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 revised edition of Women and the Law in Nova Scotia published in 1972, and covers a range of legal issues affecting women in Nova Scotia, including marriage, abortion, rape, maternity leave benefits, tenancy law etc. It was written by Susan Perly with research and discussion by the Women and the Law Pamphlet Revision Committee: Deborah Dostal, Elizabeth Glenister, Elizabeth Lennon, Susan Perly and Judith Wouk.
File contains one English and one French copy of the Canadian Human Right's Commission's Survey of public opinion on human rights, one draft copy of the Gay Alliance for Equality brief to Canadian Human Right's Commission, and one pamphlet regarding filing a complaint with the Canadian Human Right's Commission.
File contains handwritten notes, partially in shorthand, written on lined loose leaf paper. The notes appear to be about court proceedings. The file also includes a report of the trial magistrate from the trial of Lorne Edward Pace, who stole a cake that belonged to the Government of Canada in 1964, and a county court docket from September 1964.
Item is a newspaper clipping from an unknown newspaper that contains two short articles. The first article is called "McNab: WIldlife Esperts To Air Views" and is about decisions related to the recreational use of McNab's Island. The second article is called "'A Bit Out Of The Ordinary'" and is about a court case against James Herbert Messervey that was sent to the Supreme Court. There is no author named for either article.
File contains six spiral bound stenographer's notebooks containing handwritten notes about the Warner case. Some of the notes are written in shorthand.
Item is a typed and annotated manuscript of an address that begins: "There are many reasons why citizens should be willing to listen to a discussion of matters relating to the law and its problems."
File contains two typed manuscript copies of a paper prepared for delivery to the Canadian Association of Administrators of Labour Legislation at Halifax onSeptember 9, 1952.
File contains three offprints from The Canadian Bar Review 18 (March 1940); the article contains out-of-date and racist language in reference to Indigenous peoples.
File contains two offprints from Canadian Bar Review 21.10 (December 1943) of an article originally delivered as a speech at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Bar Association held in Winnipeg in August 1943.
Item is a printed speech collection from a Symposium on Legal Education held at University of British Columbia on October 27, 1949 and includes speeches by Erwin N. Griswold, Frederick C. Cronkite, Cecil a. Wright, Vincent C. MacDonald, and D. Hughes Parry.
Item is a report written by Vincent C. MacDonald on behalf of the Nova Scotia Commissioners for the Conference of Commissioners on Uniformity of Legislation in Canada.
Item is a printed script of the speech given by MacDonald at the Canadian Association of Administrators of Labor Legislation's 11th Annual Meeting, which includes introduction and conclusion by other speakers.
File contains three copies of the speech given by MacDonald at Osgoode Hall Law School. The bound speech is an excerpt from a larger publication of collected lectures delivered at Osgoode Hall Law School in March 1960.
Item is a notebook with typed and handwritten notes regarding the BNA and Newfoundland. Some notes contain outdated and racist language in describing Indigenous peoples.
Item is an offprint from The Canadian Bar Review 13.8 (October 1935). The article is a version of a speech given by MacDonald at the Twentieth Annual Meeting of the Canadian Bar Association in Winnipeg.