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              David Laing Dawson headshot
              CA BWGPL LHC-Libr-LibraryLife-1990s-2024.2.2 · Pièce · 1992
              Fait partie de Local History Collection

              Black and white photograph of author and professor David Laing Dawson. Includes a printed biography stamped with "Bradford Public Library" pasted onto the back. Likely included as part of an annual "Mystery Night" event at the Library held in 1992, which the subject participated in.

              The back reads: "DAVID LAING DAWSON | David Laing Dawson was born in 1941 in Victoria, British Columbia. After completing his undergraduate degree at the University of Victoria, he hitch-hiked through Europe before entering the University of British Columbia Medical School. Mr. Dawson performed part of his residency in Canada and part in Cambridge, England. | He spent five years travelling through Northern Ontario as a consultant to mental health services, and is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario. | He is the author of Last Rites (Macmillan, 1990) and, most recently, Double Blind (Macmillan, 1992). In addition to his fiction, he has written many academic articles on topics as schizophrenia, and is the owner of NIDUS, a microcomputer company. | Mr. Dawson lives with his wife and two children in a century-old farmhouse outside Hamilton, Ontario."

              Sans titre
              Author of Marsh Study dead
              CA BWGPL GJ-SB 77-PH26868 · Pièce · 1977
              Fait partie de George Jackson fonds

              "Dr. John R. Brown, a professor at the University of Toronto who studied the effects of pesticides on workers in the Holland Marsh, died Saturday at the age of 57. In April this year Dr. Brown warned than an important (missing part of the article). Dr. Brown qualified as a medical doctor in London, England, in 1953. He received a PhD in applied physiology. After coming to Canada in 1959 he lectured at the University of Toronto in science, environmental health, and industrial health. Dr. Brown was blind in one eye since childhood and became almost totally blind in 1969, but he continued to work with the help of his wife, Helena, and son, David Bartholomew. He was the author of four technical books, president of the Health League of Canada, and chairman of the national committee of employment for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind."

              Sans titre
              CA BWGPL GJ-SB 76-PH26940 · Pièce · 1976
              Fait partie de George Jackson fonds

              "The Right Honorable John Diefenbaker receives a mounted replica of a portion of the press plate used in printing his article "My First Prairie Christmas" which appears in the December Canadian Reader's Digest. Making the presentation to Mr. Diefenbaker in Ottawa are roving editor Robert Collins (left) and Digest editor Charles Magill. In the Digest article, Mr. Diefenbaker describes how his first Christmas in the prairies in 1903 reaffirmed the values he was learning day by day; the warmth of family, the loyalty of friends, the special kind of goodwill that reaches out to those less fortunate."

              Sans titre
              John Lawrence Reynolds headshot
              CA BWGPL LHC-Libr-LibraryLife-1990s-2024.2.1 · Pièce · 1992
              Fait partie de Local History Collection

              Black and white photograph of author John Lawrence Reynolds, taken by "H. Miller." Includes a printed biography stamped with "Bradford Public Library" pasted onto the back. Also on the back is a label identifying the subject and the photographer. Likely included as part of an annual "Mystery Night" event at the Library held in 1992, which the subject participated in.

              The back reads: "JOHN LAWRENCE REYNOLDS | John Lawrence Reynolds was born in Hamilton, Ontario where he attended McMaster University. Reynolds has had a variety of careers: advertising, freelance feature writing, and film writing and direction. His first novel, The Man Who Murdered God, introduced readers to no-nonsense Detective Joe McGuire and won the Arthur Ellis First Novel Award. His other McGuire mysteries include the critically acclaimed And Leave Her Lay Dying and Whisper Death. He lives in Burlington, Ontario."

              Sans titre