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Microfilm reels

Series contains newspapers and textual records such as Ceylon Patriot, Hindu Organ, Sansoni Commission Evidence, Sutantiran, Thainadu, Congress, Eelakesari, Kesari, The Independent, Thina Murasu, Sari Negar, Viduthalai, Tribune, Elath Thamilar Varalalu (or Waralaru), and Tamil Culture. Some reels contain miscellaneous articles or articles that have been organized by theme.

Guest books

Series contains seven guest books with signatures and messages written by guests upon visitation to the Lieutenant Governor’s Suite.

Daily records

This series provides a detailed overview of David C. Onley's daily activities as Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. Activities include events hosted by the Lieutenant Governor, events in which he appeared, community visits, special visits, royal visits, convocation and honorary degree ceremonies, and annual office holiday activities. The series includes daily calendars, detailed daily agendas, and electronic daily records. The daily calendars contain schedules showing dates and times of Onley's appointments and events he attended. Daily agendas include time schedules as well as detailed documentation of Onley's appearances related to duties as Lieutenant Governor. Types of files include 'event scenarios' (instructions and reference information for Onley and staff), event programs, correspondence, speaking notes, objects and mementoes from events (albums, badges, stickers), computer printed contact sheets, photographs and snapshots, and computer disks with photographs and occasionally video. The electronic daily records contain copies of the aforementioned material, including documentation of events in which Ruth Ann Onley appeared or spoke at, and may not be accessible at this time; please contact the Archivist. Series has been kept in original order with exception of oversize material.

Correspondence

Series includes outgoing professional correspondence from David C. Onley, incoming correspondence to David C. Onley, a folder of correspondence of Ruth Ann Onley, a folder of internal correspondence between employees of the Office of the Lieutenant Governor of Ontario and David C. Onley, incoming thank you cards and letters, and Christmas cards. Outgoing correspondence is mostly typed, with some exceptions of copies of handwritten letters. Series has been kept in original order; however, the archivist created the Internal Correspondence file from a folder of general correspondence.

Articles and clippings

Series contains articles, clippings, magazines, and interviews that feature or mention David C. Onley as Lieutenant Governor. Also includes “Articles of Interest” material collected for David C. Onley about current events and issues.

Series has been kept in its original order, arranged chronologically.

General files

Series contains files related to associations that David C. Onley was a part of as Lieutenant General, as well as events he attended, and material sent to the office from others gaining his interest. Files include promotional material from companies, annual reports, papers and articles, magazines, speaking notes, correspondence, invitations, and business cards. Series has been kept in original order, arranged by company or association in alphabetical order. Some material is in French.

Misc. Printed Materials

Material in this series consists of printed material about animals, including elephants and rhinos, the story "Shirley Visits the Zoo," and several magazines.

Chimpanzee Performance

Material in this series consists of black and white and colour postcards of chimpanzees from the St. Louis Zoo and newspapers containing ads and information about training the chimpanzees at the zoo.

Frank Buck

The series contains material related to Frank Buck the animal hunter, movie actor, producer, director and author. Material consists of ads, movie stills, books (primarily in comic book style), and trading cards.

Photographs and video

Series contains travel photographs and recorded television programs that feature Spiller or his menu collection.

Textual material

  • UTSC 007-S5
  • Series
  • 1922, 1927-1928, 1933, 1950-1951, 1958-1961, 1964-1965, 1972, 1977, 1984-2012
  • Part of Harley J. Spiller fonds

Series contains publications about food, press clippings, recipe books, travel and restaurant guides, museum brochures,

Research

Series contains notes and textual material on food-related research and menus.

Exhibits and programs

Series contains documentation about exhibits and programs curated by Spiller, including correspondence, photographs, press clippings, notes, invitations, guest books, and printed material.

Food writing

Series contains drafts, notes, and scrapbooks on Spiller's writings about food, including his articles for the magazine Flavor & Fortune.

Menus

The series comprises menus from around the world featuring a variety of cuisines including Afghan, American Argentinian, Armenian, Asian, Bangladeshi, Brazilian, Burmese, Cambodian, Caribbean, Chinese (Peking, Szechuan, Shanghai, Yunnan, Mandarin, Cantonese, Hunan and Jiangnan), Colombian, Cuban, Dutch, Ecuadorian, Egyptian, European, Filipino, Finnish, French, Hong Kong style, Indian, Indochinese, Indonesian, Islamic, Israeli, Italian, Jamaican, Japanese, Korean, Laotian, Latin American, Lebanese, Malaysian, Mediterranean, Mexican, Middle Eastern, Mongolian, Moroccan, Mughlai, Nepalese, Pakistani, Pan-Asian, Peruvian, Russian, Scandinavian, Singaporean, Southwestern, Spanish, Taiwanese, Thai, Tibetan, Turkish, Venezuelan, Vietnamese, seafood and vegetarian.

Menus are from restaurants located in Kenya, Morocco, South Africa, China (Beijing, Hangzhou and Shanghai), Egypt, Guam, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Tibet, Turkey, Vietnam, Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, England, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Scotland, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Wales, Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Bermuda, Canada (British Columbia, Manitoba, Newfoundland and Labrador, Northwest Territories, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec, Saskatchewan and Yukon Territory), Costa Rica, Cuba, Curaçao, El Salvador, Greenland, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, the United States (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming), Australia, New Caledonia (France) New Zealand, Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Peru and Venezuela.

Menus types included placemat menus, single sheet menus, trifold and four fold, five fold and seven fold menus and menus in booklet style. Some menus are laminated while others are in vinyl enclosures. Menus range from take away and delivery to eat in and include wine lists as well.

Menus from hotels, cruises and airlines are also included in this series.

The series is divided into 6 subseries: Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceania and South America. The division is based on the 7-continent model, substituting Australia as a continent and replacing it with Oceania for greater geographical coverage.

University of Toronto Governing Council

Series A, University of Toronto Governing Council, covers the years 1963 through 2002. The Governing Council is the highest governing body of the University of Toronto. In 1963, the Governing Council drafted A Provisional Plan for Two Off-Campus Colleges in the University of Toronto, which established Scarborough College (later UTSC) and also Erindale College (later the University of Toronto Mississauga, or UTM). The series includes correspondence and address lists for various council members, by-laws for the council, and council minutes from 1973 to 2002. Also included are documents relating to the opening of the College in 1964 for extension courses and the formal opening in 1966. Materials regarding the design and construction of the College, including architectural drawings, are included as well, since the Governing Council oversaw the construction of the initial buildings.

Photographic Prints

Series C: Photographic Prints contains all of photograph prints that were housed in paper folders and filing cabinets in the office of Ken Jones. The folders were arranged by subject. For the most part, folders are labelled by subject but the folders and some photographs were out of order when the records were transferred to UTSC Library. In some cases, folders contain photos that do not reflect the subject of the original folder label.

U of T Sioux Lookout Program

Series relates to Dr. Baines’s involvement with the University of Toronto Sioux Lookout Program as the Faculty of Medicine’s Vice-Dean of Education and later as acting Program Director following the retirement of F. W. Baker in 1997. The Sioux Lookout Program was established in the 1960s through a collaboration with the Hospital for Sick Children and the Medical Services Branch of Health and Welfare Canada. The program aimed to improve the access and delivery of health care to Indigenous communities across the Sioux Lookout region in Northwestern Ontario. It operated out of the Sioux Lookout Zone Hospital and served over 18,000 individuals from 28 First Nations until the University of Toronto severed its ties with the program in 1998. The records span from 1996 – 1999 and document the activities of the Sioux Lookout Program and the series of events, decisions, and financial crises that led to the collapse of the program. Additionally, several of the records provide insight into the negative impacts that these events had on the Indigenous communities and Sioux Lookout Zone Hospital staff.

Materials predominantly consist of correspondence between various U of T faculty and administrators, Sioux Lookout Zone Hospital staff, and members or representatives of the Nishnawbe-Aski Nation, Sioux Lookout First Nations Health Authority, Northern Chiefs Tribal Council, Ad Hoc Chief’s Committee, Shibogama Tribal Council, Independent First Nations Alliance, Ontario Ministry of Health, and Medical Services Branch of Health and Welfare Canada, including: Arnold Aberman, Fred W. Baker, Donna Barnaby, Sheila Brown, Delores Cheena, Sheree Davis, Joe Dooley, Michelle Farlinger, Janet Gordon, Tom Hawke, Daisy Hoppe, Phil Jackson, Marjorie Y. Johnson, Mae Katt, David Keeling, Barb Lacalmita, Carol Maxwell, Dermot McLoughlin, Kim Meyers, Donny Morris, James Morris, Yvonne Murphy, Lynda Roberts, Walter W. Rosser, Nancy Roy, Adel Sedra, Grace Teskey, Debbie Toppozini, Peter Toth, Judith Wright, and Donna Barnaby. Other materials include activity reports, financial reports, budgets, recovery plan proposals, notes, notices, discussion papers, agendas, Doctors Services Working Group meeting minutes, Four Party meeting minutes, and news clippings.

Aboriginal Health Professions Program

Series consists of records created and collected by Dr. Baine’s throughout his participation in several committees that were instrumental in the creation and administration of the Aboriginal Health Professions Program (AHPP) and the Office of Aboriginal Student Services and Programs (OASSP) at the University of Toronto. These committees include the Faculty of Medicine Task Force on Native Canadian Students (ca. 1980s), the Professional Education of Native Students Committee (PENSC) (1983 – 1986), the Aboriginal Health Professions Program Advisory Committee (1986 – 1991), and the Management Committee for Aboriginal Programs and Services (MCAPS) (1991 – 1993).

The AHPP (originally named the Indian Health Careers Program) was established in 1986 to improve the admission, retention, and graduation rates of Indigenous students in health science programs by identifying and supporting their specific cultural, social, and academic needs. One of its primary goals was to increase the number of qualified healthcare professionals who held both traditional knowledge and understandings of Western medical practices in order to improve the provision of healthcare to urban and rural Indigenous communities. Records in this series document several of the programs and services provided by the AHPP, including the Health Sciences Access Program for pre-university preparation, the Science-Math Pilot Project for grades 9 to 13, the Health Experience Program, as well as a recruitment, admission advocacy, and career counselling programs. These programs laid the foundations for the establishment of the OASSP and First Nations House which continue to provide culturally relevant student services to Indigenous students University-wide.

Records document the history, structure, objectives, and activities of the AHPP, OASSP, and the aforementioned committees. Materials include correspondence, agendas, meeting minutes, reports, workshop materials, project and funding proposals, project summaries, budgets, news clippings, and reference materials.

Series is divided into three subseries:

  • Subseries 5.1 includes records related to the Faculty of Medicine Task Force on Native Canadian Students and PENSC, which preceded the creation of the AHPP.
  • Subseries 5.2 includes records related to the AHPP Advisory Committee.
  • Subseries 5.3 relates to MCAPS which was established after the creation of the AHPP.

Due to the closely related functions of the various committees, there may be some overlap between subseries.

Research and Publications

Series consists of manuscript drafts of academic articles written or co-authored by Dr. Baines. These records document a portion of his research related to hypertension as well as the structure, function, and physiology of the kidneys.

Series also includes an unpublished? manuscript on pore and fibre-matrix models which includes some content that was published in Fraser, W. D. & Baines A. D. (1989). Application of a fibre-matrix model to transport in renal tubules. Journal of General Physiology, 94(5), 863 – 879.

Teaching

Series primarily consists of records documenting the Stowe-Gullen Stream of the Vic One Program which was designed and co-taught by Dr. Baines between 2005 and 2018. The Vic One program at Victoria College was created to provide select first-year undergraduate students with a unique close-knit academic experience and mentorship opportunity within a designated academic stream. Each stream features small seminar classes of no more than 25 students in addition to weekly plenary sessions consisting of guest lectures from professionals and professors in a variety of fields. The Stowe-Gullen Stream designed by Dr. Baines consists of two year-long courses aimed at fostering an interdisciplinary perspective and foundation in critical thinking, research and writing skills in the life sciences. Topics include ethics, statistics, rhetoric, and the philosophy of science.

The series begins with a file consisting of materials that were removed from a binder titled “VIC 170 2011-12” followed by two files containing related lecture materials. The binder’s contents were kept in their original order. Materials include agendas, minutes, and plenary session schedules and notes related to the Vic One Program; a syllabus, class schedule, lecture notes and presentation slides, and reference materials for Dr. Baine’s course, VIC 170: An Introduction to Probability, Persuasion, and the Rhetorics of Science; and a syllabus for VIC 171: Methodology, Theory, and Practice in the Natural Sciences taught by Professor Brian Baigrie.

Series also includes lecture notes and reference materials for a lecture on Rhetoric and Medicine given at the Massey Grand Rounds Symposium on October 10, 2007. These materials are arranged at the end of the series.

Correspondence

Series consists of personal and professional correspondence between Dr. Baines and various friends, colleagues, and journal editors including Arnold Aberman, Francis Chinard, James A. Dauphinee, John R. Evans, David M. Goldberg, Allan G. Gornall, Avrum Gotlieb, François Morel, Abraham Rapoport, and Escott Reid. The records document aspects of his relationships, post-doctoral research, sabbatical, and appointments at the University of Toronto and the Toronto General Hospital. Also included is a file containing correspondence and reports related to the merger of University of Toronto’s Department of Pathology and the Departments of Clinical Biochemistry and Medical Microbiology.

Personal and Biographical

Series consists of materials documenting Dr. Baine’s personal life and career at the University of Toronto. Records include a CV, some personal notes, correspondence and forms related to his salary and benefits, an outline of his early academic activities, and student course evaluations for his teaching of CLB 401/1401: Biochemistry and Physiology of Human Disease.

Operational files

Series contains records documenting the day-to-day operation of the day care and includes newsletters, information sheets, phone lists and handbooks. The day care handbooks provided basic child care instruction to members and also outlined the political values and principles of the centre. See file level descriptions for additional information. Other records relating to the day-to-day operation of the day care may also be found in Series 1: Committees.

Research

Series contains records created and accumulated in the course of research about day care both in Canada and internationally and includes photocopied articles, publications, handwritten and typed lists and notes, reports, pamphlets and news clippings.

Daycare legislation

Series contains records relating to the CCCDC’s attempts to receive a license under the provincial day care regulations (the Day Nurseries Act), including legal materials such as briefs, decision and appeal notices, correspondence, research, and meeting notes. Materials relating to day care legislation can also be found in Series 1 (Daycare Legal Committee) and Series 4 (Research).

Relations with the University of Toronto

Series contains correspondence, minutes and fact sheets predominantly concerning relations with University of Toronto administration, but also with related bodies including the Faculty Association, the SAC, the Graduate Student Union (GSU), the Day Care Board, the proposed University of Toronto Day Care Centre and St. Andrew’s University Day Nursery (financial and contractual information relating to St. Andrews University Day Nursery can also be found in B2021-0002/001(01)). The news clippings, which include opinion pieces and letters to the editor, show how these campus events caught the public imagination.

Committees

Series contains records relating to CCCDCC committees. There were many different committees during the early years of the CCCDCC, however this series only contains records relating to a few, primarily the Finance Committee of which John Foster was chair. Files contain a mix of various types of record including correspondence, budget projections, minutes, handwritten and typed notes, drafts, strategic planning and phone lists. Information relating to committee work can also be found within the CCCDCC newsletters in Series 5 (file B2021-0002/002(02))

Publications, University Activities

This series consists of correspondence and notes regarding publications and presentations by Professor Wolfe. It also includes correspondence related to his position at University College, and his leave of absence during 1990-1993.

NDP and Government of Ontario

This series consists of records covering Professor Wolfe’s involvement with the Ontario NDP and his position as the Executive Coordinator of Economic and Labour Policy for the Government of Ontario. This includes memos and drafts about policy, as well as reference documents.

Student and Labour Advocacy, Course Materials

This series consists student and labour advocacy materials, including publications, meeting minutes, and proposals for organizations such as the Canadian Union of Students, Ontario Waffle, and the Canadian Labour Congress. This series also includes materials used for instruction during Professor Wolfe’s time in the University of Toronto Mississauga’s Department of Political Science.

Addresses

This series consists of materials for and associated with addresses given by Professor Griffin, primarily from the beginning and end of Professor Griffin’s career. Consists of notes for talks, transparencies and printed slides. Many talks were given in more than one location over the course of a year; in this case, the location or locations indicated are the one recorded on the surviving slides or notes. Originally, transparencies were stored within the pages of magazines; where the magazine is relevant (i.e. related to the address in some way), the front cover the magazine is also included.

History of the Study of Liquid Helium and Superfluidity

In the latter part of his career, Professor Griffin pursued an interest in the history of research into liquid helium and superfluidity, particularly that of scientists at or connected to the University of Toronto. This series contains research materials, correspondence, notes and publications related to this historically-oriented interest; addresses given on historical topics can be found in Series 9 - Addresses. Individuals researched and written about by Professor Griffin include Jack Allen, Donald Austin Misener, Laszlo Tisza, John Cunningham McLennan and Oliver Penrose. For some of these individuals, correspondence with Professor Griffin inquiring about their work is included.

Manuscripts and Publications

This series consists of materials related to published and unpublished physics notes, articles, chapters and books by Professor Griffin. In his career, Professor Griffin authored and co-authored hundreds of articles, a number of book chapters and three books. Professor Griffin kept many of his articles in the form of reprints, and these have been included; some feature annotations or corrections that were added at a later unknown date, often in association with later research. Where the date of the annotations can be guessed at due to associated material, it is noted; otherwise, dates of annotations are unknown. Some annotations may be associated with later papers. Other materials, including associated correspondence, notes, referee reports & responses and publication documents, are included with the ensuing publication.

Towards the end of his life (2009-2011), Professor Griffin collaborated on research that produced a number of interrelated papers, many of which remain unpublished. Materials produced during this period have been divided according to their apparently closest-related publication (some of which are posthumous).

Documents associated with Professor Griffin’s publications on the history of physics can be found in Series 8 - History of the Study of Liquid Helium and Superfluidity.

Research and Professional Activities

This series comprises Professor Griffin’s research activities as a condensed matter physicist over the course of his career (1970-2011), and some associated material, such as documents and correspondence related to the supervision of graduate students. Records include: notes, articles by others that have been heavily annotated by Professor Griffin, correspondence with co-researchers (including students), and referee reports. Most of these materials have been retained in the groupings in which they were left by Professor Griffin. Where Professor Griffin had included his own reprints with his research or notes, these have been removed and filed in Series 7 - Manuscripts & Publications. Documents associated with Professor Griffin’s historical research can be found in Series 8 - History of the Study of Liquid Helium and Superfluidity.

Teaching

This series includes materials assembled by Professor Griffin over the course of his teaching career as a professor of physics at the University of Toronto, mostly at the Scarborough Campus, where Professor Griffin was based through most of his career. Materials include lecture notes, problem sets, course descriptions, exams and quizzes. As Professor Griffin reused materials for courses over his career, materials for a given class or on a single topic can span more than a decade.

Most materials retained relate to graduate-level courses and folders reflect the groupings in which his papers were left.

Conferences

This series consists of documents and photographs pertaining to conferences organised by Professor Griffin. Includes correspondence, advertising posters, funding requests, attendance requests and photographs of participants. One of these conferences, the History of Low Temperature Conference (2004), should be seen in the context of Professor Griffin’s historical research (Series 8 - History of the Study of Liquid Helium and Superfluidity). The rest are associated with his work as a physicist.

Employment

This series covers Griffin’s employment at the University of Toronto on the St George campus from 2000-2011. For the most part, it comprises correspondence and documents related either to Griffin’s own travel for professional engagements, or to the visits of other researchers.

Correspondence

This series includes a small quantity of correspondence between Griffin and others (largely colleagues and researchers) that is not easily associated with articles, research, supervision of students, or employment. Griffin transitioned to email in the mid-1990s, but continued to print out significant correspondence and keep it alongside relevant work.

The majority of Griffin’s correspondence has been filed in Series 6 - Research & Professional Activities, Series 7 - Manuscripts & Publications, and Series 8 - History of the Study of Liquid Helium and Superfluidity.

Personal and Education

This series consists of work from Professor Griffin’s time at Cornell, where he received his PhD in 1965. It includes notebooks from physics courses given by professors Vinay Ambegaokar and Peter Carruthers and a copy of Professor Griffin’s doctoral thesis, “The Electronic Thermal Conductivity and Other Properties of ‘Gapless’: Superconductors”.

Also includes a file about Griffin’s election to the Royal Society of Canada in 2003.

Canadian Journal of Chemistry - Editor

These files were created by Yates in his capacity as editor of the Canadian Journal of Chemistry. Arrangement is by original file number which reflects the order in which a manuscript was received for review in a given year. Additional file title information includes the primary author's name. Files usually include original and revised manuscripts, correspondence among the author(s), the editor (Yates) and the referees, referees' comments and recommendations.

Course Files

Includes selective exams, problems, research reports, lecture notes and reference to readings for chemistry courses taught by Yates at the University of Toronto and to a lesser extent Harvard University where he began his career as an academic.

Research and publications

These files represent the most extensive series in this accession. They document quite extensively three decades of Yates' work and contributions in the field of organic chemistry. Files can contain a number of different types of records ranging from correspondence to manuscripts, to research reports, to original data and research notes. Those that relate specifically to publications often contain revised manuscripts and referees' reports.

Dr. Yates arranged his research and publication files alphabetically by the name of the person with whom he was engaged in research and/or publishing. To facilitate access to this series, a file list as well as a list of Yates' publications have been provided. Should researchers wish to consult this series regarding a specific area of research or a specific publication, they are advised to consult the bibliography first, noting the names of the colleagues with whom he published and then request the files on these individuals by consulting the file list.

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