Hockey - Players√

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

Source note(s)

Display note(s)

Hierarchical terms

Hockey - Players√

Equivalent terms

Hockey - Players√

Associated terms

Hockey - Players√

19 Archival description results for Hockey - Players√

Only results directly related

Penta Kai Deka - Activities

Big and Little Sisters hockey game during Pente Kai Deka Week.

Bio/Historical Note: From the Greek for ‘five and ten,’ Pente Kai Deka was created on 8 April 1911 with the first 15 women students on campus – five “big sisters” and ten “little sisters.” Every woman entering the University automatically became a member. Eventually the group became its own directorate within the Students Representative Council, and the PKD president, the vice-president of the SRC. Activities of the group included a Big Sister-Little Sister Dance, June in January, Jeanboree, a Spring Tea and a Frosh Week fashion show. As the sexual revolution loomed large in the late 1960s women on campus grew increasingly ambivalent toward the group, which had been seen by many female students as irrelevant and antiquated since midway through the decade. It was this attitude, as well as the sheer increase in the number of women and students in general at the University by the late 1960s that led to the group’s demise after the 1968-1969 academic year.

University of Saskatchewan Huskies Men's Hockey Team - Lew Parres

Lew Parres, Huskies player, in uniform with his stick on the ice.

Bio/Historical Note: Alfred Lewis (Lew) Parres was born 19 February 1915. He was a juvenile and junior hockey star with the Nutana Athletic Club in Saskatoon. He also excelled at track and field, winning many awards. In 1932 his brother Jim entered Geological Engineering at the University of Saskatchewan with Lew following in 1934. Lew played hockey for the Huskies and after graduation could have had a career in hockey but chose the mining business instead. Parres was a staunch Northerner. He knew the North and loved the North. His vision in proposing a new Northern Province (which he called Precambria) was to keep the wealth (especially the tremendous mineral wealth) of the North in the North working to improve the lives of Northerners. His dream was to combine Northern Manitoba and Northern Saskatchewan and a small piece of Northern Alberta into one entity. His plan was backed by the local Chamber of Commerce in the early 1950s and made headlines across western Canada.

University of Saskatchewan Men's Hockey Team - Player Photos

Individual photographs of hockey team members grouped; champions of Saskatoon-Prince Albert League. Players, top row: E.K. (Kent) Phillips, forward; Charlie Hay, goal (captain); Vern DeGeer (asst. mgr); Alfred Leroy Paine, forward; William Charles (Bill) Broadfoot at centre (mgr). Bottom row: George L. Art, forward; H.E. (Hap) Wilson, defence; Colb McEown (trainer); Ward Turvey, defence; Stuart Fulton Conrod, forward.

Results 1 to 15 of 19