Dal 200

Dal 200: Reflecting on Dal's anniversary year

Dal 200: Reflecting on Dal's anniversary year

Watch our video slideshow of highlights from Dal's bicentennial celebrations.  Read more.

Featured News

Matt Reeder
Tuesday, December 11, 2018
Dal 200 wrapped up with a singalong spectacular last week, as attendees at the final bicentennial event of the year looked back on some of the 200th anniversary's many special moments and ahead to its legacy.
Matt Reeder (with files from Ryan McNutt)
Friday, December 14, 2018
A milestone as exciting as a 200th anniversary naturally lends itself to thinking big. That’s just what Dal has done during its bicentennial year, creating a legacy as the university enters its third century.
Staff
Thursday, December 6, 2018
What does it mean to truly belong? Highlights from Dal 200's Belong Forum series, which included such world-leading thinkers as Angela Davis and Temple Grandin.

Archives - Dal 200

Chris Benjamin
Thursday, October 18, 2018
Iconic African-American activist and scholar Angela Davis headlined the first Viola Desmond Legacy Lecture Tuesday night, part of Dal 200's Year of Belonging. The emotional evening — which also included the awarding of an honorary degree — was both a celebration of community and a powerful reminder of the long struggle towards change.
Heather Aipperspach
Friday, October 12, 2018
An author and professor, Angela Davis has been an inspiring force in American political activism and a passionate leader for gender and racial equality for decades. Learn more about the influential changemaker and social-justice advocate ahead of her Oct. 16 Belong Forum, part of Dal 200's "Year of Belonging."
Nick Pearce
Wednesday, October 3, 2018
Photo essay: Attendees at Shaun T's community workout event — hosted by the Faculty of Health for Dal 200 — left sweaty, tired and inspired.
Ryan McNutt
Wednesday, October 3, 2018
Dalhousie’s Ignite dinner brought more than 1,200 alumni, friends, donors and community members to the Halifax Convention Centre to kick off the university’s third century with a celebration of creativity and inspiration in all its forms — from the scientist’s lab to the performing artist’s stage.
Chris Benjamin
Friday, September 28, 2018
Temple Grandin is perhaps both the world's best known animal scientist and the world's most famous person with autism. At her Dalhousie Belong Forum, she discussed what links those two together — and how important it is to encourage different styles of learning and thinking.