List of Bradley University people

From Wikipedia - Reading time: 9 min

This list of Bradley University people includes alumni and faculty of Bradley University, a private, mid-sized university in Peoria, Illinois founded in 1897.

Alumni

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Government, public service, and public policy

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  • David Brant — former director of Naval Criminal Investigative Service
  • Richard E. Carver — former Mayor of Peoria and 16th Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Air Force
  • Brad Cohen — motivational speaker and teacher
  • Tom Fink — former mayor of Anchorage, Alaska and Speaker of Alaska House of Representatives
  • Joseph R. Holzapple — U.S. Air Force four-star general
  • Laura Kelly — 48th Governor of Kansas[1]
  • Robin Kelly — U.S. Congresswoman from Illinois' 2nd District
  • Morris Kleiner — AFL-CIO Professor of Public Policy, Humphrey School, University of Minnesota
  • Ray LaHood — U.S. Congressman from Illinois' 18th District and former United States Secretary of Transportation
  • Ali al-Marri — convicted 9/11 co-conspirator [2]
  • Judge Joe Billy McDade — Senior United States District Judge for the Central District of Illinois (BS '59, MS '60)
  • Robert H. Michel — U.S. Congressman from Illinois' 18th District and longest serving Republican leader of the U.S. House of Representatives
  • Nicholas Scoppetta — New York City Fire Commissioner
  • James E. Shadid — Chief United States District Judge for Central District of Illinois
  • General John M. Shalikashvili — retired chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and former Supreme Allied Commander of NATO
  • Jerald D. Slack — U.S. Air National Guard Major General, Adjutant General of Wisconsin
  • Ryan Spain — Member of the Illinois House of Representatives from the 74th district
  • Scott Randolph — Orange County Tax Collector and former member of the Florida House of Representatives
  • Aaron Schock — former member of the US House of Representatives
  • Michael D Unes — Member of the Illinois House of Representatives from the 91st district and Assistant Minority Leader
  • Chuck Weaver — Member of the Illinois Senate from the 37th District

Literature, arts, and media

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  • Cecil Baldwin — voice of Cecil Palmer, the narrator of the podcast Welcome to Night Vale
  • Jill Bennett — actress
  • Merle Boyer—jewelry designer
  • Jack Brickhouse — Baseball Hall of Fame radio and TV announcer for the Chicago Cubs
  • Cardon V. Burnham — musical composer, arranger, conductor, performer
  • Hal Corley — five-time Emmy Award-winning TV writer, nationally produced and published playwright[3][4]
  • Philip José Farmer — author, known for science fiction and fantasy novels
  • Neil Flynn — actor best known for his roles on Scrubs and The Middle[5]
  • Jerry Hadley — lyric tenor for the New York Metropolitan Opera
  • Chick Hearn — Basketball Hall of Fame play-by-play announcer for the Los Angeles Lakers
  • David Horowitz — consumer advocate
  • Tami Lane — Academy Award winner (makeup, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe)
  • Ralph Lawler — TV and radio play-by-play announcer for the Los Angeles Clippers
  • Jeff Mauro — television personality on Food Network
  • Rude Osolnik (1915–2001) American woodturner and educator; class of 1937[6][7]
  • Lyall Smith — sportswriter, editor and Detroit Lions public-relations director
  • Charley Steiner — sportscaster, ESPN's SportsCenter, radio announcer for New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers
  • Richard Thomas - author, known for his neo-noir and speculative fiction
  • Timothy Treadwell — environmentalist and documentarian, star of Animal Planet's Grizzly Man Diaries
  • Eric Petersen — actor, best known for role of Kevin in AMC's Kevin Can F**k Himself
  • Michelle Young — American television personality best known for being the Runner up on The Bachelor season 25 and being the lead of The Bachelorette season 18

Business and science

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  • Dr. Lillian Glass — expert in body language, columnist, TV commentator
  • Jerry Hayden — former President of Peacock Engineering
  • John R. Horne (MS 1964) — former CEO of Navistar[8]
  • Howard Lance — chairman, president, and chief executive officer at Harris Corporation
  • Major Robert Henry Lawrence, Jr. — became the first African American astronaut in 1967
  • J.J. Liu — software engineer; one of the top women poker players in the world
  • Timothy L. Mounts — agricultural chemist specializing in edible oilseed
  • George T. Shaheen — former CEO of Siebel Systems, Andersen Consulting, and Webvan
  • Louis Skidmore — architect and co-founder of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill

Athletics

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  • Alon Badat (born 1989) - Israeli soccer player
  • Pat Brady — professional football player for Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Gavin Glinton — professional soccer player for Nam Dinh FC and Turks and Caicos Islands national football team
  • Curt Hasler — professional baseball player and current bullpen coach for Chicago White Sox
  • Hersey Hawkins — professional basketball player for Chicago Bulls, Seattle SuperSonics, Charlotte Hornets and Philadelphia 76ers; also bronze medalist, 1988 Summer Olympics; all-time leading scorer for Bradley men's basketball
  • Harry Jacobs — professional football player for Boston Patriots, Buffalo Bills and New Orleans Saints
  • Scottie James (born 1996) - basketball player for Hapoel Haifa in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
  • Jerry Krause — legendary General Manager for the Chicago Bulls; managed the Bulls to six NBA Championships and two-time recipient of the NBA's Executive of the Year award
  • Walt Lemon Jr. (born 1992) - basketball player in the Israel Basketball Premier League
  • Jim Les — professional basketball player for Utah Jazz, Los Angeles Clippers, Sacramento Kings and Atlanta Hawks; assistant coach for WNBA's Sacramento Monarchs; former head coach at Bradley
  • Bobby Joe Mason — professional basketball player for Harlem Globetrotters
  • Shellie McMillon — professional basketball player for Detroit Pistons
  • Gene Melchiorre — basketball player, first overall pick in 1951 NBA Draft
  • Steve Miller — coach, Kansas State athletic director, Nike and Professional Bowlers Association executive, University of Oregon faculty member
  • Dennis Morgan — professional football player for Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles
  • Bryan Namoff — soccer player, defensive starter for Major League Soccer team D.C. United
  • Patrick O'Bryant — professional basketball player drafted ninth overall in the 2006 NBA draft by Golden State Warriors
  • Anthony Parker — professional basketball player for Toronto Raptors, Orlando Magic, Philadelphia 76ers, and Cleveland Cavaliers
  • Marcus Pollard — professional football player for Detroit Lions, Indianapolis Colts and Seattle Seahawks
  • Kirby Puckett — 1981 One of just six professional baseball players for Minnesota Twins inducted into Baseball Hall of Fame
  • Ray Ramsey — professional football player for the Chicago Cardinals
  • Bryan Rekar — professional baseball player for Colorado Rockies, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, and Kansas City Royals
  • Bill Roehnelt — professional football player for Chicago Bears, Washington Redskins and Denver Broncos
  • Matt Savoie — figure skater, U.S. bronze medalist, member of 2006 Winter Olympics U.S. team
  • Rob Scahill — professional baseball player for Colorado Rockies and Pittsburgh Pirates
  • Leo Schrall — baseball head coach from 1949 through 1972, led Bradley Braves to two College World Series appearances and five Missouri Valley Conference championships
  • Brian Shouse — professional baseball player for Tampa Bay Rays
  • Bill Stone — football player, halfback for Baltimore Colts, Chicago Bears ('51–'54), Bradley football head coach
  • Levern Tart — professional basketball player for several ABA teams
  • Mike Tauchman (born 1990) - outfielder for the Chicago Cubs of Major League Baseball
  • David Thirdkill — professional basketball player, member of 1985–86 Boston Celtics championship team, also played for Detroit Pistons and Phoenix Suns, 1993 Israeli Basketball Premier League MVP
  • Bill Tuttle — professional baseball player for Detroit Tigers, Kansas City Athletics, and Minnesota Twins
  • John M. Veitch — Hall of Fame thoroughbred racehorse trainer
  • Chet Walker — Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, professional basketball player for Syracuse Nationals, Philadelphia 76ers, and Chicago Bulls

Faculty

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People who did not attend Bradley as a student but were on the Bradley staff or faculty include:

  • John R. Brazil — president of Bradley, 1992–2000
  • Phil Crane — Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Illinois's 13th district (1969-1973), 12th district (1973-1993), and 8th district (1993-2005)
  • Romeo B. Garrett — He was the first black faculty member to be hired by the university. Professor of Sociology.
  • Claire Etaugh — Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
  • Ernst Ising — German physicist: developed the Ising model in statistical mechanics
  • Sibyl Moholy-Nagy - German-American architectural writer, in 1948[9]
  • David P. Schmitt — Personality psychologist, founder of the International Sexuality Description Project, (1995–present)
  • Kevin Stein — Poet Laureate of Illinois (2003–present)
  • Charles E. Tucker, Jr. — retired U.S. Air Force Major General[10] and Executive Director of the World Engagement Institute[11]
  • Olive B. White — novelist, English professor, longtime Dean of Women

References

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  1. ^ "Laura Kelly, a Kansas Democrat, Tops Kobach in Governor's Race". Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  2. ^ Alleged terrorist charged with conspiracy - CNN.com
  3. ^ Nick Madigan (February 21, 1999). "The write track: Scribes honored at WGA ceremony". Variety Magazine. Retrieved October 27, 2020. ...In daytime serials, "All My Children" took the prize for its writers — Agnes Nixon ... Hal Corley,....
  4. ^ Walter F. Rodriguez (January 4, 2013). "5 Questions With Hal Corley". Playwrights Theater of New Jersey. Retrieved October 27, 2020. ... You are a five time Emmys and two WGA Awards winner....
  5. ^ Rosenberger, Tim (April 3, 2017). "TV Star Returns to Bradley to Receive Alumni Award". Peoria Journal Star. Peoria, Illinois. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
  6. ^ "Obituaries". Lexington Herald-Leader. November 21, 2001. p. 18. Retrieved 2023-11-28 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ Kardon, Janet; Coe, Ralph T. (1994). Revivals! Diverse Traditions, 1920-1945: The History of Twentieth-century American Craft. H.N. Abrams. p. 243. ISBN 978-0-8109-1955-6.
  8. ^ "Corrections Corp Of America (CXW:New York): John R. Horne". Bloomberg. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  9. ^ "Guide to the Sibyl Moholy-Nagy Collection MS.043 at UC Santa Cruz". Online Archive of California. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  10. ^ Nationalguard.mil[permanent dead link]
  11. ^ "World Engagement Institute - The World Engagement Institute (WEI)". World Engagement Institute. Retrieved May 26, 2016.
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