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Archival Description
Dalhousie University Archives File
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Keynote addresses

File contains a collection of family history accounts and journal entries. Also contains a script for Alexander Leighton's keynote address titled "Social science and psychiatric epidemiology: a difficult relationship," and a script for Dorothea Leighton's address titled "Anthropologist by accident."

Alexander Kerr's speaking notes and scripts

File includes a convocation address to the University of King's College and Dalhousie University; an address to the Stationer's Guild of Saint John, NB; an address to the Imperial Order of Daughters of the Empire; an address to the Maritime Conference of the United Church; and a tribute to the Reverend James Ross.

A national asset : [manuscript]

File contains a typed and annotated manuscript copy of an address given to the Halifax Commercial Club in 1946. It also includes newspaper clippings related to the event.

Government and the Law

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.

To Armenian Americans : [manuscript]

File contains the typed manuscript text of an undated address made (presumably in late 1941 or early 1942) by Kenneth Leslie, to "Mr. Chairman, [...] Archbishop Hovsepian, learned doctors, brave Captain [Jim] Chankalian, [and the] Armenian people". File addresses the Armenian cause and the Russian War Relief effort in the months following the Atlantic Charter.

Sermon delivered at Abyssinian Baptist Church, Harlem, New York : [manuscript]

File contains an undated, untitled fragment (lacking the first of seven pages) of a sermon delivered by Kenneth Leslie at Abyssinian Baptist Church, Harlem, New York. The sermon was likely given October 24th, 1943, entitled "God -- Empty Church", a later version of which appeared in the December 1943 issue of The Protestant. File addresses the threat posed by both the Papacy and Martin Luther to the Baptists, stating that Luther was not "for the people" and that "Baptists ... were massacred with the people by both Luther and the Pope". File expresses the notion that since the success of the Russian Revolution and communism, "the opportunity for free religion is here, [...as] religion has not, nor can be free under capitalism". File also addresses the role in Leslie's 'The Protestant' (The pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church, Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., was serving on the editorial board of 'The Protestant' at this time) in ensuring the opportunity for free religion in a American capitalist socioeconomic system that prevents it.
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