- A-4062
- Item
- 1915
Women's team playing on an outdoor rink, spectators and building in background.
Women's team playing on an outdoor rink, spectators and building in background.
Women's Intramural Athletic Board - Group Photo
Members of the WIAB. Standing: Pat Connolly (St. Thomas More), Pat Baird (Nursing), Marilyn Wearring (Physical Education), Muriel Callander (WASA). Seated: Jane Art (Home Economics), Hazel Cubbon (Pharmacy), Sharon Art, Hilda Glemser (President, Education).
Women's Intramural Swimming Team - Group Photo
Team members pose in swimsuits at the edge of Qu'Appelle Hall pool. Members (from l to r): Anne McGillivary, Mills, Betty Moore, Evelyn Thompson, Kay Taggart and Grace Hardy.
Bio/Historical Note: The University of Saskatchewan’s first pool opened in 1916. Located in the basement of Qu'Appelle Hall, it was 18 feet wide, 45 feet long and around 8 feet deep with a spring board and changing rooms. Speed swimming, diving, water polo and recreational swimming soon became popular activities in the long Saskatchewan winters. The pool closed soon after the Physical Education pool opened in October 1964.
Women's Intramural Volleyball Team - Group Photo
Women's Intramural volleyball championship team pose on the court: Members, standing: Myrna Needham, Vi Kachman, Dianne Thompson, Lenore Kivell, Orma Longworth, Joanna Samson and Berle Aston. Two unidentified men and a woman in back row.
Women's Physical Education Class - Group Photo
Female students in physical education class with Ethel Mary Cartwright as instructor.
Women's Swimming Race - Action
Three swimmers dive into the pool from starting blocks to start a race in the Qu'Appelle Hall pool. Other swimmers standing and seating at pool's edge.
Bio/Historical Note: The University of Saskatchewan’s first pool opened in 1916. Located in the basement of Qu'Appelle Hall, it was 18 feet wide, 45 feet long and around 8 feet deep with a spring board and changing rooms. Speed swimming, diving, water polo and recreational swimming soon became popular activities in the long Saskatchewan winters. The pool closed soon after the Physical Education pool opened in October 1964.
Women's Telegraph Bowling Team - Group Photo
Women's Telegraph Bowling team members (l to r): S. Horseth, Grace Jasper, A. Bowden, E. Holtby, F. Haider.
University of Saskatchewan first women's sprinting race.
Two women grappling.
People examining the World Soil Chart display showing Saskatchewan and North and Central America.
Head and shoulders image of W.P. Fraser, Federal Officer in-charge of the Dominion Laboratory of Plant Pathology in Saskatoon.
Bio/Historical Note: William Pollock Fraser (1867-1943) was professor of Biology from 1925-1937.
Head and shoulders image of William Pollock Fraser, Federal Officer in-charge of the Dominion Laboratory of Plant Pathology in Saskatoon.
Bio/Historical Note: William Pollock Fraser (1867-1943) was professor of Biology from 1925-1937.
[W.P Thompson] dressed in winter attire and wearing a hat, standing at the end of an alleyway with cattle in their stanchions on either side in a barn.
Caricature sketch done by L.G. Saunders of W.P. Thompson, third University President, at time of retirement.
Bio/Historical Note: Walter Palmer Thompson was born 3 April 1889 near Decewsville, Ontario. He graduated from the University of Toronto with a BA (1910), and from Harvard with an AM (1912) and PhD (1914). Thompson came to the University of Saskatchewan as professor and head of the Biology Department in 1913. He was an important figure at the university for the next fifty years. Thompson served in a variety of administrative positions: dean of Junior Colleges (1934); dean of Arts and Sciences (1938); acting president (1942); director of Summer School (1948); and president of the University (1949). Dr. Thompson retired in 1959 and became President Emeritus. During his academic career Thompson gained international recognition for his work as a geneticist, particularly for the development of rust resistant wheat hybrids. The W.P. Thompson Biology Building, opened in 1960, was named in his honour. Upon his retirement as president Thompson was appointed chairman of the Advisory Committee on Medical Care. The recommendations of this committee were an important foundation for the provincial Medicare system. In 1967 he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada, one of the first to receive this award. He was awarded an honourary Doctor of Laws degree in 1960 by the U of S. Walter Thompson died in Toronto in 1970.
Caricature sketch done by L.G. Saunders of W.P. Thompson, third University President, at time of retirement.
Bio/Historical Note: Walter Palmer Thompson was born 3 April 1889 near Decewsville, Ontario. He graduated from the University of Toronto with a BA (1910), and from Harvard with an AM (1912) and PhD (1914). Thompson came to the University of Saskatchewan as professor and head of the Biology Department in 1913. He was an important figure at the university for the next fifty years. Thompson served in a variety of administrative positions: dean of Junior Colleges (1934); dean of Arts and Sciences (1938); acting president (1942); director of Summer School (1948); and president of the University (1949). Dr. Thompson retired in 1959 and became President Emeritus. During his academic career Thompson gained international recognition for his work as a geneticist, particularly for the development of rust resistant wheat hybrids. The W.P. Thompson Biology Building, opened in 1960, was named in his honour. Upon his retirement as president Thompson was appointed chairman of the Advisory Committee on Medical Care. The recommendations of this committee were an important foundation for the provincial Medicare system. In 1967 he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada, one of the first to receive this award. He was awarded an honourary Doctor of Laws degree in 1960 by the U of S. Walter Thompson died in Toronto in 1970.