Item is a copy of Dalhousie Magazine (Winter 2015), which features a message to the Dalhousie community about the university's response to the "dentistry situation"; an article about light-related research and insight; and a retrospective on Dalhousie theatre and drama.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Winter 2014), which features articles about heart research across Dalhousie; the Institute for Big Data Analytics; and a global panel on the future of universities.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Spring/Summer 2019), which features a cover story on the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences and artificial intelligence.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Spring 2022), which features spotlight interviews with Dal alumni Brice Scheschuk (BCOMM '94), Jeremy Dutcher (BA '12), partners David Hodgson and Sara Fedullo (BENG '21), William (Bill) Stanish (MD '70), and Marriam Abou-El-Haj; an article about the research project "Home Food Gardening in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Lessons for Food Security Considerations"; and a story about research in music, medicine and neuroscience.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Spring 2018), which contains an article about the Killam Trusts, featuring scholar recipients Annette Hayward (1967), Ryan D'Arcy (2002), and Nicole Ward (1997).
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Spring 2017), which features an article on Dalhousie's approaching bicentennary; a profile of Chancellor's Chair in Aboriginal Law and Policy Naiomi Metallic (BA '91, LLB 1994); and a story about Dalhousie's Herzberg Canada gold medallists, Ford Doolittle, Axel Becke and Jeff Dahn.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Spring 2016), which features articles on alumni and faculty who think "outside the box" -- including brain surgeon Gwynedd Pickett; international memory champions Andy Fong (BEng '06) and Angel Lai (BEng '06); Nobel Prize-winning physicist Art McDonald (BSc '64, MSc '65, LLD '97); Dalhousie Elder in Residence Deb Eisan; and Trailer Park Boys co-creator, writer and actor Barrie Dunn (LLB '98).
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Spring 2015), which features articles about Dalhousie and the ocean economy; award-winning chemist Dr. Axel Becke; and research into newcomers.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Fall 2021), which features an article about the fiftieth anniversaries of the Dal Arts Centre, Killam Library and the Life Sciences Centre; and interviews with alumni Mona Challa (MPA '21, BSC '19), Rene Boudreau (BA '15), Paul Gauthier (BSC '94), Rafaela Andrade (PHD '15), and George Cooper (BSC '62, LLB '66, LLD '04).
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Fall 2019), which features articles about Afua Cooper and the Dal-commissioned Scholarly Panel's Report on Lord Dalhousie's History on Slavery and Race; Michael Ungar's resiliency research in the School of Social Work; and the thirtieth anniversary of Breaking Barriers: Report on the Task Force on Access for Black and Native People.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Fall 2018), which contains the article "What Does it Mean to Belong," featuring interviews with Craig Steven Wilder, Mark Tewksbury, Senator Wanda Thomas Bernard (MSW 77), Temple Grandin, Rick Hansen, Senator Murray Sinclair, Patricia Doyle-Bedwell (BA 91, LLB 93), Jen Powley (MPLAN 09) and others.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Fall 2017), which features articles about CKDU radio; the role of Dalhousie during the Halifax Explosion; and food research at Dalhousie.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Fall 2016), which features an article about Dalhousie's ocean research and the $220 million investment into the Ocean Frontier Institute.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Fall 2015), which features articles about Dalhousie research into food supply; cancer research in Nova Scotia; and the impact of competitive sport according to university athletes.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Fall 2014), which features an article about Shin Dong-hyuk's transformation from North Korean prisoner to human rights activist.
Item is a copy of Dal Magazine (Fall 2013), which features an article about Dalhousie's auto-related research and thinking; conversations between older adults and their middle-aged children; and a commentary about fairness in the 21st century, by Dean of Law Kim Brooks, Lisa Roberts (BA 95, MDE 03) and Diane Peters.