125 results
Search Results
2. Paper chase.
- Author
-
Willis, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
PAPER , *PUBLISHING , *PAPER industry , *PRICES - Abstract
Reports on the soaring cost of paper prices in Canada. Increasingly bitter struggle between cash-strapped publishers and the pulp-and-paper industry that supplies them; Impact of rising paper prices on readers; Decline in number of trees to be harvested; No sign of any newsprint supplies emerging to relieve the pressure on publishers.
- Published
- 1995
3. CASCADES INC.
- Author
-
McClelland, Susan
- Subjects
- *
PAPER recycling , *SCHOOL recycling programs , *PAPER industry - Abstract
Offers information about Cascades Inc., a paper company that supports paper recycling programs in Kingsey Falls, Quebec.
- Published
- 2003
4. The wrong leaf is the least of its problems.
- Author
-
Feschuk, Scott
- Subjects
- *
LEGAL tender , *PAPER money design , *MONEY , *MAPLE leaf (Emblem) - Abstract
The article offers the author's facetious views about the changed design of the Canadian $20 bill as of February 2013. Topics include how the banknotes are printed on a polymer material rather than paper, the Bank of Canada's deputy governor Tiff Macklem, and concerns that the leaf depicted on the notes is a Norway maple leaf instead of a Canadian sugar maple leaf.
- Published
- 2013
5. NOW THE NEWS HITS HOME.
- Author
-
Mooers, Anne
- Subjects
- *
PAPER industry , *BANKRUPTCY , *RESOURCE-based communities , *FINANCIAL crises , *SMALL business , *EMPLOYEES , *MILLS & mill-work , *MANUFACTURING processes , *PULP mills - Abstract
This article focuses on the news that a pulp mill was going bankrupt and how it would affect the community. Even though I work in New Brunswick--not exactly crime central in Canada--we've had our share of murderers, pedophiles and pot-carrying premiers. Since the province's economy is largely based on natural resources, I've edited my fair share of boom-and-bust stories from here and elsewhere. Stories about disgruntled forestry workers in northern New Brunswick replaced by mechanical harvesters and stories about angry protests over the closure of the cod fishery in Newfoundland. Along with the 400 direct jobs, economists predicted at least another 200 indirect jobs would shortly disappear. I envisioned people sitting at their kitchen tables, crunching numbers: the mortgage, car payment, groceries, electricity, Christmas presents, kids' clothing.
- Published
- 2004
6. Business Notes.
- Subjects
- *
BUSINESS , *PAPER industry , *SECURITIES , *MERGERS & acquisitions , *EMPLOYEES - Abstract
Presents Canadian business news for December 7, 1998. SkyDome Corp.'s filing for court protection from its creditors; The resignation of two directors from the board of Livent Inc., the Toronto-based live theater company that has filed for bankruptcy protection; United States employment growth compared to Canada's between 1889 and 1997; Provincial securities administrators as close to reaching an agreement on a national system of securities; New York-based International Paper to purchase Union Camp Corp.
- Published
- 1998
7. A union victory.
- Subjects
- *
PAPER industry - Abstract
Says the month-long strike that shut down most of the B.C. pulp-and-paper industry ended when the mills agreed to drop demands to abolish a floating holiday. The new contract includes a base wage increase of 6.5 percent over two years.
- Published
- 1992
8. Shiny, smooth and fake.
- Author
-
Rekai, Mika
- Subjects
- *
PAPER money , *COUNTERFEIT money - Abstract
The article looks at the polymer bills released by the Bank of Canada in 2011, discussing the public's initial disdain for the design and the discovery in 2013 of several counterfeit bills, despite the currency's anti-counterfeiting measures.
- Published
- 2013
9. A free man, on paper.
- Author
-
Friscolanti, Michael
- Subjects
- *
BORDER security , *UNDOCUMENTED immigrants , *DETENTION of persons - Abstract
The article discusses investigation into the Canadian Border Services Agency's (CBSA) handling of refugee claimant cases, focusing on the organization's conduct regarding immigrants who died in its custody. Topics include the suicide of deported hotel maid Lucia Vega Jimenez, the death of illegal immigrant and convicted fraudster Maxamillion Akamai, and allegations that the CBSA released Akamai in order to avoid dealing with his imminent death.
- Published
- 2014
10. Confronting the Irvings.
- Author
-
Chisholm, P. and Tunney, M.
- Subjects
- NEW Brunswick, SAINT John (N.B.), CANADA, IRVING Pulp & Paper Ltd.
- Abstract
Discusses Saint John, N.B., residents' complaints about the sulphurous fumes emitted by the Irving Pulp and Paper Mill, owned by billionaire K.C. Irving and his family. Provincial Environment Minister Vaughn Blaney's call for closure of the plant; Measures to reduce the emissions; High unemployment and concern over jobs; Comments by residents and city and provincial officials.
- Published
- 1989
11. A frenzied paper sale.
- Author
-
McMurdy, D. and Dalglish, B.
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRIES - Abstract
Examines the reasons why more than 35 Canadian firms have issued new shares recently to cash in on a sudden surge of interest in new share issues. Why investors are interested; What various companies will do with the money raised; Lenders' policis; Revival of stock trading among small Canadian investors; Concern about corporate earnings and cash flow; Petro-Canada stock; Montreal-based pulp-and-paper producer Domtar Inc.
- Published
- 1991
12. The great paper swap.
- Author
-
Wison-Smith, Anthony
- Subjects
- *
MERGERS & acquisitions - Abstract
Focuses on a deal between Canada's Southam Inc. and Sun Media Corp. Southam to buy `The Financial Post' from Sun Media; How both sides benefit from the deal; How it affects Canadian print journalism; Comments from the companies' executives.
- Published
- 1998
13. A PORCELAIN POLL.
- Author
-
Cameron, Amy and Deziel, Shanda
- Subjects
- *
EXHIBITIONS , *TOILETS , *TOILET paper - Abstract
Mentions 'Sitting Pretty: The History of the Toilet,' an exhibit at the West Parry Sound District Museum in Northern Ontario. Debate concerning how to hang toilet paper; Popularity of the exhibit.
- Published
- 2001
14. OUR MAD SCIENTISTS.
- Author
-
Wells, Paul
- Subjects
- *
RESEARCH grants , *FEDERAL aid to research , *RESEARCH , *GENETICS , *SCIENTISTS , *SUBSIDIES , *SCHOLARS - Abstract
This article focuses on federal funding of scientific research in Canada and how scientists are reacting to rejection of research grants. Michel Desjardins, who holds a Canada Research Chair in cellular microbiology at the Université de Montréal, applied for a research grant from Genome Canada, the arms-length foundation that since 2000 has provided most of the federal money in Canada that goes toward genetic research. In a previous competition, Genome Canada had granted him money for projects that led to research papers in two prestigious journals, Cell and Nature. Genome Canada funds only half the cost of a research project. It requires that researchers identify other agencies or private-sector donors willing to pay the other half. Desjardins' tuberculosis project had an $8-million budget, so he needed $4 million from Genome Canada. Near the end of April, Genome Canada told Desjardins his project had been rejected. He never had a chance to defend his science in front of other scientists. To Desjardins, this was a fundamental breakdown in the doctrine of "peer review," by which scientists decide among themselves which of their colleagues should have a project funded or a paper published. Biomedical researchers in Canada are a tightly knit community. It didn't take long for rejected scientists to find one another and compare notes. In a series of interviews with Maclean's, more than a dozen researchers across the country depicted Genome Canada as an organization that has become so concerned about demonstrating sound book-keeping that it is failing to promote the best science. Serious complaints are also being levelled by scientists who survived the co-funding exam and who are still in the running for big Genome Canada grants.
- Published
- 2005
15. Paper chain sale.
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
Advises that Thomson Newspapers Corp. put several of its daily papers in Canada up for sale as part of a restructuring plan. Aim of Dick Harrington, president and CEO of Thomson, to transform the company into a marketing and communications company; Names of newspapers on the block.
- Published
- 1995
16. Remaking the CBC.
- Author
-
Clark, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
BROADCASTING industry , *PAPER industry workers , *LABOR unions , *BROADCASTING policy , *EMPLOYEES - Abstract
Focuses on layoffs at the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. (CBC). Comments by Mike Sullivan of the Communications Energy and Paperworks Union of Canada; CBC president Robert Rabinovitch's plan to reshape the CBC; Plans to follow up layoffs with the integration of the CBC's new services; The effect on employee morale of Rabinovitch's opposition to new license conditions imposed by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).
- Published
- 2000
17. A long strike finally ends.
- Subjects
- *
STRIKES & lockouts , *PAPER industry workers , *LABOR unions , *PAPER industry - Abstract
Reports that Canadian forestry giant Abitibi-Consolidated will return to work in December of 1998 after a five month strike by the Communications, Energy, and Paperworkers Union. How the company hopes to regain customers; Percentage of the North American newsprint production that Abitibi-Consolidated was responsible for before the strike; What the union was able to get from the company.
- Published
- 1998
18. KARLA HOMOLKA: GIRL NEXT DOOR.
- Author
-
Gillis, Charlie
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINALS , *OFFENSES against the person , *WOMEN criminals - Abstract
This article focuses on Karla Homolka, who is soon to be released from jail for her involvement in several murders. Outrage, fear, overreaction and -- let's admit it -- prurient fascination all rise to the surface each time the words "Karla Homolka" surface in the national conversation, each time her face smiles mockingly from our morning paper. The price of convicting Paul Bernardo for the murders of Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy was Homolka's plea bargain, and we now know that price was sickeningly high. Videos that emerged after Homolka secured her deal in 1993 showed her not just participating but revelling in the torture of the two Ontario teenagers, plus the rape of a third woman. Those images, along with news that Homolka participated in the fatal drugging and rape of her own 15-year-old sister, Tammy, long ago laid ruin to the theory she'd been Bernardo's compliant victim, forced on pain of death to help him live out his monstrous fantasies. On July 5, 2005, Homolka will walk free from Joliette Institution north of Montreal, a relatively young woman at 35, having paid the debt society asked and completed almost nothing in the way of rehabilitation. The rumour mill is already churning. In varying degrees, the rumours are also based on misconceptions -- about Homolka, about the law, about the ease of disappearing when 32 million people are watching. INSET: A KILLER VANISHES: Evelyn Dick served 11 years -- then disappea...
- Published
- 2005
19. KYOTO SHELL GAME.
- Author
-
Gillis, Charlie
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change , *GLOBAL warming , *GREENHOUSE gases , *INTERNATIONAL obligations , *TREATIES - Abstract
This article discusses the Kyoto Protocol on climate change and how since its ratification in Canada few changes have been made to battle global warming. The day after Canada officially ratified the Kyoto Protocol on climate change in December 2002, David Anderson was in New York City to deposit the freshly signed paper with the Treaty Section of the United Nations. It was his shining moment as federal environment minister: an avowed multilateralist and an unabashed tree hugger, Anderson had spent three years battling opponents -- and sometimes cabinet colleagues -- over a deal he firmly held to be a turning point in the war against global warming. Whatever it was about the Kyoto accord that stirred such emotions two years ago seems like a distant memory, to the point where neither proponents nor critics of the deal give it much chance of making a difference in Canada. Since the conception of the protocol in 1990, greenhouse gas emissions in Canada have climbed some 20 per cent (as of 2002), and all signs suggest those numbers have increased since Anderson's giddy time in New York two years ago. But most critics agree on the basic errors that have led us to our current dilemma, where reaching our stated goal of cutting emissions six per cent below 1990 levels by 2010 -- a reduction of at least 240 megatonnes per year -- would require a brand of resolve we simply don't have. Our most grave, and perhaps most foreseeable, mistake was fooling ourselves into thinking we could do our part under Kyoto without inflicting pain on so-called large final emitters.
- Published
- 2005
20. Travels with Conrad.
- Subjects
- *
BUSINESSMEN - Abstract
This article presents an adapted excerpt from the book "Here Be Dragons," by Peter C. Newman about Conrad Black. This adapted excerpt describes Newman s three-decade-long relationship with Lord Black of Crossharbour, who excelled at being all three. That was the day the music died for Canada's poster boy tycoon, and some of it died within me, because I was there at the creation. We first met when he returned to Toronto from Quebec in 1974. Black was 29, had earned a law degree from Laval, had written an unusually perceptive master's thesis on Quebec premier Maurice Duplessis and, with his partners Peter White and David Radler, had purchased the Sherbrooke Record for $20,000. Black's downfall dates back to the fall of 1993, when he engaged in a feud with Rupert Murdoch, the pragmatic proprietor of the Times, who had reduced his paper's cover price to challenge the Telegraph's then heady circulation lead. Conrad's responsibility for what appeared to be a gross misappropriation of corporate funds remained to be proven.
- Published
- 2004
21. The Myth Of Rich.
- Author
-
Macklem, Katherine
- Subjects
- *
CANADIANS , *RICH people , *WEALTH , *INCOME , *REAL property , *ENTREPRENEURSHIP , *MILLIONAIRES , *SOCIAL classes , *UPPER class - Abstract
This is an article that focuses on the lives of rich Canadians and what it means to be rich in 2004.One of the most popular attractions at the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto during the '60s and early '70s was a display of a million dollars in cold hard cash. Silver dollars and paper bills, all in mint condition, were assembled each summer into a new diorama: there was a Million Dollar Money Tree, a Million Dollar Merry-Go-Round, and, one year, the risque Million Dollar Bubble Bath, featuring svelte models who'd slowly strip behind a screen and appear to slip into a tub. The 36-year-old married father of two has been making money the hard way ever since his first job pumping gas at his father's Petro-Canada station. if it were, the ranks of millionaires would at least double, given today's real estate prices, says Keith Sjogren, a principal with Taddingstone Consulting Group Inc., which surveys Canada's wealthiest citizens. Traditionally, Canada's millionaires have made their money in one of two ways: by inheriting it or by making a good income and investing it well. Still, most Canadians in the very top bracket resist flaunting their wealth. Discretion, even downright frugality, tends to be admired.
- Published
- 2004
22. A RESEARCH MYSTERY.
- Author
-
Scott, Sarah
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTISTS , *IMMUNOLOGY , *AWARDS - Abstract
At this peak a couple of years ago, Josef Penninger was one of the hottest, most charming scientists in the world. From his lab on Toronto's hospital row, Penninger, a fearless anarchist, loved to demolish accepted wisdom as he swooped over a stunningly broad scientific landscape--bone, pain, cancer, heart disease and the immune system.He churned out so many papers in the world's most prestigious scientific journals that for two years running, in 1999 and 2000, the trend-tracker 'Science Watch' said Penninger was among the world's most quoted scientific researchers. Penninger's boss was Tak Mak, the wiry, hard-driven 56-year-old Hong Kong immigrant who has won nearly every scientific prize, except for the Nobel, for his discovery of the holy grail of the immune system.
- Published
- 2003
23. Can the Aspers do it?
- Author
-
MACKLEM, KATHERINE
- Subjects
- *
CORPORATIONS - Abstract
Focuses on Canada's dominant newspaper owner CanWest Global Communications Corp. and the role of president and chief executive officer Leonard Asper and founder and executive chairman Izzy Asper. Scrutiny they are receiving based on the question of what they will do with the assets; Goals of the media company, which has been a family enterprise; Issue of debt; Controversy surrounding its plan to publish centrally written editorials in the major Southam papers.
- Published
- 2002
24. Trouble in paradise.
- Author
-
Levin, B.
- Subjects
- *
LUMBER industry - Abstract
Examines the conflict between the Vancouver Island (B.C.) towns of Tofino and Ucluelet over the logging of old-growth timber. Tourism versus logging; Environmentalism versus jobs; Comments by townspeople on both sides of the dispute and logging-company executives. INSET: `Maclean's' Decima poll (logging); Paper tigers.;Bleach balm..
- Published
- 1990
25. Danger in the water.
- Author
-
Nichols, M. and Jensen, H.
- Subjects
- *
WATER pollution - Abstract
Discusses Canadians' growing concern about the level of pollutants and toxic wastes in their lakes, rivers, and coastal waters. Concern about drinking water; Pulp-and-paper mills; Types of toxic wastes; Tolerance of pollution from industries which provide jobs and tax revenues; Need for stricter regulation; St. Lawrence River; US-Canadian efforts to clean up the Great Lakes. INSET: A glossary of contaminants..
- Published
- 1990
26. An outbreak of newspaper wars.
- Author
-
Corelli, R. and Jenish, D.
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
A special report looks at Canada's newspaper wars over readers, advertisers, and revenue. Clashes between newspapers in various Canadian cities over readership and markets; Famous newspaper rivalries. INSET: The little paper that grew..
- Published
- 1988
27. Eyes on the prize.
- Author
-
Brady, Diane
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC degrees - Abstract
Questions what, besides a piece of paper, does a university degree really provide in Canada. How provincial governments are chopping university budgets; Demands that universities become more accountable; Tuition concerns among students; Prospect of privatization; Debate over the teaching of skills; How university degree seems to be a prerequisite of sorts, an essential to be built upon.
- Published
- 1993
28. LOOKING WEST.
- Author
-
Coyne, Andrew and Wells, Paul
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *GROSS domestic product ,CANADIAN politics & government - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at a symposium sponsored by the periodical "Maclean's" on the Western provinces of Canada is presented. Topics include the political power of the Western provinces of Canada, the gross domestic product of the Western provinces of Canada as compared to that of Ontario, and the conservative and liberal political parties in Canada.
- Published
- 2010
29. DOWNSIZED DREAMS.
- Author
-
Kirby, Jason
- Subjects
- *
RETIREMENT planning , *GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,CANADIAN economy, 1991- - Abstract
The article reports on changes in retirement practices in Canada. The central focus of the article is on the impact that downsizing, financial conditions in Canada and the 2008-09 global financial crisis have had on retirement planning. The article focuses on the bankruptcy filing of Abitibibowater, a Canadian paper manufacturer.
- Published
- 2009
30. Cut down by red ink.
- Author
-
McMurdy, D. and Dale, D.
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Examines the reasons for the current downturn in Canada's forest products industry. Threat to Canada's economy; Plans to shut down the Spruce Falls Paper and Power Co. in Kapuskasing, Ont.; Downturn in Quebec, Ont., the Atlantic provinces, and British Columbia; Spending cuts and environmental standards; De-inking plants; Newsprint maker, Abitibi-Price Inc. of Toronto; Noranda Forest Inc. of Toronto; More.
- Published
- 1991
31. Green politics.
- Author
-
Wallace, B. and Quinn, H.
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
Discusses Environment Minister Lucien Bouchard's discussion paper, titled `The Green Plan,' on Canada's environmental policies. Policy options and lack of concrete proposals; Public consultation process; Comments by Bouchard's supporters and criticism from environmentalists. INSET: `This is not an action plan' (interview with Bouchard), by L....
- Published
- 1990
32. Taking the heat.
- Author
-
Caragata, Warren
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL problems ,CANADIAN economy - Abstract
Examines how proposed social program reforms in Ottawa are sparking a storm of controversy. Human Resources Minister Lloyd Axworthy's 89-page discussion paper which calls for sweeping changes in several critical areas; Dissension within Liberal ranks about the scope of the changes that threatens to under mine Axworthy; Brouhaha over leaked cabinet briefing note to `The Toronto Star'; Debate over unemployment insurance and more. INSET: Rewriting the rule book.
- Published
- 1994
33. STELLAR PERFORMANCE.
- Author
-
Hawaleshka, Danylo
- Subjects
- *
ASTRONOMERS , *CANADIANS , *RESEARCH , *ASTRONOMY - Abstract
This article focuses on the study of astronomy in Canada. Canadians are masters of the universe. Sure, the U.S. leads the world in spending on space research, laying out roughly US $7 per American each year, while Britain, France and Germany budget between US $4 and US $5 for every citizen. Canada spends just US$1 per capita, less even than Australia. Yet by one important measure -- the confidence of their peers -- Canadian astronomers produce some of the best astrophysical science on the planet. Thomson Scientific, a Philadelphia-based information clearing house, reported Canadian scientists published 4,836 research papers on space in the past decade. Those studies in turn were referenced 76,921 times in other scientific papers, for an average citation rate of 15.91. If one were to list Canada's 150 most cited scientists from the many different fields of study, about 15 would be astronomers, say Jaymie Matthews, associate professor of astronomy at the University of British Columbia. William Harris, a frequently cited astronomer at McMaster University in Hamilton, likens the Canadian success to a talented student making a movie with next to no money. The young director is forced to be innovative. Lack of funding has forced scientists to pick their projects wisely, observes Ray Carlberg, an astrophysics professor at the University of Toronto. Last year's most quoted paper -- cited 1,058 times -- mapped the radiological afterglow of the big bang, in the process helping confirm theories of how the universe came to be. What Canada lacked until only recently was the ability to make observations from space. That changed with MOST, a suitcase-sized, $10-million rocket-borne telescope that was blasted into space in 2003. Backed by the Canadian Space Agency, MOST has already outlived its life expectancy and has another two, maybe three years to go, says Matthews, the project's mission scientist.
- Published
- 2005
34. LINGERIE AND CARIBOU.
- Author
-
Hawaleshka, Danylo
- Subjects
- *
CATALOGS , *CARIBOU , *WOODLAND caribou , *ENDANGERED species , *ANIMALS , *NATURE conservation , *WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
This article discusses how retail company Victoria's Secret may be destroying the habitat of the caribou in Canada in order to create its catalogs. Victoria's Secret, the U.S. purveyor of much bodacious lingerie, is struggling to assuage critics who accuse it of contributing to the demise in Canada of the threatened woodland caribou. Victoria's Secret prints and mails, on average, well over one million catalogues a day to promote its form-enhancing women's undergarments, sleepwear and clothing. But according to ForestEthics, a San Francisco-based environmental watchdog, about 25 percent of the paper in those catalogues comes from trees felled in Canada's virgin boreal forest, where the caribou live. Last fall, ForestEthics launched a cheeky ad campaign dubbed "Victoria's Dirty Secret." Featuring an arresting photo of a woman in a black merry widow wielding a chainsaw, it calls on the public to pressure the company to stop using paper from endangered forests, to use more recycled paper, and to stop publishing so many catalogues. Anthony Hebron, spokesman for Limited Brands, the Columbus, Ohio-based parent company of Victoria's Secret, says its catalogue practices are changing.
- Published
- 2005
35. A Strategic Retreat.
- Author
-
SHEPPARD, ROBERT and CHISHOLM, PATRICIA
- Subjects
- *
SERIAL publications , *PUBLISHING - Abstract
Focuses on the decision of Conrad Black, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Hollinger International Inc., to sell a large number of newspapers and serial publications owned by his company. Speculation as to which papers are for sale; Effect of the decision on the company's stock price; Canadian companies that are expected to purchase local papers; Outlook for the Internet strategy of Hollinger.
- Published
- 2000
36. The media message.
- Subjects
- *
MASS media , *POLITICAL candidates , *PUBLIC opinion , *ELECTIONS , *PREJUDICES ,CANADIAN prime ministers - Abstract
This article focuses on how the Canadian media portrayed the different political candidates in the 2006 elections for Prime Minister. This year, Maclean's, in partnership with McGill University, put the assumption that facts are filtered through political bias to the test. Throughout the election campaign, McGill's Observatory on Media and Public Policy has monitored coverage in seven of the country's biggest and most influential papers. Most of the major papers dealt with news stories in the same relatively balanced way.
- Published
- 2006
37. AND THE WINNER IS …:.
- Author
-
Wells, Paul
- Subjects
- *
JOURNALISM awards , *COLLEGE student newspapers & periodicals , *COLLEGE journalism , *JOURNALISM , *STUDENT newspapers & periodicals , *JOURNALISTS - Abstract
This article presents the first and last campus journalism awards as selected by the author. This year's finest campus newspaper in Canada, according to me, is Quartier Libre at the Université de Montréal. And since one of the runners-up is the Link, from neighbouring Concordia University, the one-member jury of the First (and Last) Back Page Campus Journalism Awards has decided to crown Montreal as the capital of campus journalism in Canada. Both papers achieve quality by doing something that hasn't occurred to most Canadian campus papers: they take their time. Several weeks ago on my weblog I asked for samples of Canadian campus newspapers. Student scribes across the country hurried to comply, and it's been great fun to read their work. At the University of Saskatchewan, Drew Larson shot an amazing cover photo of the Arcade Fire for the Sheaf: two musicians with faces tilted up, mouths open in identical Os. Today's campus papers have too many opinion columns by students who had nothing new to say. Nobody in Canada is doing anything in English to match Quartier Libre.
- Published
- 2005
38. You Heard It Here First.
- Author
-
Wells, Paul
- Subjects
- *
ELECTIONS , *POLITICAL campaigns ,CANADIAN politics & government, 1980- - Abstract
This article presents predictions for upcoming elections. British reporters covering Tony Blair's campaign in 2001 amused themselves by playing" battle-bus bingo": they wrote down Blair's favourite cliché phrases on strips of paper, paid a pound each to get into the contest, then each drew three strips of paper at random. Paul Martin rewarded this apple-cheeked British Columbia Liberal's bootlicking fealty with an appointment as the party's nominee in Burnaby-Douglas. Last week Peter Mansbridge's column announced that political leaders' tours are a waste of time, which is why the CBC will have its own bus travelling the country avoiding politicians. If Peter leads The National with more stories from the CBC bus than he does from Paul Martin's, Stephen Harper's and Jack Layton's, I'll buy him dinner.
- Published
- 2004
39. Good things come in small packages.
- Author
-
Cameron, Amy
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN artists , *WOMEN sculptors , *JAPANESE art , *ART exhibitions , *ART museums , *CANADIAN small sculpture - Abstract
Cybéle Young, a Toronto sculptor who makes small Japanese paper constructions of everyday urban symbols, including T-shirts, fire hydrants, shoes, chairs and handbags--has come up with some playful titles for her pieces. In her solo show, "Toys that Linger," opening at Toronto's Prime Gallery on May 29, the artist (who makes most of her income from art fairs in the United States) is displaying these paper constructions as well as some small bronze sculptures that use the same iconography. Her fascination for all things little started as a child when she would build miniature farms with tiny tools. Today, her seven-year-old daughter Calder remains a huge inspiration. In fact, Young and her husband David named their child after the American sculptor Alexander Calder "more for his philosophy than his art," she explains.
- Published
- 2003
40. Pipped at the Post, fiscal realities intrude.
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPERS , *JOURNALISTS , *JOURNALISM , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *REPORTERS & reporting - Abstract
The changes have been anything but conservative at Canada's unabashedly right-wing national daily. After months of speculation that CanWest Global Communications Corp. was set to fold its perennially money-losing National Post, the paper was granted a reprieve. Ken Whyte, editor-in-chief, and Martin Newland, his deputy--the duo behind the Post's cheeky mixture of agenda-driven news, pointed commentary and unapologetic fluff, have left to pursue unspecified "opportunities." Leonard Asper, CanWest chief executive, announced a three-year plan to make the paper profitable and appointed his older brother David to oversee the flagship. Matthew Fraser, a media commentator and journalism professor with no previous management experience, was named editor-in-chief. More and more Post reporters have been showing up on TV screens, and the content of the chain's daily papers across the country has become increasingly standardized--a trend that seems sure to intensify as the company struggles to get out from under a $3.6-billion debt load.
- Published
- 2003
41. Ads That Subtract.
- Author
-
Mansbridge, Peter
- Subjects
- *
TELEVISION advertising , *NEWSPAPERS , *MASS media - Abstract
Canada's two "national" newspapers have been in their war for more than four years now, and the damage lies on the landscape for all to see. It ranges from credibility on disputed readership numbers, to the list of former editors and owners, not to mention front-page story claims that put tabloid television to shame. "The National Post" used it first, but the "Globe" and "Mail" has recently put its version into production. Paul Wells and Andrew Coyne are two very bright guys -- I know, because I often turn to them for their analysis, wit and ability to cut through the nonsense that surrounds political life in Canada. But here they are, shot with Hollywood lighting and soft focus lenses, coming up with lines about their paper that would make some of their ad people blush. Before I go further, let me say that I know what they must have gone through when they were locked in a studio to do their part in their paper's war plan. Being in TV, I know these types of videotaped self-promotions: after hours of preparation, lighting tests, makeup brushes, and cameras rolling perfectly along little tracks, you finally start talking about your broadcast, your colleagues, your viewers. And with each take, you get encouraged by the production hangers-on to get looser, and more bold, in your claims. Pretty soon, you'll say almost anything just to get out of the room. And sure enough, that's what they end up using in the commercials
- Published
- 2003
42. UP AGAINST THE FORCES OF PROGRESS.
- Author
-
Friscolanti, Michael
- Subjects
- *
EMINENT domain , *PROPERTY rights - Abstract
The article looks at Frank Meyers, a direct descendant of Revolutionary War-era British loyalist spy John Walden Meyers, and his legal battle with the Canadian federal government over land originally given to the Meyers family by the British government. The government reportedly wants the farmland back to build a military training ground for Canada's special operations unit Joint Task Force 2 and filed expropriation papers against Meyers and two other landowners in March 2012.
- Published
- 2012
43. THE POWER OF GOING GREEN.
- Author
-
MacDonald, Nancy
- Subjects
- *
CLEAN energy investment - Abstract
This article introduces a section on the Canadian companies whose corporate environmental policies are the most successful. The development of a micro-hydroelectric generation project by the Whistler-Blackcomb ski resort owned by Intrawest ULC is described. The adaptations of waste to energy systems at McGill University and the paper company Cascades Inc. are described.
- Published
- 2009
44. The Mail.
- Author
-
Schneider, Grazielle, Todd, Sarah, Ouimette, Mitch, Cook, Laurie, Whalen, Amanda, Uhlmann, Eric, White, Peter, Hickman, Julie, Rennie, Shanna, Giroux, Bethany, Taub, Julie, Martin, Guy, Kowbell, Daniel, Small, J. Tobin, Neumann, Cadence, Cardozo, Andrew, Derkson, Rachel, and Gilson, Marissa
- Subjects
- *
LETTERS to the editor , *TEENAGERS , *LOW-carbohydrate diet , *DISMISSAL of employees , *CHILD soldiers ,CANADIAN politics & government, 1980- - Abstract
Presents letters to the editor commenting on articles previously published in this magazine. Responses to the articles "Teen trouble," "Paper trail," "Gut-check time," "Why Quebecers feel especially betrayed," "They're so sorry [not]" and "Smooth reign," from the March 1, 2004 issue; Responses to the articles "The Lowdown on the low-carb diet wars" and "If at first you don't …," from the February 23, 2004 issue; Responses to "In the country of love," from the February 16, 2004 issue, Response to "Arms and the child," from the February 9, 2004 issue.
- Published
- 2004
45. Protecting Privacy.
- Author
-
Macklem, Katherine
- Subjects
- *
RIGHT of privacy , *FALSE personation , *BANK accounts , *SAFETY - Abstract
This article discusses the new privacy protection legislation in Canada that went into effect on January 1, 2004. CONSIDER THE CASE of the bride-to-be who was inadvertently shown her fiancé's private financial papers. It revealed a line of credit she hadn't been aware of, used by her love to help pay his university tuition fees. Since 2001, federally regulated companies--banks and broadcasters, for instance--have had to comply with Canada's updated privacy legislation.Bank of Montreal had a similar near-miss last September: computers containing records that included customers' names, addresses, phone numbers and bank-account and credit-card balances were for sale on eBay for six hours before their content was discovered. The new law, called the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, or PIPEDA, says organizations can only collect personal information for a stated reason--and can use it only for that purpose.
- Published
- 2004
46. BACK TO THE FUTURE.
- Author
-
Aubin, Benoit
- Subjects
- *
PERIODICALS , *JOURNALISTS - Abstract
In the age of convergence, where fearsome local editors have taken a back seat to faceless corporate managers from out of town, the romantic good old days at the [Montreal Gazette[ are slipping fast into nostalgia, alongside the three-martini lunch, felt fedoras thrown on the ice at the Forum, and the let-them-deny-it approach to sensational copy. The paper became part of a megadeal that saw the Asper family's CanWest Global Communications Corp. of Winnipeg gain control of the Southam newspapers from media mogul Conrad Black. The Gazette was a building block of the fabled Montreal Anglo establishment which controlled much of Canada's economy, to say nothing of national politics, through most of the last two centuries. Journalists complain about the Aspers' bottom-line-driven style of management. The Gazette has been a special place since its inception. One of its backers was an American, Benjamin Franklin, and its first publisher was a Voltairean freethinker from France.
- Published
- 2003
47. NEW FEARS FOR THE NEW YEAR.
- Author
-
BELTRAME, JULIAN and LOWTHER in Washington, WILLIAM
- Subjects
- *
TERRORISM , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *REFUGEES , *RACIAL profiling in law enforcement ,CANADIAN economy, 1991- - Abstract
Watching the countdown to the new year in Times Square on television is usually an unalloyed pleasure. But last week, as millions of Canadians and Americans turned on their sets to witness--and even vicariously join in--the revelry, it was impossible to keep a chilling thought from partially spoiling the moment. U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) officials cautioned that little is known about the individuals--including whether they had crossed into the U.S. from Canada, used their real names and ages, or were alone or part of a group as large as 20. Partly in response to the scare, Canada, the U.S. and several European countries clamped on stricter security measures at airports.According to some reports, the five are believed to be part of a larger group who were issued false identity papers for the U.S. after coming to Canada from Pakistan via Britain. The pressure for governments to take action is also building in Canada. Last week, Ontario Minister of Public Safety and Security Bob Runciman warned that the impact of a greater U.S. clampdown on the border would be catastrophic for the economy.
- Published
- 2003
48. A FELT PEN ALWAYS AT THE READY.
- Author
-
MOSHER, TERRY
- Subjects
- *
CARTOONISTS , *CANADIANS , *ARTISTS - Abstract
Profiles Canadian cartoonist George Feyer. Biographical information, including his work as a forger of papers and passports during the Second World War; Cartoons that he sold to 'Maclean's'; Description of the cartoons he drew for Imperial Oil television commercials; Thoughts from his peers; Description of his work; His appearances on television in the U.S.; His suicide in 1967; Publication of his book 'The Man in the Red Flannel Suit,;
- Published
- 2002
49. A new province for first nations?
- Author
-
Newman, P.C.
- Subjects
CANADIAN government relations with First Nations - Abstract
Summarizes a strategy paper sponsored by Ottawa that proposes the creation of a First Nations Province, confederational in nature, that would encompass the great diversity of the aboriginal peoples, consisting of Canada's 2,231 reserves, plus anynew territory arising out of successful aboriginal land claims. Comments by Thomas Courchene, author of the paper; Ovide Mercredi's seat at the constitutional table; Guarded reaction of Ottawa officials; Criticism from Quebec.
- Published
- 1992
50. Sludge wars.
- Author
-
Quinn, H.
- Subjects
- *
WATER pollution - Abstract
Discusses British Columbia's water pollution problems. Pulp-and-paper mill effluents, including dioxins and furans; Charges that the federal and provincial governments are not enforcing pollution regulations pertaining to pulp-and-paper mills; coalition of environmental groups, including Greenpeace.
- Published
- 1990
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.