Browse Items (990 total)

Letters of Marque - XV

LoM_15.pdf
Treats of the startling Effect of a Reduction in Wages and the Pleasures of Loaferdom. Paints the State of the Boondi Roa and the Treachery of Ganesh of Situr.

Letters of Marque - XVI

LoM_16.pdf
The Comedy of Errors and the Exploitation of Boondi. The Castaway of the Dispensary and the Children of the Schools. A Consideration of the Shields of Rajasthan and other trifles.

Letters of Marque - XVII

LoM_17.pdf
Shows that there may be Poetry in a Bank, and attempts to show the Wonders of the Palace of Boondi.

Letters of Marque - XVIII

LoM_18.pdf
Of the Uncivilized Night and the Departure to Things Civilized. Showing how a Friend may keep an Appointment too well.

Letters of Marque - XIX

LoM_19.pdf
Comes back to the Railway, after Reflection on the Management of the Empire: and so Home again, with Apology to All who have read thus far.

Gau-Mukh

Gaumukhtank_in_the_fort.jpg
A photograph of the Gomukh Kund, a tank situated inside the Fort of Chittorgarh in Rajasthan, taken by Lala Deen Dayal in 1895.

Chittorgarh Fort

View_of_Chittorgarh_Fort.jpg
A view from Chittorgarh Fort, Chittorgarh, Rajasthan, India.

Photograph of students working in the Macdonald library reading room

pc1_31_11_022.jpg
Item is a photograph of several unidentified students working at tables in the reading room of the Macdonald Library at Dalhousie University.

Photograph of a crane lifting a computer into the Sir James Dunn Science Building

PC1_14_24_004.jpg
Item is a photograph of a crane lifting a computer onto the roof of the Sir James Dunn Science Building at Dalhousie University. This was the first computer at Dalhousie which was installed in the Sir James Dunn Science Building in 1964.

Tags:

Photograph of a crane lifting a computer into the Sir James Dunn Science Building

PC1_14_24_005.jpg
Item is a photograph of a crane lifting a computer into the Sir James Dunn Science Building at Dalhousie University. This was the first computer at Dalhousie which was installed in the Sir James Dunn Science Building in 1964.

Tags: