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"Parade - Sports Day"

A parade float hitched to two horses
Signs on the float read "Porteous Bros The Painters Men of Color", "Furniture Paints", "...Right Porteous Bros The Right Ho..."
Written on the back in blue ink: "Parade - Sports Day 1913" and "Ms MacKay 223 Railway St. Saskatoon."

"Parade - Sports Day"

A parade float hitched to two horses
Written on the back in blue ink: "Sports Day - July 1st 1913" and "Ms GR. MacKay 223 Railway St. Saskatoon."

"First CNR Tennis Court"

Two men on a tennis court
Four buildings on First Avenue in Biggar, SK can be seen in the background
Written on the bottom: "First C.N.R. Tennis Court"
Written on the back in pencil and blue ink: "Foreground Johnny Johnson Ray McKay in Back About 1926 or 28"
Written on the back in blue ink: "I believe O.J. Rowe not McKay - Rowe was Asst. Sept C.N.R at Biggar & was a great tennis player & was instrimental in having C.N.R. build and maintain up to 6 tennis courts on C.N. Right of way. Courts were made of cinders & clay - watered - raked & rolled daily"

Biggar Wildcats Hockey Team

Eight boys in hockey uniforms and one man posing for a team photo; Each boy is holding a hockey stick, and the boy wearing goalie gear is holding a trophy

"Tennis At Biggar" Saskatchewan

Women and children sitting and standing around a bench, watching other people play tennis at an outdoor tennis court
The Canadian National Train Station in Biggar Saskatchewan can be seen in the background

University of Saskatchewan Huskies Sports Coaching Staff - Group Photo

Posed indoor image of sports coaches: Ches Anderson, wrestling; Lyn Bannister, hockey; Don Bailey, curling; Don Burgess, athletic director; Malcolm Cant, swimming; Don Fry, basketball; Cedric Gillott, soccer; Reg Haskins, fencing; Bob Laycoe, assistant athletic director, assistant football and wrestling coach; Al Ledingham, football; Doris Miller, diving; Barry Mooney, assistant football coach.; Warren McKay, fencing; Wayne Perkins, assistant football coach; Lyle Sanderson, cross country, indoor track and field; Chuck Sebestyen, gymnastics; Tony Schildo, diving; Paul Schoenhals, assistant football coach.

Bio/Historical Note: Dr. Doris I. Miller earned a Bachelor of Physical and Health Education from the University of Toronto (1961), an MA from University of Oregon (1964) and was the first PhD graduate (1970) from Penn State University’s new biomechanics program. She later earned a Master’s in Divinity from University of Victoria (1990). Dr. Miller's sport biomechanics research spanned four decades investigating a variety of sports, but her true passion focused on diving biomechanics. Dr. Miller is considered a world leader in diving research and was a pioneer in bridging the gap between scientific research and coaching. In her PhD thesis, Dr. Miller developed a 3D multisegmented dynamic model to investigate flight characteristics of diving performance which required a computer mainframe program that used over 3,000 punch cards to create (Wikipedia link to what punch cardcomputing is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card). Dr. Miller was a diving coach at the University of Saskatchewan before becoming a faculty member at University of Washington and later University of Western Ontario (now Western University). From 1983-2009 Dr. Miller was a Performance Enhancement Team member for USA Diving and a biomechanist for the Olympic Medal Program. She collected data live at the Fifth World Aquatics Championships in Madrid (1986) and at the Olympic Games in Atlanta (1996) among a host of other international diving competitions. In Madrid and Atlanta, the 10-m diving tower was instrumented with a force plate to capture data live on all competitive dives. During that time, she also worked with Canada’s high-performance divers. As a result, Dr. Miller created an extensive database of all the international divers that she used to create coaching software that permitted the comparison of any diver’s biomechanical data to those of Internationally ranked competitors. This broke the barrier between sport biomechanics research and coaching. Dr. Miller was a founding member of the International Society of Biomechanics, the American Biomechanics Society and the Canadian Society of Biomechanics. She was the sixth president of the American Society of Biomechanics (1984). Dr. Miller was recognized in 2009 by the American Society of Biomechanics with the Jim Hay Memorial Award for Research in Sports Biomechanics. She is a Canadian Society of Biomechanics Career Award recipient and is a Fellow of both the Canadian Society of Biomechanics and the International Sports Biomechanics Society.She is an Honourary Member of the International Society of Biomechanics (2024)..

Senior Women's Swimming Team - Group Photo

Members of team pose in swim suits by the [Qu'Appelle Hall] pool. Back row: Grace Hardy, Betty Moore, Marion Proctor and Mary Boyd; Front row: Mary Varey and Pat Willis.

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.

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