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Reg Fleming - Curriculum Studies

Head and shoulders of Curriculum Studies Assoc. Prof. Reg Fleming uses Lego kits with his Education students, to show them practical examples of technology in action - and to encourage their classroom creativity.

Bio/historical note: Image appeared in the September 1, 2000 OCN.

Larry C. Fowke - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Larry C. Fowke, Professor of Biology.

Bio/Historical Note: Lawrence Carroll Fowke was born 6 June 1941 in Toronto, and raised in Saskatoon. He earned a BA (Biology) from the University of Saskatchewan in 1963 and his PhD from Carleton University (1968) in plant cytology. Following a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at the Australian National University in Canberra, he joined the Department of Biology at the University of Saskatchewan as an assistant professor. By 1979 Dr. Fowke was a full professor. Author of over 160 research papers, Dr. Fowke was appointed visiting scientist at universities and research institutes in Australia, Switzerland, Sweden and England. He was awarded the Distinguished Researcher Award and named Jarislowsky Chair in Biotechnology and Rawson Professor in Biology. He was recognized as an ISI Highly Cited Researcher in the plant and animal category. Dr. Fowke served as an editor for Plant Cell Reports and has served on the editorial boards of three other botanical and cell biology journals. He was nominated three times for the USSU Teaching Excellence Award. In 2006, the University of Saskatchewan awarded him an earned Doctor of Science degree.

Atlas of Saskatchewan

Production team for the Atlas of Saskatchewan (from l to r): Dr. Ka-iu Fung, Atlas editor; Lawrence Martz, Michael Wilson, and technicians Keith Bigelow and Gerald Romme stand before maps and Atlas data.

Bio/Historical Note: Image appeared in 7 Feb. 1997 issue of OCN.

Naomi Frankel

Naomi Frankel of the Organization and Employee Development unit, starts off the March meeting of the CUPE Supervisors Network, an initiative that has been getting rave reviews from participants.

Susan Gingell

Head and shoulders image of Susan Gingell, English.

Bio/Historical Note: Susan Alison Gingell was born at Shalford, England on 3 April 1951. A feminist and cross-cultural teacher, editor and critic, Gingell graduated from York University in 1971 (B.A.), Queen's University in 1974 (M.A.) and the University of Toronto in 1977 (Ph.D.). She joined the University of Saskatchewan in 1977 and having progressed through the ranks is a professor of English and of Women's and Gender Studies. Gingell is a member and executive member of several Canadian academic and professional organizations, the author of several articles, chapters in books, monographs and children's poems as well as the editor of a volume on E.J. Pratt.

Cedric Gillott - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Cedric Gillott, Professor of Biology.

Bio/Historical Note: Image appeared in 5 Sept. 1997 issue of OCN.

Bio/Historical Note: Cedric Gillott is a native of Sheffield, England, and played for the University of Nottingham before moving to Canada in 1965. As a player he was with Saskatoon Spartans on the provincial championship team in 1966, the Saskatchewan All-Stars in the same season and captained Saskatoon City who won the provincial title in 1968. He coached the University of Saskatchewan Huskies men's soccer team for eight seasons between 1968-1978. Gillott was responsible for Canada West soccer going from a weekend tournament to regular league play. Gillott also coached youth teams, notably the provincial boys under-16 (later under-15) All-Star teams between 1981 and 1991 (including Canadian bronze medalists in 1983) and provincial champion club teams (Brunskill, 1981, 1983; Express, 1985; Titans, 1985). Gillott coached the Saskatchewan men's team at the 1977 Canada Games and was assistant coach of the men's team in the 1993 Canada Games. Gillott is rofessor emeritus of Biology (2022).

Centre for the Study of Democratic Institutions and Governance - Group Photo

Posed indoor image of members of the working group of the Centre for the Study of Democratic Institutions and Governance (CSDIG), From l to r: Dr. Gordon Barnhart, associate director of University of Saskatchewan International (USI); Dick Gosse, QC, former Saskatchewan attorney-general, with subsequent experience in CSIS, the RCMP, Public Complaints Commission, and 1992-94 chair of the Law Foundation; Dr. Asit Sarkar, director, USI; Ned Shillington, Regina MLA, former government house leader, and former minister of intergovernmental affairs, labor, and education, minister responsible for crown corporations and information technology; and Rob Norris, research officer, USI.

Bio/historical note: Image appeared in 19 Feb. 1999 issue of OCN.

Dr. Donna Greschner - In Office

Dr. Donna Greschner, professor of Law, sits at her desk.

Bio/Historical Note: As a law professor at the University of Saskatchewan from 1982-2003, Dr. Donna Margaret Greschner taught its first seminars in feminist legal theory and helped create the Women's Studies Research Unit in 1984. She was called to the Saskatchewan Bar in 1997. She received the University of Saskatchewan's Master Teacher Award in 2002 for teaching excellence. Dr. Greschner was a visiting professor at the University of Toronto, McGill University and Griffith University (Australia), and taught comparative constitutional law in southern California. She had extensive experience in supervising and examining graduate students and served on the executive of the Canadian Association of Law Teachers and the Canadian branch of the International Association of Constitutional Law. Her community service experience includes positions on the Saskatoon Legal Assistance Clinic board, the Accessibility Committee of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan LEAF and the Canadian Women's Studies Advisory Committee. From 1987-1990, Dr. Greschner was the Western Canada representative on the Canadian Human Rights Commission. From 1992-1996 she served as Chief Commissioner of the Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission. As a member of the Saskatchewan and California Bars, Dr. Greschner has advised many governments, First Nations and non-profit organizations on constitutional questions, and she was a member of the Government of Saskatchewan's negotiating team for the Charlottetown Accord in 1992. Amongst other work, Dr. Greschner was a consultant to the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (1990-1991) and the Royal Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada (2003). Her international work includes advising the African National Congress on constitutional issues in 1991, and consulting on anti-discrimination policies for the Commission on Labor Co-operation in 2004-2005. Dr. Greschner served as dean of Law at the University of Victoria from 2008 to 2013. Her research and scholarship have focused on constitutional law (especially equality rights) and, more recently, health-care law. Her writings are frequently cited by Canadian courts. She retired from UVic in August 2021 and is Professor Emerita (2022).

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