French Immersion 1965-70 - Summer School at Collège Mathieu
- 1.0145.10
- Stuk
- 1968
Arbos September-October 1968, p. 22 Teachers taking University level French immersion classes at Collège Mathieu, Gravelbourg are seen discussing classwork.
French Immersion 1965-70 - Summer School at Collège Mathieu
Arbos September-October 1968, p. 22 Teachers taking University level French immersion classes at Collège Mathieu, Gravelbourg are seen discussing classwork.
French Immersion 1965-70 - Summer School at Collège Mathieu
Arbos September-October 1968, p. 19 Father Piché instructs a classroom of teachers taking University level French immersion summer classes at Collège Mathieu, Gravelbourg.
French Immersion 1965-70 - Summer School at Collège Mathieu
Arbos September-October 1968, p. 20 Teachers taking University level French immersion classes at Collège Mathieu, Gravelbourg, look at picture books.
French Immersion 1965-70 - Summer School at Collège Mathieu
Arbos September-October 1968, p. 21 Father Piché teaching French songs to teachers taking University level French immersion summer classes at Collège Mathieu, Gravelbourg.
Historic Photos - Miscellaneous - 1850 - 1930s - Religious Procession
A group of nuns in habits and wimples shoulder a wooden stretcher bearing a small religious statue of a woman and young boy. Other nuns walk alongside and behind the procession, and men in uniform are seen in the background.
A large group of men, women and children are gathered around and on top of a large sod building [school?] with plank roof and glass windows. A pile of lumber in the foreground suggests recent construction.
Historic Photos - Miscellaneous - 1850 - 1930s - Nurses
A pair of nurses in white uniforms and caps are shown standing beside an adjustable bed. A sterilizer and surgical instruments are pictured to the right of the women.
Relief Camp #28, Shamrock, Saskatchewan
The men of Relief Camp #28, Shamrock, Saskatchewan are pictured standing beside ramshackle buildings on open prairie; the men of Relief Camp # 28 worked as a highway construction crew.
Relief Project # 44, Dundurn, Saskatchewan
Relief Project # 44 was located in Dundurn, Saskatchewan. The men's camp, pictured here in May, 1935 is at a railroad grade. Men can be seen walking, riding in a truck, and sitting on piles of logs, in a clearing in the bush where large tents have been erected.
Expo 1967 - Western Canada Pavilion
Cedar shingles cover the entire exterior of this unusually shaped pavilion with huge fir trees rising out of the top of the structure. The interior is arranged in a walk-through series of display cells designed to recreate sights, sounds and scents characteristic of the Canadian West.
Expo 1967 - Automotive Stadium
A 25,000 seat arena, it is sponsored by five of Canada's automobile manufacturers at a cost of $3.3 million. Events to be held in the Automotive Stadium during the 1967 World Exhibition in Montreal include: an international soccer tournament, a Europe vs. the Americas track and field meet, military tattoos, horse pageants and spectacular variety shows. The Stadium surface is 535 feet long by 212 feet wide surrounded by a quarter mile rubberized asphalt track.
Expo 1967 - "Man in the Community" Pavilion
Gracefully rising interlacing wooden beams is structural feature of Man in the Community pavilion at Expo 67. Designed by Vancouver architects Massey-Erickson, the pavilion will contain exhibits probing the uniquely modern effects upon man of growing urbanization and exploding populations.
An overhead view of a model of Place d'Acceuill, a geometrically stylized pavilion, is shown.
The Mini-rail will make up part of the secondary transportation system on the Expo 67 site. It's a single, elevated rail vehicle with open cars each carrying 12 persons. It is a mono-rail system in miniature.
Expo 1967 - Katimavik Building
The Katimavik (Eskimo word for 'meeting place'), a huge inverted pyramid, is the focal point of the Canadian pavilion at the 1967 World Exhibition. The Canadian exhibit, built on 21 acres of the largely man-made Ile Notre Dame, is the largest pavilion, national or private. The Canadian government commenced construction on June 18, 1965.