List of Kansas State University people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable people associated with Kansas State University, whose main campus is located in the American city of Manhattan, Kansas.

University presidents[]

George T. Fairchild

The following men have served as President of Kansas State University:[1]

  • Joseph Denison, 1863–1873
  • John Anderson, 1873–1879
  • George Fairchild, 1879–1897
  • Thomas Elmer Will, 1897–1899
  • Ernest Reuben Nichols, 1899–1909
  • Henry J. Waters, 1909–1917
  • William Jardine, 1918–1925
  • Francis D. Farrell, 1925–1943
  • Milton Eisenhower, 1943–1950+
  • James A. McCain, 1950–1975
  • Duane C. Acker, 1975–1986
  • Jon Wefald, 1986–2009
  • Kirk Schulz, 2009–2016
  • Richard Myers, 2016–present+

+Kansas State alumnus

Alumni[]

Academia[]

Ernest Fox Nichols
  • Anna Estelle Arnold (1879–1942) – school teacher, administrator, textbook publisher
  • Erle Bartley – professor (1949–83); developed widely used preventative for ruminal tympany (ruminant bloat)[2]
  • May Louise Cowles – researcher and nationwide advocate of home economics study[3]
  • Kenneth S. Davis – historian, professor, nominated for National Book Award[4]
  • Milton S. Eisenhower – former president of Kansas State, Penn State, and Johns Hopkins universities; brother of Dwight D. Eisenhower[5]
  • Charlotte P. Morris (PhD) – interim president of Tuskegee University (2010; 2017–2018)[6]
  • Ernest Fox Nicholsphysicist, president of Dartmouth College (1909–16) and MIT (1921–23)[7]
  • Michael O'Donnell – professor, researcher on adolescent wellness
  • George P. "Bud" Peterson – President of the Georgia Institute of Technology (2009–present); chancellor of the University of Colorado-Boulder (2006–09)[8]
  • Imam Prasodjo – professor at the University of Indonesia[9]
  • John Brooks Slaughter – Chancellor of University System of Maryland (1982–88), president of Occidental College (1988–99), director of the National Science Foundation[10]
  • Jackie Vietti – President of Butler Community College for 17 years; interim president of Emporia State University in 2015

Arts and media[]

  • Kirstie Alley – actress (Cheers, Veronica's Closet, Fat Actress); winner of two Emmy Awards[11]
  • Craig Bolerjack – announcer on NFL on CBS; Utah Jazz television announcer[12]
  • Charles L. Brainard – architect; active in preserving the papers of Dwight D. Eisenhower and establishing the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum and Boyhood Home
  • Jane Butel – cookbook author;[13] founder of the Jane Butel Cooking School[14]
  • Bill Buzenberg – journalist; executive director of Center for Public Integrity; former vice-president of news at NPR[15]
  • Del Close – actor, improviser, writer; co-founder of I.O. theatre in Chicago and one of premier influences on modern improvisational theater
  • Lucinda Dickey – actress (Breakin', Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo), former Solid Gold dancer
  • Roy M. Fisher – journalist; former Editor-in-Chief of Chicago Daily News[16]
  • Gail Gregg – artist[17]
  • Eddie Griffin – comedian[18]
  • Mitch Holthus – radio voice of Kansas City Chiefs[19]
  • Gordon Jump – actor (WKRP in Cincinnati, "Maytag Man")[20]
  • Charles Melton – actor
  • Virgil Miller – film special effects pioneer; Academy Award nominee[21]
  • Clementine Paddleford – journalist and food writer; declared by Time magazine in 1953 as the "best known food editor in the United States"[22]
  • Darcy Pattison – writer of children’s literature, blogger, writing teacher and indie publisher.
  • Steve Pepoon – TV writer/producer; Emmy winner, The Simpsons
  • Steve Physioc – broadcaster for the Kansas City Royals[23]
  • Keylee Sue Sanders – television fashion consultant; former Miss Teen USA; pageant organizer[24]
  • Lawrence M. Schoen – science fiction author
  • Mark Schultz – musician[25]
  • Crystal Smith – model, actress, and Playboy centerfold[25]
  • Pete Souza – photojournalist and official White House photographer (1983–1989); chief White House photographer (2009–present)
  • Eric Stonestreet – actor (Modern Family), Emmy Award winner
  • Theresa VailMiss Kansas 2013
  • Jerry Wexler – record producer; enshrined in Rock and Roll Hall of Fame[26]

English/creative writing[]

  • Derick Burleson – poet[27]
  • Frank Marshall Davis – poet; journalist; editor of several African-American newspapers[28]
  • Darren DeFrain – fiction writer
  • Taylor Mali – slam poet
  • Claude McKay – poet influential during Harlem Renaissance[29]
  • Debra Monroe – fiction writer
  • Bryan Penberthy – poet
  • Kevin Rabas – poet
  • Ed Skoog – poet
James Harbord

Business[]

Politics, government and military[]

  • Emory S. AdamsUnited States Army general
  • Joseph Boakai – Vice President of Liberia (2006–2018)[35]
  • Sam BrownbackU.S. Senator, Kansas (1996–2011),[36] 46th governor of Kansas (2011–2018)
  • Donald M. Campbell Jr. – Commanding general of U.S. Army Recruiting Command in Fort Knox
  • John W. Carlin – 40th governor of Kansas; Archivist of the United States (1995–2005)[37]
  • Glen E. Edgerton – Major General, U.S. Army[25]
  • Marlin FitzwaterPress Secretary under Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush[38]
  • Kenji FujimoriPeruvian businessman and Congressman
  • Jim Geringer – 30th governor of Wyoming[39]
  • Mike Hayden – 41st governor of Kansas[40]
  • Lori Healey – Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Planning and Development
  • Lynn JenkinsKansas State Treasurer (2002–08), U.S. House of Representatives (2009–present)
  • Ronald E. Keys – General, U.S. Air Force[25]
U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts
  • Richard A. Knobloch – Brigadier General, U.S. Air Force
  • Henry D. Linscott – Lieutenant General, U.S. Marine Corps
  • Michael A. McAuliffe – Brigadier General, U.S. Air Force
  • Frank B. Morrison – 31st governor of Nebraska (1961–67)
  • Richard MyersChairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff (2001–2005)[41]
  • Richard Bordeaux Parkerdiplomat[42]
  • John Jacob RhodesMinority Leader of the U.S. House of Representatives (1973–1981)[43]
  • Pat Roberts – U.S. Senator, Kansas (1996–present)[44]
  • Bernard W. Rogers – NATO Supreme Allied Commander
  • Glenn Rogers – Member of the Texas House of Representatives (2021-Present)
  • Susanna M. Salter – Mayor of Argonia, Kansas (1887); first female mayor in the United States[45]
  • Fred Andrew Seaton – U.S. Senator, Nebraska (1951–1952); U.S. Secretary of the Interior (1956–1961)[46]
  • K. Gary SebeliusMagistrate judge of the United States District Court for the District of Kansas
  • Harold Sebring – Chief Justice of the Florida Supreme Court, American judge at the Nuremberg Trials, Dean of the Stetson University College of Law, and head coach of the Florida Gators football team[47]
  • Richard J. Seitz – Lieutenant General, U.S. Army
  • Theresa Sparks – President of the San Francisco Police Commission
  • Virginia Trotter – U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education (1974–1977)
  • Allen West – U.S. House of Representatives from Florida's 22nd district (2011–2013)
David Fairchild

Science and technology[]

Athletics[]

Baseball[]

Basketball[]

Michael Beasley

Football[]

Golf[]

Track and field[]

Erin Brockovich
  • Thane Baker – winner of four Olympic medals, including gold, at 1952 Summer Olympics and 1956 Summer Olympics
  • Tom Brosius – All-American in shot put and discus
  • DeLoss Dodds – Big Seven champion; Kansas State track coach (1963–1976); U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Hall of Fame
  • Steve Fritz – Big Eight champion; finished fourth in decathlon at 1996 Summer Olympics; assistant coach at Kansas State
  • Kenny Harrison – won gold medal in triple jump at 1996 Summer Olympics
  • Thomas Randolph – two-sport All-American (1992)
  • Ivan Riley – won bronze medal in 400 meter hurdles at 1924 Summer Olympics
  • Austra Skujytė – won silver medal in heptathlon (for Lithuania) at 2004 Summer Olympics; assistant coach at Kansas State

Others[]

  • Erin Brockovich – activist[116]
  • Sean Lowe – reality star (The Bachelorette, The Bachelor, Dancing with the Stars)
  • Jim Rayburn – founder of Young Life
  • Kevin Saunders – wheelchair Olympian

Faculty and staff[]

  • Stephen Ambrose – professor of history (1970–71)
  • Helen Brockman – fashion designer (1968–74)
  • Helen Stuart Campbell – professor of domestic science (1896–97)[117]
  • Elizabeth Williams Champney – secretary of college, drawing instructor (1870–73)[117]
  • John Ciardi – professor of English (poetry)[118]
  • John Wynn Davidson – first professor of military science (1868–71)
  • Kenneth S. Davis – professor of history
    B.F. Mudge
  • Michael Finnegan – professor of anthropology
  • Angelo Garzio, emeritus professor of ceramics
  • Charles Christian Georgeson – professor of agriculture (1890–98)
  • Nehemiah Green – professor of military tactics
  • – professor; later president of Colorado State University[119]
  • T. Marshall Hahn – Dean of College of Arts and Sciences (1959–62); later president of Virginia Tech
  • Pascal Hitzler - professor of computer science (2019-present)
  • Jonathan Holden – professor of English (poetry) (1978–present)
  • John S. Hougham – chairman of philosophy and agriculture (1868–72)
  • A. S. Hitchcock – professor of botany (1892–1901)
  • Lloyd Hulbert – professor of biology (1955–86)
  • William Ashbrook Kellerman – professor of botany (1883–91)
  • Naomi B. Lynn – professor of political science; later first Hispanic female president of an American public university
  • George A. Milliken – professor of statistics
  • W. R. Moses – poet; professor of English
  • Benjamin Franklin Mudge – Chair of Geology Department (1866–74)
  • Philip Nel – professor of English (2000–present)
  • Mitsugi Ohno – glassblower of first successful Klein bottle (1961–96)
  • Andrew Summers Rowan – professor of military tactics (1902–03)
  • Fred Albert Shannon – professor of history; awarded Pulitzer Prize for History in 1929 while teaching at Kansas State
  • James Shanteau – professor of psychology
  • Maurice Cole Tanquary – professor of entomology (1913–1919)
  • Albert M. Ten Eyck – professor of agriculture (1902–06), agronomy (1906–10) and farm management (1910–12)
  • Michael Wesch – assistant professor of cultural anthropology, recipient of 2008 U.S. Professor of the Year award from CASE[120]
  • Kimberly A. With – professor of biology

Fictional characters[]

  • Joseph, anti-hero of Bruce Jay Friedman's novel A Mother's Kisses, attends "Kansas Land Grant Agricultural College."
  • Mary Ashley, main character in Sidney Sheldon's novel Windmills of the Gods, starts the book as a professor at Kansas State University.
  • Brantley Foster, protagonist in the movie The Secret of My Success, portrayed by Michael J. Fox, is a recent graduate of Kansas State University who moves to New York City where he has landed a job as a financier.
  • Oliver Lang, terrorist in the movie Arlington Road, portrayed by Tim Robbins, is a former Kansas State student.
  • Lamar Quin, senior associate in the John Grisham novel The Firm, is noted to have graduated from Kansas State.

See also[]

References[]

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