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Learned Societies Conference - Convocation - Addresses

R.W. Begg, University President, speaking during the special convocation held in the Bowl during the Learned Societies Conference, U of S, 22 May 1979-8 June 1979. Allan Blakeney, Premier of Saskatchewan, and John G. Diefenbaker, University Chancellor, seated on dais with other dignitaries.

Bio/Historical Note: A special convocation was held 2 June 1979 to celebrate the "Learned Societies Conference." It was 20 years since the last conference was held at the University of Saskatchewan. Honorary Doctor of Literature (D.Litt.) degrees were conferred on four outstanding scholars; Jean Sutherland Boggs, Sir Moses I. Finley, Amartya Kumar Sen, and Arthur Whalley.

Learned Societies Conference - Convocation - Honourary Degrees - Presentation - Jean Sutherland Boggs

Jean Sutherland Boggs receives an honourary Doctor of Literature (D.Litt.) degree from John G. Diefenbaker, University Chancellor, during the special convocation held in the Bowl during the Learned Societies Conference, U of S, 22 May 1979-8 June 1979.

Bio/Historical Note: Grace Jean Sutherland Boggs (1922-2014) was born in Negritos, Peru. Boggs attended Alma College in St. Thomas, Ontario, graduating in 1938. She would later receive a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Trinity College in 1942. She received a M.A. in 1946 and a Ph.D. in 1953 from Radcliffe College. From 1942-1944 Boggs was an education secretary for the Art Association of Montreal (today known as the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts). In 1948, she joined the faculty of Skidmore College as an assistant professor. From 1949-1952 she was an assistant professor at Mount Holyoke College. From 1954 to 1962 Boggs was an assistant and associate professor at the University of California. In 1962, she was appointed curator for the Art Gallery of Toronto. In 1964 she was appointed Steinberg Professor of Art History at Washington University in St. Louis. In 1966 Boggs was appointed the first female and fifth director of the National Gallery of Canada and served in this position until 1976. During her tenure, the Gallery collection grew by more than 8,600 pieces. including works from Degas, van Gogh, Pollock, the Group of Seven, and the beginnings of the Gallery's photography collection. From 1976-1979 she was a Professor of Fine Arts at Harvard University. From 1978-1982 she was the director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Under her leadership, the Museum purchased Edgar Degas's painting After the Bath, which is now considered to be one of the Museum's most important acquisitions in the post-war period. She also presided over the Museum during art historian Stella Kramrisch's acclaimed 1981 exhibition of Indian art, Manifestations of Shiva. She was chair and chief executive officer of the Canada Museums Construction Corporation from 1982-1985, where she directed the construction of both a custom-built National Gallery building and the unique Canadian Museum of Civilization (today known as the Canadian Museum of History) in collaboration with the architects Moshe Safdie and Douglas Cardinal. From 1991 to 1993 Boggs was a senior advisor for the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. As an art historian, she has written books about the life of Edgar Degas, including Portraits By Degas (1962). In 1973, Boggs was made an Officer of the Order of Canada "in recognition of her scholarship and the vision and energy she has displayed in developing the collection and the services of the Gallery". She was promoted to Companion in 1992. In 1979 she was awarded an honorary Doctor of Literature from the University of Saskatchewan. She was awarded honorary degrees from Mount Holyoke College in 1971, York University in 1976 and from Concordia University in 2000. Boggs died in 2014 in Ottawa at age 92.

Bio/Historical Note: A special convocation was held 2 June 1979 to celebrate the "Learned Societies Conference." It was 20 years since the last conference was held at the University of Saskatchewan. Honorary Doctor of Literature (D.Litt.) degrees were conferred on four outstanding scholars; Jean Sutherland Boggs, Sir Moses I. Finley, Amartya Kumar Sen, and Arthur Whalley.

Honourary Degree Recipients - Group Photo

Group photograph of honourary degree recipients at the special convocation at the opening of University Hospital. Back row (l to r): Dr. J.B. Ritchie, Regina, Saskatchewan College of Physicians and Surgeons; Dr. F.D. Mott, Washington, DC, former Saskatchewan deputy minister of Public Health; Dr. G.H. Agnew, professor of hospital administration, University of Toronto; Dr. R.D. Defries, Connaught Laboratories, University of Toronto. Front row (l to r): Dr. Edward James Baldes, Arts '18, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota; Kathleen W. Ellis, first U of S director of Nursing, Penticton, British Columbia; Dr. W.S. Lindsay, ad eundem, Dean Emeritus of Medicine, Saskatoon.

Bio/Historical Note: Special Convocation was held in conjunction with the opening of the new University Hospital. Honourary Doctor of Laws degrees were conferred on seven outstanding persons in the field of medicine.

Honourary Degrees - Presentation - Arnold D. Dunton

F. Hedley Auld, University Chancellor, making presentation of an honourary Doctor of Laws degree to Arnold D. Dunton at Convocation ceremony held in Physical Education gymnasium.

Bio/Historical Note: Arnold Davidson Dunton (1912-1987) was a Canadian educator and public administrator. From 1943-1958 Dunton was chairman of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Honourary Degrees - Presentation - William J.F. Warren

F.H. Auld, University Chancellor, making presentation of an honourary Doctor of Laws degree to William J.F. Warren at Convocation held in Physical Education Gymnasium.

Bio/Historical Note: William John Finley Warren (1873-1963) was born in Balderson,, Ontario, near Perth, and was educated at the Saskatchewan Agricultural College. He settled in Belbeck, Saskatchewan. near Moose Jaw, in 1906. In 1917 Warren enrolled in the Associate Course in the School of Agriculture at the University of Saskatchewan. He received his Diploma in 1919, but returned to take another year of special studies. Warren soon became prominent as a producer and exhibitor of registered seed. He was president of the Moose Jaw Agricultural Society, of the Saskatchewan Registered Seed Growers’ Association and of the Saskatchewan Agricultural Societies' Association. He represented Thunder Creek in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan from 1921 to 1925 as a Progressive Party member. Warren was defeated by Robert Scott Donaldson when he ran for re-election to the provincial assembly in 1925. As a rancher, Warren had Aberdeen-Angus cattle and won a grand championship at both the Toronto Royal and the Chicago International. Warren died in 1963 and is buried in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.

Honourary Degrees - Presentation - Dr. Isabel G. Auld

Emmett M. Hall, University Chancellor, making presentation of an honourary Doctor of Laws degree to Isabel G. Auld at Convocation held at Centennial Auditorium.

Bio/Historical Note: Dr. Isabel G. Auld was born in 1916 in Winnipeg. She was educated at Regina Central Collegiate, the University of Saskatchewan on scholarships at undergraduate and graduate levels, and McGill University on a National Research Council award. The war cut short her doctoral research. In 1941 Dr. Auld joined the Federal Department of Agriculture’s Rust Research Laboratory at the University of Manitoba, and worked in cytogenetic research. Dr. Auld’s lifelong career of voluntarism began during wartime with the Canadian Red Cross, as a blood tester at donor clinics. After marriage to Walter Murray Auld (1916-2015), while raising three children, she became involved in the consumer movement through the University Women’s Club. Dr. Auld’s focus in the mid-1960s was advocacy for consumer credit law reform. This broadened to family and social services, post-secondary education, health care, and medical research. Dr. Auld led or was a director of many community boards, including the Consumers Association of Canada (Manitoba Chair), Family Services of Winnipeg, Westminster United Church (Chair), Middlechurch Home (Chair), Klinic, Mount Carmel Clinic, and the Women’s Canadian Club of Winnipeg (Chair). In 1968 Dr. Auld was appointed a citizen representative on the Board of Governors of the University of Manitoba. She served 14 years, including four years as the Board’s representative to the University’s Senate. In 1977 Auld was installed as ninth Chancellor of the University of Manitoba, the first woman elected to this office and second female university chancellor in Canada. She served nine years (re-elected 1980 and 1983) on a full-time basis, concurrently serving on the boards of Winnipeg’s Health Sciences Centre (Chair, 1988-89), Social Planning Council of Winnipeg and Canada World Youth. Honours included investiture as a Member of the Order of Canada, and honourary degrees from the universities of Saskatchewan (1979) and Manitoba. Auld died in Winnipeg in 2016.

Honourary Degrees - Presentation - Colonel Robert L. Houston

Emmett M. Hall, University Chancellor, is making presentation of an honourary Doctor of Laws degree to Colonel Robert L. Houston at Convocation at Centennial Auditorium. Iain MacLean, University Secretary, prepares to hood recipient.

Bio/Historical Note: Col. Robert Laird (Bob) Houston was born in Melville, Saskatchewan in 1911. He grew up in Arnprior, Ontario and then attended Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York on a hockey scholarship from which he graduated in 1934 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. In 1935 he was commissioned into the Canadian Army. He served in various capacities in the Army until retiring as a Colonel in 1963, including fighting in World War II as a Commanding Officer of the Fourth Canadian Armoured Divisional Signals and being awarded the French Croix de Guerre, instructing at the Canadian Army Staff College in Kingston, Ontario and the NATO Defence Staff College in Paris, France and serving on different international committees. In 1963 Col. Houston founded the Canada Japan Trade Council and led the Council until his retirement. In 1987 he was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Star from His Majesty, The Emperor of Japan for his efforts through the years to promote friendly relations and economic ties between Canada and Japan. Col. Houston initiated the Western Transportation Advisory Council and he is a past chairman of the Canadian National Committee of United World Colleges (which ultimately led to the establishment of the Lester B. Pearson College of the Pacific), past president of Clarkson University Alumni Board of Governors, past President of the NATO Defence College Association of Canada, past Chairman of the National Committee for the Diefenbaker Canada Centre and a past Director of the Royal Canadian Geographic Society and the Big Rideau Lake Association. Col. Houston died in Ottawa in 2002 at age 90.

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