Curriculum Vitae John Robert Lampard
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Critical Care Nursing Abstracts
Volume 29, Number 2, Summer 2018 ISSN: 2368-8653 IN thIS ISSue: 6 Position Statement Healthy Work Environments 20 Dynamics of Critical Care 2018 NURSING ABSTRACTS 62 A standardized structured approach to improving sleep quality in the intensive care unit: SLEEP-MAD The Canadian Journalof Critical Care Nursing Volume 29, Number 2, Summer 2018 editor editorial Review Board Paula Price, PhD, RN Adult Consultants: Director, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Marie Edwards, PhD, RN, Winnipeg, MB Mount Royal University, 4825 Mount Royal Gate SW, Calgary, AB Sandra Goldsworthy, PhD, MSc, RN, CNCC(C), CMSN(C), T3E 6K6 Calgary, AB phone: 403-440-6553; fax: 403-440-6555; email: [email protected] Martha Mackay, PhD, RN, CCN(C), Vancouver, BC Mary Mustard, MN, NP-Adult, CNCC(C), CNC(C), Etobicoke, ON Managing editor Mae Squires, PhD, RN, Kingston, ON Heather Coughlin, Pappin Communications, Pembroke, ON Pediatric Consultant: Franco Carnevale, MSA, MEd, PhD, RN, Montréal, QC Neonatal Consultant: Debbie Fraser, MN, RNC, Winnipeg, MB Canadian Association of Critical Care Nurses Board of Directors CACCN National Office President: Kathy Bouwmeester, RN, ACCN, Calgary, AB Chief Operating Officer: Vice-President: Mélanie Gauthier, M. Int. Care N., BScN, RN, Christine R. Halfkenny-Zellas, CIM CNCC(C), Montréal, QC P.O. Box 25322, London, Ontario N6C 6B1 Treasurer: Sarah Crowe, MN, RN, CCCN(C), Langley, BC www.caccn.ca Directors: email: [email protected] Peter Anderst, BN, RN, Edmonton, AB phone: 519-649-5284 Lissa Currie, BN, RN, CNCC(C), Winnipeg, MB toll-free: 1-866-477-9077 Angela Foote, BSc, RN, CCNP(C), New Glasgow, NS fax: 519-649-1458 Brandi Vanderspank-Wright, PhD, RN, CNCC(C), Ottawa, ON TheCanadian Journal of Critical Care Nursing is the only peer-reviewed critical care journal in Canada, and is published four times annually by Pappin Communications, Pembroke, Ontario. -
Stronger Together
Stronger Together Ashley Lam Grade Seven, Colonel Irvine School Word Count:1188 Being born at the Peter Lougheed Hospital in Calgary about thirteen years ago, little did I know that the man behind the namesake of the hospital would have such an impact on my life and the lives of fellow Albertans. Honourable Edgar Peter Lougheed once said, "I'm a community person, I think in terms of community before individual. That's the essence of Albertans and to a large extent that's the essence of Canadians as well.” He demonstrated this belief through his contributions to medical research, political actions and views, and his ability to lead the province of Alberta to strength and prosperity. Honorable Edgar Peter Lougheed was born on July 26th, 1928 in Calgary, Alberta and passed away from natural causes in 2012. Grandson to Sir James Alexander Lougheed, an early senator and accomplished businessman, Mr. Lougheed was destined for greatness. While studying at the University of Alberta he received a BA in 1951 and a LLB in 1952. Later earning a MBA from Harvard University. He then practised law in Calgary, until he joined the Mannix corporation, one of Canada’s largest construction business. Quickly moving up to the rank of vice president then director. In 1965 Peter Lougheed was the elected leader of a small political party, the Progressive Conservatives. At the time the Progressive Conservatives did not have a single seat in the legislature. The start of a strong political party in legislature seemed unlikely. That is until Mr. Lougheed led the party to victory in the 1967 election. -
If We Could All Be Peter Lougheed” Provincial Premiers and Their Legacies, 1967-2007 1
“If we could all be Peter Lougheed” Provincial premiers and their legacies, 1967-2007 1 J.P. Lewis Carleton University [email protected] Paper for Presentation at The Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association Concordia University, Montreal June 2010 Introduction For a variety of reasons, the careers of Canadian provincial premiers have escaped explicit academic attention. Premiers are found frequently in Canadian political science literature, but more for direct roles and actions – in questions of the constitution, federalism, public policy and electoral and legislative studies – instead of longitudinal study and analysis. This fits a pattern of neglect in the field; some academics have lamented the lack of direct attention to provincial politics and history (Brownsey and Howlett 2001). The aggregate imprints of premiers are relatively ignored outside of regional and provincial treatments. No pan- Canadian assessment of premiers exists, and probably for good reason. The theoretical and methodological concerns with asking general research questions about premiers are plenty; leadership theory and historical approaches provide some foundations but any approach is going to confront conceptual challenges. This is where this study is found – in a void of precedents but a plethora of qualitative data. 2 Regardless of methodological challenges, some historians, political scientists and members of the media have not shied away from ranking and assessing national leaders. Some of the more popular treatments (from the popular culture version to the more academic approach) include Ferguson’s Bastards and Boneheads , Granatstein and Hillmer’s Prime Ministers: Ranking Canada’s Leaders , and Bliss’s Right Honourable Men . Bliss (xiv), the esteemed historian, is skeptical of such endeavours, “While this is Canadian history from Parliament Hill, I am not a Hegelian and I do not believe that political leaders, least of all prime ministers of Canada, are personifications of the world spirit. -
The Right Honourable Edgar Peter Lougheed, Pc, Cc, Aoe, Qc
-1- THE RIGHT HONOURABLE EDGAR PETER LOUGHEED, PC, CC, AOE, QC Date and place of birth (if available): Born July 26, 1928 Date and place of interview: April 13, 2011, at 10:00 a.m. at Mission Room, Lougheed House, Calgary Name of interviewer: Peter McKenzie-Brown Name of videographer: Peter Tombrowski Full names (spelled out) of all others present: N/A Consent form signed: Yes No PMB: Okay we are now recording. VIDEOGRAPHER: Okay, let me just start this. LOUGHEED: Do you mind if I refer to you as Peter, or do want me to use the last name? PMB: Oh by all means, please call me Peter. PMB: Mr. Lougheed would you please give us a brief summary of your career? LOUGHEED: [laughs] PMB: Now I know that’s a bit of a challenge. LOUGHEED: No that’s fine. Well I was born in Calgary. And my grandfather came here when there were only 100 people who were not Native Indian in Calgary and he came here actually before the Railway. And my Father was born in this very house we are sitting in right now, the Lougheed House on 13th Avenue, because my grandfather built this residence here. And there was my Father and his brothers and sister grew up in this very house, so they were very much a part of the growth of Calgary. And my grandfather from where we are sitting there was nothing between here and his office on Stephen Avenue, and he used to walk across way back, walk across right though the Prairies to the house. -
Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) Summits on the Air
Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) Summits on the Air Canada (Alberta – VE6/VA6) Association Reference Manual (ARM) Document Reference S87.1 Issue number 2.2 Date of issue 1st August 2016 Participation start date 1st October 2012 Authorised Association Manager Walker McBryde VA6MCB Summits-on-the-Air an original concept by G3WGV and developed with G3CWI Notice “Summits on the Air” SOTA and the SOTA logo are trademarks of the Programme. This document is copyright of the Programme. All other trademarks and copyrights referenced herein are acknowledged Page 1 of 63 Document S87.1 v2.2 Summits on the Air – ARM for Canada (Alberta – VE6) 1 Change Control ............................................................................................................................. 4 2 Association Reference Data ..................................................................................................... 7 2.1 Programme derivation ..................................................................................................................... 8 2.2 General information .......................................................................................................................... 8 2.3 Rights of way and access issues ..................................................................................................... 9 2.4 Maps and navigation .......................................................................................................................... 9 2.5 Safety considerations .................................................................................................................. -
President's Column SHAMIN MALMAS, President
vol. 35 • no. 2 Winter 2016 www.archivesalberta.org President'S Column SHAMIN MALMAS, PRESIDENT Once again it has been a busy fall and winter for the ASA. We are thrilled to announce that we had a successful application for the Documentary Heritage Communities Program through Library and Archives Canada. Our project is an Audiovisual Preservation and Access Strategy which involved hiring an Audiovisual Preservation Specialist in early January. The Board is confident that this new program will provide much needed support and services to our member institutions. Stay tuned for more details about this exciting project. In early December I was one of at the Alberta Legislature. I was On February 2, 2016 Ricardo Miranda 36,000 people who visited the thrilled that it took over two hours was appointed Minister of Culture Royal Alberta Museum for a final to reach the front of the line. What and Tourism. Rene and I will be farewell. As I am sure you all know an amazing experience realizing that meeting with Minister Miranda the RAM closed its doors and is in hundreds of people came to see a in March. The Grants Committee the process of moving its exhibition single record. Now if only I could meets in early March to review and space to a new downtown convince that many people to visit adjudicate grant applications, and Edmonton location. Scheduled to me in the archives! the ASA Board is preparing for the open in 2017 it will be the largest AGM and Conference from May 4 to museum in western Canada. -
The Case of the Canadian Province of Alberta's Oil Sands
Project Document A sub-national public-private strategic alliance for innovation and export development: the case of the Canadian province of Alberta’s oil sands Annette Hester Leah Lawrence Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) This background document was prepared by Annette Hester and Leah Lawrence, Consultants of the Division of International Trade and Integration, Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), within the activities of the study “Public-private alliances for innovation and export upgrading“, coordinated by Robert Devlin and Graciela Moguillansky with the financial support of SEGIB, through the project “Alianzas público-privadas para la Innovación y el Desarrollo Exportador: Casos Exitosos Extraregionales y la Experiencia Latinoamericana”. Some of their preliminary findings were formerly presented at ECLAC, in Structural Change and Productivity Growth 20 Years later: Old Problems, New Opportunities, (LC/G.2367 (SES.32/3)), Santiago de Chile, 2008, chapter VI, pages 231 to 299.. The paper benefited from the support and comments of Inés Bustillo, Clement Bowman, and Eddy Isaacs, as well as the research assistance of Timmy Stuparyk and Michael Bagan. Annette Hester and Leah Lawrence are Calgary-based economists and writers. Ms. Hester is a research fellow with the Centre for International Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Canada and a Senior Associate with the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, DC. The views expressed in this document, which has been reproduced without formal editing, are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Organization. LC/W.292 Copyright © United Nations, April 2010. All rights reserved Printed in Santiago, Chile – United Nations ECLAC – Project Documents collection A sub-national public-private strategic alliance for innovation and export… Contents Abstract…………………….............................................................................................................. -
Creating the Future of Health: the History of the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary, 1967-2012
University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository University of Calgary Press University of Calgary Press Open Access Books 2021-02 Creating the Future of Health: The History of the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary, 1967-2012 Lampard, Robert; Hogan, David B.; Stahnisch, Frank W.; Wright Jr., James R. University of Calgary Press Lampard, R., Hogan, D. B., Stahnisch, F. W., & Wright Jr, J. R. (2021). Creating the Future of Health: The History of the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary, 1967-2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1880/113308 book https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca CREATING THE FUTURE OF HEALTH: Creating the The History of the Cumming School of Medicine Future of Health The History of the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary, 1967–2012 at the University of Calgary, 1967–2012 Robert Lampard, David B. Hogan, Frank W. Stahnisch, and James R. Wright, Jr. ISBN 978-1-77385-165-5 Robert Lampard, David B. Hogan, Frank W. Stahnisch, and James R. Wright, Jr. THIS BOOK IS AN OPEN ACCESS E-BOOK. It is an electronic version of a book that can be purchased in physical form through any bookseller or on-line retailer, or from our distributors. Please support this open access publication by requesting that your university purchase a print copy of this book, or by purchasing a copy yourself. If you have any questions, please contact us at [email protected] Cover Art: The artwork on the cover of this book is not open access and falls under traditional copyright provisions; it cannot be reproduced in any way without written permission of the artists and their agents. -
Calgary Jewish Community Council and Its Successor, Calgary Jewish Federation, During an Incredibly Busy and Productive Year
Rededicating Renewing Rejewvenating Annual Report 2010 – 2011 | 5771 President and Interim Executive Director’s Message It is a real pleasure to share in these pages the accomplishments of Calgary Jewish Community Council and its successor, Calgary Jewish Federation, during an incredibly busy and productive year. Our efforts this past year have been focused on renewing and “rejewvenating” our Jewish community through education, inclusion and leadership development. We reached in to the unaffiliated and reached out to the greater Calgary community. And we are proud to say that we brought the joys of “doing Jewish” to an increasing number of men, women and children. We have a new name and new logo. Calgary Jewish Federation is now our community’s central funding, planning and coordinating body, completing a process that began with our March 2007 Strategic Plan for Ensuring the Future of the Jewish Community. This year, Federation and CJCC share one annual report. Henceforth, we will operate independently of one another. CJCC will continue to proudly serve the community, but will function independently as a not-for-profit organization tasked with coordinating local Israel advocacy efforts and promoting projects and programs with our sister region of Etzba HaGalil (the Galilee Panhandle) in Northern Israel. Another major undertaking during the past year was our search for a new Executive Director, and we are very pleased to welcome Drew Staffenberg back to Calgary in that capacity. Having served the community so capably from 1983 through 1993, Drew returns to us with outstanding experience in campus development and we are thrilled that he will help us to achieve our dream of a Jewish community campus. -
Glisan, Rodney L. Collection
Glisan, Rodney L. Collection Object ID VM1993.001.003 Scope & Content Series 3: The Outing Committee of the Multnomah Athletic Club sponsored hiking and climbing trips for its members. Rodney Glisan participated as a leader on some of these events. As many as 30 people participated on these hikes. They usually travelled by train to the vicinity of the trailhead, and then took motor coaches or private cars for the remainder of the way. Of the four hikes that are recorded Mount Saint Helens was the first climb undertaken by the Club. On the Beacon Rock hike Lower Hardy Falls on the nearby Hamilton Mountain trail were rechristened Rodney Falls in honor of the "mountaineer" Rodney Glisan. Trips included Mount Saint Helens Climb, July 4 and 5, 1915; Table Mountain Hike, November 14, 1915; Mount Adams Climb, July 1, 1916; and Beacon Rock Hike, November 4, 1917. Date 1915; 1916; 1917 People Allen, Art Blakney, Clem E. English, Nelson Evans, Bill Glisan, Rodney L. Griffin, Margaret Grilley, A.M. Jones, Frank I. Jones, Tom Klepper, Milton Reed Lee, John A. McNeil, Fred Hutchison Newell, Ben W. Ormandy, Jim Sammons, Edward C. Smedley, Georgian E. Stadter, Fred W. Thatcher, Guy Treichel, Chester Wolbers, Harry L. Subjects Adams, Mount (Wash.) Bird Creek Meadows Castle Rock (Wash.) Climbs--Mazamas--Saint Helens, Mount Eyrie Hell Roaring Canyon Mount Saint Helens--Photographs Multnomah Amatuer Athletic Association Spirit Lake (Wash.) Table Mountain--Columbia River Gorge (Wash.) Trout Lake (Wash.) Creator Glisan, Rodney L. Container List 07 05 Mt. St. Helens Climb, July 4-5,1915 News clipping. -
ANNUAL REPORT the Calgary Flames Foundation
2018-19 ANNUAL REPORT The Calgary Flames Foundation The Calgary Flames Foundation strives to improve the lives of southern Albertans through the support of health and wellness, education, and amateur and grassroots sports. Over $36 million has been invested into southern Alberta communities since inception. Thank you for your support of the Calgary Flames’ charitable arm. on the cover HOCKEY CALGARY NOVICE PROGRAM opposite ALBERTA CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL WHEELCHAIR HOCKEY feature player SEAN MONAHAN CHAIRMAN Board of Directors Letter from Jeff McCaig CALGARY FLAMES FOUNDATION On behalf of the board of directors of the Calgary program which provides every grade six student in Flames Foundation, I am proud to share the 2018- the City of Calgary with a free YMCA membership. 19 edition of our Annual Report. This publication These initiatives plus the continued gift of outdoor showcases the various outreach activities that ice and hockey programming are included in this the Calgary Flames and its charitable arm, the year’s distribution of over $3 million to charities Calgary Flames Foundation, collectively have and community groups in southern Alberta. We engaged in during the past year. When the are humbled by the support and enthusiasm from ownership group brought the Flames to Calgary in Flames fans and community benefactors in all JEFF MCCAIG KEN KING JOHN BEAN ALVIN LIBIN CHAIRMAN, VICE CHAIRMAN, PRESIDENT & CEO, PRESIDENT & CEO, 1980 they believed that we could have a positive areas of our business, particularly our charitable THE TRIMAC TRANSPORTATION GROUP CALGARY SPORTS AND CALGARY SPORTS AND BALMON INVESTMENTS LTD. OF COMPANIES ENTERTAINMENT CORPORATION ENTERTAINMENT CORPORATION impact on the quality of life of southern Albertans arm. -
Glaciers of the Canadian Rockies
Glaciers of North America— GLACIERS OF CANADA GLACIERS OF THE CANADIAN ROCKIES By C. SIMON L. OMMANNEY SATELLITE IMAGE ATLAS OF GLACIERS OF THE WORLD Edited by RICHARD S. WILLIAMS, Jr., and JANE G. FERRIGNO U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PROFESSIONAL PAPER 1386–J–1 The Rocky Mountains of Canada include four distinct ranges from the U.S. border to northern British Columbia: Border, Continental, Hart, and Muskwa Ranges. They cover about 170,000 km2, are about 150 km wide, and have an estimated glacierized area of 38,613 km2. Mount Robson, at 3,954 m, is the highest peak. Glaciers range in size from ice fields, with major outlet glaciers, to glacierets. Small mountain-type glaciers in cirques, niches, and ice aprons are scattered throughout the ranges. Ice-cored moraines and rock glaciers are also common CONTENTS Page Abstract ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- J199 Introduction----------------------------------------------------------------------- 199 FIGURE 1. Mountain ranges of the southern Rocky Mountains------------ 201 2. Mountain ranges of the northern Rocky Mountains ------------ 202 3. Oblique aerial photograph of Mount Assiniboine, Banff National Park, Rocky Mountains----------------------------- 203 4. Sketch map showing glaciers of the Canadian Rocky Mountains -------------------------------------------- 204 5. Photograph of the Victoria Glacier, Rocky Mountains, Alberta, in August 1973 -------------------------------------- 209 TABLE 1. Named glaciers of the Rocky Mountains cited in the chapter