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Hungarian Studies Review, Vol
Hungarian Studies Review, Vol. XLIII, Nos. 1-2 (Spring-Fall, 2016) Essays: (relating to North American themes) Greg Donaghy Éva Petrás Susan Glanz Nándor Dreisziger (relating to Hungary and neighbouring states) Béla Bodó Gergely Kunt Oszkár Roginer Also: Book reviews Forthcoming essays and reviews by Joseph Imre Zotán Fejős Anna Menyhért Nóra Deák* Ágnes Széchenyi* Howard Lupovitch* *tentative Hungarian Studies Review, Vol. XLIII, Nos. 1-2 (Spring-Fall, 2016) CONTENTS North America: “A Perennial Problem”: Canadian Relations with Hungary, 1945-65 GREG DONAGHY ……………………………………...……… 5 Escape into Emigration: Christian democratic social welfare politician Béla Kovrig and the Hungarian State Security, 1946-1948 ÉVA PETRÁS …………………………………………….…… 23 Nicholas L. Deak, the Hungarian “James Bond of the world of money” SUSAN GLANZ ………………………………………………. 39 The Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Roman Catholic Parish of Toronto: Nine Decades of Evolution NÁNDOR DREISZIGER …………………………………...… 59 East Central Europe: Caught between Independence and Irredentism: The “Jewish Question” in the Foreign Policy of the Kállay Government, 1942-1944 BÉLA BODÓ ………………………………………………….. 83 Ágnes Zsolt’s Authorship of her Daughter Éva Heyman’s Holocaust Diary GERGELY KUNT ………………………………………….... 127 Identity Shift in the Literature of Vojvodina’s Hungarian Community, 1992-2010 OSZKÁR ROGINER ……………………….……………...… 155 Contents (continued): Book Reviews Marius Turda, Eugenics and Nation in Early 20th Century Hungary. Reviewed by Boglárka Kiss ………………………………….. 183 H. David Baer, The Struggle of Hungarian Lutherans under Communism. Reviewed by Nándor Dreisziger ………………………...… 186 Books received ……………………………………………..………… 190 Our Contributors ……………………………………………………… 191 Hungarian Studies Review, Vol. XLIII, Nos. 1-2 (Spring-Fall, 2016) “A Perennial Problem”: Canadian Relations with Hungary, 1945-65 Greg Donaghy1 2014-15 marks the 50th anniversary of the establishment of Canadian- Hungarian diplomatic relations. -
Canadian Polish Congress Mb District General Operating
1 CANADIAN POLISH CONGRESS MB DISTRICT GENERAL OPERATING BY-LAWS (under the Canada Not-for-Profit Corporations Act) GENERAL OPERATING BY-LAW NO. 10 A by-law relating generally to the conduct of the affairs of CANADIAN POLISH CONGRESS (a federal corporation) (the “Congress”) 2 INDEX SECTION I INTERPRETATION 5 1.01 Definitions 7 1.02 Interpretation 8 SECTION II MEMBERS 8 2.01 Classes and Sub-categories of Membership 8 2.02 Definition of Single Level Organization 9 2.03 Definition of Supporting Member 9 2.04 Conditions for Membership 9 2.05 Admission to Membership 10 2.06 Member in good standing 11 2.07 Duties and Rights of Members 12 2.08 Delegates and Presidents of Organizations 12 2.09 Membership Fess 14 2.10 Suspension and Termination of Membership 15 SECTION III MEETING OF MEMBERS 16 3.01 Annual Meetings 16 3.02 Special Meetings 16 3.03 Place of Meetings 17 3.04 Notice of Meetings 17 3.05 Proposals at Annual Meetings 17 3.06 Record Date 19 3.07 Waiving Notice 19 3.08 Persons Entitled to be Present 19 3.09 Chair of the Meeting 19 3.10 Quorum 19 3.11 Participation at Meetings by Electronic Means 20 3.12 Voting by Electronic Means 20 3.13 Absence Voting by Mailed-In Ballot or Electronic Ballot 20 3.14 Absence Voting by Proxy 20 3.15 Votes to Govern 21 3.16 Show of Hands 22 3.17 Ballots 22 3.18 Rules of Order 22 3.19 Adjournment 22 SECTION IV EXECUTIVE BOARD 23 4.01 Powers 23 4.02 Number and Composition 23 4.03 Qualifications and Composition 23 4.04 Election, Term and Maximum Term, and Nomination 24 4.05 Consent 24 4.06 Nomination of Executive -
Statut Canadian Polish Congress
CANADIAN POLISH CONGRESS GENERAL OPERATING BY-LAW NO. 10 (under the Canada Not-for-Profit Corporations Act) Final Draft – May 16, 2014 GENERAL OPERATING BY-LAW NO. 10 A by-law relating generally to the conduct of the affairs of CANADIAN POLISH CONGRESS (a federal corporation) (the “Congress”) INDEX SECTION I INTERPRETATION .................................................................................................. 4 1.01 Definitions .................................................................................................................... 4 1.02 Interpretation ................................................................................................................ 8 SECTION II MEMBERS ............................................................................................................... 8 2.01 Classes and Sub-Categories of Membership ................................................................ 8 2.02 Definition of Single Level Organization ...................................................................... 9 2.03 Definition of Multi-Level Organization ....................................................................... 9 2.04 Conditions for Membership .......................................................................................... 9 2.05 Admission to Membership.......................................................................................... 10 2.06 Member in Good Standing ......................................................................................... 11 2.07 Duties and -
Community Economic Development in Manitoba's Ethno-Cultural Communities
Community Economic Development in Manitoba’s Ethno-cultural Communities: Progress & Prospects May 31, 2006 For The Province of Manitoba Department of Labour and Immigration Multiculturalism Secretariat Community Economic Development in Manitoba’s Ethno-Cultural Communities: Progress and Prospects Acknowledgments We would like to thank the members of ethno-cultural organisations, settlement agencies and CED organisations that contributed their knowledge and experiences to this research. We would also like to acknowledge the following members of the Steering Committee who committed their time to participate in developing the consultation process: Anna Dell’Acqua - Italian Canadian Centre of Manitoba Carlos Campos - Brandon immigrant and refugee experiences Emina Cingel - Spence Neighbourhood Association, Newcomer Youth Program Ivy Lopez - SEED Winnipeg Julio Rivas - CEDTAS Mamadou Ka - L’amicale de la Francophonie du Manitoba Nadia Kidwai - Canadian Muslim Women’s Institute Virginia Guiang - Philippine-Canadian Centre of Manitoba Inc. Special thanks to Njeri Karanja, Rupert Downing, Nicole Chaland, Brendan Reimer and Babatoundé Osseni for their technical, editorial and methodological supports. CED IN MANITOBA ETHNO-CULTURAL COMMUNITIES 2 Community Economic Development in Manitoba’s Ethno-Cultural Communities: Progress and Prospects Executive Summary This report is the result of a recent consultation and engagement process of twenty-one organisations engaged to varying degrees in the development of specific ethno-cultural communities, immigrant -
'Solidarity Wave' on Canadian An
‘It’s Our Patriotic Duty to Help Them’: the Socio-Cultural and Economic Impact of the ‘Solidarity wave’ on Canadian and Polish- Canadian Society in the Early 1980s Michal Mlynarz, University of Alberta 56 | This paper examines the economic, social, and cultural impact made on Canadian and Polish-Canadian society as a result of the mass influx of refugees from the People’s Republic of Poland to Canada in the early to mid 1980s. Although a brief overview and examination of Polish immigration history to Canada over the last few centuries is provided, the paper focuses upon the significant effect caused by the arrival of a new wave of Polish immigrants, largely consisting of highly educated and politically vocal individuals, into the country. The paper argues that this period constituted a significant turning point in Polish-Canadian history. Throughout this period, Polish communities across the country organized and rallied around the plight of the refugees and their ancestral homeland in an unprecedented fashion, supporting them through a wide variety of means, including the mass organization of protests, food and medicine drives, and sponsorship schemes to bring in as many people as possible. Mainstream Canadian society was also made more aware of and became more involved in the issue, with both politicians and average citizens nation-wide lending their support to the cause. As a result of the unique socio-cultural nature of the refugees, the great level of support displayed by Polish-Canadians, and the significant level of sympathy and -
Uot History Freidland.Pdf
Notes for The University of Toronto A History Martin L. Friedland UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS Toronto Buffalo London © University of Toronto Press Incorporated 2002 Toronto Buffalo London Printed in Canada ISBN 0-8020-8526-1 National Library of Canada Cataloguing in Publication Data Friedland, M.L. (Martin Lawrence), 1932– Notes for The University of Toronto : a history ISBN 0-8020-8526-1 1. University of Toronto – History – Bibliography. I. Title. LE3.T52F75 2002 Suppl. 378.7139’541 C2002-900419-5 University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial assistance to its publishing program of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council. This book has been published with the help of a grant from the Humanities and Social Sciences Federation of Canada, using funds provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. University of Toronto Press acknowledges the finacial support for its publishing activities of the Government of Canada, through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP). Contents CHAPTER 1 – 1826 – A CHARTER FOR KING’S COLLEGE ..... ............................................. 7 CHAPTER 2 – 1842 – LAYING THE CORNERSTONE ..... ..................................................... 13 CHAPTER 3 – 1849 – THE CREATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO AND TRINITY COLLEGE ............................................................................................... 19 CHAPTER 4 – 1850 – STARTING OVER ..... .......................................................................... -
Canada Que B Ec, Can Ad A
c A N A D A CANADA QUE B EC, CAN AD A #\rA VS'-: ^W + 347'(105.8 m1) + 347' (105.8m) LEVIS QUEBEC Cantilever truss bridge with main span of 1600 ff still Ahe longesh jpan in the world for any type of bridge other than a suspension bridge.. Construction s far tec/ in I90O but was interrupted oy two accidents. The 5outh cantilever section col/apsed in 190/ killing J5 workmen. The suspended span dropped during Hf/ing in lf/Gy killing 12 men, The bridge Has finally completed in /)ugusi If IS. 0. hi. A mm an n Ivas engaged to analyze the cause of the Iqoj collapse Mb official report is noiw an engineering classic CANADA QUEBEC BRIDGE With its clear span of 1800 ft., the Quebec Bridge was considered the eighth "Wonder of the World" when it was opened to traffic in 1919. It still is the longest cantilever steel railway bridge in the world. y 7f~5M - -—- >.v Cornelius V/..»de Forest,El .ce President Union uas and Power Co. ^EOISTEREO r lum an °rth r e Cincinnatti, Ohio. 3'JMAL. ORIGINAL R .... ?<>J 48339 CANADA QUEBEC BRIDGE The Quebec Bridge is a riveted steel cantilever structure with a main span of 1800 ft and side spans of 515 ft. In its width of 94 ft, it carries one rail line, 3 lanes of automobile traffic and 2 pedestrian walkways across the St.Lawrence Seaway, providing a clearance above water of 150 ft. The bridge was declared a historic monument in 1987 by the Canadian and American Society of Civil Engineers, and a National Historic Site on January 24,1996 by the Department of Canadian Heritage. -
970 Canada Year Book 1980-81 the Senate
970 Canada Year Book 1980-81 The Hon. Charles Ronald McKay Granger, The Hon. Monique Begin, September 15,1976 September 25, 1967 TheHon. Jean-Jacques Blais, September 15, 1976 The Hon. Bryce Stuart Mackasey, February 9, 1968 The Hon. Francis Fox, September 15, 1976 The Hon. Donald Stovel Macdonald, April 20, The Hon. Anthony Chisholm Abbott, September 1968 15,1976 The Hon. John Can- Munro, April 20, 1968 TheHon. lonaCampagnolo, September 15, 1976 The Hon. Gerard Pelletier, April 20, 1968 The Hon. Joseph-Philippe Guay, November 3, The Hon. Jack Davis, April 26, 1968 1976 The Hon. Horace Andrew (Bud) Olson, July 6, The Hon. John Henry Horner, April 21,1977 1968 The Hon. Norman A, Cafik, September 16, 1977 The Hon. Jean-Eudes Dube, July 6, 1968 The Hon, J. Gilles Lamontagne, January 19, 1978 The Hon. Stanley Ronald Basford, July 6, 1968 The Hon. John M. Reid, November 24, 1978 The Hon. Donald Campbell Jamieson, July 6, 1968 The Hon. Pierre De Bane, November 24, 1978 The Hon. Eric William Kierans, July 6, 1968 The Rt. Hon. Jutes Leger, June 1, 1979 The Rt. Hon. Joe Clark, June 4, 1979 The Hon. Robert Knight Andras, July 6, 1968 The Hon. Walter David Baker, June 4, 1979 The Hon. James Armstrong Richardson, July 6, The Hon. Flora MacDonald, June 4, 1979 1968 The Hon James A. McGrath, June 4, 1979 The Hon. Otto Emil Lang, July 6, 1968 The Hon, Erik H. Nielsen, June 4, 1979 The Hon. Herbert Eser Gray, October 20, 1969 The Hon. Allan Frederick Lawrence, June 4, 1979 The Hon. -
Neoliberal Heritage Redress at a Time When Global Financial Regulation and the Partial Nationalization of Industries Are Mainstr
Matt James Neoliberal Heritage Redress At a time when global financial regulation and the partial nationalization of industries are mainstream items of political discussion, using the word “neoliberal” in a chapter title suddenly feels anachronistic. Discussing the topic fifteen years after the appearance of pioneering works such as political scientist Stephen Gill’s “Disciplinary Neoliberalism” might seem superfluous in any event.1 Yet when it comes to the subject of this collection and chapter, Canadian redress politics and the broader arena of diversity politics in which it is situated, it remains illuminating to speak of neoliberalism in the present tense: or, at least, so this chapter will argue. The chapter proceeds as follows. Stressing neoliberalism’s concern to remake the conditions under which organized groups communicate with government and society, I outline how this concern has reshaped Canadian multiculturalism. Although astute criticisms of Canada’s multiculturalism policy abound, the policy’s importance for groups challenging the terms of belonging within the Canadian settler society ought equally to be noted; this role has made multiculturalism a particularly important target of neoliberal change in this 2 country.2 While the profile of Canadian multiculturalism has diminished in recent years, the debates around coming to terms with historical injustice have not. In the remainder of the essay, I show how the characteristic tactics and tools of a neoliberalized multiculturalism have latterly been transported and applied -
Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
Protection of Protection of Conscience: Yesterday, Today and Conscience Project Tomorrow Sean Murphy Administrator, Protection of Conscience Project Presentation to the Courtenay Pro-Life Society www.consciencelaws.org Courtenay, British Columbia, Canada (14 March, 2004) ADVISORY BOARD Janet Ajzenstat, BA, MA, PhD Dept. of Political Science, Outline McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada My talk this afternoon is called Protection of Conscience: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. I will be referring to developments in Britain and the United Dr. Shahid Athar, MD Clinical Associate Professor States, but my focus today is Canada. of Medicine & Endocrinology, Indiana School of Medicine, Under the heading Yesterday I will discuss protection of conscience as it relates Indianapolis, Indiana, USA to early abortion legislation and subsequent developments. J. Budziszewski, PhD Professor, Departments of When we come to the situation Today, I will explain that there is much more to Government & Philosophy, be concerned about than abortion, and introduce you to the Protection of University of Texas (Austin) USA Conscience Project. Dr. John Fleming, For Tomorrow, I will not play the prophet, but I will suggest some key issues BA, ThL (Hons), PhD President, Campion College that need study. Sydney, Australia I will conclude with some general remarks, and take questions from the Dr. Henk Jochemsen, PhD Director, Lindeboom Institute, audience. Center for Medical Ethics, Amsterdam, Netherlands This is merely an overview. There are also gaps in my information. The Protection of Conscience Project is very much a work in progress. David Novak, AB, MHL, PhD Chair of Jewish Studies, University of Toronto, Introduction Toronto, Ontario, Canada Conflicts of conscience in medicine are not new. -
Sir Casimir Gzowski (1813-1898) Engineer, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
Sir Casimir Gzowski (1813-1898) Engineer, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario zowski’s personal qualities, his professional skills and his Gdevotion to public affairs in the land of his adoption made him one of the foremost citizens of the Dominion in the second half of the nineteenth century. Born to an aristocratic Polish family residing in Saint Petersburg at the time, Casimir Gzowski served as a young man in the Imperial Corps of Engineers, until he joined the rebels in the 1830 uprising against Tsarist rule in Poland. When the uprising fell, he fled to Austria, where he was first interned for two years, then exiled to the United States, where he lived until finally settling in Canada in 1841. After a short career as a lawyer, Gzowski returned to engineering and became involved in the leading-edge projects of the time, railway and canal construction. He was the Chief Engineer of one of the first railways linking up Montreal with the U.S.A., and again in the Harbour Works of the great St. Lawrence seaport. In 1853, in partnership with A.T. Galt, D.L. Macpherson and L.H. Holton, he created a firm for railway construction, to be known as Gzowski and Co., and began the building of the Grand Trunk line from Toronto to Sarnia. When in 1873 the construction of the International Bridge across the Niagara River was finished, Gzowski’s reputation as a front-rank engineer in the New World was assured. During a number of years he sat in the Senate of the University of Toronto and was one of the founders of its Wycliffe College. -
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.