News

Dalhousie launches “Bag of Ideas” to put campus wellness in everyone’s hands

Dalhousie launches “Bag of Ideas” to put campus wellness in everyone’s hands

A new online resource gathers campus-driven wellness strategies into one accessible space, making it simple for individuals and teams to find, customize, and put positive ideas into practice.  Read more.

Featured News

Matt Reeder
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Dalhousie President Kim Brooks discusses the new strategic framework, how it was shaped by community voices, and what it asks of the university and its community.
Stephanie Paterson
Friday, May 22, 2026
Dalhousie celebrates inspiring alumni whose leadership, innovation, and service are transforming communities locally and globally, highlighting a lifetime of achievement and the diverse impact of this year’s honourees.
Matt Reeder
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
A two‑year deep‑energy retrofit has modernized the Killam Memorial Library’s aging systems, boosting efficiency, reducing emissions, and setting the stage for similar upgrades across campus.

Archives - News

Stephanie Rogers
Monday, February 28, 2022
Dal's Faculty of Agriculture provided an accessible space and volunteers to help vaccinate an additional 1,500 Nova Scotians over the past month.
Yuri Leving
Monday, February 28, 2022
Yuri Leving, a professor in Dal's Department of Russian Studies, reflects on the tragedy unfolding in Ukraine — the largest conventional conflict in Europe since the Second World War.
Theresa Anne Salah
Friday, February 25, 2022
Erin O’Keefe Graham wants to help future leaders and entrepreneurs recognize opportunities and embrace challenges when they come through the doors at Dal's Emera ideaHUB.
Alison Auld
Thursday, February 24, 2022
We asked two of Dalhousie's top experts in the field about Russia's invasion of Ukraine in the pre-dawn hours of Thursday and the wider implications of the conflict.
Julia M. Wright
Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Stories build powerful emotional attachments. We root for heroes, boo their opponents and get anxious for the fictional problem to be solved. Facts have very little to do with it, writes Julia M. Wright.