This list includes notable alumni, non-matriculating, faculty, and staff of what is now Iowa State University (ISU).
Academia
Arts
Literature
Design
Performing arts
Business
Government and politics
United States
U.S. vice presidents
U.S. cabinet
U.S. governors
- Robert D. Blue, governor of Iowa (1945âÂÂ1949), lieutenant governor of Iowa (1943âÂÂ1945), speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives (1941âÂÂ1943)
- Garrey Carruthers (born 1939), Economics PhD 1968, governor of New Mexico (1987âÂÂ1991); president and CEO of Cimarron Health Plan
- James Benton Grant (1848âÂÂ1911), attended and then transferred to Cornell, governor of Colorado (1883âÂÂ1885)
- Bourke B. Hickenlooper (1896âÂÂ1971), Industrial Science B.A. 1919, Governor of Iowa (1943âÂÂ1945) and longtime U.S. Senator (1945âÂÂ1969)
- Frank D. Jackson (1854âÂÂ1938), governor of Iowa (1894âÂÂ1896), and Iowa secretary of state (1885âÂÂ1891)
- John Edward Jones (1840âÂÂ1896), class of 1865, eighth governor of Nevada (1895âÂÂ1896)
- Kim Reynolds (born 1959), degree concentrations in Political Science, Business Management, and Communications B.L.S. 2016, lieutenant governor of Iowa (2011âÂÂ2017), 43rd governor of Iowa (2017âÂÂpresent)
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
- Berkley Bedell (1921âÂÂ2019), attended for two years but did not graduate, United States representative from Iowa's 6th congressional district (1975âÂÂ1987)
- Bruce Braley (born 1957), B.A. 1980, United States representative from Iowa's 1st congressional district (2007âÂÂ2015)
- T. Cooper Evans (1924âÂÂ2005), B.S. & M.S., United States representative from Iowa's 3rd congressional district (1981âÂÂ1987)
- Randy Feenstra (born 1969), MPA, United States representative from Iowa's 4th congressional district (2021âÂÂpresent)
- Tom Latham (born 1948), attended but did not graduate, United States representative from Iowa's 4th congressional district (1995âÂÂ2015)
- Dave Loebsack (born 1952), B.S 1974 and M.A. 1976, United States representative from Iowa's 2nd congressional district (2007âÂÂ2021)
U.S. ambassadors
State of Iowa officials
- Maurice E. Baringer (1921âÂÂ2011), B.A. & M.A. Animal Husbandry (1949), treasurer of Iowa (1969âÂÂ1983), speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives (1967âÂÂ1969)
- Dale M. Cochran (1928âÂÂ2018), B.A. Agriculture 1950, Iowa secretary of Agriculture (1987âÂÂ1999), speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives (1975âÂÂ1979), member of the Iowa House (1965âÂÂ1987)
- Dayton Countryman (1918âÂÂ2011), B.S. Forestry 1940, attorney general of Iowa (1955âÂÂ57)
- E. Thurman Gaskill (born 1935), Commissioner of both Iowa's Department of Economic Development and its Department of Natural Resources, president of Iowa Corn Growers Association, president of National Corn Growers Association, chairman of the United States Feed Grains Council
- William C. Hayward (1847âÂÂ1917), did not graduate, Iowa secretary of state (1907âÂÂ1913)
- Clem F. Kimball (1868âÂÂ1928), B.A. Mechanical Engineering, lieutenant governor of Iowa (1925âÂÂ1928)
- Jeff Kurtz (born 1954), did not graduate, Iowa state representative (2019âÂÂ2021)
- Mary Mosiman (born 1962), B.S. Accounting 1999, Iowa state auditor (2013âÂÂ2019)
- Bill Northey (born 1959), Agricultural Business B.A. 1981, Iowa secretary of Agriculture (2007âÂÂ2018)
- Kraig Paulsen (born 1964), speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives (2011âÂÂ2015)
- Sally Pederson (born 1951), class of 1973, former lieutenant governor of Iowa (1999âÂÂ2007)
- Elaine Szymoniak (1920âÂÂ2009), Family Environment M.A. 1977, Iowa state senator (1988âÂÂ2000)
- Andrew Varley (1934âÂÂ2018), B.S. Agricultural Economics (1957), speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives (1973âÂÂ1975)
- Jo Ann Zimmerman (1936âÂÂ2019), took graduate classes but did not receive a degree, first female lieutenant governor of Iowa (1987âÂÂ1991) and member of the Iowa House of Representatives (1983âÂÂ1987
Other U.S. officials
- Katharine Abraham (born 1954), B.S. Economics 1976, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (1993âÂÂ2001), member of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Obama (2011âÂÂ2013)
- James Clark Jr. (1918âÂÂ2006), B.A. Animal Husbandry (1941), president of the Maryland State Senate (1979âÂÂ1983)
- Harvey Gantt (born 1943), transferred to Clemson University, becoming the first black student to be admitted, mayor of Charlotte, NC (1983âÂÂ1987)
- Gwynn Garnett (1909âÂÂ1995), B.S. 1934, administrator of the Foreign Agricultural Service 1955âÂÂ1959, author of the first draft of what would become the Food for Peace program
- Bayard T. Hainer (1860âÂÂ1933), B.S. 1884, justice of the Territorial Oklahoma Supreme Court (1898âÂÂ1907)
- Spencer Haven (1868âÂÂ1938), B.S. 1890, attorney general of Wisconsin (1918âÂÂ1919)
- Willet M. Hays (1859âÂÂ1928), M.A. Agriculture 1885, U.S. assistant secretary of Agriculture (1904âÂÂ1913)
- Jon Lindgren (born 1938), B.S. 1960, mayor of Fargo, North Dakota, 1978âÂÂ1994 and pioneering LGBT supporter
- Thomas Harris MacDonald (1881âÂÂ1957), Civil Engineering B.S. 1904, led the development of the Interstate Highway System
- Elwood Mead (1858âÂÂ1936), Civil Engineering PhD 1883, commissioner of U.S. Bureau of Reclamation during construction of the Hoover Dam, namesake of Lake Mead
- Lenora Moragne (1931âÂÂ2020), B.S. 1953, nutritionist
- Trudy Huskamp Peterson, B.S. 1967, Archivist of the United States (1993âÂÂ1995)
- Robert W. Sennewald, B.A. 1951, commanding general, United States Army Forces Command (1984âÂÂ1986)
- Scott Stanzel, B.A. 1995, deputy press secretary at the White House in the George W. Bush administration
- Steven VanRoekel, Management of Information Systems B.A. 1994, second Federal Chief Information Officer of the United States
International
Heads of state and government
Cabinet ministers
Other figures
Activists
Journalism
- Terry A. Anderson, B.A. 1974, former Middle East Bureau chief, the Associated Press
- Sally Jacobsen, B.A., journalist and foreign correspondent, first woman to serve as international editor of the Associated Press
- Jeff Joniak, B.A. 1984, announcer for Chicago Bears radio broadcasts
- Arendo Joustra, attended Graduate School, Department of Journalism and Mass Communication, 1979âÂÂ1980, Dutch, writer and editor in chief of Elsevier
- Robert E. Kowalski, B.A. 1966, M.S. 1977, bestselling medical author
- John Madson, 1951 (wildlife biology), freelance writer (outdoor sports periodicals); became independent scholar of tallgrass prairie ecology
- Sean McLaughlin, B.A. journalism, former Today Show weather anchor
- Christine Romans, B.A. 1993, CNN chief business correspondent
- Hugh Sidey, B.S., journalist for Life and Time magazines
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists
- Robert L. Bartley (1937âÂÂ2003), B.A. 1959, recipient of the 1980 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing; editor of The Wall Street Journal opinion page, vice president of Dow Jones & Company
- Jennifer Jacobs, journalist, senior White House correspondent for Bloomberg News
- Tom Knudson, Journalism B.A. 1980, two-time Pulitzer Prize winner in 1985 and 1992
- Ted Kooser (born 1939), B.S. 1962, U.S. Poet Laureate (in 2004âÂÂ2006) and recipient of the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
- Lauren K. Soth (1911âÂÂ1998), Agriculture Journalism B.A. 1932 and Agriculture Economics M.S. 1938, recipient of the 1956 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing
Science and technology
Aerospace engineering and mechanical engineering
- Clayton Anderson (born 1959), M.S. 1983, NASA astronaut; first Iowa State alum in space
- Steve Bales (born 1942), Aerospace Engineering B.S. 1964, director, Space Operations Management Office at NASA; known for the Apollo 11 landing
- Clarence Chamberlin (attended but did not graduate), aviation pioneer
- Sadanand Joshi, Ph.D. 1980, president of Joshi Technologies International, Inc. (JTI), petroleum engineer, contributed in developing horizontal well technology to produce crude oil and natural gas
- Firouz Naderi (born 1946), Mechanical Engineering B.S. 1969, Iranian-American, served 36 years at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), has an asteroid named after him, "5515 Naderi"
Agriculture sciences, plant sciences, and food science
- Griffith Buck (1915âÂÂ1991), B.S. 1948, M.S. 1949, Ph.D. 1953, professor of horticulture; developed nearly 100 new varieties of roses
- George Washington Carver (1860sâÂÂ1943), B.S. 1894, M.S. 1896, botanist and inventor, first African-American student and first African-American faculty member at ISU
- Michael Grimes, MS 1922, PhD 1923, Irish scientist and first professor of microbiology at University College Cork
- David Allen Laird, soil scientist
- Charlotte Maria King (1864âÂÂ1937), botanist, mycologist and agronomist
- Edward F. Knipling (1909âÂÂ2000), Entomology Ph.D. 1947, noted entomologist, World Food Prize winner for his work on developing the sterile insect technique
- Rose Marie Pangborn (1932âÂÂ1990), Food M.S. 1955, food scientist, food technologist, pioneer in the field of sensory analysis of food attributes, and professor at University of California, Davis
- , Utah State University Research Professor Emeritus and Cornell University Roy A. Young Scientist Emeritus Chair, helped to form the subdiscipline of biological pest control, known for studying Metarhizium
- James A. Slater (1920âÂÂ2008), Ph.D. 1950, noted entomologist, specialist in the study of heteroptera, and professor at the University of Connecticut
- G. Malcolm Trout, B.S. 1923, M.S. 1924, noted food scientist and creator of homogenized milk
Chemistry and biochemistry
- Julian Banzon (1908âÂÂ1988), Biochemistry Ph.D. 1940, biochemist, National Scientist of the Philippines
- Lawrence F. Dahl, Ph.D. 1956, professor emeritus of chemistry at the University of WisconsinâÂÂMadison
- Lionel Dahmer, Ph.D. 1966, research chemist and author who was the father of serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer
- Velmer A. Fassel, Ph.D. 1947, chemist, creator of inductively coupled plasma for mass spectrometry
- Lyle Goodhue, B.S. 1928, M.S. 1929, Ph.D. 1934,inventor, research chemist and entomologist
- Darleane C. Hoffman, B.S. 1948, nuclear chemist, part of the team that discovered Seaborgium, faculty senior scientist in the Nuclear Science Division of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, professor in the graduate school at University of California, Berkeley
Computer engineering
- Dale A. Anderson, M.S. 1959, Ph.D. 1964, pioneer in the field of computational fluid dynamics
- John Vincent Atanasoff (1903âÂÂ1995), ISU Math M.S. 1926 (see also AtanasoffâÂÂBerry Computer), inventor of the first electronic digital computer
- Clifford E. Berry (1918âÂÂ1963), B.S. 1939, MS 1941, Ph.D. 1948 (see also AtanasoffâÂÂBerry Computer), co-developer of the first electronic digital computer
- Bob O. Evans, B.S. 1951, computer pioneer and National Medal of Technology recipient
- John Gustafson, M.S. 1981, Ph.D. 1982, computer scientist and businessman, chiefly known for his work in high performance computing (HPC) such as the invention of Gustafson's law of parallel computing, introducing the first commercial computer cluster
- Tom M. Whitney, BS 1961, MS 1962, Ph.D. 1964, co-inventor of the first handheld calculator able to perform trigonometry, and former executive vice president of engineering at Apple Inc.
Mathematics
- Albert Turner Bharucha-Reid, mathematician, probability and Markov chain theorist
- Arthur E. Bryson, Jr., "father of modern optimal control theory"
- Gertrude Cox, B.S. 1929, statistician, president of American Statistical Association in 1956, first woman elected into International Statistical Institute
- Wayne Fuller, B.S. 1955, M.S. 1957, Ph.D. 1959, statistician
- Sarah Nusser, master's 1987, Ph.D. 1990, statistician and vice president for research at Iowa State
- Hadley Wickham, Ph.D. 2008, New Zealand statistician, elected fellow of American Statistical Association in 2015, known for ggplot2 and tidy data
Medical sciences
- Mary Carrington, M.S., Ph.D., director of the basic science program at the Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research
- Nancy Cox, BS 1970, virologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2006 U.S. Federal Employee of the Year; one of the 2006 Time 100
- Kate Stevens Harpel, teacher, physician
- Mark Mattson, BS 1979, prominent neuroscientist
- Emil Steinberger, M.D. 1955, endocrinologist, founding president of the American Society of Andrology
Sports
Baseball
Basketball
Football
Mixed martial arts
Olympics
- Glen Brand, 3-time All-American wrestler; 1948 Summer Olympics gold medalist in freestyle wrestling
- Dan Gable, lost only one collegiate wrestling match; 1972 Olympic gold medalist and 1971 World Wrestling Champion, became top wrestling coach in the country at the University of Iowa
- Kevin Jackson, 1992 Olympic Freestyle Wrestling Champion, former mixed martial artist, former head coach for ISU Cyclone Wrestling
- Nawal El Moutawakel, first African woman and first Muslim woman to earn Olympic gold
- Ben Peterson, 2-time NCAA Champion wrestler at Iowa State; 1972 & 1976 Olympic gold and silver medalist respectively
- Cael Sanderson, 4-time NCAA undefeated wrestling champion (159âÂÂ0) and 2004 Summer Olympics gold medalist, head coach of the Penn State wrestling team
- Jake Varner, 2012 Summer Olympics gold medalist
Track
Cross country
- Edwin Kurgat, 2019 NCAA Champion and Olympic qualifier
- Guor Mading Maker, 2-time Olympic marathoner and flag bearer for South Sudan at the 2016 Summer Olympics
- Lisa Uhl, four-time NCAA Division One champion, current NCAA record holder in the 10,000 meters
Cheerleading
Wrestling
Ultramarathon
- Pete Kostelnick, 2015 1st place Badwater 135 Ultramarathon, 23hr 27min 10sec
Notable faculty and staff
Nobel laureates
Pulitzer Prize
Government and politics
Arts
Literature
Visual arts
Science and technology
Agriculture sciences, plant sciences, and food science
Chemistry and biochemistry
- John B. Balinsky, biochemist, physiologist, chair of zoology
- L. K. Doraiswamy, chemical engineer, proponent of Organic synthesis engineering and Padma Bhushan winner
- Henry Gilman, known as the "father of organometallic chemistry"
- Nellie May Naylor (1885âÂÂ1992), influential chemistry professor at Iowa State University, one of the earliest female chemistry professors at ISU, teaching 1908âÂÂ1955
- Frank Spedding, noted Ames Laboratory chemist who developed the Ames Process as a part of the Manhattan Project; namesake of Spedding Prize
Computer science and engineering
Economics
Military technology
Mathematics
Medicine
Physics
Sports
Basketball
- Larry Eustachy, former men's basketball coach, 2000 NCAA National Coach of the Year
- Tim Floyd, former men's basketball coach with 81âÂÂ49 record and first coach with three consecutive 20-win seasons
- Johnny Orr, most successful coach in Iowa State and Michigan men's basketball history
Football
Martial arts
- Yong Chin Pak, Grandmaster, instructs taekwondo, hapkido, and judo
Sociology
Presidents of Iowa State University
References