File is an audio reel containing an interview with Dalhousie president Doctor Howard Clarke on the pros and cons of provincial auditing. The interview was conducted by CKDU's Dan Gawthrope. The episode was recorded on November 7, and was broadcast on November 10 on Title Waves, a CKDU program.
File is an audio reel containing an interview with Barney Savage, a researcher for the Student Union of Nova Scotia, on the Maritime Provinces Higher Education Committee. The episode was recorded on July 9, and was broadcast on the same day.
File contains photographic slides of mackeral (Scomber japonicus) boats in Little Harbour, parr, seals, and whitehead sharks. Several of the slides are labelled as belonging to Jefferey Hutchings, Bob Scheibling, and David Scott.
File contains a letter from Mary Dobie to James Dinwiddie. In the letter, Dobie thanks Dinwiddie for a Carnelian seal ring he sent to her as a gift. The letter was likely written sometime in the 1810s.
Series contains a range of material related to Dinwiddie's scientific interests including notes on fireworks, a list of industrial manufacturers in England, and a newspaper clipping of a letter written by Joseph Priestly. In addition, the section holds documents from Dinwiddie's time abroad such as a translation of Malay laws. Also included is Dinwiddie's university degree from Edinburgh.
File consists of two copies of a photograph of Dr. Thomas McCulloch. The original pastel drawing by Sir Daniel McNee, is dated in the 1840s. The photograph was selected for inclusion in the publication "The Lives of Dalhousie University, Vol. 1" by Peter B. Waite (page 53).
File consists of a photograph of an engraving of the Halifax Tandem Club at the Grande Parade in the 1840s. The photograph was selected for inclusion in the publication "The Lives of Dalhousie University, Vol. 1" by Peter B. Waite (page 65).
File consists four copies of a photograph of Richard Weldon, Dalhousie University's first dean of law, 1883-1914..The photograph was selected for inclusion in the publication "The Lives of Dalhousie University, Vol. 1" by Peter B. Waite (page 139).
Item is a reproduction of a sketch by A. Hendschel (probably Albert Louis Ulrich Hendschel) from Live and Fancy. The sketch shows an old man looking at a plant with a magnifying glass. An open umbrella is sitting on the ground.
File consists of three copies of a photograph of Sir Charles Tupper, a Fathers of Confederation, about 1880. The photograph was selected for inclusion in the publication "The Lives of Dalhousie University, Vol. 1" by Peter B. Waite (page 92).
Item is a photograph of Captain Jock Douglas (or possibly Jack Douglas or Jonathan Douglas) of Maitland. The photograph was taken by Douglass of Brooklyn, New York.
This file contains a manuscript of a story from The Porter of Bagdad and Other Fantasies, which was published in 190; it also contains 2 revised copies of this manuscript.
File consists of two copies of a photograph of the Dalhousie University Science Building. The building was the first erected on the Studley Campus in the 1910s. The photograph was selected for inclusion in the publication "The Lives of Dalhousie University, Vol. 1" by Peter B. Waite (page 219).
Item is a sheet with two drawings of a second floor plan designed to serve as office and lecture spaces before being converted to a law library and eventually a university museum. One plan shows the space partitioned into a lecture hall, faculty room and offices to serve current needs; in the second it is laid out as a law library. There is also a small inset aerial perspective of the new (temporary) Arts Building in relation to the Science Building and Macdonald Library.
Item is an unsigned sketch (likely by President Arthur MacKenzie) for the Macdonald Library that indicates two lecture rooms, a faculty room, offices for the president, bursar and secretary, and coat and toilet facilities for faculty.
Item is a drawing of the ground floor of a building designed to serve as office and lecture spaces before being converted to a law library and eventually a university museum. The plan includes notes regarding future additions and usages.
Item may have been a page in one of Thomas Head Raddall's photograph albums. The photographs are an assortment from T.H. Raddall, Sr.'s military career. The top photograph appears to be related to MS-2-202, Box 51, Folder 16, Item 2 in subseries Thomas Head Raddall's loose photographs, and was likely taken at the Reach Field shooting range in Hythe, Kent, England. The photograph on the bottom left is a duplicate of MS-2-202, Box 51, Folder 20, Item 2 in subseries Thomas Head Raddall's loose photographs, and was taken at Valcartier Camp, Quebec.