Mostrar 91995 resultados

Archival description
Previsualizar a impressão Ver:

37939 resultados com objetos digitais Mostrar resultados com objetos digitais

Honourary Degrees - Walter C. Murray

Walter C. Murray, honourary Doctor of Civil Laws recipient and first president of the University of Saskatchewan, seated in a garden wearing an academic gown.

Bio/Historical Note: Walter Charles Murray, first president of the University of Saskatchewan, was born in 1866 in Kings County, New Brunswick and received his BA with honours in 1886 from the University of New Brunswick. Having won the Gilchrist Scholarship for Canada, for continued studies overseas, he attended the University of Berlin and the University of Edinburgh, where he received his MA with first class honours in 1891. Later that year he joined the faculty at the University of New Brunswick as Professor of Philosophy and Economics. In 1892 he was appointed Professor of Philosophy and lecturer in Education at Dalhousie, where he remained until joining the University of Saskatchewan as president in 1908. Murray served as president for 29 years, retiring in 1937. Murray was successful in building a progressive university with a beautiful campus. His own work was in education and education history, but he was also a supporter of art and music. Murray served on numerous councils and commissions, including the National Research Council from 1916-1932. Murray married Christina Cameron (1866-1947) in 1895. They had three daughters: Christina Cameron Murray, Lucy Hunter Murray and Jean Elizabeth Murray. Murray died in Saskatoon in 1945. The city of Saskatoon honours him with "Murray Place" in the Dundonald area; Walter Murray Collegiate Institute, opened in 1965 and located near Market Mall; the Murray Building on the U of S campus; and President Murray Park, located in the Varsity View neighbourhood.

Saskatchewan Dignitaries

Prominent Saskatchewan men standing in front of a wooden building; location unknown. From l to r: Charles Dunning, Premier of Saskatchewan; Walter C. Murray, University President; Benjamin T. Chappell; General Superintendent of Canadian National Railways; S.G. Moore, Mayor of Melfort, Saskatchewan; and R. Beatty, Melfort-area pioneer.

Murray Memorial Library - Staff

Two employees appear to be cleaning up [after a bookcase broke]. Male employee holding up a board; female employee on floor with piles of books scattered around. Bookcases in background.

Bio/Historical Note: Though the first recorded withdrawal from the University Library occurred in October 1909, nearly five decades passed before the Library had its own building. The early collection was housed either on the second floor of the College Building (later known as the Administration Building) or was scattered among a number of small departmental libraries. Plans for a new library building in the late 1920s were ended by the start of the Great Depression; but a dramatically reduced acquisitions budget was offset by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation in 1933. In 1943 the University hired its first professional Librarian. A combination of provincial grants and University fundraising financed the construction of the Murray Memorial Library. The library was named after the University’s first President, Walter C. Murray. Designed by noted Regina architect Kioshi Izumi working under H.K. Black, Architect, it marked a change in campus architecture away from the more angular and elaborate Collegiate Gothic style to that of the less expensive cube. Building materials included granite at the entrance and Tyndall stone as a wall cladding and window trim. In addition to the library, the building housed the College of Law, an office of the Provincial Archives and a 105-seat lecture theatre equipped with the latest in audiovisual teaching aids. The most dramatic transformation took place between 1970 and 1976 when a six floor south wing was added along with an extensive renovation of the 1956 structure. Designed by BLM, Regina, the south wing was unlike any other building on campus. Clad in Tyndall stone panels made to look like concrete (through a "bush hammered" finish), the grey almost windowless building is industrial and utilitarian in appearance. The University's master plan required buildings in the core of campus to be clad in stone. However, the "bush hammered" finish was used since the Library addition was built during a period that saw the flowering of "Brutalist" Architecture, so called because of the wide use of exposed concrete. The new (south) wing, originally called the Main Library, was officially opened on 17 May 1974, and also became the home of the Department of Art and Art History, the College of Graduate Studies and the University Archives.

Engineering Institute of Canada

Participants (including 12 women) of the second annual Engineering Institute of Canada convention, seated and standing at the doorway of College Building. Walter C. Murray, University President, seated in front row and holding a small child.

Penta Kai Deka - Members

Penta Kai Deka members seated and standing wearing robes, white shirts and dark coloured ties.

Bio/Historical Note: From the Greek for ‘five and ten,’ Pente Kai Deka was created on 8 April 1911 with the first 15 women students on campus – five “big sisters” and ten “little sisters.” Every woman entering the University automatically became a member. Eventually the group became its own directorate within the Student Representative Council, and the PKD president, the vice-president of the SRC. Activities of the group included a Big Sister-Little Sister Dance, June in January, Jeanboree, a Spring Tea and a Frosh Week fashion show. As the sexual revolution loomed large in the late 1960s women on campus grew increasingly ambivalent toward the group, which had been seen by many female students as irrelevant and antiquated since midway through the decade. It was this attitude, as well as the sheer increase in the number of women and students in general at the University by the late 1960s that led to the group’s demise after the 1968-1969 academic year.

School of Accounting - Graduates - 1933

Individual photographs of Accounting graduates grouped. Names: W. Toole, T. Talbot Crosby, F.W. Warly, C. Reed, J. Blewett, W. Parker, D. German, V. Lock, G. Rooke, J.M. Irwin, A. Kidd, M.R. Wells, W. Mascuich, A. Zaitlen, A.C. McGill, P. Bradbrooke, G. Wilson, E.E. Parks, E. Quine.

Resultados 3226 a 3240 de 91995