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Canada Physiology
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Charles Beecher Weld fonds

  • MS-13-53
  • Fonds
  • [ca. 1924] - [ca. 1979]
Fonds consists of Charles Beecher Weld's correspondence, medicine-related offprints and other textual records, records about community organizations with which he was involved, and photographs of Dalhousie University and Halifax.

Weld, Charles Beecher

Concepts in spasticity : clinical physiological and functional consequences of spasticity : part 1

Item is a videocassette is the second part of a two-part series created as part of the Dalhousie Medical School curriculum. Consultants in its creation were Nathaniel Mayer, M.D., Temple University, Philadelphia, and Edward F. Domino, M.D., Pharmacology, University of Michigan. The video was transferred from a 16 mm film. The video was requested by Dr. Kirby from the Division of Physical Medicine in the Department of Medicine.

Concepts in spasticity : clinical physiological and functional consequences of spasticity : part 2

Item is a videocassette is the first part of a two-part series created as part of the Dalhousie Medical School curriculum. Consultants in its creation were Nathaniel Mayer, M.D., Temple University, Philadelphia, and Edward F. Domino, M.D., Pharmacology, University of Michigan. The video was transferred from a 16 mm film. The tape was requested by Dr. Kirby from the Division of Physical Medicine in the Department of Medicine.

Dr. Beecher Weld : [interview]

Item is a videocassette of an interview with Dr. Beecher Wild, who was appointed to the Dalhousie Medical School in the Spring of 1936 and was the only faculty person in the Department of Physiology for several years. The interview was conducted by June Penny and was part of a series of interviews with alumni, "Dalhousie Medical School Remembered." The interviews were conducted in the interviewees' homes, with a few exceptions; Dr. Wild's interview took place at his home on Waegwoltic Avenue in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The interviews discuss each doctor's memories of attending or teaching at the School, how the School has changed, and impressions of how the medical field has changed over the years. The video was requested by Dean Hatcher from the Dean's Office.

Faculty Meetings

Includes reports on Department of Physiology, Pharmacy, Biochemistry and Anatomy (1950-52). Also includes a change in acceptance of first year medical students (1954) and a report investigating larger medical classes. (1951).

Lab 1 : physiology of muscle

Item is a videocassette of an educational demonstration video, created as part of the curriculum for the Dalhousie Medical School. The video has two parts: "Part A: The Isolated Skeletal Muscle" and "Part B: Frog Cardiac Muscle." The video demonstrates electrical experiments on frog skeletal muscle. The tape was requested by Carol Kafer from the Department of Physiology and Biophysics.

Lab 3 : spirometry

Item is a videocassette of an educational demonstration video, created as part of the curriculum for the Dalhousie Medical School, to demonstrate the use of a spirometre, which measure lung volume in an individual. The tape was requested by Carol Kafer from the Department of Physiology and Biophysics.

Mucosal immunity : physiology significance

Item is a videocassette of a lecture given by Dr. J. Bienstock who spoke as part of the Dalhousie Medical School's Friday at Four series. Friday at Four was a lecture series sponsored and organized by the School that focused on a variety of subjects by lecturers invited to speak about specialized areas of medicine. The lectures were held each Friday by the School from the 1970s to the 1990s. The video was requested by Dr. Putnam from the Division of Continuing Medical Education.

Pathophysiology of peptic ulcer

Item is a videocassette of a guest lecture by Dr. F. Brooks, who spoke as part of the Friday at Four lecture series. This series was sponsored and organized by the Dalhousie Medical School and focused on a variety of subjects by lecturers invited to speak about specialized areas of medicine. The lectures were held each Friday by the School from the 1970s to the 1990s. The video was requested by Dr. Clark from the Division of Continuing Medical Education.

Recording of an interview with Dr. John Szerb

File contains a cassette tape recording of Barbara Hinds' interview with Dr. John Szerb, a doctor from the Physiology Department at Dalhousie Medical School. The interview is about the effect of drugs on the bain in the late 1940's in Hungary. This is the first interview in a series of four. The file also contains a typed script of the intro and outro of the interview.