List of Carleton University people
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This is a list of notable people associated with Carleton University, such as faculty members and alumni.
Contents
Lineage and establishment
Chancellors
- 1952–1954 Harry Stevenson Southam
- 1954–1968 Jack Mackenzie
- 1969–1972 Lester B. Pearson
- 1973–1980 Gerhard Herzberg
- 1980–1990 Robert Gordon Robertson (Emeritus 1992–)
- 1990–1992 Pauline Jewett
- 1993–2002 Arthur Kroeger (Emeritus 2002–2008)
- 2002 Ray Hnatyshyn
- 2003–2008 Marc Garneau
- 2008–2011 Herb Gray
- 2011–present Charles Chi
Presidents
- 1942–1947 Henry Marshall Tory
- 1947–1955 Murdoch Maxwell MacOdrum
- 1955–1956 James Alexander Gibson (pro tempore)
- 1956–1958 Claude Bissell
- 1958–1972 Davidson Dunton
- 1972–1978 Michael Kelway Oliver
- 1979 James Downey (pro tempore) 1 January – 15 May
- 1979–1989 William Edwin Beckel
- 1989–1996 Robin Hugh Farquhar
- 1996–2005 Richard J. Van Loon
- 2005–2006 David W. Atkinson
- 2006–2008 Samy Mahmoud (pro tempore), from 20 November 2006
- 2008–present Roseann Runte
Notable alumni and faculty
- Suhayya Abu-Hakima, co-founder and CEO of AmikaNow! and Amika Mobile Corporation[1]tor and comedian; studied criminology and sociology, but did not graduate
- David Azrieli, architect, 10th richest man in Canada
- Lord Black of Cross Harbour (Conrad Black), former businessman
- Lindsay Blackett, first black Cabinet minister in Alberta
- Keith Boag, chief political correspondent for Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
- Patrick Boyer, Member of Parliament
- Andrew Brook, Chancellor's Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Science
- Gord Brown, Member of Parliament
- Rita Celli, host for Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
- Louise Charron, Puisne Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada
- Mike Colle, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Alex Cullen, Member of Provincial Parliament, Ottawa City Councillor
- Hans Daigeler, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Yvon Dandurand, criminologist
- Barry Devolin, Member of Parliament
- Paul Dewar, Member of Parliament
- Michelle Douglas, human rights activist
- James Duthie, TSN host and Journalist
- Bruck Easton, former president of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
- Ward P.D. Elcock, Deputy Minister of Defence, former Director of Canadian Security Intelligence Service
- Ivan Fellegi, former Chief Statistician of Canada
- Catherine Fife, Member of Provincial Parliament, President of the Ontario Public School Boards Association
- Rob Ford, current Mayor of the City of Toronto, studied political science for a year
- Matthew Fraser, former Editor-in-Chief of National Post
- Evelyn Gigantes, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Edward Greenspon, Editor-in-Chief of The Globe and Mail
- Allan Gregg, pollster, political pundit
- Sara Gruen, fiction author known best for award-winning novel Water for Elephants
- Peter Grünberg, Nobel laureate in Physics 2007[2]
- Elizabeth Hanna, undergraduate major in philosophy and later graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada; voice actor and speech-language pathologist
- Gregory Henriquez, architect, Governor-General's Medal for Architecture
- Mervyn G.H. Hinds, Chicago blues musician, known as Harmonica Hinds
- Abdul Rahman Jabarah, alleged al-Qaeda member killed in 2003
- Peter Jennings, journalist and news anchor for ABC News, two-time Peabody Award winner, awarded a Litterarum doctor, honoris causa in 1997
- Pauline Jewett, Member of Parliament, professor and Chancellor of Carleton University
- Donna Jones, civil servant, murder victim
- Leo Jordan, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Jim Judd, Director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service
- K-OS (Kheaven Brereton), musician
- Wilbert Keon, Senator, heart surgeon
- Firdaus Kharas, human rights activist, founder of Chocolate Moose Media
- Warren Kinsella, lawyer, author, musician, political consultant, lobbyist and commentator
- Lawrence M. Krauss, physics professor at Arizona State University and popular science author
- Michael I. Krauss, professor at George Mason University School of Law
- Carolyn MacKenzie, broadcaster[3]
- Chalmers Jack Mackenzie, former chancellor, first president of Atomic Energy of Canada Limited
- Robert MacNeil, journalist, Officer of the Order of Canada
- John Manley, former Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister of Canada
- Randal Marlin, Carleton philosophy professor specializing in the study of propaganda
- Trevor Matthews, founder and CEO of Brookstreet Pictures
- Nicole McCance, psychotherapist
- Gavin McInnes, writer, founder of Vice
- Claudia Mo, Member of Hong Kong Legislative Council
- Yasir Naqvi, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Robin Neill, economic historian
- Tom Nevakshonoff, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba
- Ryan North, writer and computer scientist
- Paul Okalik, former premier of Nunavut
- Gordon Pape, financial self-help writer
- Ernie Parsons, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Lester Bowles Pearson, former chancellor, professor, Prime Minister of Canada, Nobel Peace Prize laureate
- John Porter, former Professor of Sociology
- Michael Prue, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Karim Rashid, industrial designer
- Scott Reid, Member of Parliament
- Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke, former Prime Minister of Somalia
- Shane Smith, co-founder and CEO of Vice
- Wayne Smith, current Chief Statistician of Statistics Canada
- Norman Sterling, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Barbara Sullivan, Member of Provincial Parliament
- Harley Swedler, architect
- Judy Wasylycia-Leis, Member of Parliament
- Jim Watson, Member of Provincial Parliament, Mayor and City Councillor of Ottawa
- Keenan Wellar, sociopreneur, founder of LiveWorkPlay and Heartwood House charities
- Susan Wood, Canadian literature scholar, pioneer of feminist science fiction studies
- Peter Worthington, Editor-in-Chief of the Toronto Sun
- Omar Zakhilwal, former Professor of Economics, Afghan Finance Minister and Chief Economic Advisor to the President of Afghanistan
Notable honorary degree recipients
- Dag Hammarskjöld, United Nations Secretary-General (1953–1961), Nobel Peace Prize laureate; awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 1954[4]
- U Thant, United Nations Secretary-General (1961–1971); awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 1962[4]
- Kurt Waldheim, United Nations Secretary-General (1972–1981); awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 1972[4]
- Tommy Douglas, 7th Premier of Saskatchewan; led the first socialist government in North America and introduced universal public health care to Canada; awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 1980[4]
- Tommy Douglas, 7th Premier of Saskatchewan; led the first socialist government in North America and introduced universal public health care to Canada; awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 1980[4]
- Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, United Nations Secretary-General (1982–1992); awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 1985[4]
- Mikhail Gorbachev, General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union; awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 1993[4]
- Boutros Boutros-Ghali, United Nations Secretary-General (1992–1997); awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 1995[4]
- Romano Prodi, 79th Prime Minister of Italy; awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 2001[4]
- Kofi Annan, United Nations Secretary-General (1997–2007), Nobel Peace Prize laureate; awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 2004[4]
- Michaëlle Jean, Governor General of Canada (2005–2010); awarded a Legum Doctor, honoris causa in 2012[5]
Other people
Name | Known for | Relationship to Carleton |
---|---|---|
Timothy J. Anderson | Opera singer, writer | Graduate |
Ike Awgu | Mayoral candidate, television host, columnist | Graduate |
Dan Aykroyd | Actor | Studied at Carleton, honorary D.Litt. 1994 |
David Azrieli | Architect, businessman | Graduate |
Georges Bédard | Ottawa City Councillor | Graduate |
Conrad Black | Financier and newspaper magnate | Graduate |
Alan Bones | Diplomat | Graduate |
Patrick Boyer | Member of Parliament | Graduate |
Walter Douglas Boyd | Heart surgeon | Graduate |
George Brizan | Former Prime Minister of Grenada | Graduate |
Gord Brown | Politician | Graduate |
Shona Brown | Google's VP, Business Operations | Graduate |
Rita Celli | Ottawa anchor for CBC TV's Canada Now program | Graduate |
Louise Charron | Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada | Graduate |
Barbara Coll | Founder of SEMPO | Graduate |
Mike Colle | Politician | Graduate |
Michael Cowpland | Former CEO and founder of Corel | Graduate |
Alex Cullen | Ottawa City Councillor | Graduate |
Allan Cutler | Public servant, politician | Graduate |
Hans Daigeler | Politician | Graduate |
Barry Devolin | Conservative Member of Parliament | Graduate |
Paul Dewar | New Democratic Party Member of Parliament | Graduate |
Michelle Douglas | Human rights activist | Graduate |
James Duthie | TSN sportscaster | Graduate |
Bruck Easton | Politician | Graduate |
Ward P.D. Elcock | Public servant | Graduate |
Phil Eyler | Politician | Graduate |
Ivan Fellegi | Chief Statistician of Canada | Graduate |
Marc Garneau | Former President of the Canadian Space Agency, Member of Parliament | Former Chancellor |
Evelyn Gigantes | Former New Democrat Ontario cabinet minister | Graduate |
Frank Graves | President of EKOS Research Associates | Graduate |
Herb Gray | Former Deputy Prime Minister of Canada | Former Chancellor |
Edward Greenspon | Editor-in-chief of the Globe and Mail | Graduate |
Peter Grünberg | Nobel laureate in Physics, 2007 | Research Faculty |
Thomas Homer-Dixon | Author of The Ingenuity Gap; Director of Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies | Graduate |
Peter Hume | Ottawa City Councillor | Graduate |
Peter L. Hurd | Evolutionary biologist | Graduate |
Marianne Illing | Olympian (Canadian Olympic water polo team) | Graduate |
Peter Jennings | Journalist | Studied briefly at Carleton, honorary D.Litt. 1997 |
Pauline Jewett | Politician | Taught at Carleton; was chancellor 1990–1992 |
Leo Jordan | Politician | Graduate |
Wilbert Keon | Senator, heart surgeon | Graduate |
Lawrence M. Krauss | Author of The Physics of Star Trek | Professor of Physics and Astronomy |
Arthur Kroeger | Civil Servant | Chancellor (1993–2002) |
Warren Kinsella | Politician, author, weblogger | Graduate |
Alison Korn | Olympic medalist | Graduate |
Shawn Little | Ottawa City Councillor | Graduate |
Robert MacNeil | Journalist and television news anchor | Graduate |
John Manley | Politician, former Deputy Prime Minister | Graduate |
Randal Marlin | Author | Professor |
Trevor Matthews | Producer, actor | Studied at Carleton |
Gerald McMaster | Author, artist, and curator | Graduate |
John Milloy | Politician | Graduate |
Bruce Milne | Vice President of Product Management, CA Technologies | Graduate |
Tom Nevakshonoff | New Democrat Manitoba MLA | Graduate |
Ryan North | Comic author | Graduate |
Paul Okalik | Former Premier of Nunavut | Graduate |
Ernie Parsons | Politician | Graduate |
Michael D. Prue | Politician | Graduate |
W. Wesley Pue | Professor of law, past President of Canadian Law and Society Association | Faculty |
Karim Rashid | Industrial designer | Graduate |
Scott Reid | Politician | Graduate |
Cristina Rémond | Model, anthropologist | Graduate |
Don Scott | Politician | Graduate |
Sheridan Scott | Politician | Professor |
Norm Sterling | Politician | Graduate |
Barbara Sullivan | Politician | Graduate |
Doug Thompson | Ottawa City Councillor | Graduate |
John Turmel | Engineer, holder of Guinness world record for greatest number of elections lost | Graduate |
Chris Tse | Spoken word poet | Graduate |
Jill Vickers | Political scientist, author, candidate | Professor |
Judy Wasylycia-Leis | Politician | Graduate |
Jim Watson | Politician | Graduate |
Keenan Wellar | Sociopreneur | Graduate |
Douglas Whiteway | Journalist | Graduate |
Peter Worthington | Journalist | Graduate |
References
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- ↑ The Nobel Prize in Physics 2007. nobelprize.org
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- ↑ Honorary Degree Recipients (Fall 2012). carleton.ca