Dalhousie University Archives Reference Files: Dalhousie History
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The University of King's College Has a Long and Rich History
THE UNIVERSITY OF KING’S COLLEGE (Founded A.D. 1789) C A L E N D A R 2 0 1 3 / 2 0 1 4 Bachelor of Arts (Minor, Major and Honours) Bachelor of Music Bachelor of Science (Minor, Major and Honours) (granted by Dalhousie University) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with Contemporary Studies) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with Early Modern Studies) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with History of Science & Technology) Bachelor of Science (Combined Honours with History of Science & Technology) Master of Journalism Master of Fine Arts (Creative Non-Fiction) (granted jointly by Dalhousie University and the University of King’s College) Bachelor of Journalism (Honours) Bachelor of Journalism (Combined Honours with a Second Subject) Bachelor of Journalism (One year after first degree) (granted by the University of King’s College) HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA 224th Session IMPORTANT NOTICES Regulations: Students are advised that the matters dealt with in this Calendar are subject to continuing review and revision. This Calendar is printed some months before the year for which it is intended to provide guidance. Students are further advised that the content of this Calendar is subject to change without notice, other than through the regular processes of Dalhousie University/University of King’s College, and every student accepted for registration in the University shall be deemed to have agreed to any such deletion, revision or addition, whether made before or after said acceptance. Additionally, students are advised that this Calendar is not an all-inclusive set of rules and regulations but represents only a portion of the rules and regulations that will govern the student’s relationship with the University. -
Master of Information Management Application to the Province of Ontario
Master of Information Management Application to the Province of Ontario Minister of Training Colleges and Universities for Ministerial Consent under the Post-Secondary Education Choice and Excellence Act, 2000 For Dalhousie University’s MIM Program Submitted by the Centre for Advanced Management Education (CFAME) Dalhousie University May 2015 0 1. Introduction Appendix 1.1. Organization and Program Information Full Legal Name of Organization: Dalhousie University Operating Name of Organization: Dalhousie University Common Acronym of Organization (if applicable): DAL URL for Organization Homepage (if applicable): www.dal.ca Proposed Degree Nomenclature: Master of Information Management Location (specific address) where program to be delivered (each location requires a location- specific consent from the Minister): Halifax, NS; Ottawa, ON Contact Information: Person Responsible for this Submission: Name/Title: Dr. Martine Durier - Copp, Director, Centre for Advanced Management Education Administrative Full Mailing Address: Dalhousie University Faculty of Management 6100 University Avenue, Suite 3100 Halifax, NS B3H 4R2 Telephone: (902) 494-3477 Fax: (902) 494-5164 ESite-mail: Visit martine.durier Coordinator -([email protected] different from above):** Name/Title: Full Mailing Address: Telephone: Fax: E-mail: Anticipated Start Date: Program launched in 2008 Anticipated Enrolment for the first 4 years of the program: The program was originally launched in 2008 (part-time/on-line/blended) Enrolment intakes are based on the last four years’ annual enrolment: Academic Year 2011/12 = 14 2012/13 = 20 2013/14 = 23 2014/15 = 14 Year 3- Fall 2013 = 1 3 7 ; Year 4 Fall 2014 = 1291 Initial Tuition Fee: $ 3000.00/course 4 cr hrs (9 Courses) (Part Time studies ) * The person who is the primary contact for the submission on matters pertaining to proposal content and communications from the Postsecondary Education Quality Assessment Board. -
Academic Calendar 18-19 Final.Fm
THE UNIVERSITY OF KING’S COLLEGE (Founded A.D. 1789) CALENDAR 2018/2019 Bachelor of Arts (Minor, Major and Honours) Bachelor of Music Bachelor of Science (Minor, Major and Honours) (granted by Dalhousie University) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with Contemporary Studies) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with Early Modern Studies) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with History of Science & Technology) Bachelor of Science (Combined Honours with Contemporary Studies) Bachelor of Science (Combined Honours with Early Modern Studies) Bachelor of Science (Combined Honours with History of Science & Technology) Master of Journalism Master of Fine Arts (Creative Non-Fiction) (granted jointly by Dalhousie University and the University of King’s College) Bachelor of Journalism (Honours) Bachelor of Journalism (Combined Honours with a Second Subject) Bachelor of Journalism (One year after first degree) (granted by the University of King’s College) HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA 230th Session IMPORTANT NOTICES Regulations: Students are advised that the matters dealt with in this Calendar are subject to continuing review and revision. This Calendar is printed some months before the year for which it is intended to provide guidance. Students are further advised that the content of this Calendar is subject to change without notice, through the regular processes of Dalhousie University/University of King’s College, and every student accepted for registration in the University shall be deemed to have agreed to any such deletion, revision or addition, whether made before or after said acceptance. Additionally, students are advised that this Calendar is not an all-inclusive set of rules and regulations but represents only a portion of the rules and regulations that will govern the student’s relationship with the University. -
John Thomas Bulmer, Lawyer, Librarian and Social Reformer
Dalhousie Law Journal Volume 13 Issue 1 Article 8 5-1-1990 "His whole life was one of continual warfare": John Thomas Bulmer, Lawyer, Librarian and Social Reformer Philip Girard Dalhousie University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/dlj Part of the Legal History Commons Recommended Citation Philip Girard, ""His whole life was one of continual warfare": John Thomas Bulmer, Lawyer, Librarian and Social Reformer" (1990) 13:1 Dal LJ 376. This Commentary is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Schulich Law Scholars. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dalhousie Law Journal by an authorized editor of Schulich Law Scholars. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Philip Girard* "His whole life was one of continual warfare": John Thomas Bulmer, Lawyer, Librarian and Social Reformer1 On a clear cold day in January, 1899 a ship entered Halifax harbour with a rather unusual cargo. Some 5,000 Doukhobours fleeing persecution in Czarist Russia made a brief stop in the port before proceeding to their ultimate destination in the Canadian West. In spite of the brevity of their stay, a number of Haligonians boarded the vessel to express their good wishes. A lawyer deputed by a workmen's association to address the throng spoke through an interpreter, but his speech did not contain the clichs usually retailed on such occasions. You bring to Canada something more needed in this country than new immigrants - men who will stand by their principles no matter how much suffering it costs them. -
The Dalhousie University Model
Transactions of the Burgon Society Volume 9 Article 10 1-1-2009 The ‘Canadian Tradition’ of Academical Costume in Nova Scotia: The Dalhousie University Model John N. Grant St. Francis Xavier University Follow this and additional works at: https://newprairiepress.org/burgonsociety Recommended Citation Grant, John N. (2009) "The ‘Canadian Tradition’ of Academical Costume in Nova Scotia: The Dalhousie University Model," Transactions of the Burgon Society: Vol. 9. https://doi.org/10.4148/2475-7799.1078 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by New Prairie Press. It has been accepted for inclusion in Transactions of the Burgon Society by an authorized administrator of New Prairie Press. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Transactions of the Burgon Society, 9 (2009), pages 200–212 The ‘Canadian Tradition’ of Academical Costume in Nova Scotia: The Dalhousie University Model by John N. Grant The eleven degree-granting institutions in Nova Scotia represent a variety of sys- tems and traditions of academical costume. By 1807, the University of King’s Col- lege (1789), the oldest university in Nova Scotia, borrowed the academical dress of Oxford University,1 while l’Université Sainte-Anne, where the use of cap, toge, and épitoge is comparatively recent, is in the tradition of French and Quebec-based institutions.2 Several schools, including St Mary’s University, St Francis Xavier University, Mount St Vincent University, and the Nova Scotia Agricultural College, follow the rules of the Intercollegiate Code of Academic Costume as developed in the United States in the 1890s.3 Other schools follow the ‘Canadian tradition’ of academical dress that Humphries describes.4 It could be argued, however, that this was, and is, in fact, a trans-Atlantic mi- gration of the British academical tradition. -
Master of Public Administration
MPA Management Application to the Province of Ontario Minister of Training Colleges and Universities for Ministerial Consent under the Post-Secondary Education Choice and Excellence Act, 2000 For Dalhousie University’s MPA (Management) Program Submitted by the Centre for Advanced Management Education (CFAME) Dalhousie University April 2015 Table of Contents Appendix 1.2 Table of Contents 1. Organization and Program Information ........................................................................................... 1 Appendix 1.1. Submission Title Page ................................................................................................... 1 Appendix 1.2 Table of Contents ......................................................................................................... 1a 2. Executive Summary ........................................................................................................................... 3 Appendix 2.1 Executive Summary ....................................................................................................... 3 3. Program Abstract .............................................................................................................................. 6 Appendix 3.1 Program Abstract ............................................................................................................ 6 4. Program Degree- Level Standard ..................................................................................................... 7 Appendix 4.1 Degree Level Summary ................................................................................................. -
The University of King's College Has a Long and Rich History
THE UNIVERSITY OF KING’S COLLEGE (Founded A.D. 1789) C A L E N D A R 2 0 1 2 / 2 0 1 3 Bachelor of Arts (Concentration, Major and Honours) Bachelor of Music Bachelor of Science (Concentration, Major and Honours) (granted by Dalhousie University) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with Contemporary Studies) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with Early Modern Studies) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with History of Science & Technology) Bachelor of Science (Combined Honours with History of Science & Technology) Master of Journalism (granted jointly by Dalhousie University and the University of King’s College) Bachelor of Journalism (Honours) Bachelor of Journalism (Combined Honours with a Second Subject) Bachelor of Journalism (One year after first degree) (granted by the University of King’s College) HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA 224th Session IMPORTANT NOTICES Regulations: Students are advised that the matters dealt with in this Calendar are subject to continuing review and revision. This Calendar is printed some months before the year for which it is intended to provide guidance. Students are further advised that the content of this Calendar is subject to change without notice, other than through the regular processes of Dalhousie University/University of King’s College, and every student accepted for registration in the University shall be deemed to have agreed to any such deletion, revision or addition, whether made before or after said acceptance. Additionally, students are advised that this Calendar is not an all-inclusive set of rules and regulations but represents only a portion of the rules and regulations that will govern the student’s relationship with the University. -
Uniust ·Ring Brings $700 Fine
Uniust ·ring brings $700 fine by Allan Zdunich Gazette on Tuesday that the $700.00 The Dalhousie SUB Operations that MacDougall was to be paid as department will be fined $700.00 for compensation had come from the unjustly firing Ken MacDougall the SUB ·Operations Staff Salaries Dalhousie Gazette learned Tuesday. budget. The Gazette learned that in an Not clear why the money should unanimous decision the three per come from a salaries budget when it son Grievance Committee decided was a fine Dalhousie Gazette Editor that MacDougall had been unjustly Allan Zdunich asked Graham "Does tired and the Student Union would that seem Reasonable?" Graham be ordered to pay him $700.00 as replied "Well, yes it does." compensation. If the Committee decides that As grounds for firing MacDougall, Dalhousie must pay the costs of the the Grievance Committee was told legal action, Graham told Zdunich that "He was attempting to organize that the money would come from a union among the Grawood staff." the Student Council Legal Costs Provincial labor laws protect the budget. right of an employee to organize a Although the report will not be union and it is believed to be this made public until later in the week violation of the labor code that has the Dalhousie Gazette was told that forced the Student Union to make MacDougall received his money restitution. before Christmas MacDougall for his part, rather Grievance Committee Chairper· than dealing with the specifics of son Mildred Royer refused to his firing, attempted to show that disclose the contents of the report the body that fired him had never before it is made public, although done anything right, and the firing she did acknowledge that some of of him continued that tradition. -
Drive for 25
Looking for power boost CKDU- Drive for 25 by James McDowell band concert at the Pub Fla comparable to that of other char ast Saturday, Dalhousie's mingo featuring Willy Hop, Sus itable organiztions, not even famed radio station pect Device, 100 Flowers, Black that of PBS. CKDU is local com L CKDU began its third Pond, and others. Saturday, Feb. munity and friends, providing annual fundraising drive. The sta Wth, will be CKDU's benefit radio that is not only alternative tion, which relies on community concert feturing six local bands but specialized. Everyone is funding, hopes to reach this (the Five Loggers and Love of invited to get involved in the sta year's goal of $25,000. Gods, to name a couple) for $5 in tion, and this positive spirit is The collected revenue is used the Dunn theatre. reflected in the upbeat tempo of to maintain equipment and pay The relationship between the Drive for Twenty-Five. Dial the few members of the staff who CKDU and its listeners is not and donate, 424-8812. are not volunteers. The station best known for offerin('alterna tive" programming is staffed by Black History Month and BU~F more than 175 people, only eight of whom receive any kind of payment. Combat racism Past fundraising drives have been successful. Last year more by Tony Tracy As well, BUF assists people than $20,000 was raised, a figure ebruary is Black History who complain of being victim· ~ that makes this year's "Drive for Month, being celebrated ized by racial discrimination by < Twenty-Five" a reasonable goal. -
Dalhousie's Student Newspaper Since 1868 Classifieds
Dalhousie's Student Newspaper since 1868 Classifieds Stuck On A Tough Essay? EssayExperts.ca can help! Expert Dalhousie writers will help you with editing, writing, graduate school applications. We'll help you on any subject- visit us 24/7 at tudent EssayExperts.ca Union ~ ......................................... SECRETARY/TYPIST Qualified and experienced secretary/typist, working in her home, would love to put together your job-winning resume, type your latest thesis, formulate your research information or just type up your notes for reasonable rates. Do you have a book in you? You've found the right location to collate all your thoughts on paper!! Contact: [email protected] ~ ......................................... To place a classified contact our advertising department at: 494-6532 Monday Football Night Win A rip To An NFL Game Tuesday Available for Society and Group Jjookings Wednesday [) !l :lll )\j iI ; I\ i! J II i: 2 ! Win$100 Cash Ffaa Football tournament Mon~a~ afternoonl Su tn s oy • oft r 0 SU • ay Available for Society and Group ookin s Editorial REPO KEMPT Editor·ln..Chief "Don't worry, honey. I'll make su re you never counter may well be struggling to work her way through ing government awareness" of the student debt crisis. have to work at Tim Horton's, because I'll make sure school. Many students, including myself, work part- Is building a giant Lego wall for one day outside of our you get an education." time (or even full-time) to try and deal with the high cost legislature going to be any more effective than student of liv1ng away from home while going to university. -
40 Years of Activism: Working for a Better Dalhousie
40 Years of Activism: Working for a Better Dalhousie Celebrating DFA’s 40th year as a certified bargaining agent TERRITORIAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENT We would like to begin by acknowledging that we are in Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq People. This territory is covered by the “Treaties of Peace and Friendship” which Mi’kmaq and Maliseet people first signed with the British Crown in 1725. The treaties did not deal with surrender of lands and resources but in fact recognized Mi’kmaq and Maliseet title and established the rules for what was to be an ongoing relationship between nations. SPECIAL THANKS Thank you to those who wrote articles: David Westwood, David Robinson, Robert Rodger, Ray Larkin, Dale Poel, Jane Fee, Pierre Stevens, Mandy Kay-Raining Bird, David Mensink, Debbie Mellish, Catrina Brown, Darren Abramson, Faye Woodman, and Julia M. Wright. Thank you to our former Presidents who submitted their President Recollections: Sue Sherwin, Chris Axworthy, Marcia Ozier, David Lewis, David Tindall, Colin Stuttard, Jane Fee, Ian Flint, Kevin Grundy, Helen Powell, Jerome Singleton, David Mensink, Terry Mitchell, Carrie Dawson, Catrina Brown, and Laurene Rehman. Thanks to Shirley Vail, Digitization Coordinator, Dalhousie University Archives, for helping us gather information and articles about the DFA; and thanks to Randy Barkhouse, Association of Dalhousie Retirees and Pensioners, for his help in contacting many of our former DFA presidents. Thank you to Catherine Wall, DFA Communications Officer, for editing and coordinating -
The University of King's College Has a Long and Rich History
THE UNIVERSITY OF KING’S COLLEGE (Founded A.D. 1789) CALENDAR 2016/2017 Bachelor of Arts (Minor, Major and Honours) Bachelor of Music Bachelor of Science (Minor, Major and Honours) (granted by Dalhousie University) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with Contemporary Studies) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with Early Modern Studies) Bachelor of Arts (Combined Honours with History of Science & Technology) Bachelor of Science (Combined Honours with Contemporary Studies) Bachelor of Science (Combined Honours with Early Modern Studies) Bachelor of Science (Combined Honours with History of Science & Technology) Master of Journalism Master of Fine Arts (Creative Non-Fiction) (granted jointly by Dalhousie University and the University of King’s College) Bachelor of Journalism (Honours) Bachelor of Journalism (Combined Honours with a Second Subject) Bachelor of Journalism (One year after first degree) (granted by the University of King’s College) HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA 228th Session IMPORTANT NOTICES Regulations: Students are advised that the matters dealt with in this Calendar are subject to continuing review and revision. This Calendar is printed some months before the year for which it is intended to provide guidance. Students are further advised that the content of this Calendar is subject to change without notice, other than through the regular processes of Dalhousie University/University of King’s College, and every student accepted for registration in the University shall be deemed to have agreed to any such deletion, revision or addition, whether made before or after said acceptance. Additionally, students are advised that this Calendar is not an all-inclusive set of rules and regulations but represents only a portion of the rules and regulations that will govern the student’s relationship with the University.