Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He opened one of the first Canadian KFC locations in North Battleford, Saskatchewan in the 1950s and still operated the establishment until his death. Sparrow was involved in many worthwhile projects in the city of North Battleford. His contracting company "Westman Contracting LTD" helped develop many parts of the Killdeer area in North Battleford.
Eiling Kramer (July 14, 1914 – May 5, 1999) MLA, was an auctioneer, rancher and political figure in Saskatchewan, Canada. [1]Eiling Kramer was born in 1914, the son of Minne Dowe Kramer and Jacobina Kopinga, [2] in Highworth, Saskatchewan in the North Battleford district.
Born in North Battleford, Saskatchewan in 1941, [1] he attended high school in North Battleford and Saskatoon. He obtained a B.A., B. Ed. with Distinction, and a Post Graduate Diploma in Curriculum Studies from the University of Saskatchewan. Kowalsky began his teaching career in 1961.
Rudi Peters (born January 30, 1939 - November 30, 2002) was a Canadian politician who served in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan from 1995 to 1999, as a Saskatchewan Party member for the constituency of Battleford-Cut Knife.
North Battleford is a city in west-central Saskatchewan, Canada. It is the seventh largest city in the province and is directly across the North Saskatchewan River from the Town of Battleford . Together, the two communities are known as "The Battlefords".
232nd (Saskatchewan) Battalion, CEF; 1991 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships; 2008 Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts; 2011 SaskTel Tankard; 2017 Battlefords—Lloydminster federal by-election; 2019 Canadian Open (curling) 2537 Battlefords Army Cadets
Born in North Battleford and raised in Saskatoon, [2] he was working in social services in Saskatoon in 1971. [3] With no visible LGBT community in the city, in that year he placed a classified advertisement in the Vancouver newspaper The Georgia Straight seeking other people interested in forming a gay group. [4]
NcNair was born on 15 May 1919 in Springfield, Nova Scotia, the son of railroad engineer Kenneth Frank McNair (1891–1973) and Hilda May (née Grimm; 1898–1983). The family moved to North Battleford, Saskatchewan, during the Great Depression.