator; President of the University of Florida and the University of Vermont
- Kimberly Bracken Long, B. Mus. (1981), Presbyterian pastor; writer; Associate Professor of Worship at Columbia Theological Seminary
- Merton M. Sealts, Jr., English (1937), Emerson and Melville scholar
- Ronald Takaki, History (1961), historian, ethnographer, professor of ethnic studies at the University of California, Berkeley
- J. Campbell White, President of Wooster, 1915-1919
- Wendell L. Wylie, American Orthodontist
- Nancy Zahniser, pharmacologist
Business
- George Fitch, Economics (1970), politician and business consultant; co-founder of the Jamaican Bobsled Team, which debuted at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta
- Stanley Gault, Geology (1948), former CEO of Rubbermaid and Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company
- Charles F. Kettering, inventor of electric automobile starter motor; Vice President of General Motors Research Corporation; namesake of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; attended but did not graduate
- Blake Moore, History (1980), NFL lineman for the Cincinnati Bengals and Green Bay Packers; CEO of Allianz Global Investors
- Bill Townsend, Art (1986), Internet entrepreneur, politician, founder and chairman of the Amati Foundation[1]
- Dan Griffis, History (1994), Sports and Entertainment Marketing Executive, Entrepreneur, Former EVP of Chip Ganassi Racing Teams, Inc and winner of 8 IndyCar Championships, 4 Indianapolis 500's, 1 Daytona 500 and 5 Daytona 24 Hour Rolex races, Former Vice President of Marketing at Target Corporation, Founder and President of Narrative Partners
Government
- Ted Celeste, member of the Ohio House of Representatives
- John Dean, Political Science (1961), White House Counsel (1970–1973) to President Richard Nixon
- Eugene DePasquale, Political Science (1993), member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
- David Dudley Dowd Jr. (1951), United States federal judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio
- Charlie Earl, former Ohio state representative; candidate in the 2014 Ohio gubernatorial election
- Mark F. Giuliano, Deputy Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation[2]
- Donald Kohn, Economics (1964), Vice Chairman of the Board of Governors of the United States Federal Reserve
- Ping-Wen Kuo (1911), Chinese educator and statesman
- John McSweeney (1912), member of the United States House of Representatives
- John T. Morrison (1887), sixth Governor of Idaho, 1903-1905[3]
- Norman Morrison, Religion (1956), pacifist, Vietnam War protester
- Solomon Oliver Jr., Philosophy and Political Science (1969), U.S. District Court Chief Judge for the Northern District of Ohio
Journalism
- Vince Cellini, Speech (1981), host of The Golf Channel; former anchor for CNN Sports
- Alfred William Edel, History (1957), news anchor for ABC Radio News and Voice of America
- Daniel Howes, History (1983), business columnist for The Detroit News
- Mark Stephens, also known as Robert X. Cringely, History (1975), technology journalist for Public Broadcasting Service
Literature
- Debra Allbery, English (1979), poet (Walking Distance), winner of the 1990 Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry Prize
- Frederic Lauriston Bullard (1891), Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for the Boston Herald; Lincoln historian; writer (Famous War Correspondents)
- Mary Crow, English (1955), Poet Laureate of Colorado[4]
- Stephen R. Donaldson, English (1968), New York Times bestselling science fiction author (Thomas Covenant)
- John Lawrence Goheen (1906), missionary, agriculturist, writer (Glimpses of Ichalkaranji)
- David Means, English (1984), short story writer (Assorted Fire Events), winner of 2000 Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction
Performing arts
- James B. Allardice, Emmy Award winning television writer
- Caitlin Cary, English (1990), alt-country musician, member of the band Whiskeytown
- J.C. Chandor, Cultural Film Studies (1996), film director, Margin Call (2011)
- Divya Gopikumar, Psychology (2008), South Indian actress
- Duncan Jones (aka Zowie Bowie or Joey Bowie), Philosophy (1995), British film director of Moon and Source Code; son of rock musician David Bowie
Science
- Arthur Holly Compton, Physics (1913), Nobel Prize-winning physicist; member of the National Academy of Sciences; Chancellor of Washington University 1945-1953
- Helen Murray Free, Chemistry (1945), elected President of the American Chemical Society in 1993; inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2000
- Elizebeth Friedman, America's first female cryptologist; attended briefly but transferred elsewhere
- George E. Goodfellow (1876), physician, authority on gunshot wounds, first surgeon to perform a perineal prostatectomy
- Tim McCreight, Art (1973), artist and metalsmith; President of the Society of North American Goldsmiths (1993–1994)
- James V. Neel, Biology (1935), Distinguished Professor of Human Genetics University of Michigan; Albert Lasker Award winner, National Medal of Science winner, National Academy of Sciences member; "father of modern human genetics"
- James C. Stevens, Chemistry (1975), Distinguished Fellow at Dow Chemical; inventor of constrained geometry catalyst for polyolefin manufacture; member of the National Academy of Engineering
- George W. Thorn, Biology (1927), Chief of Medicine, Bringham & Woman's Hospital Harvard University; NAS Public Welfare Medal winner; Chairman Emeritus Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- John Travis, Chemistry (1965), preventive medicine physician, founder of first wellness center in US
Sports
- Reggie Minton, Physical Education (1963), deputy executive director of the National Association of Basketball Coaches; head basketball coach United States Air Force Academy (1985–2000)
- Larry Shyatt, Physical Education (1973), basketball coach; head coach of Clemson University and the University of Wyoming; current assistant coach of the Dallas Mavericks
Faculty
- Daniel Bourne, poet, professor of English
- Jack Gallagher, composer, Olive Williams Kettering Professor of Music
- William Gass, novelist (The Tunnel), professor of philosophy and English
- Jack Lengyel, head football coach and lacrosse coach 1966–1970; head football coach at Marshall University 1971–1974
- Hayden Schilling, professor of history
- Orange Nash Stoddard, professor of natural history
References
- ↑ "Amati Foundation & Extreme Makeover: Home Edition". Amatifoundation.org. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
- ↑ "Mark F. Giuliano Named Deputy Director of the FBI". FBI. 5 Nov 2013. Retrieved 6 Nov 2013.
- ↑ "Idaho Governor John T. Morrison". National Governors Association. Retrieved September 19, 2012.
- ↑ "Mary Crow, Colorado Poet Laureate". Colostate.edu.
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