Counselling Services introduces a new online, self-help program.
An exhibition of photography—“Qoriwaynacunas” or "Youth of Gold"—runs November 29 and 30 in the atrium of the Rowe Management Building.
— from the print edition
A hate crime and a community's response are dissected in the DalTheatre Production, The Laramie Project.
Eighty varsity athletes are recognized for their academic accomplishments, according to standards set by the national university sport authority, Canadian Interuniversity Sport.
A project for his first-year management class prompted Terry Michalopoulos to go on a pilgrimmage in northern Spain and raise money for a cause close to his heart.
— from the print edition
Bring in your bulbs! Dalhousie students stage a Compact Fluorescent Light (CFL) Bulb Exchange on Thursday.
Dalhousie's student-faculty ratio gets high marks from students.
— from the print edition
Leslie Ramsammy, the Minister of Health for Guyana, comes to campus to discuss health challenges facing people around the globe.
Friday's fashion show will parade international students' unique national costumes.
The art of Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge is on display at Dalhousie Art Gallery.
Dalhousie music students put on a concert to benefit the Nova Scotia Gambia Association.
Prestigious honour awarded for “leadership in or outstanding contribution to the profession of chemistry or chemical engineering in Canada.”
Fifty-one years ago, Minnijean Brown was one of the Little Rock Nine, challenging the colour barrier at her high school. Today, she still doesn't understand where hate comes from.
Retired law professor and respected labour arbitrator Innis Christie is awarded the University of Toronto Bora Laskin Award.