- A-9378
- Stuk
- 13 May 1963
J.W.T. Spinks (second from right), University President, and Mary Spinks (third from right) chat with unidentified guests at a tea held in the President's Residence following a University of Saskatchewan Senate meeting.
J.W.T. Spinks (second from right), University President, and Mary Spinks (third from right) chat with unidentified guests at a tea held in the President's Residence following a University of Saskatchewan Senate meeting.
United Nations Scientific and Technical Aid to Developing Nations Conference in Geneva
J.W.T. Spinks headed the Canadian delegation to the meeting. Overhead view of participants seated at long tables.
Fund Raising for the National fund
J.W.T. Spinks standing at a podium with a large cheque on the wall behind him from the University of Saskatchewan Engineering Alumni in Calgary, Alberta, acceptance was made at the Calgary Inn.
Linear Accelerator Lab - Equipment
Looking at some equipment in the Linear Accelerator Lab are (l to r): Dr. Leon Katz, Director of Linear Accelerator Laboratory and Professor of Physics; Dr. Vasilii Vasilevich Vladimirskii, Russian nuclear physicist and Director of the Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics, Moscow; and J.W.T. Spinks, University President and Professor of Chemistry.
Honourary Degrees - Presentation - Dr. V.V. Vladimirskii
Dr. Vasilii Vasilevich Vladimirskii, Russian nuclear physicist and Director of the Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics, Moscow, receives an honourary Doctor of Science degree in a special ceremony in President Spinks' office. Standing (l to r): Dr. B.W. Currie, Dr. Leon Katz, Norman K. Cram, Dr. Vladimirskii and J.W.T. Spinks.
Bio/Historical Note: Born in August 1915 in Zheleznovodsk. Russia, Dr. Vasilii Vasilevich Vladimirskii graduated from Moscow University in 1938. Since 1946, he has been deputy director of the Theoretical and Experimental Physics Institute in Moscow. His works have been in optics, propagation of ultrasound and electromagnetic waves as well as in the theory of linear accelerators and neutron spectroscopy. He participated in the creation of the Serpukhov accelerator whose energy level is 70 giga-electron-volts. State Prize, 1953; Lenin Prize, 1970. He served as an advisor to the Theoretical and Experimental Physics Institute (ITEP) in Moscow.