Item is a notebook kept by James Dinwiddie in Calcutta, in which he recorded his observations and experiments in galvanism and other electrical phenomena.
Item is Carleton Stanley's manuscript copy of Judge George Geddie Patterson's article submitted to the Halifax Chronicle on December 6, 1932, discussing the importance of alumni contributions to Dalhousie University as a result of the funding and construction for the new gymnasium.
Fonds consists of Gerard Veldhoven's published writing, correspondence, and speeches. Veldhoven's writings cover subjects including same-sex marriage, LGBT parenting and families, Pride celebrations, and LGBT social issues. Fonds also contains clippings and correspondence related to Veldhoven's experience as part of the first same-sex couple to be married in Nova Scotia, as well as his activism, writing career, and honours.
File contains correspondence with or about Robert and Monique Gessain. Also contains lecturer registration forms, a manuscript for "Report on the sciences of man: can psychiatry travel?," a booklet titled "Nicolas et Antoine en Nouvelle Ecosse," and 6 photos : 4 b&w and 2 colour; 5 x 7 1/2 in and smaller.
File contains correspondence with or about Robert Gessain. Also includes a brochure for the International Association of Students in Economics and Commerce, photocopied journal articles, and manuscripts for "Avenues to understanding man," and "Lack of HTLV-1 and LAV/HTLV-III antibodies in patients with multiple sclerosis from France and French West Indies."
Subseries comprises manuscripts of conference and seminar papers, testimony statements, and published and unpublished scholarly papers and reports. Records include related correspondence, agendas, notes, newspaper clippings, and other materials.
Fonds comprises records created or collected by Gil Winham in the course of his education, teaching, research, publication and consultancy activities. Record types include course materials; personal and professional correspondence; grant applications; research materials, reports and manuscripts; and committee minutes and notes.
File includes printed and handwritten interview notes, correspondence, printed web pages, government and seafood company brochures, and photocopied journal articles.
File contains an annotated manuscript and a photocopied excerpt from Gary Gereffi and Raphael Kaplinsky, ed., "The Value of Value Chains: Spreading the Gains from Globalization," IDS Bulletin, vol. 32, no. 3 (2001).
File contains Gilbert Winham's research grant application to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for his project titled "Globalization and Global Governance", submitted in spring 2000 while employed at Dalhousie University. File includes several draft proposals. File also includes correspondence between Winham and Marian Binkley, Mathieu Ravignat, John S. Odell, Grace Skogstad, Richard Stubbs, and Mac Destler.
File contains a manuscript titled "3rd draft / Spring 1987" with the penciled annotation "rehearsal draft - final copy"; pages labelled "rehearsal rejects" and "new original masters introduced during rehearsals; and pages of "crits/notes + rejected pages from work toward a rehearsal draft" dated September 1987.
Subseries contains correspondence, research data, and conference minutes and notes related to the Census of Marine Life subcommittee Gulf of Maine Area (GOMA). The GOMA project involved creating a species register of the diverse Gulf of Maine, examining tidal pools, slopes, seamounts, and other underwater landforms. The project, headed by Canadian and American scientists Sara Ellis, Lewis Incze and Peter Lawton, assembled more than 4000 species and microbes native to the area (more than twice the amount previously determined to live in the Gulf). The project used sonar as a means of examining the overall marine ecosystem and species’ interactions, rather than focusing on individual species.
File includes a manuscript dated March 1990 of a paper by Boris Raymond and Richard Apostle: "Information, Information Professionals, and the Information Society: The Use and Misuse of a Concept."
File contains an annotated manuscript, poster, and chronology of events of a staged presentation by Christopher Heide given in Amherst, Liverpool, Yarmouth, Greenwood, Antigonish and Sydney as part of a sales and promotion tour of the Dramatists' Co-op.
File contains handwritten manuscript pages with inconsistent pagination, sometimes clipped together in sections; file contents were divided between individual folders by the processing archivists in the same order and groupings as originally arranged and received.
File contains Gilbert Winham's handwritten course notes related to content analysis and quantitative techniques in foreign policy analysis while a graduate student at University of North Carolina. The notes later served as a basis for an article entitled "Quantitative Methods in Foreign Policy Analysis" which appeared in Canadian Journal of Political Science in 1969.
File contains four manuscript copies of a one-act play by Andrew Merkel titled variously "Harriet Richardson" and "Mrs. Richardson Wins." The latter version contains hand-written edits that appear in the both copies titled "Harriet Richardson." One manuscript lists the author as "Marc Lescarbot" and is two pages longer than the others. The copy typed on legal-sized onion skin paper contains a note that the play was originally presented at the Community Centre, Annapolis Royal, on 5th June 1947. There is also a short note critiquing the play.
Fonds contains business and personal correspondence; materials related to awards received and events attended; and research notes, correspondence, interview notes, manuscripts, typescripts, and reviews of his published writings.
Item consists of Carleton Stanley's typescript copy of Dean Harry Goudge Grant's scathing letter to the editors of the Halifax Chronicle and Halifax Daily Star, dated March 25, 1934, responding to critiques around funding of the Public Health Clinic. "It can be said without contradiction that in no other place in the world is it [the funding of such a medical facility] done by a University."
Fonds consists of correspondence, notes and manuscripts for Harry Oxorn's biography on H.B. Atlee. There are also copies of articles and stories written by H.B. Atlee.
File contains handwritten notes and a printed manuscript titled "Comment on Emil Fackenheim's "Hegel and Judaism," by James Doull, which was published in The Legacy of Hegel, ed. J.J. O'Malley et al. (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1973). Also in the file are copies of Emil Fackenheim's article "The People Israel Lives," from The Christian Century (May 6, 1970) and Shlomo Avineri's "The Palestinians and Israel."
File contains handwritten notes on the difference between Neoplatonism and the philosophy of Hegel; Hegel and the concept of absolute spirit; and Parmenides.
File contains handwritten notes about Hegel's Introduction to Philosophy; Hegel on Anglo-American liberalism; Emil Fackenheim on Hegel; the English Reform Bill; Hegel's Phänomenologie; and other topics.