Farm Girls Club - Food Preparation
- A-1326
- Item
- June 1935
Young women seated at tables and standing inside a classroom making preserves. Empty jars at right. stove with a boiler at centre. Edith C. Rowles of Extension instructing.
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Farm Girls Club - Food Preparation
Young women seated at tables and standing inside a classroom making preserves. Empty jars at right. stove with a boiler at centre. Edith C. Rowles of Extension instructing.
Dr. William S. (Bill) Bulmer, CEO of Prairie Diagnostic Services, the first provincial veterinary laboratory diagnostic service to be incorporated in Canada.
Bio/Historical Note: Image appeared in 30 Oct. 1998 issue of OCN.
Groundskeepers were busy planting the four featured flowerbeds encircling the Bowl - this year with Horticulture student Rachelle Poirier's kite-and-tail design, in golden marigolds surrounded by blue ageratum. Hard at work are, from left, assistant greenhouse supervisor Peter Penner, grounds supervisor Dale Hills, and summer helpers Todd Knihnitski and Raegan Bergstrom. Hills says more than 22,000 flowers are planted each summer on campus - and after the first frost, usually in mid-September, all the plants will be cleared out of the beds.
Bio/historical note: Appeared in 3 Sept. 1999 issue of OCN.
Head and shoulders image of Professor Robert Carlson, Educational Foundations; taken outdoors.
Bio/Historical Note: Image appeared in 28 Nov. 1997 issue of OCN.
Group photo of young women [and instructor] sitting on lawn; bushes and building in background. Women are wearing shoulder sashes with the inscription "Homecraft Saskatoon Exhibition 1939." Annotated.
Head and shoulders of Dr. Robert Card, associate dean of undergraduate medical education.
Bio/Historical Note: Image appeared in 27 Mar. 1997 issue of OCN.
Bio/Historical Note: Dr. Robert (Bob) Card earned his MD from Queen’s University. He completed postgraduate studies in Boston and Hamilton, Ontario. He received a FRCPC in Internal Medicine and Hematology in 1972. Dr. Card moved to Saskatoon in March 1973 to join the College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan. He was a full-time faculty member until 2007. Dr. Card was longtime director for the Saskatchewan Bleeding Disorders Program, starting in 1978. He remained active clinically with part-time practice in the area of bleeding disorders until 2011.
John Livingstone Clark, a sessional lecturer in English, signs a book.
Bio/historical note: Ronald John Clark was born 6 August 1950 on Saltspring Island, British Columbia. He earned a B.A. from UBC in 1976 and a M.A. from SFU in 1982. He also studied at the University of Sydney in 1979 and 1980 as the Commonwealth Scholar for Graduate Studies in English Literature. In 1984, Clark moved to Saskatoon and joined the Department of English, University of Saskatchewan, as a Sessional Lecturer. In addition to his teaching duties, Clark worked as an editor, contributed to several literary publications and anthologies as a poet, prose writer and reviewer and had several books of his poetry published. His work has been published under the following names: R.J. Clark, Ron Clark, John Clark, John Livingstone Clark and J. Livingstone Clark. His awards include grants from Saskatchewan Arts Board and Canada Council, a CBC Award for Drama and an appointment as Writer-in-Residence at the Saskatoon Public Library for 1999-2000.
Image appeared in 27 Mar.1997 issue of OCN.
Dr. Hilary Clark, professor of English, stands at a table while three others sit.
Bio/Historical Note: Dr. Hilary Clark earned her BA (Hons) in English from Simon Fraser University, her MA in Comparative Literature from the University of Toronto and her PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of British Columbia. Dr. Clark is Professor Emerita of English (2023).
Group photo of young women sitting and standing on lawn with building in background. Annotated.
Canadian Light Source - Student Tour
Grade 12 students from Walter Murray Collegiate looking at a chart of how a synchrotron works.
Bio/Historical Note: Image appeared in 9 March 2001 issue of OCN.
Farm Girls Club - Group Photo - Saskatoon
Group photo of young women sitting and standing on lawn at the University of Saskatchewan. Building in background. Annotated.
Ken Coates, Dean of Arts and Science, speaks at the Faculty Club.
Campus Computer Store Awards Customer Prize
Campus Computer Store manager Mark Jagoe and prize-winner Mark Kurmey share a laugh as Kurmey receives his prize of a new Raleigh mountain bike.
Bio/historical note: Image appeared in 17 Sept. 1999 issue of OCN.
Head and shoulders mage of Paula Croteau, Human Resources Division.
Bio/historical note: Image appeared in 5 Sept. 1997 issue of OCN.
U of S Agriculture Dean Dr. Ernie Barber, left, watches as news media and visiting seed growers take a close look at the new "huetronic color sorter" that provides for high-speed sorting of seeds by color. Barber told the audience Saskatoon can become "the pulse-crop capital of the world".
Bio/Historical Note: In 1977, Frederick Wesley Kernen (d. 1991), a Saskatoon-area farmer, a graduate of the College of Agriculture (1939), and a part-time extensionist with the Department of Crop Science, made an offer to the university that was the largest gift ever by an individual at that time. To honour his parents, the late Frederick John (1879-1948) and Lucy Ruxby Marie Kernen (d. 1952), Fred W. Kernen offered to gift two sections of prime agricultural land to the university, with full jurisdiction to operate on the lands. Included in the gift were 300 acres of native prairie land, which were to remain un-tilled and be used for ecological research. The station’s 380 hectares of cultivated land is adequate to provide for commercial production and small plot experiments. The Kernen Crop Research Farm is located at the intersections of Highways 5 and 41 on the quickly expanding east side of Saskatoon. Over the last 35 years, the site has accommodated ecological studies, grazing studies, crop breeding, crop production and crop and weed management research in the Department of Plant Sciences. Managed on a four-year crop rotation, the cultivated area of the farm also generates revenue, which helps support the cost of crop research and future development on the farm.
Bio/historical note: Image appeared in the Sept 1, 2000 OCN.