General Information 1041 Years of Expansion: 1945 to 1969 With the end of the registrationwar, a rose floodfrom of2,023 veteransin Accommodation1943-44 poured to into a thepeak in ofUniversity classrooms, nearly inadequate,and 5,000 and in laboratories, housing 1947-48. was generally andpartially evenrelieved the pressure. By libraries less1947 student numbers had tripled satisfactory.from pre-war was Army huts pathetically only Years of Challenge: 1914 to 1945 The outbreak of war in 1914 slowed the pace of development. The new University sent 438 of its staff, alumni, and students to killed, or the died in armed active service. forces. Their names, together Eighty-two with those were of the casualties of the war of 1939-45, are commemorated on a bronze tablet near the entrance to Convocation Hall. Although the war brought a halt to the building Agriculture of Faculty the of establishment the with on moved teaching University’s activity, the organization of the in 1915, the School of Accounting in 1916, the School of Pharmacy and the sub- Faculty of Dentistry in 1917, and the Department of Household Economics in 1918. Of these, the School of became all Economics Accounting Household and Dentistry, became Pharmacy, and Business, the of Faculty Faculty of Commerce, now the faculties. With the end of the Great students and staff. War New laboratories were the built adjacent to Universitythe Arts Building, and rapidly expandedthe Medical Building was completed in 1921; new wings were added following the in number of permit to 1919-20 in revised fundamentally was curriculum The War. World Second The 1919. in held was term summer first The courses. of election in freedom greater institution of the Research Council of signified an increasing emphasis development on the in involvement University’s the of recognition further a and science, of the province. In 1927 St Joseph’s College Stephen’s was College had opened been, as under Alberta Roman College South, Catholiccampus. the first auspices. After building on the St the union of college for Alberta. renamed in 1927 and became the United Church theological the Methodist and Presbyterian decline, not did registration churches, Though problems. serious brought years it depression The was its increase was painfully slow, from 1,560 students in 1929 to 2,327 in 1939. Full- time teaching staff increased even more slowly. The budget actually fell not and recover did to its pre-depression level until after the war. place No after new the building present took Corbett Hall was completed. (Corbett constructed as Hall a was provincial normal originally school, not a University building.) RC Wallace succeeded President Tory in 1928, and in 1936 was followed had been the first Dean of by the Faculty of Arts and Science. The affiliation of Mount WAR Kerr, who Royal College in 1931 marked a beginning of university work in Calgary. The Banff established was Music of Board Western the and 1933 in opened Arts Fine of School in 1931. Entrance to the University from Grade 11 was abolished in 1937. In 1930 fraternities were permitted; a less controversial change was the abolition of the old practices involved in freshman initiation. The impact of the war of 1939 was very different from that of 1914-18. Though war naturally disrupted the University’s life, there was national the a to relation in determination possible as fully to as facilities preserve its using while its being essential whose students, out-of-town and residences three the over took Force Air The effort. number had not substantially declined, flocked into Garneau boarding houses and made use of a new Medicine, cafeteria Building). known Academic Central the to for site the later provide to 1969 generations in demolished as Hot Caf (which was Dentistry, and Education offered accelerated courses. Engineering offered special courses to members of the armed services. No more important development took place than the acceptance in 1945training Alberta teachers. The School by of Education, established in the1928, became a University of sole faculty in responsibility1942, and after the war for it became, in terms of enrolment, the largest in the University. Robert Newton was named President on WAR Kerr’s retirement in 1941. He played an important part in the framing of the University Act of 1942, which from the Senate transferred to the General Faculty Council jurisdiction over academic matters and vested all final authority in the Board previously been confined to finance. of Governors, whose jurisdiction had the same year the Department of Extension began its work of promoting a closer relationship between the University and the people of the Faculty province. In of 1913 Applied the Science (renamed latter able to offer three years of a five-year program. Medicine were instituted, the Engineering in 1948) and the Faculty of The Students’ Union was established during the first session and the first edition of the The Gateway, the students’ newspaper, appeared in 1911. The on Committee Student Affairs began in 1912 as a joint committee of students and University officials to exercise general supervision over matters affecting student welfare and on Student Affairs carries on its work. discipline. Today the Council University University of a Albert General Information General

The Beginnings of the University Excerpt from University Beginnings in Alberta, by RK Gordon. We were a small, light-hearted company, hardly more than a score of us; and of all us were young. We lived in a clearing in the poplar bush on the south bank of the North . On the sloping sides of the great valley and on the flats below the coyotes barked and howled at night, but taught mathematics and physics, Greek and history, English literature, and biology. on top of the bank we Along with some four hundred students and two red brick buildings, we were the ; and we felt sure that the future belonged coyotes. to us, not to the We looked across the Government, which in riverits wisdom had brought us into being and from which came to the newly our finishedvery modest monthly cheques. Just below the buildingGovernment Building stood the of therather forlorn Provincial remains of old Fort , reminder a in but interested not was city bustling raw, new, The landscape. the cumber they were not long allowed to that of glory dazzling the of and thing, the was future The beginnings. humble its of future nobody was so mean-spirited as to entertain the slightest doubt. Alberta became a province in 1905. In 1906 the first session of legislature passed sponsor act’s The Alberta. of University the of establishment the authorize to act an was Alexander Cameron Rutherford, Alberta’s first Premier and Education. His first government purchased Minister the of site in what was then Strathcona, and Rutherford himself persuaded Henry Marshall Tory to leave McGill to become the University’s first President, an office he held from 1908 to 1928. The act permitted all resident graduates of British register and Canadian as universities members to of Convocation.Senate; the government appointed ten Convocationmore. The Senate, acting as the electedgoverning five membersbody of the University, toestablished the Faculty a of Arts and Science as the core of of Board the constituted Act University the of revision a 1910 In institution. new the Governors, with powers of business management and administration. Classes opened in September 1908, in what is now Queen Alexandra School with forty-five students and a faculty English; of WM Edwards, Mathematics; five:LH Alexander, Modern Languages; WH and Tory Alexander, Classics; himself. EK Thence Broadus,they moved to the upper floor of and Strathcona then in Collegiate 1911 to Athabasca Institute Hall. Athabasca not only served as a residence for staff and students, but also accommodated classrooms, graduating laboratories, first the of members The offices. administrative the and gymnasium, the the library, class received their degrees at the Convocation of 1912, with Mr Justice CA Stuart presiding as Chancellor. Assiniboia 1914. in 439 reaching registration with followed, growth rapid of period A Hall was completed in 1913, Pembina Hall followed in 1914, and the Arts Building was formally opened in 1915. The Faculty of Law had its beginning in 1912. In The The University of Alberta is a publicly supported, educational, non-denominational, co- multi-campus institution.Commonwealth Universities, Association of ItUniversities and isColleges of a Canada, Network. and Worldwide Universities member of the Association of bank of southern wooded the borders hectares 89 of campus north University’s The the and lies about two miles from Edmonton’s business 148 approximately occupies campus south the campus, north the from Away centre. hectares. Other holdings include Enterprise Square, located in the historic building on and 102 Street in Saint-Jean, a French-language campus east of the downtown Mill Creek ravine; the botanical Edmonton; Faculté gardens near Devon; the Mattheis Ranch near Duchess; lands as far away as Fort and Augustana Faculty, a small liberal arts campus southeast of located Edmonton in 100 the city km of Camrose. A considerable area is held under and the Kinsella ranch. rental agreements, including the Ellerslie Research Station More than two dozen major teaching and research buildings are situated on the north campus, along with two affiliated colleges, six residence halls, the Students’ Union, and service buildings. Michener Park, once part of the south campus, is a student housing area. South of 87th Avenue, on lands formerly part of the original campus, are the quarters of the Provincial Laboratory of Public Health, the Walter C Mackenzie Health Sciences Centre, the and the MazankowskiDr WW Cross Cancer Institute. The Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium is Alberta Heart Institute situated adjacent to these areas on land owned by the provincial government. An off-campus Book and Record Depository for storage of less-used library materials was opened in 1994. Historical Sketch University University History and Traditions www.ualberta.ca General Information Although at first without regular staff, the press nevertheless succeeded in in succeeded nevertheless press the staff, publishing regular a small group of works without of high quality. The appointment first of Les Gutteridge at Although Press. Alberta of University the established formally Governors of Board the when The importance of scholarly publishing in the academic community was recognized inaugurated in1972andprovedtobean immediatesuccess. was offered, are courses intensive which during Term), Summer of beginning the Spring Term (a six-week period between the end of the regular Fall/Winter Term and that concernnativepeoplesandcommunities. relations contemporary and historical the examine critically and explore research, learn, to students non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal for ground common a provide to A School of Native Studies, now the Faculty of Native Studies, was founded in 1984 It offersabilingualprogramofcoursesinarts,science,andeducation. University’s newest Faculty when the name officially changed to Faculté Saint-Jean. University as the Collège Universitaire Saint-Jean and in May of 1978 it became the the of part integral an became Edmonton, South in Saint-Jean, Collège the 1970 In in 1978.RenovationoftheArtsBuildingwascompletedspring1988. recitals on this instrument have been nationally broadcast since it was inaugurated several installed; organ new a and renovated, also was completed Hall Convocation was 1982. Hall in Assiniboia of rebuilding similar A turn. its in Award Canada Heritage a received and 1977 of autumn the in reopened was building renovated its as transformation, drastic more wooden construction needed to be completely even replaced with modern materials; the an underwent Canada Hall Heritage a Athabasca of form Award. the in recognition national earned it that successful so was residence student graduate modern fully a into transformation Pembina’s Hall. Pembina demolish, than rather renovate, to decision a to led buildings older University’s the of value practical and architectural both of awareness growing A in 1982,andanewbuildingfortheFacultyofBusinesswascompleted1984. opened was Centre Sciences Health Mackenzie C Walter the of Part 1981. October was brokenground for a new construction, Agriculture andon Forestry Building;moratorium it was completedof and openedyears in several after 1978, In use. into additions to the and Chemistry Building andLibrary, Education Building haveRutherford successively come the of expansion projected a of phase one Fine Building, the Arts Centre, Humanities the then, Since Union. Students’ the of initiative the on financed and designed Building, Union Housing the into moved residents first the 1972, in Also 1972. in II, Phase Centre, Engineering the and Complex Sciences Medical Basic the and 1971, in Centre Law the 1970, in Building Academic Central the and Centre Sciences Biological the one: by one Buildings completed were begun already 1986-1987. in students almost part-time reaching 4,000 than resumed, more and numbers full-time student 25,000 of increase gradual a 1980s the In made theUniversity’sprojectedbudgetslessadequatethanhadbeenexpected. years new problems arose, as a levelling of student numbers andthese worldwideDuring 1994. inflationto 1989 from Davenport Paul Myer and 1989, 1979, to 1979 to from Horowitz 1974 from followed Gunning Harry 1974; until served and 1969 in Max Wyman, the first graduate of the University to become its president, took office ‘90s Early and ‘80s ‘70s, The bring highereducationtomoreareasoftheprovince. Camrose, Red Deer, and Grande Prairie became affiliated with the University to help Hat, Medicine in colleges junior Other 1966. in universities separate became These Lethbridge. in established was college junior affiliated an and expanded gradually Education. Outside of Edmonton, the University’s work in Calgary, instituted in 1951, is now, as the School of Library and Information Studies, a unit within the Faculty of of Library Science was created in 1968; an independent faculty from 1975 to 1991, it a number of new centres and institutes dedicated specifically to research. A School of the Faculty of Arts and was Science into two faculties University in 1963, and in the the foundation of at studied reflected subjects in the classification of of Graduate Studies as a faculty in complexity 1957, in the division and range increasing The Universities’ Commission,whichhassincedisbanded. 1966 of Act providedthe for the establishment of other and separate provincialuntil universities under a occurred status legal University’s the in changes major No Faculty ofMedicinein1969.AnewStudents’UnionBuildingopened1967. Phase I of the Engineering Centre in 1968, and the Clinical Sciences Building of the care of the older residences. The Henry Marshall Tory 1042 University of Alberta of University to enhancingthequalityoflifeincommunityasawhole. it commitment continuing University’s the of merged. sign a donation, arts, performing the for facilities private were up-to-date with Arts, generous the for a Centre Timms departments the of complete to 1994 and in purposes possible was the of faculties of fulfilment impairing in number without Nevertheless, a costs administrative quality, reduce to Governors effort educational of an Board of the part by As declared 1994. was in exigency financial of state a budget; In the 1990s the University was severely affected by retrenchments in the provincial time tobeusedduringthegames,remainasremindersofoccasion. in completed all Garneau, in housing student new and Centre, Tennis the Pavilion, Universiade The events. cultural and athletic of variety wide a to countries 87 from participants 6,000 than more attracted which Games, University World the opened and convocation, special a at doctorate honorary an received Wales of Prince the way that illustrated its significance in Canada and the international community. HRH In 1983 the University celebrated the seventy-fifth anniversary of its foundation in a Walter HJohns,wasasignofthematuritybothUniversityandpress. publication in July 1981, of A History of the University of Alberta, by former president The year. each value scholarly of works of number a issued has it then since basis; adequate more a on operations its placed 1977 in press the of Director first the as opened. The 14-storey building, the tallest on the University’s North Campus, brings officially was Engineering for Centre Innovation Donadeo the 2015, June In panels. with designed and community, leading-edge the sustainability features and including Canada’s University largest built-in the array of solar both support to intended theatre 550-seat a Campus, Augustana at Centre Arts Performing Lougheed Peter an of part is development programs. November 2014 saw the official opening of the Jeanne and college the Campbell, Kim initiative with The Banff Centre to create one of the world’s pre-eminent leadership minister prime Canadian former and Lougheed Leadership College, slated to open in 2016. Headed by founding principal vaccines to market. In late 2013, the University announced the creation of the Peter new as such discoveries research fast-track to Institute Virology Applied Shing Ka Li the and research, cyclotron medical in excellence of centre a as University the establishing Facility, Cyclotron and Isotope Medical the of launch the saw 2013 in officially opened in January 2012. The Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry’s centennial Interdisciplinary Science followed in 2011, and the Edmonton Clinic Health Academy Healthfor ResearchCentre InnovationShing Ka were completedLi the in 2009-2010.and TheResearch CentennialHealth Centreand for Pharmacy for Centre Group the by the home and training centre of interdisciplinary Canada’s senior marked women’s basketball on team. The Katz focus been became Centre Saville the a 2013, In has facilities. world-class in research reflecting and teaching century buildings signature second new of University’s construction the of beginning The incorporated intotheUniversityasAugustanaFaculty. former the when 2004 was College) Lutheran Camrose as 1910 in (founded College University Augustana in extended was Alberta rural into reach University’s the addition, In building. the occupying were departments and programs several 2007 late by and Square, Enterprise as inaugurated was site this 2006 October In centre. to city Edmonton the in related building Bay Hudson historic the of purchase 2005 University’s the in office took she when Samarasekera Indira President by made announcements first the of One Edmonton. downtown in presence enhanced established an also University The facilities. sports multi-use finest Canada’s of one and teams, volleyball and tennis curling, basketball, Pandas and Bears Golden the for its main donor. The Saville Centre was expanded in 2011 to become the home of named also Centre, Sports Community Saville the by 2004 in joined was It campus. south the on located is it, fund to helped who alumnus the of contributions the of recognition in Field Foote named facility, The fields. playing two featuring facility athletics an is event this from legacy major Its Athletics. in Championships World also gained facilities from its involvement in helping to host the 2001 Edmonton provincial IAAF the campus, particularly from related to facilities Although for funding engineering and medicine. base The campus. University in to gains government, crews the buoyant Alberta economy fueled achieve a flurry of construction activity on to construction struggled of University return the the was arrival their with new staff members joined the University before the turn of the century. Coincidental process renewal the begin before competitiongrewfierce.Sosuccessfulwasthestrategythatmorethan500 to plan a unveiled University the 1996 in late-1960s, the in growth that of period unprecedented the during Recognizing hired members faculty the program. for renewal faculty replacements finding with faced be soon would America North successful across universities a and boom building renewed a by fueled revitalization a seen has University the mid-1990s the Since Arts programinhumanitiescomputingthatwasthefirstofitskindworld. and a ground-breaking experiment in humanities computing, related to a Master of English in women by writing of history ambitious an both is which Project, Orlando Another important scholarly initiative on campus over the past decade has been the home of the National Research Council’s new National Institute for Nanotechnology. their make mark in the emerging field of nanotechnology and in 2001 the campus became the to quick also were researchers Alberta of University diabetes. severe for transplanting insulin-producing cells to improve the headlines quality of life for made peopleprotocol with Edmonton the University developed team research A the of U a when 2001 world the around In research. and teaching its of quality the for borders Canada’s beyond recognition gaining of goal the itself set and outlook international an developed increasingly University the tenure, ten-year his During president. eleventh Unive www.ualberta.ca General Information 1043 The University Flag The Flag of the University consists of the background. shield of the coat of arms on identity a visual University’s the gold with accordance in used are motto the and shield The program. Trademarks and Logos The University’s name (i.e., The University of Alberta) and acronym (U of A), other names commonly associated with the University (e.g., Bears/Pandas), and as well as the University coat-of-arms, shield, crest, logos, insignia, and other graphic and word marks are protected under the Trade Marks Act. Any use of these trademarks for other than official University of Alberta business requires authorization from the Vice President (University Relations) or designate. It is a serious offence to use and infringement any constitutes use Unauthorized permission. of written without purpose these trademarks or their elements for any guilty parties are subject to penalties. The names and marks of the University may not be used in conjunction with any other names, marks and/or trademarks of a third party, except by express written permission from the owner of those marks. the by except used be not may Alberta of University the of Coat-of-Arms Official The Office of the Chancellor in conducting official University business. The University Colours The original suggestion for green and gold University colours came from Marion Kirby Alexander, who drew her inspiration from the autumn valley colours below of the the river campus. Her husband, Classics, relayed Williamthe suggestion to Hardy the Faculty Alexander,meeting of October Professor5, 1908. At of its first meeting of October 13, 1908, the Senate approved the combination of green and gold as particularly appropriate to the new University represents of wide Alberta. The stretches green of prairie land is and fields flanked harvest golden the represents by gold the optimism; and deep hope of symbolic spruce forests, and is symbolic of the light of knowledge. open book above the shield and the motto Lux Alberta” were to be et attached as might seem fit. The present motto was substituted Lex; the words “University of in January 1911 for the one originally proposed. In 1950 the representation of the coat of arms was altered to conform better to the principles of heraldic design but never actually registered. these arms were associated symbols traditional of number a incorporating arms of coat new a 1994 In with the University or the Province, or with learning, was officially granted by the following the of consists it language, non-technical In Authority. Heraldic Canadian elements: Shield: a representation of the topography of and Alberta the (wheat ) fields, derived from hills, the rivers, provincial coat of arms, symbolizing learning. and a book the provincial bird and a traditional symbol of wisdom. Crest: a Great Horned Owl, bear, golden a and arms, of coat provincial the from taken pronghorn, a Supporters: long the University mascot, standing on a mound of wild roses, the floral emblem of Alberta. Motto: Quaecumque vera. University University of a Albert On November 15, 1909, a motion by the faculty recommended to the adoption Senate by the the University of the provincial coat of arms, with the addition of an The Coat of Arms The University motto, Quaecumque vera, is taken from the Latin Vulgate version of 4, verse 8: the Bible, the Epistle of St Paul to the Philippians, chapter De cetero, fratres, quaecumque sunt vera, quaecumque pudica, quaecumque justa, virtus, qua si famae, bonae quaecumque amabilia, quaecumque sancta, quaecumque si qua laus disciplinae, haec cogitate. version: Following is the same passage, from the King James whatsoever honest, are things whatsoever true, are things whatsoever brethren, Finally, things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things. University Traditions The University Motto together together professors and graduate students from all engineering disciplines under time. for the first one roof 2015: in completed were life student enhancing at aimed projects construction Four recreation 111,000-square-foot an Centre, (PAW) Wellness and Activity Physical the facility featuring a campus fitness centre new and 282-bed a women’s world-class residence climbing for centre; St Joseph’s a to College; the extensive Students’ renovations Union the to Building overhaul interior to an and expand activities; group study student and volunteer and in involvement social space, and promote iconic Founders’ Hall at Augustana Campus, to provide a single space for services experience. aimed at widening the student launch the with worldwide presence learning digital its expanded also University The second A 2013. September in 101, Dino course, online open massive first-ever its of online course, Understanding Video Games, was launched in September 2014, and software product management followed in 2015. an online specialization in An important factor supporting the completed campus successfully University vitality the 2000 of August In recent philanthropy. years private in growth has been the the largest fund development campaign in its private history, donors. In raising 2004 the $195 University officially million launched an from even more ambitious campaign. That initiative, which raised nearly $582 million to support the work of the University, culminated in 2008, the year in which the University celebrated 100 years of service to the province and people of Alberta. In 2012, a year in which the University saw the highest enrolment in its history with more than 39,000 students, a record number of overall alumni donors of number record a had contributed University the 2013, In to support. philanthropic an all-time high of $162.7 million as contributing to addition In 2007. since donors alumni of number in highest the and donors, alumni are contributing to their communities, with more than 77 percent volunteering locally and 17 percent volunteeringUniversity reached a major milestone as outsideits endowment fund surpassed $1 Canada.billion. In its commemorated 2014,Association Alumni the 2015: in happened milestones more Two the centrepiece the as Visionaries The entitled sculpture bronze a donating by centenary of the new President’s Circle in the heart welcomed its of 13th North president Campus, and and vice-chancellor, the David Turpin. University More the students, faculty, staff, than and alumni of the ever, University of Alberta are fulfilling the live, they which in communities the enriching people, whole the uplifting of promise where province the of borders the beyond well felt contributions diverse making and the University first opened its doors in 1908. www.ualberta.ca General Information Science Faculté Saint-Jean Rehabilitation Medicine Physical EducationandRecreation Pharmacy andPharmaceuticalSciences Nursing Native Studies Medicine andDentistry Law Engineering Education Business Augustana Arts Agricultural, LifeandEnvironmentalSciences Undergraduate Degrees 1 Chart Information General with afullliningofwhitesilk.Capsareblackvelvetgoldtassel. silk scarlet of form Cambridge the in made are Hoods silk. white with faced robe scarlet a wear (DSc) Science and (DLitt), Letters (LLD), Laws of Doctors Honorary Honorary Degrees trencher shapewithblacktassels,whicharewornforwardandtotheleft. where the gold lining joins the black material. Mortarboards are the standard black piping green narrow a is There sleeves. gown’s the on trim velvet the matches and degrees two the distinguishes trim velvet The chevron. satin green six-inch a with satin gold of lining full a have and gown, the match to material black of made are EdD. the for They is color. and size, Blue shape, in Code sleeves Intercollegiate Light the to conform Education hoods the Doctor’s and on DMus, trim and velvet PhD the the for and Blue material Philosophy in black Code of made Intercollegiate are the to They conform design. EdD) and DMus, (PhD, gowns Doctors’ Doctorate Degrees color black trencher shapewithblacktassels,whicharewornforwardandtotheleft. standard the the of are Mortarboards lining below. full noted also a Faculty has the hood of distinctive Masters’ The below. noted as Faculty the of material. The Bachelor’s hood has a border three inches wide of the color distinctive green spruce of pattern Oxford the in made are Hoods point. a in terminating and i.e., a gown of black material falling below the knee with full sleeves cut to the elbow All undergraduate and master’s degree gowns are the customary Cambridge shape, Undergraduate Degrees Costume Academic 1044 •BSc •BEd •BA Bilingual BScN Medicine Dentistry/Dental Hygiene Bilingual BCom White Bilingual BScEnv White/band ofRed,White,Green,Gold,andBlue Band ofRed,Black,White Crimson/White/Lavender University of Alberta of University Grass Green/Lavender Silver Grey/Lavender Royal Blue/Gold Lavender/White Crimson/White Lavender/Gold Lavender/Blue Salmon Pink Grass Green Light Green Silver Grey Royal Blue Cinnamon Crimson Maroon Scarlet Gold

•Genetics •Forest Science •Foods andNutrition •Food Science •Family Studies •Family EcologyandPractice •Environmental Engineering •Entomology •Electrical Engineering •Earth andAtmosphericSciences •Dentistry •Computing Science •Computer Engineering •Clothing andTextiles •Civil Engineering •Chemistry •Chemical Engineering •Cell Biology •Botany •Biomedical Engineering •Biology •Biological Sciences •Biochemistry •Applied SciencesinMedicine •Animal Science •Anatomy andCellBiology •Agricultural, FoodandNutritionalSciences •Agricultural Engineering Science in Public Health Pharmacy Nursing Native Studies Music Library andInformationStudies Laws Forestry Fine Arts Financial Management Engineering •Secondary Education •Faculté Saint-Jean(Maîtriseensciencesdel’éducation) •Elementary Education •Educational Psychology •Educational PolicyStudies Education in Design Coaching Business Administration •Sociology •Slavic andEastEuropeanStudies •Romance Languages •Religion •Recreation andLeisureStudies •Psychology •Political Science •Physical EducationandSportStudies •Philosophy •Music •Modern LanguagesandCulturalStudies •Linguistics •History •Hispanic Literatures •Germanic Languages •Geography •Film Studies •Faculté Saint-Jean(Maîtriseenarts) •English •Economics •East AsianStudies •Earth andAtmosphericSciences(Geography) •Drama •Comparative Literature •Communications andTechnology •Clothing andTextiles •Classics •Art andDesign •Anthropology Arts in •Rural Economy •Resource EconomicsandEnvironmentalSociology •Renewable Resources •Human Ecology •Agricultural, FoodandNutritionalSciences Agriculture in Master’s Degrees

Crimson Crimson White White/band ofRed,White,Green,Gold,andBlue Royal Blue/Gold Royal Blue/Gold Royal Blue/Gold White/Lavender Crimson/White Blue/Lavender Lemon Yellow www.ualberta.ca Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Light Green Light Green Light Green Light Green Light Green Light Green Silver Grey Silver Grey Royal Blue Royal Blue Royal Blue Royal Blue Cinnamon Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Maroon Scarlet White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White White Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold

General Information 1045 F Stacey McCall Albert E Ottewell W Davidson HG (Paddy) Nolan RC Jackson Arthur E White Robert K Colter Katherine I McCrimmon JH Olgilvie PF Morecombe C Reilly AD McGillivary HR Thornton Robert L Lamb John A McAllister Mark R Levey (Marshall) Percy G Davies Ernest B Wilson DJ Wesley Oke Anna Wilson Donald Cameron AD Harding ME Manning Arthur Wilson Hugh Arnold Arthur Bierwagen Edward E Bishop Bill Scott Arch McEwan John A Maxwell JP Dewis Jack Neilson Bob MacBeth Lloyd Grisdale Gerry Amerongen Alf Harper Ron Helmer Willard (Bill) Pybus George Hartling Bernard J Bowlen Tevie Miller Michael O’Byrne E Peter Lougheed Edward Stack WA Doug Burns Robert J Edgar John D Bracco John N Chappel Robert F Smith Louis D Hyndman John V Decore Alex F McCalla Peter S Hyndman David E Jenkins A Wesley Cragg Francis M Saville Richard T Price Branny Schepanovich Al W Anderson Marilyn Pilkington David T Leadbeater Timothy J Christian Donald G McKenzie Gerald A Riskin George W Mantor Joseph G McGhie Graeme Leadbeater Leonard J Zoetman EJ (Jay) Spark Cheryl A Hume Dean L Olmstead Nolan D Astley Eric P Newell Hughes Linda J Ralph B Young Presidents of the Students’ Union Presidents 1909 - 1910 1911 - 1912 1912 - 1913 1913 - 1914 1914 - 1915 1915 - 1916 1916 1916 - 1917 1917 - 1918 1918 - 1919 1919 - 1920 1920 - 1921 1921 - 1922 1922 - 1923 1923 - 1924 1924 - 1925 1925 - 1926 1926 - 1927 1927 - 1928 1928 - 1929 1929 - 1930 1930 - 1931 1931 - 1932 1932 - 1933 1933 - 1934 1934 - 1935 1935 - 1936 1936 - 1937 1937 - 1938 1938 - 1939 1939 - 1940 1940 - 1941 1941 - 1942 1942 - 1943 1943 - 1944 1944 - 1945 1945 - 1946 1946 - 1947 1947 - 1948 1948 - 1949 1949 - 1950 1950 - 1951 1951 - 1952 1952 - 1953 1953 - 1954 1954 - 1955 1955 - 1956 1956 - 1957 1957 - 1958 1958 - 1959 1959 - 1960 1960 - 1961 1961 - 1962 1962 - 1963 1963 - 1964 1964 - 1965 1965 - 1966 1966 - 1967 1967 - 1968 1968 - 1969 1969 - 1970 1970 - 1971 1971 - 1972 1972 - 1973 1973 - 1974 1974 - 1975 1975 - 1976 1976 - 1977 1977 - 1978 1978 - 1979 1979 - 1980 1980 - 1981 2004 - 2008 2004 - 2012 2008 - 2012 - Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold White Maroon Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Crimson Cinnamon Light Green Light Green Light Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Grass Green Salmon Pink Salmon Pink Salmon Pink Pink/Crimson Royal Blue/Gold University University of a Albert Grass Green Grass Green Crimson Crimson Charles Allen Stuart Nicolas Dubois Dominic Beck Alexander Cameron Rutherford Frank Ford George Frederick McNally Earle Parkhill Scarlett Laurence Yeomans Cairns Francis Philip Galbraith Louis Armand Desrochers Ronald Norman Dalby Jean Beatrice Forest Peter Savaryn Tevie Harold Miller Sandy Auld Mactaggart Louis Davies Hyndman Lois Elsa Hole John Thomas Ferguson Henry Marshall Tory Robert C Wallace William AR Kerr Robert Newton Andrew Stewart Walter H Johns Max Wyman Harry Gunning Myer Horowitz Paul T Davenport W John McDonald Roderick D Fraser Indira V Samarasekera David H Turpin 1908 - 1926 1926 - 1927 1927 - 1942 1942 - 1946 1946 - 1952 1952 - 1958 1958 - 1964 1964 - 1970 1970 - 1974 1974 - 1978 1978 - 1982 1982 - 1986 1986 - 1990 1990 - 1994 1994 - 1998 1998 - 2000 2000 - 2004 Chancellors of the University of Alberta Presidents of the University of Alberta 1908 - 1928 1928 - 1936 1936 - 1941 1941 - 1950 1950 - 1959 1959 - 1969 1969 - 1974 1974 - 1979 1979 - 1989 1989 - 1994 1994 1995 - 2005 2005 - 2015 2015 - University Officials •Physical Education and Sport Studies •Physical Therapy •Physics •Geology •Geophysics •Health Promotion •Human Ecology •Immunology and Pathology •Laboratory Medicine •Linguistics •Mathematics •Mechanical Engineering •Medical Genetics Immunology •Medical Microbiology and •Medical Sciences •Medicine •Meteorology •Microbiology Engineering •Mining, Materials, and Petroleum •Occupational Therapy •Oncology •Ophthalmology •Oral Health Sciences •Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences •Physiology •Plant Science •Psychiatry •Psychology •Public Health Sciences •Radiology and Diagnostic Imaging •Renewable Resources •Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology •Rural Economy •Soil Science •Speech Pathology and Audiology •Statistics and Applied Probability •Surgery •Textiles and Clothing •Zoology •Geography www.ualberta.ca •Materials Engineering Sciences •Mathematical •Paediatrics •Pathology •Pharmacology General Information 1998 -1999 1997 -1998 1996 -1997 1995 -1996 1994 -1995 1993 -1994 1992 -1993 1991 -1992 1990 -1991 1989 -1990 1988 -1989 1987 -1988 1986 -1987 1985 -1986 1984 -1985 1983 -1984 1982 -1983 1981 -1982 1980 -1981 1979 -1980 1978 -1979 1977 -1978 1976 -1977 1975 -1976 1974 -1975 1973 -1974 1972 -1973 1971 -1972 1970 -1971 1969 -1970 1968 -1969 1967 -1968 1966 -1967 1965 -1966 1964 -1965 1963 -1964 1962 -1963 1961 -1962 1960 -1961 1959 -1960 Presidents oftheGraduateStudents’Association 2015 -2016 2014 -2015 2013 -2014 2012 -2013 2011 -2012 2010 -2011 2010 2009 2008 -2009 2007 -2008 2006 -2007 2005 -2006 2004 -2005 2003 -2004 2002 -2003 2001 -2002 2000 -2001 1999 -2000 1998 -1999 1997 -1998 1995 -1997 1994 -1995 1993 -1994 1992 -1993 1991 -1992 1990 -1991 1989 -1990 1988 -1989 1987 -1988 1986 -1987 1985 -1986 1984 -1985 1983 -1984 1982 -1983 1981 -1982 1046 Kimberly Speers Peter Cahill Gordon Squirell Jay Krushell Kimberley Krushell Frank Coughlan Steven Karp Stephen Downs Stephen Downs Ken Ross Dwayne Barber Florence Glanfield Annette Richardson Kevin Giles Gary Genosko Richard Jehn Bob Ascah Patricia Whiteley/NiallShanks Paul Fisher George McCourt/MyronOlekiw Barry Mills Jim Talbot John Cherwonogrodzky Jack Girton Susan Therrin Peter Flynn Mohammed Adam John Hoddinott Orman Granger Richard Watson/RobertBNewall Richard Watson John Towler Peter Boothroyd Dave Cruden WT Painter Norman Anderson Norman Anderson Ronald Brown Earl RMilton Gordon DWilliams Navneet Khinda William Lau Petros Kusmu Colten Yamagishi Rory Tighe Nicholas Dehod Zachary Fentiman Kory Mathewson Janelle Morin Michael Janz Samantha Power Graham Lettner Jordan Blatz Mathew DBrechtel Mike Hudema Chris Samuel Leslie Church Michael Chalk Sheamus Murphy Stephen Curran Garett Poston Suzanne Scott Terence Filewych Randy PBoissonnault Marc Dumouchel Suresh Mustapha David Tupper Paul LaGrange Timothy IBoston David SROginski Mike ANickel Floyd WHodgins Robert GGreenhill Robert GGreenhill Philip DKSoper University of Alberta of University Post-Secondary LearningActassentedtoDecember4,2003. The mainlinesoftheconstitutionUniversityAlbertaarelaiddownin Introduction University the of Constitution 2015 - 2014 -2015 2013 -2014 2012 -2013 2011 -2012 2010 -2011 2009 -2010 2008 -2009 2007 -2008 2006 -2007 2005 -2006 2004 -2005 2003 -2004 2002 -2003 2001 -2002 2000 -2001 1999 -2000 strategy andtheOffice oftheSenate. advertising, creative services,imageandidentitymanagement); universitydigital the Calgary Centre;marketingandcommunications (publicrelations,media relations; community and corporate government, includes portfolio This outreach, strategiccommunications,and value-addedservice. and publicresourcesoftheUniversity through relationshipbuilding,stakeholder The Vice-President(UniversityRelations) advancestherelationships,reputation, D PozegaOsburn,PhD Vice-President (UniversityRelations) issues haveahighprofileinplanninganddecisionmaking. student ensuring and students, of well-being the enhancing - issues for student responsibility takes also portfolio This relations. international University’s and government the coordinating with and funding, their and programs academic regarding industry networking planning as well institutional as responsibility, overall Provost’s and the are leadership Academic the vision. of achievement toward University’s aligned are goals and portfolios that ensure to vice-presidents of team the leads (Academic) Vice-President and Provost The S Dew,PhD Provost andVice-President(Academic) Vice-Presidents The the ensure long-term sustainabilityoftheUniversity. to team executive senior the oversees portfolio This vision. the of Council, theSenateandBoardofGovernors)isfocusedonachievement Faculties (General bodies governing the of work the ensures Dare and Discover in to contained vision University’s the promotes President The initiatives. fundraising University’s the promoting in leads and industry, and government, of levels various the with spokesperson lead the is and Plan Business Strategic and internationally.ThePresidentpromotestheinitiativessetoutinUniversity representative, modelsthevaluesofinstitutionlocally,provincially,nationally chief University’s the as and Governors, of Board the to reports President The DH Turpin,CM,PhD,LLD,FRSC President andVice-Chancellor Vice-Chancellor and President The ceremonial at occasions. University the of represents Board and the degrees of all member confers officio Governors, ex an Senate, the of chair is Chancellor the Senate, the by office of term four-year public a for the Elected University. represents the in and interest University, the of head titular is Chancellor The RB Young,BEng,MBA Chancellor oftheUniversity Chancellor The Colin More Nathan Andrews Brent Epperson Ashlyn Bernier Roy Coulthard Roy Coulthard Jen Landry/RoyCoulthard Ben Whynot Julianna Charchun Christine Delling Toks Bakinson Alexis Pepin Lee Skallerup Brad Wuetherick Brad Wuetherick Shannon McEwen Laura Bonnett www.ualberta.ca General Information 1047 Electronic Collections resources you need,UAL is dedicated to providing you with the online scholarly you with access to: accessible anytime, anywhere. To this end, UAL provides more than 110,000 scholarly ejournals across disciplines from a wide range of publishers; over 1.3 million ebooks accessible via a variety of formats, some downloadable to ebook readers and other mobile devices; over 1,700 online databases to projects; help you succeed with academic a researchwide range of digitized collections, including photos, letters, and postcards, related to the history and settlement of Alberta, the prairies, and Canada; ERA: Education and Research Archive, with over 36,000database designed to collect, distribute, items,and preserve the intellectual output is of a growing the UofA; and Dataverse, a data repository designed to help you publish, analyze, distribute, and preserve your research data and datasets. User Services UAL strives to meet your changing needs as researchers and learners through a wide range of services, including: research help offered on site at library service points, and via chat, e-mail, and depth in for consultations one-to-one for available also are Appointments phone. assistance. Instructional workshops integrated into specific courses and programs, offered on a drop in basis, or delivered in collaboration with campus partners, such as the Student Union, the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research, and the Grant Assist Program. online resource development in the formto orient of you guides to the and library, navigate tutorials research designed in manage, store, different cite, use, subject and reuse resources areas, ethically. Find these and via the UAL website and/or integrated into your online course. interlibrary loan, which provides you with access to library collections around the globe. If UAL does not have what you need, request that it be delivered to your University University Library The University of Alberta Libraries (UAL) is Canada’s second largest research titles and over exceeding 4.7 million print and electronic collection library, with a 8.7 million volumes. Last year, library staff responded to over 118,000 research questions and taught over 500 classes to more than 18,000 students, staff, faculty, and community members. UAL is comprised of three campuses, ten housing physical libraries, collections spanning in all disciplines of study at the university. Libraries North Campus Anglo-American Canadiana, in Strengths Library: Collections Special Peel Bruce literature, Amer-Indian history and culture, European history, print culture, and private presses. Cameron Library: Agricultural, environmental, physical, and life sciences, engineering, and technology. Also houses Circumpolar collections. data, map, math, and Canadian Education, physical education, and recreation. IncludesHerbert T. Coutts Library: literature collections. children’s and young adult and social sciences, as well as governmentRutherford Library: Arts, humanities, publications collection. John A Weir Law Library: Legal resources covering jurisdictions. a broad range of John W Scott Health Sciences Library: Medicine, dentistry, houses Rawlinson Rare Booksciences, nursing, and rehabilitation medicine. Also pharmaceutical history. Collection with emphasis on Western Canadian medical and finance. Winspear Business Library: Business, administration, Augustana Campus Augustana Library: Undergraduate collection supporting the sciences, social sciences, humanities, and fine arts. Campus Saint-Jean Bibliotheque Saint-Jean: Primarily humanities, French social language sciences, sciences, collection and supporting and regional levels. French-Canadian culture and publications at the local education, with an emphasis on Off-site facility. Book and Record Depository [BARD]: Library storage UAL offers a wideIn addition to housing core print collections across disciplines, range of electronic collections, user services, spaces, and technology to meet community. your needs as a member of the University of Alberta University University of a Albert www.governance.ualberta.ca/AdvisoryGroups/DeansCouncil.aspx Faculty Councils Each Faculty, except that of Graduate Studies and consisting Research, of has the President, a the council Dean of the Faculty, all full-time the members academic of staff of the Faculty, a representative of each of the appropriate professional societies associated with the Faculty appointed by General Faculties Council on the recommendation of the Faculty Council, appointed and by General Faculties other Council on persons the recommendation of the Faculty Council. The Council of the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research consists of the President, the Dean, and other persons appointed by General Faculties Council. Each Faculty Council, subject to the control of arranges General the courses of study falling Faculties within its jurisdiction and provides Council, for the setting of examinations and for determining the results. It deals with admissions learning of branches in degrees of granting the authorizes and withdrawals and within its jurisdiction. General Faculties Council www.governance.ualberta.ca/GeneralFacultiesCouncil.aspx Deans’ Council The Senate www.senate.ualberta.ca The Board of Governors www.governance.ualberta.ca/BoardofGovernors.aspx Vice-President (Advancement) H McCaw, BCom The Vice-President (Advancement) provides vision and direction for development the and execution of and financial support fosters relationships that result in the continuing goodwill a full-scale advancement program,from alumni, parents, which friends, and organizations, including foundations. corporations and The Office of Advancement portfolio includes: Advancement Records, Advancement Services, Alumni Finance and Administration,Foundation Relations, Events, Faculty Development, Relations, Annual Information Services, Fund, Major Gifts and Corporate Planned Giving, Prospect and Research, Recording Secretary, Stewardship, Strategic Engagement and Outreach, University Development. and Vice-President (Research) LA Babiuk, O.C., SOM, PhD, DSc, FRSC The Vice-President (Research) plays a vital role in the University’s vision achievement by of providing the leadership and direction to research facilitate includes portfolio the of scope The research campus. on initiatives and activities services, research ethics, field research, and commercialization/knowledge translation. PM Clark, BA, MA The Vice-President (Finance and Administration) and Chief Financial Officer is responsible for all financial and human resource functions of the organization and accessible institutional services. and for the provision of responsive This portfolio includes finance, human resources, risk management health and safety, resource planning, insurance(campus security, environmental services and risk management, emergency management and policies and procedures), strategic analysis, safe disclosure and human rights, administrative information supply management services. systems (peoplesoft), and Vice-President (Finance and Administration) Vice-President (Finance Vice-President (Facilities and Operations) and (Facilities Vice-President DL Hickey, PEng The Vice-President (Facilities and Operations) supports the University Alberta’s vision of by meeting the challenges and strategic goals of the University encompasses the University space which long range planning for with strategic leased by and equipment owned and/or base building systems all real property, the University of Alberta, as well as utility and ancillary services. This portfolio and project management, planning estate and commercial property includes real delivery, utilities, operations and maintenance, hospitality services, parking, residences, and ONEcard. The Office of Sustainability and the Residence Life with the Office of the Provost. Program have joint oversight www.ualberta.ca General Information interfaith basis,integratingfaithandtheologywithpracticeexperience. affiliated with thebeen University since 1908 and works on a broadly ecumenicalhas and Charter, Provincial by established Canada, of Church United the by St Stephen’s College, an undergraduate and graduate theological school founded General Information www.ualberta.ca/st.stephens College Stephen’s St applying ittocontemporaryissues. and tradition religious and intellectual Judaeo-Christian the in courses offering by education liberal to contributes College the University, the with collaboration and Church In education. postsecondary to dimension Catholic a provide to 1926 in Alberta Catholic of Roman University the with the affiliated and Alberta by of Legislature the by incorporated established was College Joseph’s St General Information http://stjosephs.ualberta.ca/ College Joseph’s St may betakenfordegreecreditbystudentsoftheUniversity. to theUniversitybyanagreementdescribedasaffiliation,andoffercoursesthat Two denominationally-sponsored colleges, with buildings on campus, are related Colleges On-Campus Affiliated Colleges membership upongraduation. lifetime no-fee a earns student Every Association. Alumni the form collectively life of walks all in working and worldwide living graduates 250,000 that More www.ualberta.ca/alumni Association Alumni a 24/7studyspace,onthelowerandfirstlevelsofCameronLibrary. everyone. to open and varied are spaces UAL Our rooms. reading free quiet large technology and zones silent, to seating soft comfortable and from carrels everything individual have which areas, silent and quiet common, designated and size in varied setup, thatarebookableonlineforgroupsoftwoormoreinhourblocks. rooms, presentation practice and study bookable 50 over and SPSSatAugustanaCameron. of browsersandofficeproductivitysoftware,includingtheAdobeCreativeSuite over 700Windowsand100Macworkstations,equippedwithawiderange your support to technology and research activities,including: spaces of range wide a to access have you UAL, At technology. of use the requires extensive it often times Very peers. with other collaboration at and reflection, and study quiet requires sometimes learning This others. with and independently - learning for places are Libraries Technology and Spaces archive your data. and share, organize, you help to support management data research 30 openaccessjournals. openly research your available, orwhowanttohostanopenaccessjournal.Thelibrarycurrentlyhosts make to want who you of those for support publishing nearest librarylocation. 1048 University of Alberta of University www.ualberta.ca