- JGD/MG01/XVII/Slide2230- original slide missing
- Item
- unknown
Part of John G. Diefenbaker fonds
Aerial view of Wairakei, New Zealand.
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Part of John G. Diefenbaker fonds
Aerial view of Wairakei, New Zealand.
Wairakei Geothermal Station - New Zealand
Part of John G. Diefenbaker fonds
Work site on Wairakei Geothermal Station No. 1; hot springs in the background, Dec 1958.
Wairakei Geothermal Station - New Zealand
Part of John G. Diefenbaker fonds
Site of Wairakei Geothermal Station No. 1, Dec 1958.
Wairakei Geothermal Station - New Zealand
Part of John G. Diefenbaker fonds
Hot springs at Wairakei Geothermal Station No. 1 as seen from a distance, Dec 1958.
Wading through rapids, Sungaruyacu River
Part of W.O. Kupsch fonds
Bernhard Felber and Jorge Portugal wading through rapids, Sungaruyacu River.
W.A. Riddell and Beryl Riddell
W.A. (Bill) Riddell, principal of Regina Campus, with his wife, Beryl Riddell, who is shaking hands with an unidentified man. Possibly a retirement function upon Riddell's retirement in 1973.
Head and shoulders image of W.A. (Bill) Riddell, principal, Regina Campus.
Bio/Historical Note: William Andrew (Bill) Riddell was born on 6 July 1905 in Hamiota, Manitoba. He received a BA (1925) and BSc (1926) from the University of Manitoba, an MSc (1928) from the University of Saskatchewan, and completed his PhD (1931) in chemistry and biology at Stanford University. Riddell taught at Regina College during the 1930s before holding various research positions with the federal and provincial governments. He returned to Saskatchewan in 1938 as an analyst for the Provincial Laboratories and was appointed Director in 1942. In 1950 he returned to Regina College, serving as dean until his appointment as acting principal in 1962. Riddell was instrumental in developing the College’s School of Art and in the expansion of the Norman Mackenzie Art Gallery. Perhaps his greatest contribution was his tireless effort to raise the College to full degree-granting status. In 1959 the Board of Governors did just that and, within two years, design and construction of a new campus in Wascana Park began. Regina Campus, as the College was renamed, was the forerunner of the University of Regina. Riddell was named acting principal of Regina Campus in 1961. He was appointed the first principal the following year and a vice-president of the University in 1967. In 1969 Riddell was appointed assistant to the president. He was awarded an honourary Doctor of Laws degree in 1973, the same year as retirement. Riddell was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1974. He received the Saskatchewan Order of Merit in 1994. An annual lecture was established in his honour at the University of Regina, and later a new building housing the Faculty of Fine Arts and Student Services became the Riddell Centre, in recognition of his long-standing support of the fine arts in the province. Riddell died in Regina on 27 May 2000.
W.A. Riddell - Cheque Presentation
W.A. (Bill) Riddell, principal, Regina Campus, receiving a cheque from an unidentified man.
Materials relating to the Saskatchewan artist Robert Newton Hurley.
Portrait of W.A. Carruthers, Department of Political Science, 1921-1930.
Head and shoulders of W. Young, University of Saskatchewan Professor of Home Economics.
W. Jaffrey H. Tisdale With a Sheep
W. Jaffrey H. Tisdale, assistant professor of Animal Husbandry, holding a ram; unidentified building in background.
This fonds contains materials relating to Arscott's work; his involvement with the Progressive Conservative Party and later disillusionment with the mainstream parties and his activities with the Rhinoceros Party; his extended family; his war service;and reminiscences of growing up in Saskatoon, attending the University, and local and political figures. Particularly extensive is his writing: creative; satire; and memoirs.
Arscott, William Hughes, 1924-2002 (alumnus, financial planner, political commentator)
Image of Dr. V.S. Gupta, Department of Veterinary Physiological Sciences, in the laboratory. Note on back: "Dr. Gupta, purifying the anti-viral drug he and his colleagues developed against herpes simplex".
Two beds, two desks, and two shelves sit in a residence bedroom. The shelves contain some books and there is a poster on one wall.