File consists of records related to the 1966 exhibition 'Arts for the Home' organized by Dalhousie Art Gallery in connection to the first Halifax-based Festival of the Arts. The festival was sponsored by the Halifax branch of Voices of Women, Records also relate to publicity about local bronze sculpture artist Sarah Jackson.
Records consist of newspaper clippings, correspondence, a Dalhousie newsletter, and a handwritten schedule.
File consists of records related to the scheduling of guest lectures in connection with the Dalhousie Art Gallery for the 1966-1967 academic period.
Records consist mainly of correspondence of Evelyn Holmes (Acting Curator, Dalhousie Art Gallery) regarding organizing, planning, and presenting guest lectures. Additional records consist of a Dalhousie newsletter regarding a lecture presented by Stuart Allen Smith (Director, Beaverbrook Art Gallery), as well as Smith's biography and lecture summaries, lecturer itineraries, newspaper clippings, and publicity materials related to Ladislas Segy (Director, Segy Gallery, NY).
File contains records related to the 14th Annual exhibition of artworks by Dalhousie students, staff, and alumni.
Records consist of a list of works, list of winners for a 'slide contest', correspondence of Evelyn Holmes, a biography of R. H. (Roudolph Humphrey) Whips, and a Dalhousie newsletter.
Fonds comprises records related to Susan Sherwin's professional activities, including publication, research and teaching. Record types include correspondence, contracts, manuscripts, research materials and notes, committee materials, reports, conference materials, and university course records such as syllabi, exams, and assignments.
Subseries consists of Ronald St. John Macdonald's records regarding his involvement with the American Society of International Law. Subseries contains newsletters, reports, programmes, and other materials.
Item is a newsletter featuring a story about architecture students designing a playground structure for the George Dixon Centre; notes on faculty; appointment notes, publication notes; and past and upcoming events.
File contains correspondence with different individuals, including Eli Whitney Debevoise, John Lawrence Hargrove, W.H. Montgomery, Bryan F. MacPherson, Tad Daley, Michael P. Scharf, and others. File includes the American Society of International Law letter to members from 1961 to 1962, and 1971, a notice of proposed amendments to the constitution of the society, a photocopy of the American Society of International Law newsletter of May to July 1986, an issue of the American Society of International Law interest group on the United Nations decade of international law newsletter of December 1992, February 1993, and March 1995, an issue of the American Society of International Law newsletter of January to February 1995, a World Association for World Federation special report of November 1989.
File contains correspondence with different individuals, including Leslie C. Green, Charles M. Dalfen, Alice Desjardins, Ross T. Clarkson, Donat Pharand, K.R. Simmonds, William C. Graham, R.W. MacDowell, A.W. Robertson, M. Debicki, Rene-Jean Dupuy, Gilles Lalande, P.F. Little, John H. Currie, Arch MacKenzie, A.E. Gotlieb, Ivan L. Head, Kenneth Jarvis, Maxwell Cohen, Jorge Castaneda, N.A.M MacKenzie, Paul Mahoney, M.L. Jewett, Stanislas Slosar, Donald J. Fleming, and others. File includes Canadian Council on International Law reports, research proposals, meeting agendas and minutes, bulletins, and other materials. File contains correspondence about John Thomas Peters Humphrey's will and a photocopy of the will.
Subseries contains records that were created and used in the partnership project with the Nova Scotia Agricultural College (NSAC) and the Universidad Francisco de Paula Santander (Columbia) in the development of a 'Training Program in Sustainable Agriculture' at UFPS for both the undergraduate and graduate levels. The program ran between 1997 and 2002. The Universidad Francisco de Paula Santander (UFPS) was asked to play a key role in “El Salto Social”, the social leap forward, in the Santander region of Colombia. New curricula was to be introduced at UFPS, faculty being upgraded and new extension and outreach programs being established with the assistance of NSAC through this project. Other project partners were the Universidad de la Republica Uruguay (URU) of Uruguay and Saint Mary’s University (SMU). This was an Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC) University Program for Cooperation in Development (UPCD) Tier 2 project led by NSAC. NSAC Personnel involved were Norman Goodyear, Bonnie Waddell, Sam Asiedu, and Leanne French.
File contains correspondence with different individuals, including M. Teresa, M.C.W. Pinto, Jacqueline Dauchy, Leo Nevas, Avard Bishop, and others. File includes two issues of the Disarmament Times periodical of September and October 1990 and the issue vol. 9, no. 3, November 1989 of Science for Peace Bulletin.
Item is a copy of Dalhousie Alumni News (Volume 28, Number 2), a quarterly publication by the Dalhousie Alumni Association. Numbering for this new series restarted in 1943. Issue cover has a photograph of President Henry Hicks accepting a gift of Inuit artifacts from Miss Constance MacFarlane on behalf of the Class of '29.
File contains notes and manuscripts written by Alexander Murchison and Norris Turner between 1972–1975 reviewing child guidance clinics and group homes in Nova Scotia. File also contains the June 1973 issue of the Nova Scotia Association of Social Workers Newsletter, with articles by Norris Turner , Patricia Hardy, Ernie Rafuse, F.M. Fraser, Martin M. Dolan, Linda Isitt, and Barrie R. MacFarlane.
Series contains reference materials used by volunteers of the GayLine. Series is divided into two subseries. The first sub-series contains reference and educational materials used by GayLine volunteers covering issues such as homosexuality and coming out, sexual heath and AIDS prevention, alcoholism and substance abuse, abuse in LGBT relationships, parenting, discrimination, legal rights, and women's issues. Materials include pamphlets, flyers, legal briefs and resources, newsletters, essays, and bibliographies. The second subseries contains reference materials relating to the operations of other helplines, as well as information about LGBT businesses and services, community groups, and events in Halifax, across Canada, and in the United States, Europe, Mexico, and Oceania. Materials include advertisements and press releases, pamphlets, newsletters, flyers, information sheets, and directories.
Subseries contains materials collected for reference and educational use by GayLine volunteers. Subjects covered include homosexuality and coming out, sexual heath and AIDS prevention, alcoholism and substance abuse, abuse in LGBT relationships, parenting, discrimination, legal rights, and women's issues. Materials include pamphlets, flyers, newsletters, essays, and correspondence.
Fonds primarily contains records of the GayLine a phone helpline for LGBT Nova Scotians funding by GAE/GALA that operated between 1972-1996. In 1994 the name was changed to the Gay, Lesbian & Bisexual Line. Fonds contains three series; one containing administrative and financial records, one containing recruitment and training materials, and one containing reference materials for volunteers. Materials include monthly and annual reports; meeting minutes; call logs and templates; staff notebooks; correspondence; pamphlets; volunteer training session materials, application forms and guidelines; flyers; legal briefs and resources; newsletters; essays; bibliographies; and directories.
Fonds contains material collected by Ken Clare relating to his interest in Nova Scotia Unions. Material includes photographs of the Halifax Lab Tech Strike in 1975; material relating to the Dalhousie Cleaners strike in the winter of 1978-1979; material from the Nova Scotia Labour Research and Support Centre; and material relating to the attempts to organize the workers at the Michelin plant at Granton by the United Rubber workers.
This file consists of copies of the Nova Scotia Labour Research and Support Centre newsletters from 1978-1981; the organization's draft constitution and statement of purpose; and also newspaper clippings related to this organization. This was a union support group located mainly in Halifax, which included several students, faculty and alumni of Dalhousie.
Item is a copy of Dalhousie Alumni News (Volume 30, Number 3), a three-times annual bulletin published by the Dalhousie Alumni Association. Numbering for this new series restarted in 1943. Issue contains an article about the appointments and reassignment of university vice-presidents.
Item is a copy of Dalhousie Alumni News (Volume 30, Number 1), a three-times annual bulletin published by the Dalhousie Alumni Association. Numbering for this new series restarted in 1943. Issue includes an article on planning for Dalplex.
Item is a copy of Dalhousie Alumni News (Volume 30, Number 2), a quarterly bulletin published by the Dalhousie Alumni Association. Numbering for this new series restarted in 1943. Issue includes an article on the opening of the Life Sciences Centre, as well as an interview with Peter Wangersky regarding Dalhousie's Oceanography program.
Fonds consists of Marjorie Stone's records illustrating her professional involvement with the Dalhousie University English Department, Dalhousie University Graduate Faculty Review Committee, Dalhousie Women Faculty Organization, and the Women's Action Coalition of Nova Scotia. Record types include correspondence, meeting minutes and reports.
Item consists of the January 13, 1976 edition of Ansul, the alumni newsletter for the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University. This issue contains biographical sketches of many renowned graduates of the School, including Emelyn MacKenzie, Vincent J. Pottier, F.W. Bissett, J.G. Hackett, Arthur W. MacLeod Rogers, J.F. MacNeill, N.A.M. MacKenzie, Donald McInnes, F.M. Covert, Ethel Macdonald Hamilton, Gordon S. Cowan, G.I. Smith, Arthur S. Pattillo, John Willis, R. Graham Murray, J.W.G. Macdougall, Leonard A. Kitz, Moffatt Hancock, Peter O Hearn, A.J. MacIntosh, J.W.E. Mingo, Denne Burchell, and J. Chisholm Lyons.
Item is a copy of Dalhousie Alumni News (Volume 32, Number 1), which includes an article on the opening of the African Studies Centre. The official publication of the Dalhousie Alumni Association, it was published three times a year as a supplement to the University News and in the summer in magazine format. Numbering for this new series restarted in 1943.
File contains correspondence with different individuals, including Moffat Hancock, Junos Miklavc, Bernard Adell, Claude Emanuelli, Balfour J. Haley, D.A. Soberman, Richard B. Potter, Gerard J. Wiarda, Antonio LaPergola, Franz Karasek, Herbert Petzold, Janice Paskey, Marc-Andre Eissen, Wolfgang Heinz, Hans Eberhard Wohlfarth, Maggie Nicholson, J. Wolf, George Soros, Alan Stephens, Hans-Peter Furrer, Eva Smith, Franz Matscher, Jutta Brunne, V.S. Vereshchetin, J. Robert S. Pritchard, Luzius Wildhaber, Christine Chinkin, John K. Akpalu, William R. Pace, Adel Omar Sherif, Richard A. Falk, I.I. Lukashuk, Alberto Sanguinetti, Roger S. Clark, J. Callewaert, Rudolf Bernhardt, Rolv Ryssdal, Bakhtiyar Tuzmukhamedov, and others. File includes meeting minutes, reports, handwritten notes, 19 photographs of Ronald St. John Macdonald with a group of unidentified individuals possibly at the European Court of Human Rights in 1993, one photograph of Ronald St. John Macdonald with Rudolf Bernhardt at the European Court of Human Rights' old deliberation room in 1982, and other materials related to the European Court of Human Rights. File contains a copy of the editor's agreement between Ronald St. John Macdonald and Martinus Nijhoff Publisher regarding the manuscript "the European system for the protection of human rights" and Bakhtiyar Tuzmukhamedov's resume.
File contains three issues of Dalhousie Alumni News for 1976. Numbering for this series ceased after Volume 31, Number 2. The periodical had switch from biennial to quarterly in 1960 and was published somewhat irregularly starting in 1973.
Item is a copy of Dalhousie Alumni News (Volume 32, Number 2). The official publication of the Dalhousie Alumni Association, it was published three times a year as a supplement to the University News and in the summer in magazine format. Numbering for this new series restarted in 1943.
Item consists of the May 1976 edition of Ansul (Volume 8, Number 1), the alumni newsletter for the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University. Includes the following articles: "Abortion" by Donald MacDonald, and "Should Society Authorize Maintenance of Life by Artificial Means?"
Item consists of the [August]1976 edition of Ansul (Volume 8, Number 2, with inked correction verso cover), the alumni newsletter for the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University. Includes the following articles: "How Canadian is Canadian Law?" by Ian Mac Leod, "Credit Cards and the Cardholder Problem Areas: An Examination and Analysis" by R.W. Leavens, "Deceptive Trade Practices" by Jane Rush, and "Personal Bankruptcy: a Consumer Protection" by J.R. Matheson.