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The T-Room is a campus bar located in downtown Halifax, Nova Scotia, on Barrington Street between Spring Garden Road and Morris Street. [1] It was opened in 1937 by Fredrick H. Sexton on the campus of the Nova Scotia Technical College, which is today the Sexton Campus of Dalhousie University. [2]
The Faculty of Architecture and Planning building is located at Sexton Campus. Sexton was the former campus of the Technical University of Nova Scotia before its merger with Dalhousie in 1997. Sexton Campus sign. Dalhousie has three campuses within the Halifax Peninsula and a fourth, the Agricultural Campus, in Bible Hill, Nova Scotia. [8]
For several years the former TUNS faculties formed a separate college called Dalhousie University Polytechnic (nicknamed DalTech) but in 2001 the college structure was dissolved and the faculties simply became part of Dalhousie University. Today, the TUNS campus is known as the Sexton Campus of Dalhousie University.
This photo taken on 15 September 2018 at 1360 Barrington Street in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada shows part of the F. H. Sexton Memorial Gymnasium building on the Sexton Campus of Dalhousie University. Date: 15 September 2018, 06:24: Source: Sexton Campus, Dalhousie University (2018) Author: Coastal Elite from Halifax, Canada
A man who violently assaulted his partner several times and tried to control her life has been jailed for five years. Grant Henry, 32, broke his victim's jaw during one of the attacks at a house ...
On Spring Garden one can also find the Main Branch of Halifax Public Libraries, the Halifax Provincial Court, the school of architecture and the Sexton Campus of Dalhousie University (the former Technical University of Nova Scotia), the Halifax Public Gardens, and St. Mary's Basilica.
Fed's Powell gets chance to address trade war, stagflation fears. Finance. Reuters. Broadcom jumps as upbeat forecast quells AI chip demand worries. Food. Food. Southern Living.
Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, last week told CNBC that if tariffs cause a little inflation but address a national security issue, then people should “get over it.” Lutnick echoed those ...