Textile machinery / University of the Air
- Item
- February 4, 1983
Part of University of the Air
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Textile machinery / University of the Air
Part of University of the Air
Textiles and their applications / University of the Air
Part of University of the Air
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Basic science sessions for residents
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Mid-summer night's dream : [original]
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Problem based learning and learning in a functional context : part 1
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Problem based learning and learning in a functional context : part 2
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Problem based learning and learning in a functional context : part 3
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Laughter is the best medicine : part 1
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Laughter is the best medicine : part 2
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dr. Beecher Weld : [interview]
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dr. Lloyd McPherson : [interview] : part 1
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dr. Lloyd McPherson : [interview] : part 2
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dr. C.E. Van Rooyen : [interview]
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Problem based learning and learning in a functional context : part 4
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dr. Drew Bethune : [interview]
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dr. Carl Tupper, Dr. Atley, and Dr. Larry Swail : [interviews]
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dr. Fraser Nicholson : [interview]
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dr. C.B. Stewart : [interview]
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
The Margaret and Norman Gosse lectureship in cancer
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Psychotherapy session : phobic anxiety disorder
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Laughter is the best medicine : part 2
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
MacDougall, Liz
Debert bunker : by invitation only / Liz MacDougall
Part of Liz MacDougall fonds
Item is a 30-minute video produced and directed by Liz MacDougall while she was a member at the Centre for Art Tapes and a student at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design.
In this video documentary, set outside a military base in Debert, Nova Scotia on 29 February 1984, five women's Peace groups converge to call attention to an Emergency Measures Organization (EMO) test drill coordinated with multiple NATO bunkers simulating a nuclear attack on North America. For this drill, selected officials (329 men and only 11 women) were invited into Debert’s underground bunker.
At its core, NATO’s goal during a nuclear attack was to maintain continuity of Government with no provision for the protection of the population they govern. Outside the bunker, members of five non-violent feminist activist groups point out, through street theatre, rituals, waving signs and shouting, the deadly irony of this NATO strategy to rehearse for nuclear war.
Inter-cut with scenes of the day-long protest are interviews with representatives from each group comically punctuated with news footage, photographs, live radio, and film clips explaining nuclear defense strategy. Throughout this day of action women debunk the NATO strategy which would have us believe we can survive nuclear war and ultimately demand an end to the nuclear threat and to militarism.
The documentary features interviews with John Bouris, Ginny Green, Kate McKenna, Donna Smyth, Deborah Westerberg, and CBC’s Peter Gzowski interviewing Dr. Mutandis (played by Pat Kipping) live on location at Debert.
Documentary video was originally produced on U-matic 3/4 inch tape. MacDougall digitally remastered the video in 2014.
Laughter is the best medicine : part 1
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Dalhousie Medical School convocation
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Debert bunker : by invitation only : [digital video] / Liz MacDougall
Part of Liz MacDougall fonds
Item is a 30-minute video produced and directed by Liz MacDougall while she was a member at the Centre for Art Tapes and a student at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design.
In this video documentary, set outside a military base in Debert, Nova Scotia on 29 February 1984, five women's Peace groups converge to call attention to an Emergency Measures Organization (EMO) test drill coordinated with multiple NATO bunkers simulating a nuclear attack on North America. For this drill, selected officials (329 men and only 11 women) were invited into Debert’s underground bunker.
At its core, NATO’s goal during a nuclear attack was to maintain continuity of Government with no provision for the protection of the population they govern. Outside the bunker, members of five non-violent feminist activist groups point out, through street theatre, rituals, waving signs and shouting, the deadly irony of this NATO strategy to rehearse for nuclear war.
Inter-cut with scenes of the day-long protest are interviews with representatives from each group comically punctuated with news footage, photographs, live radio, and film clips explaining nuclear defense strategy. Throughout this day of action women debunk the NATO strategy which would have us believe we can survive nuclear war and ultimately demand an end to the nuclear threat and to militarism.
The documentary features interviews with John Bouris, Ginny Green, Kate McKenna, Donna Smyth, Deborah Westerberg, and CBC’s Peter Gzowski interviewing Dr. Mutandis (played by Pat Kipping) live on location at Debert.
Documentary video was originally produced on U-matic 3/4 inch tape. MacDougall digitally remastered the video in 2014.
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Psychotherapy session : personality disorders
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Communication techniques in higher education
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Genetic counselling : neural tube defects
Part of Dalhousie Medical and Computing Media Services Audiovisual collection
Item consists of a video by Douglas Waterman. An insert in the U-matic tape box describes the video as follows:
"A static electrical charge is generated by shuffling my clothed feet over an insulator, and by postponing contact with elements having characteristics which would operate as outlets for the charges being generated. The stored charge emits an electrical fields that draws the particles (ashes) toward it. A proportion of the charge from my hand jumps to the particles as the particles rise to and contact my hand. The particles have received an overcharge which opposes it to its source, so is driven back to its resting place. Dispersal time for the particles' energy is (approx. 10 sec.) allowing it to be activated again, initiating another cycle as the particles slowly spread out."
Waterman, Douglas