Showing 25329 results

Archival description
9 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Senate
File · 1965, 1986, 1960s-1970s
Part of Douglas Fisher fonds

Debates of the Senate, June 2 1965, four articles on the Canadian Senate, newspaper clippings on the senate, list of the 1986 senate members, correspondence on the Senate. (1960s- 1970s unless noted)

File · 1938-1941
Part of Dr. Penny Petrone fonds

A softcover semi-monthly time book printed by Callow Brothers Stationers, Toronto, in which Luigi Petrone kept track of how many hours he worked a day from October 1938 to March 1941; between some pages are prayer cards printed in Italian. Cover is cracked but the binding is intact.

"Sellars and Leeper"

Manuscript entitled "Sellars and Leeper"; List of Finnish residents in Sellars, Leeper area in 1936; Interview with early resident of area; List of teachers and janitors to S.S. #3 South Gillies School (1920-57); Photocopy of scrapbook made by Mrs. C. Edwards of newspaper articles about Sellars area.

Segre
File · 1997
Part of Dr. Gerd Schroeter fonds

The Formation of Communities in Business Milieux: The Contributions of Toennies, Weber, Simmel, and Contemporary Society, by Sandro Segre, 1997. The American Sociological Association: Sociological Abstracts, Aug. 1997.

SEE 2008 RAACWI
File
Part of Steve Mantis fonds

Outline of Submissions on the Unfunded Liability; research paper, Competitively Unemployable, or Not?, OWA. 2008?

Sedna Myth
File · 1987
Part of Dr. Penny Petrone fonds

Page titled "Sedna; The woman who lives in the sea", by Glenbow Museum. Typed page on a little girl named 'Nuliajuk'. Photocopy excerpt titled "Changes in the Sedna myth among the Aivilik" by Edmund S. Carpenter. Anthropological papers, University of Alaska. Volume 3, no. 2, dated 1955, pp 69-73. Photocopy excerpt discussing myth of Sedna, pp 364-70. Typed pages on myth of Sedna taken from J.W. Bilby. Among Unknown Eskimos. London, 1923. pp 187-192. Photocopy excerpt titled "Doctor Faust and the Woman in the Sea" by Alex Spalding, dated 1972.