File consists of records relating to the 'Walter R. Sickert Exhibition', organized and circulated by the Beaverbrook Art Gallery and presented at Dalhousie Art Gallery from October to December 1971.
Records consist mainly of correspondence of Ernest Smith (Director, Dalhousie Art Gallery) and staff of the Beaverbrook Art Gallery. Additional records consist of insurance certificates, exhibition loan agreement forms, correspondence between Henry Hicks (President, Dalhousie University) and Wallace S. Bird (Chairman, Beaverbrook Art Gallery) requesting a loan of the Sickert paintings, shipping receipts, and a condition report.
File consists of a catalogue for the exhibition 'Eric Freifield', arranged by Bruno Bobak of the University of New Brunswick Art Center and toured through the Atlantic Provinces Art Circuit. The exhibition was presented at Dalhousie Art Gallery in April 1972.
Catalogue contains a list of artworks in the exhibition, the exhibition itinerary, two essays by Tom Lapierre and Doris Shadbolt, and a C.V. for Freifield.
Items are catalogues for a juried exhibition of printed matter from an selection of international artists, organized by the Owens Art Gallery, Mount Allison University. The exhibition was presented at Dalhousie Art Gallery in April and May 1975.
Catalogues contain images of work in the exhibition, an introduction by Christopher Youngs (Director, Owens Art Gallery), and short biographies for artists included in the show.
Item is a catalogue for an exhibition of paintings and drawings by Mary Pratt, organized by the Art Gallery of Memorial University, Newfoundland, and presented at Dalhousie Art Gallery in June 1975.
Catalogue contains a list of artworks, artist statement, and biography.
Item is a catalogue for an exhibition of paintings and drawings by Molly Bobak, organized and circulated by the Beaverbrook Art Gallery. The exhibition was presented at Dalhousie Art Gallery from November 30 to December 18, 1978.
Catalogue includes images of Bobak's work, a preface by Ian G. Lumsden (Curator, Beaverbrook Art Gallery), a biography of Molly Bobak, an interview between Bobak and Lumsden, and an exhibition list.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Earth Action, a radio program broadcast on CKDU radio 88.1. The episode features a variety of topics including a New Brunswick Organic Farmers Conference, clean cool technology, and Canada exporting food irradiation technology to Thailand. The episode aired on January 26, 1989, and was rebroadcasted on January 30 on The Evening Affair, CKDU's evening public affairs radio program.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Earth Action, a radio program broadcast on CKDU radio 88.1. This episode features the Bioregional Farmer and Scientist Workshop in Organic Agriculture in 1988, which was held in Fredericton, New Brunswick and included both Maine and the Maritime provinces. The episode aired on February 9, 1989.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Earth Action, a radio program broadcast on CKDU radio 88.1. The episode features Julie Galbraith of People against Lepreau in Saint John, New Brunswick. The episode aired on April 9, 1990, and was rebroadcasted on April 16, 1990 on The Evening Affair, CKDU's evening public affairs radio program.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Earth Action, a radio program broadcast on CKDU radio 88.1. The episode features Lois Corbett of the Ecology Action Centre on Point Aconi in New Brunswick. The episode aired on November 6, 1990, and was rebroadcasted on November 12, 1990 on The Evening Affair, CKDU's evening public affairs radio program.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of New World Stories, a radio program broadcast on CKDU radio 88.1. The episode features local artists, including David McGimpsey and Mark Leger, discussing Chow Yun Hat and Mother Talk. The label has a warning that it contains advertising and profanity. The episode aired on May 24, 1993, and was rebroadcasted on May 25, 1993 at 10:00AM.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Title Waves. This episode is on Owl's Head Press, a poetry publishing company run by Allan Cooper from Alma, New Brunswick. The episode aired August 13, 1985 and was rebroadcast September 5, 1985.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Title Waves. This episode features an interview with George Peabody, an author from Kirkland, New Brunswick. Hosted by Judy Dudar, the episode was recorded December 20, 1988 and aired December 22, 1988. It was rebroadcast November 23, 1989.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Title Waves. This episode features an interview with Kathy Mac (also known as Kathleen McConnell) , a poet and playwright from Fredericton, New Brunswick. Hosted by Judy Dudar, the episode was recorded January 17, 1989 and aired January 19, 1989.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Title Waves. This episode features an interview with Fredericton, New Brunswick author Nancy Bauer on her book The Opening Eye (1988). The episode was recorded August 22, 1989 and aired August 24, 1989.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Title Waves. This episode features Kenneth Saunders, an author from Riverview, New Brunswick, on his book The Rectory Murder: The Mysterious Crime that Shocked Turn-of-the-Century New Brunswick. Hosted by Judy Dudar, the episode was recorded December 15, 1989; aired December 21, 1989; and was rebroadcast February 1, 1990 and March 1, 1990.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Title Waves. This episode is the first part of a two-part series on Malcolm Ross, a teacher and author from Moncton, New Brunswick.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Title Waves. This episode is the second part of a two-part series on Malcolm Ross, a teacher and author from Moncton, New Brunswick. The episode was recorded July 23, 1990 and aired July 26, 1990.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Title Waves. This episode features an interview with Kathy Mac (also known as Kathleen McConnell) , a poet and playwright from Fredericton, New Brunswick. Hosted by Liz van Berkel, the episode was recorded April 16, 1991; aired April 18, 1991; and was rebroadcast April 23, 1991 and July 11, 1991.
File is an audio reel containing a recording of Bishop Desmond Tutu's convocation address at Mount Allison University. This reel is the first of two parts.
File is an audio reel containing a recording of Bishop Desmond Tutu's convocation address at Mount Allison University. This reel is the second of two parts.
File is an audio reel containing an excerpt from Bishop Desmond Tutu's convocation address at Mount Allison University. The excerpt was recorded May 12, 1988 and aired May 13, 1988 on Title Waves, a CKDU radio program.
File is an audio reel containing a recording of Professor Michael Clow's lecture on the struggle for sustainable development. Clow, the former news director at CKDU and a professor at St. Thomas University in Fredericton, New Brunswick, spoke at the main branch of the Halifax public library as part of The World We Want lecture series. The recording of the lecture is in two parts (11 min., 58 sec. and 21 min. 35 sec.) and was recorded October 1, 1992. Both parts aired October 2, 1992 on The Evening Affair, CKDU's evening public affairs program, and were rebroadcast March 2, 1993, also on The Evening Affair.
File is an audio reel containing an interview with John Read from the Department of Maritime Studies at St. Mary's University. Read spoke with CKDU's Ken Burke about de-industrialisation in the Maritimes. The interview aired November 28, 1986 and was rebroadcast May 2, 1988 on Title Waves; May 23, 1988 at 4:20 pm; July 12, 1988; July 14, 1988; and September 12, 1988 on Title Waves.
File is an audio reel containing an interview with Sister Kathleen Waters, a Trappist Monk from the Our Lady of Calvary Abbey in Rogersville, New Brunswick. Sister Waters spoke with Roman Catholic Chaplain Edward McSheffrey at Dalhousie University in May of 1987.
File is an audio reel containing an interview with Chris Pekarik of the Ecology Action Centre. Pekarik spoke with CKDU's Samantha Brennan about the No to Lepreau II rally, a protest against a new CANDU (CANada Deuterium Uranium) reactor at the Point Lepreau nuclear power plant in New Brunswick. The interview aired June 15, 1987 and was rebroadcast June 15, 1987 at 5:20 pm.
File is an audio reel containing an episode of Earth Action, a radio program broadcast on CKDU radio 88.1. This episode features the Conserver House in New Brunswick and commentary about the Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station, also in New Brunswick. The episode aired on March 12, 1987, and was rebroadcasted on Monday the 23rd at 5:30.
Series contains research notes, drafts, and annotated copies of scores used and created by Anthony Pugh in the process of writing program notes for various classical music concerts in Fredericton, New Brunswick and Cambridge, England.
Series comprises Ronald St. John Macdonald's records regarding his academic activities, including his involvement as a faculty member of York University Osgoode Hall, University of Toronto, Dalhousie University, and other institutions. Series also includes records and research materials regarding the development of Macdonald's publications, unpublished papers, and other materials.
Subseries consists of Ronald St. John Macdonald's research and publication records, including subject files, book reviews, meeting minutes, clippings, reports, offprints, interview transcripts, periodicals and newsletters.
Subseries contains Mr. Atlantic Canada Leather [MACLeather] society bylaws and resolution, bylaws and policies from leather groups from Ontario and other groups from Atlantic Canada, membership applications, and historical records of M.A.C. Leather.
Subseries contains duplicate issues of Gaezette, a publication which was originally published as the newsletter for the Gay Alliance for Equality. It was published by a non-profit collective between 1984-1995, when it changed its name to Wayves. It existed to inform lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and transgender people across Atlantic Canada of activities in their communities, and to promote those activities and support their aims and objectives.
Series contains materials collected by Al Stewart as part of his involvement with the Halifax-based TightRope leather brotherhood, which was established in the early 1990s, incorporated in 1997, and disbanded in 2007. Series also contains materials related to the Mr. Atlantic Canada Leather [MACLeather] organization, which operated between 1999-2010, and the leather community more broadly. Materials include TightRope administrative and financial records, correspondence, and promotional materials; event cards, flyers, posters, programs, and certificates of participation for TightRope events, MACLeather contests, and leather events across Canada and the United States; photographs of TightRope meet-ups, MACLeather contests, and other leather community events; web print-outs; issues of the Phalia newsletter published by Spearhead leather and denim club in Toronto; erotic gear catalogues; and one copy of the 2002 Men of Pumpjack calendar.
Series comprises records created and collected by Richard Apostle documenting his work in the Marginal Work World Research Program, an interdisciplinary and long-term examination of employment and work settings in the Maritime provinces carried out through the Institute of Public Affairs, Dalhousie University. Richard Apostle's research focused on two projects: the General Segmentation Survey, which involved the collection and analysis of private sector employment data across the Maritimes; and the longitudinal Morphology Survey, which sampled low-wage establishments across Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, and included managerial personnel and employee interviews. Record types include secondary readings and notes; datasets; agreements; recorded interview and transcripts; manuscripts and published papers; meeting records; and correspondence and memoranda.
Series consists of Robert (Bob) William Maclellan and Delphine Caroline (Wallace) Maclellan's correspondence, photographs, newspaper clippings, birth certificate, and other textual records.
Series consists of photographs of the manufacturing yard of reinforced concrete pipe and of a meeting with members of the Halifax and Saint John (New Brunswick) branches of the Engineering Institute of Canada.
Series contains copies of Gaezette, a publication which was originally published as the newsletter for the Gay Alliance for Equality. It was published by a non-profit collective between 1984-1995, when it changed its name to Wayves. It existed to inform lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and transgender people across Atlantic Canada of activities in their communities, and to promote those activities and support their aims and objectives.
Series contains duplicate posters from fonds in the Nova Scotia LGBT Seniors Archive. Materials in series include posters for the Halifax Fetish Ball, Mr. Atlantic Canada Leather [M.A.C. Leather] contests, other LGBT events in Halifax and Montreal, LGBT films, and posters and acetate negatives of posters for events held at Rumours, a bar owned and operated by the Gay and Lesbian Association of Nova Scotia [GALA].
Series contains duplicate copies of magazines, periodicals, newsletters, and zines from the Nova Scotia LGBT Seniors Archive. Series primarily contains issues of Gaezette, Wayves, the Wayves literary supplement Punoqun, as well as zines.
Subseries contains duplicate issues of Wayves Magazine. Wayves was initially published beginning in 1983 as the newsletter for the Gay and Lesbian Association of Nova Scotia, under the name Gaezette. The magazine adopted the name Wayves in 1995 and continued to print content intended to inform and support lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and transgendered people throughout Atlantic Canada until the print edition ended in 2012.
Series consists of several sub-series and contains financial records, meeting minutes, sponsorship documents, bylaws, posters, programs, ephemera, promotional material, and contest notes from Mr. Atlantic Canada Leather [MACLeather].
Series contains posters for the 5th and 10th anniversary Diamond Divas Revue annual drag shows, held in Moncton, New Brunswick. Diamond Divas revues served as fundraisers for various LGBTQ+ initiatives in the Maritimes.
Series consists of Reverend Robert Murray's correspondence and records regarding his involvement with the Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes and his participation in a farewell dinner on the R.M.S. Aurania.