(1) Thanksgiving in Canada is generally thought to come from three
traditions.
European farmers in Europe held celebrations at harvest time to give thanks
for their good fortune of a good harvest and abundance of food. When
Europeans came to Canada they may have brought the tradition with them.
Around 1578 English navigator Martin Frobisher held a ceremony, in what is
now Newfoundland to give thanks for surviving his journey there. Other
settlers later arrived and continued these "thankful" ceremonies.
The third influence happened in 1621 when Pilgrims celebrated their first
harvest in the "New World". Around 1750 this celebration was brought to Nova
Scotia by American settlers from the south. At the same time, French
settlers arriving were also holding feasts of "thanksgiving".
In 1879 Canadian Parliament declared November 6th a day of Thanksgiving and
a national holiday. Over the years the date of Thanksgiving changed several
times until on January 31st, 1957 Parliament proclaimed....."that the 2nd
Monday in October"........"be a Day of General Thanksgiving to Almighty God
for the bountiful harvest with which Canada has been blessed.".
www.sholay.com
see also
Wed 986 with Bio &
w-n on India
Kimon Valaskakis will try to re-join us
Diana and David Nicholson
We are thrilled to congratulate Dr. Margo Somerville on her most recent award:
she is the first winner of the UNESCO Avicenna Ethics in Science Prize.
Read About W-N
NP story on W-N
Contact W-N & Map
Wednesday Night Salon #1127
October 8, 2003
CALIFORNIA – HERE WE GO!
Who are the winners and who the losers in the recent California gubernatorial recall and election? It is not difficult to target dethroned governor Gray Davis as a loser, most certainly the victim of legislation permitting the recall of elected officials, but also, the much heralded legislation making the provision of services within the legislated constraints virtually impossible to comply with, most probably even for a terminator.
Arnold Schwarzenegger will most likely find that his super-hero physical and intellectual movie powers will not prove up to the task of untying that Gordian knot. Fortunately his wife is rumoured to be capable of continuing to earn a good living.
There is another possible loser, namely President George W. Bush. He lost California in 1980 and thanks to the Terminator whose image does not fit in with that of those in Bush’s entourage, risks losing it again in 1984, when he will probably be greatly in need of all the support he can get.
It is the population of California, of course, that has the most to lose, but surfers are said to be used to living on the edge.
INDIA
To our great pleasure, Vithal Rajan took the time from the crowded schedule of his first trip back from India since January 2001 to make a return visit to Wednesday Night, bringing with him Sheila Arnopoulos and his former wife, Ann Rajan, who has just received a Lifetime Achievement Award from Bishop's University for athletics.
Canada has been increasing trade ties with India, a country of half a million people with significant problems currently but which is believed to have the potential to contribute enormously to its own well being as well as to world stability. In fact, the Asia Pacific Foundation has published Canada-India Trade: Retrospect and Prospects, the first comprehensive review of merchandise trade between Canada and India. See:asiapacific.ca
Its population of slightly over a billion is an indication of the India that is possible. Although the literacy rate is only 25% with a rural illiteracy rate of 95%, 80% of the population have neither electricity nor flush toilets, and only 8% file a tax return, the challenge of reaching the potential indicated by increasing wealth of the wealthy in a democratic country and the work ethic of the population can be met. Although the British in 1910-1912 maintained that they could make everyone in India literate in thirty-five years, that goal has not been achieved half a century after independence. Where industry exists, especially in the field of technology, India has been very successful. The solution appears to lie not in changing the nature of the population nor the system of government so much as the increase in literacy and the decrease in the cost of providing power to rural areas. A very small increase in productivity in a population that large, would have an enormous impact on the total economy of the nation.
One factor is the tremendous decrease in the cost of the technology in the manufacture of solar cells. In northern climates solar panels have only a minimal impact on the cost of producing electricity, but India, with abundant year round sunshine will certainly profit greatly from the process, which can provide energy at a manufacture and installation cost of one dollar a watt. Gerald Ratzer reminded Vithal that McGill's Brace Research Institute (now known as The Brace Centre for Water Resources Management works on solar energy and alternative sources of energy and has an active interest in India.
Vithal will visit Prof Dave Irvine-Halliday of the University of Calgary, winner of the 2002 Rolex Award for his work with the volunteer-driven Light Up The World (LUTW) Foundation which provides inexpensive and energy-efficient lighting systems to homes, schools and temples in some of the world’s poorest, most remote villages. Vithal is enthusiastic about the potential of the lighting system based on white-light emitting diodes (LED), which can light up an entire village with less energy than that used by a single, conventional 100-watt light bulb. By the end of 2001, LUTW’s rechargeable, energy efficient and environmentally friendly systems were lighting up 700 homes and buildings in remote villages in Nepal, India and Sri Lanka.
Meantime, Vithal continues his work with the "untouchables" (Dalit) and extreme poor, concentrating on the low end of the spectrum of business deals, and has built a Federation of 165 co-ops with over 200, 000 members who now have savings of over 100M rupees. While there is a need for management skills, because of their strong sense of community, women tend to undertake activities that benefit the community, particularly the children. Women dominate much of the small farming, using ecological principles because that's the way to save the land and guarantee food security.
Vithal is also a member of the Board of Governors of the Environment Protection Research Institute of India.
Great progress has been made in the increase in the rate of literacy through non-profit organizations working not through governmental or industrial organizations, but directly with Indian women. In India there is little if any objection to women playing this role and the multiplier effect of creating literate children will enable India to play a larger role in the international community.
The conflict between India and Pakistan has been a financial drain on both countries that could do much with the money the military now costs them. However, with the European Union as a model and both Indians and Pakistanis pushing for an understanding between their governments, the resolution of this problem will help the development of twenty-first century India and will contribute to the stabilization of the region. The danger of the proliferation of nuclear weapons is not that the countries that are nuclear powers will use them, but that those individuals who are willing to give up their lives for a cause will acquire and use them.
Some fear that within the context of increased trade between Canada and India, good-paying jobs in Canada will be transferred to Indian sweatshops. In reality, however, those who are the net losers are not the Canadians who are candidates for similar or better paying jobs in a stable employment market, but those who have taken investment risks and previously profited from those risks.
THE CANADIAN DOLLAR
The Canadian dollar continues to rise against its American counterpart, but this is really an indication of the fall of the American dollar against world currencies. The low U.S. dollar will force Americans to spend more at home and import less, thus improving the currently disappointing U.S. employment picture.
SEX SELLS – OR DOES IT?
In a recent trend, sex has been used increasingly in an attempt to sell products in a market thatcontinues to be more and more competitive. While some women cry “exploitation,” no one seems to be aware that the human subject (or object) being promoted is remembered to a far greater extent than is the product and the targeted potential buyer recalls only the advertisement. It appears to be a case of the messenger being remembered while the product is forgotten.
Thursday Oct 9, 2003 cbc
TERRA BOOTS TO TAKE DOWN BILLBOARDS
Terra Footwear has pulled a controversial ad campaign featuring lingerie models and topless dancers after trade unions threatened a boycott.
QUOTES of the EVENING 1127
- “The disaster is not unique. We expect all kinds of services for the taxes we don’t want to pay. In California, the people have lost track of the fiscal process.”
- “If five hundred million people are enriched by (an average of) ten dollars, five billion dollars of wealth have been created.”
- “Unless you work with the very poor, the wealth doesn’t percolate down from the top.”
- “The sense of community (in India) is very strong among the women.”
- "The (nuclear) technology is increasing at a more rapid rate than human intelligence at pushing the button.”
- “Some not nice people will (ultimately) get hold of the bomb and use it.”
- “The poor repay (bank loans) on the button and very rarely default.”
- “One thing about technology is that it accelerates the learning process.”
- “Whenever you make a change there are winners and losers. The perception is that labour lose their jobs, the reality is that investors lose their investment.”
- “The average Indian boy gets less than three years of schooling.”
- “Have we become a society that cannot look at and admire the human body?”
- “If women were not being exploited, I think that most women wouldn’t have any objection to advertising the female body.
- “We are climbing up out of the recession and are likely to continue to do so.”
- “ Interest rates are low. Money is cheap because no one wants it.”
- “This whole discussion of quality of life in Canada is very unclear from the point of view of us who live here who have it, not from the point of view from the people whOWN to live here. We are a beacon.”
- “We have to play the cards we are dealt. How could we be a great military power? We have to get out of this ‘bronze mania;’ we have to go for the gold.”
Guy
Notes by Herb Bercovitz & Edited by Diana Thébaud Nicholson
W-N Links for #1127
2003,Oct 1st., Notes for #1127
Prof. Sheila Arnopoulos: Author (Jackrabbit Moon $18.95C, Voices from French Ontario $22.95C & $55.00C; The English Fact in Quebec $22.95C) and assistant professor, department of Journalism, (Full Fellow) Concordia University, Montreal.-- ..Lecturer 1968 Montreal Star Knows Donna Logan [see w-n page]
Also see Monday Oct 20, 2003 bbc
Water sparks new power source
Scientists say they have developed a new way of generating electricity from water which could power computer chips.
Monday Oct 20, 2003 cbc
EDMONTON TEAM DEVISES NEW WAY TO GENERATE ELECTRICITY
Researchers in Alberta have discovered a new way to produce electricity.
They believe the finding may lead to a new kind of battery for small
appliances such as cell phones.
5 June 1999 Bilingual anglos who have close ties with francophones are more appreciative than unilingual folks of the historic wounds that are still nursed by many French-speakers over symbolic issues like the language of commercial signs, suggests journalist Sheila McLeod Arnopoulos, co-author of the 1980 book The English Fact in Quebec. and on ..."One of the nice things about being a minority," observes award-winning writer Sheila Arnopoulos, who in 1980 was co-author of the landmark book The English Fact in Quebec, "is that you tend to be more creative. It's a lot more fun to be English in Montreal than it is to be English in Toronto, because we're in a minority situation. It makes you rub ideas together." ... Even William Weintraub , the writer and filmmaker, who acknowledges he is something of a hawk on "English rights" and the national question, concedes the film he made six years ago was probably unduly pessimistic.
Thursday Oct 9, 2003 cbc
DAVIS RECALLED, SCHWARZENEGGER WINS
Saying he will be "the people's governor," bodybuilder turned action
star turned governor-elect Arnold Schwarzenegger celebrated his
landslide victory of the California recall election Tuesday night.
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| Thursday Oct 9, 2003 bbc |
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Jittery dollar drops again
The US currency continues to slide against the yen, as investors become convinced that Washington wants a weaker dollar. |
Thursday Oct 9, 2003 cbc
LAWYERS BLAST SECRET EVIDENCE IN TERRORISM CASE
Lawyers in Montreal say Canada may be violating the Constitution and
international law by using a security certificate to hold a man
suspected of terrorism. ...But constitutional lawyer Julius Grey told a Federal Court justice Wednesday that the whole security certificate process is unconstitutional because it doesn't allow Charkaoui to see key evidence against him.
Monday Oct 13, 2003 cbc
BUSH AIMS TO WEAKEN CASTRO'S HOLD ON POWER
U.S. President George W. Bush said he will crack down on Americans
illegally travelling to Cuba in an effort to hasten the downfall of
Fidel Castro's regime. W-N news
Wednesday Oct 8, 2003 TORONTO: LOONIE AT HIGHEST LEVEL IN YEARS
The Canadian dollar closed on Tuesday at its highest level in trading
against its American counterpart in seven years. Canada's currency
closed the day at 75.10 US, having risen by almost one-half a cent
over the day. The decline of the U.S. dollar in world money markets
was evidently caused in part by a comment by the president of the
European Central Bank that the worsening American trade and budget
deficits inevitably lead to its decline in value in trading against
other currencies. The dollar also declined on Tuesday in trading
against the Japanese yen, the Australian dollar and British sterling.
The rise of Canada's dollar is bad news for Canadian exporters, who
rely on a low dollar to make their products more affordable. But the
lower American dollar helps importers of American goods. Some
analysts have predicted that the Canadian dollar could rise as high
as 80 cents US over the next year.
see w-n chart
Wednesday Oct 8, 2003 OTTAWA:
NATIONAL ID CARD GETS POOR REVIEWS
A committee of the Canadian parliament has reached a tentative
conclusion that a national identity card would serve little purpose.
In an interim report, the committee said there is little if any
evidence that such a scheme would improve national security. The idea
is being promoted by the minister of immigration, Denis Coderre.
Estimates of the cost of a national ID card have ranged up to $7
billion. see w-n on cards
Tuesday Oct 7, 2003 cbc
HOUSING PRICES HIT RECORDS OVER THE SUMMER: ROYAL LEPAGE
High demand for homes spurred by low interest rates pushed average house
prices in Canada to record levels in the third quarter, although some
markets are showing signs of slowing down, Royal LePage Real Estate
Services said Monday. see w-n
Sunday Oct 5, 2003 gaz
Councillors desert Tremblay to fight 'megacity disaster'
Mayor Gérald Tremblay says he regrets the departure of more of his party's borough councillors so they can fight for demergers, but he warns them not to mislead the public about where demergers will lead.
September 15, 2003 eg
Americans tire of whining over "racial profiling" by David Jones
Preview this week's slide show w-n 1123 | past 1124 w-n slides
22 May 2003 - International Day for Biological Diversity
Please click here to see new/updated pages since last visit
Stephen S. Poloz VP EDC Economics Weekly Commentary
October 8, 2003 Job Losses Won't Halt Recovery
Other weekly commentaries
David N. Thank You All please also sign the book Great

Wed 1126 Oct 1st., 2003 Gerald Ratzer intro David Ketterer; Dr. Mark Roper reintro
Robert Johnson with his new book Tables for One; Stephen Kingsman intro Frances Macleod ; also Mark J. Oppenheim, Holly & Dr. John J. Jonas; Bruce Kippen; Peter Trent looking like a winner for us and Me Donald Bunker from Dubai... JACQUES CLÉMENT’S REPORT
Wed1126 | w-n slides | Album
Notes by Herb Bercovitz 2400x321 pan 1126 News slide show
Wed1126
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