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												Alumni Association News Director’Sdiary
. “This spells it out” Buslnesvnenconcerned inmaking esecutive Thismonthly diagnosis of thecurrent (‘ana- decisionsoften make reference to the authorita- dian economic scene is prepared at the B of XI’S tiveBusiness Review published monthly by the Head OfFicc by economistshaving the sources Bankof Montreal. Experience has taught them andthe esperience of Canada‘sfirst bank at theycan rely onthis concise report for factual their disposal. If you feel it would be of value in informationand for accurateinterpretation of your work, anote to the Business Development econonlicdevelopments alfecting their particu- Division,Bank of hlontreal, P.O. Box 6002, lar business interests. Xlontreal, will put you on our regular mailing list. WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN EVERYWALK OF LIFE SINCE 1817 Volume 17, No. 3- Autumn, 1963 CONTENTS EDITOR 4-8 "Before wecan help consfrucfively . ." Frances Tucker, BA'50 9 UniversityNews BUSINESS MANAGER 11 Sfudenf News Gordon A. Thom, BCom'56, MBA(Maryland1 12The New Freddy Wood Theatre EDITORIALCOMMITTEE 14 Man of Two Worlds:Dean MacPhee John L. Gray, BSA39, chairman Inglis (Bill) Bell, BA'51, BLS(Tor.1 16The Beedles in Kuala Lumpur Mrs. T. R. Boggs, BA'29 17 Commerce FacultyinMalaya Mrs. J. J. Cvetkovich, BA'57 19-26Homecoming 1963 Stanley Evans, BA'41, BEd'44 Allan Fotheringham, BA'54 27 AlumniAssociation News Cecil Hacker, BA'33 28Alumni Annual Giving Himie Koshevoy, '32 30 Alumnaeand Alumni Frank P. Levirs, BA'26, MA31 J. A. (Jock) Lundie, BA'24 42Alumni Association Directory Publishedquarferly by !he AlumniAssociafion of !he University of Brifish Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. Busi- ness andediforial offices: 252 Brock Hall, U.B.C., Van- couver 8, B.C. - 
												
												By Anne Millar
Wartime Training at Canadian Universities during the Second World War Anne Millar Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctorate of Philosophy degree in history Department of History Faculty of Arts University of Ottawa © Anne Millar, Ottawa, Canada, 2015 ii Abstract This dissertation provides an account of the contributions of Canadian universities to the Second World War. It examines the deliberations and negotiations of university, government, and military officials on how best to utilize and direct the resources of Canadian institutions of higher learning towards the prosecution of the war and postwar reconstruction. During the Second World War, university leaders worked with the Dominion Government and high-ranking military officials to establish comprehensive training programs on campuses across the country. These programs were designed to produce service personnel, provide skilled labour for essential war and civilian industries, impart specialized and technical knowledge to enlisted service members, and educate returning veterans. University administrators actively participated in the formation and expansion of these training initiatives and lobbied the government for adequate funding to ensure the success of their efforts. This study shows that university heads, deans, and prominent faculty members eagerly collaborated with both the government and the military to ensure that their institutions’ material and human resources were best directed in support of the war effort and that, in contrast to the First World War, skilled graduates would not be heedlessly wasted. At the center of these negotiations was the National Conference of Canadian Universities, a body consisting of heads of universities and colleges from across the country. - 
												
												From the Ground up the First Fifty Years of Mccain Foods
CHAPTER TITLE i From the Ground up the FirSt FiFty yearS oF mcCain FoodS daniel StoFFman In collaboratI on wI th t ony van l eersum ii FROM THE GROUND UP CHAPTER TITLE iii ContentS Produced on the occasion of its 50th anniversary Copyright © McCain Foods Limited 2007 Foreword by Wallace McCain / x by All rights reserved. No part of this book, including images, illustrations, photographs, mcCain FoodS limited logos, text, etc. may be reproduced, modified, copied or transmitted in any form or used BCE Place for commercial purposes without the prior written permission of McCain Foods Limited, Preface by Janice Wismer / xii 181 Bay Street, Suite 3600 or, in the case of reprographic copying, a license from Access Copyright, the Canadian Toronto, Ontario, Canada Copyright Licensing Agency, One Yonge Street, Suite 1900, Toronto, Ontario, M6B 3A9. M5J 2T3 Chapter One the beGinninG / 1 www.mccain.com 416-955-1700 LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION Stoffman, Daniel Chapter Two CroSSinG the atlantiC / 39 From the ground up : the first fifty years of McCain Foods / Daniel Stoffman For copies of this book, please contact: in collaboration with Tony van Leersum. McCain Foods Limited, Chapter Three aCroSS the Channel / 69 Director, Communications, Includes index. at [email protected] ISBN: 978-0-9783720-0-2 Chapter Four down under / 103 or at the address above 1. McCain Foods Limited – History. 2. McCain, Wallace, 1930– . 3. McCain, H. Harrison, 1927–2004. I. Van Leersum, Tony, 1935– . II. McCain Foods Limited Chapter Five the home Front / 125 This book was printed on paper containing III. - 
												
												Provincial Solidarities: a History of the New Brunswick Federation of Labour
provincial solidarities Working Canadians: Books from the cclh Series editors: Alvin Finkel and Greg Kealey The Canadian Committee on Labour History is Canada’s organization of historians and other scholars interested in the study of the lives and struggles of working people throughout Canada’s past. Since 1976, the cclh has published Labour / Le Travail, Canada’s pre-eminent scholarly journal of labour studies. It also publishes books, now in conjunction with AU Press, that focus on the history of Canada’s working people and their organizations. The emphasis in this series is on materials that are accessible to labour audiences as well as university audiences rather than simply on scholarly studies in the labour area. This includes documentary collections, oral histories, autobiographies, biographies, and provincial and local labour movement histories with a popular bent. series titles Champagne and Meatballs: Adventures of a Canadian Communist Bert Whyte, edited and with an introduction by Larry Hannant Working People in Alberta: A History Alvin Finkel, with contributions by Jason Foster, Winston Gereluk, Jennifer Kelly and Dan Cui, James Muir, Joan Schiebelbein, Jim Selby, and Eric Strikwerda Union Power: Solidarity and Struggle in Niagara Carmela Patrias and Larry Savage The Wages of Relief: Cities and the Unemployed in Prairie Canada, 1929–39 Eric Strikwerda Provincial Solidarities: A History of the New Brunswick Federation of Labour / Solidarités provinciales: Histoire de la Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Nouveau-Brunswick David Frank A History of the New Brunswick Federation of Labour david fra nk canadian committee on labour history Copyright © 2013 David Frank Published by AU Press, Athabasca University 1200, 10011 – 109 Street, Edmonton, ab t5j 3s8 isbn 978-1-927356-23-4 (print) 978-1-927356-24-1 (pdf) 978-1-927356-25-8 (epub) A volume in Working Canadians: Books from the cclh issn 1925-1831 (print) 1925-184x (digital) Cover and interior design by Natalie Olsen, Kisscut Design. - 
												
												Myth Making, Juridification, and Parasitical Discourse: a Barthesian Semiotic Demystification of Canadian Political Discourse on Marijuana
MYTH MAKING, JURIDIFICATION, AND PARASITICAL DISCOURSE: A BARTHESIAN SEMIOTIC DEMYSTIFICATION OF CANADIAN POLITICAL DISCOURSE ON MARIJUANA DANIEL PIERRE-CHARLES CRÉPAULT Thesis submitted to the University of Ottawa in partial Fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctorate in Philosophy degree in Criminology Department of Criminology Faculty of Social Sciences University of Ottawa © Daniel Pierre-Charles Crépault, Ottawa, Canada, 2019 ABSTRACT The legalization of marijuana in Canada represents a significant change in the course of Canadian drug policy. Using a semiotic approach based on the work of Roland Barthes, this dissertation explores marijuana’s signification within the House of Commons and Senate debates between 1891 and 2018. When examined through this conceptual lens, the ongoing parliamentary debates about marijuana over the last 127 years are revealed to be rife with what Barthes referred to as myths, ideas that have become so familiar that they cease to be recognized as constructions and appear innocent and natural. Exploring one such myth—the necessity of asserting “paternal power” over individuals deemed incapable of rational calculation—this dissertation demonstrates that the processes of political debate and law-making are also a complex “politics of signification” in which myths are continually being invoked, (re)produced, and (re)transmitted. The evolution of this myth is traced to the contemporary era and it is shown that recent attempts to criminalize, decriminalize, and legalize marijuana are indices of a process of juridification that is entrenching legal regulation into increasingly new areas of Canadian life in order to assert greater control over the consumption of marijuana and, importantly, over the risks that this activity has been semiologically associated with. - 
												
												Prince Edward Island and the 1971 National Farmers Union Highway Demonstration Ryan O’Connor
Document generated on 10/01/2021 5:07 a.m. Acadiensis Agrarian Protest and Provincial Politics: Prince Edward Island and the 1971 National Farmers Union Highway Demonstration Ryan O’Connor Volume 37, Number 1, Winter 2008 Article abstract During ten days in August 1971 Prince Edward Island farmers, led by the local URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/acad37_1art02 chapter of the National Farmers Union, staged high-profile public protests against the provincial government’s neglect of family farm issues and its See table of contents promotion of economic rationalization and modernization as exemplified in the government’s 1969 Comprehensive Development Plan. While these protests did not stop the trend towards farm abandonment, they did manage to put the Publisher(s) concerns of small farmers on the political agenda and dampen the government’s enthusiasm for development planning that ignored small The Department of History at the University of New Brunswick producers. The result was a consultation process between the government and small farmers and the government’s 1972 Family Farm Development Policy. ISSN 0044-5851 (print) 1712-7432 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article O’Connor, R. (2008). Agrarian Protest and Provincial Politics: Prince Edward Island and the 1971 National Farmers Union Highway Demonstration. Acadiensis, 37(1), 31–55. All rights reserved © Department of History at the University of New This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit Brunswick, 2008 (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit. - 
												
												A Historical and Legal Study of Sovereignty in the Canadian North : Terrestrial Sovereignty, 1870–1939
University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository University of Calgary Press University of Calgary Press Open Access Books 2014 A historical and legal study of sovereignty in the Canadian north : terrestrial sovereignty, 1870–1939 Smith, Gordon W. University of Calgary Press "A historical and legal study of sovereignty in the Canadian north : terrestrial sovereignty, 1870–1939", Gordon W. Smith; edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer. University of Calgary Press, Calgary, Alberta, 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50251 book http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 International Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca A HISTORICAL AND LEGAL STUDY OF SOVEREIGNTY IN THE CANADIAN NORTH: TERRESTRIAL SOVEREIGNTY, 1870–1939 By Gordon W. Smith, Edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer ISBN 978-1-55238-774-0 THIS BOOK IS AN OPEN ACCESS E-BOOK. It is an electronic version of a book that can be purchased in physical form through any bookseller or on-line retailer, or from our distributors. Please support this open access publication by requesting that your university purchase a print copy of this book, or by purchasing a copy yourself. If you have any questions, please contact us at ucpress@ ucalgary.ca Cover Art: The artwork on the cover of this book is not open access and falls under traditional copyright provisions; it cannot be reproduced in any way without written permission of the artists and their agents. The cover can be displayed as a complete cover image for the purposes of publicizing this work, but the artwork cannot be extracted from the context of the cover of this specificwork without breaching the artist’s copyright. - 
												
												Alexander Manson Fonds (RBSC- ARC-1350)
University of British Columbia Library Rare Books and Special Collections Finding Aid - Alexander Manson fonds (RBSC- ARC-1350) Generated by Access to Memory (AtoM) 2.4.0 Printed: January 29, 2019 Language of description: English University of British Columbia Library Rare Books and Special Collections Irving K. Barber Learning Centre 1961 East Mall Vancouver British Columbia V6T 1Z1 Telephone: 604-822-2521 Fax: 604-822-9587 Email: [email protected] http://rbsc.library.ubc.ca/ http://rbscarchives.library.ubc.ca//index.php/alexander-manson-fonds Alexander Manson fonds Table of contents Summary information ...................................................................................................................................... 3 Administrative history / Biographical sketch .................................................................................................. 3 Scope and content ........................................................................................................................................... 4 Arrangement .................................................................................................................................................... 5 Notes ................................................................................................................................................................ 5 Access points ................................................................................................................................................... 6 Physical - 
												
												Beaton-Mikmaw.Pdf
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 2010-800.012.001 Medicine Man's brush. -- [ca. 1860]. -- 1 brush : dyed quills with brass, wire and coconut fibres ; 31 cm. Scope and Content Item is an original brush, believed to be of Mi'kmaw origin. 2011-001.001 Domed Top Quill Box. -- [ca. 1850]. -- 1 box : dyed quills with pine, birchbark, and spruce root binding ; 18 x 19 x 27 cm Scope and Content Item is an original quill box made by Nova Scotia Mi'kmaq. Notes This piece has an early Mi'kmaw winged design (prior to the tourist trade material). 2011-001.002 Round Quill Storage Box. -- [ca. 1870]. -- 1 box : dyed quills with pine, birchbark, and spruce root binding ; 12 x 20 cm Scope and Content Item is an original quill box collected in Cape Breton in the 1930s. 2011-001.003 Oval Box. -- [18--]. -- 1 box : dyed quills with pine, birchbark, and spruce root binding ; 8 x 9 x 14 cm Scope and Content Item is an original quill box featuring an intricate Mi'kmaw design (eagles and turtles). 2011-001.004 Oval Box. -- [between 1925 and 1935]. -- 1 box : dyed quills with pine, birchbark, spruce root, and sweetgrass ; 6 x 8 x 13 cm Scope and Content Item is an original Mi'kmaw quill box. 2011-001.005 Mi'kmaw Oval Panel. -- [ca. 1890s]. -- 1 panel : dyed quills mounted on birchbark ; 18 x 27 cm Scope and Content Item is an original Mi'kmaw quill panel featuring a turtle and eagle design. - 
												
												L'absence De Généraux Canadiens-Français Combattants
Où sont nos chefs? L’absence de généraux canadiens-français combattants durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale (1939-1945). Par : Alexandre Sawyer Thèse présentée à la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales À titre d’exigence partielle en vue de l’obtention d’un doctorat en histoire Université d’Ottawa © Alexandre Sawyer, Ottawa, Canada, 2019 ii RÉSUMÉ Le nombre d’officiers généraux canadiens-français qui ont commandé une brigade ou une division dans l’armée active durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale est presque nul. On ne compte aucun commandant de division francophone dans l’armée outre-mer. Dans les trois premières années de la guerre, seulement deux brigadiers canadiens-français prennent le commandement de brigades à l’entrainement en Grande-Bretagne, mais sont rapidement renvoyés chez eux. Entre 1943 et 1944, le nombre de commandants de brigade francophones passe de zéro à trois. L’absence de généraux canadiens-français combattants (à partir du grade de major-général) durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale s’explique par plusieurs facteurs : le modèle britannique et l’unilinguisme anglais de la milice, puis de l’armée canadienne, mais aussi la tradition anti-impérialiste et, donc, souvent antimilitaire des Canadiens français. Au début de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, aucun officier canadien n’est réellement capable de commander une grande unité militaire. Mais, a-t-on vraiment le choix? Ces officiers sont les seuls dont dispose le Canada. Quand les troupes canadiennes sont engagées au combat au milieu de 1943, des officiers canadiens, plus jeunes et beaucoup mieux formés prennent la relève. À plus petite échelle, le même processus s’opère du côté francophone, mais plus maladroitement. - 
												
												SFU Thesis Template Files
Pulp Fictional Folk Devils? The Fulton Bill and the Campaign to Censor “Crime and Horror Comics” in Cold War Canada, 1945-1955 by Joseph Tilley B.A. (Hons., History), Simon Fraser University, 2008 Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the Department of History Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Joseph Tilley 2015 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Fall 2015 Approval Name: Joseph Tilley Degree: Master of Arts (History) Title: Pulp Fictional Folk Devils? The Fulton Bill and the Campaign to Censor “Crime and Horror Comics” in Cold War Canada, 1945-1955 Examining Committee: Chair: Roxanne Panchasi Associate Professor Allen Seager Senior Supervisor Associate Professor Lara Campbell Supervisor Professor, Department of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies John Herd Thompson External Examiner Professor Emeritus Department of History Duke University Date Defended/Approved: December 15, 2015 ii Abstract This thesis examines the history of and the social, political, intellectual, and cross-border influences behind the “Fulton Bill” and the campaign to censor “crime and horror comics” in Canada from roughly 1945 to 1955. Many – though by no means all – Canadians had grown to believe reading comic books was directly linked with a perceived increase in rates of juvenile criminal behaviour. Led primarily by PTA activists and other civic organizations, the campaign was motivated by a desire to protect the nation’s young people from potential corrupting influences that might lead them to delinquency and deviancy and resulted in amendments to the Criminal Code passed by Parliament in 1949. These amendments criminalized so-called “crime comics” and were thanks to a bill introduced and championed by E. - 
												
												ORGANISATION DU GOUVERNEMENT 109 L'hon
ORGANISATION DU GOUVERNEMENT 109 L'hon. George Prudham, 13 décembre 1950 L'hon. Maurice Sauvé. 3 février 1964 L'hon. James Sinclair, 15 octobre 1952 L'hon. Yvon Dupuis, 3 février 1964 L'hon. William Ross Macdonald, 12 mai 1953 L'hon. George Stanley White. 25 juin 1964 L'hon. George Alexander Drew, 12 mai 1953 L'hon. Major James William Coldwell, 25 juin 1964 L'hon. John Whitnev Pickersgill. 12juin 1953 L'hon. Edgar John Benson. 29 juin 1964 L'hon. Jean Lesage, 17 septembre 1953 L'hon. Léo-Alphonse Joseph Cadieux, 15 février L'hon. George Carlyle Marier. 1er juillet 1954 1965 L'hon. Roch Pinard, 1er juillet 1954 L'hon. Lawrence T. Pcnnell, 7 juillet 1965 L'hon. Paul Théodore Hellyer. 26 avril 1957 L'hon. Jean-Luc Pépin. 7juillet 1965 Le très hon. John George Diefenbaker. 21 juin 1957 L'hon. Alan Aylesworth Macnaughton. 25 octobre L'hon. Howard Charles Green, 21 juin 1957 1965 L'hon. Donald Methuen Fleming. 21 juin 1957 L'hon. Jean Marchand. 18 décembre 1965 L'hon. George Hees, 21 juin 1957 L'hon. John James Greene, 18 décembre 1965 L'hon. Léon Balcer. 21 juin 1957 L'hon. Joseph Julien Jean-Pierre Côté. 18 L'hon. George Randolph Pearkes, 21 juin 1957 décembre 1965 L'hon. Gordon Churchill. 21 juin 1957 L'hon. John Napier Turner, 18 décembre 1965 L'hon. Edmund Davie Fulton. 21 juin 1957 L'hon. Maurice Bourget, 22 février 1966 L'hon. Douglas Scott Harkness, 2i juin 1957 Le très hon. Pierre EUiott Trudeau, 4 avril 1967 L'hon.