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List of University of Saskatchewan alumni
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Between 1907 and 2007 there were over 132,200 alumni of the University of Saskatchewan. This list features notable people who have graduated from a degree, certificate and/or diploma program at the university.[1]
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2022) |
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Agriculture
- Lorne Babiuk - immunologist, pathogenesist, virologist, molecular virology, and vaccinologist[2]
- Howard Fredeen - animal breeding researcher[3]
- Lawrence Kirk - agronomist best known for introducing crested wheatgrass[2]
- J.W. Grant MacEwan - Director of the School of Agriculture, Professor of Animal Husbandry, and Lieutenant-Governor of Alberta (1966–1974)[4]
- Kenneth Norrie - economic historian specializing in the economy of Western Canada, especially prairie wheat farming[5]
- Cecil Frederick Patterson - introduced 52 new varieties of hardy fruits for the prairies and over 18 varieties of hybrid hardy lilies[6]
- Clayton Oscar Person - international authority on the genetics of host-parasite relations[7]
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Arts and entertainment
- Robert Boyer - Canadian visual artist of aboriginal heritage; BEd from the Regina Campus of the U of S in 1971[8]
- Kim Coates - actor, honorary Doctor of Letters[9]
- Stephen Fox - clarinet maker[10]
- Garnet Hertz - artist, designer and academic; Canada Research Chair[11]
- Frances Hyland - actress[12]
- William G. Hobbs - physician, surgeon, major Canadian artist[13]
- Ann James - English-born Canadian artist and educator[14]
- Laurel Johannesson - artist[15]
- Deborah Theaker - actress known as Casey Edison on the science fiction comedy show Manic Mansion[16]
- Gordon Thiessen OC - Governor of the Bank of Canada; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2][17]
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Business
- Tom Anselmi - President and COO of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment[18]
- H. Douglas Barber - founder of Electrical Engineering Canadian; CEO of Gennum Corporation[19]
- N. Murray Edwards - billionaire[2]
- John E. Floyd - economist[20]
- Chad Hamre - entrepreneur[21]
- Daryl "Doc" Seaman, OC, honorary Doctor of Laws - businessman; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2]
- Arnold Tremere - Executive Director, government official (Canadian International Grains Institute)[22]
- Steven Gregory Woods - entrepreneur[23]
- Victor J. Zaleschuk - chair of the board of Cameco Corporation[24]
Computers, engineering, and technology
- Fred Mannering - Professor at University of South Florida, Clarivate Highly Cited Researcher[25]
- Permanand Mohan - Chief Examiner for the Caribbean Examinations Council's CAPE Examinations in Computer Science[26]
- W. Brett Wilson - entrepreneur, philanthropist; former Dragon's Den panelist; co-founder of FirstEnergy Capital; founder, President, and Chairman of Prairie Merchant Capital; Chairman of Canoe Financial[27]
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Educators
- Dominique Abrioux - former President of Athabasca University
- John Hall Archer - librarian, historian, civil servant, first President of the University of Regina
- Reginald John Godfrey Bateman - professor of English[28]
- George Fredrick Curtis - dean of the University of British Columbia Faculty of Law
- R. Peter MacKinnon - lawyer, legal academic, President of the U of S[2]
- Darin Nesbitt - instructor of political science at Douglas College in New Westminster, B.C.
- A K M Siddiq - 18th Vice-Chancellor of the University of Dhaka.
- Paul Thagard - Professor of Philosophy, with cross appointment to Psychology and Computer Science, and Director of the Cognitive Science Program, at the University of Waterloo
- Henry (Harry) George Thode, CC, MBE, FRSC - president and vice-chancellor of McMaster University; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2]
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Environmentalists
- Richard St. Barbe Baker - English forester, environmental activist, and author
- Jim MacNeill - consultant, environmentalist, and international public servant[2]
Historians
- Frank Kusch - historian of American history
Journalism/publishing/broadcasting
- Eric Malling - television journalist[2]
- Sally Merchant - television personality and political figure
Law, government, and public policy
- Don Atchison - Mayor of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
- Pat Atkinson - politician
- Chris Axworthy - politician
- Gordon Barnhart - University Secretary, professor in Canadian Politics, former Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan[2]
- Dave Batters - politician
- Edward Dmytro Bayda - Chief Justice of Saskatchewan[2]
- Clément Chartier - Métis Canadian leader
- Brooke Claxton - veteran of World War I, federal Minister of National Health and Welfare and Minister of National Defence honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the U of S
- Eric Cline - politician
- Roméo Dallaire, OC, CMM, GOQ, MSC, CD - senator, humanitarian, author and retired general; honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the U of S
- Jonathan Denis - 23rd Minister of Justice of Alberta and notable Calgary lawyer
- Grant Devine - 11th Premier of Saskatchewan
- John Diefenbaker, CH, PC, KC - 13th Prime Minister of Canada;[2] university's chancellor; he and his wife were buried at the university, near the Diefenbaker Canada Centre
- Noah Evanchuk - 2011 Canadian federal election candidate, Saskatchewan Provincial Court Judge
- Laurie Evans - politician
- Clarence Fines - provincial treasurer of Saskatchewan
- Jon Gerrard, PC - politician and medical doctor
- Ralph Goodale, PC - Minister of Agriculture, Minister of Natural Resources, Minister of Public Works, Minister of Finance, Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
- Alvin Hamilton, PC - politician
- Robert Hanbidge, honorary Doctor of Laws - lawyer, municipal, provincial and federal politician, and Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan
- Lynda M. Haverstock - Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan (2000–2006); Leader of the Saskatchewan Liberal Party[2]
- Benjamin D. Heppner - school teacher, businessman and politician
- John Hewson - Australian politician
- Ray Hnatyshyn - 24th Governor General of Canada[2]
- Constance D. Hunt - lawyer, legal academic, and judge
- Gerard Jennissen - politician
- Fredrick W. Johnson - 16th Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan
- Georgina Jolibois - mayor and former Member of Parliament
- Gordon Kirkby - politician, mayor and lawyer
- Otto Lang, PC, OC, KC - politician
- Léonard Hilarion Joseph Legault - diplomat
- Harold Hugh MacKay, OC, KC - lawyer and corporate director
- Murdoch MacPherson, KC - Attorney-General of Saskatchewan; honorary Doctor of Civil Law degree from U of S
- Jim Maddin - Mayor of Saskatoon
- James Mallory - jurist; academic; constitutional expert; instructor in political science at U of S
- Edward Cyril Malone - Saskatchewan lawyer and politician
- William McIntyre, CC (born 1918) - retired Puisne Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada[2]
- Stewart McLean - Manitoba politician
- Gary Merasty, M.P. - politician; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2]
- Anthony Merchant, KC - Saskatchewan lawyer
- George Porteous - 14th Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan
- Alison Redford, ECA, KC - 14th Premier of Alberta
- Robert Gordon Robertson, PC, CC[29] FRSC - Commissioner of the Northwest Territories
- David Rodney - politician, teacher, and professional speaker[2]
- Roy Romanow, PC, OC, SOM, KC -[30] politician and 12th Premier of Saskatchewan; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2]
- Tillie Taylor - judge, first chair of the Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission
- Andrew Thomson - Minister of Finance of Saskatchewan
- William Ferdinand Alphonse Turgeon - politician and diplomat
- John Thomas Wolfe - Canadian provincial politician
- Stephen Worobetz, OC, MC, SOM - physician and former Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2]
- Clifford Wright - mayor of Saskatoon; honorary Doctor of Laws
- Iva Yeo - politician
- Jacqueline Dorgan - Justice of Supreme Court - BC
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Literature
- William Barr - Arctic historian; U of S faculty member
- Dennis Cooley - poet
- Lorna Crozier, a.k.a. Lorna Uher - poet
- Dawn Dumont, author, BA 1995[31]
- Sarah Ens - poet
- Richard Epp - playwright[32]
- Michael Helm - novelist
- Maureen Hunter - playwright
- Eli Mandel - poet and literary academic
- William Sarjeant - geologist and novelist
- Joseph Schull - playwright and historian[33]
- Tasha Spillett-Sumner - writer and educator[34]
- Guy Clarence Vanderhaeghe, OC, SOM - fiction author; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2]
- William Whitehead - writer, actor and filmmaker
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Medicine
- Hulda Regehr Clark - naturopath, author, and controversial practitioner of alternative medicine
- Dmytro Cipywnyk, CM – physician and academic
- Emmett Matthew Hall, CC, KC - jurist and civil libertarian; considered one of the fathers of the Canadian system of Medicare[2]
- Franklin M. Loew - one of the team that developed canola oil; recipient of the Queen's Jubilee Medal
- Charles Randal Smith - head pediatric forensic pathologist[2]
Nobel Prize winners
- Gerhard Herzberg - Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1970; was offered a position in 1935 to flee Nazi Germany, and remained at the university for ten years
- Henry Taube, FRSC - Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1983[2]
Philosophy
Science
- Sylvia Fedoruk - University Chancellor, professor in Oncology, Associate Member in Physics, and Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan (1988–1994)[2]
- William Sarjeant - geologist and novelist
- Elizabeth Scarr - researcher in neuropathology
- Raymond Thorsteinsson - geologist of the high Arctic; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S][2]
- Thorbergur Thorvaldson - scientist and first dean of graduate studies at the U of S
- James Till O.C., O.Ont., F.R.S.C. - biophysicist, medical researcher who demonstrated the existence of stem cells; one of the "100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2]
Sociologists
Sports
- Kelly Bates - B.C. Lions, CFL and U of S Saskatchewan Huskies football player
- Rod Bryden - owner of the Ottawa Senators; professor of law at U of S
- Tyson Craiggs - B.C. Lions, CFL and U of S Saskatchewan Huskies football player
- Nikita Ens - Paralympic swimmer
- Cyprian Enweani - sprinter
- George Genereux - physician and trap shooting gold medal winner
- Charles Cecil Hay - ice hockey player, organizer, and administrator
- Diane Jones-Konihowski, C.M. - pentathlete[2]
- Dave King - hockey coach[2]
- Gene Makowsky - Saskatchewan Roughriders lineman of the CFL
- Shannon Miller - hockey coach
- Sandra Schmirler, SOM, BSPE - curler; Olympic and triple World Champion; one of the '100 Alumni of Influence" from the U of S[2]
- Don Wittman - nationally recognized sports broadcaster in Canada
- Viola Yanik - wrestler
Theology
- Maurice Baudoux - priest and Archbishop of Saint Boniface, Manitoba[35]
- Walter H. Farquharson - hymn-writer[36]
- Herbert V. Günther - Buddhist; professor and Head of the Department of Far Eastern Studies at the U of S[37]
- Muzaffar Iqbal - founding president of the Center for Islam and Science[38]
- Raymond L. Schultz - National Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada[39]
Honorary degree recipients
- Arnold Davidson Dunton, CC, Doctor of Laws, honoris causa - educator and public administrator
- Charles Cecil Hay, honorary doctorate - ice hockey player, organizer, and administrator
See also
Notes
References
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