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Dalhousie University Archives File
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C.C. Richards : company prescriptions

File contains handcopied prescriptions from C.C. Richards and Company of Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, in a Hilroy exercise book and examination booklet. File also contains photocopied information on prescriptions, sent to him by Jean Palmer of New Brunswick.

College of Pharmacy : History Pharmacy 170C files

File contains a assortment of textual records that may have been related to a course on the history of pharmacy, including photocopies of journal articles, handwritten notes, asetats, short texts on pharmacy history and its symbols, as well as pamphlets and endowment documents.

Materials related to international politics and foreign relations courses at Dalhousie University

File contains Ph.D outlines and course syllabi related to international politics courses at Dalhousie University in thelate-1970s and early-1980s. File includes a course syllabus for Theories in International Relations (P.S. 4520/5520) delivered by Gilbert Winham, an examination example, as well as guidelines for Ph.D comprehensive examinations in international politics and foreign policy.

Pharmacy Examining Board of Canada

File contains textual records pertaining to the Pharmacy Examining Board of Canada, including correspondence, memorandums, income and expenditures, executive committee minutes, reports, news bulletins, and information of examination qualifications.

Political Science 88 tests and examinations

File contains examinations prepared and given by Gilbert Winham in 1965, 1966, and 1967 while teaching at University of North Carolina. File also includes hand-written notes and occasional class letter-grading results.

Winham, Gilbert Rathbone

Seminar in Comparative Government final examination

File contains Gilbert Winham's final examination for a course entitled Seminar in Comparative Government, written May 31, 1961, taken at San Diego State University "while on active duty w. U.S. Navy". Winham's paper responds to the question: "From your study of comparative government this semester, what do you see as the basic limitations or obstacles facing the field of comparative government?"