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Thomas Rowles - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Thomas Rowles, member, University Board of Governors.

Bio/Historical Note: Thomas Caldwell Rowles won the University silver medal in Agriculture in 1919. He served on the University of Saskatchewan Board of Governors from 1936-1946. The William Rowles Fellowship in Physics and Engineering Physics at the U of S was established in honour of Thomas Rowles and his brother, Dr. William Rowles, Physics graduate and Professor of Agricultural Physics at McGill University.

Thomas Johann Arnason fonds

  • MG 31
  • Fonds
  • 1948-1965 (inclusive) ; 1956-1960 (predominant)

This fonds contains Professor Arnason's genealogy; correspondence regarding W.P. Thompson's retirement; material relating to the planning and formal opening of the Biology Building; and information concerning the Faculty Association.

Arnason, Thomas Johann, 1905-1990 (Professor of Biology)

Thomas H. McLeod - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Thomas H. McLeod, dean, College of Commerce, from 1953-1964.

Bio/Historical Note: Thomas Hector McLeod was born 11 August 1918 in Weyburn, Saskatchewan, and took his schooling there, graduating from Weyburn Collegiate with honours. It was in Weyburn that Tommy McLeod met T.C. Douglas, the young Baptist minister who would play such an important role in his life. During the Depression, Douglas organized a boys' group which devoted its time to sports and boxing, and to debating and drama. Douglas was a graduate of Brandon College, and persuaded several of his 'boys' to attend that venerable institution. There McLeod received a BA with distinction. After earned a MA from Indiana University, he was urged by President Evans to come back to Brandon to teach economics, where he stayed for three years. In 1944, when T.C. Douglas led the CCF party to a landslide election victory in Saskatchewan, Premier Douglas asked McLeod to work for the new government. He began as advisor to the premier and general troubleshooter, taking on assignments as Secretary of Health Services Planning, Secretary of the Economic Planning Board, Chair of the new Budget Bureau, and ending as Deputy Provincial Treasurer. Together with Dr. Mindel Sheps in the Health Service Planning Commission, Dr. McLeod helped plan the introduction of hospitalization in 1947. In between jobs, he earned two degrees from Harvard University, an MA in Public Administration and a PhD in Economics. In 1952 McLeod was appointed dean of Commerce. During this period he served on several boards and commissions, chairing the Saskatchewan Commission on Taxation. In 1964 McLeod returned to Regina as dean of Arts and Vice-Principal at the new university. In 1971 the Canadian International Development Agency offered a broader mandate, where McLeod joined the senior ranks of CIDA travellers, attempting to sort out administrative problems in several countries, including Turkey, Iran, Nigeria, and Botswana. So the family moved to Ottawa, where they stayed for 26 years. McLeod moved from CIDA to the Federal Management Institute, acted as administrator of the Anti-Inflation Board, and held other management positions. McLeod was awarded an honourary Doctor of Laws degree from the U of S in 1972. He was awarded the Vanier Medal from the Institute of Public Administration in 1971 and the Order of Canada in 2003. He co-wrote a popular biography of T.C. Douglas with his son Ian; Tommy Douglas, Road to Jerusalem was published in 1987. In 1997 Tommy McLeod moved to Victoria, where he died New Years' Day, 2008.

Thomas E. Perrett - Portrait

Oval-shaped frame with head and shoulders image of Thomas E. Perrett, member of University Council, 1910.

Bio/Historical Note: Thomas Edwin Perrett was born in Westmeath Township, Renfrew County, Ontario, on 13 February 1871. He received his bachelor's degree in Toronto and took graduate studies in Chicago and at Columbia University in New York. Perrett arrived in Regina, Saskatchewan, in 1891 and taught at the Teachers’ Normal School, rising to Superintendent of City schools. Perrett was a member on the University of Saskatchewan Senate and was on the University Council in 1910. A member of the local militia until World War I, he enlisted with the Canadian Expeditionary Force in 1915. After a variety of stops he was eventually assigned (at age 46) as a Lieutenant Colonel to the 5th Battalion Canadian Railway Troops located outside Ypres, arriving at headquarters on 9 September 1917. On 29 September, Perrett was injured as a result of a bomb dropped from a plane and lost the sight of both eyes. He was eventually transferred to the Imperial Order of Daughters of the Empire Hospital in London and then St. Dunstan’s Hostel for the Blind that had opened in 1915 in Regent’s Park. He returned to Regina in November 1918 and resumed his post as the principal of the Normal School. Perrett was awarded an Order of the British Empire (OBE) which was presented to him by the Prince of Wales at a ceremony in Regina on 4 Oct 1919. Perrett died in 1945.

Third Year Medicine – Class of ‘69

Class of 1969 group photo
Back row: Aisby, Berezowsky, Corrigall, Coueslan, Dickson, Downey, Garbe, Gogal
Third row: Green, Gropper, Hanson, Haug, Heaney, Hooge, Hoogeveen, Hubbard, Johnson
Second row: Klassen, Kudel, McHattie, McIvor, McNaughton, Maggs, Midmore, Mitchell, Niedermayer, Oryschak
Front row: Siemens, Stoik, Treen, Truscott, Stephenson, Fletcher, Lucio, Waymouth, Wedge, Will, Woodrow, Zondervan
Absent: Kirchgesner, Taylor

Third Year Medicine – Class of ‘68

Class of 1968 group photo
Back row: Ang, Banting, Barschel, Behm, Berezowsku, Biem, Buhr, Cheo, Colquhoun, Davidner, Diemert, Domanko
Third row: Fagnou, Gutzman, Halliday, Harrington, Hodge, Hubbard, Janzen, Kelman, McCaffrey, McCombs
Second row: MacKay, MacRae, Meiklejohn, Aaron, Cheong, Chipperfield, Henderson, Lau, Lee, Ross, Middlekamp, Paproski, Penner
Front row: Pierce, Regehr, Rebalkin, Scarlett, Scott, Smith, Tiedeman, Tusz, Unger, Wallace, Warren

Third Year Medicine – Class of ‘67

Class of 1967 group photo
Back row: Briggs, Billett, Buckle, Buekert, Chin, Deutcher, Dmytryshyn, Forrest, Fruman, Gerber, Gibbings, Giraudier
Third row: Gorski, Gutek, Guzik, Hartridge, Hill, Hutcheon, Hitchinson, Jack, Kehler, Kitchell
Second row: Kozakewich, Ledding, McHattie, McNeil, Battel, Flatt, Henricks, Jenkins, Studney, Mah, Marshall, Meiklejohn, Mulder
Front row: Peterson, Purves, Ready, Rebalkin, Rempel, Sugarman, Tang, Thiessen, Veeman, Wendland, Wiens, Wilson, Yap.

Third Year Medicine – Class of ‘66

Class of 1964 group photo
Back row: Beckie, Briggs, Burke, Edwards, Epp, Ernst, Goluboff, Gordon, Griffith, Hill
Third row: Johnsrude, Letkeman, McKinstry, McLean, Mayhew, Morrison, Opsal, Partridge, Persow
Second row: Peto, Salter, Slywka, Thompson, B.V., Thompson, R.P.,
Front row: Turanski, Voth, Lewke, Bowman, Petrich, MacKay, Wong, Young
Absent: Malfair

Third Year Medicine – Class of ‘63

Class of 1963 class photo
Back row: Budsinkski; Chernenkeff, R.; Chernenkoff, W.; Cipywnyk; Criswick; Davis; Dosman; Driedger; Hindle
Third row: Jenner; Jonat; Khan; Konik; McBride; Mackenzie; Maxwell; Millman
Second row: Molberg; Munday; Oakes; Schaffrin; Shatz Talpash; Wirgen; Wong
Front row: Yackel; Ewaniuk; Nickorick; Puetz; Ungar; Yuen

Third Year Medicine – Class of ‘61

Class of 1961 class photo
Back row: Andrucson, Bugg, Cameron, Carlson, Ewasew, Fletcher, Gaimari, Gulka
Third row: Klaasen, Kolke, Larsen, Lee, Lindsay, McLurg, MacMillan, Neufeld
Second row: O’Shaughnessy, Painchaud, Pickering, Reich, Schramm, Spooner, Squires
Front row: Tse, Voth, Warwaruk
Absent: Rusnak

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