1 Dear Joint Review Panel Members, I'm Writing to Express Serious
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High Performance Stallions Standing Abroad
High Performance Stallions Standing Abroad High Performance Stallions Standing Abroad An extract from the Irish Sport Horse Studbook Stallion Book The Irish Sport Horse Studbook is maintained by Horse Sport Ireland and the Northern Ireland Horse Board Horse Sport Ireland First Floor, Beech House, Millennium Park, Osberstown, Naas, Co. Kildare, Ireland Telephone: 045 850800. Int: +353 45 850800 Fax: 045 850850. Int: +353 45 850850 Email: [email protected] Website: www.horsesportireland.ie Northern Ireland Horse Board Office Suite, Meadows Equestrian Centre Embankment Road, Lurgan Co. Armagh, BT66 6NE, Northern Ireland Telephone: 028 38 343355 Fax: 028 38 325332 Email: [email protected] Website: www.nihorseboard.org Copyright © Horse Sport Ireland 2015 HIGH PERFORMANCE STALLIONS STANDING ABROAD INDEX OF APPROVED STALLIONS BY BREED HIGH PERFORMANCE RECOGNISED FOREIGN BREED STALLIONS & STALLIONS STALLIONS STANDING ABROAD & ACANTUS GK....................................4 APPROVED THROUGH AI ACTION BREAKER.............................4 BALLOON [GBR] .............................10 KROONGRAAF............................... 62 AIR JORDAN Z.................................. 5 CANABIS Z......................................18 LAGON DE L'ABBAYE..................... 63 ALLIGATOR FONTAINE..................... 6 CANTURO.......................................19 LANDJUWEEL ST. HUBERT ............ 64 AMARETTO DARCO ......................... 7 CASALL LA SILLA.............................22 LARINO.......................................... 66 -
Stop Cheap Shrimp
www.arcticseafood.sg STOP CHEAP SHRIMP Executive Summary Cheap and unsustainable shrimp imports to Canada are dangerous for humans and environment. Antibiotic-resistant shrimp make their way here and pose the risk of causing fatal infections1,2. Other artifacts of cheap shrimp are slavery, habitat loss, and destruction of coastal cities. Canada must stand against unsustainable shrimp imports. Why Shrimp Health & Nutrition Only 5% of our food imports are inspected at the border, leaving 95% of imports to enter Canada uninspected3. Unsustainable imported shrimp from countries like Thailand and India were recently sent back for containing Nitrofurans, a carcinogen antibiotic2. But antibiotic- resistant bacteria are making their way to Canada despite 5% being inspected. These bacteria can harbour disease and cause fatal infections2. We don’t need to consume shrimp to ensure a healthy lifestyle. Canada’s 2019 food www.cbc.ca/news guide recommends “choosing protein foods that come from plants”4. Antibiotic use on domestic shrimp is banned Arvin Bahrabadi by CFIA, yet imported shrimp are not held to the same standard2. Antibiotic resistance is one of the biggest @ArvinBahrabadi threats to global health5. Once these organisms are here, (Twitter) there is no good way of stopping them from spreading. [email protected] Destructive effect of shrimp farming on mangrove coasts https://www.goodplanet.info Why Shrimp Environmental Destruction Mangroves are natural barriers to natural disasters, saving lives during tsunamis and storms6. But mangroves forests are destroyed to increase production and keep up with western world’s appetite for shrimp7, 1. Our culinary pleasures and Recommendations greed are causing people their lives. -
Letter to Prime Minister Trudeau Re Radioactive Waste Policy
The Right Honourable Justin Trudeau September 19 2017 Prime Minister of Canada Dear Prime Minister Trudeau: Canada is at the dawn of a new era: the Age of Nuclear Waste. Yet this country has no official policy regarding the long-term management of any radioactive wastes other than irradiated nuclear fuel. A federal policy on radioactive wastes other than irradiated fuel is urgently needed. The absence of such a policy in effect gives a green light for the approval of three ill-considered projects to abandon long-lived radioactive wastes at sites very close to major bodies of water – wastes that will remain hazardous for hundreds of thousands of years. One is a gigantic multi- story mound, on the surface at Chalk River, one kilometre from the Ottawa River, meant to permanently house up to a million cubic metres of mixed radioactive wastes. The other two projects involve the in-situ abandonment of the long-lived radioactive remains from two defunct nuclear reactors – the NPD reactor at Rolphton on the Ottawa River, and the WR-1 reactor at Pinawa on the Winnipeg River. These projects pose a threat to future generations, and they set a dreadful example for other countries looking to Canada for socially and environmentally acceptable policies and practices. All three projects involve radioactive wastes that are the sole responsibility of the government of Canada; yet in each case, the projects have been conceived by a private consortium of multinational corporations hired by the previous federal government under a time-limited contract. The previous government also ensured that the approvals process for all three projects is entirely in the hands of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC), a body whose independence has been challenged from many quarters. -
Lib2021 • Program
LIB2021 • PROGRAM From April 8-10, Canadians from coast to coast to coast are joining Justin Trudeau and our Liberal team for our 2021 Liberal National Convention, featuring special keynote panels and speakers, virtual policy discussions, innovating campaign training, and much more. Thursday Sessions Time Session Type Speakers Convention 7:00 PM Opening and Welcome Business Keynote 7:25 PM President’s Opening Remarks Remarks • Suzanne Cowan Supporting Canadians, and building Keynote 7:55 PM a real and fair chance to succeed: Remarks • Hon. Ahmed Hussen Remarks by the Hon. Ahmed Hussen Shaping our future for the Keynote 8:30 PM better: Remarks by the Remarks • Hon. Steven Guilbeault Hon. Steven Guilbeault A Better, Stronger, and More Resilient Canada: In Conversation with the Keynote • Hon. Chrystia Freeland 8:50 PM Hon. Chrystia Freeland and Conversation • Hon. Ken Dryden the Hon. Ken Dryden Subject to change and confirmation | All times EDT 1 Updated as of 1 PM / Saturday / 10/04/2021 - Latest program updates at Lib2021.ca/program Friday Sessions Time Session Type Speakers Convention • Mira Ahmad 10:00 AM Convention 101 Business • Élise Bartlett • Hon. Carolyn Bennett • Hon. Marc Miller 10:00 AM Indigenous Peoples’ Commission Commission • Jaime Battiste • Suzanne Cowan Organizing 11:00 AM Safe and Inclusive Campaigns • Jess Spindler & Readiness 11:00 AM Senior Liberals’ Commission Commission • Stéphane Lauzon • Suzanne Cowan • Hon. Carla Qualtrough 11:00 AM Young Liberals of Canada Commission • Hon. Bardish Chagger • Hon. Karina Gould • Nathaniel Erskine-Smith National Women’s 12:00 PM Commission • Suzanne Cowan Liberal Commission Official Convention Convention 12:30 PM Business Opening Business • Hon. -
Freeland, Champagne to Balance Canada-US Relationship
Heard on the Hill Foreign Policy Michael Harris Politics Hill Climbers Susan Riley Sheila Copps p. 9 Senate news Energy p. 6 NDP rookie MP Matthew Rose LeMay p. 7 policy briefi ng pp. 19-27 Green making waves p. 4 Hill Times’ 30th shin dig p. 33 THIRTY-FIRST YEAR, NO. 1686 CANADA’S POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT NEWSPAPER MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2019 $5.00 Opinion Climate catastrophe was a problem with the climate. In fact, they have gone up 15 per So much for promises of ‘early and deep cent in the past 10 years. So much for the promises of “early and deep cuts” in emissions to avoid catastrophic heating. cuts’ to avoid castrophic climate change Governments have been making these promises since the ONDON, U.K.—What a sur- report by the United Nations is BY GWYNNE DYER emissions are still going up 30 early 1990s, and they are never Lprise! The annual emissions now out, and greenhouse gas years after we fi rst realized there Continued on page 10 News Prime minister News Foreign policy News Legislation New Foreign Affairs Minister Humbled François-Philippe Policy primer: Champagne and Trudeau new Deputy Prime Liberals Minister and changes Intergovernmental promise to Affaris Minister leadership style, Chrystia Freeland, address Impact pictured at but unclear if Rideau Hall on Assessment law Nov. 20, 2019. The Hill Times it’s an ‘actual photographs by outrage without conversion’ or Andrew Meade amendments just a ‘diff erent BY PETER MAZEREEUW role, for now’ overnment offi cials are pol- Gishing off “guidance” docu- ments that experts say could be BY ABBAS RANA used by new Environment Minis- ‘No such thing as too ter Jonathan Wilkinson to make fter dealing with numerous good on his promise to address Ahigh-profi le controversies in criticisms of his government’s his fi rst mandate, being reduced Impact Assessment Act without to a minority government in many cooks’: Freeland, changing the law. -
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba Standing Committee on Industrial
First Session- Thirty-Seventh Legislature of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba Standing Committee on Industrial Relations Chairperson Mr. Daryl Reid Constituency of Transcona Vol. L No. 3 - 6:30 p.m., Monday, August 14, 2000 MANITOBA LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY Thirty-Seventh Legislature Member Constituency Political Affiliation AGLUGUB, Cris The Maples N.D.P. ALLAN, Nancy St. Vital N.D.P. ASHTON, Steve. Hon. Thompson N.D.P. ASPER, Linda Riel N.D.P. BARRETT, Becky, Hon. Inkster N.D.P. CALDWELL, Drew, Hon. Brandon East N.D.P. CERILLI, Marianne Radisson N.D.P. CHOMIAK, Dave, Hon. Kildonan N.D.P. CUMMINGS, Glen Ste. Rose P.C. DACQUAY, Louise Seine River P.C. DERKACH, Leonard Russell P.C. DEWAR, Gregory Selkirk N.D.P. DOER, Gary, Hon. Concordia N.D.P. DRIEDGER, Myrna Charleswood P.C. DYCK, Peter Pembina P.C. ENNS, Harry Lakeside P.C. FAURSCHOU, David Portage Ia Prairie P.C. FILMON, Gary Tuxedo P.C. FRIESEN, Jean, Hon. Wolseley N.D.P. GERRARD, Jon, Hon. River Heights Lib. GILLESHAMMER, Harold Minnedosa P.C. HEL WER, Edward Girnli P.C. HICKES, George Point Douglas N.D.P. JENNISSEN, Gerard Flin Flon N.D.P. KORZENIOWSKI. Bonnie St. James N.D.P. LATHLIN, Oscar, Hon. The Pas N.D.P. LAURENDEAU. Marcel St. Norbert P.C. LEMIEUX, Ron, Hon. La Verendrye N.D.P. LOEWEN, John Fort Whyte P.C. MACKINTOSH, Gord, Hon. St. Johns N.D.P. MAGUIRE, Larry Arthur-Virden P.C. MALOWAY, Jim Elmwood N.D.P. MARTINDALE, Doug Burrows N.D.P. McGIFFORD, Diane, Hon. Lord Roberts N.D.P. -
The Fragility of Fear: the Contentious Politics of Emotion and Security in Canada
The Fragility of Fear: the Contentious Politics of Emotion and Security in Canada by Eric Van Rythoven A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Affairs in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In Political Science Carleton University Ottawa, Ontario ©2017, Eric Van Rythoven Abstract International Relations (IR) theory commonly holds security arguments as powerful instruments of political mobilization because they work to instill, circulate, and intensify popular fears over a threat to a community. Missing from this view is how security arguments often provoke a much wider range of emotional reactions, many of which frustrate and constrain state officials’ attempts to frame issues as security problems. This dissertation offers a corrective by outlining a theory of the contentious politics of emotion and security. Drawing inspiration from a variety of different social theorists of emotion, including Goffman’s interactionist sociology, this approach treats emotions as emerging from distinctive repertoires of social interaction. These emotions play a key role in enabling audiences to sort through the sound and noise of security discourse by indexing the significance of different events to our bodies. Yet popular emotions are rarely harmonious; they’re socialized and circulated through a myriad of different pathways. Different repertoires of interaction in popular culture, public rituals, and memorialization leave audiences with different ways of feeling about putative threats. The result is mixed and contentious emotions which shape both opportunities and constraints for new security policies. The empirical purchase of this theory is illustrated with two cases drawn from the Canadian context: indigenous protest and the F-35 procurement. -
LOBBY MONIT R the 43Rd Parliament: a Guide to Mps’ Personal and Professional Interests Divided by Portfolios
THE LOBBY MONIT R The 43rd Parliament: a guide to MPs’ personal and professional interests divided by portfolios Canada currently has a minority Liberal government, which is composed of 157 Liberal MPs, 121 Conservative MPs, 32 Bloc Québécois MPs, 24 NDP MPs, as well as three Green MPs and one Independent MP. The following lists offer a breakdown of which MPs have backgrounds in the various portfolios on Parliament Hill. This information is based on MPs’ official party biographies and parliamentary committee experience. Compiled by Jesse Cnockaert THE LOBBY The 43rd Parliament: a guide to MPs’ personal and professional interests divided by portfolios MONIT R Agriculture Canadian Heritage Children and Youth Education Sébastien Lemire Caroline Desbiens Kristina Michaud Lenore Zann Louis Plamondon Martin Champoux Yves-François Blanchet Geoff Regan Yves Perron Marilène Gill Gary Anandasangaree Simon Marcil Justin Trudeau Claude DeBellefeuille Julie Dzerowicz Scott Simms Filomena Tassi Sean Casey Lyne Bessette Helena Jaczek Andy Fillmore Gary Anandasangaree Mona Fortier Lawrence MacAulay Darrell Samson Justin Trudeau Harjit Sajjan Wayne Easter Wayne Long Jean-Yves Duclos Mary Ng Pat Finnigan Mélanie Joly Patricia Lattanzio Shaun Chen Marie-Claude Bibeau Yasmin Ratansi Peter Schiefke Kevin Lamoureux Francis Drouin Gary Anandasangaree Mark Holland Lloyd Longfield Soraya Martinez Bardish Chagger Pablo Rodriguez Ahmed Hussen Francis Scarpaleggia Karina Gould Jagdeep Sahota Steven Guilbeault Filomena Tassi Kevin Waugh Richard Lehoux Justin Trudeau -
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba DEBATES
First Session- Thirty-Seventh Legislature of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba DEBATES and PROCEEDINGS Official Report (Hansard) Published under the authority of The Honourable George Hickes Speaker Vol. L No. 808- 1:30 p.m., Thursday, August 17, 2000 (REPRINT) ISSN 0542-5492 MANITOBA LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY Thirty-Seventh Legislature Member Constituency Political Affiliation AGLUGUB, Cris The Maples N.D.P. ALLAN, Nancy St. Vital N.D.P. ASHTON, Steve, Hon. Thompson N.D.P. ASPER, Linda Riel N.D.P. BARRETT, Becky, Hon. Inkster N.D.P. CALDWELL, Drew, Hon. Brandon East N.D.P. CERlLLI, Marianne Radisson N.D.P. CHOMIAK, Dave, Hon. Kildonan N.D.P. CUMMINGS, Glen Ste. Rose P.C. DACQUAY, Louise Seine River P.C. DERKACH, Leonard Russell P.C. DEWAR, Gregory Selkirk N.D.P. DOER, Gary, Hon. Concordia N.D.P. DRIEDGER, Myrna Charleswood P.C. DYCK, Peter Pembina P.C. ENNS, Harry Lakeside P.C. FAURSCHOU, David Portage Ia Prairie P.C. FILMON, Gary Tuxedo P.C. FRIESEN, Jean, Hon. Wolseley N.D.P. GERRARD, Jon, Hon. River Heights Lib. GILLESHAMMER, Harold Minnedosa P.C. HELWER, Edward Gimli P.C. HlCKES, George Point Douglas N.D.P. JENNISSEN, Gerard Flin Flon N.D.P. KORZENIOWSKI, Bonnie St. James N.D.P. LATHLIN, Oscar, Hon. The Pas N.D.P. LAURENDEAU, Marcel St. Norbert P.C. LEMIEUX, Ron, Hon. La Verendrye N.D.P. LOEWEN, John Fort Whyte P.C. MACKINTOSH, Gord, Hon. St. Johns N.D.P. MAGUIRE, Larry Arthur-Virden P.C. MALOWAY, Jim Elmwood N.D.P. MARTINDALE, Doug Burrows N.D.P. -
A Prima Vista
A PRIMA VISTA a survey of reprints and of recent publications 2007/2 BROEKMANS & VAN POPPEL Van Baerlestraat 92-94 Postbus 75228 1070 AE AMSTERDAM sheet music: + 31 (0)20 679 65 75 CDs: + 31 (0)20 675 16 53 / fax: + 31 (0)20 664 67 59 also on INTERNET: www.broekmans.com e-mail: [email protected] 2 CONTENTS A PRIMA VISTA 2007/2 PAGE HEADING 03 PIANO 2-HANDS 10 PIANO 4-HANDS, PIANO 6-HANDS, 2 AND MORE PIANOS, CLAVICHORD, HARPSICHORD 11 ORGAN 14 PIANO AND ORGAN, KEYBOARD, ACCORDION 15 BANDONEON 1 STRING INSTRUMENT WITHOUT ACCOMPANIMENT: 15 VIOLIN SOLO, CELLO SOLO, DOUBLE BASS SOLO 1 STRING INSTRUMENT WITH ACCOMPANIMENT, piano unless stated otherwise: 15 VIOLIN with accompaniment 18 VIOLIN PLAY-ALONG, VIOLA with accompaniment. VIOLA PLAY-ALONG 19 CELLO with accompaniment 20 DOUBLE-BASS with accompaniment, VIOLA DA GAMBA / VIOL with accompaniment 20 2 AND MORE STRING INSTRUMENTS WITH AND WITHOUT ACCOMPANIMENT: 1 WIND INSTRUMENT WITHOUT ACCOMPANIMENT: 27 FLUTE SOLO 28 OBOE SOLO, CLARINET SOLO, SAXOPHONE SOLO 29 BASSOON SOLO, TRUMPET SOLO 30 HORN SOLO, TROMBONE SOLO 31 TUBA SOLO 1 WIND INSTRUMENT WITH ACCOMPANIMENT, piano unless stated otherwise: 31 PICCOLO with accompaniment, FLUTE with accompaniment 32 FLUTE PLAY-ALONG, ALTO FLUTE with accompaniment 33 OBOE with accompaniment, CLARINET with accompaniment 34 CLARINET PLAY-ALONG, SAXOPHONE with accompaniment 35 SAXOPHONE PLAY-ALONG, BASSOON with accompaniment 36 HORN with accompaniment TRUMPET with accompaniment, TRUMPET PLAY-ALONG 37 TROMBONE with accompaniment, TUBA with accompaniment 2 -
C. E. C. G. 1984 - Xi CECG Number -1
C. E. C. G. 1984 - xi CECG Number -1 Concordia Electro-acoustic Composers' Gr ou p Welcome to Issue Number minus one of the C. E. C. G. Newsletter. The previous issue of this newsletter went (initially) to about 45 people, with a request for addresses of others. The mailing list is now close to 150, and growing weekly. Over 95% of ~his list are composers / composer~organizers. There are still some glaring holes in the list, particularly the Maritimes and the Prairies, ~ people sent addresses, and I would particularly like to thank John Winiarz, John Celona, Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux, Wendy Bartley and Jim Montgomery for their special efforts. Submissions to the Newsletter are encouraged. Materials should be 'photo - ready', and (usually) be able to be reduced to one-half size. (See the rest of the newsletter.) It is also possible to send out information that is received in quantity: please send 200 copies. (note attached from the Toronto Music Gallery). Items and articles of personal, local and national interest will be included, with (for example) a Montreal 'calendar' of up coming events. The function of this being two-fold (i) to let people know what is going on and (ii) (and more importantly), to give organizers a rough guide to planned events to avoid conflicts in the timing, as much as possible. Until a national newsletter is established, I am offering to do the same for Toronto. Send your d~tes as soon as they are established, and if possible, even in their tentative form. (page 1) English or French. -
Dictionnaire Nobiliaire : Répertoire Des Généalogies Et Des Documents
Please handle this volume with care. The University of Connecticut Libraries, Storrs GAYLORD RG DICTIONNAIRE NOBILIAIRE. La Haye, Février 1884. .['Monsieur , ES, je vous prie d'avoir la bonté de m'accuser réception de cet ouvrage. Prière de m envoyer en même temps à titre d'échange le catalogue ou l'inv^entaire de la biblio- thèque, du musée, des archives, sous votre direc- tion . ou des autres publications historiques. Il me serait fort agréable si ce dictionnaire pour- rait rester déposé dans la salle de lecture. veuillez agréer, Mon- En vous remerciant d'avance , sieur, l'assurance de ma considération distinguée. A. A. VORSTERMAN VAN OYEN. J RÉPERTO IRE DES GÉNÉALOGIES et des DOCUMENTS GÉNÉALOGIQUES, QUI SE TROUVENT DANS LA BIBLIOTHÈQUE, LES COLLECTIONS ET LES ARCHIVES DE A. A. TORSTERMÂN YAl OYEI, membre honoraire et Chevalier de l'ordre da Me'rite de Waldeck et de Pyrmoat, membre correspondant de plusieurs sociétés savantes. (LA HAYE, HOLLANDE). LA HAYE, . G. VAN DOORN & FILS, Libraires de la Cour. , "vooI^^wooI^r). Wat goed en edel is houdt stand 't Is aan d'onsterflijkheid verwant. Bijna vijftien jaren geleden ontstond bij mîj het plan een Dictionnaire nobiliaire het licht te doen zien. Al dien tijd werd onvermoeid doorgewerkt. De uitslag van dien arbeid wordt hierbij aangeboden. Sedert de laatste vier jaren werd ik bij bet inventarisecren en vooral ook bij het nauwkeurig nazien der proeven , trouw ter zijde gestaan door dan Hcer Fred. Caland. Daarvoor mijn' dank , met den wensch dat hem nog jaren lang kracht worde geschonken, om zijn' werkkring te blijven vervullen.