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Names

Elliott, Curtis

  • Person

Dates on some of his notebooks indicate Curtis W. Elliott attended the University of Saskatchewan from 1920-1922 in the college of Arts and Science, making him a contemporary of Jean and Lucy Murray, Bertha Oxner, and Colb McEown, to name a few. His professors during these years are likely to have been A.E. Cameron (histology and zoology); may well have been T. Thorvaldson for chemistry; and Frank Underhill taught the course in English History, using Green's Short History of the English People. Professors for English, physics and Latin are less easily identified but may have included R.A. Wilson, Jean Bayer, E.L. Harrington, and W.G. Sullivan, all of whom were on faculty at the time.

Vaughan, Frederick

  • Person

Frederick Vaughan is the author of Aggressive in Pursuit: the life of Justice Emmett Hall (University of Toronto Press for the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History, 2004). He is a professor emeritus of political studies at the University of Guelph, and previously taught at Osgoode Hall Law School.

Matthews, Vincent Leon, 1922-1988 (Professor of Medicine)

  • Person

Born near Kincaid, Saskatchewan on 6 February 1922, Vincent Leon Matthews attended the University of Saskatchewan Arts and Science Pre-Medical Course receiving a B.A. in 1943. He continued his studies at the University of Toronto earning a M.D. in 1945 and a Diploma in Public Health in 1947. In later years he was to become a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in both Public Health and Preventative Medicine. Dr. Matthews returned to Saskatchewan in 1947 and took a position with the Regional Health Service Branch of the Saskatchewan Department of Public Health. The following year he became the Medical Health Officer, Swift Current Health Region. From 1949 through 1951 he operated a general practice at Maple Creek Clinic. During his tenure in Swift Current, the first universal hospital and medicare insurance and comprehensive children's dental programs were pioneered and the first Regional Hospital Council was formed. Dr. Matthews played a significant role in the development of Medicare both as a member of the Planning Committee on Medicare which designed Medicare and as Acting Deputy Minister of Health during its introduction in 1962. Matthews joined the faculty of the College of Medicine in 1964 as Professor and Head of the Department of Social and Preventative Medicine. He was appointed Professor Emeritus upon his retirement in 1987. His areas of interest and research laid in the organization, administration and delivery of health care services in Canada and abroad. Dr. Matthews died in Saskatoon on 7 October 1988.

Henderson, T.Y. (Professor of Philosophy)

  • Person

Judith Rice Henderson is a Professor of English and former associate dean at the University of Saskatchewan. T.Y. Henderson is a retired Professor of Philosophy at the University of Saskatchewan.

Hanson, Stanley Duane, 1942-2001 (Archivist)

  • Person

Stanley Duane Hanson was born on 5 September 1942 in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, but lived for most of his early years in Regina. He earned a BA in English from the University of Saskatchewan (1964) and his MA in History in 1972 (University of Saskatchewan, Regina Campus). After graduation in 1964 he was employed as an archival assistant with the Legislative Library; then joined the Saskatchewan Archives Board from 1966 to 1970. In 1970 he was hired by the University of Saskatchewan as University Archivist. He remained with the University for the rest of his career, retiring in December 1999. He died suddenly at his home in Saskatoon on 31 October 2001.

Scharf, C. Ralph

  • Person

C. Ralph Scharf was Regional Superintendent of Vocational Region, Saskatchewan Region, Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development when the Education-Manpower Surveys were produced.

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