Miriam Burland – astronomer at Dominion Observatory from 1927 to 1967
Ron Burnett (PhD 1981) – president and vice-chancellor, Emily Carr University of Art and Design; former Director of the Graduate Program in Communications, McGill University
Anne Carson – thinker, writer, translator, and University of Michigan classics professor
Donald Ewen Cameron – psychiatrist, involved with mind control experimentation at McGill
Thomas Chang (BSc 1957, MD 1961, PhD 1965) – invented and developed world's first artificial cell
R. F. Patrick Cronin (MD 1953) – cardiologist; Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at McGill (1972–1977); healthcare consultant
Augusto Claudio Cuello – Professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics and Charles E. Frosst/Merck Chair in Pharmacology at McGill University
Kyle Elliott – Canadian ornithologist, assistant professor in the Department of Natural Resource Sciences at McGill University, and Canada Research Chair in Arctic Ecology.
Grover Furr (BA 1965) – professor of English literature; historical negationist and apologist for Joseph Stalin
James E. Gill (BSc 1921) – geology professor who introduced the Master's of Applied Science in Mineral Exploration program and established an analytical laboratory for the application of geochemistry to mineral exploration
Phil Gold (BSc 1957, MSc 1961, M.D. 1961, PhD 1965) – Canadian physician, scientist, and professor. In 1968, he co-discovered the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), which resulted in a blood test used in the diagnosis and management of people with cancer.
David Goltzman (BSc 1966, MD 1968) –
endocrinologist, Professor of Medicine and Physiology, and A.G. Massabki Chair in Medicine at McGill University
Alma Howard (BSc 1934, MSc, 1936, PhD 1938) – radiobiologist
Fumiko Ikawa-Smith – archaeologist in East Asian and Japanese archaeology & administrator, Director of the Centre for East Asian Studies (1983 and 1988)[11] and Associate Vice-Principal (Academic) of McGill University (1991–1996).
Howard Atwood Kelly – member of the faculty of medicine at McGill; one of the "Big Four" founding professors at the
Johns Hopkins Hospital, credited with establishing gynecology as a true specialty
Mortimer Mishkin (MA 1949, PhD 1951) – renowned neuropsychologist for path-breaking work on brain-processing of memories and 2009
National Medal of Science recipient
Albert Moll (LLB 1932, MD 1937) – professor of psychiatry; pioneer of psychiatric day treatment
Marie-Eve Morin – Canadian philosopher and Professor of Philosophy
Karl Moore – associate professor of management at McGill University
William Reginald Morse, MD, one of four medical missionaries who founded the
West China Union University in
Chengdu, Sichuan, in 1914; went on to become dean of the medical faculty and, later, assistant researcher at the
Peabody Museum, where he advanced studies of Chinese and Tibetan medicine
Percy Erskine Nobbs – former professor of architecture; designer of many buildings in Montreal, especially at McGill, and in Alberta, British Columbia, and South Africa
James Olds (Postdoc 1955) – neuroscientist and psychologist; co-discovered the reward center of the brain; a founder of modern neuroscience
Kelvin Ogilvie – McGill chemistry professor 1974–87; expert in biotechnology, bioorganic chemistry, genetic engineering
Gilles Paradis – public health and preventive medicine physician at the Institut national de santé publique du Québec, as well as professor in the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health and Strathcona Chair in Epidemiology at McGill University.
Madhu Pai – Canada Research Chair of Epidemiology and Global Health at McGill University
Jordan Peterson (PhD 1991, Postdoc 1993) – clinical psychologist, cultural critic, and psychology professor currently at the
University of Toronto
Kevin Petrecca – neurosurgical oncologist at the
Montreal Neurological Institute, chief of neurosurgery at the
MUHC, associate professor of neurology and neurosurgery and William Feindel Chair in Neuro-Oncology at McGill University
Judah Hirsch Quastel – biochemist; pioneer in
neurochemistry and soil metabolism; Director of the McGill University-Montreal General Hospital Research Institute
Amélie Quesnel-Vallée – associate professor with joint appointment in the Departments of Sociology and Epidemiology, and Canada Research Chair in Policies and Health Inequalities at McGill
Bernard Shapiro (BA, 1956) – Ethics Commissioner of Canada; former Principal of McGill and Deputy Education Minister of Ontario; twin brother of Harold Shapiro
Stephen Toope (BCL, 1983 LLB, 1983) – Vice-Chancellor of the
University of Cambridge (2017–), President of the University of British Columbia (2006–2014)
Bruce Trigger – OC OQ FRSC (18 June 1937 – 1 December 2006) archaeologist, anthropologist, and ethnohistorian. James McGill Professor (2001–2006), Professor McGill University (1967–2006).
Tom Velk – monetary economics and public policy professor
Joseph Wong, Vice President, International, University of Toronto
William Wright (DMC 1848) – first person of colour to obtain a medical degree in Canada and first to be a professor; professor,
McGill Medical Faculty, 1854-1883.[19][20]
Hans Zingg (PhD) – Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Professor of Medicine, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Wyeth-Ayerst Chair in Women's Health at McGill
Bernard Zinman (MD) – research endocrinologist, clinician, and diabetes expert
Conrad Black – imprisoned press baron and media tycoon in the Anglo-Canadian tradition of Lord Beaverbrook and Lord Thomson of Fleet; owner of 650 dailies/weeklies around the world[23]
Allan Scott – writer-producer of more than 20 feature films, including Don't Look Now, voted the best British film of all time; wrote Priscilla, Queen of the Desert; as chairman of Macallan-Glenlivet, he turned Macallan into a world-leading malt whisky
Don Johnston (BA 1955, BCL 1958) – Minister of State for Science and Technology, Minister of State for Economic and Regional Development, and Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada
John McCallum (PhD 1977) – Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship of Canada since 2015; former Dean of the Faculty of Arts of McGill University
David Lametti (BCL/LLB 1989) – Minister of Justice, 2019–
Catherine McKenna (LLB 1999) – Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, 2015–
David Lametti (BCL 1989, LLB 1989): Current Member of Parliament for
LaSalle—Émard—Verdun, Quebec, and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development
Arif Virani (BA 1994): Current Member of Parliament for
Parkdale—High Park,
Ontario, and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada
Anthony Housefather (BCL, LLB 1993): Current Member of Parliament for
Mount Royal, Quebec, and chair of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights
May Cutler (BA 1945, MA 1951) – first woman to serve as Mayor of
Westmount, Quebec (1987–1991); founder of
Tundra Books; first female Canadian publisher of children's books[41]
Sir
Charles Peers Davidson (BA 1864, MA 1867, BCL 1873, DCL 1875, Hon. LLD 1912) – Chief Justice of the Quebec Superior Court, 1912–1915
Henry Thomas Duffy (BA 1876, BCL 1879) – Minister of Public Works and Treasurer of Quebec
Stephen Chebrot (MSc 2009) – current Minister for Transport in the Ugandan Cabinet and incumbent Member of the
Parliament of Uganda, and former Ugandan Ambassador to
India
Peng Ming-min (MA 1952) – senior adviser (with cabinet rank) to the president of
Taiwan, and former presidential candidate in Taiwan
Jacqui Quinn-Leandro (PhD 2003) – first female (acting) prime minister of
Antigua and Barbuda, and cabinet member (Minister of Education, Minister of Labour, and Minister of Public Service)
Jamaluddin Jarjis (PhD 1980) – former Malaysian ambassador to the United States and Minister of Science, Technology, and Innovation
Dov Yosef (BA 1921) – Minister of Justice, Minister of Trade and Industry, and Minister of Health of the State of Israel
Marko Pavliha (DCL 1992) – Minister of Transport of
Slovenia
Malik Amin Aslam (MBA 1993) – former Pakistani Minister of State for the Environment and current advisor to the prime minister for Climate Change (with Cabinet rank)
Ian DeVere Archer (LLM 1968) – Secretary of Health and Social Security of
Barbados and former chairman of
Caribbean Airlines (national airline of
Barbados)
Hidipo Hamutenya (MA 1971) – Member of the
National Assembly of Namibia and cabinet member (Minister of Information and Broadcasting, Minister of Trade and Industry, and Minister of Foreign Affairs) of
Namibia
David Hackett (BA 1950) – boarding school friend of
Robert F. Kennedy; founder and head of
Lyndon B. Johnson's 1964 Volunteers in Service to America (
VISTA), the domestic U.S.
Peace Corps program; inspiration for Phineas in John Knowles's 1959 novel A Separate Peace; McGill hockey player and selected for the US Olympic Hockey Team (1952)
Wang Bingzhang (Phd 1982) – Chinese Dissident and Political Prisoner, the founding father of the overseas Chinese Democratic Movement.
Arthur Erickson – architect (Robson Square, Vancouver; Canadian Chancery, Washington DC; Roy Thomson Hall; Museum of Anthropology, UBC; Simon Fraser University; Museum of Glass, Tacoma; California Plaza, San Diego Convention Center)
Raymond Moriyama – architect (Bata Shoe Museum, Toronto; Canadian Embassy, Tokyo; Ontario Science Centre; Toronto Reference Library; Canadian War Museum; Saudi Arabian National Museum, Riyadh)
Thomas Chang – creator of the first artificial cell
James Creighton (Law 1880) – considered the originator of North American ice hockey rules
Charles R. Drew (MDCM 1933) – black American medical pioneer; track star who led McGill to five intercollegiate titles; as medical advisor for the Blood for Britain program of World War II, the father of blood banks
Lorne Elias (PhD 1956) – inventor of the explosives vapour detector EVD-1[46]
Ken Dryden (LLB 1974) – politician, lawyer, businessman, author; retired National Hockey League goaltender from the
Montreal Canadiens; former president of the Toronto Maple Leafs
George Hodgson (BEng 1916) – Canadian Olympic men's swim team (1912 and 1920); McGill's first athlete to win an Olympic gold medal; first Canadian to win two Olympic gold medals (Stockholm, 1916)
Jackrabbit Johannsen – Norwegian-Canadian; credited with introducing cross-country skiing to North America; lived in retirement at McGill's
Mont-Saint-Hilaire Gault Nature Reserve
Charline Labonté (
BEd – Physical Education) – 2006 Olympic gold medalist in women's ice hockey
R. Tait McKenzie – pioneer in college physical education; sculptor; physician
Kim St-Pierre (BEd 2005) – Canadian Olympic women's hockey team (2002 and 2006), McGill's first female athlete to become an Olympic gold medallist (Salt Lake City, 2002)
Frank "Shag" Shaughnessy – first professional football coach hired by a Canadian university, he revolutionized Canadian college football by introducing the forward pass in 1921 in a game against
Syracuse University and lobbied for a decade until the forward pass was adopted by the
Canadian Rugby Football Union in 1931
Major Donald Craig, Canadian commando serving with British special forces during World War II, portrayed by
Rock Hudson in the 1967 war movie Tobruk. Though the film was loosely based on real events, it's not clear whether or not Hudson's character was based on a real person. Most likely he was a pastiche character, given a Canadian background as cover for Hudson's inability to emulate a British accent.
Dr. Walter Langkowski, researcher from the Marvel Comics Canadian superhero series
Alpha Flight; portrayed as a McGill-based biophysicist researching the gamma radiation accident which created the Hulk; his discoveries transformed him into the superhero known as
Sasquatch
Norman Bethune – as "Bai Qiu'en", subject of essay In Memory of Norman Bethune (in Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung, Chapter 17: Serving the People) (Jinian Bai Qiu'en) by
Mao Zedong; medical professor; became Red Army's medical chief and trained thousands of Chinese as medics and doctors; died in 1939 (from blood poisoning) during the
Second Sino-Japanese War
Jennifer Davidson - (BSW, 1991) child rights advocate and founding director of
CELCIS, awarded an OBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours 2020 for services to the care and protection of children and young people in Scotland and abroad[49]
Alanna Devine – founder of McGill Student Animal Legal Defence Fund and director of Animal Advocacy
Arnold Johnson – performed the first cardiac heart catheterization procedure in Canada in 1946
Annie MacDonald Langstaff – in 1914 became McGill's and
Quebec's first female law graduate but was not admitted to the Quebec bar until 2006 (posthumously); the Quebec bar did not admit women until 1941
^"Archived copy"(PDF). www.binghamton.edu. Archived from
the original(PDF) on 8 June 2003. Retrieved 30 June 2022.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link)
^Taylor, Jim (2005). The best of Jim Coleman: fifty years of Canadian sport from the man who saw it all. Madeira Park, British Columbia: Harbour Publishing. p. 13.
ISBN978-1-55017-359-8.
Miriam Burland – astronomer at Dominion Observatory from 1927 to 1967
Ron Burnett (PhD 1981) – president and vice-chancellor, Emily Carr University of Art and Design; former Director of the Graduate Program in Communications, McGill University
Anne Carson – thinker, writer, translator, and University of Michigan classics professor
Donald Ewen Cameron – psychiatrist, involved with mind control experimentation at McGill
Thomas Chang (BSc 1957, MD 1961, PhD 1965) – invented and developed world's first artificial cell
R. F. Patrick Cronin (MD 1953) – cardiologist; Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at McGill (1972–1977); healthcare consultant
Augusto Claudio Cuello – Professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics and Charles E. Frosst/Merck Chair in Pharmacology at McGill University
Kyle Elliott – Canadian ornithologist, assistant professor in the Department of Natural Resource Sciences at McGill University, and Canada Research Chair in Arctic Ecology.
Grover Furr (BA 1965) – professor of English literature; historical negationist and apologist for Joseph Stalin
James E. Gill (BSc 1921) – geology professor who introduced the Master's of Applied Science in Mineral Exploration program and established an analytical laboratory for the application of geochemistry to mineral exploration
Phil Gold (BSc 1957, MSc 1961, M.D. 1961, PhD 1965) – Canadian physician, scientist, and professor. In 1968, he co-discovered the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), which resulted in a blood test used in the diagnosis and management of people with cancer.
David Goltzman (BSc 1966, MD 1968) –
endocrinologist, Professor of Medicine and Physiology, and A.G. Massabki Chair in Medicine at McGill University
Alma Howard (BSc 1934, MSc, 1936, PhD 1938) – radiobiologist
Fumiko Ikawa-Smith – archaeologist in East Asian and Japanese archaeology & administrator, Director of the Centre for East Asian Studies (1983 and 1988)[11] and Associate Vice-Principal (Academic) of McGill University (1991–1996).
Howard Atwood Kelly – member of the faculty of medicine at McGill; one of the "Big Four" founding professors at the
Johns Hopkins Hospital, credited with establishing gynecology as a true specialty
Mortimer Mishkin (MA 1949, PhD 1951) – renowned neuropsychologist for path-breaking work on brain-processing of memories and 2009
National Medal of Science recipient
Albert Moll (LLB 1932, MD 1937) – professor of psychiatry; pioneer of psychiatric day treatment
Marie-Eve Morin – Canadian philosopher and Professor of Philosophy
Karl Moore – associate professor of management at McGill University
William Reginald Morse, MD, one of four medical missionaries who founded the
West China Union University in
Chengdu, Sichuan, in 1914; went on to become dean of the medical faculty and, later, assistant researcher at the
Peabody Museum, where he advanced studies of Chinese and Tibetan medicine
Percy Erskine Nobbs – former professor of architecture; designer of many buildings in Montreal, especially at McGill, and in Alberta, British Columbia, and South Africa
James Olds (Postdoc 1955) – neuroscientist and psychologist; co-discovered the reward center of the brain; a founder of modern neuroscience
Kelvin Ogilvie – McGill chemistry professor 1974–87; expert in biotechnology, bioorganic chemistry, genetic engineering
Gilles Paradis – public health and preventive medicine physician at the Institut national de santé publique du Québec, as well as professor in the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health and Strathcona Chair in Epidemiology at McGill University.
Madhu Pai – Canada Research Chair of Epidemiology and Global Health at McGill University
Jordan Peterson (PhD 1991, Postdoc 1993) – clinical psychologist, cultural critic, and psychology professor currently at the
University of Toronto
Kevin Petrecca – neurosurgical oncologist at the
Montreal Neurological Institute, chief of neurosurgery at the
MUHC, associate professor of neurology and neurosurgery and William Feindel Chair in Neuro-Oncology at McGill University
Judah Hirsch Quastel – biochemist; pioneer in
neurochemistry and soil metabolism; Director of the McGill University-Montreal General Hospital Research Institute
Amélie Quesnel-Vallée – associate professor with joint appointment in the Departments of Sociology and Epidemiology, and Canada Research Chair in Policies and Health Inequalities at McGill
Bernard Shapiro (BA, 1956) – Ethics Commissioner of Canada; former Principal of McGill and Deputy Education Minister of Ontario; twin brother of Harold Shapiro
Stephen Toope (BCL, 1983 LLB, 1983) – Vice-Chancellor of the
University of Cambridge (2017–), President of the University of British Columbia (2006–2014)
Bruce Trigger – OC OQ FRSC (18 June 1937 – 1 December 2006) archaeologist, anthropologist, and ethnohistorian. James McGill Professor (2001–2006), Professor McGill University (1967–2006).
Tom Velk – monetary economics and public policy professor
Joseph Wong, Vice President, International, University of Toronto
William Wright (DMC 1848) – first person of colour to obtain a medical degree in Canada and first to be a professor; professor,
McGill Medical Faculty, 1854-1883.[19][20]
Hans Zingg (PhD) – Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Professor of Medicine, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Wyeth-Ayerst Chair in Women's Health at McGill
Bernard Zinman (MD) – research endocrinologist, clinician, and diabetes expert
Conrad Black – imprisoned press baron and media tycoon in the Anglo-Canadian tradition of Lord Beaverbrook and Lord Thomson of Fleet; owner of 650 dailies/weeklies around the world[23]
Allan Scott – writer-producer of more than 20 feature films, including Don't Look Now, voted the best British film of all time; wrote Priscilla, Queen of the Desert; as chairman of Macallan-Glenlivet, he turned Macallan into a world-leading malt whisky
Don Johnston (BA 1955, BCL 1958) – Minister of State for Science and Technology, Minister of State for Economic and Regional Development, and Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada
John McCallum (PhD 1977) – Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship of Canada since 2015; former Dean of the Faculty of Arts of McGill University
David Lametti (BCL/LLB 1989) – Minister of Justice, 2019–
Catherine McKenna (LLB 1999) – Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, 2015–
David Lametti (BCL 1989, LLB 1989): Current Member of Parliament for
LaSalle—Émard—Verdun, Quebec, and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development
Arif Virani (BA 1994): Current Member of Parliament for
Parkdale—High Park,
Ontario, and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada
Anthony Housefather (BCL, LLB 1993): Current Member of Parliament for
Mount Royal, Quebec, and chair of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights
May Cutler (BA 1945, MA 1951) – first woman to serve as Mayor of
Westmount, Quebec (1987–1991); founder of
Tundra Books; first female Canadian publisher of children's books[41]
Sir
Charles Peers Davidson (BA 1864, MA 1867, BCL 1873, DCL 1875, Hon. LLD 1912) – Chief Justice of the Quebec Superior Court, 1912–1915
Henry Thomas Duffy (BA 1876, BCL 1879) – Minister of Public Works and Treasurer of Quebec
Stephen Chebrot (MSc 2009) – current Minister for Transport in the Ugandan Cabinet and incumbent Member of the
Parliament of Uganda, and former Ugandan Ambassador to
India
Peng Ming-min (MA 1952) – senior adviser (with cabinet rank) to the president of
Taiwan, and former presidential candidate in Taiwan
Jacqui Quinn-Leandro (PhD 2003) – first female (acting) prime minister of
Antigua and Barbuda, and cabinet member (Minister of Education, Minister of Labour, and Minister of Public Service)
Jamaluddin Jarjis (PhD 1980) – former Malaysian ambassador to the United States and Minister of Science, Technology, and Innovation
Dov Yosef (BA 1921) – Minister of Justice, Minister of Trade and Industry, and Minister of Health of the State of Israel
Marko Pavliha (DCL 1992) – Minister of Transport of
Slovenia
Malik Amin Aslam (MBA 1993) – former Pakistani Minister of State for the Environment and current advisor to the prime minister for Climate Change (with Cabinet rank)
Ian DeVere Archer (LLM 1968) – Secretary of Health and Social Security of
Barbados and former chairman of
Caribbean Airlines (national airline of
Barbados)
Hidipo Hamutenya (MA 1971) – Member of the
National Assembly of Namibia and cabinet member (Minister of Information and Broadcasting, Minister of Trade and Industry, and Minister of Foreign Affairs) of
Namibia
David Hackett (BA 1950) – boarding school friend of
Robert F. Kennedy; founder and head of
Lyndon B. Johnson's 1964 Volunteers in Service to America (
VISTA), the domestic U.S.
Peace Corps program; inspiration for Phineas in John Knowles's 1959 novel A Separate Peace; McGill hockey player and selected for the US Olympic Hockey Team (1952)
Wang Bingzhang (Phd 1982) – Chinese Dissident and Political Prisoner, the founding father of the overseas Chinese Democratic Movement.
Arthur Erickson – architect (Robson Square, Vancouver; Canadian Chancery, Washington DC; Roy Thomson Hall; Museum of Anthropology, UBC; Simon Fraser University; Museum of Glass, Tacoma; California Plaza, San Diego Convention Center)
Raymond Moriyama – architect (Bata Shoe Museum, Toronto; Canadian Embassy, Tokyo; Ontario Science Centre; Toronto Reference Library; Canadian War Museum; Saudi Arabian National Museum, Riyadh)
Thomas Chang – creator of the first artificial cell
James Creighton (Law 1880) – considered the originator of North American ice hockey rules
Charles R. Drew (MDCM 1933) – black American medical pioneer; track star who led McGill to five intercollegiate titles; as medical advisor for the Blood for Britain program of World War II, the father of blood banks
Lorne Elias (PhD 1956) – inventor of the explosives vapour detector EVD-1[46]
Ken Dryden (LLB 1974) – politician, lawyer, businessman, author; retired National Hockey League goaltender from the
Montreal Canadiens; former president of the Toronto Maple Leafs
George Hodgson (BEng 1916) – Canadian Olympic men's swim team (1912 and 1920); McGill's first athlete to win an Olympic gold medal; first Canadian to win two Olympic gold medals (Stockholm, 1916)
Jackrabbit Johannsen – Norwegian-Canadian; credited with introducing cross-country skiing to North America; lived in retirement at McGill's
Mont-Saint-Hilaire Gault Nature Reserve
Charline Labonté (
BEd – Physical Education) – 2006 Olympic gold medalist in women's ice hockey
R. Tait McKenzie – pioneer in college physical education; sculptor; physician
Kim St-Pierre (BEd 2005) – Canadian Olympic women's hockey team (2002 and 2006), McGill's first female athlete to become an Olympic gold medallist (Salt Lake City, 2002)
Frank "Shag" Shaughnessy – first professional football coach hired by a Canadian university, he revolutionized Canadian college football by introducing the forward pass in 1921 in a game against
Syracuse University and lobbied for a decade until the forward pass was adopted by the
Canadian Rugby Football Union in 1931
Major Donald Craig, Canadian commando serving with British special forces during World War II, portrayed by
Rock Hudson in the 1967 war movie Tobruk. Though the film was loosely based on real events, it's not clear whether or not Hudson's character was based on a real person. Most likely he was a pastiche character, given a Canadian background as cover for Hudson's inability to emulate a British accent.
Dr. Walter Langkowski, researcher from the Marvel Comics Canadian superhero series
Alpha Flight; portrayed as a McGill-based biophysicist researching the gamma radiation accident which created the Hulk; his discoveries transformed him into the superhero known as
Sasquatch
Norman Bethune – as "Bai Qiu'en", subject of essay In Memory of Norman Bethune (in Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung, Chapter 17: Serving the People) (Jinian Bai Qiu'en) by
Mao Zedong; medical professor; became Red Army's medical chief and trained thousands of Chinese as medics and doctors; died in 1939 (from blood poisoning) during the
Second Sino-Japanese War
Jennifer Davidson - (BSW, 1991) child rights advocate and founding director of
CELCIS, awarded an OBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours 2020 for services to the care and protection of children and young people in Scotland and abroad[49]
Alanna Devine – founder of McGill Student Animal Legal Defence Fund and director of Animal Advocacy
Arnold Johnson – performed the first cardiac heart catheterization procedure in Canada in 1946
Annie MacDonald Langstaff – in 1914 became McGill's and
Quebec's first female law graduate but was not admitted to the Quebec bar until 2006 (posthumously); the Quebec bar did not admit women until 1941
^"Archived copy"(PDF). www.binghamton.edu. Archived from
the original(PDF) on 8 June 2003. Retrieved 30 June 2022.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link)
^Taylor, Jim (2005). The best of Jim Coleman: fifty years of Canadian sport from the man who saw it all. Madeira Park, British Columbia: Harbour Publishing. p. 13.
ISBN978-1-55017-359-8.