Showing 15 results

Archival description
University of Saskatchewan, University Archives & Special Collections University of Saskatchewan - Administration Building√
Print preview View:

14 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Early Campus Buildings

Looking east across the Bowl showing cars on road and people walking on pathways. Campus buildings in background (l to r): Physics Building, College Building, Saskatchewan Hall and Qu'Appelle Hall. Taken from the roof of the Chemistry Building.

Campus - Scenic

Looking east across the Bowl at buildings (l to r): Physics Building, Administration Building, Saskatchewan Hall, Qu'Appelle Hall and north wing of Murray Memorial (Main) Library. Taken from roof of Chemistry Building.

Early Campus Buildings

Elevated view looking east across the Bowl showing cars on road and people walking on pathways. Campus buildings in background (l to r): Physics Building, College Building, Saskatchewan Hall and Qu'Appelle Hall. Taken from the roof of the Chemistry Building.

Early Campus Buildings

Looking east at campus buildings (l to r): Chemistry Building, Physics Building, College Building, Saskatchewan Hall, Qu'Appelle Hall, Stone School House (at entre), and St. Andrew's College.

Bio/Historical Note: Photograph was displayed on cover of "Green & White", spring 1980 issue.

Early Campus Buildings

Elevated view looking east across the Bowl showing cars on road and people walking on pathways. Campus buildings in background (l to r): Physics Building, College Building, Saskatchewan Hall and Qu'Appelle Hall. Taken from the roof of the Chemistry Building.

Nobel Plaza

View of the Nobel Plaza at the entrance of the College Building.

Bio/Historical Note: The Nobel Plaza honouring the two Nobel laureates with University of Saskatchewan connections was officially opened on 24 October 1997. The $200,000 Plaza was sponsored by the Meewasin Authority and Meewasin Foundation and presented as a gift to recognize the university’s 90th birthday. Two bronze plaques honour Henry Taube (BSc. 1935, MSc. 1937), who was a Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry in 1983 when affiliated with Stanford University, and Gerhard Herzberg, who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1971. He had an illustrious career with the National Research Council, Ottawa. The Plaza is attached to the main exit from the building and the Bowl and consists of a pedestrian concourse with a stone clad speaker’s podium faced with the two bronze plaques.