- A-4066
- Item
- 1965
Two women grappling.
39 resultados con objetos digitales Muestra los resultados con objetos digitales
Two women grappling.
University of Saskatchewan Tennis Team - Harry Whelan
Posed indoor image of Harry Whelan, men's champion, holding a tennis racket.
Atina Ford delivers a lecture standing in front of a white screen.
Bio/Historical Note: Atina Ford (nee Johnston) is a world champion and Olympic champion curler. She won a gold medal at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano as the alternate for Sandra Schmirler. She also won the World Championships in 1997 as the alternate for the Schmirler team. Ford won a bronze medal in the 1991 World Junior Curling Championships in Glasgow as skip for the Canadian Junior women’s team. Ford has a BEd and is qualified to teach French immersion.
University of Saskatchewan Fencing Club - Group Photo
Group photo of the fencing team.
University of Saskatchewan Women's Curling Team
Early photo of four team members with straw house brooms.
University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Basketball Team - Group Photo
Elevated view of team members in uniform posing indoors with a basketball. Players: M. Ackerman, Grace Jasper, J. Benson, S. Hay, S. Wright, G. Evans, G. Hanson, Myrna Needham, E. Edwards, Gil Strumm (coach), J. Buttery (mgr).
University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Basketball Team - Player Photos
Individual photographs of "Ladies Basket Ball" team members in action grouped. Names: I. Macinnis (mgr), Ray Frey (coach), G. Wilson, Catherine Louise Stuart Bergin (Cherry), Florence Roxana Ullainee Kinsman, K. Paterson, W. Treleaven, C. Early, E. Burwash, [Margaret Holmes] Richardson, E. Wheaton, K. Otton, H. Stewart.
Bio/Historical Note: The colours green and white were chosen in 1910 by Reginald Bateman, a native of Ireland and the first English professor at the University of Saskatchewan. The name ‘Huskies’ was included in an article in the 20 September 1932 Star-Phoenix: “The Varsity Stadium yesterday morning saw the advance guard of over twenty gridiron Huskies swing into action.” One of the earliest pictures of players wearing sweaters with ‘Huskies’ on them was the 1932-1933 Greystone yearbook, showing the men’s hockey team in uniforms with the new name. Women's teams were using ‘Huskiettes’ by 1937.
Saskatchewan Agricultural Graduates Association - Curling Team - Group Photo
Unidentified curling team, [Agricultural Engineering students], 3rd Event winners of the Skelly Trophy.
Bio/Historical Note: Conway James Skelly was born in Ontario in 1922. He graduated from the School of Agriculture in 1947. Skelly died in 1949.
University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Badminton Team
Posed indoor image of team members holding racquets while standing on a court (l to r): Irene Eilers, Ruth James, Daphne Lane, Barbara Toren.
Four images of women's intramural diving; two images of intramural swimming races; in the Qu'Appelle Hall pool.
Bio/Historical Note: The University of Saskatchewan’s first pool opened in 1916. Located in the basement of Qu'Appelle Hall, it was 18 feet wide, 45 feet long and around 8 feet deep with a spring board and changing rooms. Speed swimming, diving, water polo and recreational swimming soon became popular activities in the long Saskatchewan winters. The pool closed soon after the Physical Education pool opened in October 1964.
University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes Swim Team - Group Photo
Team members sitting and kneeling on the pool's diving board. Members: Marg Hardy, Helen Wood, Jean Wimmer, Pat Lawson, Margot Good, Peggy Wilton, Molly Dunn, Ruth Noble, Betty McGregor.
University of Saskatchewan Women's Basketball Team - Dorothy McKenzie
Posed indoor image of Dorothy (Dot) McKenzie dressed in uniform and holding a basketball.
Bio/Historical Note: Dorothy (McKenzie) Walton, born in 1909 in Swift Current, Saskatchewan, enrolled at the University of Saskatchewan (BA 1929; MA 1931) in 1926. From 1926-1930 she won more than 50 championships at the local, provincial and inter-varsity levels. Walton played on 14 U of S athletic teams and was the first female awarded the Oak Shield as the University's outstanding athlete. While a student she represented the school on the inter-varsity debate team, was a member of the Athletic Directorate and served as vice president of the Students’ Representative Council. Walton moved to Toronto in 1931 where she took up badminton. In 1939-40 she became the first player to hold Canadian, United States and All-England badminton titles concurrently and was recognized as the premier player in the world. In 1940 she was runner up in voting for the Lou Marsh Trophy as Canada's athlete of the year. In a poll by the Canadian Press, Walton was named one of the top six female athletes in Canada for the first half of the 20th century. She was a founding member of the Consumers' Association of Canada and was its first president from 1950-1953. In 1973 Walton was made a Member of the Order of Canada, Canada's highest civilian honour. She is an inductee into the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame (1961), the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame (1966), the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame (1971), and the U of S Athletic Wall of Fame (1984). Walton died in 1981 in Toronto.
Bio/Historical Note: Green and white were established as the official colours of U of S sports teams in 1909-1910 by Reginald Bateman, a native of Ireland and the first English professor at the University of Saskatchewan. But the Huskies name did not appear at that time. Teams were generally referred to as “varsity” or “the green and white” when they played or appeared in media. The name Huskies was included in an article in the 20 September 1932 Star-Phoenix: “The Varsity Stadium yesterday morning saw the advance guard of over twenty gridiron Huskies swing into action.” The origin of the Huskie name is unclear. One of the earliest images of players wearing sweaters with ‘Huskies’ on across the front was in the 1932-1933 Greystone yearbook, showing the men’s hockey team in uniforms with the new name. By 1937 women’s teams were generally referred to as Huskiettes.