AASMAN, SUSAN See CB WATCO

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

AASMAN, SUSAN See CB WATCO 1 GSR Vertical File Index General Subjects Compiled by the staff of Information Services, Kitchener Public Library Updated 7 June 2013 – Phase 2 Version - 1 - GSR General Subjects Abbreviations: CB KW = Collective Biography – Kitchener Waterloo CB Watco = Collective Biography – Waterloo County (Region) – excluding Kitchener – Waterloo Note: Coverage starts from various dates to 31 December 2004. For articles from the Waterloo Region Record (formerly K-W Record), dated 1 October 1990 to the present, please see staff at the Information Level 2 desk. Thank you. Updated 7 June 2013 Page 2 of 537 GSR General Subjects GSR General Subject Headings Index General A AASMAN, SUSAN see CB WATCO ABATE, LAURA ABBEY, JOHN see CB WATCO ABBOTT, BRUCE see CB KW ABBOTT, KATHLEEN (WIFE OF WILLIAM) NEE LOTH see CB KW ABERNATHY, RUTH see ARTISTS-RMW ABERLE, MURRAY see CB WATCO ABERLE, ROY see CB WATCO ABWUNZA YMCA CHILD CARE CENTRE see DAY CARE (A-Z) ACADEMY OF DANCE see BUS ENT WAT ACCIDENTS - KITCHENER, ONTARIO - 1995 - 1999 see also scrapbooks MRARE 363.100971345 ACCID for Volume 1: 1950-1985, Volume 2: 1986-1995 ACCIDENTS - KITCHENER - AISHA BAIG ACCIDENTS - WATERLOO COUNTY – 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999 see also scrapbooks MRARE 363.100971344 ACCID for Volume 1: 1971-1989, Volume 2: 1990-1993 and Volume 3: 1994 -1995 ACCIDENTS - WATERLOO COUNTY - HAYRIDE 1984 ACCIDENTS - WATERLOO COUNTY - HAYRIDE 1985 ACCIDENTS - WATERLOO COUNTY - TREVOR CHAMBERLAIN ACETENBERG, MARY see CB KW ACHESON, JOHN SIDNEY see CB KW ACHIUME, Dr. JORDAN Updated 7 June 2013 Page 3 of 537 GSR General Subjects ACKLAND, MARIANNE (WIFE OF WILLIAM) NEE WHALLY see CB KW ACTION NETWORK FOR OVERSEAS AID see CLUBS KW (A-K) ADAIR FAMILY see CB KW ADAM, GEORGE & GERTRUDE see CB KW ADAMKIEWICZ, LESLIE see CB WATCO ADAMS, BERNICE ADAMS, MIKE see WATERLOO OXFORD DISTRICT SECONDARY SCHOOL ADAMS, STEVE see CB KW ADAMS, TOM see CB KW ADAMS, WILLIAM see CB KW ADDARIO, Sister HELEN see CB KW ADENEY, JAMES see CB KW ADENEY, JEFFREY see CB KW ADENEY, MARCUS see CB KW ADENEY, SAXON see CB KW ADLER, SIMON see CB KW ADLYS, J. W. see CB KW ADLYS, BERNARD V. “BERNIE” see CB KW ADOURIAN, DALE see CB KW ADSHADE, ROBERT see CB WATCO ADULT EDUCATION see also ST. LOUIS ADULT EDUCATION CENTRE ADULT EDUCATION CENTRE AFFELDT, ALBERT ADOLPH see CB WATCO AFFORDABLE HOUSING see HOUSING – RMW - LOW RENTAL AGAJANIAN, GERTRUDE (WIFE OF ARTHUR) NEE FRANKS see CB KW AGGARWAL, RAM see CB WATCO Updated 7 June 2013 Page 4 of 537 GSR General Subjects AGGERHOLM, BARBARA see CB KW AGRICULTURE - RMW see also WATERLOO COUNTY FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE AHMAD, RANA see CB KW AHRENS, ALBERT see CB KW AHRENS, CARL AHRENS, CARL A. see CB KW AHRENS, CARRIE see CB KW AHRENS, CHARLES see CB KW AHRENS, CHARLOTTE see CB KW AHRENS, EMMA see CB KW AHRENS, FLORENCE (FLOSS) see CB KW AHRENS, FREDERICK see CB KW AHRENS, HENRY see CB KW AHRENS, HERMAN see CB KW AHRENS, LAURIE see CB KW AHRENS, LOUISE see CB KW AHUJA, AMRIK S. see CB KW AINLAY, HARRY see CB KW AINSLIE, ADAM see CB WATCO AINSWORTH, HERB see CB KW AINSWORTH, JAMES see CB KW AIR CADETS see KW AIR CADETS AIR POLLUTION - RMW AITCHISON, NEIL see CB KW AITCHISON, TAMMY see CB KW AITCHISON, TODD see CB KW Updated 7 June 2013 Page 5 of 537 GSR General Subjects AITKEN, GORDON see CB KW AITKENHEAD, KEVIN J. see CB KW AITKIN, GEORGE AITKIN, WILLIAM HOWIE see CB KW AL-ANON - K-W see ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS - K-W ALARIE, BEN see CB WATCO ALARIE, LIZZIE see CB WATCO ALATEEN see ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS - K-W ALBERT, JEAN ELEANOR NEE BOYER see CB KW ALBERT, JOAN & KEN see CB WATCO ALBERT, MICHAEL see CB KW ALBERT, JAMES “AB” MORTON see CB WATCO ALBION DANCE CLUB see CLUBS KW (A-K) ALBRECHT, BETTY ALBRECHT, CHRISTIAN E. see CB WATCO ALBRECHT FAMILY see CB KW ALBRECHT, GUS & GLADYS see CB KW ALBRECHT, HELEN RUTH NEE BACH see CB KW ALBRECHT, HENRIETTA see CB KW ALBRECHT, JOHN K. see CB WATCO ALBRECHT, SCOTT see CB KW ALBRECHT, TIM see CB WATCO ALBRIGHT, PRISCILLA YANTHA see CB KW ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS - K-W see also HOUSE OF FRIENDSHIP ALDER LAKE see NEW DUNDEE MILL ALDERSON, MARGARET see CB WATCO Updated 7 June 2013 Page 6 of 537 GSR General Subjects ALE TRAIL ALETTER, DORINDA see CB KW ALETTER, ESTHER (WIFE OF GEORGE R.) NEE GROSS see CB KW ALETTER, MRS. GEORGE H. see CB KW ALETTER, GEORGE H. see CB KW ALETTER, MRS. GEORGE H. see CB KW ALETTER, GEORGE R. see CB KW ALETTER, REBECCA see CB KW ALEXANDER, BRUCE & LAWLOR ALEXANDER, SHERRY see TEACHERS-RMW ALEXANDER, JIM see CB WATCO ALEXANDER, JAMES (pianist) see CB WATCO ALEXANDER, JAMES (war veteran, Cambridge) see CB WATCO ALEXANIAN, ARMEN see CB KW ALGER, BRIAN see CB WATCO ALKINS, WES see ATHLETES – RMW (A-K) ALLAN, FRANCES see CB KW ALLCROFT, MARY see CB KW ALLEMANG, CARL O. see CB WATCO ALLEMANG, CHRISTENA see CB KW ALLEMANG, LAURA MARY see CB KW ALLEN, BRENT see CB WATCO ALLEN, CHARLES ALFRED see CB WATCO ALLEN, GEORGE see CB WATCO ALLEN, JULIE see CB WATCO ALLEN, ROSE see CB WATCO ALLEN, STAN & SYLVIA see CB WATCO ALLEN, STEVE see CB WATCO Updated 7 June 2013 Page 7 of 537 GSR General Subjects ALLEN, TERRY see CB WATCO ALLENDORF, LUCINDA see CB KW ALLES, Reverend PETER see CB WATCO ALLES, R. V. see CB KW ALLES, WILLIAM J. see CB KW ALLGEIER, CLAYTON see CB KW ALLGEIER, HERBERT see CB KW ALLGEIER, ROBERT see CB KW ALLIANCE FRANCAISE ALLISON, CLIFF & ELSIE see CB WATCO ALLISON, JIM see WATERLOO COUNTY JAIL - HANGINGS ALLISON, JOHN R. see CB KW ALLISON, KELLY see CB WATCO ALMA STREET UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH, KITCHENER ALMEDA, MANUELA see CB WATCO ALOUETTE CLUB ALOYSIA, Sister M. ALPINE CLUB ALSACE ALTMAN, FRED see CB KW ALTMAN, VIOLET see CB KW ALVIANO, VINCENT see CB KW AMALGAMATED CLOTHING AND TEXTILE WORKERS UNION AMARAL, ISALTINA see CB KW AMARAL, MIGUEL see CB WATCO AMARAL, MIKE AMBROSE, MARJ see CB WATCO Updated 7 June 2013 Page 8 of 537 GSR General Subjects AMBULANCE SERVICE - RMW see also names of individual hospitals AMENT, ANNETTA see CB KW AMENT, ANNIE see CB KW AMENT, JOSEPH see CB KW AMISH AMLINGER, GERRY see CB KW AMNESTY INTERNATINAL AMOS, MARJORIE see CB KW AMOS, SHERRI see CB WATCO AMY, J. NELSON see CB KW AMY, JACK see CB KW AMY, JONATHAN see CB WATCO AMY, ROSS see CB KW AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS SOCIETY OF CANADA CLUB see CLUBS KW (A-K) ANAGNOSTOPOULOS, ANGELA see CB KW ANCIENT MARINERS CANOE CLUB see CLUBS KW (A-K) ANDERSON, CYNTHIA see CANCER - INDIVIDUALS ANDERSON, ERNIE see CB KW ANDERSON, FRED see CB WATCO ANDERSON, GRACE see CB KW ANDERSON, HOPE see CB WATCO ANDERSON, JAMES "DEAN" see CB KW ANDERSON, JIM see CB WATCO ANDERSON, JERRY see ATHLETES – RMW (A-K) ANDERSON, JUNE see CB WATCO ANDERSON, MARION see CB KW Updated 7 June 2013 Page 9 of 537 GSR General Subjects ANDERSON, RAY & BRENDA see CB WATCO ANDERSON, ROBERT J. see CB KW ANDERSON, ROSS see CB WATCO ANDERSON, Reverend SUSAN see CB WATCO ANDERSON, WILLIAM (BILL) see CB KW see also BILL ANDERSON CLOTHIER LTD. in STORES-KIT ANDRADE, ALEXANDER, JOSEPH & DAVID see CB WATCO ANDREW, DANIEL see CB KW ANDREW, JOCK see CB KW ANDREW, LESLEY see CB KW ANDREW, NATHANIEL see CB WATCO ANDREWS, ARTHUR LORNE see CB KW ANDREWS, NANCY see CB WATCO ANDRICH, CAROLINE NEE BROHMANN see CB WATCO ANDRULIS, ED see ATHLETES - KW (A-K) ANDRUS, GUY see CB KW ANIMAL CONTROL KITCHENER see COUNCIL - KITCHENER - BYLAWS - ANIMAL CONTROLS ANNANDALE, BRUCE see CB WATCO ANNEXATION - KITCHENER, ONTARIO see also WATERLOO TOWNSHIP - ANNEXATIONS ANNEXATION - WATERLOO, ONTARIO see also WATERLOO TOWNSHIP - ANNEXATIONS ANSELMA HOUSE ANSTETT, DENNIS & LARRY see also HAYSVILLE VALLEY DEER SANCTUARY & GALLERY ANTHES, JOHN S. & LYDIA CATHERINE (nee HERLAN) ANTHES, RAYMOND GORDON see CB KW Updated 7 June 2013 Page 10 of 537 GSR General Subjects ANTHONY, DAVID ANTONELLI, ANGELA see CB KW ANTONELLI, CELESTINO see CB KW ANTONELLI, NICOLA E. see CB KW ANTONIELLO, TONY see CB WATCO ANTSCHERL, DAVID see CB KW APLIN, JULIA see CB WATCO APPLEBAUM, RAY see CB KW APPLEBY, ROY see CB KW APPLEYARD, Reverend HAROLD F. see CB KW APPLEYARD, Canon R. T. see CB WATCO APPRAISAL INSTITUTE OF CANADA -WATERLOO-WELLINGTON CHAPTER see CLUBS KW (A-K) ARAM, KENNETH GEORGE see CB KW ARAMA, DAVID see CB KW ARCHAEOLOGY - K-W & DISTRICT ARCHER, DONALD see CB KW ARCHER, KENNETH STAFFORD see CB KW ARCHIBALD, DAVID see CB KW ARCHIBALD, LAURA see AUTHORS – RMW (A-Z) ARCHIBALD, RUTH ANN see CB KW ARCHITECTURAL CONSERVANCY OF ONTARIO - NORTH WATERLOO REGION BRANCH see also HISTORIC BUILDINGS - WATERLOO COUNTY ARCHITECTURAL SURVEY - WATERLOO COUNTY ARCHITECTURE - RMW ARCON, CHARLIE see CB WATCO ARIARATNAM, ARI ARMBRECHT FAMILY see CB KW Updated 7 June 2013 Page 11 of 537 GSR General Subjects ARMBRUST, GRACE (WIFE OF JACK C.) NEE LEDERMAN see CB KW ARMED FORCES ARMENIAN, RAFFI ARMORIES – KW ARMORY - CAMBRIDGE see HIGHLAND FUSILIERS OF CANADA ARMSTRONG, BILL see CB KW ARMSTRONG, LES see CB WATCO ARMSTRONG, NEIL see CB WATCO ARMSTRONG, ROBERT see CB WATCO ARMSTRONG, WALTER see CB KW ARNDT, DIETER ARNDT, SUSAN see CB KW ARNDT, WALTER see CB KW ARNOLD, ALFRED see CB KW ARNOLD, ALMA see CB KW ARNOLD, ARNOLD see CB KW ARNOLD, CARL see CB KW ARNOLD, EDWARD see CB KW ARNOLD, ESTHER & BILL see CB KW ARNOLD, HAROLD see CB KW ARNOLD, JACOB (JAKE) see CB KW ARNOLD, Reverend JEROME LOUIS see CB KW ARNOLD, JOANNE see CB KW ARNOLD, LARGETTA (WIFE OF VINCENT) NEE SCHAFFER see CB KW ARNOLD, LEANNE see CB KW ARNOLD, MARY PATRICIA see CB KW ARNOLD, PAUL see CB KW Updated 7 June 2013 Page 12 of 537 GSR General Subjects ARNOLD, PERCY see CB KW ARNOLD, ROBERT see CB KW ARNOLD, Dr.
Recommended publications
  • Synapsis: Philadelphia Campus (1928) Philadelphia College of Osteopathy
    Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine DigitalCommons@PCOM All Yearbooks PCOM Yearbooks 1928 Synapsis: Philadelphia Campus (1928) Philadelphia College of Osteopathy Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/yearbooks Part of the Medicine and Health Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Philadelphia College of Osteopathy, "Synapsis: Philadelphia Campus (1928)" (1928). All Yearbooks. Book 72. http://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/yearbooks/72 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the PCOM Yearbooks at DigitalCommons@PCOM. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Yearbooks by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@PCOM. For more information, please contact [email protected]. When i commenced to study, i took the human bones and handled them week in and week out. month in and month out. c^. T. Still ExLibRis- Q f\rcv^ \b'aoH\ ::(S5>^ •'-^L" [ifiPTI- Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/synapsisphiladel1928phil The SYNAPSIS Volume IV Published by THE JUNIOR CLASS OF THE PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHY Philadelphia. Penna. dedication Frofn others he has received the gratitude for the tvork he did in liberatir?g, to an extent that per- haps no other man has achieved, the span of life from physical afflictions small and great. From us noiv comes an appreciation, not only of his efforts but also of the opening he has made for all of us who have chosen to follow in his steps in the field of serv- ice to humanity. His own simplicity, honesty, knowl- edge and unflinching courage in the face of unceas- ing opposition, we reverently acknowledge and hope will become an intrinsic part of our own struggle to carry on the ideals for which he stood.
    [Show full text]
  • Dorchester Pope Family
    A HISTORY OF THE Dorchester Pope Family. 1634-1888. WITH SKETCHES OF OTHER POPES IN ENGLAND AND AMERICA, AND NOTES UPON SEVERAL INTERMARRYING FAMILIES, 0 CHARLES HENRY POPE, MllMBIUl N. E. HISTOalC GENIIALOGlCAl. SOCIETY. BOSTON~ MASS.: PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR, AT 79 FRANKLIN ST. 1888 PRESS OF L. BARTA & Co., BOSTON. BOSTON, MA88,,.... (~£P."/.,.. .w.;,.!' .. 190 L.. - f!cynduLdc ;-~,,__ a.ut ,,,,-Mrs. 0 ~. I - j)tt'"rrz-J (i'VU ;-k.Lf!· le a, ~ u1--(_,fl.,C./ cU!.,t,, u,_a,1,,~{a"-~ t L, Lt j-/ (y ~'--? L--y- a~ c/4-.t 7l~ ~~ -zup /r,//~//TJJUJ4y. a.&~ ,,l E kr1J-&1 1}U, ~L-U~ l 6-vl- ~-u _ r <,~ ?:~~L ~ I ~-{lu-,1 7~ _..l~ i allll :i1tft r~,~UL,vtA-, %tt. cz· -t~I;"'~::- /, ~ • I / CJf:z,-61 M, ~u_, PREFACE. IT was predicted of the Great Philanthropist, "He shall tum the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the hearts of children to their fathers." The writer seeks to contribute something toward the development of such mutual afiection between the members of the Pope Family. He has found his own heart tenderly drawn toward all whose names he has registered and whose biographies he has at­ tempted to write. The dead are his own, whose graves he has sought to strew with the tributes of love ; the living are his own, every one of whose careers he now watches with strong interest. He has given a large part of bis recreation hours and vacation time for eight years to the gathering of materials for the work ; written hundreds of letters ; examined a great many deeds and wills, town journals, church registers, and family records ; visited numerous persons and places, and pored over a large number of histories of towns and families ; and has gathered here the items and entries thus discovered.
    [Show full text]
  • The Commencement of Michigan State University
    ,TUESDAY, DECEMBER EIGHTH NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTY-NINE The Fall Commencement of Michigan State University UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM EAST LANSING The -Fall Commencement of Michigan State University ACADEMIC COSTUME The pageantry and color at commencement of the institution conferring the degree. If the exercises reveal a record of academic achievement institution has more than one color, the chevron is of the various individuals taking part in the exer­ used to introduce the second color. Colored velvet cises. The following brief description is given that or velveteen binds the hoods and indicates the the audience might more readily interpret such department or faculty to which the degree pertains. achievement. Historical associations of color have been In 1894, the Intercollegiate Commission, a continued to signify the various faculties. Art and group of leading American educators met at letters cali be recognized by the white, taken from Columbia University to draft a code which would the traditional white fur trimming of the Oxford serve to regulate the design of gowns and hoods and Cambridge Bachelor of Arts hoods. Red, long indicating the various degrees as well as the colors traditional of the church, indicates theology. The to indicate the various faculties. This code has been royal purple of the King's court signifies law. The adopted by most of the colleges and universities green of medicinal herbs immediately identifies a in America and its use has made identification of medical degree. Philosophy is signified by the color scholastic honors an immediate activity. of wisdom and truth, blue. Because through re­ Three types of gowns are indicated by the search untold wealth has been released to the world, code.
    [Show full text]
  • 1929-1930 Catalog College of the Holy Cross
    College of the Holy Cross CrossWorks Course Catalogs College Archives 7-1-1930 1929-1930 Catalog College of the Holy Cross Follow this and additional works at: http://crossworks.holycross.edu/course_catalog Part of the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation College of the Holy Cross, "1929-1930 Catalog" (1930). Course Catalogs. 49. http://crossworks.holycross.edu/course_catalog/49 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the College Archives at CrossWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Course Catalogs by an authorized administrator of CrossWorks. Extract from Speech of Cardinal Gibbons at the Corn- mencement Exercises, June 18, 1907. "Christian schools, like Holy Cross College, are. indispensable far the moral and mental development of the rising generation." "The defences of our Commonwealth are not material, but spiritual. Her fortifications, her castles, are her insti- tutions of learning. Those who are admitted to the college campus tread the ramparts of the State. The classic halls are the armories from which are furnished forth the knights in armor to defend and support our liberty.. For such high purposes has Holy Cross been called int' eing. A firm foundation of the Commonwealth. A '•nder of right- eousness. A teacher of holy men. Let I ,....;;-rets continue to rise, shuwing forth the way, the truth, and the light. "In thougnts sublime that pierce the night like stars, An t € their mild persistence urge man's arch To ea, tsues.'l "(Extract from the ad r of His Excellency, the Hon. Calvin Coolidge, delivered at the Comm-..u....ment exercises, Holy Cross College, June 25, 1919.) • BULLETIN HOLY CROSS COLLEGE 'EIGHTY-SEVENTH YEAR Catalogue Number WORCESTER, MASS.
    [Show full text]
  • REGIONAL COUNCIL MINUTES Wednesday, June 28, 2006
    REGIONAL COUNCIL MINUTES Wednesday, June 28, 2006 The following are the minutes of the Regular Council meeting held at 7:15 p.m. in the Regional Council Chamber, 150 Frederick Street, Kitchener, Ontario, with the following members present: Chair K. Seiling, J. Brewer, D. Craig, K. Denouden, T. Galloway, R. Kelterborn, C. Millar, J. Mitchell, W. Roth, J. Smola, B. Strauss, J. Wideman, and C. Zehr. Regrets: M. Connolly, H. Epp, J. Haalboom DECLARATIONS OF PECUNIARY INTEREST UNDER THE MUNICIPAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST ACT None declared. Chair Seiling noted 2 plaques that have been received and circulated them to councillors. One was recognizing the Region’s commitment to the Canadian Forces Reserves and the other was with respect to the Greater Golden Horseshoe Growth Plan. CLOSED SESSION MOVED by W. Roth SECONDED by J. Brewer That a closed meeting of Council be held on Wednesday, June 28, 2006 at 6:30 p.m. in accordance with Section 239 of the Municipal Act, 2001, for the purposes of considering the following subject matters: a) pending acquisition of property b) personal matters about an identifiable individual c) solicitor-client privilege d) labour negotiations e) labour relations CARRIED MOVED by J. Smola SECONDED by K. Denouden The Council reconvene in Open Session. CARRIED DELEGATIONS a) Catherine Fife appeared before Council with respect to the Best Start Program and provided her views on the proposed Option 1. She suggested amendments to the option in order to accommodate the special needs children and ensure continued funding for their programs. She stated by not increasing the funding there will be a Council - 2 - 06/06/28 decrease in the services provided.
    [Show full text]
  • Old Bones: a Recent History of Urban Placemaking in Kitchener, Ontario
    Old Bones: A recent history of urban placemaking in Kitchener, Ontario through media analysis by Lee Barich A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in fulfillment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Master of Arts in Planning Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2020 © Lee Barich 2020 Author’s Declaration I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. ii Abstract Kitchener, Ontario has experienced significant social and physical changes in its downtown in recent decades. Once an industrial hub, the City's urban core declined as suburban migration and deindustrialization gutted its economic and cultural activity. Now, the downtown sees a new light rail transit (LRT) system pass by the old brick industrial buildings where tech companies and new developments thrive. This thesis will offer a historical review as to how this transition occurred through media analysis. Newspaper archives show that this revitalization was the process of negotiating place, identity, and value amongst the City's leaders, its residents, and investors. This process revolved around the successful conservation of cultural heritage sites. Participants considered how to leverage these assets to reclaim the City's identity while also building a liveable space for its future. By exploring the important role played by heritage conservation in the City's downtown revival, readers will see how cultural assets can offer an economic, social, and cultural return on investment.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 Newsletters
    Waterloo Historical Society Newsletter MARCH 2019 Marion Roes, Editor Public Meetings – All are welcome! Saturday, April 6, 1 pm Victoria Park Pavilion Doors Open at 12 80 Schneider Ave., Kitchener Please bring indoor footwear to wear if wet weather Our presenter for this meeting will be Tarah Brookfield. Tarah is a graduate of McGill University (BA), University of Waterloo (MA), and York University (PhD). Since 2009, she has been a professor of history and youth and children’s studies at Wilfrid Laurier University’s Brantford campus. Tarah’s past and current research focuses on Canadian women’s political activism, peace work, and child welfare efforts during the World Wars and Cold War. She is the author of Cold War Comforts: Canadian Women, Child Safety, and Global Insecurity (2012). She’ll be presenting on research conducted for her second book, Our Voices Must be Heard: Women and the Vote in Ontario (2018) which examines the history of suffrage activism, anti- suffragists, and Ontario’s first women voters, including some stories of women from what is now the Waterloo Region. Tarah will have her books to sell at the meeting. Next meetings Victoria Park Pavilion: Tuesday, May 21 at 7:30 pm, doors open at 6:30 Volumes will be distributed free to current members at this meeting. Note: There won’t be another newsletter before the May 21 meeting. Details will be on our web site, Facebook and Twitter. If you don’t use the internet and would like information, contact Eric Uhlmann after May 13 at the phone number on the back page.
    [Show full text]
  • Grand Lodge of AF & AM of Canada, 1998
    Grand Lodge A.F. & A.M. of Canada in the Province of Ontario PROCEEDINGS 1998 GRAND LODGE A.F. & A.M. OF CANADA in the Province of Ontario PROCEEDINGS ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-THIRD ANNUAL COMMUNICATION HELD IN THE CITY OF TORONTO July 15th, A.D. 1998, A.L. 5998 The property of and ordered to be read in all the Lodges and preserved. The Proceedings should always be available for use by all members of the lodge. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Heritage Lodge No. 730 G.R.C. & Grand Lodge A.F.& A.M. of Canada in the Province of Ontario http://www.archive.org/details/grandlodge1998onta MOST WORSHIPFUL BROTHER WILLIAM T. ANDERSON GRAND MASTER A BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF OUR GRAND MASTER M.W. Bro. William Thompson Anderson was born m Adjala Township in the County County of Dufferin, where he of Simcoe, and raised in the Township of Mono, in the . attended public school. Upon graduation from Orangeville District High School, he went to work with the then Department of Lands and Forests, becoming involved in Municipal Assessment through the Provmcial Land Tax Programme. Bro. Anderson then transferred to the Department of Municipal Affairs, Municipal Assessment Division, and enrolled in the Queen's University Extension School Municipal Assess- ment Accreditation Programme, leadmg to the designation M.I.M.A. (Member of the Institute of Municipal Assessors). When the provmce of Ontario assumed all responsi- bility for municipal assessment, he was transferred to Barne as Valuation Manager, where he served until his retirement in 1 990.
    [Show full text]
  • Conference Committees
    FLAIRS-23 Conference Committees Conference Chair David Wilson (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA) Program Cochairs Hans W. Guesgen (Massey University, New Zealand) R. Charles Murray (Carnegie Learning, USA) Special Tracks Chair Philip McCarthy (University of Memphis, USA) General Conference Program Committee John Anderson (University of Manitoba, Canada) Tiffany Barnes (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA) Valerie Barr (Union College, USA) Roman Barták (Charles University, Czech Republic) Ralph Bergmann (Universität Trier, Germany) Chris Biemann (Microsoft, USA) Eric Breck (Rhodes College, USA) Debra Burhans (Canisius College, USA) Brian Carse (University of the West of England, United Kingdom) Amedeo Cesta (ISTC, Italy) Soon Chun (City University of New York, USA) Bill Clancey (NASA/Ames Research Center, USA) Diane Cook (Washington State University, USA) Douglas D. Dankel II (University of Florida, USA) Sidney D’Mello (University of Memphis, USA) William Eberle (Tennessee Technological University, USA) Mark Fenner (Norwich University, USA) Susana Fernández (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain) Susan Fox (Macalester College, USA) Reva Freedman (Northern Illinois University, USA) James Geller (New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA) Michael Glass (Valparaiso University, USA) Ashok Goel (Georgia Tech, USA) Avelino Gonzalez (University of Central Florida, USA) Jesus Gonzalez (National Institute of Astrophysics Optics and Electronics, Mexico) Art Graesser (University of Memphis, USA) Samer Hassan (University of
    [Show full text]
  • REGIONAL COUNCIL MINUTES Wednesday, January 26, 2005
    REGIONAL COUNCIL MINUTES Wednesday, January 26, 2005 The following are the minutes of the Regular Council meeting held at 7:10 p.m. in the Regional Council Chamber, 150 Frederick Street, Kitchener, Ontario, with the following members present: Chair K. Seiling, J. Brewer, M. Connolly, K. Denouden, H. Epp, T. Galloway, J. Haalboom, R. Kelterborn, C. Millar, J. Mitchell, J. Smola, B. Strauss, J. Wideman, and C. Zehr. Regrets: D. Craig and W. Roth DECLARATIONS OF PECUNIARY INTEREST UNDER THE MUNICIPAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST ACT J. Smola disclosed a pecuniary interest with respect to the grant for K-W Counselling Services Inc., as he is the carpenter for this new construction. CLOSED SESSION MOVED by B. Strauss SECONDED by J. Smola That Council convene in Closed Session pursuant to Part II, Section 14(1) a), b), f) of Procedural By-law 00-031, as amended. CARRIED DELEGATIONS Mike O’Connor on behalf of Keith Murray appeared with respect to the Development Charges Act, 1997. M. O’Connor stated he is Mr. Murray’s son-in-law and he supports a change in the Development Charges By-law. He stated this proposed development of Mr. Murray’s land will require no increase in the current Regional infrastructure. Mr. O’Connor concurred that the Council’s hands are tied but noted the building is primarily for the production of crops and breeding of animals. He advised the property is used for a farm vacation program for 60 days each year. He provided suggestions to Council for changes in the wording of the by-law which would give Council the power to impose development charges based on a percentage of use related to time or square footage.
    [Show full text]
  • Deaths and Marriages As Published in the Ellsworth American 1884 Thru 1891
    Maine State Library Maine State Documents Death and Marriage Records as Published in the Ellsworth American Archives Ellsworth American 1992 Deaths and Marriages as Published in the Ellsworth American 1884 thru 1891 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalmaine.com/ellsworth_american_indexes Recommended Citation "Deaths and Marriages as Published in the Ellsworth American 1884 thru 1891" (1992). Death and Marriage Records as Published in the Ellsworth American. 3. http://digitalmaine.com/ellsworth_american_indexes/3 This Text is brought to you for free and open access by the Ellsworth American Archives at Maine State Documents. It has been accepted for inclusion in Death and Marriage Records as Published in the Ellsworth American by an authorized administrator of Maine State Documents. For more information, please contact [email protected]. DEATHS and MARRIAGES as published in the ELLSWORTH AMERICAN 1884 thru 1891 Compiled by: Mrs. Arthur Ward 12 Lincoln Street Brewer, ME 04412 ( 1992) FOREWORD The following excerpt is taken from an article entitled "The History of Newspapers in Hancock County," written by Hale G. Joy for the ELLSWORTH AMERICAN, and published in the July 13, 1989 edition, page 26: "The history of successful newspapers in Ellsworth seems to start in October 1851, when Couliard and Hilton came to Ellsworth from Bangor and started the ELLSWORTH HERALD. After Hilton ceased his connection with the paper, Couliard continued to publish until the fall of 1854. After the discontinuation of this paper, the press and other material became the property of William H. Chaney, who bought out the ELLSWORTH AMERICAN in 1854. He became associated with Charles W.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Download
    Languages of Ethnicity: Teaching German in Waterloo County’s Schools, 1850–1915 BARBARA LORENZKOWSKI* The German-language classroom in the public schools of Waterloo County, Ontario, thrust the local ethnicity of the region into the public eye and provoked public conversations on the meaning of the German language and its importance to cultural identity. Ethnic leaders vocally sought to preserve their mother tongue in its ancestral “purity” and to boost enrolment in German-language programmes in the schools. Yet the languages of ethnicity in Waterloo County were not bound by the standard German that ethnic leaders sought to perpetuate as the only legiti- mate expression of the mother tongue. Rather, a local language that infused German with English phrases, syntax, words, and idiom remained a medium of communi- cation well into the twentieth century. This fluid new medium — “pidgin” German, as ethnic leaders derisively called it — reflected the cultural hybrid that was Waterloo County. La classe d’allemand des e´coles publiques du comte´ de Waterloo, en Ontario, a braque´ le feu des projecteurs sur l’ethnicite´ locale de la re´gion et suscite´ des de´bats publics sur le sens a` donner a` la langue allemande et sur l’importance de celle-ci comme vecteur d’identite´ culturelle. Les leaders ethniques cherchaient ardemment a` pre´server la « purete´ » ancestrale de leur langue maternelle et a` stimu- ler l’inscription aux programmes d’enseignement de l’allemand. Or, les langues de l’ethnicite´ dans le comte´ de Waterloo n’e´taient pas assujetties a` la norme allemande dont les leaders ethniques cherchaient a` faire la seule expression le´gitime de la langue maternelle.
    [Show full text]