List of Oregon State University alumni

Oregon State University is located in Corvallis, Oregon in the United States. It traces its roots to 1856, when Corvallis Academy was founded. It was not formally incorporated until 1858 when the name was changed to Corvallis College, and not chartered until 1868. In 1890 the school became known as Oregon Agricultural College, then in 1927 as Oregon State Agricultural College. Its current name was adopted in 1961. Alumni from each of these eras may be included on the list, and more than 200,000 people have attended the university since its founding.[1]

Corvallis College's first graduating class was in 1870, and consisted of three people.

Activism

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Bobby Henderson1999–2003Activist and creator Pastafarianism[2]
Bruce W. Klunder?–1958Civil rights activist and Presbyterian minister[3]
Ada-Rhodes ShortTransgender rights activist and mechatronic design engineer
Katherine Ann Power?—2001Anti-war activist, convicted of armed robbery and manslaughter who spent fourteen years on the FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list[4]

Art and architecture

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
John Clem Clarkepainter[5]
Tala Madani1999–2004Artist, painter featured in the 2017 Whitney Biennial[6]
Lee Arden ThomasArchitect who designed the OSU Memorial Union.
Roger A. Wreth?–1980Photographer 1980 Pulitzer Prize in Photography finalist[1][7]

Business

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Thomas J. Autzen1905–1909Plywood manufacturing pioneer
Mercedes Alison Bates?–1936Former vice president of General Mills' Betty Crocker Cooking division; first female officer of General Mills[1]
Austen S. Cargill II?Heir and major shareholder of Cargill, received a PhD from Oregon State University[1]
Peggy Cherng1969–1971CEO of Panda Express[8]
Randy Conrads?–1972Founder of Classmates.com[9]
Jen-Hsun Huang1980–1984Co-founder and CEO of NVIDIA[10][11]
Timothy S. Leatherman?–1970Inventor of the Leatherman tool[12]
Brian McMenamin?–1980Co-founder of the McMenamins chain[13]
Mike McMenamin?–1974Co-founder of the McMenamins chain[13]
Bernie Newcomb?–1965Co-founder of E*TRADE[1]
Hüsnü ÖzyeğinTurkish billionaire businessman, philanthropist
Don RobertCEO of Experian[14]
Leonard ShoenFounder of U-Haul[15]
John A. Young?–1953Former president and CEO of Hewlett-Packard[1]
Peter Gassner1983–1989Co-founder and CEO of Veeva Systems[16]

Education

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Holly Barnard?–2009Professor of Geography at University of Colorado Boulder and founder of the Critical Zone Laboratory[17]
Sara HarrisClimate scientist and 3M National Teaching Fellow at the University of British Columbia
Wayne L. Hubbell?–1965Jules Stein Professor of Ophthalmology at UCLA[18]
Octave Levenspiel?–1991Emeritus Professor of chemical engineering at Oregon State University[19]
Staci SimonichDean of the College of Agricultural Sciences at Oregon State University
Ann StreissguthEndowed Professor Emeritus and Founding Director of the Fetal Alcohol Drug Unit at the University of Washington School of Medicine
Carrie Halsell Ward1922–1926College lecturer and first black student to graduate from OSU.[20]
Michael Watermanearly 70sComputational biologist; professor of biological science, mathematics, and computer science at the University of Southern California[21]

Entertainment

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Trevor Bardetteactor
John BrothertonSoap opera actor[1]
George Bruns?–1936Composer[1]
Meghna Chakrabarti1994-1998Journalist, radio producer, and host of the NPR program On Point
Pinto Colvig?–1911Voice actor; the original Bozo the Clown[1]
Kevin HagenActor
Harley Jessup?–19761987 Best Visual Effects Oscar winner for the film Innerspace[1]
Cathy MarshallNews anchor
Beau Mirchoff?-2024Actor[22]
Roger NicholsRecording Engineer for Steely Dan
Jodi Ann Paterson?–19982000 Playboy Playmate of the Year and model[23]
Meredith PhillipsStar of ABC reality television show The Bachelorette
Mike RichScreenwriter
Laurie RothSyndicated radio talk-show host
Travis RushCountry music singer
Kendra Sunderland?Model and pornographic actress who was also expelled from the university because of public indecency.[24]
Sara Jean Underwood2002–2007July 2006 Playboy Playmate of the Month, 2007 Playmate of the Year, actress, and model[25]

Literature and journalism

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Chris Anderson1968–1972Two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize[1]
Pamela CytrynbaumJournalist and restorative justice practitioner
Geffrey DavisPoet
Webley Edwards?–1927World War II news correspondent[1]
Christopher HowellPoet
Chris Johns1971-1974Current Editor-In-Chief of National Geographic magazine
George OppenPoet and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
Mary OppenPoet
Bert Sperling1968-1972Author and researcher
Marion Eugene Carl
Anthony E. Van Dyke

Military

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Edward C. Allworth?–1916Recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor[1]
Rex T. Barber?–1940World War II pilot credited with killing Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto[1]
Marion Eugene Carl?–1938World War II flying ace; record-setting test pilot; United States Marine Corps (USMC) Major General[1]
Elmer E. HallWorld War II Brigadier General, USMC
John Noble Holcomb1967Recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor[1]
Ulysses G. McAlexanderCommander of Army ROTC. Earned the nickname "Rock of the Marne" during World War I.
Anthony E. Van Dyke?–1978USMC Colonel and current commander of Marine forces at Henderson Hall[26]

Politics

Cecil D. Andrus
John Ensign
Douglas McKay
NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Cecil D. Andrus1952Governor of Idaho (1971–1977, 1987–1995) and U.S. Secretary of the Interior (1977–1981)[1]
Earl I. Anzai?–1964Attorney General of Hawaii (1999–2002)[27]
Brad Avakian?–1984Commissioner of the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (2008–2019 )[28]
Rod Chandler?–1968U.S. Representative of Washington (1983–1993)[29]
Charles Crookham1941–1943Attorney General of Oregon (1992–1993)[30]
John Ensign?–1981U.S. Representative of Nevada (1995–1999); Nevada U.S. Senator (2001—2011)[31]
John Hubert Hall?–1923Governor of Oregon (1947–1949); member of the Oregon House of Representatives (1936–1947)[1]
Julia Butler Hansen1924–1926U.S. Representative of Washington (1960–1974)[32]
Darlene Hooley?–1961U.S. Representative of Oregon (1997—2009)[33]
Hector Macpherson, Jr.1936-1940Oregon State Senator (1971-1974)[34]
Douglas McKay?–1917Governor of Oregon (1949–1952) and U.S. Secretary of the Interior (1953–1956)[1]
Paul Peek?–?California Secretary of State (1940–1943); Speaker of the California State Assembly (1939)[35]
Pou Sohtireak?–1980sCambodian Minister for Industry, Mines and Energy[36]
Norris Poulson1923U.S. Representative of California (1943–1945, 1947–1955); mayor of Los Angeles, California (1953–1961)[37]
Frederick Steiwer?–1902Oregon U.S. Senator (1927–1937)[38]
Lowell Stockman?–1922U.S. Representative of Oregon (1943–1953)[39]
Jolene Unsoeld1949–1951U.S. Representative of Washington (1989–1995)[40]
Robert M. Veatch1868-1871Oregon Representative (1883-1886), Senator (1887-1892), and mayor of Cottage Grove, Oregon[41]
James K. Weatherford1868-1872Oregon Representative, Speaker of the House (1876), Senator, and mayor of Albany, Oregon[42]
Mary Carlin Yates?–1968U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Burundi and U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Ghana[1]
Irwandi Yusuf1993Governor of Indonesian province of Aceh[43]

Religion

Bobby Henderson?–2003Activist and creator Pastafarianism[2]
Katharine Jefferts Schori?–1983Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church and oceanographer[44]
Linus Pauling
William Oefelein
Donald Pettit

Science and engineering

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Charity DeanEpidemiologist, assistant director of the California Department of Public Health, and co-founder and CEO of The Public Health Company.
Paul H. Emmett1917–1922Manhattan Project research staff member and member of the United States National Academy of Sciences[45]
Milton Harris1924–1926Founded the Harris Research Laboratories, which later merged with Gillette.[46]
Donald M. Kerr?–1969Wildlife biologist and founder of the High Desert Museum[47]
Ann Kiessling?-1971Reproductive biologist and leading stem cell researcher
Linus Pauling1917–19221954 Nobel Prize in Chemistry and 1962 Nobel Peace Prize recipient[1]
Glenn Odekirk1923–1927Hughes Aircraft Aerospace Engineer, helped design the H-4 Hercules[48]
William Oefelein?–1988NASA astronaut[49]
Donald Pettit?–1978NASA astronaut[50]
Stephen O. RicePioneer in the related fields of information theory, communications theory, and telecommunications
J. Michael Scott?–1973Ornithologist (research scientist), Peace Corps volunteer[51]
Ernest H. TavesPsychiatrist, author, and UFO skeptic
William Tebeau1948Chemical engineer and first African-American male graduate
Earl A. ThompsonInventor of the manual transmission synchronizer in 1923 and leader of the team at General Motors Corporation that developed the first Hydramatic automatic transmission in 1940
Marta TorresMarine geologist known for her work on the geochemistry of cold seeps and methane hydrates
Warren Washington1954? - 1958Atmospheric scientist
Omran Al Mazrouei2010 - 2016Senior Climate Change Negotiator, the twenty eighth session of the conference of parties (COP28, Dubai). Awarded UAE president Zayed II first order medal.

Sports

Technology

NameAttendedNotabilityReference
Philip Emeagwali1974–19771989 Gordon Bell Prize winner[52]
Douglas Engelbart?–1948Inventor of the computer mouse and winner of the National Medal of Technology[1]
Bobby Henderson1999–2003Activist and created Pastafarianism[2]
Jensen Huang1980–1984Founder of Nvidia

See also

References