College of Agriculture - Class in Session
- A-12409
- Stuk
- Mar. 1968
Students observing a typical demonstration in the welding lab.
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College of Agriculture - Class in Session
Students observing a typical demonstration in the welding lab.
School of Agriculture - Class in Session
Members of class seated in classroom in Kirk Hall. View from back of classroom looking towards instructor.
College of Agriculture - Conventions - Group Photo
Attendees seated in Livestock Pavilion during a convention. Alexander M. Shaw, W. Jaffrey H. Tisdale, and [W.P.] Thompson are identified. Several men have buttons and ribbons on their coats. Small boy in foreground; flag and crossed batons in background.
College of Agriculture - Class in Session
Students working in carpentry shop stations looking at camera.
Formal/Studio portrait of Dr. Roly St. Arnaud, professor, Saskatchewan Institute of Pedology (Soil Science).
Biology Building - Construction
A truck delivers cement to the Biology Building construction site.
Bio/Historical Note: The W.P. Thompson Biology Building is named after Walter Palmer Thompson, the University of Saskatchewan's third president and founder of the Biology Department (1913). Designed by Izumi, Arnott and Sugiyama, it was constructed between 1957 and 1959 and officially opened in 1960. Set back from the Bowl, the flat-roofed cube style building was located between the Collegiate Gothic architecture of the Chemistry and Physics Buildings. It originally consisted of a teaching wing and a research wing but a header and greenhouse complex was added in 1962. Unlike many other Canadian universities the Department of Biology remained a single unit, balancing diverse sub-disciplines rather than separating into several distinct departments. Prior to the building's opening in 1960, work in biological sciences was scattered among four campus locations. Perhaps the most striking of the building’s features is the mural of mosaic tiles that adorns the south and west exterior walls. The mural depicts the four main stages of cellular mitosis. The artist, Roy Kiyooka, chose chromosome patterns as a testament to Dr. Thompson's important discoveries regarding the genetics of wheat rust. In 1986, the Geology Building was completed on the south side of Biology, resulting in the transformation of the south façade from an exterior into an interior wall, part of a new atrium.
Biology Building - Official Opening
J.W.T. Spinks, University President, speaks during official opening.
Biology Building - Official Opening
Presentation of key by J.W.T. Spinks, University President, to Dr. D.S. Rawson, head, Department of Biology, during the official opening of the Biology Building.
Biology Building - Official Opening
F. Hedley Auld, University Chancellor, addresses the audience during the official opening of the Biology Building. J.W.T. Spinks, University President, seated in the background.
Biology Building - Official Opening
View of the crowd seated in the Bowl during the official opening of the Biology Building.
College of Agriculture - Conventions - Group Photo
Attendees seated indoors during a convention in Regina; several men with ribbons on coats. Attendees identified are: Raymond K. Baker, Samuel E. Greenway, M. Smith, Walter C. Murray, University President; William J. Rutherford, dean of Agriculture, Alexander M. Shaw and Leslie Quick are identified. Flags hang on wall in background.
Elevated view of the betatron being slid down wood ramps into the basement of the Physics Building.
Bio/Historical Note: In May 1948 Dr. Harold E. Johns, Dr. Newman Haslam and Dr. Leon Katz, professors of Physics at the University of Saskatchewan, travelled to Milwaukee to inspect the betatron that had been built for the U of S. In August of that same year, the U of S installed in the Physics Annex the first betatron in Canada—the world’s first betatron used for a cancer treatment program. Dr. Johns then began the design and construction of one of the first cobalt-60 teletherapy units. Dr. Johns and his graduate students became the first researchers in the world to successfully treat a cancer patient using cobalt-60 radiation therapy. It was also used for research programs in nuclear physics, radiation chemistry, cancer therapy and radiation biology. In 1951 the world’s first calibrated Cobalt-60 cancer therapy unit was installed at University Hospital (G Wing). The calibration work was done by Dr. Sylvia Fedoruk through rigorous depth dose measurements. In early 1952, Maclean's magazine had dubbed the cobalt-source radiotherapy machine the cobalt bomb - a tongue-in-cheek tribute to this peaceful use of nuclear technology. Dr. Johns’ pioneering work in cobalt-60 teletherapy became the gold standard for radiation therapy for many years and thousands of units were installed worldwide. The original treatment device was used in Saskatchewan until 1972. The work Dr. Johns and his team did on the physics of high energy photon beams was fundamental, and still forms the basis of most treatment planning systems in use today (2024).
Image of the betatron.
Bio/Historical Note: In May 1948 Dr. Harold E. Johns, Dr. Newman Haslam and Dr. Leon Katz, professors of Physics at the University of Saskatchewan, travelled to Milwaukee to inspect the betatron that had been built for the U of S. In August of that same year, the U of S installed in the Physics Annex the first betatron in Canada—the world’s first betatron used for a cancer treatment program. Dr. Johns then began the design and construction of one of the first cobalt-60 teletherapy units. Dr. Johns and his graduate students became the first researchers in the world to successfully treat a cancer patient using cobalt-60 radiation therapy. It was also used for research programs in nuclear physics, radiation chemistry, cancer therapy and radiation biology. In 1951 the world’s first calibrated Cobalt-60 cancer therapy unit was installed at University Hospital (G Wing). The calibration work was done by Dr. Sylvia Fedoruk through rigorous depth dose measurements. In early 1952, Maclean's magazine had dubbed the cobalt-source radiotherapy machine the cobalt bomb - a tongue-in-cheek tribute to this peaceful use of nuclear technology. Dr. Johns’ pioneering work in cobalt-60 teletherapy became the gold standard for radiation therapy for many years and thousands of units were installed worldwide. The original treatment device was used in Saskatchewan until 1972. The work Dr. Johns and his team did on the physics of high energy photon beams was fundamental, and still forms the basis of most treatment planning systems in use today (2024).