List of Missouri University of Science and Technology alumni

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

green stylized 'Missouri S&T' logo text against a transparent background
Missouri S&T logo
Hasselmann Alumni House at Missouri S&T

The alumni of Missouri University of Science and Technology, or Missouri S&T, include both graduates and non-graduates who have attended the university located in Rolla, Missouri. Missouri S&T was founded as the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy (MSM) in 1870, the first technological institution west of the Mississippi River.[1] In 1964, the school's name was changed to University of Missouri–Rolla (UMR) as part of the University of Missouri System, and the most recent name change to Missouri University of Science and Technology took effect in 2008 to "distinguish UMR from the other University of Missouri campuses", among other reasons.[2]

As of fall 2017, Missouri S&T had a total enrollment of 8,884 students (6,920 undergraduates and 1,964 graduate students).[3] The total enrollment of students has continued to increase over the last decade (fall 2007 total enrollment was 6,167 students),[3] which has resulted in an increasing number of active Missouri S&T alumni. As of fall 2017, the Miner Alumni Association of Missouri S&T serves nearly 60,000 graduates and former students.[4] The Hasselmann Alumni house was dedicated in 2015 as the home for the Miner Alumni Association and as a venue for campus and community events. It is named for Karl Hasselmann, a 1925 graduate in mining engineering, who had a prominent career in the oil industry. The Havener Center, the multipurpose campus center for student life and activity, is named for entrepreneur Gary Havener, a 1962 graduate in mathematics.

The listed alumni span multiple fields and careers, particularly those concentrated in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. The creator of Twitter, Jack Dorsey, enrolled at Missouri S&T in 1995 majoring in computer science and mathematics, but transferred out during his junior year to accept a job with the New York-based company Dispatch Management Services after hacking into their computer network and alerting the company chairman of a hole in their software.[5] Many notable NASA astronauts and engineers are graduates from Missouri S&T, such as Sandra Magnus, who was aboard the last American space shuttle, and George Mueller, who helped enable the Apollo 11 moon landing. Other S&T alumni have filled leadership positions within state and federal government, and some have become known in athletics and entertainment.

Business[]

Name Class year Notability References
Forrest W. Breyfogle III 1968 (B.S.) Founder, CEO, and president of Smarter Solutions, Inc. (1992–present), developer of the Integrated Enterprise Excellence (IEE) system [6][7]
Jack Dorsey Transferred out, 1997; did not graduate Billionaire co-founder and CEO of Twitter (2015–present), and co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Square, Inc. (2009–present) [5][8]
Gary D. Forsee 1972 (B.S.) CEO of Sprint (2003–2007), president of the University of Missouri System (2008–2011) [9]
Thomas Holmes 1950 (B.S.) CEO of Ingersoll Rand (1980–1988) [10][11]
Alan S. Kornacki 1974 (B.S.) Senior staff geochemist for Shell, retired U.S. Army Reserve lieutenant colonel [12]
Dan Obrycki 1983 (B.S.) Co-founder of the Applied Finance Group [13][14]
Michael M. Sears 1976 (M.S.) Successfully launched the Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet program, CFO of Boeing (2002–2003), terminated in 2003 as a result of corruption allegations and sentenced to four months in prison [15][16]
Ellis Short 1983 (B.S.) Founder of Kildare Partners private equity fund (2013), owner of Skibo Castle (2003–present) and Sunderland A.F.C. (2009–2018) [17][18]
Gary White 1985 (B.S.), 1987 (M.S.) Co-founder and CEO of Water.org, founding member of the Global Water Challenge, named in the 2011 TIME 100 list of the most influential people in the world [19][20]
Oz Yilmaz 1970 (B.S.) Chief Technology Officer of GeoTomo LLC and the founder of Anatolian Geophysical [21]
image of Jack Dorsey at a London cafe in November 2014, smiling with his mouth closed, and wearing a dark upper garment and jacket
Jack Dorsey

Education[]

Name Class year Notability References
Mack A. Breazeale 1954 (M.S.) Professor and senior scientist at the National Center for Physical Acoustics at the University of Mississippi (1995–2009), professor of physics at the University of Tennessee (1962–1995) and at Michigan State University (1957–1962), known for work in ultrasonics and physical acoustics [22][23]
Bruce L. Edwards 1977 (B.A.) Professor of English and Africana studies at Bowling Green State University (1981–2012), general editor of the four-volume reference set C. S. Lewis: Life, Works, and Legacy [24][25]
Roger Garrison 1967 (B.S.) Professor of economics at Auburn University (1981–present), adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute [26]
John Johnson 1999 (B.S.) Professor of astronomy at Harvard University (2013–present), known for exoplanet research [27]
Kim Young-gil 1969 (M.S.) President of Handong Global University (1995–2014) [28]
David F. Larcker 1972 (B.S.), 1974 (M.S.) Professor at Stanford University in the Stanford Graduate School of Business (2005–present) [29]
Glenn Lipscomb 1981 (B.S.) Department chair of chemical engineering at the University of Toledo (2004–present) [30]
Dana S. Nau 1974 (B.S.) Professor of computer science and systems research at the University of Maryland, College Park (1994–present), discovered game tree pathology and developed simple hierarchical ordered planner (SHOP) HTN planning systems [31]
image of Mack Breazeale from 1997, smiling in a white shirt, red tie, and dark suit coat
Mack A. Breazeale
image of John Johnson wearing a light short-sleeved shirt and looking to his left
John Johnson

Entertainment and athletics[]

Name Class year Notability References
Marv Breuer 1935 (B.S.) Major League Baseball pitcher for the New York Yankees (1939–1943) and a reliever in the 1941 and 1942 World Series [32][33]
Aaron Buerge 1997 (B.S.) Television personality known for starring in Season 2 of The Bachelor [34][35]
Forrestal Hickman 2015 (B.S.) Offensive lineman who has played in the NFL as a free agent for the San Diego Chargers (2015) and has played as a signed athlete in the CFL for the Montreal Alouettes (2016) and the IFL for the Colorado Crush (2017) and the Sioux Falls Storm (2018–present) [36][37]
A. J. Mandani 2010 Professional Indonesian Basketball League player for CLS Knights Indonesia (2020–present), previously on the MPBL's Caloocan Katipuneros (2018–2019), TBL's TGE team (2018), ABL's Singapore Slingers (2017), and several PBA teams (2012–2016) [38][39]
Bill Preston circa 1915 NFL tackle for the Akron Pros (1920), 1920 NFL champion [40]
Greg "Fossilman" Raymer 1985 (B.S.) 2004 World Series of Poker Main Event champion [41]
Brad Scott Transferred out, 1976 Head football coach for the University of South Carolina (1994–1998), assistant football coach for Clemson University (1999–2011) [42][43]
Tyrone Smith 2006 (B.A.) Long jumper representing Bermuda, 3-time Olympian, reached the finals in the 2012 Summer Olympics, champion in the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games and the 2011 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics [44][45]
Harry Stella Transferred out, 1936 Tackle for the Army Cadets football team at the United States Military Academy (1936–1939), 1939 First-team All-American, retired at the rank of colonel [46]
Dick Thornton circa 1930 Quarterback for the Philadelphia Eagles (1933) [47]
Tershawn Wharton 2019 Defensive tackle for the Kansas City Chiefs (2020–present) [48]
image of Greg Raymer seated at the 2008 World Series of Poker, wearing a green shirt with player patches applied and its long sleeves folded up to his elbows, with a black lanyard and badge around his neck
Greg "Fossilman" Raymer
image of Tyone Smith from 2012, wearing a white uniform with blue long sleeves and a dark zipper down the front center
Tyrone Smith

Government[]

Name Class year Notability References
Jay Ashcroft 1996 (B.S.), 1998 (M.S.) Missouri Secretary of State (2017–present) [49][50]
Ed Emery 1972 (B.S.) Member of the Missouri Senate (2013–present), member of the Missouri House of Representatives (2003–2011) [51]
Nicole Galloway 2004 (B.S.) Missouri State Auditor (2015–present) [52][53]
Jim Guest 1962 (B.S.), 1970 (M.S.) Member of the Missouri House of Representatives (2003–2011) [54]
Thomas Franklin Fairfax Millard Transferred out, 1882 First American political adviser to the Chinese Republic, founder of the China Weekly Review, author of seven influential books on the Far East [55][56]
Aruna Miller 1989 (B.S.) Member of the Maryland House of Delegates (2011–2019) [57][58]
Arthur P. Murphy circa 1893 U.S. Representative from Missouri (1905–1907, 1909–1911) [59]
Stephanie O'Sullivan 1982 (B.S.) Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence (2011–2017), Associate Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (2009–2011) [60]
William R. Painter circa 1882 (grad. prof. degree) 28th Lieutenant Governor of Missouri (1913–1917); Missouri State Senator (1923–1930), the first four years during which he was president pro tempore [61][62]
1985 (B.S.), 1986 (M.S.) Arkansas State Senator (2019–present), majority leader of the Arkansas House of Representatives (2017–2019) [63][64]
image of Nicole Galloway, smiling at the camera, wearing a collarless magenta top and dark coat, with U.S. and Missouri flags to each side in the background
Nicole Galloway
image of Maryland Representative Aruna Miller
Aruna Miller
image of Stephanie O'Sullivan, smiling at the camera, wearing a collared purple top and dark coat, with U.S. and DOJ flags to each side in the background
Stephanie O'Sullivan

Military and uniformed services[]

Name Class year Notability References
Joe N. Ballard 1972 (M.S.) Lieutenant general, U.S. Army, Chief of Engineers and Commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (1996–2000) [65][66]
Lisa Jaster 2004 (M.S.) Major, U.S. Army, one of only three women to graduate from the U.S. Army Ranger School and the first female Army Reserve officer to become a Ranger School graduate [67]
Walter Philip Leber 1940 (B.S.) Lieutenant general, U.S. Army, 15th Governor of the Panama Canal Zone (1967–1971) [68]
Glenn J. Lesniak 1979 (M.S.) Major general, U.S. Army Reserve, Deputy Chief of the U.S. Army Reserve at the Pentagon (2014–2015) [69]
George Allison Whiteman Enlisted in WWII, 1939 Second lieutenant, U.S. Air Force, first American pilot killed in aerial combat in World War II while serving under American forces, Whiteman Air Force Base is named after him [70]
image of Joe Ballard, wearing his formal army uniform, with U.S. and lieutenant general (three white stars against red) flags to each side in the background
LTG Joe N. Ballard

NASA[]

Name Class year Notability References
Thomas Akers 1973 (B.S.), 1975 (M.S.) Veteran of four shuttle flights including flights on Discovery and Endeavour, retired Air Force colonel [71][72]
Farouk El-Baz 1961 (M.S.), 1964 (Ph.D.) Supervisor of Lunar Science Planning and Secretary of the Landing Site Selection Committee for the NASA Apollo program (1967–1972) [73]
Ronald Greeley 1966 (Ph.D.) Director of the NASA Regional Planetary Image Facility (1998–2000), chair and principal investigator of multiple NASA committees and programs, professor in the School of Earth and Space Exploration (SESE) at Arizona State University (1977–2011) [74][75]
Janet L. Kavandi 1982 (M.S.) Veteran of three shuttle flights, Deputy Chief of the Astronaut Office (2005–2008), center director of the NASA Glenn Research Center (2016–present) [76]
Sandra Magnus 1986 (B.S.), 1990 (M.S.) Veteran of three shuttle flights including STS-135, the final mission of the American Space Shuttle program, executive director of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (2012–present) [77]
George Mueller 1939 (B.S.) Led NASA's Office of Manned Space Flight (1963–1969), which oversaw the Apollo program and began development of Skylab and the Space Shuttle program [78][79]
image of Janet Kavandi in 2001, posing in her orange NASA uniform with helmet in front of her, and U.S. flag and an upright space shuttle model to each side of her in the background
Janet L. Kavandi
black-and-white image of George Mueller, smiling to the viewer's left in a light shirt, dark tie and suit coat, and wearing dark plastic eyeglasses
George Mueller

Science and research[]

Name Class year Notability References
Robert Banks circa 1942 (B.S.) Chemist who co-invented crystalline polypropylene and high-density polyethylene, inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2001 [80]
Terry Bollinger 1977 (B.S.), 1980 (M.S.) Computer scientist who was influential in preventing free and open-source software from being banned in U.S. DoD systems [81][citation needed]
Clyde Cowan 1940 (B.S.) Co-discoverer of the neutrino by the Cowan–Reines neutrino experiment, whose contributions earned the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1995, captain in the U.S. Army Air Forces [82]
Delbert Day 1958 (B.S.) Curator's Professor Emeritus of Ceramic Engineering at Missouri S&T; co-invented glass microspheres for medical (radiation therapy) and dental applications, and co-invented Glasphalt, which recycles waste glass for use in asphalt paving [83][84]
Harold Garner 1976 (B.S.) Executive Director of the Biocomplexity Institute of Virginia Tech (2009–2012), Executive Director of the Office of Medical Informatics Translation, Training and Ethics (MITTE) at Virginia Tech (2015–present), known for research in plasma physics, biological engineering, and bioinformatics [85][86]
M. Frederick Hawthorne Transferred out, 1940s Curators' Distinguished Professor of chemistry and radiology at University of Missouri and director of its International Institute of Nano and Molecular Medicine (2008–present); a 2011 National Medal of Science recipient for his significant work involving boron [87][88]
Daniel C. Jackling 1892 (B.S.) Pioneered the exploitation of low-grade porphyry copper through new methods such as open-pit mining that created the Bingham Canyon Mine, the largest man-made excavation in the world, founded the Utah Copper Company which is now Kennecott Utah Copper [89]
Mervin Kelly 1914 (B.S.) Research physicist, engineer, and manager. He was president of Bell Laboratories, 1951–1959. [90]
Shi Changxu 1948 (M.S.) Materials scientist who was an academician with the Chinese Academy of Engineering and the Third World Academy of Sciences, the asteroid 28468 Shichangxu is named after him [91]
close-up profile of the right side of Bollinger's face
Terry Bollinger
black-and-white side view of Clyde Cowan, seated with his right arm outstretched toward one of several equipment panels before him
Clyde Cowan
Mervin Kelly, wearing a dark suit and bow tie, standing behind a desk
Mervin Kelly

References[]

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