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Stanley, Carleton Wellesley Text
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Retrospect and prospect

Item is a manuscript copy of an address given by Carleton Stanley at the Canadian Club in Saint John, New Brunswick, on June 13, 1938.

Address to Commercial Club, Hx, Jan. 1937

Item is a manuscript copy of an address made to members of the Halifax Commercial Club in which Carleton Stanley appeals to their social and political consciences to address the slums and improve the schools of Halifax.

The universities and the international outlook : [offprint]

Item consists of an offprint of an article title "The Universities and the International Outlook", written by Carleton Stanley, and reprinted from the University of Toronto Quarterly, Vol. V, No. 2, January, 1936. Speech was originally delivered before the American Association of Colleges in May 1934.

The universities and the international outlook

Item is a manuscript copy of an article published in the Toronto University Quarterly based on the substance of a speech delivered by Carleton Stanley to the National Association of State Universities in Washington, DC, in November 1935.

President's address : Rotary Club

Item is a typed copy of Carleton Stanley's address to the Rotary Club at a luncheon at the Lord Nelson Hotel on January 21, 1936. His subject was "that forgotten man — the Englishman."

Professors and governors

Item is a manuscript copy of an address given by Carleton Stanley at a dinner held on October 28, 1936 to professors and governors of Dalhousie University. The focus of his speech is the events and tendencies of the university during the previous five years and a glimpse into the possibilities of the next fifty.

An appeal to the heads of the Maritime colleges

Item is a manuscript copy of an appeal made to the heads of the Maritime colleges to pay heed to the 1921 Learned-Sills Report, which called for a merger of Maritime universities at Halifax. A handwritten note on the first page indicates that the appeal "resulted in unanimous support of [sending?] an appeal to local governments [and] Med/Dental schools."

The schoolmaster

Item is a handwritten address about the university and its professoriate made by Carleton Stanley in Yarmouth in January 1935.

Address to students, March 12, 1935

Item is a manuscript copy of an address given by Carleton Stanley to the male students at Dalhousie University. Appended is an unrelated announcement for publication in The Halifax Herald about a public lecture by J.E. Barton, Headmaster of Bristol Grammar School.

Present predicaments

Item is a manuscript copy of an address given by Carleton Stanley at a University of Maine convocation ceremony on June 10, 1935.

Carleton Stanley's address in Sussex, New Brunswick

Item consists of a typescript copy of a speech delivered by Carleton Stanley in Sussex, New Brunswick, on June 25, 1934, praising the quality of New Brunswick students at Dalhousie, a toast to the "dullest of all dull subjects" -- the state of education -- in the Maritime Provinces.

Carleton Stanley's address to New York Dalhousie alumni

Item consists of a typescript copy of an address delivered by Carleton Stanley before Dalhousie University alumni at an event in New York, May 4, 1934, discussing the financial situation at Dalhousie during a period of worldwide economic tumult. Speech was initially prepared May 2, 1934.

Universities and the international outlook : Carleton Stanley's address before the American Association of Colleges

Item consists of an annotated typescript copy of a speech delivered by Carleton Stanley before the American Assocation of Colleges in May 1934, under the title "The Universities and the International Outlook". A version of this speech later appeared in the January 1936 issue of the University of Toronto Quarterly.

Carleton Stanley's address before Dalhousie graduates at a Boston Alumni event

Item consists of a typescript copy of Carleton Stanley's address Boston-based alumni from Dalhousie University, at the Hotel Westminster on April 12, 1934, addressing the difficulties of constructing a university budget during times of economic upheaval, what programs grants and alumni donations have aided at Dalhousie, as well as the threats posed by wars which "pend and threaten".
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