Cumentary Artifact Type Title Author Source Description Keywords "C" Miscellaneous Sept
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
A Year in Review
2019 A Year In Review Your Marine Carrier of Choice Table of Contents CEO Message 1 About Algoma 3 Celebrating 120 Years 5 Financial Highlights 7 Delivering Our Strategy 9 Strategic Focus 2020 10 Segment Highlights 11 Outlook 2020 15 Sustainability 17 Vision & Values Marine Carrier of Choice TEAMWORK PASSION INTEGRITY We are stronger We are committed We are honest, we together. in heart and mind, are courageous we are driven and and we always we are proud. strive to make the right choice. OWNERSHIP SUSTAINABILITY We take We believe in our accountability for people, we care for our actions and we our planet and we are empowered to work to ensure the initiate change. prosperity of our stakeholders. 1 Algoma Central Corporation Year In Review A Message From Our CEO As fiscal 2019 drew to a close, the senior leadership team of Algoma met away from the work-a-day demands of the office with one purpose in mind – consider the Company’s existing vision statement and corporate values and update them to reflect our current goals and priorities. This meeting led to a new vision and values. While the words may be new, I am happy to say they are fully consistent with the business strategy we adopted four years ago. Marine Carrier of Choice Our new vision statement verbalizes something that Our values describe how we do the things we must has always been a goal for Algoma. It emphasizes do to be the marine carrier of choice. Our values, a fact we know well – all stakeholders have choices simply put, are: and we want Algoma to be at the top of their list. -
1866 (C) Circa 1510 (A) 1863
BONUS : Paintings together with their year of completion. (A) 1863 (B) 1866 (C) circa 1510 Vancouver Estival Trivia Open, 2012, FARSIDE team BONUS : Federal cabinet ministers, 1940 to 1990 (A) (B) (C) (D) Norman Rogers James Ralston Ernest Lapointe Joseph-Enoil Michaud James Ralston Mackenzie King James Ilsley Louis St. Laurent 1940s Andrew McNaughton 1940s Douglas Abbott Louis St. Laurent James Ilsley Louis St. Laurent Brooke Claxton Douglas Abbott Lester Pearson Stuart Garson 1950s 1950s Ralph Campney Walter Harris John Diefenbaker George Pearkes Sidney Smith Davie Fulton Donald Fleming Douglas Harkness Howard Green Donald Fleming George Nowlan Gordon Churchill Lionel Chevrier Guy Favreau Walter Gordon 1960s Paul Hellyer 1960s Paul Martin Lucien Cardin Mitchell Sharp Pierre Trudeau Leo Cadieux John Turner Edgar Benson Donald Macdonald Mitchell Sharp Edgar Benson Otto Lang John Turner James Richardson 1970s Allan MacEachen 1970s Ron Basford Donald Macdonald Don Jamieson Barney Danson Otto Lang Jean Chretien Allan McKinnon Flora MacDonald JacquesMarc Lalonde Flynn John Crosbie Gilles Lamontagne Mark MacGuigan Jean Chretien Allan MacEachen JeanJacques Blais Allan MacEachen Mark MacGuigan Marc Lalonde Robert Coates Jean Chretien Donald Johnston 1980s Erik Nielsen John Crosbie 1980s Perrin Beatty Joe Clark Ray Hnatyshyn Michael Wilson Bill McKnight Doug Lewis BONUS : Name these plays by Oscar Wilde, for 10 points each. You have 30 seconds. (A) THE PAGE OF HERODIAS: Look at the moon! How strange the moon seems! She is like a woman rising from a tomb. She is like a dead woman. You would fancy she was looking for dead things. THE YOUNG SYRIAN: She has a strange look. -
Smelter Fumes, Local Interests, and Political Contestation in Sudbury, Ontario, During the 1910S Don Munton and Owen Temby
Document generated on 09/23/2021 11:58 a.m. Urban History Review Revue d'histoire urbaine Smelter Fumes, Local Interests, and Political Contestation in Sudbury, Ontario, during the 1910s Don Munton and Owen Temby Environmental Nuisances and Political Contestation in Canadian Article abstract Cities During the second half of the 1910s the problem of sulphur smoke in Sudbury, Volume 44, Number 1-2, Fall 2015, Spring 2016 Ontario, pitted farmers against the mining-smelting industry that comprised the dominant sector of the local economy. Increased demand for nickel from URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1037234ar World War I had resulted in expanded activities in the nearby Copper Cliff and DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1037234ar O’Donnell roast yards, which in turn produced more smoke and destroyed crops. Local business leaders, represented by the Sudbury Board of Trade, sought to balance the needs of the agriculture and mining-smelting sectors and See table of contents facilitate their coexistence in the region. Among the measures pursued, farmers and some Board of Trade members turned to nuisance litigation, with the objective of obtaining monetary awards and injunctions affecting the Publisher(s) operation of the roast yards. While the amounts of the awards were disappointing for the farmers, the spectre of an injunction was sufficient to Urban History Review / Revue d'histoire urbaine convince the provincial government to ban civil litigation in favour of an arbitration process accommodating industry. This article provides an account ISSN of the political activism over Sudbury’s smoke nuisance that failed to bring 0703-0428 (print) about emission controls, highlighting the contextual factors contributing to this 1918-5138 (digital) failure. -
Collection: Green, Max: Files Box: 42
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Green, Max: Files Folder Title: Briefing International Council of the World Conference on Soviet Jewry 05/12/1988 Box: 42 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing National Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/ WITHDRAWAL SHEET Ronald Reagan Library Collection Name GREEN, MAX: FILES Withdrawer MID 11/23/2001 File Folder BRIEFING INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL & THE WORLD FOIA CONFERENCE ON SOVIET JEWRY 5/12/88 F03-0020/06 Box Number THOMAS 127 DOC Doc Type Document Description No of Doc Date Restrictions NO Pages 1 NOTES RE PARTICIPANTS 1 ND B6 2 FORM REQUEST FOR APPOINTMENTS 1 5/11/1988 B6 Freedom of Information Act - [5 U.S.C. 552(b)] B-1 National security classified Information [(b)(1) of the FOIA) B-2 Release would disclose Internal personnel rules and practices of an agency [(b)(2) of the FOIA) B-3 Release would violate a Federal statute [(b)(3) of the FOIA) B-4 Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial Information [(b)(4) of the FOIA) B-8 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted Invasion of personal privacy [(b)(6) of the FOIA) B-7 Release would disclose Information compiled for law enforcement purposes [(b)(7) of the FOIA) B-8 Release would disclose Information concerning the regulation of financial Institutions [(b)(B) of the FOIA) B-9 Release would disclose geological or geophysical Information concerning wells [(b)(9) of the FOIA) C. -
Démesures De Guerre
DÉMESURES DE GUERRE ABUS, IMPOSTURES ET VICTIMES D’OCTOBRE 1970 Sous la direction d’ANTHONY BEAUSÉJOUR Avec la collaboration de GUY BOUTHILLIER MATHIEU HARNOIS-BLOUIN MANON LEROUX IRAI nº XII CATHERINE PAQUETTE Étude 7 NORA T. LAMONTAGNE Octobre 2020 DANIEL TURP DÉMESURES DE GUERRE ABUS, IMPOSTURES ET VICTIMES D’OCTOBRE 1970 Démesures de guerre Abus, impostures et victimes d’Octobre 1970 Sous la direction d’Anthony Beauséjour Avec la collaboration de Guy Bouthillier Mathieu Harnois-Blouin Manon Leroux Catherine Paquette Nora T. Lamontagne Daniel Turp IRAI nº XII Étude 7 Octobre 2020 Édition : IRAI Recherche d’archives : Karine Perron / Madame Karine inc. Révision linguistique : Sophie Brisebois / C’est-à-dire inc. Conception et mise en page : Dany Larouche / infographie I-Dezign © Les auteurs, 2020 Tous droits réservés Photo de couverture : Des enfants curieux observent les forces militaires protégeant le poste de police de la rue Parthenais à Montréal, le 15 octobre 1970. / Curious children watch military forces protect the police station on Parthenais St. in Montreal, October 15, 1970. © : George Bird / The Montreal Star / Bibliothèque et Archives Canada / PA-129838 Institut de recherche sur l’autodétermination des peuples et les indépendances nationales www.irai.quebec [email protected] À propos de l’IRAI Fondé en 2016, l’IRAI est un institut de recherche indépendant et non partisan qui a pour mission de réaliser et de diffuser des travaux de recherche sur les enjeux relatifs aux thèmes de l’autodétermination des peuples et des indépendances nationales. L’IRAI vise ainsi à améliorer les connaissances scientifiques et à favoriser un dialogue citoyen ouvert et constructif autour de ces thèmes. -
Transcript Espinet Interview
INTERVIEW WITH THE HONOURABLE RAY STORTINI For the Diversifying the Bar: Lawyers Make History Project Law Society of Upper Canada Interviewee: Honourable Ray Stortini (RS) Interviewer: Allison Kirk-Montgomery (AKM), for The Law Society of Upper Canada. Mary Kay Stortini (MKS) present during part of the interview. Interview Date: April 12, 2011 Location: Home of Ray Stortini, Richards Landing, St. Joseph Island, near Sault Ste. Marie Transcribed by Allison Kirk-Montgomery and Planet Shift Inc. [Transcript has been edited by Allison Kirk-Montgomery and Ray Stortini to correct errors, and to remove false starts, etc. for improved clarity.] AKM: My name is Allison Kirk-Montgomery and I’m here in Richards Landing, on St. Joseph Island at the home of the Honourable Ray Stortini, who has kindly agreed to be interviewed by me for the project of the Law Society of Upper Canada. It’s name is Diversifying the Bar, Lawyers Make History. And I’m here with one of the history-making lawyers of Algoma District. So, Ray, we’re going to start at the beginning, and the beginning for you was Sault Ste. Marie and the West End. Was it, or does it go further back? RS: Well, my grandfather came in 1905 at the call of the Canadian government looking for immigrants to come to Canada. My grandfather came to Hon. Ray Stortini interview by Allison Kirk-Montgomery The Law Society of Upper Canada Diversifying the Bar: Lawyers Make History Project 12 April 2011 Page 1 of 78 Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, because there was an industrialist by the name of Francis Clergue who founded Lake Superior Iron Works in order to build rails for the Canadian Pacific Railway going out to B.C. -
Bibliography of Works Using Sources from the University of Toronto Archives
Bibliography of works using sources from the University of Toronto Archives Compiled by Harold Averill July 2004 26th revision, June, 2019 © University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Services, 2019 Bibliography of works using sources from the University of Toronto Archives Introduction Since 1965 the University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Services has been acquiring, preserving and making available the documentary heritage of the University of Toronto as a permanent resource in support of the operational, educational and research needs of the University community and the general public. Over the years, the thousands of researchers who have used the Archives have produced a huge number of articles, books, theses and other publications, and material has also been used in films, videos, radio, stage and other multi-media productions. In 2004 Harold Averill, the Assistant University Archivist, initiated a project to capture the record of this research. This ongoing project is designed to draw the reader’s attention to the range of research that has been conducted at University of Toronto Archives and, by implication, the wealth of our holdings. The listings include published or produced material only and, while comprehensive, make no claim to be complete. It is currently divided into four sections: books, articles, catalogues and pamphlets; theses and research papers; plays; and moving image material. Other sections will be added as information becomes available. Researchers are invited to submit the results of their research for inclusion. Please provide full bibliographic record(s) to [email protected] A. Books, articles, catalogues, and pamphlets A guide to architectural records in the University of Toronto Archives. -
Chez Joe, Il S'en Passe Des Choses!
il s’en passe des choses! (J.L.) Partis de chez eux pour aller goûter à dans un but pacifique, d’après lui. l’excitemet» de la grande ville, trois étudiants, Mais nos trois amis sont par erreur entrés en Pierre, joué par Wayne Robichaud, Robert, joué possession de la fameuse formule chimique et par Gérald Arsenault et Yvon, joué par Chris Monsieurs Gros veut la leur reprendre, en usant Gallant, se retrouvent malgré eux mêlés à une de force, s’il le faut. Sur la photo, on les voit histoire de fou qui a pour théâtre un bar appelé qui viennent d’ouvrir la valise laissée au bar par Chez Joe. erreur.Ils découvrent par le fait même les plans Monsieur Gros, joué par Raymond Arsenault, diaboliques de Monsieur Gros et décident de le veut s’emparer d’une formule chimique qui lui confronter. permettrait de prendre le contrôle de la terre... (Lire en page 4) Chez Joe : Une pièce drôle et tendre Par JACINTHE LAFOREST bien vite que la ville a ses attraits, pas vue depuis 40 ans, à New York, personnages collent très bien aux méchants, ces deux lurons attirent surtout quand on en est loin, et laissant les jeunes apprendre sur le acteurs, et vice versa. vite la sympathie de l’auditoire. Et La pièce de théâtre Chez Joe, ses défauts. quand on y est. Ils tas. Les méchants dans l’histoire encore la, les contrastes physiques écrite par Wayne Robichaud et mise débarquent dans un bar, Chez Joe, S’ensuit une intrigue bien déve- sont sous le joug de Monsieur Gros sont bien exploites. -
Canadianism, Anglo-Canadian Identities and the Crisis of Britishness, 1964-1968
Nova Britannia Revisited: Canadianism, Anglo-Canadian Identities and the Crisis of Britishness, 1964-1968 C. P. Champion Department of History McGill University, Montreal A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History February 2007 © Christian Paul Champion, 2007 Table of Contents Dedication ……………………………….……….………………..………….…..2 Abstract / Résumé ………….……..……….……….…….…...……..………..….3 Acknowledgements……………………….….……………...………..….…..……5 Obiter Dicta….……………………………………….………..…..…..….……….6 Introduction …………………………………………….………..…...…..….….. 7 Chapter 1 Canadianism and Britishness in the Historiography..….…..………….33 Chapter 2 The Challenge of Anglo-Canadian ethnicity …..……..…….……….. 62 Chapter 3 Multiple Identities, Britishness, and Anglo-Canadianism ……….… 109 Chapter 4 Religion and War in Anglo-Canadian Identity Formation..…..……. 139 Chapter 5 The celebrated rite-de-passage at Oxford University …….…...…… 171 Chapter 6 The courtship and apprenticeship of non-Wasp ethnic groups….….. 202 Chapter 7 The “Canadian flag” debate of 1964-65………………………..…… 243 Chapter 8 Unification of the Canadian armed forces in 1966-68……..….……. 291 Conclusions: Diversity and continuity……..…………………………….…….. 335 Bibliography …………………………………………………………….………347 Index……………………………………………………………………………...384 1 For Helena-Maria, Crispin, and Philippa 2 Abstract The confrontation with Britishness in Canada in the mid-1960s is being revisited by scholars as a turning point in how the Canadian state was imagined and constructed. During what the present thesis calls the “crisis of Britishness” from 1964 to 1968, the British character of Canada was redefined and Britishness portrayed as something foreign or “other.” This post-British conception of Canada has been buttressed by historians depicting the British connection as a colonial hangover, an externally-derived, narrowly ethnic, nostalgic, or retardant force. However, Britishness, as a unique amalgam of hybrid identities in the Canadian context, in fact took on new and multiple meanings. -
The Italian Colony at Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario
The Italian Colony at Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario By Gerolamo Moroni [A report written by the Italian royal Attaché of Immigration, Girolamo Moroni, stationed at Montréal, Québec, Canada. The report was published in the Bolletino dell’Emigrazione in 1914. The Italian government published the Bolletino between 1907 and 1927 to show prospective immigrants what to expect throughout the world if they decided to immigrate. This report provides an indepth look into the Italian community at Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario and the social and work conditions facing them. Included in this report are the Magpie and Helen iron mines to the north of Sault Ste. Marie. It is translated and edited by Russell M. Magnaghi.] Sault Ste. Marie is situated in the Algoma District in northern Ontario, between Lakes Huron and Superior. The city has approximately 12,000 inhabitants and including the suburbs of Steelton, Buckley, and Bay View, approximately 18,000. It is a small industrial city, with laborers working on the railroad, steel, paper and mechanized sawmills. The Italian colony is composed of approximately 3,000 permanent residents and between the spring and autumn 600800 seasonal residents. The frst Italians arrived in 1895, but the great part came with the opening of the metallurgy industry in 1902. Our people come from Calabria, The Marches and Abruzzi, and Veneto, and a small number from other parts of the Kingdom [of Italy]. In the Italian colony there are no professionals; only one Italian [Catholic] priest; two contractors overseeing building, excavation and sewerage laborers. The Italians of this place have demonstrated a desire for an Italian physician, who would have small pharmacy, as they do not have a pharmacy here. -
My Dearest Mother Canada 1902
MY DEAREST MOTHER - 1902 Letters from Canada 1902 Ella Brewin My Dearest Mother - 1901 Copyright © 2018 by James Holme. All Rights Reserved. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review. Cover designed by Cover Designer Printed in the United States of America First Printing: Feb 2018 Name of Company ISBN-13 978-1-9769438-2-9 Many thanks to my wife, Edith, who put up with me chained to my computer all day and for her invaluable help deciphering some of my grandmother’s very unreadable hand writing. Contents My Dearest Mother - 1902..................................................................................................................................................................... 0 My grandmother, Ella Brewin ............................................................................................................................................................... 2 Ella’s family ............................................................................................................................................................................................ 4 Andrew George Blair’s Family ............................................................................................................................................................... 4 Lecture notes from “Impressions -
I- Les Relations Extérieures Du Canada Manon Tessier
Document generated on 09/29/2021 5:30 a.m. Études internationales I- Les relations extérieures du Canada Manon Tessier Afrique : la déconnexion par défaut Volume 22, Number 2, 1991 URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/702846ar DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/702846ar See table of contents Publisher(s) Institut québécois des hautes études internationales ISSN 0014-2123 (print) 1703-7891 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this document Tessier, M. (1991). I- Les relations extérieures du Canada. Études internationales, 22(2), 393–407. https://doi.org/10.7202/702846ar Tous droits réservés © Études internationales, 1991 This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit (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. Érudit is a non-profit inter-university consortium of the Université de Montréal, Université Laval, and the Université du Québec à Montréal. Its mission is to promote and disseminate research. https://www.erudit.org/en/ Chronique des relations extérieures du Canada et du Québec Manon TESSIER* I - Les relations extérieures du Canada (janvier à mars 1991) A — Aperçu général Si depuis le 2 août, la crise du Golfe canalisait déjà l'essentiel de l'activité de la politique étrangère du Canada, le début de l'année 1991 l'accaparait presque complètement. Le déclenchement des hostilités poussait le Canada à participer à ses premières opérations militaires offensives depuis la guerre de Corée avec une contribution de 2 000 soldats, 26 chasseurs CF-18, trois navires et un hôpital de campagne.