Showing 4086 results

Authority Record

Clark, Patrick

  • Person
Patrick Clark is a designer who worked closely with the Stratford Festival for nine seasons. He has also designed for the Shaw Festival, Neptune Theatre, Theatre Plus, Canadian Stage, Theatre New Brunswick, and the Banff Centre for the Arts.

Clark, Jim, 1951-

  • Person
  • 1951-

Jim Clark is an award-winning photographer in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He graduated in 1971 from a Halifax Campus Community College photography course as the top student and began his career as a darkroom technician and photographer with Wamboldt-Waterfield Photography Ltd.

From 1971-1975 he worked for the Dalhousie University Life Sciences Audiovisual Department as a bio-medical photographer. He pursued freelance work from 1975-1978, while also managing a retail photography department and travelling throughout Nova Scotia and New Brunswick as a representative for Maritime Color Labs.

A year after returning to Wamboldt-Waterfield as a photojournalist in the summer of 1978, Clark became a business partner, acquiring full ownership in 1985 and changing the company's name to Clark Photographic Ltd. after Terry Waterfield's 1990 retirement. In 1998 he formed a partnership with photographer Gary Castle, and Clark Photographic became Digiscan Photographic, reflecting the changes in imaging technology.

Clark continued to work as a photographer in commercial, advertising and special events throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. From 1995-1996 he had a contract with Dalhousie's Medical Computing Media Services (later MED IT), and in 2001 he became the medical photographer and videoconferencing coordinator for Dalhousie, where he worked until 2011.

Clark, James, W.

  • Person
James W. Clark joined Dalhousie’s Psychology Department in the 1960s after completing his MA at McGill University and his PhD at Queen’s. He remained a member of the department until c. 2004.

Clark, Howard C.

  • Person
  • 1929-
Howard C. Clark was the ninth president of Dalhousie University, serving from 1986-1995. Clark was a strong advocate for affirmative action and led the university in establishing the James Robinson Johnson Chair in Black Canadian Studies. Born in New Zealand in 1929, he taught chemistry and held administrative posts at the universities of Western Ontario, British Columbia, Auckland and Guelph, where he held also served as vice-president.

Clark, David

  • Person
David Clark is a media artist who utilizes the internet as a cinematic format. Clark also uses an experimental narrative form within his media work. Clark is a professor in Media Arts at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. Clark’s education includes Fine Arts in 1984 at the University of Calgary, a BFA in 1985 at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and a MFA in 1989 from the School of Art Institute of Chicago

Clark, Chuck

  • Person
Chuck Clark was a founding member of the Atlantic Filmmakers Cooperative (AFCOOP) in 1974. Clark became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2003 because their video recording "CFAT Cabaret" became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

CKDU Radio

  • Corporate body
  • 1975 -

CKDU Radio is a campus radio station at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. CKDU evolved from Dalhousie University's radio club, Radio Tiger, ca. the 1950s. In 1975 the station was renamed CKDU and began broadcasting on 610 AM in the Student Union Building via closed circuit and by carrier-current broadcasting in the university residences, Howe Hall and Fenwick Towers. Harvey MacKinnon was the first station manager and Stan Carew was the first program director. In its first year, approximately 40 students worked at the station as production personnel, news reporters, copy editors, public affairs interviewers, music programmers and on-air staff.

CKDU was granted an FM license in 1985. On 1 February 1985, at 4:00 p.m., the station began broadcasting on 97.5 FM, 24 hours a day. In 2006 the station increased its broadcasting power to 3200 watts and changed its frequency to 88.1 FM. The station is now operated by the not-for-profit CKDU-FM Society.

CKDU is mandated to act as an alternative to public and commercial radio stations, and to be a forum for diverse and under-represented voices, music and news. CKDU is committed to public access to the airwaves and supporting marginalized individuals and communities through their projects and programming. The station is a member of the National Campus and Community Radio Association, and in 1999 and 2011 was host to the National Campus and Community Radio Conference.

Citrigno, Jo-Ann

  • Person
Jo-Ann Citrigno became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 1993 because their audio recording “A Oral History: CKDU/ Halifax” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Churchmembers Assembled to Respond to Aids

  • Corporate body
  • 1988-2003
Churchmembers Assembled to Respond to Aids (CARA) was a multi-denominational organization first assembled on 17 February 1998 with the aim of providing pastoral care to persons with HIV/Aids, education to the community, and consciousness raising with AIDS groups and church people. Among their projects was Morton House, a residence/hospice for persons living with AIDS, and AIDS-LINK, which connected people with AIDS to resources and support. They also started the Clergy Walk for Aids and hosted "Awake the World: A multi-faith, multi-media meditation on AIDS" at St. Matthew's United Church, Halifax. The group officially disassembled in September 2003.

Churchill, Ward

  • Person
  • 1947-
Ward Churchill is an American author, political activist and former professor of ethnic studies at the University of Colorado Boulder who writes about the historical treatment of political dissenters and Native Americans by the United States government. In 2007 he was fired by the University of Colorado investigating allegations for research misconduct.

Churchill, Augustus, Dr.

  • Person
  • fl. 1886
Augustus Churchill was a physician in London, England, in the later nineteenth century.

Christopher, Patrick, 1945-2005

  • Person

Patrick Christopher-Carter was born in London, Ontario, on 30 June 1945. He studied at the Ontario College of Art, the National Theatre School of Canada in Montreal, and he completed a one-year program at the Loeb Drama Center in Boston. Christopher's early career concentrated on acting and included performances at the Grand Theatre in London, the Stratford Festival, the Shaw Festival, the Manitoba Theatre Centre, and with The Grand Theatre Company.

Eventually, Christopher began to focus on directing and teaching. He worked as an acting instructor for the Ryerson Theatre in Toronto and then for Theatre Ontario's Summer School in Kingston. He came to Dalhousie in 1988 as an associate professor where he directed approximately twenty productions, including Cloud Nine, The Marriage of Bette and Boo, Working, Tonight We Improvise, The Art of Success, and Red Noses. He also taught acting and directing courses. In 1994 he founded Shakespeare by the Sea, the only outdoor theatre group in the province, with spouse Elizabeth Murphy.

Christopher retired from Dalhousie in 2005. To celebrate this milestone and his sixtieth birthday, Christopher and Murphy were married on 1 July 2005, after twenty-nine years together. He died shortly thereafter on 17 July 2005. Christopher had one daughter, Zoe.

Christie, Innis M.

  • Person
  • November 8, 1937 - February 9, 2009
Innis M. Christie was born on November 8, 1937 in Amherst, Nova Scotia to Alice and Harold Christie. He was a law professor at Dalhousie from 1971-2007, and Dean of the Faculty of Law from 1985–1991. He was the leading architect of the Nova Scotia Trade Union Act and Nova Scotia Labour Standards Code, a member of the Canadian Anti-Inflation Appeal Tribunal, Counsel to the Nova Scotia Labour Standards Tribunal, and served as Chair of the Nova Scotia Labour Relations Board from 1972 to 1979, and of the Workers’ Compensation Board from 1996 to 2001. He was awarded the University of Toronto Bora Laskin Award for Distinguished Contributions to Canadian Labour Law in 2008. Christie died on February 9, 2009.

Christie Trunk and Bag Co. Ltd.

  • Corporate body
  • 1863-1968
Christie Bros. and Co. was founded in 1863 when brothers Charles and George Christie purchased the former Nelson Mills mill and carriage shop in Amherst, Nova Scotia. The company manufactured carriages until 1882 and began manufacturing coffins and caskets in 1880 when J. Alexander Christie joined the company. In 1893, Christie Bros. expanded into trunks, traveling bags and suitcases, adding other leather products in 1910. In 1913, Christie Bros.’ casket division amalgamated with Dominion Manufacturing Limited of Toronto, and the business was renamed Christie Trunk & Bag Co. Ltd. The factory moved to a new location in the early 1960s before closing in 1968.

Choyce, Lesley

  • Person
  • 1958-

Lesley Choyce was born in Riverside, New Jersey, in 1951. He studied at East Carolina University and Livingston College before receiving his BA from Rutgers University and MA degrees from both Montclair State College and City University of New York Graduate Centre. Choyce immigrated to Canada in 1978, where he worked variously as a farmer, journalist, rehabilitation counsellor and janitor.

His writing encompasses a variety of genres: autobiography, history, fiction, young adult fiction, philosophy and poetry. He has also worked in film, music, radio and television, hosting and co-producing Vision TV's Off the Page with Lesley Choyce. He is the founding director of Pottersfield Press and of the literary magazine The Pottersfield Portfolio. His own work has been translated into Spanish, German, French and Danish, and he has received both the Dartmouth Book Award and the Ann Connor Brimer Award for outstanding contributions to Atlantic Canadian children's literature.

Choyce teaches part time in the English Department and the Transition Year Program at Dalhousie University. Based in Lawrencetown Beach, Nova Scotia, he is well-known as a year-round surfer and a founding member of the 1990s spoken-word rock band, The Surf Poets.

For a current bibliography and further information, see http://www.lesleychoyce.com/

Choudens Pere et Fils

  • Corporate body
  • 1845-2006
Choudens Pere et Fils was a publication company founded by Antoine Choudens in Paris, France in 1845. His sons Antony and Paul joined the firm in 1876 and Paul was the sole manage from 1902. The firm underwent a few minor name changes during its existence, before it was bought in 2006 by the French office of Music Sales Limited.

Chou Wen-Chung

  • Person
  • 1923-
Chou Wen-Chung was born in Yantai, China in 1923 and immigrated to the United States in 1946. In 1949, he was introduced to Edgard Varèse and became his student and assistant during the last years of Varèse's life. Chou completed his graduate work in composition at Columbia University under Otto Luening (1952-1954) and later taught at the university (1964-1991), becoming the head of the composition program in 1969. He established the Fritz Reiner Center for Contemporary Music at Columbia in 1984 and converted Columbia's Electronic Music Center to the Computer Music Center. He also established ties between Columbia University and East and Southeast Asia with the United States-China Arts Exchange, which enabled various programs, including the Pacific Music Festival and the Pacific Composers Conference in Sapporo, Japan.

Chircop, Aldo

  • Person
Aldo Chircop is a Dalhousie professor of law and Canada Research Chair in maritime law and policy. He is Chair of the Comité Maritime International’s International Working Group on Polar Shipping and former director of the Marine & Environmental Law Institute (MELAW), Dalhousie Marine Affairs Program (MAP), International Ocean Institute (IOI) and the Mediterranean Institute at the University of Malta. He was also Canadian Chair in Marine Environment Protection at the IMO's World Maritime University in Malmö, Sweden, and has published extensively in Canada and overseas.

Chipman, Francis Beverley Allan

  • Person
  • [18--] - [19--]
Francis Beverley Allan Chipman, or “Chippy,” graduated from Dalhousie Law School in 1902 and later worked with E.M. Macdonald in Pictou, Nova Scotia. While studying at Dalhousie he served on the Student Union’s Executive Committee and the DAAC’s Managing Committee. Prior to attending Dalhousie, Chipman received an MA from Acadia University.

Chettiar, Nadiya

  • Person
Nadiya Chettiar is a Canadian actress and writer. Originally from Grand Falls, New Brunswick, Chettiar is a graduate of the acting program at Dalhousie University. Chettiar became associated with the Centre for Art Tapes in 2004 because their video recording “Relentless” became a part of the centre’s tape collection.

Chester Playhouse

  • Corporate body
  • 1987-

Chester Playhouse has been a home to the performing arts since it was built in 1938 in Chester, Nova Scotia, by Ken Corkum and Eric Redden. Its first tenant, the Keneric Theatre, operated for thirty years as a cinema, and the building was first used for live performances in 1963, when the Chester Jesters began the first of five summer seasons.

The building was purchased and renovated in the 1970s by Leo and Dora Velleman, who renamed it the Leading Wind Theatre as a home for Canadian Puppet Festivals (CPF). Managed by a board of directors, CPF was a non-profit organization that hosted workshops and puppet productions including The Pirates of Penzance and The Mikado. After the Vellemans retired in 1983 CPF merged with Mermaid Theatre.

Chester Theatre Council (CTC) was founded in 1984 to preserve the Leading Wind Theatre. CTC originally sponsored touring productions, but in 1987 leased the building as a venue for the first Chester Theatre Festival. That same year, Christopher Ondaatje purchased the theatre and leased it to the council and the name was changed to Chester Playhouse. The Ondaatje family donated the playhouse to the CTC in 1992 and in 1993 the theatre underwent an extensive renovation. In 1999 fundraising for a second wave of improvements began. These renovations were completed in two phases, which resulted in new dressing rooms, workshop space, green room and lobby, and an updated electrical system.

The Chester Playhouse is owned and operated by a volunteer board of directors, drawn from the community, who provide strategic leadership to guide the direction of the theatre. The theatre is managed by the Chester Playhouse Society, which is mandated to source, present and promote live theatre, music performance, film and other cultural experiences, and educational and participatory opportunities for youth and adults. To support this, the society seeks to sustainably equip, operate and maintain the Chester Playhouse and has hosted both touring companies and other performers; provided a venue for local performing arts groups, including the Chester Drama Society, the Chester Ballet School, and the Chester Brass Band; hosted workshops for all ages; established the Chester Theatre School program and the Chester Theatre Festival; and allowed the space to be used for local meetings.

Chester Municipality.

  • Corporate body
The register was kept by the town clerk of Chester municipality.

Chester Hotels Limited.

  • Corporate body

Chester Hotels Limited was a small hotel company incorporated in Nova Scotia on June 1, 1959. Victor DeBedia Oland was President of the company, Bruce S.C. Oland was Vice-President, and Don J. Oland was Secretary-Treasurer. Gordon Cowan also acted as interim President of the company. The company was formed to purchase Bryans' Villa Inn in Chester from William F. Bryans. The Inn was renamed the Sword and Anchor Inn and Forbes Thrasher, a well-known hotelier, was appointed manager. The company also ran and maintained the Sheet Anchor House, a separate lodging across the street from the Sword and Anchor Inn.

Forbes Thrasher resigned as manager in December, 1962 and became President of the Innkeepers Guild of Nova Scotia in 1963. Hugh Parker became general manager of the Inn in March, 1963 and various other managers were appointed over the years. The company experienced numerous financial hardships, often operating at a loss. In 1974, the Sword and Anchor Inn was sold to R. David Neima, President of Piper Advertising Company in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia.

Chester Hotels Limited was a wholly owned subsidiary of Keith Hall Investments, a real estate and property management company that was wholly owned by Lindwood Holdings Limited.

Chebucto Symphony Orchestra

  • Corporate body
  • 1975-

The Chebucto Symphony Orchestra was first established in 1975 with a grant provided by the Department of Recreation of the Province of Nova Scotia. In September 1979, the Orchestra gained the support of the Department of Continuing Education of the Dartmouth Schools. The Orchestra is also a member of the Association of Canadian Orchestras.

The Chebucto Symphony Orchestra was formed to provide a platform for career music teachers, advanced music students, experienced amateurs and ex-career musicians to practice and perform music with a full orchestra. The Orchestra brings high level classical music to a range of local and provincial audiences by hosting public performances and events. All players must demonstrate their ability to meet playing requirements before performing with the Orchestra. As a community orchestra the Chebucto Symphony Orchestra has significant participant turnover. Over two hundred community players have participated in the Orchestra since its inception in 1997. Members of the Atlantic Symphony Orchestra have also participated in Chebucto Symphony Orchestra performances to fill gaps in instrumentation.

Chebucto Community Singers.

  • Corporate body
The Chebucto Community Singers is a mixed adult community choir comprised of roughly 65 individuals and has been active since the 1970's.

Chebucto Community Net

  • Corporate body
  • 1993-

Chebucto Community Net is Eastern Canada's oldest running independent Internet Service Provider, which continues to run as a non-profit, community-run ISP dedicated to providing public access to the tools of communication. Originally called the Chebucto FreeNet, and operating on a Sparc 2 loaned by Dalhousie University, it began operating as a text-based host in late October 1993; on 16 June 1994, the name was changed to Chebucto Community Net (CCN).

On 7 June 2013 CNN completed the first phase of its Manors Project, a plan to provide high-speed wireless Internet access to public-run, low-income seniors housing. Joseph Howe Manor and H.P. MacKeen Manor were the first examples of non-profit home high-speed Internet access in Eastern Canada and the first multi-dwelling residences in the Maritimes with full wifi access.

In addition to its wireless service, CCN provides affordable dialup Internet access and supports free, text-based terminal Internet access. It provides low-cost or free communication tools and a home for the websites of dozens of community groups, information resources, neighbourhood organizations and small businesses.

Chebucto Community Net is run entirely by volunteers, including a volunteer board of directors, with the support of community partners including Dalhousie University Department of Mathematics and Statistics; Dalhousie Computing and Information Services; Halifax Regional Library; Nova Scotia Department of Technology & Science Secretariat; Human Resources and Development Canada; and Industry Canada.

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