List of University of Iowa alumni

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The University of Iowa
TypeFlagship
Public
Space grant
Established1847 (1847)
Location
Iowa City
,
Iowa
,
U.S.
NicknameHawkeyes
Websitewww.iowalum.com

This list of University of Iowa alumni includes notable current and former students of the University of Iowa.

Academia[]

  • Michael J. Budds, Musicologist and professor at the University of Missouri School of Music, inducted into the Missouri Music Hall of Fame
  • Edwin Adams Davis – M.A. from Iowa; historian of Louisiana; father of Louisiana state archives; Louisiana State University professor[1]
  • Shardé M. DavisAssistant Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Connecticut .
  • James R. Dow – emeritus professor of German at Iowa State University
  • R. William Field – Associate Professor, College of Public Health, University of Iowa
  • Elnora M. Gilfoyle – occupational therapist; Dean of the College of Applied Human Sciences and Provost/Academic Vice President at Colorado State University
  • Michael P. Johnson – emeritus professor of sociology, Pennsylvania State University
  • James Kennedy – professor of the history of the Netherlands at the University of Amsterdam
  • Otto Kraushaar – former president of Goucher College, long-time professor in philosophy at Smith College
  • Minnette Gersh Lenier – teacher who used stage magic to improve students' learning skills
  • Cindy Lovell – educator and writer; executive director of the Mark Twain Boyhood Home & Museum and Mark Twain House
  • Robert Moyers – Founder of Center of Growth and Development at University of Michigan
  • Jewel Prestage – Dean of the School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs at Southern University. First African-American woman to earn Ph.D. in Political Science.
  • W. Ann Reynolds – chancellor of the California State University and City University of New York
  • Noliwe Rooks - associate director of the African-American program at Princeton University, W.E.B. Du Bois Professor of Literature at Cornell University, chair of and professor in the Africana Studies Department at Brown University, founding director of the Segrenomics Lab at Brown University
  • Jim Rossi – law professor at Vanderbilt University
  • Clifford V. Smith, Jr. – 4th chancellor of University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
  • William A. Staples – president of the University of Houston–Clear Lake
  • John E. Visser – President of Emporia State University, 1967–1984

Business[]

  • Helen Brockman – fashion designer
  • John Bucksbaum – former chairman and chief executive officer of GGP Inc.
  • Jim Foster – founder Arena Football League
  • Paul P. Harris – lawyer and founder of the first Rotary Club
  • Scott Heiferman – founder and CEO, Meetup.com; founder, Fotolog.com
  • Howard R. Hughes, Sr. – father of aviation pioneer and film producer Howard Robard Hughes, Jr. and builder of his fortune that started his empire
  • Kerry Killinger – chairman and CEO of Washington Mutual
  • Bill Perkins – hedge fund manager, film producer
  • C. Maxwell Stanley – engineer, entrepreneur, philanthropist; founder of Stanley Consultants and The Stanley Foundation; co-founder of HON Industries
  • Ted Waitt – co-founder of Gateway, Inc.
  • Frank R. Wallace (pen name of Wallace Ward), 1957, entrepreneur, publisher, writer, and developer of the Neo-Tech philosophy

Government and politics[]

  • Cindy Axne, United States Congresswoman
  • Theodore J. Bauer – former head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention[2]
  • Fred H. Blume – Justice of the Wyoming Supreme Court for 42 years[3]
  • David E. Bonior – formerly represented Michigan in the United States House of Representatives; Former member of President Barack Obama's Economic Advisory Board[4]
  • Terry E. Branstad – two-time Governor of Iowa, and longest-tenured Governor in the nation[5]
  • John Burke – tenth Governor of North Dakota[6]
  • James Cartwright – retired U.S. Marine Corps General and the 8th Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff[7]
  • Norm Coleman – former Junior Republican U.S. Senator of Minnesota[8]
  • James Dooge – Irish senator and academic in the area of Hydrology; served as the Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Irish Government, and instrumental in forming the framework of the modern European Union and beginning the debate on climate change[9]
  • Martha Angle Dorsett – first woman admitted to the Bar of Minnesota (in 1878)[citation needed]
  • James B. French – member of the Wisconsin State Assembly[10]
  • Greg Ganske – politician from Iowa
  • Paul C. Gartzke – Presiding Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[11]
  • Mads Gilbert – Norwegian doctor in Gaza providing humanitarian care at Al-Shifa Hospital during the 2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict[12]
  • Lea Giménez, Master's Degree in Economics, Minister of Finance (Paraguay)
  • Silas B. HaysSurgeon General of the United States Army[13]
  • Leo A. Hoegh – former Governor of Iowa and National Security Council member[14]
  • David W. Hopkins – former member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Missouri[15]
  • Chuck HornerUnited States Air Force general; commanded Coalition Air Forces during the Gulf War[16]
  • Edward F. Howrey, chair of the Federal Trade Commission[17]
  • Cheryl L. Johnson, lawyer and 36th Clerk of the United States House of Representatives
  • Patty Judge, former Lieutenant Governor of Iowa and 2016 candidate for the US Senate
  • George Koval – Soviet intelligence officer and Hero of the Russian Federation[18]
  • Robert L. Larson – former member of the Iowa Supreme Court[19]
  • Donald P. Lay – judge of the Eighth Circuit[20]
  • Ronald H. Lingren – member of the Wisconsin State Assembly[21]
  • Marry Mascher – member of the Iowa House of Representatives
  • Andy McKean – politician in the state of Iowa
  • John Walter Grant MacEwan – MS 1928; Western Canadian Lieutenant Governor of Alberta; Canadian legislator; Mayor of Calgary[22]
  • Jayaprakash Narayan – Indian freedom fighter, social reformer, politician[citation needed]
  • Kay A. Orr – first woman Governor of Nebraska; Republican[23]
  • John E. Osborn – former Commissioner, U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy; former executive vice president and general counsel, Cephalon, Inc.[citation needed]
  • Gregory A. Peterson – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[24]
  • John Pickler – member of the United States House of Representatives[25]
  • Coleen Rowley – shared 2002 Time "Person of the Year" award; the FBI whistleblower who helped bring in terrorist suspect Zacarias Moussaoui[26]
  • Lawrence F. ScaliseAttorney General of Iowa (1965–1966)
  • Juanita Kidd Stout – first woman appointed as a federal judge; Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice[27]
  • Jim Summerville – Tennessee Senator[28]
  • Wang Huning – member of the Politburo Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China, Chinese political theorist, former Dean of the School of Law and Chair of the Department of International Politics, Fudan University[29]
  • Perry Warjiyo, [Ph.D, 1991), Central Bank Governors, The Republic of Indonesia
  • Hugh E. Wild – U.S. Air Force Brigadier General[30]
  • Ann Williams – member of Illinois House of Representatives[31]
  • Wu JinMinister of Education of Taiwan, 1996–1998[32]

Art and architecture[]

  • Mildred Beltre – multi-disciplinary artist; co-founder of Brooklyn Hi-Art! Machine
  • Ryan Bliss – 3D artist; founder of Digital Blasphemy
  • Shirley Briggs – artist and writer; studied under Grant Wood; provided artwork for a number of projects within the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, and worked on a number of dioramas for the Smithsonian Institution's Museum of Natural History
  • David Cantine – Canadian artist
  • Elizabeth Catlett – painter; studied under Grant Wood; first African American woman to earn an MFA from the University of Iowa
  • Eve Drewelowe
  • Baulu Kuan – artist and curator
  • Barbara Lekberg – metal sculptor
  • Evan Lindquist – Artist Laureate of the State of Arkansas[33]
  • Charles Ray – contemporary artist
  • Joe Sharpnack – editorial cartoonist
  • Rudi Stern – multimedia artist
  • Kirsten Ulve – graphic artist

Literature and journalism[]

  • Melissa Albert – author of young adult fiction
  • Goodwin Tutum Anim – Ghanaian journalist
  • Mildred Benson – writer under pen name Carolyn Keene of Nancy Drew books
  • T.C. Boyle – PEN/Faulkner award-winning writer (World's End, Drop City)
  • Tom Brokaw – broadcast journalist, former anchor (NBC Nightly News), author (The Greatest Generation); dropped out after 1 year
  • Chelsea Cain – writer (Heartsick, Mockingbird)
  • Sandra Cisneros – author (The House on Mango Street)
  • Max Allan Collins – writer of comic strip Dick Tracy (Chester Gould was the creator and Collins took over in 1977 when Gould retired); also writes mystery novels
  • Justin Cronin – author (The Passage, The Twelve)
  • Rita Dove – 1993 Poet Laureate of the United States
  • David Drake – science-fiction writer (Hammer's Slammers series)
  • Andre Dubus – short story writer (Killings – adapted into 2001 film In the Bedroom)
  • Jeannette Eyerly – writer of young adult fiction
  • Joshua Ferris – novelist
  • Charles Gaines – author (Pumping Iron) and inventor of paintball
  • George Gallup – founder of the Gallup Poll
  • Ezzat Goushegir – playwright
  • Garth Greenwell – author (What Belongs to You)
  • Oscar Hahn – author
  • Joe Haldemanscience-fiction writer (The Forever War)
  • Kathryn Harrison – author (Thicker than Water)
  • A.M. Homes – author (The Safety of Objects)
  • L. D. Hotchkiss – editor-in-chief, Los Angeles Times
  • John Irving – writer (A Widow for One Year, The World According to Garp)
  • Amy Jacobson – Chicago broadcast journalist
  • Leslie Jamison – author (The Empathy Exams)
  • Denis Johnson – author (Jesus' Son)
  • W.P. Kinsella – author (Shoeless Joe, the book on which Field of Dreams was based)
  • William Lashner – author of Past Due
  • Robie Macauley – novelist and editor of Playboy
  • Anthony Marra – author (A Constellation of Vital Phenomena)
  • Bharati Mukherjee – Bengali-American writer
  • Flannery O'Connor – novelist and author of numerous short stories
  • Chris Offutt – short story writer and essayist
  • Ann Patchett – author (Bel Canto, State of Wonder)
  • Tappy Phillips – consumer affairs reporter for WABC-TV in New York City; correspondent for ABC News
  • La Ferne Price – philosopher and author
  • Jim Simmerman – poet; founded creative writing program at Northern Arizona University
  • Wallace Stegner – author
  • Stewart Stern – screenwriter (Rebel Without a Cause, Sybil)[34]
  • Douglas Unger – novelist and founder of UNLV's creative writing MFA program
  • Bertha M. Wilson – dramatist, critic, actress
  • Yu Guangzhong – Taiwanese poet and author
  • Torrey Peters, author (Detransition, Baby )

Pulitzer Prize winners[]

  • Stephen Berry – 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for story he co-wrote for the Orlando Sentinel; associate professor in School of Journalism and Mass Communication
  • Robert Olen Butler Jr. – won the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for fiction
  • Marquis Childs – commentator; 1969 winner for distinguished commentary
  • Paul Conrad – editorial cartoonist for the Los Angeles Times; won in 1964, 1971, and 1984
  • Michael Cunningham – writer/novelist (The Hours)
  • Jorie Graham – poet (1996 winner for The Dream of the Unified Field: Selected Poems 1974–1994) and MacArthur Fellow on faculty of Iowa Writers' Workshop
  • Paul Harding – author (Tinkers)
  • Robert Hass – poet (2008 winner for Time and Materials: Poems 1997–2005) and former Poet Laureate of the United States
  • Benny Johnson – columnist and host The Benny Report on NewsMax TV
  • Josephine Johnson – novelist (1935 winner for her first novel, Now in November), writing instructor
  • Donald Justice – poet (1980 winner for Selected Poems)
  • Tracy Kidder – 1982 winner for The Soul of a New Machine
  • James Alan McPherson – author (1978 winner for Elbow Room, becoming the first African-American to win the Pulitzer for fiction) and MacArthur Fellow on faculty of Iowa Writers' Workshop
  • Marilynne Robinson – 2005 winning author for Gilead: A Novel; faculty in Iowa Writers' Workshop
  • Jane Smiley – novelist; 1992 winner for A Thousand Acres
  • William De Witt Snodgrassconfessional poet; 1960 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
  • Mark Strand – poet; 1999 winner for A Blizzard of One
  • Tennessee Williams – playwright; won for A Streetcar Named Desire in 1948 and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof in 1955

Performing arts[]

  • Tom Arnold – actor (Roseanne, True Lies) and host of Fox Sports Net's talk show Best Damn Sports Show Period
  • Lemuel Ayers, Tony Award winning designer and producer[35]
  • Scott Beck – filmmaker (A Quiet Place)
  • Macdonald Carey – actor (Days of Our Lives)
  • David Daniels – conductor and author
  • Don DeFore – actor (The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, Hazel)
  • Ellen Dolan – soap opera actress (Guiding Light, As the World Turns)
  • Duck's Breath Mystery Theater (Dan Coffey, Bill Allard, Merle Kessler, Leon Martrell, and Jim Turner) – touring comedy troupe featured on National Public Radio's All Things Considered
  • David Eigenberg – actor (Steve Brady on Sex and the City)
  • Simon Estes – bass baritone opera singer, formerly of the New York Metropolitan Opera
  • Tanna Frederick – stage and independent film actress
  • Bruce French – actor (Mr. Mom, Legal Eagles, Fletch)[34]
  • Robin Green – executive producer of the HBO series The Sopranos
  • Don Hall – director of the Disney animated movie Big Hero 6 which won the Oscar for best animated feature in 2015 and Moana (2016 film)
  • Jake Johnson – actor (New Girl, Paper Heart, Get Him to the Greek, Safety Not Guaranteed, 21 Jump Street, Drinking Buddies, Jurassic World and Tag).
  • John Shifflettjazz double bass player and teacher at San Jose State University
  • Joy Harjo – poet, songwriter
  • Candace Hilligoss – actress (1960 film Carnival of Souls)
  • Mary Beth Hurt – actress (The World According to Garp, Interiors)
  • Toby Huss – actor, creator of Artie, the Strongest Man in the World from The Adventures of Pete and Pete, which he created at No Shame Theatre at the university
  • Barry Kemp – producer (Coach, Newhart) (Hayden Fox, the title character of Coach, was named after Iowa football coach Hayden Fry)
  • Alex Ko – actor (Billy Elliot the Musical), author, film director
  • Ashton Kutcher – actor (That '70s Show, Two and a Half Men), producer (created Punk'd), entrepreneur
  • Adam LeFevre – film and television actor, playwright
  • Nicholas Meyer – director (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan)
  • Greg Morris – actor (Barney Collier in original Mission: Impossible TV series)
  • Terry O'Quinn – actor (Lost)
  • Lara Parker – actress (Angelique in the serial Dark Shadows)
  • James Romig – composer
  • Eugene Rousseau – saxophonist
  • Brandon Routh – actor (Superman Returns)
  • Joe Russo – director-writer Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Captain America: Civil War, Avengers: Infinity War, Avengers: Endgame, and TV shows Arrested Development (TV series) and Community (TV Series)
  • Paul Rust – actor (I Love You, Beth Cooper and Love (TV series))
  • Jean Seberg – actress (Breathless, Paint Your Wagon, Airport)
  • William Oscar Smith – jazz double bassist
  • David Strackany – musician
  • Susan Werner – singer-songwriter
  • Brooks Wheelan – comedian (Saturday Night Live)
  • Gene Wilder – actor (Silver Streak, Young Frankenstein, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory)
  • Bryan Woods – filmmaker (A Quiet Place)
  • David Bryan Woodside – actor (Wayne Palmer on the TV series 24)

Academy Award winners[]

Grammy Award winners[]

  • Al Jarreau – seven-time Grammy Award-winning vocalist
  • David Sanborn – six-time Grammy-winning saxophonist[36]

Science and technology[]

  • Hind Al-Abadleh – chemist and environmental scientist
  • Archie Alexander – first African-American graduate (in engineering); governor of the Virgin Islands
  • M. M. Ayoub – a pioneer in the field of ergonomics
  • Alfred Marshall Bailey – ornithologist and long-term director of the Denver Museum of Natural History
  • Sidney W. Bijou, (1908–2009) – developmental psychologist[37]
  • Lawrence Einhorn – pioneering oncologist whose research increased testicular cancer survival rates from 10% to 95%
  • Mildred Adams Fenton – geologist, paleontologist, writer on paleontology
  • Leon Festingersocial psychologist who was responsible for the theory of cognitive dissonance
  • James E. Hansen – heads NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies; recognized in Time's "100 Most Influential People of 2006" for his efforts to bring understanding and fighting the effects of global climate change
  • Bruce C. Heezen – led a team from Columbia University that mapped the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
  • Darrell Huff – writer known for best-selling book How to Lie with Statistics
  • Marshall Kay – geologist and Penrose Medal winner
  • Tom Krimigis – space scientist, physicist
  • E.F. Lindquist – co-founder of the ACT examination
  • Gregor Luthe – chemist, toxicologist, nanotechnologist, inventor and entrepreneur
  • Charles F. Lynch – Epidemiologist
  • Mark Mattson – neuroscientist at the National Institutes of Health and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  • Deane Montgomery – mathematician
  • Mary Lawson Neff – neurologist
  • Kent Norman – cognitive psychologist and expert on computer rage
  • Clair Cameron Patterson – geochemist who developed the uranium–lead dating method into lead–lead dating, worked on the Manhattan Project, and led early campaigns against lead poisoning
  • James Van Allen – space scientist
  • Oswald Veblen – mathematician
  • Shirley Briggs – conducted work in pesticide and synthetic chemical research
  • Wang Shizhen – Chinese academician, father of Chinese nuclear medicine
  • George Ojemann – Neurosurgeon and cognitive neuroscientist
  • Herbert Jasper – Pioneer of surgical epileptology at the Montreal Neurological Institute

Sports[]

Baseball[]

Basketball[]

Football[]

  • Bret Bielema – football player and assistant coach; head coach of University of Arkansas[54]
  • Paul BurmeisterNFL quarterback, NFL Network anchor[55]
  • Jim Caldwell – offensive coordinator for the Baltimore Ravens[56]
  • Dallas Clark – tight end for the Colts, Buccaneers, and Ravens[57]
  • Sean Considine – Former NFL defensive safety and special teams, member of the Ravens' Super Bowl XLVII championship team[58]
  • Kerry Cooks – NFL defensive back[59]
  • John Derby – NFL linebacker[60]
  • Jeff Drost – NFL defensive tackle[61]
  • Wayne Duke – Commissioner of the Big Ten Conference 1971–1989[62]
  • Tim Dwight – NFL player[63]
  • Harold Ely – NFL player[64]
  • Dick Evans – NFL player[65]
  • Wesley Fry – general manager for the Oakland Raiders[66]
  • Robert Gallery – NFL offensive tackle, second overall pick in 2004 draft[67]
  • Dennis Green – head coach with the Minnesota Vikings and Arizona Cardinals[68]
  • Merton Hanks – NFL defensive back (four-time Pro Bowl selection)[69]
  • Homer Harris – player in 1937; first African American captain of a Big Ten Conference team[70]
  • Jay Hilgenberg – center for Chicago Bears (seven-time Pro Bowl selection)[71]
  • Walt Housmanfootball player[72]
  • Carlos James – Arena Football League player[73]
  • Cal Jones – one of two Iowa football players to have his jersey retired; won the Outland Trophy in 1955[74]
  • Nate Kaeding – NFL placekicker[75]
  • Harry Kalas – voice of the Philadelphia Phillies (MLB), NFL on Westwood One and NFL Films[76]
  • Aaron Kampman – NFL defensive end[77]
  • Alex Karras – professional football player and actor[78]
  • George Kittle – 2x Pro Bowler and 2x All-Pro tight end for the San Francisco 49ers; part of the 49ers Super Bowl LIV team[79]
  • Nile Kinnick – Iowa's 1939 Heisman trophy winner with Iowa's Kinnick Stadium named for him in 1972[80]
  • Dick Klein – professional football player[81]
  • Joe Laws – professional football player for the Green Bay Packers[82]
  • Chuck Long – closest-ever Heisman Trophy runner-up in 1985; later a college head coach; analyst for the Big Ten Network[83]
  • Jim Miller – NFL offensive guard[84]
  • Tom Moore – longtime NFL coach and offensive coordinator for the Indianapolis Colts[85]
  • Bruce Nelsonguard and center[86]
  • Ed Podolak – player with the Kansas City Chiefs; football analyst for Hawkeye Radio Network[87]
  • Fred Roberts – player for the Portsmouth Spartans[88]
  • Eddie Robinson – winningest coach in football history at Grambling State University from 1942 until 1997[89]
  • Reggie Roby – punter (three-time Pro Bowl Selection) for the Miami Dolphins[90]
  • Bob Sanders – free agent safety, member of the Indianapolis Colts' Super Bowl XLI championship team[91]
  • Tyler Sash – safety for the New York Giants' Super Bowl XLVI championship team[92]
  • Zud Schammel – NFL guard[93]
  • Scott Slutzker – NFL player[94]
  • Larry Station – two-time All-American player[95]
  • Bob Stoops – player and coach; head coach of the University of Oklahoma[96]
  • Mark Stoops – player; head coach of the University of Kentucky[97]
  • Mike Stoops – player, coach; defensive coordinator at Oklahoma[98]
  • Andre Tippett – Hall of Fame linebacker for the New England Patriots[99]
  • Emlen Tunnell – player; first African American to play for the New York Giants; later played for the Green Bay Packers[100]
  • Marshal Yanda – Pro-Bowl offensive lineman for the Ravens; member of Super Bowl XLVII championship team[101]

Mixed Martial Arts[]

  • Jordan Johnson (fighter) – professional Mixed Martial Artist, currently with the UFC[102]
  • Julie Kedzie – Two-time Hook n' Shoot Tournament Champion, National Karate Champion & fought in first women's MMA match on cable television[103]

Olympics[]

  • Ed Banach – light heavyweight gold medalist at 1984 Olympic Games, Los Angeles[104]
  • Lou Banach – heavyweight gold medalist at 1984 Olympic Games, Los Angeles[105]
  • Terry Brands – bronze medalist at 2000 Olympic Games, Sydney, Australia
  • Tom Brands – gold medalist at 1996 Olympic Games, Atlanta, Georgia; current University of Iowa wrestling coach
  • Chuck Darling – member of the 1956 Summer Olympics gold medal basketball team
  • Houry Gebeshian – Armenian Olympic gymnast at the 2016 Summer Olympics
  • Deacon Jones – 1956 and 1960 Olympics, track and field
  • Randall Lewis – featherweight gold medalist at 1984 Olympic Games, Los Angeles, CA
  • Anthuan Maybank – 1996 Olympic Games gold medalist in the men's 4x400 meter relay for the US
  • Wally Ris – 1948 Olympic swimmer, winner of two gold medals
  • George Saling – Olympic hurdler who won the 110-meter hurdles in the 1932 Summer Olympics[36]
  • Bowen Stassforth – 1952 Olympic Silver Medalist swimmer 200 m Breaststroke

Track and field[]

  • Francis X. Cretzmeyer – track and field coach, 1948–78; coached Ted Wheeler and Deacon Jones (1956 and 1960 Olympics)[106]
  • Mel Rosen – track coach[107]

Wrestling[]

  • Royce Alger – 2x NCAA Champion (87' & 88') and retired mixed martial artist[108]
  • Paul Bradley – two-time NCAA All-American;[109] professional mixed martial artist, formerly with the UFC[110] and currently with Bellator[111]
  • Terry Brands – NCAA Champion in 1990 and 1992, 2000 Olympic bronze medalist, and two-time World freestyle Champion in 1993 & 1995
  • Tom Brands – Outstanding Wrestler Award at the 1992 NCAA Tournament; World Champion in 1993; Olympic Champion in 1996
  • Rico Chiapparelli – NCAA Champ in 1987; mixed martial arts trainer[108]
  • Barry Davis – bantamweight silver medalist 1984 Olympic Games, Los Angeles[112]
  • Ettore Ewen – professional wrestler for WWE under the name "Big E"[113]
  • Brent Metcalf – 2008 and 2010 NCAA Champion; 2008 Dan Hodge Trophy winner
  • Steve Mocco – 2003 NCAA Division I Champion at Heavyweight; 2008 Olympic team member; current professional MMA fighter[114]
  • Tony Ramos – 2014 NCAA Champion
  • Joe Williams – three-time NCAA Champion; 2001 and 2005 wrestling world bronze medalist
  • Bill Zadick – 1996 NCAA Wrestling Champion, 2006 World Champion
  • Mike Zadick – 2006 wrestling world silver medalist
  • Jim Zalesky – three-time NCAA Champion; current coach for Oregon State University

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