THE UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN’S MAIN CAMPUS IS SITUATED ON TREATY 6 TERRITORY AND THE HOMELAND OF THE MÉTIS.

THE UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN’S MAIN CAMPUS IS SITUATED ON TREATY 6 TERRITORY AND THE HOMELAND OF THE MÉTIS.

News

  • By September 25, 2014

    Vision 2025 rescinded despite objections from motion’s original proponents.

  • Campus club spotlight: Model UN to attend Harvard conference

    By September 19, 2014

    Politically-minded students at the University of Saskatchewan will have the chance to travel and debate across the continent as the Usask Model UN Club returns for another year.

  • Doug Ford running for mayor; Rob Ford drops out

    By September 19, 2014

    Councillor Doug Ford met with media in front of his mother’s Etobicoke, On. home Friday evening to officially announce he will be running for mayor.

  • U of A researchers hope to educate about MDMA content

    By September 19, 2014

    With the number of deaths linked to party drugs on the rise, a group of University of Alberta researchers are looking to provide further insight about their chemical composition.

  • Med. students experience rural Saskatchewan

    By September 19, 2014

    During the summer, 40 medical students at the U of S took part in PREP — a rural externship program — to learn more about practicing in rural Saskatchewan.

  • Faculty Association ratifies new contract

    By September 19, 2014

    On Sept. 3, members of the University of Saskatchewan Faculty Association ratified a three-year contract which will remove the university president’s ability to veto tenure.

  • Sask. sees highest 2014-15 percentage tuition increase in Canada

    By September 19, 2014

    A report from Statistics Canada indicates that Saskatchewan students in both undergraduate and graduate programs have seen the largest percentage increase in tuition costs for the 2014–15 academic year.

  • TransformUS banner scrapped, admin heads in new direction

    By September 19, 2014

    Though TransformUS was formally cancelled during the University of Saskatchewan president’s address on Sept. 9, the reality may be slightly less optimistic than initial coverage has implied.