Phi Kappa Phi is an international collegiate honor society. Following is a list of notable members of Phi Kappa Phi.
Academia
- Doris Twitchell Allen, psychologist and professor
- Stephen Ambrose, historian and professor
- Kwame Anthony Appiah, philosopher, professor, and awardee of the National Humanities Medal
- George C. Baldwin, theoretical and experimental physicist and professor
- John R. Brazil, president of Trinity University
- Mary Ethel Creswell, home economist and university professor
- David Herbert Donald, historian and professor
- Peter M. Donohue, president of Villanova University
- Barbara Forrest, professor of philosophy in Southeastern Louisiana University
- Marye Anne Fox, chancellor of the University of California, San Diego
- Claude Hall, historian and professor
- Abram W. Harris, president of Northwestern University and the University of Maine, afounder of Phi Kappa Phi and Alpha Delta Tau
- Freeman A. Hrabowski III, president of University of Maryland, Baltimore County
- Milton Stover Eisenhower, president of three major American universities
- Robert Khayat, chancellor of the University of Mississippi
- Louis LaPierre, professor of ecology
- Jose P. Laurel, 3rd president of the Philippines
- Wilbur R. LePage, professor and department chair of electrical and computer engineering at Syracuse University
- Elizabeth Ann Nalley, chemist and professor of chemistry at Cameron University
- Shlomo Sawilowsky, rabbi and professor
- Bernadotte Everly Schmitt, Pulitzer Prize–winning historian and professor of Modern European History at the University of Chicago
- Steffen Schmidt, faculty of Iowa State University
- Theodore Schultz, Nobel Memorial Prize–winning economist and chairman of the University of Chicago Department of Economics
- David Silva, Provost and academic vice president of Salem State University
- Lou Anna Simon, 20th president of Michigan State University
- James Monroe Smith, president of Louisiana State University
- Teresa A. Sullivan, 8th president of the University of Virginia
- Michael Vocino, librarian and professor at the University of Rhode Island
- Richard F. Wilson, 18th President Illinois Wesleyan University
- Jill Zimmerman, computer scientist, professor, and head of the Goucher College robotics lab
Art and architecture
- Lamar Dodd, artist
- Leslie Erganian, artist who works in photography, collage, assemblage, and animation
- Glenna Goodacre, sculptor, designer of the Vietnam Women's Memorial
- Frank Albert Waugh, pioneer of landscape architecture
Business
- James Barksdale, president and CEO of Netscape Communications Corporation
- Robert A. McDonald, chairman, president, and CEO of Procter & Gamble
- John D. Zeglis, president of AT&T and the chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) of AT&T Wireless
Entertainment
- William Bolcom, composer and pianist, recipient of the Pulitzer Prize, the National Medal of Arts, and a Grammy Award
- David Brubeck, jazz musician
- Renee Fleming, opera singer and Grammy Award winner
- Arlie Honeycutt, Miss North Carolina 2012
- Sharon Jordan, actress
- Ellis Marsalis, jazz musician
- Deborah Norville, television anchor for Inside Edition and member of the board of directors at Viacom Corporation
- Christopher Rouse, Pulitzer Prize-winning composer
Floyd Van Nest Schultz |
Law
- Fernande R. V. Duffly, associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
- Phil Preis, lawyer and candidate for governor in Louisiana
- Edward Terry Sanford, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
- Chesterfield Smith, president of the American Bar Association during the Watergate scandal
- William Howard Taft, 10th Chief Justice of the United States and 27th President of the United States
Literature and journalism
- David Baldacci, novelist
- Lela E. Buis, author, poet, and painter
- Turner Catledge, senior executive of The New York Times
- Rita Dove, Pulitzer Prize–winning poet
- Ernest J Gaines, author, MacArthur Foundation fellow, and awardee of the National Humanities Medal
- John Grisham, author
- Charles W. Henderson, author who writes about military history
- W. Patrick Lang, author, commentator on the Middle East, special forces officer, and intelligence executive
- Kathleen Parker, nationally syndicated columnist for The Washington Post
- John Noble Wilford, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist
Military
- William Allen Knowlton, Superintendent of the United States Military Academy
- Ray Mabus, 75th United States Secretary of the Navy
Politics
- H. Gardner Ackley, economist and former United States ambassador to Italy
- Jonathan S. Adelstein, former commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission
- Ellis Arnall, 69th governor of Georgia
- Kathleen Blanco, 54th governor of Louisiana
- William Denis Brown III, Louisiana State Senate (1968–1976)[1]
- Julie Cantrell, editor and best-selling author
- Jimmy Carter, 39th president of the United States
- Hillary Clinton, 67th United States Secretary of State
- Thad Cochran, United States Senator
- Mike Davis, California State Assemblyman (2006–2012), president pro tem, LA Board of Public Works Commission
- Michael Dukakis, 65th and 67th Governor of Massachusetts
- Tim Flakoll, North Dakota State Senator
- Henry H. Fowler, 58th United States Secretary of the Treasury
- Robert Gates, 22nd United States Secretary of Defense
- Al Gore, 45th vice president of the United States
- Nathaniel Edwin Harris, 61st governor of Georgia
- Samuel Ichiye Hayakawa, United States Senator
- Marjorie Holt, United States Congresswoman
- William Marion Jardine, United States Secretary of Agriculture and Ambassador
- Alf Landon, 26th governor of Kansas and United States presidential nominee
- Loren Legarda, senator of the Republic of the Philippines
- Ferdinand Marcos, 10th president of the Philippines and kleptocrat
- Edward Perkins, former United States Ambassador and director of the United States Diplomatic Corps
- Russell Peterson, 66th governor of Delaware
- Fidel V. Ramos, 12th president of the Philippines
- Harry Reid, United States Senate Majority Leader
- Peter Rheinstein, former U.S. Food and Drug Administration official
- Emma Ridgway, Washington House of Representatives
- Mitt Romney, 70th governor of Massachusetts
- Carlos P. Romulo, president of the Fourth Session of United Nations General Assembly
- Robert Walter Scott, 67th governor of North Carolina
- James Graves Scrugham, 14th governor of Nevada
- Harry Shiver, Alabama House of Representatives
- Robert L. F. Sikes, United States Congressman
- William Howard Taft, 27th President of the United States and 10th Chief Justice of the United States
- Morris Udall, U.S. Representative
- Matthew VanDyke, freedom fighter and prisoner of war (POW) in the 2011 Libyan Civil War
Science and technology
- Bernard A. Harris, Jr., first African American to spacewalk
- Douglas Engelbart, inventor and internet pioneer
- Tim Kopra, NASA astronaut and former commander of the International Space Station
- Wendy Lawrence, NASA astronaut
- James A. McDivitt, commander of Gemini 4 and Apollo 9
- George Andrew Olah, Nobel Prize–winning chemist
- Rahul Pandit, condensed matter physicist, Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar laureate
- Linus Pauling, Nobel Peace Prize and Nobel Prize in chemistry
- Claude Shannon, the father of information theory
Sports
- Bob DuPuy, former president and chief operating officer of Major League Baseball
- Ted Howard, soccer excecutive
- Jim Tressel, former head football coach at Ohio State University
- Dallas Ward, head football coach at the University of Colorado in Boulder
References
- ^ "William Denis Brown, III". Monroe News-Star, March 9, 2012. Retrieved July 13, 2013.