CBC Radio One - Prince Edward Island Sept

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

CBC Radio One - Prince Edward Island Sept CBC Radio One - Prince Edward Island Sept. 26, 2008 MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 5:00 CBC Radio Overnight 5:00 5:30 CBC Radio Overnight Daybreak 5:30 5:45 5:55 6:00 6:30 Weekend Mornings 6:30 Island Morning Weekend Mornings 7:00 CBC News: World 7:00 CBC News: World Report at 6/7/8 am CBC News: World Report 8/9 am 7:30 Report 7/8/9 am 7:30 8:00 8:00 8:30 Maritime Magazine 8:30 9:00 The Current* 9:00 The House* 9:30 9:30 10:00 10:00 The Sunday Edition 10:30 Q* GO!* 10:30 11:00 11:00 White Coat Black C'est la vie* Spark* Afghanada* Q* The Debaters 11:30 Art* 11:30 12:00 PM 12:00 PM Quirks & Quarks* Vinyl Café* 12:30 12:30 Maritime Noon 1:00 WireTap* 1:00 1:30 Definitely Not The The Inside Track 1:30 2:00 Opera* 2:00 Tapestry* 2:30 The Point* 2:30 3:00 3:00 Laugh out Age of Festival of The Next Chapter* Writers & Co. The Choice* Inside Track* 3:30 Loud Persuasion Funny 3:30 4:00 Spark* 4:00 All the Best 4:30 Mainstreet White Coat Black Art* 4:30 CBC News: The World This Hour at 4/5 pm 5:00 5:00 Atlantic Airwaves 5:30 Cross Country 5:30 6:00 CBC News: The World at Six* Checkup 6:00 A Propos 6:30 6:30 As It Happens* 7:00 CBC News: The World This Weekend 7:00 Laugh Out Loud 7:30 Dispatches* Dispatches 7:30 8:00 The Night Time Review 8:00 8:30 The Debaters C'est La Vie 8:30 Outfront* Randy Bachman's Vinyl Tap 9:00 9:00 Ideas* Inside The Music 9:30 9:30 10:00 10:00 Q* 10:30 10:30 Saturday Night Blues In The Key of Charles 11:00 Quirks & Afghanada 11:00 Vinyl Cafe* Writers & Co.* 11:30 Quarks* WireTap* 11:30 From Our Own Vinyl Tap* 12:00 AM Correspondent And The Winner 12:00 AM The Choice* Rewind* The Ticket Is* 12:30 Culture Shock Tonic 12:30 1:00 1:00 CBC Radio Overnight 1:30 1:30 Returning favourite in a new time slot. New show. local/regional show Note: CBC radio programming schedule subject to change. Detailed program information is available at cbc.ca/radio Toll-free number for Audience Relations: 1-866-306-INFO (4636) Local/Regional news on the half hour from 6 am - 6 pm. ~ * Available on Sirius Satellite Radio..
Recommended publications
  • Siriusxm-Schedule.Pdf
    on SCHEDULE - Eastern Standard Time - Effective: Sept. 6/2021 ET Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Saturday Sunday ATL ET CEN MTN PAC NEWS NEWS NEWS 6:00 7:00 6:00 5:00 4:00 3:00 Rewind The Doc Project The Next Chapter NEWS NEWS NEWS 7:00 8:00 7:00 6:00 5:00 4:00 Quirks & The Next Now or Spark Unreserved Play Me Day 6 Quarks Chapter Never NEWS What on The Cost of White Coat NEWS World 9:00 8:00 7:00 6:00 5:00 8:00 Pop Chat WireTap Earth Living Black Art Report Writers & Company The House 8:37 NEWS World 10:00 9:00 8:00 7:00 6:00 9:00 World Report The Current Report The House The Sunday Magazine 10:00 NEWS NEWS NEWS 11:00 10:00 9:00 8:00 7:00 Day 6 q NEWS NEWS NEWS 12:00 11:00 10:00 9:00 8:00 11:00 Because News The Doc Project Because The Cost of What on Front The Pop Chat News Living Earth Burner Debaters NEWS NEWS NEWS 1:00 12:00 The Cost of Living 12:00 11:00 10:00 9:00 Rewind Quirks & Quarks What on Earth NEWS NEWS NEWS 1:00 Pop Chat White Coat Black Art 2:00 1:00 12:00 11:00 10:00 The Next Quirks & Unreserved Tapestry Spark Chapter Quarks Laugh Out Loud The Debaters NEWS NEWS NEWS 2:00 Ideas in 3:00 2:00 1:00 12:00 11:00 Podcast Now or CBC the Spark Now or Never Tapestry Playlist Never Music Live Afternoon NEWS NEWS NEWS 3:00 CBC 4:00 3:00 2:00 1:00 12:00 Writers & The Story Marvin's Reclaimed Music The Next Chapter Writers & Company Company From Here Room Top 20 World This Hr The Cost of Because What on Under the NEWS NEWS 4:00 WireTap 5:00 4:00 3:00 2:00 1:00 Living News Earth Influence Unreserved Cross Country Check- NEWS NEWS Up 5:00 The Current
    [Show full text]
  • He KMBC-ÍM Radio TEAM
    l\NUARY 3, 1955 35c PER COPY stu. esen 3o.loe -qv TTaMxg4i431 BItOADi S SSaeb: iiSZ£ (009'I0) 01 Ff : t?t /?I 9b£S IIJUY.a¡:, SUUl.; l: Ii-i od 301 :1 uoTloas steTaa Rae.zgtZ IS-SN AlTs.aantur: aTe AVSí1 T E IdEC. 211111 111111ip. he KMBC-ÍM Radio TEAM IN THIS ISSUE: St `7i ,ytLICOTNE OSE YN in the 'Mont Network Plans AICNISON ` MAISHAIS N CITY ive -Film Innovation .TOrEKA KANSAS Heart of Americ ENE. SEDALIA. Page 27 S CLINEON WARSAW EMROEIA RUTILE KMBC of Kansas City serves 83 coun- 'eer -Wine Air Time ties in western Missouri and eastern. Kansas. Four counties (Jackson and surveyed by NARTB Clay In Missouri, Johnson and Wyan- dotte in Kansas) comprise the greater Kansas City metropolitan trading Page 28 Half- millivolt area, ranked 15th nationally in retail sales. A bonus to KMBC, KFRM, serv- daytime ing the state of Kansas, puts your selling message into the high -income contours homes of Kansas, sixth richest agri- Jdio's Impact Cited cultural state. New Presentation Whether you judge radio effectiveness by coverage pattern, Page 30 audience rating or actual cash register results, you'll find that FREE & the Team leads the parade in every category. PETERS, ñtvC. Two Major Probes \Exclusive National It pays to go first -class when you go into the great Heart of Face New Senate Representatives America market. Get with the KMBC -KFRM Radio Team Page 44 and get real pulling power! See your Free & Peters Colonel for choice availabilities. st SATURE SECTION The KMBC - KFRM Radio TEAM -1 in the ;Begins on Page 35 of KANSAS fir the STATE CITY of KANSAS Heart of America Basic CBS Radio DON DAVIS Vice President JOHN SCHILLING Vice President and General Manager GEORGE HIGGINS Year Vice President and Sally Manager EWSWEEKLY Ir and for tels s )F RADIO AND TV KMBC -TV, the BIG TOP TV JIj,i, Station in the Heart of America sú,\.rw.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix 6 Board of Directors’ Response to the Recommendations Presented in the Ombudsmens’ Report
    APPENDIX 6 BOARD OF DIRECTORS’ RESPONSE TO THE RECOMMENDATIONS PRESENTED IN THE OMBUDSMENS’ REPORT BOARD OF DIRECTORS of the CANADIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION STANDING COMMITTEES ON ENGLISH AND FRENCH LANGUAGE BROADCASTING Minutes of the Meeting held on June 18, 2014 Ottawa, Ontario = by videoconference Members of the Committee present: Rémi Racine, Chairperson of the Committees Hubert T. Lacroix Edward Boyd Peter Charbonneau George Cooper Pierre Gingras Marni Larkin Terrence Leier Maureen McCaw Brian Mitchell Marlie Oden Members of the Committee absent: Cecil Hawkins In attendance: Maryse Bertrand, Vice-President, Real Estate, Legal Services and General Counsel Heather Conway, Executive Vice-President, English Services () Louis Lalande, Executive Vice-President, French Services () Michel Cormier, Executive Director, News and Current Affairs, French Services () Stéphanie Duquette, Chief of Staff to the President and CEO Esther Enkin, Ombudsman, English Services () Tranquillo Marrocco, Associate Corporate Secretary Jennifer McGuire, General Manage and Editor in Chief, CBC News and Centres, English Services () Pierre Tourangeau, Ombudsman, French Services () Opening of the Meeting At 1:10 p.m., the Chairperson called the meeting to order. 2014-06-18 Broadcasting Committees Page 1 of 2 1. 2013-2014 Annual Report of the English Services’ Ombudsman Esther Enkin provided an overview of the number of complaints received during the fiscal year and the key subject matters raised, which included the controversy about paid speaking engagements by CBC personalities, the reporting on results polls, the style of, and views expressed by, a commentator, questions relating to matters of taste, the coverage regarding the mayor of Toronto, and the website’s section for comments. She also addressed the manner in which non-news and current affairs complaints are being handled by the Corporation.
    [Show full text]
  • Anatoliy Gruzd
    ANATOLIY GRUZD, PHD Canada Research Chair in Social Media Data Stewardship, Associate Professor, Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson University CV Email: [email protected] Twitter: @gruzd Research Lab: http://SocialMediaLab.ca APPOINTMENTS 2014 - present Associate Professor, Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson University, Canada Director, Social Media Lab 2010 - 2014 Associate Professor, School of Information Management, Faculty of Management, Dalhousie University, Canada (cross-appointment at the Faculty of Computer Science, Dalhousie University) 2009 (Fall) Adjunct Faculty, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) 2008 - 2009 Adjunct Faculty, Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto 2006 - 2008 Research Assistant, UIUC 2005 (Fall) Teaching Assistant, UIUC 2005 (Spring) Teaching Assistant, School of Management, Syracuse University 2001 - 2003 Computer Science Teacher, Lyceum of Information Technologies, Ukraine EDUCATION PhD in Library & Information Science, Graduate School of Library & Information Science 2005 – 2009 University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign, IL, USA) ▪ Dissertation title: Automated Discovery of Social Networks in Online Learning Communities MS in Library & Information Science, School of Information Studies 2003 – 2005 Syracuse University (Syracuse, NY, USA) BS & MS in Computer Science, Department of Applied Mathematics 1998 – 2003 Dnipropetrovsk National University (Ukraine) Graduated with Distinctions AWARDS, HONORS & GRANTS Grants ▪ eCampus Ontario Research Project ($99,959) 2017-2018
    [Show full text]
  • The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's Annual Report For
    ANNUAL REPORT 2001-2002 Valuable Canadian Innovative Complete Creative Invigorating Trusted Complete Distinctive Relevant News People Trust Arts Sports Innovative Efficient Canadian Complete Excellence People Creative Inv Sports Efficient Culture Complete Efficien Efficient Creative Relevant Canadian Arts Renewed Excellence Relevant Peopl Canadian Culture Complete Valuable Complete Trusted Arts Excellence Culture CBC/RADIO-CANADA ANNUAL REPORT 2001-2002 2001-2002 at a Glance CONNECTING CANADIANS DISTINCTIVELY CANADIAN CBC/Radio-Canada reflects Canada to CBC/Radio-Canada informs, enlightens Canadians by bringing diverse regional and entertains Canadians with unique, and cultural perspectives into their daily high-impact programming BY, FOR and lives, in English and French, on Television, ABOUT Canadians. Radio and the Internet. • Almost 90 per cent of prime time This past year, • CBC English Television has been programming on our English and French transformed to enhance distinctiveness Television networks was Canadian. Our CBC/Radio-Canada continued and reinforce regional presence and CBC Newsworld and RDI schedules were reflection. Our audience successes over 95 per cent Canadian. to set the standard for show we have re-connected with • The monumental Canada: A People’s Canadians – almost two-thirds watched broadcasting excellence History / Le Canada : Une histoire CBC English Television each week, populaire enthralled 15 million Canadian delivering 9.4 per cent of prime time in Canada, while innovating viewers, nearly half Canada’s population. and 7.6 per cent share of all-day viewing. and taking risks to deliver • The Last Chapter / Le Dernier chapitre • Through programming renewal, we have reached close to 5 million viewers for its even greater value to reinforced CBC French Television’s role first episode.
    [Show full text]
  • Radio One Winter 2011 Mainlandnsoutside905.XLS
    Mainland NS - outside 90.5 FM Frequency MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 5:00 World Business & Witness Asia Pacific Heart & Soul 5:00 5:30 Daybreak All in the Mind One Planet 5:30 6:00 6:00 Information Morning: Mainland NS 6:30 6:30 Weekend Mornings 7:00 CBC News: World Weekend Mornings 7:00 7:30 CBC News: World Report at 5/6/7/8 am Report 6/7/8/9 CBC News: World 7:30 8:00 Report 6/7/8/9 8:00 8:30 Maritime Magazine 8:30 9:00 The Current 9:00 The House 9:30 9:30 10:00 10:00 Day 6 10:30 Q 10:30 The Sunday Edition 11:00 White Coat Black Art 11:00 White Coat C'est la vie The Debaters Backbencher 11:30 Black Art Age of Persuasion 11:30 (3:30 NT) (3:30 NT) (3:30 NT) (3:30 NT) 12:00 PM 12:00 PM Maritime Noon Quirks & Quarks Vinyl Café 12:30 12:30 1:00 The Next The Story from The Bottom Spark 1:00 In the Field Dispatches The Debaters 1:30 Chapter Here Line Wire Tap 1:30 2:00 Ideas in the Laugh Out Loud 2:00 Your DNTO Spark Canada Live Tapestry 2:30 Afternoon Age of Persuasion 2:30 Definitely Not The 3:00 Opera 3:00 Close to Home Writers & Company 3:30 3:30 4:00 4:00 Mainstreet Mainland NS The Next Chapter All The Best 4:30 4:30 5:00 5:00 CBC News: The World This Hour at 4/5 pm Atlantic Airwaves 5:30 5:30 Cross Country CBC News: The World at Six 6:00 Checkup 6:00 A Propos 6:30 6:30 As It Happens 7:00 CBC News:The World This Weekend 7:00 7:30 Laugh Out Loud C'est la vie 7:30 8:00 8:00 The Current Review Randy Bachman's Dispatches 8:30 8:30 Vinyl Tap 9:00 9:00 Ideas In the Field 9:30 9:30 10:00 10:00 Q Inside the Music 10:30
    [Show full text]
  • CBC Radio One - New Brunswick Sept
    CBC Radio One - New Brunswick Sept. 26, 2008 MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 5:00 CBC Radio Overnight 5:00 5:30 CBC Radio Overnight Daybreak 5:30 5:45 5:55 6:00 6:30 Weekend Mornings 6:30 Information Morning Weekend Mornings 7:00 CBC News: World 7:00 CBC News: World Report at 6/7/8 am CBC News: World Report 8/9 am 7:30 Report 7/8/9 am 7:30 8:00 8:00 8:30 Maritime Magazine 8:30 9:00 The Current* 9:00 The House* 9:30 9:30 10:00 10:00 The Sunday Edition 10:30 Q* GO!* 10:30 11:00 11:00 White Coat Black C'est la vie* Spark* Afghanada* Q* The Debaters 11:30 Art* 11:30 12:00 PM 12:00 PM Quirks & Quarks* Vinyl Café* 12:30 12:30 Maritime Noon 1:00 WireTap* 1:00 1:30 Definitely Not The The Inside Track 1:30 2:00 Opera* 2:00 Tapestry* 2:30 The Point* 2:30 3:00 3:00 The Next Chapter* Writers & Co. 3:30 3:30 4:00 Spark* 4:00 Shift All the Best White Coat Black Art* 4:30 CBC News: The World This Hour at 4/5 pm 4:30 5:00 5:00 Atlantic Airwaves 5:30 Cross Country 5:30 6:00 CBC News: The World at Six* Checkup 6:00 A Propos 6:30 6:30 As It Happens* 7:00 CBC News: The World This Weekend 7:00 Laugh Out Loud 7:30 Dispatches* Dispatches 7:30 8:00 The Night Time Review 8:00 8:30 The Debaters C'est La Vie 8:30 Outfront* Randy Bachman's Vinyl Tap 9:00 9:00 Ideas* Inside The Music 9:30 9:30 10:00 10:00 Q* 10:30 10:30 Saturday Night Blues In The Key of Charles 11:00 Quirks & Afghanada 11:00 Vinyl Cafe* Writers & Co.* 11:30 Quarks* WireTap* 11:30 From Our Own Vinyl Tap* 12:00 AM Correspondent And The Winner 12:00 AM The Choice* Rewind* The Ticket Is* 12:30 Culture Shock Tonic 12:30 1:00 1:00 CBC Radio Overnight 1:30 1:30 Returning favourite in a new time slot.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual REPORT Rapportannuel
    Annual REPORT RAPPORTAnnuel 1999–2000 The People Behind AIMS/L’Équipe de AIMS Chairman / Président du conseil Purdy Crawford, Counsel / avocat, Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt, Toronto, ON Vice Chairmen / Vice présidents George T.H. Cooper, QC / c.r., McInnes Cooper, Halifax, NS / N.-É. Hon. John Crosbie, QC / c.r., Patterson Palmer Hunt Murphy, St. John’s, NF / T.-N. Gerald L. Pond, President / p.d.g., IT & Emerging Business, Aliant Inc., Saint John, NB / N.-B. President / Président Brian Lee Crowley, Halifax, NS / N.-É. Directors / Directeurs Malcolm Baxter, President & CEO / p.d.g., Baxter Foods Ltd., Saint John, NB / N.-B. John Bragg, President & CEO / p.d.g., Oxford Frozen Foods, Oxford, NS / N.-É. Don Cayo, Editorial Page Editor / éditorialiste, The Vancouver Sun, Vancouver, BC / C.-B. Richard P. Eusanio, President / p.d.g., Atlantic Compressed Air Ltd., Moncton, NB / N.-B. James Gogan, former President & CEO / ancien p.d.g., Empire Co. Ltd., Stellarton, NS / N.-É. John C. Hartery, President & General Manager / p.d.g., Stora Port Hawkesbury Ltd., Port Hawkesbury, NS / N.-É. James K. Irving, Chairman & CEO / p.d.g., J.D. Irving Limited, Saint John, NB / N.-B. Robert P. Kelly, Vice Chairman, Retail Banking / vice-président, services bancaires aux consommateurs, TD Bank Financial Group, Toronto, ON Colin Latham, Executive Vice President, vice-président directeur, Telecommunications, Aliant Inc., Halifax, NS / N.-É. Denis Losier, p.d.g. / President & CEO, Assomption Mutuelle Vie, Moncton, NB / N.-B. Beverley Keating MacIntyre, President & CEO / p.d.g., BKM Research & Development, Dieppe, NB / N.-B. David Mann, President & CEO / p.d.g., Nova Scotia Power, Inc., Halifax, NS / N.-É.
    [Show full text]
  • Novel Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19): Q&A on Global Implications And
    Novel Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19): Q&A on Global Implications and Responses April 17, 2020 Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R46319 SUMMARY R46319 Novel Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19): Q&A on April 17, 2020 Global Implications and Responses Tiaji Salaam-Blyther, On December 31, 2019, Chinese authorities informed the World Health Organization (WHO) Coordinator about a cluster of pneumonia cases in Wuhan City, Hubei Province. Illnesses have since been Specialist in Global Health linked to a disease caused by a previously unidentified strain of coronavirus, widely known as COVID-19. The disease quickly became a pandemic, and has spread to over 150 countries, including the United States. WHO declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern on January 30, 2020, raised its global risk assessment to "Very High" on February 28, and labeled the outbreak a "pandemic" on March 11. In using the term pandemic, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus cited COVID-19's "alarming levels of spread and severity" and governments' "alarming levels of inaction." As of April 15, 2020, almost 2 million confirmed COVID-19 cases, and more than 120,000 confirmed deaths, of which over half of all cases and nearly 70% of all deaths were identified in Europe. Congress has demonstrated strong interest in ending the pandemic domestically and globally, having introduced 50 pieces of legislation on the matter (see the Appendix). Individual countries are carrying out not only domesitic but also international efforts to control the COVID-19 pandemic, with the WHO issuing guidance, coordinating some international research and related findings, and coordinating health aid in low-resource settings.
    [Show full text]
  • A Journal of Policy Ideas from Across the Roosevelt Network
    2020 A Journal of Policy Ideas from Across the Roosevelt Network | CREATIVE COMMONS COPYRIGHT 2018 | ROOSEVELTINSTITUTE.ORG | 1 Roosevet Network Staff KATIE KIRCHNER, NATIONAL DIRECTOR NICOLE ANNUNZIATA ANNA N. SMITH FERNANDA BORGES NOGUEIRA JADE WILENCHIK EAMON ROSS Student Leadership Policy Coordinators OLIVIA BRADY AUSTIN SHIRLEY SNIPTA MALLICK WITTER SWANSON ARIELLA MELTZER ANGELA TSAO DOMINICK PERAINO Roosevelt Institute Staff KENDRA BOZARTH TAYRA LUCERO MATT HUGHES KATY MILANI SUZANNE KAHN TIARA PEELE JULIETTE KANG STABLESKI VICTORIA STREKER KRISTINA KARLSSON Roosevelt Network Alumni ZACHARY AGUSH JOEL LUGONES CHISOLM ALLENLUNDY CASEY LUKSZO EMILY APPLE KIMBERLY MANRIQUEZ DON BLACK TARA MARLOWE SAUMYA BOLLAM SUNDUS MUJAHID JARRED BOWMAN SABA MUNDLAY STEPHANIE BRANOVAN VALERIE NAUMAN ASHLEY CHAPPO ALYSSA NUNEZ OLIVIA COHN AUSTIN PERELKA CHRISTINA COVER KEVIN POWERS NNEKA EWULONU CARLEY PRZYSTAC GRANT FEROWICH AMREEN RAHMAN COLLEEN FONSECA LILY ROBERTS JOHN FORD DOMINIC RUSSEL AMY FRIEDER SHAUNA RUST WILL GABELMAN CARA SCHIAVONE MIGUEL GALAZ JONATHAN SHERMAN MEHAK GUPTA GARRETT SHOR KEVIN HILKE ANDREW SMALLEY JAY HOBBS MANON STEEL COURTNEY JOLINE MICHELLE TAFUR BRIGID KENNEDY MICHAEL TRACHT ZACH KOMES MATT WALSH AMY LITTLETON PEGAH ZARDOOST HANNAH LOVE 2 | CREATIVE COMMONS COPYRIGHT 2018 | ROOSEVELTINSTITUTE.ORG | Who We Are The Roosevelt Network trains, develops, and supports emerging progressive policymakers, researchers, and advocates, focusing on communities historically denied political power. With locations on campuses and in cities in nearly 40 US states, the network is founded on the principle that changing who writes the rules can help fulfill the promise of American democracy and build true public power. The network supports student-led, scalable policy campaigns that fight for the equitable provision, distribution, and accessibility of public goods at the campus, local, and state levels.
    [Show full text]
  • World Youth Report 2003
    Economic & Social Affairs World ReportYOUTH 2003 The global situation of young people UNITED NATIONS Department of Economic and Social Affairs World ReportYOUTH 2003 The global situation of young people UNITED NATIONS Note The Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat is a vital interface between global policies in the economic, social and environmental spheres and national action. The Department works in three main interlinked areas: (i) it compiles, generates and analyzes a wide range of eco- nomic, social and environmental data and information on which States Members of the United Nations draw to review common problems and to take stock of policy options; (ii) it facilitates the negotiations of Member States in many intergovernmental bodies on joint courses of action to address ongoing or emerging global challenges; and (iii) it advises interested Governments on the ways and means of translating policy frameworks developed in United Nations conferences and summits into programmes at the country level and, through techncal assistance, helps build national capacities. ST/ESA/287 ISBN 92-1-130228-5 United Nations publication - Sales No. E.03.IV.7 Copyright © United Nations, 2004 All rights reserved Printed by the United Nations Reproduction Section New York Young people make up almost a fifth of the world’s population. Close to 85 per cent of the 1.061 billion young men and women between the ages of 15 and 24 live in develop- ing countries; Asia accounts for the majority, with 60 per cent of the total, while another 15 per cent call Africa home, and approximate- ly 10 per cent reside in Latin America and the Caribbean.
    [Show full text]
  • Anthony Germain, Host of the Canadian Broadcasting
    Interview - Bob Rae March 29, 2003 CBC Radio Page #1 Anthony Germain, host of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s national political affairs radio show, “The House”, interviews Forum President, Bob Rae, March 29, 2003. “The House” is broadcast Saturday mornings on CBC Radio One. Q Well one of the stated goals of Operation Iraqi Freedom is to build a new nation, to give Iraqis the tools and political institutions to govern themselves. And that’s easier said than done. In Afghanistan it continues to be nation-enforcing. So, how do you create lasting political institutions in countries such as Afghanistan or Iraq? Well Bob Rae has given the subject some thought. He’s the former Premier of Ontario and now chairs the board of the Forum of Federations, an international network on federalism and Mr. Rae is with me now. Good morning. B. Rae Good morning. Q We’ve been listening to our discussion this morning and wondering what, what are your initial thoughts about how do we actually approach this entire issue? B. Rae I think Mr. Manley’s got it right in terms of where we’re at now. I think obviously with respect to the United States it’s a very difficult situation. But I think that we also have to recognize where Canadian public opinion is and, and where some of our important traditions internationally have been with respect to the situation. We’re very much committed to the war against terrorism. I think there has been a recognition across the country that the world has changed since September 11th, but I also think there’s some very important commitments that Canada has to the way we should do things internationally: The importance of international law, the importance of trying to create broader consensus.
    [Show full text]