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Open Wide a Wilderness Canadian Nature Poems
Open Wide a Wilderness Canadian Nature Poems Edited by NANCY HOLMES Introduction by DON MCKAY Wilfrid Laurier University Press IfwuTH Contents xv PREFACE xvii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I INTRODUCTION: "GREAT FLINT SINGING" BY DON MCKAY THE POEMS 35 Thomas Cary from Abram's Plain 38 Adam Allan A Description of the Great Falls, of the River Saint lohn, in the Province of New Brunswick 40 Ann Cuthbert Knight from A Year in Canada 41 Adam Hood Burwell from Talbot Road 44 Standish O'Grady from The Emigrant 46 Adam Kidd from The Huron Chief 48 William Kirby from The U.E., "Niagara" 50 Alexander McLachlan The Hall of Shadows 53 Charles Sangster from The St. Lawrence and theSaguenay 55 George Martin The lewelled Trees 57 Charles Mair The Last Bison 63. Isabella V.Crawford The Lily Bed 65 Isabella V. Crawford from Malcolm's Katie 67 Ethelwyn Wetherald Unheard Niagaras 68 Ethelwyn Wetherald The Horned Larks in Winter 69 Susan Frances Harrison Rhapsodie (II) [Seranus] 70 Susan Frances Harrison A Canadian Anthology [Seranus] 73 Wilfred Campbell Indian Summer 74 Wilfred Campbell How One Winter Came in the Lake Region 75 Charles G. D. Roberts The Clearing 76 Charles G. D. Roberts from'Ave!" 80 Charles G. D. Roberts The Skater 81 Bliss Carman A Vagabond Song 82 Bliss Carman Vestigia 83 Pauline Johnson The Flight of the Crows (Tekahionwake) 85 Pauline Johnson The Camper (Tekahionwake) 86 Archibald Lampman Freedom 88 Archibald Lampman In November 90 Archibald Lampman To the Ottawa River 91 Archibald Lampman On the Companionship with Nature 92 Frederick G. -
Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2012-212
Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2012-212 PDF version Ottawa, 10 April 2012 Notice of hearing 7 June 2012 Gatineau, Quebec Deadline for submission of interventions/comments/answers: 10 May 2012 [Submit an intervention/comment/answer or view related documents] The Commission will hold a hearing commencing on 7 June 2012 at 2 p.m. at the Commission Headquarters, 1 Promenade du Portage, Gatineau, Quebec. The Commission intends to consider, subject to interventions, the following applications without the appearance of the parties: Applicant/licensee and locality 1. MOTV Média Inc. Across Canada Application 2012-0170-7 2. MOTV Média Inc. Across Canada Application 2012-0171-4 3. Rogers Broadcasting Limited Across Canada Application 2012-0173-0 4. 3924181 Canada Inc. Across Canada Application 2012-0197-0 5. Larry C. Osmond Grand Bank, Newfoundland and Labrador Application 2011-0969-5 6. Colba.Net Telecom Inc. Fredericton, Moncton, Saint John, Allardville, Big Cove, Blue Mountain Settlement, Bouctouche, Brown’s Flat, Burtts Corner, Cap Lumière, Davis Mill, Caron Brook, Centre-Acadie, Centre Napan, Clair, Harvey, Highway 505/St-Édouard, Jacquet River, Keating’s Corner, Lac Baker, Ludford Subdivision, McAdam, Morrisdale, Musquash Subdivision, Nasonworth, Noonan, Patterson/Hoyt, Petitcodiac, Richibucto, Ruchibucto Village, 2 Rogersville, St-André-de-Shediac, Ste-Anne-de-Kent, St-Antoine, St-Ignace, St-Joseph-de-Madawaska, Ste-Marie-de-Kent, Salmon Beach, Tracy/Fredericton Junction, Welsford, Willow Grove and their surrounding areas in New Brunswick; St. John’s, Deer Lake, Pasadena and their surrounding areas in Newfoundland and Labrador; Dartmouth, Halifax, Bedford, Sackville and their surrounding areas in Nova Scotia Application 2012-0174-8 7. -
Provincial Solidarities: a History of the New Brunswick Federation of Labour
provincial solidarities Working Canadians: Books from the cclh Series editors: Alvin Finkel and Greg Kealey The Canadian Committee on Labour History is Canada’s organization of historians and other scholars interested in the study of the lives and struggles of working people throughout Canada’s past. Since 1976, the cclh has published Labour / Le Travail, Canada’s pre-eminent scholarly journal of labour studies. It also publishes books, now in conjunction with AU Press, that focus on the history of Canada’s working people and their organizations. The emphasis in this series is on materials that are accessible to labour audiences as well as university audiences rather than simply on scholarly studies in the labour area. This includes documentary collections, oral histories, autobiographies, biographies, and provincial and local labour movement histories with a popular bent. series titles Champagne and Meatballs: Adventures of a Canadian Communist Bert Whyte, edited and with an introduction by Larry Hannant Working People in Alberta: A History Alvin Finkel, with contributions by Jason Foster, Winston Gereluk, Jennifer Kelly and Dan Cui, James Muir, Joan Schiebelbein, Jim Selby, and Eric Strikwerda Union Power: Solidarity and Struggle in Niagara Carmela Patrias and Larry Savage The Wages of Relief: Cities and the Unemployed in Prairie Canada, 1929–39 Eric Strikwerda Provincial Solidarities: A History of the New Brunswick Federation of Labour / Solidarités provinciales: Histoire de la Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Nouveau-Brunswick David Frank A History of the New Brunswick Federation of Labour david fra nk canadian committee on labour history Copyright © 2013 David Frank Published by AU Press, Athabasca University 1200, 10011 – 109 Street, Edmonton, ab t5j 3s8 isbn 978-1-927356-23-4 (print) 978-1-927356-24-1 (pdf) 978-1-927356-25-8 (epub) A volume in Working Canadians: Books from the cclh issn 1925-1831 (print) 1925-184x (digital) Cover and interior design by Natalie Olsen, Kisscut Design. -
The Hitch-Hiker Is Intended to Provide Information Which Beginning Adult Readers Can Read and Understand
CONTENTS: Foreword Acknowledgements Chapter 1: The Southwestern Corner Chapter 2: The Great Northern Peninsula Chapter 3: Labrador Chapter 4: Deer Lake to Bishop's Falls Chapter 5: Botwood to Twillingate Chapter 6: Glenwood to Gambo Chapter 7: Glovertown to Bonavista Chapter 8: The South Coast Chapter 9: Goobies to Cape St. Mary's to Whitbourne Chapter 10: Trinity-Conception Chapter 11: St. John's and the Eastern Avalon FOREWORD This book was written to give students a closer look at Newfoundland and Labrador. Learning about our own part of the earth can help us get a better understanding of the world at large. Much of the information now available about our province is aimed at young readers and people with at least a high school education. The Hitch-Hiker is intended to provide information which beginning adult readers can read and understand. This work has a special feature we hope readers will appreciate and enjoy. Many of the places written about in this book are seen through the eyes of an adult learner and other fictional characters. These characters were created to help add a touch of reality to the printed page. We hope the characters and the things they learn and talk about also give the reader a better understanding of our province. Above all, we hope this book challenges your curiosity and encourages you to search for more information about our land. Don McDonald Director of Programs and Services Newfoundland and Labrador Literacy Development Council ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I wish to thank the many people who so kindly and eagerly helped me during the production of this book. -
L'absence De Généraux Canadiens-Français Combattants
Où sont nos chefs? L’absence de généraux canadiens-français combattants durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale (1939-1945). Par : Alexandre Sawyer Thèse présentée à la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales À titre d’exigence partielle en vue de l’obtention d’un doctorat en histoire Université d’Ottawa © Alexandre Sawyer, Ottawa, Canada, 2019 ii RÉSUMÉ Le nombre d’officiers généraux canadiens-français qui ont commandé une brigade ou une division dans l’armée active durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale est presque nul. On ne compte aucun commandant de division francophone dans l’armée outre-mer. Dans les trois premières années de la guerre, seulement deux brigadiers canadiens-français prennent le commandement de brigades à l’entrainement en Grande-Bretagne, mais sont rapidement renvoyés chez eux. Entre 1943 et 1944, le nombre de commandants de brigade francophones passe de zéro à trois. L’absence de généraux canadiens-français combattants (à partir du grade de major-général) durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale s’explique par plusieurs facteurs : le modèle britannique et l’unilinguisme anglais de la milice, puis de l’armée canadienne, mais aussi la tradition anti-impérialiste et, donc, souvent antimilitaire des Canadiens français. Au début de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, aucun officier canadien n’est réellement capable de commander une grande unité militaire. Mais, a-t-on vraiment le choix? Ces officiers sont les seuls dont dispose le Canada. Quand les troupes canadiennes sont engagées au combat au milieu de 1943, des officiers canadiens, plus jeunes et beaucoup mieux formés prennent la relève. À plus petite échelle, le même processus s’opère du côté francophone, mais plus maladroitement. -
Acadian Music As a Cultural Symbol and Unifying Factor
L’Union Fait la Force: Acadian Music as a Cultural Symbol and Unifying Factor By Brooke Bisson A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Master of Arts in Atlantic Canada Studies at Saint Mary's University Halifax, Nova Scotia A ugust 27, 2003 I Brooke Bisson Approved By: Dr. J(Jihn Rgid Co-Supervisor Dr. Barbara LeBlanc Co-Supervisor Dr. Ma%aret Harry Reader George'S Arsenault Reader National Library Bibliothèque nationale 1^1 of Canada du Canada Acquisitions and Acquisisitons et Bibliographic Services services bibliographiques 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington Ottawa ON K1A0N4 Ottawa ON K1A0N4 Canada Canada Your file Votre référence ISBN: 0-612-85658-5 Our file Notre référence ISBN: 0-612-85658-5 The author has granted a non L'auteur a accordé une licence non exclusive licence allowing the exclusive permettant à la National Library of Canada to Bibliothèque nationale du Canada de reproduce, loan, distribute or sell reproduire, prêter, distribuer ou copies of this thesis in microform, vendre des copies de cette thèse sous paper or electronic formats. la forme de microfiche/film, de reproduction sur papier ou sur format électronique. The author retains ownership of theL'auteur conserve la propriété du copyright in this thesis. Neither thedroit d'auteur qui protège cette thèse. thesis nor substantial extracts from Niit la thèse ni des extraits substantiels may be printed or otherwise de celle-ci ne doivent être imprimés reproduced without the author's ou aturement reproduits sans son permission. autorisation. In compliance with the Canadian Conformément à la loi canadienne Privacy Act some supporting sur la protection de la vie privée, forms may have been removed quelques formulaires secondaires from this dissertation. -
Documentation of Recent Grand Banks Iceberg Grounding Events and a Comparison with Older Events of Known
Environmental Studies Research Funds 157 Documentation of Recent Iceberg Grounding Evens and a Comparison with Older Events of Know Age, Northern Grand Bank, Canada April 2006 Environmental Studies Research Funds Report ESRF # 157 June, 2005 DOCUMENTATION OF RECENT GRAND BANK ICEBERG GROUNDING EVENTS AND COMPARISON WITH OLDER EVENTS OF KNOWN AGE 1 1 2 3 Gary SonnichsenP ,P Thian HundertP ,P Robert Myers P ,P Patricia PocklingtonP P 1 P P Geological Survey of Canada (Atlantic), P.O. Box 1006, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia B2Y 4A2 [email protected] UTH 2 P P Rob Myers Consulting, 17 Harbour Drive, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, B2Y 3N83 3 P P Arenicola Marine, Consultants in Marine Biology, 7 Bishop Ave., Wolfville N.S., B4P 2L3 The correct citation for this report is: Sonnichsen, G.V., Hundert, T., Pocklton, P. and Myers, R., 2005 Documentation of recent iceberg grounding events and a comparison with older events of known age, Northern Grand Bank, Canada, Environmental Studies Research Funds Report No.157, Calgary, 206 pp. The Environmental Studies Research Funds are financed from special levies on the oil and gas industry and administered by the National Energy Board for the Minister of Natural Resources Canada and the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development. The Environmental Studies Research Funds and any person acting on their behalf assume no liability arising from the use of the information contained in this document. The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Environmental Studies Research Funds agencies. The use of trade names or identification of specific products does not constitute an endorsement or recommendation for use. -
A Canadian Biography and Canadian History.”
The Memory of Mackenzie King: American Philanthropy, “a Canadian biography and Canadian History.” By Jeffrey D. Brison Associate Professor, Department of History Queen‟s University Ontario, Canada [email protected] © 2010 by Jeffrey D. Brison On 6 April 1949 the Board of Trustees of the Rockefeller Foundation (RF) announced that it was awarding McGill University $100,000 for the purpose of supervising “the production of studies in the public and private life of W.L. Mackenzie King....”1 The object of the grant, King noted in a statement to the press the following day, was to provide him with assistance in the collection and organization of his papers and thus to “expedite the writing and early publication of Memoirs....”2 Under its terms, King had “complete liberty in making arrangements for the use of these funds in the study and preparation of his materials.”3 The ultimate goal of this “quite exceptional expression of international friendship and good-will,” King informed the public, was to produce “a Canadian biography and Canadian history.”4 For its part, the RF saw the project as no less than “a significant opportunity to use the desire of a national and international leader to record his final views on the meaning of democracy.”5 Over the years the project was to take many turns –the most fundamental occurring with King‟s death on 22 July 1950. King‟s passing transformed the autobiography in-progress to official biography but did little to dampen the enthusiasm of the American philanthropists. King‟s old confidante, John D. -
Cursillo Parish Contacts
Anglican Diocese of Central Newfoundland Cursillo Parish Contacts Mailing Name Phone # Email Address Parish Address General Delivery Minnie Janes 536-3247 Badger’s Quay Badger’s Quay, NL A0G 1B0 POBox 942 545-2105 Edith Bagg [email protected] Bonavista Bonavista, NL A0C 1B0 470-0431 General Delivery Wilson & Stella Mills 656-4481 [email protected] Gander Bay Boyd’s Cove, NL A0G 1G0 POBox 59 Geraldine Purchase 672-3503 Buchans Buchans, NL A0H 1G0 POBox 45 June Holloway [email protected] Smith's Sound Port Blandford, NL A0C2G0 POBox 310 Rev. Terry Caines 891-1377 Burin Burin, NL A0G1E0 24 Park Avenue Elsie Sullivan 466-2002 [email protected] Clarenville Clarenville, NL A5A 1V8 POBox 111 Garry & Dallas Mitchell 884-5319 Twillingate Durrell, NL A0G1Y0 POBox 85 Gordon & Thelma Davidge 888-3336 [email protected] Belleoram English Harbour W, NL A0H 1M0 General Delivery Judy Mahoney Fogo Island Fogo, NL A0G 2B0 POBox 398 Jean Rose 832-2297 Fortune/Lamaline Fortune, NL A0E 1P0 POBox 391 Jean Eastman 674-5213 [email protected] Gambo Gambo, NL A0G 1T0 113 Ogilvie Street John & Beryl Barnes 256-8184 Gander Gander, NL A1V 2R2 POBox 24 Herbert & Beulah Ralph 533-2567 Glovertown Glovertown South, NL A0G 2M0 POBox 571 Winston & Shirley Walters 832-1930 [email protected] Grand Bank Grand Bank, NL A0E 1W0 20 Dunn Place Robert & Thelma Stockley 489-6945 [email protected] Grand Falls GrandFalls-Windsor, NL A2A2M3 8 Dorrity Place Ed & Glenda Warford 489-6747 [email protected] Windsor GrandFalls-Windsor, -
Introduction Les Mouvements Étudiants Acadiens Des Années 1960 : Une Force De Gauche Ou D’Affirmation Nationale ?
Introduction Les mouvements étudiants acadiens des années 1960 : une force de gauche ou d’affirmation nationale ? es années 1960 représentent, globalement, une décen- nie heureuse dans l’histoire des Acadiens du Nouveau- L Brunswick, une décennie d’optimisme pendant laquelle la population francophone de cette province du littoral atlantique cana- dien a eu l’impression de finalement mériter une place au soleil après deux siècles de survivance, voire de survie. L’élection du premier Acadien comme premier ministre de la province, la création d’une université moderne de langue française, la réforme progressiste et égalitaire de la fiscalité et des services publics provinciaux, l’affirmation d’une volonté politique d’accélérer le développement économique des régions rurales – dont plusieurs étaient majoritairement acadiennes – et le parachève- ment du réseau scolaire de langue française 1 étaient autant d’indices que des lendemains meilleurs attendaient « l’Acadie ». Et pourtant, malgré ces évolutions ostensiblement positives, et en dépit des attentes qu’elles ont engendrées – ou à cause d’elles –, le Nouveau- Brunswick francophone a connu son « moment 1968 », moment de contestation dont l’ampleur se compare, toutes proportions gardées, aux crises soixante-huitardes qui ont alors secoué le Québec et le Canada « anglais ». Mais quels liens peut-on établir entre les actions de quelques centaines d’étudiants qui militent à Moncton en faveur des droits lin- guistiques et culturels pour les francophones, d’une part, et les luttes de la nouvelle gauche nord-américaine et des soixante-huitards français, de 1. Bien qu’il faille attendre le milieu des années 1970 pour voir les dernières écoles secondaires bilingues disparaître, la tendance à les abolir était bien établie à la fin des années 1960, lorsque l’on a commencé à construire plusieurs écoles polyva- lentes de langue française. -
Immigration Portal
Immigration Portal Main Page This section of our website has been constructed to help you, the visitor to this link, to get a better idea of the lifestyle and services that Channel-Port aux Basques offers you and your families as immigrants to our community. Please log on to the various links and hopefully, you'll find the answers to your questions about Channel-Port aux Basques. In the event that you need additional information, don't hesitate to contact the Economic Development Strategist for the town at any of the following means: E-mail:[email protected] Telephone: (709) 695-2214 Fax: (709) 695-9852 Regular mail: Town of Channel-Port aux Basques 67 Main Street P.O. Box 70 Channel-Port aux Basques, NL A0M 1C0 History Channel-Port aux Basques, the Gateway to Newfoundland, has been welcoming visitors for 500 years, from Basque Fisherman in the 1500's who found the ice free harbour a safe haven, to ferry passengers who commenced arriving on the "Bruce" steamship in 1898 to take the railway across the island. The area was actually settled on a year-round basis until fisher-folk from the Channel Islands established Channel in the early 1700's, although people had been working the south coast fishery year-round for a century before this. The name Port aux Basques came into common usage from 1764 onwards following surveys of Newfoundland and undertaken by Captain James Cook on behalf of the British Admiralty. Captain Cook went on to fame, if not fortune, as a result of his surveys in the Pacific Ocean, but it was he who surveyed the St. -
The Rhetoric of Dominion Income Taxation and the Modern Political Imaginary in Canada, 1910-1945
The Rhetoric of Dominion Income Taxation and the Modern Political Imaginary in Canada, 1910-1945 by David Tough 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 History with a Specialization in Political Economy Carleton University Ottawa, Ontario © 2013, David Tough Abstract This thesis uses Quentin Skinner’s study of rhetoric to interrogate the origins of the modern political imaginary in Canada between 1910 and 1945. The Dominion taxing power was the object of a sustained rhetorical critique in the early 20th century, in which the Liberal and Conservative party identities, built around the protective tariff in the post- Confederation era, were slowly weakened and supplemented with a new representation of difference: the left-right spectrum. Beginning in 1910 with the Grain Growers’ Guide, the nationalist resonances of the Dominion tariff were cast as duplicitous distractions from exploitation and fiscal inefficiency. During the First World War, this characterization of the tariff and the political differences it produced became tied to demands for ‘conscription of wealth,’ as the basis of a fairer and more democratic political culture. A species of what Ian McKay calls a “people’s enlightenment,” this critique resulted in the first Dominion income tax, the Income War Tax of 1917. A Dominion income tax introduced the new possibility of transferring income that had been taxed progressively from one region to another. The catastrophic economic depression of the 1930s exposed the weakness of the tariff as a fiscal instrument; a more powerful Dominion income tax was cast as the necessary solution to the crisis, and was duly introduced in 1941 and 1942.