- CA QUA07121
- Person
- 1889-1989
Marion Bell Hogg was a graduate of Queen's University, B.A 1928.
Marion Bell Hogg was a graduate of Queen's University, B.A 1928.
Lillian (Hicks) Hogg was a student at Queen's University.
Murray Hogben was born in Toronto in 1935 and grew up in Ottawa. In 1957 he earned a bachelor's degree in English literature and then a journalism degree at Carleton University. There he met an Indian Muslim student, Alia Rauf, duly became a Muslim in 1956, and they married in 1959. Working for the CBC in Toronto, he became secretary in 1960 of the new Muslim Society of Toronto for years. Also, starting in 1965, he began to earn a doctorate in history from the University of Toronto, graduating in 1973. He then taught at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston and then at le College militaire royal de Saint-Jean, in Quebec. Murray then joined the Kingston Whig-Standard in 1979 as a reporter and columnist until 2000. Meanwhile, he had also become secretary of the Islamic Society of Kingston, a volunteer Muslim chaplain at several prisons, secretary of the Kingston Police race relations advisory committee, and for decades canoeing instructor and arts and crafts director at a camp for Muslim girls and boys.
D. Hogarth was a student in the School of Mining at Queen's University.
W.A. Hoffman was a student in the School of Mining at Queen's University.
John Edwin (Ted) Hodgetts was born on May 28, 1917, in Omemee, Ontario. At the University of Toronto where he received the Bachelor of Arts degree in 1939, he was also Rhodes Scholar and Gold Medallist. In 1940 he received the Master of Arts degree from the same University and proceeded on to complete the Doctor of Philosophy degree at the University of Chicago in 1946. From 1943 to 1945 Professor Hodgetts was a Lecturer in Political Science at the University of Toronto. In 1945 he was appointed to the staff of Queen's University. During the next twenty years he was successively Lecturer, Assistant, and Associate Professor and, after appointment to full Professor, assumed the Hardy Chair of Political Science in 1961. From 1965 to retirement in 1982, he was Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto. In 1967 he was appointed Principal of his undergraduate college, Victoria College, and from 1970 to 1972 was President of Victoria University within the University of Toronto. Professor Hodgetts then returned to full time teaching in the Department of Political Science, University of Toronto and became Professor Emeritus as well as President Emeritus of Victoria University, upon his retirement. He ended up returning to Queen's in the 1990's, doing research under the Skeleton- Clark Visitor Fellowship until 2002. Dr. Hodgetts was also continually asked by various departments in the federal government to edit their reports, long after he retired. In 2005, Dr. Hodgetts was appointed to the Advisory Committee of the Gomery Commission Inquiry. During his long and distinguished academic career, Dr. Hodgetts held numerous prestigious awards. In June 1989, Dr. Hodgetts was appointed an Officer of the Order of Canada. He was active in several professional Associations and in addition to his editorial work, wrote numerous articles and book reviews in scholarly journals. Dr. Hodgetts also wrote several books including "From Arm's Length to Hands-On: the formative years of Ontario's public service 1867-1940" (1995), and "Sound of One Voice: Eugene Forsey and his letters to the press" (2000).
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