Item is a photograph of an unidentified person using special goggles in visual research which permits the psychologist to control the type of visual information that is available.
Item is a photograph of an unidentified person staining brain sections to make neural structures visible under the microscope in Dalhousie University's Department of Psychology.
Item is a postcard with a photograph of the University of King's College in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The photograph shows the college's arts and administration building and chapel.
Item is a photograph of a procession of graduates during a convocation ceremony at the University of King's College. The photograph shows the procession leaving the King's College Arts and Administration Building.
Item is an aerial photograph of the University of King's College in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Nova Scotia Public Archives (Chase Building) and Sir James Dunn Science Building (of Dalhousie University) are also visible.
Item is a photograph of Wayne Hankey, director of the King's College Foundation Year Program, lecturing during a tutorial. Hankey and his unidentified students are sitting around the edge of a room with a fireplace and bookshelves. The photograph was taken for University News, Volume 6, No. 14.
Item is a photograph of King's College professor and don Dr. John Godfrey lying on the floor and laughing as an unidentified person steps on him. The coat of arms of King's College is painted on the floor. The photograph was taken for University News, Volume 6, No. 14.
Item is a photograph of an unidentified student in the cubicles in the undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology Department. The undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology building contain well-equipped individual cubicles which give students the opportunity to run their own experiments. Also see PC1_31-35-44.
Item is a photograph of an unidentified student in the cubicles in the undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology Department. The undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology building contain well-equipped individual cubicles which give students the opportunity to run their own experiments. Also see PC1_31-35-19 and PC1_31-35-20.
Item is a photograph of a group of graduates standing in front of building during a convocation ceremony at Dalhousie University in 1931. The photograph shows Robert Clifford Levy; Charles Lamb; Herbert Simpson Lamb; Maxwell Alexander Ross; Alexander O'Handley; Harold Blanchard Price; Fernando Llorens Duharte; Daniel Philip Wallace; Percy Clarendon Henley; James Harold Conrad; Murray Nauss Zinck; Douglas Alvin Conrad; Robert Louis Miller; Russell Blendid Dockrill; Frank Archibald McIntyre; Oswin MacDonald; John James Copland; Rudolph Thomas LeBlanc; Francis Beverley Chipman; Azel Randolph Lusby; Gordon Mitchell Graham; John Killeen McKee; Ronald Joseph MacDonald; A. Stanley MacKenzie (President); Evelyn Christine Blois; Helen Gladys Williams; Jane Porter Smith; Mary Barbara Currie; Enid Elizabeth Johnson; Lillian Elsbeth Sadler; Nelly Beatrice Conrad; Ethel Beatrice Conrad; Doris Gwendolyn Margeson; and Minna Elinor Brenton. Most of the students are law students.
Item is a photograph of a procession of graduates during a convocation ceremony at Dalhousie University in 1931. The photograph shows a lineup of graduates with Professor Macneill at the front.
Item is a photograph of a group of graduates standing in front of Shirreff Hall during the 1926 spring convocation at Dalhousie University. Some of the graduates have been numbered but a key is not included to identify the subjects.
Item is a photograph of a procession at the 1926 spring convocation ceremony at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows J. C. Webster (L.L.D.); G. S. Campbell; I. Gammell (L.L.D.); Prof. H. HUrray; Dean Read; Bishop Correll; Prof. H. A. Kent; Dr. J. Stewart; General Thacker; C. H. Mitchell; G. F. Pearson; D. Cameron; and P. A. Bonet (Consul) walking in a procession by a stone building.
Item is a photograph of a procession of graduates at the 1926 spring convocation ceremony at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows Elinor Barnstead; Molly Beresford; Dorothie Berry; Agnes Bown; Marion Campbell; Marjorie Colquhoun; Margaret Crocker; Josephine Dresner; Allison FitzRandolph; Edith Hallett; Ruby Hayman; Evernia Jensen; Charlotta Johnson; and Vera Knox standing in line outside the Science Building (Chemistry Building).
Item is a photograph taken on the day of the 1925 spring convocation ceremony at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows Irene Viola Allen; Jennie Laura Brown; Anna Helen Cameron; Ruth Errington Campbell; Katherine Hannington Covert; Isabelle Gertrude Crawford; Annie Elizabeth Crowdis; Julia Weir Douglas; Harriett Evelyn Elliott; Marian Margaret Elliott; Hazel Gwendolyn Garcin; Anna Margaret Catherine Grant; Hope Evermore Hamilton; Flora Isabel MacDonald; Alice Ethel MacInnis; Margaret McLeod; Sophia MacLeod; Mary Bell Marshall; Mary Frances Milner; Charlotte Edna Parker; Evelyn Frances Hyslop Rogers; Beatrice Margaret Smith; Jean Church Webber; Pearl Gertrude Young; Maurice Whitman Armstrong; Keith Huestis Butler; Douglas Gordon Christie; Howard Hamilton; Andrew Olding Hebb; Donald Olding Hebb; Edwin Cecil Johnstone; John Donald Nelson MacDonald; Charles Gilmore MacLennan; Harry Stafford Morton; Samuel Bernard Profitt; Victor Perrin Seary; Robert Brodie Taylor; Arthur Dunbrack Yuill; Cyrus Arthur William Grierson; George Craig Laurence; William Cedric Chipman; Reginald Matheson Piercey; Samuel Sheffman; Clarence MacLeod Spencer; and Roberta Bond standing in several rows in front of stone building.
Item is a photograph taken on the day of the 1925 spring convocation ceremony at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows Jennie Laura Brown; Anna Helen Cameron; Ruth Errington Campbell; Katherine Hannington Covert; Isabelle Gertrude Crawford; Annie Elizabeth Crowdis; Julia Weir Douglas; Harriett Evelyn Elliott; Marian Margaret Elliot; Hazel Gwendolyn Garcin; Anna Margaret Catherine Grant; Hope Evermore Hamilton; Flora Isabel MacDonald; Alice Ethel MacInnis; Margaret McLeod; Sophia MacLeod; Mary Bell Marshall; Mary Frances Milner; Charlotte Edna Parker; Evelyn Frances Hyslop Rogers; Beatrice Margaret Smith; Jean Church Webber; Pearl Gertrude Young; Maurice Whitman Armstrong; Keith Huestis Butler; Douglas Gordon Christie; Hugh Artworth Fraser; Howard Hamilton; Andrew Olding Hebb; Donald Olding Hebb; Edwin Cecil Johnstone; John Donald Nelson MacDonald; Charles Gilmore MacLennan; Fridtof Charles Eugene MacRitchie; Harry Stafford Morton; Samuel Bernard Profitt; Victor Perrin Seary; Robert Brodie Taylor; Arthur Dunbrack Yuill; Cyrus Arthur William Grierson; Alden Bernard Hayman; Allan Chaloner Hill; George Craig Laurence; Norman Wilfrid Squares deCarteret; Samuel Sheffman; Clarence MacLeod Spencer; and Roberta Bond standing in several rows in front of stone building.
Item is a photograph of a procession at the 1926 spring convocation ceremony at Dalhousie University. The photograph shows Archdeacon Armitage; Dean Lloyd; Rev. J. W. A. Nicholson; Hon. G. E. Faulkner; W. E. Maclellan; S. A. Morhan; G. A. Burbidge; Prof. Copp; and D. S. McIntosh walking in a procession by a stone building.
Item is a photograph of an unidentified person using engineering equipment in psychological research. The transit in this photograph tracks buoys towed by scuba divers in experiments on underwater navigation.
Item is a photograph of lobsters in "crowded" housing conditions in the Psychology Department. Lobsters placed in close proximity to one another will fight and frequently damage each other. Research done in the Psychology Department has attempted to determine the conditions which cause this aggression and how to eliminate it. The lobster's antennae and stalked eyes all play a role in their aggressive bouts with other lobsters. The amount of aggression shown by lobsters as been shown to be influenced by their "housing" conditions and how "crowded" they are.
Item is a letter written by Thomas McCulloch to certify that James Baxter attended Latin classes at the seminary in Truro during the past three sessions. The letter was written at Dalhousie College, Halifax, on March 3, 1864.
Item is a photograph of the former Halifax High School, which was also the first home of the Dalhousie Law School. Other buildings on Brunswick Street are also visible.