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Archival description
University of Saskatchewan, University Archives & Special Collections
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Department of Sociology fonds

  • RG 2044
  • Fonds
  • 1967-1990

This fonds contains correspondence, memoranda, minutes, and publications regarding all aspects of the administration of the department.

University of Saskatchewan. College of Arts and Science. Department of Sociology

P.A. Sorokin collection

  • MG 449
  • Fonds
  • 1867-1997 (inclusive) ; 1930-1986 (predominant)

This fonds contains Sorokin's: manuscripts, published works, correspondence, clippings, Harvard University Administrative files, and administrative files of the Research Centre for Creative Alturism. Also included are a few photographs, a microfilm and cassette tapes, as well as works by others about Sorokin and his theories. Some of the material about Sorokin was added after his death.

Sorokin, Pitirim A.

Indian and Northern Education - Graduation

Tipi set up for graduation ceremony honouring Indian Teacher Education Program and Indian Social Work Education Program graduates.

Bio/Historical Note: The Indian Cultural College arranged a special graduation ceremony for students graduating from the Indian Teacher Education and the Indian Social Work Education programs. A tipi was erected in the enclosed garden between Marquis Hall and Qu’Appelle Hall in which Indian elders smoked a pipe and burned sweetgrass in a private ceremony on behalf of the students going out into the world.

Indian and Northern Education - Graduation

Dignitaries sitting on the grass outside in enclosed garden between Marquis Hall and Qu’Appelle Hall during a graduation ceremony honouring Indian Teacher Education Program and Indian Social Work Education Program graduates. Tipi at left.

Bio/Historical Note: The Indian Cultural College arranged a special graduation ceremony for students graduating from the Indian Teacher Education and the Indian Social Work Education programs. A tipi was erected in the enclosed garden between Marquis Hall and Qu’Appelle Hall in which Indian elders smoked a pipe and burned sweetgrass in a private ceremony on behalf of the students going out into the world.

Indian and Northern Education - Graduation

A female graduate receives a scroll and a feather from David Ahenakew, chair, Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations, during a graduation ceremony held in the enclosed garden between Marquis Hall and Qu’Appelle Hall during a graduation ceremony honouring Indian Teacher Education Program and Indian Social Work Education Program graduates.

Bio/Historical Note: The Indian Cultural College arranged a special graduation ceremony for students graduating from the Indian Teacher Education and the Indian Social Work Education programs. A tipi was erected in the enclosed garden between Marquis Hall and Qu’Appelle Hall in which Indian elders smoked a pipe and burned sweetgrass in a private ceremony on behalf of the students going out into the world.

Indian and Northern Education - Graduation

Standing on the rug is Harry Brabant, an elder from Red Pheasant Reserve, speaks during a graduation ceremony honouring Indian Teacher Education Program and Indian Social Work Education Program graduates.

Bio/Historical Note: The Indian Cultural College arranged a special graduation ceremony for students graduating from the Indian Teacher Education and the Indian Social Work Education programs. A tipi was erected in the enclosed garden between Marquis Hall and Qu’Appelle Hall in which Indian elders smoked a pipe and burned sweetgrass in a private ceremony on behalf of the students going out into the world.

Patricia Monture fonds

  • MG 539
  • Fonds
  • 1960-2010 (inclusive) ; 1980-2005 (predominant)

This fonds includes materials relating to Patricia Monture’s teaching, research, and professional activities on campus, as well as an extensive collection of materials relating to Indigenous rights, women’s rights, Indigenous women’s rights, the Canadian justice system, and how the Canadian justice system interacts with Aboriginal, female, and Aboriginal female offenders. The papers also explore issues of child welfare and domestic violence. A number of legal documents are included, as are materials relating to Indigenous self-governance, treaties, and the Indian Act. Also included are materials relating to Monture’s involvement in a number of national commissions including the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, the task force on federally sentenced women, and the task force on the use of solitary confinement in federal prisons. Through Monture’s correspondence, it is possible to get a sense of what it was like working as an Indigenous woman in academia during this period.

Monture, Patricia

Ivo and Jackie Lambi fonds

  • MG 229
  • Fonds
  • [ca. 1930-1999] (inclusive) ; [ca. 1970-1999] (predominant)

The fonds includes records relating to Ivo Lambi's research and teaching, and Jackie Lambi's work as a grief counsellor. The Ivo Lambi material includes drafts of books, publications by others, archival reproductions (including microfilm purchased from German archives), and lecture notes. The Jackie Lambi material includes various offprints, resources used for her University of Regina Social Work practicum, and a variety of audio cassettes.

Lambi, Ivo Nikolai

Dr. C.E. Smith - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Dr. C.E. Smith, dean of Education, 1953-1955.

Bio/Historical Note: Dr. C.E. Smith resigned as dean of education at the University of Saskatchewan in 1955 to take an educational post at McGill University. Dean Smith came to the U of S in 1953 from the University of Manitoba where he was director of the school of social work.

Shadowfax (Newspaper) - Staff

Note on back: "A reception October 12 for delegates to the national planning meeting for the 1979 Learned Societies Conference, Cheryl Sutherland (right), reporter for the [Arts and Science] student newspaper Shadowfax, interviews John Cossum of the University of Regina, representing the Canadian Association of Schools of Social Work".

Bio/historical note: The Shadowfax was a weekly Arts and Science student newspaper, published between approximately 1976-1980.

Linvill F. and Avra G. Watson fonds

  • MG 222
  • Fonds
  • 1937-1990 (inclusive) ; 1960-1980 (predominant)

This fonds contains personal, academic and research material related to the interests and activities of Linvill F. and Avra G. Watson.

Watson, Linvill Fielding

Indian and Northern Education - Graduation

Dignitaries awaiting the graduate procession during a graduation ceremony honouring Indian Teacher Education Program and Indian Social Work Education Program graduates held in the Bowl. From l to r: Pius Dustyhorn, elder, Poor Man First Nation; Jim Cannepotatoe, elder, Onion Lake; Ernest Stanley, field worker, Indian Cultural Centre of the Saskatchewan Federation of Indian Nations (FSIN), Frog Lake, Alberta; Dan Pelletier, elder, Kamsack; Lawrence Myo, elder, Moosomin First Nation; Ed Okanee, elder, Loon Lake; David Ahenakew, chief, FSIN; Lloyd Barber, president, University of Regina; and J.B. Kirkpatrick, dean, Education. All locations in Saskatchewan except where noted.

Bio/Historical Note: The Indian Cultural College arranged a special graduation ceremony for students graduating from the Indian Teacher Education and the Indian Social Work Education programs. A tipi was erected in the enclosed garden between Marquis Hall and Qu’Appelle Hall in which Indian elders smoked a pipe and burned sweetgrass in a private ceremony on behalf of the students going out into the world.

College Of Arts and Science Dean's Office fonds

  • RG 2033
  • Fonds
  • 1933-1991

This fonds contains material relating to the research work, students, faculty and administration of the College of Arts and Sciences, and its departments. These records generally contain correspondence, minutes, reports, and memoranda; they may also contain material relating to associated national or international organizations, research articles, and addresses.

University of Saskatchewan. College of Arts and Science. Dean's Office

John Dewar - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of John Dewar, Professor of Physical Education.

Bio/Historical Note: John Duncan Dewar was born on 7 March 1932 in Sexsmith, Alberta. Graduating with a Bachelor of Education in Physical Education from the University of Alberta in 1955 he went on to earn a Master of Arts from the University of Ohio in 1960 and a Doctor of Education from Florida State University in 1965. A former member of the University of Alberta Golden Bears basketball team, Dewar accepted the position of Athletic Director and coach at the University of Saskatchewan for the 1960-61 academic year. He next moved to the University of Alberta where he was Assistant Professor of Physical Education, Men's Athletic Coordinator and basketball coach from 1961-1967. The next two years found him serving as Associate Professor and Director of Physical Education at St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia. In 1969 Dr. Dewar joined the faculty of Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario. Over the next eight years he held a variety of academic and administrative positions, including: Full Professor and Dean of the Division of Physical Education, Associate Dean of Professional Schools, Acting Director of the School of Social Work, Head Administor of the School of Nursing and Acting Director of the School of Commerce. In 1977 Dewar returned to the University of Saskatchewan as Professor and Dean of the College of Physical Education. He remained Dean until 1986 and continued on faculty as Full Professor until his retirement in 1996, becoming Professor Emeritus of Physical Education/Kinesiology. The bulk of Dr. Dewar's scholarly work relates to the study of sports history. Research and publications include works dealing with Dr. James Naismith, the Edmonton Grads women's team, the Olympics, Indigenous athletes and athletics and residential schools. Dewar was member of several local, national and international societies and organizations and served on the editorial board or as a reader for several Saskatchewan sports history groups. Dewar died in Saskatoon in 2018.

Irene May Spry - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Irene Spry, Economics and Political Science.

Bio/Historical Note: The daughter of Evan Ebenezer Biss, Inspector of Schools in the Colonial and Indian Service, and Amelia Bagshaw Johnstone, Irene Mary Bliss was born in 1907 in Standerton, Transvaal Colony, South Africa. She attended Bournemouth High School in Talbot Heath, Dorset, England. She first began her undergraduate training at the London School of Economics (1924–25) and later obtained a graduate degree in economics at Girton College (1925–28) of the University of Cambridge, England, where she had been a student of J.M. Keynes, A.C. Pigou, D.H. Robertson and M. Dobb. This was followed by further studies for a master's degree (1928–29) in Social Research and Social Work at Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania. Spry's formal career as an economic historian began when she joined the Department of Political Economy at the University of Toronto in 1929 where she collaborated with the late H.A. Innis and taught Canadian economic history. Her marriage in 1938 to the late Graham Spry, and subsequent births of their three children, Robin, Richard and Lib, interrupted her academic career. However, during World War II she did serve actively on the Wartime Prices and Trade Board and its later affiliate, the Commodity Prices Stabilization Corporation, in Ottawa and, during the early postwar years, went to England and co-founded Saskatchewan House with her husband, broadcast reformer Graham Spry, who was Agent-General for Saskatchewan in London from 1946 to 1967. Spry's work in the women's movement blossomed during her time in London. She represented the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada at the Associated Country Women of the World from 1954 to 1967, including service as the group's executive chair from 1959 to 1965. Her formal academic career eventually resumed in 1967, first at the University of Saskatchewan and finally at the University of Ottawa in 1968, where she would remain for the rest of her life. Though officially retiring in 1973, Spry continued to teach courses at Ottawa's Department of Economics until the early 1980s and, indeed, gave lectures in Canadian economic history as recently as 1995. Throughout her retirement years, she maintained a strong intellectual presence at the University of Ottawa. Among many and varied honours, Irene Mary Spry received honorary doctorates from the University of Toronto (1971) and University of Ottawa (1985). The latter degree was conferred at the same time that a book in her honour entitled Explorations in Canadian Economic History was presented to her. Spry was appointed Officer of the Order of Canada in 1992 not only for her long career as writer, teacher and scholar but also for her prominence in the Canadian and international women's movements. Professor Emerita Spry died in Ottawa in 1998 at age 91.

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