Sports stars
Tiger Woods — one of the most successful golfers of all time
Kenyon Martin — basketball star with the NBA
Bob Love — legendary star of the Chicago Bulls
Johnny Damon — outfielder for the New York Yankees
Ron Harper — basketball star
Pat Williams — football player with the Minnesota Vikings
Bill Walton — basketball star, sports commentator
Bo Jackson — multi-sport professional athlete
Lester Hayes — defensive back for LA Raiders
Tommy John — pitcher for Oakland A's former Yankee
Greg Louganis — diving champion
Dave Taylor — Former hockey star with the LA Kings
Adrian Peterson — football star, running back with the Chicago Bears
Chris Zorich — the Chicago Bears defensive lineman
Trumaine McBride — cornerback for the Chicago Bears
Gordie Lane — hockey defenseman for the N.Y. Islanders
Rubin "Hurricane" Carter — boxer
Jermain Taylor — boxer
Ken Venturi — Legendary golfer and commentator for CBS Sports
Actors, singers, and entertainers
James Earl Jones — Broadway, television, and movie star.
Mel Tillis — country music singer and songwriter. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame and received the lifetime achievement award in 2007. He has also been inducted into the Grand Ole Opry. Tillis and his band, the Statesiders, released such hits as “I Ain’t Never,” “Good Woman Blues,” and “I Believe in You.”
Nicholas Brendon — TV star "Xander" in Buffy the Vampire Slayer
John Melendez — announcer for the Tonight Show, musician, actor and comedian
Bruce Willis — leading actor
Jimmy Stewart — actor
Julia Roberts — Academy Award-winning actress
Robert Merrill — opera star
Budd Schulberg — "On the Waterfront," Oscar winner
Peggy Lipton — actress from TV show "Mod Squad" and "Twin Peaks"
Sam Neil — actor
Eric Roberts — actor
Raymond Massey — actor deceased
Carly Simon — singer
Jack Paar — late show host
Anthony Quinn — actor
Marilyn Monroe — actress and singer
Bill Withers — singer and song writer
Shane Yellowbird — country music star from Canada
Tom Sizemore — actor famous for role in "Saving Private Ryan"
Emily Blunt — actress
Writers, authors, producers, and composers
Alan Rabinowitz — zoologist, conservationist, and author
Jeffrey Blitz — writer, director, and producer. Recent movies include Rocket Science and Spellbound.
John Updike — writer
Somerset Maugham — writer
Lewis Carroll — British writer, Alice in Wonderland, Through the Looking Glass
Margaret Drabble — British novelist
Jane Seymour — Actress and author of children's books
Indiana Gregg — Scottish singer who battled her stuttering by writing and performing her own songs as a child.
Marc Shell — Author and professor of comparative literature and English at Harvard University.
Robert A. Heinlein — science fiction writer
Neville Shute — Novelist
Andrew Lloyd Webber — famous for Cats, Phantom of the Opera
Jack Ebert — producer "Dances with Wolves"
Dominick Dunne — writer
Charles Darwin — British naturalist and author of The Origin of Species
John Gregory Dunne — novelist, journalist, screenwriter
Journalists and photographers
John Stossel — 20/20 co-anchor
P.F. Bentley — award-winning photographer for TIME Magazine
Government leaders and public officials
Winston Churchill — statesman and orator
Henry M. Paulson Jr., U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
Congressman Frank Wolf of Virginia
Prince Albert of Monaco
Miguel Estrada — Prominent attorney and nominee for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
U.S. Senator Joseph Biden of Delaware
Sidney Gottlieb — controversial CIA psychologist and mastermind
Bill Sheffield — former governor of Alaska
King George VI — an inspiration to his country during WWII when he addressed the nation in radio broadcasts in spite of a severe stutter
Annie Glenn — wife of former astronaut, Senator Glenn
Walter Wriston — Citibank
John Sculley — Apple
Mike Harper — Conagra
Jack Welch — General Electric
Vince Naimoli — Harvard Industries
Steven Brill — publisher and founder of Court TV
Michael Sheehan — communications consultant
Walter H. Annenberg — deceased publisher and philanthropist. He created TV Guide and Seventeen magazine. He also owned The Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News.