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01-004 · Fonds · 1986-1999

Fonds consists of letters written to Peter Gzowski in his role as broadcaster for CBC's "Morningside" show. The hundreds of letters include such subjects as literacy, Prime Minister Jean Chretien, and Edith Babb. Also included are contracts, correspondence, notes, and memos relating to Peter Gzowski's career with CBC; records relating to Gzowski's association with the "Peter Gzowski Invitational Golf for Literacy" tournament; Gzowski's association with Ridley College, and Trent University (Margaret Laurence tribute, Timothy Findley conference, chancellorship); and greeting cards, personal calendars, photographs, family genealogical information, and correspondence relating to awards received. The fonds also includes correspondence, partial manuscripts, and notes relating to various books which Gzowski has written.

Gzowski, Peter
RG 54 · Fonds · 2003-2010

Fonds consists of records from Peter Gzowski College, including opening ceremony documents (2003-2004), the student handbook (2007-2008), the Gzowski College Newsletter, Vol. 1 Issue 1 (2009-2010); and the Fair Trade Trent survey (2005).

Trent University. Peter Gzowski College
23-013/001(19) · File · 8 January, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Indian Act probe due in Metro - Toronto
  • Restoration of lost status proving costly, Indians say - Toronto
  • Fictional reservations in foothills - Toronto
  • Artistic differences - Cardinal the architect - Toronto
  • Reopen church school, Osnaburgh Indian parents urge
  • Anger grows as officials unable to trace poison in Six Nations' water - Toronto 5
  • Judge rules Micmac treaty no longer valid - Antigonish, NS
  • Quebec Mohawks to be 'nation within a state' - Montreal
  • Four anti-fur groups face tax threat - Toronto
  • Other sources possible in water contamination, company official says - Elmira, Ont.
  • Native group misses deadline for base plans - Sioux Lookout
  • White Lake (Mobert) draft management plan - Marathon
  • Sioux Lookout still waiting for decision over radar base
  • Wider self-rule for natives foreseen in '90s - Toronto
  • A human rights issue - letter to Toronto editor about Temagami
  • Support the aboriginal languages bill - letter to Toronto editor
  • Webequie natives waiting for minister to unlock resource - Thunder Bay
  • Skills school project extended into 1990 still in doubt - Sioux Lookout
  • Decaying vegetation, muck, main features of reserves - Thunder Bay commentary
  • Nakina users develop fish plan
  • Planes banned from landing on Big Trout Lake
  • Indian band gets more control under new agreement~ Curve Lake
  • Should whites write about minorities? - Toronto commentary
  • Travelling play targets problem of illiteracy - Thunder Bay
  • Disregarding natives - Letter to Toronto editor
  • Mohawks divided over casinos - Akwesasne, NY
  • Six :\at ions social counsellor terminated - Ohsweken
  • Speller tells Cadieux any asbestos too much - Ohsweken
  • Fire protection training - Moose Factory
  • Mushkegowuk council's partners in change - Moose Factory
  • Community based teacher training - Moose Factory
23-013/001(18) · File · 2 January, 1990
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Fur-bidding sessions are link to past-Manitoba
  • Comments demand inquiry - Toronto commentary
  • B.C. bands on brink of self-government - Vancouver
  • Elmira plant· told to stop dumping of chemical
  • Toward native self-sufficiency - Toronto commentary
  • $50,000 spent to promote bingo on reserve - Toronto
  • Fighting for justice - Alberta
  • Food prices in North to jump - Montreal
  • Death arouses criticism - Winnipeg
  • Native people's dilemma: tradition vs. jobs-Edmonton
  • Reserve protests train cut - Winnipeg
  • Lubicons ask Getty to clarify offer - Edmonton
  • Candles lit to support Lubicons - Edmonton
  • Remove "racist, sexist" judge - Edmonton
  • Order of Canada honors skater - Toronto
  • Whitefish, Sturgeon Lake band claims finalized
  • Indians reach land deal - Calgary
  • Death rate triple for Indians under 35 - Toronto
  • Fur auction prices drop from last year's levels
  • Lubicons get better offer from province - Edmonton
  • Sexual assault in NWT less violent, judge asserts
  • New act requires police to hire more minorities
  • Remember the ones we too often forget - Toronto
  • Indian land claim threatened - Edmonton
  • Goose Bay opposes LIA petition
  • AFL backs Lubicon oil shutdown
  • Mohawks divided over casinos - USA Today
  • Games boost economies - USA Today
  • Bands without reserve status may have case heard again
  • Chiefs turn down offer to re-write Indian Act
Morrison, David
UPC/006(48) · File · [195-?]-1998
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of photographs of Dr. David Morrison, a longtime member of the Trent University community. In 1993 Morrison was the acting President and Vice-Chancellor. Morrison was awarded the Eminent Service Award in 2007.

Lyon, Vaughan
UPC/005(59) · File · [195-?]-[198-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of four photographs and one image of Dr. K.R. Vaughan Lyon (d.2015) former Trent University professor of Political Studies from 1969 to 1996. Photographs include Tommy Douglas.

Leishman, John
UPC/005(39) · File · [195-?]-[198-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of eleven photographs of John Leishman who was the Controller of Financial Services from 1966 to 1973, then the Vice-President (Finance) from 1971 to 1981, then the Executive Vice-President (External and Board Relations) from 1981 to 1988. Some photographs include Michael Beswick.

Kidd, Kenneth & Martha
UPC/005(10) · File · [195-?]-[198-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of four photographs of Martha and Kenneth Kidd. One photograph is of them in 1990 when they received honorary degrees (Doctor of Law) from Trent University.

Bell, Bay
UPC/001(29) · File · [195-]-[198-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consist of a photograph of Bay Bell in a military uniform. Also contains a photocopy photo of racehorse Steady One and a group of people at Kawartha Downs September 25, 1980, Bay Bell pictured.

Hagar, Fred (Fredrick)
UPC/004(02) · File · [195-?]-[197-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of three images and eight photographs, three of which are identical portraits of Fred Hagar a Professor of History at Trent University. Hagar was also the acting Master of Champlain College from 1974 to 1975 and the Senior Tutor of Catharine Parr Traill College in 1978.

Tracey, Kenneth (Ken)
UPC/010(35) · File · [195-?] - [197-]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of photographs of Kenneth (Ken) Tracey. Written on the back of the photographs "Professor Emeritus Kenneth Tracey 1925-1999, with Trent University from 1967. Professor Kenneth Kidd (seated)"

Robson, Stuart
UPC/008(22) · File · [195-?]-[198-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of photographs of Stuart Robson (1940-2023). Robson was the Senior Tutor of Peter Robinson College (1967). Photos include Robert Pasternack, John Stanford, and Marjory Seeley Rogers.

Nader, George
UPC/007(01) · File · [195-?]-[199-?]
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of about ten photographs of George Nader, a Professor in the School of the Environment at Trent University.

Leslie M. Frost fonds
77-024 · Fonds · 1798-1973

This fonds consists of the personal and collected papers of the Honourable Leslie M. Frost, former Premier of Ontario. It contains correspondence; letter books from World War I through his legal and political career to post-retirement phase of public and private directorships; scrapbooks of Leslie Frost and his wife Gertrude; and historical files on various subjects, including the Frost family, the Carew family, various political figures, and Victoria, Peterborough and Haliburton Counties. The fonds is especially valuable for the study of Conservatism and it includes collected campaign material from 1891 to 1971, material on federal and provincial elections, and original and copied historical material on many individuals and events. Also included in the fonds are photographs, miscellaneous graphic materials, and audio visual materials.

Frost, Leslie M.
81-003 · Fonds · 1978

The fonds consists of 6 oral history tapes on cassettes; photocopies and original drafts of interviews; and final transcripts of interviews by Jamie Benidickson on the subject of Leslie M. Frost. Interviewees include Malcolm Montgomery, Dorothy Swallow, Marjorie Porter, Jack and Eileen Beal, and Bill Leishman.

23-013/001(16) · File · 4 December, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This following folder includes

  • OPP bill almost $1 million in Temagami logging fight
  • Indian bands back protest on logging
  • Wells close after Lubicon band's threat - Little Buffalo
  • A Lesson in Misery - Canadian Indians look back in anger at residential schools
  • Attempt to squelch Meech discord inflames showdown
  • Six Nations Schools
  • Violence feared over crackdown on bingo - Montreal
  • Native groups demand role in Alberta mill - Edmonton
  • Opponents of pulp-mill projects give Environment Minister earful - Calgary
  • Ottawa sets up panel on Indian health care
  • Indian status didn't change - Toronto
  • Lubicon land-claim offer won't change - Calgary
  • More about Six Nations
  • Police issue warrants for top 3 organizers of Kahnawake bingo
  • Native dancer's sci-fi connection - Toronto
  • More about Kahnawake
  • MP demands judicial inquiry into native suicides
  • Chief acclaimed - Brantford
  • Companies hire too few minorities - Ottawa
  • Native Women challenge art ideas - Ottawa
  • More about Kahnawake - Montreal
  • Foes of Meech riding a wave of intolerance Peterson says - Saint John
  • more about the Lubicons
  • Disabilities hit Indians on reserves at almost twice rate in non-natives
  • Chief encourage Innu to shoot at military jets - Winnipeg
  • The native nightmare of Alberta - Standoff, Alta.
  • more about disabilities on Northern reserves
  • more about the Mohawks of Kahnawake - commentary
  • Shots fired at police car on reserve - Cornwall
  • Letters about native housing and Temagami to Toronto editors
  • Their brother's keeper - Edmonton
  • Shooting at phantoms - Halifax commentary
  • Indians will set up schools if no teaching reforms are made native Manitoba judge warns - Winnipeg
  • Indians to be consulted on education - Ottawa
  • Speed lands claims officials told - Winnipeg
  • Inquiry ends with calls for native legal system- Winnipeg
  • more about Six Nations schools
David Kettler fonds
81-017 · Fonds · 1969-1979

This fonds consists of the personal records of Professor David Kettler relating to his membership in the Julian Blackburn College Academic Advisory Board and to the development of the Social Theory Program at Trent University. Included in the fonds are correspondence, minutes, reports, proposals, financial and budget records, and course and curriculum proposals.

Kettler, David
23-013/001(15) · File · 30 October, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

The following folder includes

  • Temagami blockade to resume after bid to win injunction fails - Toronto
  • A poor showing - letter to Toronto editor about new national museum
  • Armed Mounties guard border near Mohawk reserve - Cornwall
  • 1,000 rally to fight logging in Temagami - Toronto
  • Is Meech Lake accord really worth saving? - Ottawa
  • 1,600 federal workers poised to picket today - Toronto
  • Cree's 'attorney general' a passionate advocate - Ouje-Bougoumou, Quebec
  • Reserve promised new school, asbestos study - Ohsweken
  • Meech Lake foes blaze trail for PM - Toronto editorial
  • What Meech Lake accord is all about - Ottawa
  • Temagami battle is about who uses bush best - Toronto commentary
  • More about Temagami
  • Getting to know you - Toronto
  • More about Temagami
  • Three brothers hoping to stay together - Today's child - Toronto
  • Where The Spirit Lives triumphs as a powerful study of native injustice - Toronto TV review
  • More about Six Nations schools
  • More about Temagami
  • Auditor general likes morale-boosters - Ottawa commentary
  • More about Meech Lake accord
  • More about Innu protest
  • Panel urges demilitarized Arctic - Ottawa
  • More about Innu protest
  • Is there any hope for Meech Lake? - Toronto editorial
  • More about Meech Lake
  • More about Whitedog settlement
  • Ontario's new ombudsman is a proud Mohawk peacemaker - Toronto commentary
  • Indians to appeal fishing conviction - Cape Croker
  • NS Indians seek salmon fishing rights - Truro
  • Negotiator named to settle Inuit claim - Ottawa
  • Quebec Inuit village copes with double sales tax - Ottawa
  • Coffee's always on at native centre - Thunder Bay
  • Not worth fighting for? - Toronto commentary
  • Hunters upset with Indian hunting privileges - Hunters Mountain, NS
  • At the government's door - letter to Toronto editor
  • Native fishing talks set to resume - Toronto
  • Clash averted as Mohawks compromise - Cornwall
  • Mafia .backs big bingo in US, informer says - Montreal
  • Chief sees progress over island - Sault Ste. Marie
  • Nishnawbe-Aski chiefs take next step toward new structure - Thunder Bay
  • Education council asks Mennonite school to abolish strap - Sioux Lookout
  • Local woman crushes chiefs resolution on crisis centres - Sioux Lookout
  • Webequie students miss more classes - Sioux Lookout
  • Natives plan for better stores - Atikokan
  • Next round of Whitefish Island negotiations set - Sault Ste. Marie
  • More about Six Nations schools in senate - Ottawa
  • More about John Kim Bell
  • Great Lakes plan disparaged - Ottawa
  • Grade Nine plus TYP equals university - Toronto
  • The art of fighting fires - Toronto
Academic Skills Centre
23-013/001(14) · File · 23 October, 1989
Part of Indian and Northern Affairs newspaper clippings collection

This following folder includes

  • Film hits sensitive nerve in native community - Toronto
  • Prize means a lot to all native artists - Toronto
  • Cadieux to meet band chief - Toronto
  • Native groups urged to bolster blockade - Ottawa
  • Native students' Catch 22 - Toronto
  • Trappers to cull wolves under bounty program - Edmonton
  • NWT makes native new speaker - Norman Wells , NWT
  • Three hunters killed in tent fire - Marathon
  • Animal rights group assails museum fur trade exhibit - Winnipeg
  • Indians fight clear-cutting of Quebec wildlife reserve - Maniwaki
    -Mohawks ' showdown delayed at Cornwall
  • Buddy, 8, loves hiking, exploring - Toronto Today 's Child
  • Temagami road construction halted pending court case
  • Whitedog gets S2.4 million for flooding
  • Freed Mohawk casino owner must stay off Cornwall reserve - Syracuse, NY -
  • Ojibway model proud to be native - Toronto
  • More about Six Nations and New Credit schools
  • More about Whitedog settlement
  • Native awareness focus of week - Fort Frances
  • Probation for former housing manager - Thunder Bay
  • Chief arrested at blockade - Toronto
  • More about Cape Croker fishing fines I I
  • Pottawatomi take battle over land to US congress - Washington , DC
  • Micmacs claim first moose under new NS hunting rights - Hunter ' s Mountain, NS
  • Robert Jamieson gets rave reviews as new ombudsman - Toronto
  • Giving Canada's Indians provincial status would salve many wounds - Ottawa commentary
  • Aboriginal peoples' quest for justice - letter to Ottawa editor
  • Non-native hunters protest .Micmac agreement - Halifax
  • Chief wants OPP to quit border post -Cornwall
  • Absence in natives of Alzheimer's probed - Winnipeg
  • Mohawk reserve battles over bingo - Montreal
  • Buses turned back in Mohawk bingo dispute - Hogansburg
  • Law and order a target in Mohawk feud - St. Regis
  • Tax (cigarettes) dollars go up in smoke - Montreal
  • 51% say courts unfair to natives - Ottawa
  • Natives fear violence over unlicensed bingo - Montreal
  • Indians paid dearly for benefits - letter to Thunder Bay editor
  • More about fines for blocking traffic - Marathon
  • Homes opened - Fort Frances
  • AFN supports Six Nations in attack on Indian Affairs minister - Ottawa
  • Native education rights supported - Calgary
  • Most feel natives get unequal treatment - Ottawa
  • Copps offers support to halt river dredging - ·Walpole Is. 33
  • Profits tucked away out of taxman's reach•- Montreal
  • Environment No. l issue, says chief - Walpole Island
  • Stored toxic wastes seeping in river area - London
  • Natives right to mistrust dredging - letter to London editor
  • Native reliance on govt. over, Treaty 3 chief says
  • Misunderstanding - Thunder Bay editorial about medical treatment residence
  • Supports multiple use for crown land - letter to Elliot Lake editor
  • Metis send invoice to government - Sault Ste. Marie
  • Weekend elders' conference - Ohsweken
  • More about Six Nations and New Credit schools
  • Blockade is becoming a pain in neck - Decaen - North Bay
  • Skeletal remains handed over to Caldwell band - London