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Authority record

Suzuki, David

  • UBCA-ARC-AUTH-511
  • Person
  • 1936-

David Takayoshi Suzuki, Ph.D., is an award-winning and internationally recognized scientist, environmentalist and broadcaster. Born on March 24th, 1936, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Suzuki spent his early childhood years in the back of his parents' dry-cleaning business in Marpole. Still, life would change drastically for Suzuki and his family when he was six years old. In 1942, after the attacks on Pearl Harbor, Prime Minister Mackenzie King ordered all Japanese males between the ages of 14 and 45 to move more than 160 km inland to "safeguard" the Pacific Coast from Japanese spies and the possibility of attack. Suzuki's father was sent to a labour camp in Solsqua, in BC's interior. Two months later, the dry-cleaning business was sold by the BC government and Suzuki, his mother and two sisters were sent to a camp in Slocan City a few hundred kilometres from the camp where his father was held. David Suzuki was one of over 22,000 individuals of Japanese origin, three-quarters of who were naturalized or Canadian-born, interned in camps in BC's interior during WW II. After the war, the Suzuki family was forced to move east, eventually settling in London, Ontario. Suzuki's father and mother began work for Suzuki Brothers Construction Company, a business run by his father's brothers.
Accepting a scholarship to attend Amherst College in Massachusetts in 1954, Suzuki began his lifelong interest in Zoology and graduated with Honours in 1958. After receiving his Ph.D. in Zoology from Chicago in 1961, Suzuki went to California as a visiting professor at Berkeley. While in California, Suzuki's influences expanded to include the fight for equal rights - he was a member of the NAACP throughout the 50s and 60s. In addition, influenced by works such as Rachel Carson's 1962 book Silent Spring, Suzuki began to interest the growing environmental movement and consciousness.
Throughout the 60s and 70s, Suzuki's academic career flourished. He held numerous visiting professorships in Canada, Puerto Rico, and the US. After several years as an assistant and associate professor, he was made a full professor in the Department of Zoology at the University of British Columbia in 1969. This position was retained until his retirement in 2001. Well respected and known in his field from a young age, Suzuki received the E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowship Award for the Outstanding Canadian Research Scientist Under 35 from 1969-1972. Since then, Suzuki has received numerous professional and scientific awards, including twenty-one honorary doctorates from universities in Canada, the United States and Australia. In addition, he is the author of more than 170 professional and academic papers written during his career and is currently professor emeritus with UBC's Sustainable Development Research Institute.
Suzuki's career in broadcasting began in 1979 with his award-winning popular science television series for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, The Nature of Things.It is now seen in over 50 countries worldwide. In addition, Suzuki has hosted and produced countless other programs for the CBC, PBS in the US, and the Discovery Channel. These include The Secret of Life, A Planet for the Taking, for which he won the United Nations Environment Program Medal in 1985, and the mini-series The Sacred Balance, which aired in 2002. In addition, Suzuki founded the long-running radio series Quirks and Quarks for CBC Radio and has been a regular contributor to the national broadcaster both on television and radio. Suzuki has received consistently high acclaim for his 30 years of award-winning work in broadcasting, explaining the complexities of science in a compelling, easily understood way. In addition and as a supplement to his broadcast work, Suzuki has published over 40 books, including the children's series Looking At and Did you know, which was co-authored with his daughter, Laura Suzuki. In addition, Suzuki has been writing his Science Matters column, published weekly in thirty-one Canadian newspapers and magazines throughout Canada, since 1989.
Internationally respected, David Suzuki has received countless awards and honours in his career as a scientist, his work as a broadcaster, his civil rights endeavours, and his position as a leading, influential environmentalist and native rights activist. Among his many honours, he was awarded the UNESCO Kalinga Prize for science in 1986. He was made a member of the Order of British Columbia in 1995 and a Companion of the Order of Canada in 2006. In addition, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the University of British Columbia Alumni Association in 2000.
As a broadcaster, Suzuki has won numerous accolades, including four Gemini Awards for his work hosting The Nature of Things and a Governor General's Award for Conservation for A Planet for the Taking. He has won numerous local and national bookseller awards, and The Autobiography, published in 2006, won the Canadian Libris Award. He has been honoured by First Nations peoples with six names, formal adoption by two tribes, and an honorary membership in the Dehcho First Nation. Suzuki is a member or honorary member of countless international and national councils, advisory committees, and boards relating to his professional and scientific endeavours and has pursued work with civil rights groups, including the Canadian and BC Civil Liberties Unions. In 1990, Suzuki and his wife, Tara Cullis, co-founded the David Suzuki Foundation. The Foundation was officially opened in 1991 and concentrates predominantly on environmental issues, including aquaculture, biodiversity, climate change, global warming, ecosystem-based forestry, and sustainable fisheries.
David Suzuki has five children, Tamiko, Laura, and Troy from his first marriage, and Sarika and Severn, his daughters with Tara, whom he married in 1972. He also has three grandchildren.

Sutherland, John Neil

  • UBCA-ARC-AUTH-071
  • Person
  • 1931-2017

John Neil Sutherland was born in Chilliwack in 1931. He was a graduate of the Provincial Normal School, the University of British Columbia (MA), and the University of Minnesota (Ph.D.). As a teacher and historian, Neil taught in Oliver, West Vancouver, and in the Faculty of Education at UBC. He also enjoyed his time as a visiting professor at universities in the United States, Scotland, Australia and Sweden. A pioneer in the field of social history in the 1960s and 1970s, he published significant work throughout a long and productive career on the history of children and childhood in Canada.

Survey of Vancouver English

  • UBCA-ARC-AUTH-375
  • Corporate body
  • 1976-1984

The Survey of Vancouver English (SVEN) was a multi-year project conducted by Department of Linguistics Professor Robert J. Gregg. A pilot survey from 1976 to 1978 preceded and was included in SVEN. SVEN ran from 1978 to 1984, and a final report was dispatched to Canada's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. SVEN was an urban dialect survey of Vancouver-born residents seeking data concerning systematic sociolinguistic variables, such as phonology, vocabulary, and grammar. Both the Pilot Survey and SVEN began with questionnaires. The SVEN questionnaire, a modified form of the Pilot Questionnaire, was intricately structured and had over 1000 questions. Three hundred individuals were included in the final study, 60 of which were part of the initial Pilot Survey. The interview process took two years and resulted in 496 audiotapes that were subsequently transcribed. The transcription took over two years and resulted in 300 booklets, one for each interviewee. Data resulting from the surveys and data from similar studies informed the researchers

Surrey Berry Growers' Cooperative Association

  • Corporate body
  • [192-?]-[195-?]

The Surrey Berry Growers' Cooperative Association was a group of mostly Japanese-Canadian berry farmers in Surrey, BC. It was one of the first berry cooperatives in the Surrey area. The Surrey Berry Growers' Cooperative produced Sovereign Brand strawberries and jam berries. The Cooperative had 5 acres of land and Sandell Road by Townline Road, RR 4, New Westminster, British Columbia. It also had a recreation hall and caretaker's residence on the property. The Cooperative was successful throughout the Great Depression despite the failures of many other agricultural ventures during that time period. In 1942, many of the farmers in the Cooperative were interned due to being of Japanese decent and had their land and possessions taken from them. The Cooperative also had their land and property ceased at this time. While there were attempts made to regain the property and re-establish the Cooperative, the Cooperative died out sometime after 1952.

Sumarlidason, Lillian

  • Person
  • 1900-1997

Lillian was born on November 24, 1900, on a farm in Tyndastoll, Alberta to Thorarinn and Hallfridur Gudmundson. In 1905, her parents moved to Red Deer, Alberta where her father built a large home in which church services were often held. Lillian attended school in Calgary and afterwards became a teacher in Elfros, Saskatchewan. There, she met her husband, Henry, and they were married in June of 1926. They settled in Wadena, where Henry became the Imperial Oil Agent and built a prosperous oil agency. During this time Lillian became involved in the church as an organist and choir leader.

In 1940, Lillian and Henry moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, and became involved in the Icelandic community there. In 1949, they moved to Edmonton, Alberta, where Lillian took courses in group work in music. She became a member of the Registered Music Teachers Society and the Piano Class Teachers Association, and began teaching students. She organized the Icelandic Choir in Edmonton, and was an active member in the Icelandic Canadian Club of Edmonton. It was through her dedication that she was awarded an honorary membership of the Icelandic National League. In 1971, Henry and Lillian retired to White Rock, British Columbia. Lillian continued teaching several music pupils. She died on October 19, 1997.

Stursberg, Peter, 1913-

  • Person

Peter Stursberg was born in August 1913 in China. He began his career as a journalist in Victoria, and was later a correspondent during World War II and a member of the Parliamentary Press Gallery in Ottawa. He also wrote numerous memoirs and biographies of Canadian political figures. He interviewed Pauline Jewett for his book on Lester B. Pearson. Dr. Jewett was President of SFU from 1971 to 1978. She was a former university professor and a member of Parliament.

Student Nurses' Association of British Columbia

  • Corporate body
  • 1962-1978

The SNABC included representatives of nursing schools throughout British Columbia, although meetings were generally held in Vancouver. Membership was not open to practical nurses or psychiatric nurses. The association addressed concerns related to protecting the interests of student nurses, and facilitated communication among student nurses in British Columbia. A major annual event was the bed race competition, conducted to raise funds.

In 1977 two students were selected to attend the International Conference of Nurses in Tokyo, but due to lack of participation of members and interest of non-members, and perhaps partly because students could now join the RNABC, the association was dissolved in 1978. Margaret Kennedy was the last president. The remaining funds ($600) were donated to the RNABC for the Margaret Sim bursary fund for future student nurses.

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