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High School Academic Competitions

Group photo of unidentified competitors; Dr. Cecil L Kaller (back row left) and Dr. Gerald J. Langley, professor of Education (back row right).

Bio/historical note: Each year the University of Saskatchewan conducts a province-wide academic competition for high school students.

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 Men's Hockey Team - Player Photos

Individual photographs of men's hockey team members grouped. Reginald Brehaut (coach), Harold (Happy) Wilson, Charlie Hay, George Art (captain), S.E. Turvey, William P. McLean (mgr), Wilfred Heffernan, William Charles Broadfoot, H. McCallum (asst. mgr), Ernie McNab, Don Collins and Merv Moore.

Bio/Historical Note: The University of Saskatchewan men’s hockey team in 1923 was coached by Reg Brehaut, who had played and coached hockey since 1906. The team won the Mitchener Cup as Saskatoon City League champions, the Van Valkenburg Cup as Saskatchewan Amateur champions, the Halpenny Cup as Interprovincial University champions, the Patton Cup as Western Canadian League champion and were Allan Cup finalists in 1923.

Betty Wilson and Pat Lawson in Sprint

Betty Wilson (left) finishes ahead of Pat Lawson, both Huskiettes track and field members, in a sprinting race; unidentified runner and building in background at [Griffiths Stadium].

Bio/Historical Note: Betty Clare Bray was born in 1928 in Saskatoon and attended Wilson and King Edward public schools and City Park Collegiate. She obtained her BA at the University of Saskatchewan. Later, in her fifties, she earned a BSW at the same institution. Bray was a three-sport athlete, competing on the track and field team for three seasons as a sprinter, highlighted by the U of S winning the Western Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic Association title in 1947. Bray was also on the tennis team for three years, capturing the doubles tournament in 1946-47 and winning the Hudson Bay Trophy in 1948-49. Bray played guard on the basketball team for two seasons. In addition to competing in sports, she served on the Women's Athletic Board. In 1987 Bray was inducted into the U of S Athletic Wall of Fame for basketball, tennis and track. She was inducted as a team member, also for basketball, in the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame. Betty Wilson died in 2012 in Saskatoon.

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