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Sir Leonard Tilley
SIR LEONARD TILLEY JAMES HA NNAY TORONTO MORANG CO L IMITE D 1911 CONTENTS EARLY LIFE AND B' SINESS CAREER ELECTED T0 THE LEGISLAT' RE CHAPTER III THE PROHIBITORY LI' ' OR LAW 29 CHAPTER VI THE MOVEMENT FOR MARITIME ' NION CONTENTS DEFEAT OF CONFEDERATION CHAPTER I' TILLEY AGAIN IN POWER CHAPTER ' THE BRITISH NORTH AMERICA ACT CHA PTER ' I THE FIRST PARLIAMENT OF CANADA CHAPTER ' II FINANCE MINISTER AND GO VERNOR INDE' CHAPTER I EARLY LIFE AND B' SINESS CAREER HE po lit ic al c aree r of Samuel Leonard Tilley did not begin until the year t hat bro ught the work of L emuel Allan Wilmot as a legislator to a we e elect ed e bers t he close . Both r m m of House of 1 850 t he l ea Assembly in , but in fol owing y r Wil elev t ed t o t he benc h t h t t he mot was a , so a province lost his services as a political refo rmer just as a new t o re t man, who was destined win as g a a reputation t he . as himself, was stepping on stage Samuel l at t he . Leonard Til ey was born Gagetown , on St 8th 1 8 1 8 i -five John River, on May , , just th rty years after the landing of his royalist grandfather at St. - l t . e John He passed away seventy eight years a r, ull t he f of years and honours , having won highest prizes that it was in the power of his native province t o bestow. -
OECD/IMHE Project Self Evaluation Report: Atlantic Canada, Canada
OECD/IMHE Project Supporting the Contribution of Higher Education Institutions to Regional Development Self Evaluation Report: Atlantic Canada, Canada Wade Locke (Memorial University), Elizabeth Beale (Atlantic Provinces Economic Council), Robert Greenwood (Harris Centre, Memorial University), Cyril Farrell (Atlantic Provinces Community College Consortium), Stephen Tomblin (Memorial University), Pierre-Marcel Dejardins (Université de Moncton), Frank Strain (Mount Allison University), and Godfrey Baldacchino (University of Prince Edward Island) December 2006 (Revised March 2007) ii Acknowledgements This self-evaluation report addresses the contribution of higher education institutions (HEIs) to the development of the Atlantic region of Canada. This study was undertaken following the decision of a broad group of partners in Atlantic Canada to join the OECD/IMHE project “Supporting the Contribution of Higher Education Institutions to Regional Development”. Atlantic Canada was one of the last regions, and the only North American region, to enter into this project. It is also one of the largest groups of partners to participate in this OECD project, with engagement from the federal government; four provincial governments, all with separate responsibility for higher education; 17 publicly funded universities; all colleges in the region; and a range of other partners in economic development. As such, it must be appreciated that this report represents a major undertaking in a very short period of time. A research process was put in place to facilitate the completion of this self-evaluation report. The process was multifaceted and consultative in nature, drawing on current data, direct input from HEIs and the perspectives of a broad array of stakeholders across the region. An extensive effort was undertaken to ensure that input was received from all key stakeholders, through surveys completed by HEIs, one-on-one interviews conducted with government officials and focus groups conducted in each province which included a high level of private sector participation. -
RS24 S1- S43 Introduction
The General Assembly of New Brunswick: Its History and Records The Beginnings The History The Records in Context The History of the Sessional Records (RS24) The Organization of the Sessional Records (RS24) A Note on Spellings Notes on Place Names List of Lieutenant-Governors and Administrators Guide to Sessional Records (RS24) on Microfilm 1 The Beginnings: On August 18, 1784, two months after the new province of New Brunswick was established, Governor Thomas Carleton was instructed by Royal Commission from King George III to summon and call a General Assembly. The steps taken by Governor Carleton in calling this assembly are detailed in his letter of October 25, 1785, to Lord Stanley in the Colonial Office at London: "My Lord, I have the honor to inform your Lordship that having completed such arrangements as appeared to be previously requested, I directed writs to issue on the 15th instant for convening a General Assembly to meet on the first Tuesday in January next. In this first election it has been thought advisable to admit all males of full age who have been inhabitants of the province for no less than three months to the privilege of voting, as otherwise many industrious and meritorious settlers, who are improving the lands allotted to them but have not yet received the King's Grant, must have been excluded. … The House of Representatives will consist of 26 members, who are chosen by their respective counties, no Boroughs or cities being allowed a distinct Representation. The county of St. John is to send six members, Westmorland, Charlotte, and York four members each, Kings, Queens, Sunbury and Northumberland, each two members. -
JOHN A. MACDONALD the Indispensable Politician
JOHN A. MACDONALD The Indispensable Politician by Alastair C.F. Gillespie With a Foreword by the Hon. Peter MacKay Board of Directors CHAIR Brian Flemming Rob Wildeboer International lawyer, writer, and policy advisor, Halifax Executive Chairman, Martinrea International Inc., Robert Fulford Vaughan Former Editor of Saturday Night magazine, columnist VICE CHAIR with the National Post, Ottawa Jacquelyn Thayer Scott Wayne Gudbranson Past President and Professor, CEO, Branham Group Inc., Ottawa Cape Breton University, Sydney Stanley Hartt MANAGING DIRECTOR Counsel, Norton Rose Fulbright LLP, Toronto Brian Lee Crowley, Ottawa Calvin Helin SECRETARY Aboriginal author and entrepreneur, Vancouver Lincoln Caylor Partner, Bennett Jones LLP, Toronto Peter John Nicholson Inaugural President, Council of Canadian Academies, TREASURER Annapolis Royal Martin MacKinnon CFO, Black Bull Resources Inc., Halifax Hon. Jim Peterson Former federal cabinet minister, Counsel at Fasken DIRECTORS Martineau, Toronto Pierre Casgrain Director and Corporate Secretary of Casgrain Maurice B. Tobin & Company Limited, Montreal The Tobin Foundation, Washington DC Erin Chutter Executive Chair, Global Energy Metals Corporation, Vancouver Research Advisory Board Laura Jones Janet Ajzenstat, Executive Vice-President of the Canadian Federation Professor Emeritus of Politics, McMaster University of Independent Business, Vancouver Brian Ferguson, Vaughn MacLellan Professor, Health Care Economics, University of Guelph DLA Piper (Canada) LLP, Toronto Jack Granatstein, Historian and former head of the Canadian War Museum Advisory Council Patrick James, Dornsife Dean’s Professor, University of Southern John Beck California President and CEO, Aecon Enterprises Inc., Toronto Rainer Knopff, Navjeet (Bob) Dhillon Professor Emeritus of Politics, University of Calgary President and CEO, Mainstreet Equity Corp., Calgary Larry Martin, Jim Dinning Prinicipal, Dr. -
Debates of the Senate
CANADA Debates of the Senate 2nd SESSION . 37th PARLIAMENT . VOLUME 140 . NUMBER 41 OFFICIAL REPORT (HANSARD) Wednesday, March 19, 2003 ^ THE HONOURABLE DAN HAYS SPEAKER CONTENTS (Daily index of proceedings appears at back of this issue). Debates and Publications: Chambers Building, Room 943, Tel. 996-0193 Published by the Senate Available from Communication Canada ± Canadian Government Publishing, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0S9. Also available on the Internet: http://www.parl.gc.ca 956 THE SENATE Wednesday, March 19, 2003 The Senate met at 1:30 p.m., the Acting Speaker in the Chair. As of March 11, 2003, 89 countries had joined the International Criminal Court. These 89 members are expected to select a Prayers. prosecutor at the end of April of this year. Once this step has been taken, the court will be able to investigate and prosecute [Translation] individuals accused of crimes against humanity, genocide and war crimes in those countries that are party to the Rome Statute, which created the court. The ICC is to complement existing ROYAL ASSENT national legal systems and will only prosecute individuals in cases where national courts are unwilling or unable to investigate or The Hon. the Acting Speaker informed the Senate that the prosecute such crimes. following communication had been received: RIDEAU HALL The International Criminal Court represents an important development for international law in combating impunity. It is an March 19, 2003 honour for Canada to see one of our own chosen to be the first president of an institution that has the potential of playing a key Mr. Speaker, role in bringing to justice those found guilty of crimes against humanity, genocide and war crimes. -
Joe Cherwinski Fonds
MG 429 - Joe Cherwinski fonds Dates: 1914-2006 (inclusive); 1965-2000 (predominant). Extent: 5.08 m of textual records, 127 photographs, 11 negatives, 133 slides, 1 reel-to reel; 2 DVD; 8 reels of microfilm; 82 fiche; 1 disc; 23 posters; memorabilia; and library; plus oversize. Biography: Walter Joseph Carl Cherwinski was born on 26 April 1942 in Yorkton, Saskatchewan. He earned both his BA (1964) and MA (1966) from the University of Saskatchewan, and his PhD (1972) from the University of Alberta. He worked as research assistant to Eugene Forsey, and as a sessional lecturer at the University of Regina and the University of Alberta, prior to accepting a permanent position in the history department at Memorial University, Newfoundland. His research related primarily to prairie agricultural labour. He is author of numerous articles relating to labour issues, migrant workers on the prairies, and prairie history. Scope and content: This fonds contains the drafts, notes, and reference materials relating to Cherwinski’s research on prairie labour and history. Arrangement: It has been organized into 9 series: 1. Personal 2. Letters to Albert: The Main Family Correspondence from Saskatchewan, 1908-1925. 3. Prairie Farm Labour 4. Research – Various 5. Saskatchewan Organized Labour 6. Schwinghamer General Store 7. Winter on the Prairies: 1906-1907 8. Posters 9. Library Restrictions: Files marked as restricted must be vetted by archivist prior to use. Donated by WJC Cherwinski to the University of Saskatchewan Archives in 2012. Original finding aid by Patrick Hayes. Edited by Amy Putnam, 2018. Box 1 SERIES 1: PERSONAL British Columbia Today! – 1928. -
Seeing the Light: Report on Staffed Lighthouses in Newfoundland and Labrador and British Columbia
SEEING THE LIGHT: REPORT ON STAFFED LIGHTHOUSES IN NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR AND BRITISH COLUMBIA Report of the Standing Senate Committee on Fisheries and Oceans The Honourable Fabian Manning, Chair The Honourable Elizabeth Hubley, Deputy Chair October 2011 (first published in December 2010) For more information please contact us by email: [email protected] by phone: (613) 990-0088 toll-free: 1 800 267-7362 by mail: Senate Committee on Fisheries and Oceans The Senate of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A 0A4 This report can be downloaded at: http://senate-senat.ca Ce rapport est également disponible en français. MEMBERSHIP The Honourable Fabian Manning, Chair The Honourable Elizabeth Hubley, Deputy Chair and The Honourable Senators: Ethel M. Cochrane Dennis Glen Patterson Rose-Marie Losier-Cool Rose-May Poirier Sandra M. Lovelace Nicholas Vivienne Poy Michael L. MacDonald Nancy Greene Raine Donald H. Oliver Charlie Watt Ex-officio members of the committee: The Honourable Senators James Cowan (or Claudette Tardif) Marjory LeBreton, P.C. (or Claude Carignan) Other Senators who have participated on this study: The Honourable Senators Andreychuk, Chaput, Dallaire, Downe, Marshall, Martin, Murray, P.C., Rompkey, P.C., Runciman, Nancy Ruth, Stewart Olsen and Zimmer. Parliamentary Information and Research Service, Library of Parliament: Claude Emery, Analyst Senate Committees Directorate: Danielle Labonté, Committee Clerk Louise Archambeault, Administrative Assistant ORDER OF REFERENCE Extract from the Journals of the Senate, Sunday, June -
Honour's Role in the International States' System
Denver Journal of International Law & Policy Volume 31 Number 2 Winter Article 2 April 2020 Honour's Role in the International States' System Allen Z. Hertz Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.du.edu/djilp Recommended Citation Allen Z. Hertz, Honour's Role in the International States' System, 31 Denv. J. Int'l L. & Pol'y 113 (2002). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ DU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Denver Journal of International Law & Policy by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ DU. For more information, please contact [email protected],[email protected]. HONOUR'S ROLE IN THE INTERNATIONAL STATES' SYSTEM* ALLEN Z. HERTZ* INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY Studying the First World War's origins, James Joll (1918-1994), Professor of International History at the University of London, offered this insight: "In the late 20th century we perhaps find it easier to conceive of foreign policy as being motivated by domestic preoccupations and by economic interests than by... considerations of prestige and glory. It does not necessarily follow that the men of 1914 thought in the same way as we do."' To recapture that age which ended during the First World War, this essay analyzes the meaning of "honour" as a staple of European political philosophy. The significance of the "word of honour" is then located in the context of European courtly society, where a king's honour is explored in relation to that of his country and in the "international of kings" that was the European States' system until 1917-18. -
To View the Index
7lU INDEX. Abhott and Hill, 559, 561. ARMY-cont.. ilR:I1Y OFF1CERs--cont. ACT: picture of English soldier in L'tthU,ln, Lt. See. 8 Henry VI. f'. ii., 27. 1710, 224. Law, Col. See. 22 Edward IV., c. ii., 28. troops permanently stationed L3 l'rIarchant, Sir J. G. See. 11 Henry VII. c. xxiii., 28. at St. John's, 224. Lilburne, Lt., 224. 1 Henry VIII. c. 1.,27. failure of the, in America. 236. Lloyd, ~1ajor. See. 33 Henry VIII. c. xi., 33. ~loody's defence of St. John's, Maxse, .sir R., 513, 660. 2 & 3 Edward VI. c. vi., 53. 242. McDonell, Capt. See. 5 Elizabeth c. v. 27,28,55. Lloyd's defence of the out ;o,ioody, Lt. See. 23 Elizabeth c. vii., 28, 56. lymg settlements in 1705·6, Moore, M., Genl., 655. Charles I. thrown out by 246. Murray, Col., 382. Lords, 121, 138. colonial militia, 249. N orris, Col., :lSO. 12 CharlesIL, 173. Collins' command. 249. (J'Bdell, Slr 'f. N. See. 15 Charles II. c. xvi., 173. troops in St. John's, 267. Ogilvie, R, Genl.. 57..,. 10 William III. c. xxv., 225, officers engrossing trade, 267. Pearce, Capt. See. 233, 267,416. local militia, <68, 269. Philips, Lt., 26U. George II. (1759),299. local militia formed, 270. l'hillpotts, Lt., 656. Geor:re III. (176t), 299, 323. regiment raised m N., 274. Pringle, Col., 3U, 652, 653. 14 George III. c. lxxxiii., 328. recruiting for, in N., 290. Pyn>l, Sir R., 176. 15 Georp;e III. c. -
Fundamentals of Power Reactors Module Two Nuclear Reactor Systems
Training Centre / Centre de formation Fundamentals of Power Reactors Module Two Nuclear Reactor Systems Copyright Notice ©HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN IN RIGHT OF CANADA (1993) as represented by the Atomic Energy Control Board All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical photocopying, recording or otherwise, without permission from the Atomic Energy Control Board of Canada. Training Centre / Centre de formation Training Centre / Centre de formation Site Selection Training Objectives On completion of this lesson for a CANDU Station the participant will be able to: • Name the site characteristics which are important for design safety • Identify the three phases in a typical site selection process • Identify the natural site factors affecting design safety • Identify the human-related site factors affecting design safety • Name the site characteristics which are important in determining the impact of the plant in the region in which it could be located. Table of Contents 1 Overview of Siting Requirements for CANDU Nuclear Power Plants......................................................... 2 2 First Stage of Site Selection Process ...................................................... 4 3 Site Parameters Affecting Design Safety.............................................. 5 4 Site Selection - Natural Factors............................................................... 6 5 Site Selection - Human-Related -
International Nuclear Congress October 3-6,1993, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Technical Sessions Summaries
INIS-mf —U810 INC CA9600420 International Nuclear Congress October 3-6,1993, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Technical Sessions Summaries m. INTERNATIONAL NUCLEAR CONGRESS INC93 TECHNICAL SESSIONS PAPER SUMMARIES PART ONE — INVITED PAPERS Session Nl Page 5 Session N2 Page 13 Session N3 Page 19 Session N4 Page 27 Author Index Page 33 PART TWO — CONTRIBUTED PAPERS Contributed Paper Program Session Cl Page 55 Session C2 Page 61 Session C3 Page 67 Session C4 Page 73 Session C5 Page 79 Session C6 Page 85 Session C7 Page 91 Session C8 Page 97 Session C9 Page 103 Session CIO Page 109 Session Cll Page 115 Session C12 Page 121 Session C13 Page 127 Session C14 Page 133 Session C15 Page 139 Session C16 Page 145 Session C17 Page 151 Session C18 Page 157 Session C19 Page 163 Session C20 Page 169 Copyright 1993 Session C21 Page 175 Canadian Nuclear Session C22 Page 181 Association/Canadian Session C23 Page 187 Nuclear Society. INC93 Session C24 Page 193 Congress is sponsored by Session C25 Page 199 CNA/CNS and replaces their Session C26 Page 205 joint annual Conference for Session C27 Page 211 the year 1993. Session C28 Page 217 Author Index Page 223 INTERNATIONAL NUCLEAR CONGRESS 93 1993 OCTOBER 3-6 TORONTO, ONTARIO CANADA TECHNICAL SESSIONS INVITED PAPER SUMMARIES J. BOULTON CHAIRMAN, TECHNICAL SESSIONS, INVITED PAPERS NEXT PAGEJSJ left BLANK Monday October 4 11:00 - 12:30 NI: Social Issues and Environmental Implications: Waste Management City Hall Room, 2nd Floor Chaired by: Dr. T.E. Rummery, President, AECL Research UK Perspective: Mr. Michael Folger, Managing Director, UK Nirex Ltd. -
Businessmen in the British Parliament, 1832-1886
Businessmen in the British Parliament, 1832-1886 A Study of Aspiration and Achievement Michael Davey A thesis submitted for the Degree of Master of Arts in the School of History and Politics University of Adelaide February, 2012 Contents Abstract i Declaration ii Acknowledgements iii Introduction 1 1. Getting There 17 2. Surviving 40 3. Doing 60 4. Legacies 94 Conclusion 109 Bibliography 116 Abstract The businessmen who were elected to the British Parliament after the First Reform Act had not acquired country estates or rotten boroughs as had their predecessors. They were critical of the established aristocratic dominance and they had policies they wanted to promote. Few succeeded in exerting any real influence due to the entrenched power of the landed gentry, their older age when elected and their lack of public experience. This thesis identifies six businessmen who were important contributors to national politics and were thus exceptions to the more usual parliamentary subordination to the gentry. They were generally younger when elected, they had experience in municipal government and with national agitation groups; they were intelligent and hard working. Unlike some other businessmen who unashamedly promoted sectional interests, these men saw their business activities as only incidental to their parliamentary careers. Having been in business did however provide them with some understanding of the aims of the urban working class, and it also gave them the financial backing to enter politics. The social backgrounds and political imperatives of this group of influential businessmen and how these affected their actions are discussed in this thesis. Their successes and failures are analysed and it is argued that their positions on policy issues can be attributed to their strong beliefs rather than their business background.