Ducks√

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8 Archival description results for Ducks√

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Duck Hunt

Two men and a hunting dog sit on the ground in front of an antique car covered in ducks they successfully hunted. A "Zealandia" flag is sticking out from the front right tire of the car. The car's tires help date this photo as being taken sometime after 1915.

Duck Hunt 1

Image of duck hunt at Fort San.

Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League

Duck Hunt with Prince of Wales (Edward VIII)

Image of the Prince of Wales (Edward VIII) on a duck hunt at Fort San. Captioned "Prince of Wales and Jack Leader with mountie hat at Leaders point after the hunt in 1919.

Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League

Ducks wadding

A group of ducks are seen on shore and in Emma Lake, Saskatchewan.

Dommasch, Hans S.

Jean G. Bayer

Jean G. Bayer, Department of English, 1915-1945, crouching by two ducks at an unknown location.

Bio/Historical Note: Jean Gordon Bayer joined the staff of the university in 1909 as President Walter Murray's secretary. Bayer previously had been his secretary at Dalhousie University. She arrived in Saskatoon in time to witness the registration of the first students. She was the President’s secretary, university librarian, and unofficial adviser to students. Bayer helped choose the university colours and motto, and was one of the founders of the Pente Kai Deka Society. In 1915, due to staff shortages caused by the Great War, Bayer was appointed Instructor in English. She proved so effective she was encouraged to continue, and took a year of study at Bedford College, London, prior to being formally appointed to the faculty. Like Murray, “she possessed a wide vision of the function of a university and, like him, she…dedicated herself to Saskatchewan.” “A most kindly guide” to her students, “many caught their first glimpse of what a literary ‘salon’ of the great days might have been in the genial atmosphere of tea and literature in her book-lined suite. She was a most loyal and cooperative colleague….She made it seem an easy thing to be happy and brave.” When Bayer returned from London in 1921 she was named Assistant Professor of English, a rank rarely held by women in that period. Bayer retained the post until her death in 1945. A scholarship in her name is available to a student who has completed at least two years of university studies

Mist over a pond

Mist hangs over a pond as a bird swims in the pond near Emma Lake, Saskatchewan.

Dommasch, Hans Siegfried