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University of Saskatchewan, University Archives & Special Collections
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Neil Richards fonds

  • MG 355
  • Fundo
  • 1876-2018 (inclusive); 1900-2016 (predominant)

This fonds contains a variety of collections gathered together by Neil during his lifetime. The main areas of interest are LGBT, cross dressing, wrestling, and (to a minor extent) running. Periodicals, postcards, posters, artwork, textual material, and audiovisual material are found throughout the fonds. Individual scope and content notes are included for each accession/collection in the finding aid.

Sem título

John Evans fonds

  • MG 465
  • Fundo
  • 1916-1940 (inclusive) ; 1923-1940 (predominant)

This fonds contains the correspondence, reports, articles, addresses, speeches, minutes, clippings and publications pertaining to the various activities John Evans was engaged in between 1919 and 1940. The material has been arranged alphabetically according to certain topics or subject matter. However, in sorting such material, often an item would make reference to more than one issue. In this case material was grouped under the main, or predominant subject. No cross referencing has been made. Subjects are further subdivided into correspondence, articles, addresses, reports, etc.

Sem título

Art and Advertising collection

  • MG 623
  • Fundo
  • 1926-2005 (inclusive); 1967-1998 (predominant)

This collection consists of exhibition catalogues, posters, invitations and promotional ephemera, primarily (but not exclusively) from Canadian art galleries. The catalogues predominantly feature the work of Canadian artists, with some European and American artists (and minimal representation from Asian artists). The collection provides interesting documentation of the development of Canadian art across the country, including regional focus and to some extent, the development of interest in Indigenous art. In addition, the collection includes some auction catalogues, as well as items relating to advertising; art and design used in industry promotion; and industrial design.

Anne Szumigalski fonds

  • MG 460
  • Fundo
  • 1961-2008

This fonds contains materials related to Anne Szumigalski’s writing.

Sem título

Gens Hellquist fonds

  • MG 549
  • Fundo
  • 1969-2013 (inclusive); 1970-2000 (predominant)

This fonds includes materials related to Gens’ work in bringing together Saskatchewan’s gay community, both in general terms of his activism and gay health work, and more specifically in terms of his publishing work on Gaymates and Perceptions. The fonds also contains an extensive pornography collection ranging from magazines to videos to other types of pornographic materials. Gens maintained extensive subject files on Queer life in Canada, and these have been maintained under Series III: Queer Subject files. Many of these are related to the history of Queer communities in Canada and Saskatchewan. Finally, some personal material relating to Gens is also included.

Sem título

Dr. Lou Horlick - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Dr. Lou Horlick, Department of Medicine.

Bio/Historical Note: Dr. Lou Horlick’s parents, Sophie Katz (d. 1960) and Philip Horlick (d. 1981), separately emigrated from Poland and Russia to New York City to escape religious persecution and make a new life. They met working in the NYC garment district sweatshops, married, and in 1910 immigrated to Montreal, Quebec. Louis Horlick was born there on 2 December 1921 and attended Devonshire Public School and Baron Byng High School. Through scholarships and the assistance of his siblings, Dr. Horlick graduated in medicine from McGill in 1945, receiving the Holmes Gold Medal for the highest standing over 4 years of studies. Dr. Horlick interned at Montreal General Hospital. Later he spent two years as a fellow in the Cardiovascular Institute at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago where he began his career in medical research in the area of experimental atherosclerosis. He became a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and the American College of Physicians in 1952. That same year Dr. Horlick married Ruth Lenore Hood (1919-2015), a nurse who graduated from McGill University. Dr. Horlick completed his training in internal medicine and cardiology at McGill, receiving an MSc and Diploma in Internal Medicine (Experimental Medicine) in 1953. In 1954 he joined the staff of the Department of Medicine of the College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan, when it became a full four-year degree granting institution. He had the privilege of teaching the first group of students to graduate in medicine from the U of S. Dr. Horlick established the Division of Cardiology and its laboratories and developed a research program in atherosclerosis. From 1968-1974 he was professor and head of the Department of Medicine. Dr. Horlick was a highly skilled clinician and treated patients from throughout Saskatchewan over the course of his 50+ years of medical practice at Royal University Hospital in Saskatoon. He became Professor Emeritus in 1989 and continued to work in cardiology until early 2012. Lou Horlick died in Saskatoon on 23 October 2012 at age 90.
Dr. Horlick published more than 60 papers in scientific journals and gave many papers at scientific meetings in his area of research, cholesterol and atherosclerosis. He was recognized internationally for his research. He wrote and edited three books dealing with the history of the U of S College of Medicine and Royal University Hospital. The first, Medical College to Community Resource: Saskatchewan’s Medical School, 1978-1998, added to the history of the first 50 years (1926-1978) of the medical college written by Horlick’s medical colleague, Dr. D.J. Buchan, in Greenhouse to Medical Centre. The second, They Built Better Than They Knew: Saskatchewan’s Royal University Hospital, 1995-1992, appeared under Dr. Horlick’s name. The third, ‘J. Wendell Macleod, Saskatchewan’s Red Dean’, was a biography of the man who played a critical role in establishing both the new College of Medicine and University Hospital. Dr. Horlick was involved in many of the important institutions that make up Canadian medicine. He served as a member of the Medical Research Council of Canada, as member of the Medical Council of Canada, and as member of Council and Vice President (Medicine) of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. Dr. Horlick was a member of the Saskatchewan Health Research Board and served as vice-chairman of that Board. He served as chairman of the Canadian Council on Hospital Accreditation and served on the U of S Board of Governors (1983-1989).
Recognized for his scholarship and contributions to Canadian medical research, Dr. Horlick was the recipient of many awards, including the National Health Scientist Award (1975); the National Volunteer Award (1988); the Saskatchewan Order of Merit (1991, recognizing his efforts to establish a 9-1-1 emergency system in Saskatoon); the James Graham Award, Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (1991); the Annual Achievement Award, Canadian Cardiovascular Society (1992); the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada Award of Scientific Merit (1994); and Officer of the Order of Canada (1995). The Louis Horlick “Spirit of the College of Medicine Award” was established by the U of S Alumni Association and is presented annually to an individual associated with the college who has contributed over and above the call of duty and shows the spirit, dedication and enthusiasm that Dr. Horlick exemplified over his career. Lou Horlick died 23 October 2012 in Saskatoon at age 92.

Bio/Historical Note: Ruth Lenore Hood was born on 25 September 1919 in Toronto. Ruth grew up in the heart of the Canadian Thousand Islands on the St. Lawrence River. Ruth earned a BA in French, English and Politics from Queen's University in 1941. Known as "Steamer Hood" for her strong skating skills honed on the frozen St. Lawrence, Ruth was a defensive stalwart on the 1939 Queen's women's hockey team and wrote for the Queen's Journal campus newspaper. After graduation from Queen's, Ruth worked in Ottawa for the Bank of Canada and then entered the Montreal General Hospital School of Nursing in 1944, graduating with her RN in 1947. Pursuing her interest in psychiatric nursing, Ruth worked at the Colorado Psychopathic Institute from 1947-49 and at Chestnut Lodge near Washington D.C. from 1949-52. Ruth married Lou Horlick in 1952 in Montreal. In 1954 Ruth and Lou moved to Saskatoon, where Lou joined the new Medical College at the University of Saskatchewan. Except for sabbatical years spent with Louis and the boys at the National Institute of Health in Washington D.C. in 1962 and Stanford University in 1976, and medical volunteer stints with Louis in Kabul, Afghanistan, Chiang Mai, Thailand and Taiwan, Ruth resided in Saskatoon.
Ruth was a committed community volunteer. In 1957 she became the first president of the Saskatoon Symphony Volunteers, created to raise funds and other support for the Saskatoon Symphony. Ruth supported the art, drama and music communities in Saskatoon. In the early 1960s Ruth was instrumental in the establishment of the Association for Children with Learning Disabilities. Ruth pursued her interest in assisting individuals with psychiatric problems by volunteering as a tutor at the Regional Psychiatric Centre, as a board member of the Crocus Co-op (a support group for former psychiatric patients), and as a board member of the Saskatoon Housing Coalition for psychiatric patients. From 1978-1985 Ruth worked with patients being treated for psychiatric illness at the McKerracher psychiatric day-care centre. She led a daily group session for patients with thought disorders, with the aim of increasing each patient's self- confidence. Ruth also served as a board member of the Meewasin Foundation. Ruth was honoured with numerous awards, including the Canada Volunteer Award (1988), the YWCA Woman of the Year Award (1989), the Correctional Service of Canada Volunteer Award (1990), the Canada Confederation Medal (1992) and the Saskatchewan Order of Merit (2000). Ruth Horlick died on 21 February 2015 in Saskatoon at age 96.

Dr. Lou Horlick - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Dr. Lou Horlick, Department of Medicine.

Bio/Historical Note: Dr. Lou Horlick’s parents, Sophie Katz (d. 1960) and Philip Horlick (d. 1981), separately emigrated from Poland and Russia to New York City to escape religious persecution and make a new life. They met working in the NYC garment district sweatshops, married, and in 1910 immigrated to Montreal, Quebec. Louis Horlick was born there on 2 December 1921 and attended Devonshire Public School and Baron Byng High School. Through scholarships and the assistance of his siblings, Dr. Horlick graduated in medicine from McGill in 1945, receiving the Holmes Gold Medal for the highest standing over 4 years of studies. Dr. Horlick interned at Montreal General Hospital. Later he spent two years as a fellow in the Cardiovascular Institute at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago where he began his career in medical research in the area of experimental atherosclerosis. He became a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and the American College of Physicians in 1952. That same year Dr. Horlick married Ruth Lenore Hood (1919-2015), a nurse who graduated from McGill University. Dr. Horlick completed his training in internal medicine and cardiology at McGill, receiving an MSc and Diploma in Internal Medicine (Experimental Medicine) in 1953. In 1954 he joined the staff of the Department of Medicine of the College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan, when it became a full four-year degree granting institution. He had the privilege of teaching the first group of students to graduate in medicine from the U of S. Dr. Horlick established the Division of Cardiology and its laboratories and developed a research program in atherosclerosis. From 1968-1974 he was professor and head of the Department of Medicine. Dr. Horlick was a highly skilled clinician and treated patients from throughout Saskatchewan over the course of his 50+ years of medical practice at Royal University Hospital in Saskatoon. He became Professor Emeritus in 1989 and continued to work in cardiology until early 2012. Lou Horlick died in Saskatoon on 23 October 2012 at age 90.
Dr. Horlick published more than 60 papers in scientific journals and gave many papers at scientific meetings in his area of research, cholesterol and atherosclerosis. He was recognized internationally for his research. He wrote and edited three books dealing with the history of the U of S College of Medicine and Royal University Hospital. The first, Medical College to Community Resource: Saskatchewan’s Medical School, 1978-1998, added to the history of the first 50 years (1926-1978) of the medical college written by Horlick’s medical colleague, Dr. D.J. Buchan, in Greenhouse to Medical Centre. The second, They Built Better Than They Knew: Saskatchewan’s Royal University Hospital, 1995-1992, appeared under Dr. Horlick’s name. The third, ‘J. Wendell Macleod, Saskatchewan’s Red Dean’, was a biography of the man who played a critical role in establishing both the new College of Medicine and University Hospital. Dr. Horlick was involved in many of the important institutions that make up Canadian medicine. He served as a member of the Medical Research Council of Canada, as member of the Medical Council of Canada, and as member of Council and Vice President (Medicine) of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. Dr. Horlick was a member of the Saskatchewan Health Research Board and served as vice-chairman of that Board. He served as chairman of the Canadian Council on Hospital Accreditation and served on the U of S Board of Governors (1983-1989). Recognized for his scholarship and contributions to Canadian medical research, Dr. Horlick was the recipient of many awards, including the National Health Scientist Award (1975); the National Volunteer Award (1988); the Saskatchewan Order of Merit (1991, recognizing his efforts to establish a 9-1-1 emergency system in Saskatoon); the James Graham Award, Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (1991); the Annual Achievement Award, Canadian Cardiovascular Society (1992); the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada Award of Scientific Merit (1994); and Officer of the Order of Canada (1995). The Louis Horlick “Spirit of the College of Medicine Award” was established by the U of S Alumni Association and is presented annually to an individual associated with the college who has contributed over and above the call of duty and shows the spirit, dedication and enthusiasm that Dr. Horlick exemplified over his career. Lou Horlick died 23 October 2012 in Saskatoon at age 92.

Bio/Historical Note: Ruth Lenore Hood was born on 25 September 1919 in Toronto. Ruth grew up in the heart of the Canadian Thousand Islands on the St. Lawrence River. Ruth earned a BA in French, English and Politics from Queen's University in 1941. Known as "Steamer Hood" for her strong skating skills honed on the frozen St. Lawrence, Ruth was a defensive stalwart on the 1939 Queen's women's hockey team and wrote for the Queen's Journal campus newspaper. After graduation from Queen's, Ruth worked in Ottawa for the Bank of Canada and then entered the Montreal General Hospital School of Nursing in 1944, graduating with her RN in 1947. Pursuing her interest in psychiatric nursing, Ruth worked at the Colorado Psychopathic Institute from 1947-49 and at Chestnut Lodge near Washington D.C. from 1949-52. Ruth married Lou Horlick in 1952 in Montreal. In 1954 Ruth and Lou moved to Saskatoon, where Lou joined the new Medical College at the University of Saskatchewan. Except for sabbatical years spent with Louis and the boys at the National Institute of Health in Washington D.C. in 1962 and Stanford University in 1976, and medical volunteer stints with Louis in Kabul, Afghanistan, Chiang Mai, Thailand and Taiwan, Ruth resided in Saskatoon.
Ruth was a committed community volunteer. In 1957 she became the first president of the Saskatoon Symphony Volunteers, created to raise funds and other support for the Saskatoon Symphony. Ruth supported the art, drama and music communities in Saskatoon. In the early 1960s Ruth was instrumental in the establishment of the Association for Children with Learning Disabilities. Ruth pursued her interest in assisting individuals with psychiatric problems by volunteering as a tutor at the Regional Psychiatric Centre, as a board member of the Crocus Co-op (a support group for former psychiatric patients), and as a board member of the Saskatoon Housing Coalition for psychiatric patients. From 1978-1985 Ruth worked with patients being treated for psychiatric illness at the McKerracher psychiatric day-care centre. She led a daily group session for patients with thought disorders, with the aim of increasing each patient's self- confidence. Ruth also served as a board member of the Meewasin Foundation. Ruth was honoured with numerous awards, including the Canada Volunteer Award (1988), the YWCA Woman of the Year Award (1989), the Correctional Service of Canada Volunteer Award (1990), the Canada Confederation Medal (1992) and the Saskatchewan Order of Merit (2000). Ruth Horlick died on 21 February 2015 in Saskatoon at age 96.

Bill Waiser fonds

  • MG 192
  • Fundo
  • 1908-2022 (inclusive); 2014-2022 (predominant).

: The majority of this fonds is material related to the research for Waiser’s published works. It contains material relating to Waiser’s academic and writing career including instructional material; assessments and referential material; and research and publication activities. The 2023 accrual contains material relating to the significant public recognition of Waiser’s body of work, including his investiture into the Order of Canada; his Governor-General’s Award for Non-Fiction; the Governor-General’s History Award for Popular Media; the Saskatchewan Book Award for Non-Fiction; the Cheryl and Henry Kloppenburg Award for Literary Excellence; the JB Tyrrell Medal (Royal Society); and the Clio Prize Lifetime Achievement Award (Canadian Historical Association), among others. Much of the work included here was created following Waiser’s retirement from the University of Saskatchewan; and includes material relating to his interest in making history accessible to a wide audience.

Sem título

J.E. Murray fonds

  • MG 61
  • Fundo
  • 1843-1980, predominant 1908-1967

This fonds contains the personal correspondence, office, and research files of the Murray family, including W.C. Murray (President, University of Saskatchewan), his wife Christina, and his daughters, Christina, Dr. Lucy H. Murray (Professor of English, Regina College), and Dr. Jean E. Murray.

Sem título

Campus Radio Station fonds

  • MG 128
  • Fundo
  • 1952-1985

This fonds includes correspondence, program guides, subject files, program logs, and news clippings concerning the programming and operation of the University student radio station.

Sem título

Doris Hillis fonds

  • MG 444
  • Fundo
  • 1960-2004

This collection includes working papers and completed versions of Hillis’ published and unpublished poetry, drama, and fiction, as well as research and correspondence related thereto. The collection includes a range of interviews conducted by Hillis with a number of Saskatchewan authors for her books Voices and Visions and Plainspeaking. This collection also includes chapbooks published by Andrew Suknaski, Lorna Uher, and Mick Burrs.
Further, the collection contains a range of materials gathered by Doris on the subject of puppetry for her work with the Macklin Puppeteers throughout the 1960’s and 1970’s. Her personal memoirs are also included, as are materials from her involvement in Saskatchewan’s literary community, including helpful information on the art of writing from her workshops.

Sem título

Saskatchewan Aids Network (SAN) fonds

  • MG 294
  • Fundo
  • 1992-2003 (inclusive) ; 1995-2002 (predominant)

This fonds consists of materials used, created, and accumulated by the Saskatchewan AIDS Network. The records primarily detail SAN’s interactions with local, provincial, national, and international HIV/AIDS groups. These records include membership information, correspondence, and workshop/conference materials (i.e. agendas, programs, presentations) created by organizations of which SAN was a member. There is some material pertaining to SAN’s operations in this fonds but most of the operational records are related to SAN’s program-delivery (i.e. organizing conventions, workshops, or training). There are few records relating to the administration and internal operation of SAN in this fonds. A large portion of the fonds is HIV/AIDS resource materials that have been gathered by SAN. This includes pamphlets, publications, articles, newsletters, and information sheets from a variety of non-profit organizations and government ministries.

Sem título

Joe Cherwinski fonds

  • MG 429
  • Fundo
  • 1914-2006 (inclusive); 1965-2000 (predominant)

This fonds contains the drafts, notes, and reference materials relating to Cherwinski’s research on prairie labour and history. It has been organized into 9 series:

  1. Personal
  2. Letters to Albert: The Main Family Correspondence from Saskatchewan, 1908-1925.
  3. Prairie Farm Labour
  4. Research – Various
  5. Saskatchewan Organized Labour
  6. Schwinghamer General Store
  7. Winter on the Prairies: 1906-1907
  8. Posters
  9. Library

Sem título

Hinde Horn Wake family fonds

  • MG 604
  • Fundo
  • 1888-1998 (inclusive); 1910-1950 (predominant).

This fonds consists of records of the Joseph Hinde and Henry Wake families, members of an English Quaker community in Birmingham who immigrated to Canada in 1912. The records reflect their daily lives and the operation of the Hinde family's Valley Springs Ranch near Borden, Saskatchewan. Materials relating to the Horn family farm at Spring Valley Saskatchewan during the Depression comprise the second series of records in this fonds. The types of records included are diaries, correspondence, photographs, financial records, publications, artifacts and clippings.

Sem título

John Dewar fonds

  • MG 195
  • Fundo
  • 1919-1998 (inclusive); 1972-1998 (predominant)

This fonds documents the professional and academic activities of Dr. Dewar over the course of his career. Files pertaining to research and writing focus on the areas of sports history, including material on Indigenous athletes and athletics, and residential schools, basketball, hockey, and the Olympics. The material on teaching covers topics such as sports history and the philosophy of sport. Also included are student papers collected by Dewar from his and Professor Val Schneider's sports history classes. Many of these student papers deal with a variety of Saskatchewan teams and locales.

Sem título

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