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University of Saskatchewan, University Archives & Special Collections
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Showy Aster (aster laevis)

  • F. Slides, 9. Southern Saskatchewan - 1993-1995
  • Item
  • August, 1993
  • Parte de Hans Dommasch fonds

A Showy Aster (aster laevis) plant is seen growing in a field near Fort Walsh, Saskatchewan.

Sem título

Earl Fogel - At Desk

Earl Fogel, Computing Services, sitting on his desk next to a computer.

Bio/Historical Note: HyTelnet (sometimes rendered Hytelnet or HYTELNET) was an early attempt to create a universal or at least simpler interface for the various Telnet-based information resources available before the World Wide Web. It was first developed in 1990 by Peter Scott (1947-2013), then at the University of Saskatchewan Library. Using a client written by Earl Fogel, Computing Services, University of Saskatchewan, HyTelnet offered its users a primitive terminal-based GUI that allowed them to browse a directory of Telnet-based resources and then access them in a relatively standardized manner.

Ernie Walker

Image of Ernie Walker, Professor, Archaeology & Anthropology, wearing academic robes, standing with George Ivany, University President and a second unidentified man.

Bio/Historical Note: BEd 1971; BA 1972; BA [Hons] 1973, MA 1978, PhD University of Texas, Austin, 1980.

Shirley Serviss fonds

  • MG 617
  • Fundo
  • nd, 1975-1992 (inclusive)

This fonds contains correspondence from Reta Cowley, and John Hicks. The Cowley correspondence in part, discusses her painting process; and the Hicks correspondence discusses the Saskatchewan writing scene (particularly Prince Albert); his publications and awards, and his ideas about writing.

Sem título

E.G. Nisbet / C.M.R. Fowler fonds

  • MG 103
  • Fundo
  • 1969-1992 (inclusive) ; 1981-1992 (predominant)

This fonds contains correspondence, minutes, reports, articles, drafts, notes, and clippings pertaining to the academic and personal lives of Nisbet and Fowler, and the research and findings of their colleagues in the international geological community. Specific topics include komatiities, plate tectonics, global warming, Third World debt, science education in Canada, Zimbabwe, Archaean geology, origin of life, and the environment.

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Louis'

View of entrance to Louis' Bar in the Memorial Union Building; students standing on steps.

Bio/Historical Note: The Memorial Union Building (MUB) has the distinction of being the last building in the centre of campus designed in the collegiate gothic style and completely clad in greystone. It was designed to serve as a memorial to the students, faculty and staff of the University of Saskatchewan who perished overseas in the First and Second World Wars. The Upper MUB has been transformed several times since its formal opening on 11 Nov. 1955. It has been used as a student lounge, concert venue, pub, bookstore and coffee shop. It has hosted receptions, fashion shows, beauty and air guitar contests, club meetings, dances and political debates. During the 1945-1946 academic year a Students’ Union Building Committee was formed. The Committee outlined proposals for the new building, which included an auditorium, a ballroom, lounge rooms, a tuck shop and student offices, all for a cost of $600,000. A brief on the Committee’s findings and proposals was later presented to the Board of Governors of the University, which created a $100,000 sinking fund for construction of the building and student fees were raised $4 to raise an additional $200,000. The MUB formally opened on 11 November 1955. It was used primarily for student functions including dancing, card-playing, chess, and studying, though it never became the hub of student activities it was originally intended to be. Included in the original furnishings was a generous supply of ashtrays. In 1957 a Board of Directors was established to operate the MUB, and to promote social, cultural and recreational activities and programs for the students, faculty and alumni of the University of Saskatchewan. Due to the surge in enrolment at the University of Saskatchewan during the 1960s the student body quickly outgrew the building. Though the MUB had been designed to accommodate expansion to the south, by the 1964-1965 academic year the Students’ Union recognized the need for facilities much more extensive than even expansion could provide. As a result plans for what would eventually be the Place Riel Student Centre were born. In 1980 renovations to the MUB were completed as part of Phase III of the Place Riel Project. The renovations were designed by Ferguson Folstad Friggstad, and were completed by Bennett and White Construction. They included the demolition and removal of portions of the building, structural alterations, interior renovations including the refitting of Louis’ Pub, improvements to the elevator, and alterations and renovations to the pedestrian tunnel connected to the residences. The renovations cost $1.7 million. In 1983 an elevator was installed in the MUB for $143,600 and ramps for disabled access were constructed by Cana Construction. These improvements were designed by the Friggstad architectural firm. A 1985 renovation to the building was also designed by Friggstad. The renovations were performed by Haig Construction for $124,725. In March 2001 the Upper MUB was renovated as part of a planned relocation of the Browsers used bookstore. Included in the renovations was a snack and beverage bar as well as public access computers for Internet usage. The entire store is centred around the original war memorial, and the renovations have returned the space to its original purpose as a comfortable lounge for students.” The new Browsers opened its doors in late August 2001. During the summer of 2002 Louis’ Pub, located in the basement of the MUB, was also renovated, by contractors PCL Maxam. The renovations were designed by the architectural firm of Saunders Evans, and were performed by PCL Maxam for $5.25 million. The newly renovated Louis’ was opened in October 2002.5.

Dr. Ian M. McDonald - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Dr. Ian M. McDonald, dean of Medicine.

Bio/Historical Note: Born at home in Regina on 20 May 1928, Dr. Ian M. McDonald graduated from Central Collegiate, then earned a BA at the then-Regina campus of the University of Saskatchewan. He attended the University of Manitoba and earned his MD there. Following internship and residency in Vancouver, Regina, and Saskatoon, Dr. McDonald moved to Denver, Colorado, where he worked in medicine. In 1958 he accepted the invitation of Dr. D.G. McKerracher to join the newly created Department of Psychiatry in the College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan. He would succeed Dr. McKerracher as department head and eventually served two terms as dean (1983-1992) of the college, before retiring into a psychiatric consultancy with RUH and the Saskatoon Health Region. He continued the work that he loved until just before his 81st birthday. Dr. McDonald leaves a rich legacy reflecting his lifelong dedication to improving the lot of the mentally ill in Canada. He worked with his mentor McKerracher on the internationally recognized "Saskatchewan Plan," which sought to deinstitutionalize psychiatric patients from large hospitals to local clinical communities as a more effective mode of treatment. A respected expert in forensic psychiatry, Dr. McDonald offered testimony in the 1965 trial of Everett George Klippert, the last Canadian incarcerated for simply being gay. This trial led to the decriminalization of gay sex in 1969 by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. Klippert was released from prison in 1971 and pardoned by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in 2017. This change in law helped Peter MacKinnon establish the ongoing program "Psychiatry and the Law" in the U of S College of Law. A member of numerous provincial and federal commissions on mental health issues, he chaired the committee that produced the landmark "Report on the Forgotten Constituents" for Saskatchewan's Mental Health Association. Dr. McDonald’s contributions to his community and discipline earned him recognition from the Canadian Mental Health Association, and he received the one-time 50th Anniversary Golden Award from the Canadian Psychiatric Association, which noted his "lifelong dedication to biopsychosocial psychiatric care, rural community services, and his leadership in reforming mental health systems in Saskatchewan." Dr. McDonald died in Saskatoon in 2013.

R.C. Carter fonds

  • MG 161
  • Fundo
  • nd, 1949-1992 (inclusive)

This fonds contains correspondence, clippings, financial fonds, reports, and notes pertaining to the activities and interests of R.C. Carter.

Sem título

Bracket fungi

Bracket fungi are seen growing on a rotted out tree stump in Waskesiu Park, Saskatchewan.

Sem título

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