Showing 27 results

Archival description
University of Saskatchewan - Students√
Print preview View:

7 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Agricultural Students' Association fonds

  • MG 137
  • Fonds
  • 1920-1980

Minutes, financial fonds, and publications "The Bull Sheet" and "The Antelope;" as well as miscellaneous ephemera.

Agricultural Students' Association (University of Saskatchewan)

Anthropologists Among US fonds

  • MG 397
  • Fonds
  • 2003 - 2008

This fonds consists of materials created and accumulated by the Anthropologists Among US campaign. There are some student meeting notes and correspondence but the bulk of the material is presentations, reports, and correspondence written by University administrators and faculty related to a Systematic Program Review of Anthropology.

Anthropologists Among US

Canadian Officers' Training Corps fonds

  • MG 118
  • Fonds
  • 1916-1971

This series contains orders, correspondence, personnel records, minutes, reports, clippings, a photograph album, and two 8mm movie reels, all related to the administration and activities of the COTC.

Canadian Officers' Training Corps (C.O.T.C.)√

College of Home Economics fonds

  • RG 2086
  • Fonds
  • 1915-1990

This fonds contains material relating to the research work, extension activities, publications and administration of the College of Home Economics. These records generally contain correspondence, minutes, reports, and memoranda, and include as well material relating to various provincial and national professional organizations.

University of Saskatchewan - College of Home Economics√

Copland, Hunter and Anderson family fonds

  • MG 271
  • Fonds
  • 1885-1983, 2003-2005

This fonds documents the lives of the Copland, Hunter and Anderson families, notably their early years following Margaret and William Hunter's move to Canada and years in Saskatoon. It includes materials relating to events such as the 1885 Resistance; later material documenting student life, at the University, as well as materials documenting the daily life of a pioneering farm family. It also includes a card collection maintained by her Barbara Anderson's daughter, Bertha; agricultural fair ribbons from Bertha’s husband, George; and University of Saskatchewan memorabilia from Bertha and George’s daughter, Thelma.

Copland, Hunter and Anderson family

Curtis Elliott Collection

  • MG 217
  • Fonds
  • [ca. 1920-1922]

This collection includes Elliott's notes, some class handouts, and various texts.

Elliott, Curtis

Dean of Students fonds--R.A. Rennie

  • RG 2014
  • Fonds
  • 1958-1974, predominant 1960-1973

This series contains correspondence, minutes, memoranda and reports concerning student activities, counselling services, residences, etc.

University of Saskatchewan. Dean of Students

Donna Bronson Scrapbook

  • MG 581
  • Fonds
  • 1926-1930

This scrapbook, “College Days,” contains materials collected by Donna during the years she attended university. Much of the material relates to student events, including initiation; banquets (“The New Girls’ Banquet given in honour of The Old Girls”); dances sponsored by Pente Kai Deka, Arts and Science, the Engineering Society, and the Literary Society. It also include various clippings about University faculty and students; some material relating to student elections (Sexton, Culliton, Mackenzie); the 1927 program for Varsity Follies; the 1926 commemoration service on November 11; class timetables, etc. Also included are original ink drawings, of a couple dancing, and of “Study Hour at Varsity,” as well as photographs of Donna and classmates “Mac” [Mary McLeary], Eleanor Knox, Winona Yager, and Hazel [?], as well as a group known as the “Swift Current gang.” Also included are samples of University stationery, a letter, song lyrics and college yells, various ads, including one for the Halfway House, etc.

Bronson, Donna

Driedger Collection

  • MG 575
  • Fonds
  • 1932-1939

Memorabilia relating to the colleges of arts and science, and law; including the McGoun Cup debate program, student directories, university postcards, crests, and more.

Driedger, Elmer

Education Students' Society fonds

  • MG 150
  • Fonds
  • 1927-1974

Correspondence, minutes, and other related records of the society.

Education Students' Society

E.R. Simpson fonds

  • MG 85
  • Fonds
  • 1926-1997

This fonds contains personal correspondence and professional and academic materials relating to Simpson's career at the University, including memorabilia relating to student life in the late 1920s and later material relating to the history of the College of Home Economics; as well as material pertaining to the life and activities of Simpson's sister, P.W. Rowles; husband, G.W. Simpson; and her husband's first wife, M. Simpson. The bulk of the material regarding M. Simpson is a collection of prints and printing blocks illustrating the campus of the University of Saskatchewan.

Grace Pine fonds

  • MG 238
  • Fonds
  • 1926-1930

Memorabilia from the days when Grace Davis McKinnon, later Mrs. Grace Pine, was a student at the U of S. She earned a B.Sc in 1930 and ME in 1931. The bulk of material pertains to social activities of the University in general and the School of Medicine in particular. The material includes programs, dance cards, autographs, a ceramic skull made by the U of S Ceramics Department, a scrap book and a photograph of Marjorie Slater who later married Stanley Steer.

Pine, Grace Davis

Irene Partridge Department of Anatomy Photograph Collection

  • MG 277
  • Fonds
  • 1976-2002

This collection contains 13 photo albums and 1 scrapbook documenting the Department of Anatomy including symposiums, retirements and classes. Many of the photos have been labelled. The images include photographs of faculty, staff, and students of that department; and various departmental gatherings, conferences, etc

Partridge, Irene

Jack Lydiard Photograph Album

  • MG 547
  • Fonds
  • 1926-1930

This album contains images of University students involved in various activities; interiors of residence rooms; the university campus; and Saskatoon, taken between 1926 and 1930. The majority of images were taken by Jack Lydiard; most of the individuals are identified.

Lydiard, John Munro

Library - Interior

View of circulation desk with students at the card catalogue in the Library Reading Room located in the Administration (College) Building.

Bio/Historical Note: Though the first recorded withdrawal from the University Library occurred in October 1909, nearly five decades passed before the Library had its own building. The early collection was housed either on the second floor of the College Building (later known as the Administration Building) or was scattered among a number of small departmental libraries. Plans for a new library building in the late 1920s were ended by the start of the Great Depression; but a dramatically reduced acquisitions budget was offset by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation in 1933. In 1943 the University hired its first professional Librarian. A combination of provincial grants and University fundraising financed the construction of the Murray Memorial Library. The library was named after the University’s first President, Walter C. Murray. Designed by noted Regina architect Kioshi Izumi working under H.K. Black, Architect, it marked a change in campus architecture away from the more angular and elaborate Collegiate Gothic style to that of the less expensive cube. Building materials included granite at the entrance and Tyndall stone as a wall cladding and window trim. In addition to the library, the building housed the College of Law, an office of the Provincial Archives and a 105-seat lecture theatre equipped with the latest in audiovisual teaching aids. The most dramatic transformation took place between 1970 and 1976 when a six floor south wing was added along with an extensive renovation of the 1956 structure. Designed by BLM, Regina, the south wing was unlike any other building on campus. Clad in Tyndall stone panels made to look like concrete (through a "bush hammered" finish), the grey almost windowless building is industrial and utilitarian in appearance. The University's master plan required buildings in the core of campus to be clad in stone. However, the "bush hammered" finish was used since the Library addition was built during a period that saw the flowering of "Brutalist" Architecture, so called because of the wide use of exposed concrete. The new (south) wing, originally called the Main Library, was officially opened on 17 May 1974, and also became the home of the Department of Art and Art History, the College of Graduate Studies and the University Archives.

Results 1 to 15 of 27