The fonds consists of records, mostly publications, pertaining to the Waffle Movement, a radical-left political movement that grew in popularity in the early 1970s. The fonds is divided into eight categories:
1 For an Independent Socialist Canada - articles on the benefits of an Independent Socialist Canada 2 Public Ownership - the benefits of nationalizing industries and natural resources 3 Quebec - How the movement would deal with the sovereignty issue 4 Policy Issues - various political policies the movement promotes 5 Waffle in the New Democratic Party - dealing with the larger political party of the NDP 6 Waffle-Ontario - the Waffle movement in Ontario 7 Waffle-Saskatchewan - how a socialist Saskatchewan would work in a socialist Canada 8 Oversize - oversized copies of the 'Waffle News', the 'Ontario Waffle', and assorted news clippings
The Andrew Wilhelm-Boyles fonds includes the following series: newspaper articles (1997-2007); letters to the editor (1997-1998); records of the Manitoba Conservatory of Music and Arts (1998); and photographs (1999-2000).
Group photo at Bishop Cornelius Pasichny's installation, January 21, 1996, St. George's Cathedral, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Metropolitan Michael Bzdel stands in the front centre, with Bishop Cornelius Pasichny to his right and Bishop Basil Filevich to his left.
From left to right: Father Rudolph Luzney, Father Janko Kolosnjaji, Metropolitan Michael Bzdel, Father Volodymyr Mudri, and Father Yurif Malik, Inter-Eparchial Retreat, Lumsden, Saskatchewan, June 3-7, 1996.
Clergy during the Inter-Eparchial Retreat, Lumsden, Saskatchewan, June 3-7, 1996. From left to right: Father Cornelius Pasichny, Metropolitan Michael Bzdel, Father Stefan Soroka, and Bishop Nicholas Samra (retreat master).
Photograph of a Canadian Pacific Railway crew laying cement for a building in Bredenbury, Saskatchewan. Pictured are 17 men, planks of wood, machinery, grain elevator, buildings, two-horse team, train tracks, pail, shovels, rocks, and sacks. In the background is a building with the word "Bredenbuy" on the side. This was most likely the train station. Handwriting on back describes scene, also noting "Grampa Dan McLean at Breadenberry [sic], Sask 1910."