| 1. | Andrew Dickson, 1832–1918, U.S. diplomat and pioneer of land-grant education. |
| 2. | Byron R(aymond) (“Whizzer” ), born 1917, U.S. lawyer and jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1962–93. |
| 3. | Edmund, born 1940, U.S. novelist. |
| 4. | Edward Douglass, 1845–1921, U.S. jurist: Chief Justice of the U.S. 1910–21. |
| 5. | Edward H(ig⋅gins), II [hig-inz] , 1930–67, U.S. astronaut: first American to walk in space 1965. |
| 6. | E(l⋅wyn) B(rooks) [el-win] , 1899–1985, U.S. humorist and poet. |
| 7. | George Leonard, 1838–95, U.S. choral conductor. |
| 8. | Gilbert, 1720–93, English clergyman, naturalist, and writer. |
| 9. | Patrick (Victor Mar⋅tin⋅dale) [mahr-tn-deyl] , 1912–90, Australian writer, born in England: Nobel prize 1973. |
| 10. | Stanford, 1853–1906, U.S. architect. |
| 11. | Stewart Edward, 1873–1946, U.S. novelist. |
| 12. | T(erence) H(an⋅bur⋅y) [han-buh-ree] , 1896–1964, English novelist. |
| 13. | Theodore H., 1915–86, U.S. journalist and writer. |
| 14. | Walter Francis, 1893–1955, U.S. civil-rights leader and writer: executive secretary of the NAACP 1931–55. |
| 15. | William A(l⋅an⋅son) [al-uh n-suh n] , 1870–1937, U.S. neurologist, psychiatrist, and writer. |
| 16. | William Allen, 1868–1944, U.S. journalist. |