Mostrar 12519 resultados
Registo de autoridadeGreat Britain. Colonial Office
- CA QUA02875
- Pessoa coletiva
- n.d.
No information available on this creator.
- CA QUA02877
- Pessoa singular
- ca. 1890-1 Apr. 1933
Alice King was Registrar of Queen's University. The daughter of Joseph George King, Alice would first gain part-time employment with the University in 1902, and obtained a permanent appointment in 1907 as assistant to the registrar. She would become assistant registrar in 1912, deputy registrar in 1920, and registrar in 1930. She passed away suddenly in April 1933.
- CA QUA02887
- Pessoa singular
- 1930-2011
Joan McGrath, an artist and festival organizer, was born in the UK to Roderick Watson and Joan Cameron (Teasie) and educated at the University of Cambridge. She was the organizer of community art and crafts shows including Multi-Media Artists (1967-1973), Creativity (1976-1992) and Fanfayr (1983-2011). She married Gerald McGrath in 1957, and had three children.
- CA QUA02889
- Pessoa coletiva
- fl. 1907-1915
The Thursday Travel Club appears to have been a ladies club, organized as a forum for formal talks on history, art and culture from around the globe.
- CA QUA02891
- Pessoa singular
- fl. 1840
Rev. Robert MacGill was a Trustee at Queen's College in the 1840s.
- CA QUA02898
- Pessoa singular
- n.d.
Professor Beverley Baines is one of the founders of feminist legal studies in Canada. She obtained a BA from McGill University, and an LL.B. from Queen's University. She co-coordinated the Women's Studies Program in the Faculty of Arts and Science between 1991 and 1993; served as Associate Dean of the Faculty of Law from 1994 until 1997; and was Head of the Department of Womens Studies (now Gender Studies) from 2004 until 2011.
Baines was involved in the movement to entrench women's equality rights in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom. Her long-term research project is to analyze a quarter century of Supreme Court of Canada decisions pertaining to womens equality rights under the Charter. Most recently this research has focused is on womens intersectional rights claims involving religious freedom and gender equality in the contexts of polygamy, faith-based family law arbitration, and state imposed niqab bans.
College and University Retiree Associations of Canada
- CA QUA02904
- Pessoa coletiva
- 2006-
College and University Retiree Associations of Canada / Associations de retraités des universités et collèges du Canada (CURAC/ARUCC) is a not-for-profit federation of retiree organizations at colleges and universities across Canada.
The feasibility of organizing a national association of academic retirees’ associations in Canada was first explored at a meeting held during what were then called the “Learneds” at the University of Calgary in 1994. A task force was established which contacted the presidents of universities and colleges across Canada, asking them to distribute a questionnaire to any known retirees’ groups. The response was apparently encouraging. Although no formal organization was subsequently established, a small secretariat located at the University of Regina was set up to channel information of interest to Canadian retirees’ associations to the CAUT, which offered to publish such information in its Bulletin and which also established a web site for the new “virtual organization” CAERA (Canadian Association of Emeriti and Retired Academics).
A reorganization and revitalization of the national body was initiated at a conference held at the University of Toronto on 31 May 2002. The initial meeting of the steering committee was held 1 Jun. 2002, where preparations to establish an official body began. The Constitution and a motion to incorporate were passed at the Halifax Conference in 2003. CURAC was officially incorporated on 9 Feb. 2006
Cataraqui Archaeological Research Foundation
- CA QUA02906
- Pessoa coletiva
- n.d.
The Cataraqui Archaeological Research Foundation (CARF) was incorporated March 28, 1983 to oversee the excavation of Fort Frontenac in Kingston. It was a non-profit organization governed by a volunteer Board of Directors employing appropriate professionals. The Foundations mandate, derived from its constitution, was to create, foster, and maintain interest in the recognition, investigation, and preservation of Ontarios pre-historic and historic archaeological resources. The Foundation was in operation for 30 years and consulted on at least 150 separate archaeological projects. The Foundation produced in excess of 160 consulting and conservation reports, technical papers, and other publications.
The Foundation had two divisions. The Cultural Resource Management division was an archaeological consulting company providing professional archaeological assessment to private property owners and government agencies. These activities were contracted on a fee-for-service basis including archaeological assessments, planning, and research under contractual arrangements with property owners, corporations, municipalities, and provincial and federal governments. It excavated, analyzed, and interpreted material from sites on behalf of the owners of those sites. The second division was the Kingston Archaeological Centre. The Centre was established in 1986, with assistance from a Government of Ontario grant, with the purpose of providing the community with a facility from which activities relating to the education, research, conservation, and management of the areas archaeological resources could be coordinated. The Foundation catalogued, preserved, stored, and provided curatorial services for artifact collections held in trust for the people of Ontario and disseminated factual information about archaeology in Canada with special emphasis on Ontario and its municipalities.