Wikipedia:Canadian Wikipedians' notice board/Requests
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- Featured content
- Vital articles
- Portal
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- Announcements
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Indigenous peoples
[edit]- Aseniwuche Winewak Nation - not federally recognized
- Constitution Express
- Indian Rights Association (Canada)
- Island Lake First Nation
- McLeod Lake First Nation
- Nekaneet First Nation
- Peepeekisis First Nation
- Saskatchewan Treaty Land Entitlement Act
- Stony Nakoda - Tsuu T'ina Tribal Council
- Takus - Kwakwaka'wakw village
- Tetlit Gwich'in First Nation
- Tribal Chiefs Ventures
- Williams Treaties
Biography
[edit]General
[edit]Red links in Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada) - basic info lookup at [1]
Artists
[edit]- Paul Beau[2] (1871-1949), member of the Arts and Crafts Movement, contributed to building architecture of Centre Block of Parliament Hill
- Clarence Burritt, architect
- Fabien René Edouard Campeau, (1844-1916) photographer of many Canadian Members of Parliament
Actors
[edit]Businesspeople
[edit]Criminals
[edit]Educators
[edit]- Blaine Favel, First Nations leader, businessman, and 14th chancellor of the University of Saskatchewan (2013–2016)
- Jacques Frémont, law professor and 30th president of the University of Ottawa (2016–present) [3]; [4]
- Gary Kachanoski, 12th president and vice-chancellor of Memorial University of Newfoundland (2010–2020) [5]
- Alexander Enoch Kerr FRSC, Presbyterian minister and 6th president of Dalhousie University (1945–1963) [6]
- Susan Dyer Knight CM ONL, 7th chancellor of Memorial University of Newfoundland (2012–present) [7]; [8]
- Irénée Lussier, Roman Catholic cleric, educator, and fourth Rector of l'Université de Montréal (1955–1965) (fr:Irénée Lussier)
- Errol Mendes, Ontario lawyer and law professor [9], witness at Canadian House of Commons Special Committee on the Canadian Mission in Afghanistan[10]
- Vincent Piette, Roman Catholic cleric, educator, and second Rector of l'Université de Montréal (1923–1934) [11]
- James Ross (Canadian educator), Presbyterian minister and 2nd president of Dalhousie University (1863–1885) [12]
- Carleton Wellesley Stanley, 5th president of Dalhousie University (1931–1945) [13]
Fashion
[edit]- Paul Hardy (fashion designer), disambig from Paul Hardy [14][15]
Law
[edit]- Ken Murray (lawyer) and Carolyn MacDonald, counsel for Paul Bernardo, both were charged with obstruction of justice and possession of child pornography[16]
- Jack Cram, lawyer for the Gitxsan-Wet'su-wet'en in Delgamuukw v the Queen, convicted of contempt of court after accusing the Crown of corruption and being beaten and dragged into court, medicated, and forced to plead guilty.
- Bruce Clarke (lawyer), lawyer for the Ts'peten Defenders in the Gustafson Lake Standoff, also subject to contempt conviction and beatings; prob needs dab
- lawyer and prosecutors on the BC Rail/BC Legislature Raids case, also Bill Dohm, Assoc Chief Justice and if they don't have articles yet Justice Elizabeth Mackenzie. The Special Prosecutor's name was Bill Berardino I think; the surname is right anyways.
- Lucien Kurata (1922-1971) - first Japanese Canadian to be called to the bar in Ontario, first to be appointed to the bench, and the first to be elected to office (as the reeve of Swansea, Ontario). Was removed from the bench by the provincial cabinet due to a sex scandal. [17] Not to be confused with his son who has the same name and who also became a lawyer, after his father's death, and was a political candidate in the 21st century.
Musicians
[edit]See Wikipedia:WikiProject Canadian music/Attention needed.
Order of Canada
[edit]Check for red links in List of Companions of the Order of Canada.
Philanthropists and community leaders
[edit]- Ben Sabic - young philanthropist, advocate, past Chair of Kids Help Phone national youth council and led the organization's response to the Humboldt Broncos bus crash, WE Day speaker, and founder of Ben Sabic Foundation and co-founder of Student Mental Health Canada[1], [2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8], and [9];
- Michael Redhead Champagne - activist and community leader[10], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16], [17], and [18];
Politicians and government
[edit]For members of parliament and legislative assemblies (including cabinet members, lieutenant-governors, and senators) as well as municipal mayors per WP:CANSTYLE#Municipal politics. See the list in Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/Canadian politicians.
Please create pages for red links on that list. Please check that created pages refer to the appropriate Canadian politician and disambiguate as necessary.
- List of Presidents of the Bloc Québécois (until 2014, the Leader of the Bloc Québécois had the position of party president)
- List of Presidents of the Conservative Party of Canada (there have been only two, Don Plett (2003-2009) and John Walsh (2009-present))
Lieutenant Governors
[edit]Lieutenant Governors of Newfoundland and Labrador
- Martin Purcell (governor) 1717-1717
- Henry Cope 1736-1742
- Arthur Wilson (Yukon politician) (interim) 1911-1912
Party leaders
[edit]Saskatchewan Conservative Party
- Herbert E. Keown (1940–44)
New Brunswick CCF/NDP
- Jim Mugridge 1944 election
- Joseph C. Arrowsmith 1948 election
- Claude P. Milton 1952 election
- Jack Currie, 1965–1968
Newfoundland NDP
John Greene, 1977–1980.
Quebec NDP
- Roland Morin (1970–1973, 1987–1989)
- Michel Parenteau (1990–1992)
- Jean-François Sirois (1992–1994)
Sports
[edit]- Athletics at the 1971 Pan American Games - medalists
- Scott Bickerton - 2010 Olympic speedskater
Television
[edit]See Wikipedia:Canadian wikipedians' notice board/Media
Writers
[edit]Articles should be categorized as one or more of the following:
- Category:Writers from Canadian Provinces and Territories,
- Category:Canadian novelists,
- Category:Canadian poets,
- Category:Canadian short story writers,
- Category:Canadian historians,
- Category:Canadian philosophers,
- Category:Canadian science fiction writers,
- Category:Canadian fantasy writers, etc.
You should normally only use Category: Canadian writers if there are no more appropriate subcategories available for use.
See also List of Canadian writers - List of Quebec writers - List of French Canadian writers from outside Quebec - Category:Canadian literary awards.
- Ralph Edwards (naturalist), Crusoe of Lonesome Lake, trumpeter swan dude...his wife Frances Edwards also, Ruffles on my Longjohns. Those are only their two best-known. I think that's the way I disambiguated him on the Ralph Edwards page if it's still there.
- W. Gifford-Jones - a medical writer who has been the author of nine books and syndicated columnist who successfully campaigned for the legalization of heroin in Canada for use as a painkiller for terminal cancer patients. Sources: "Heroin in the hospice: opioids and end-of-life discussions in the 1980s". Canadian Medical Association Journal (October 2, 2017).[18], "Dr. Gifford-Jones has never been a fence sitter", Windsor Star[19]; "Keeping up with Dr. Gifford-Jones", Postmedia[20], You're going to do what? The memoir of Dr. Gifford-Jones[21]
- Starter list of BC historians
- Frederic W. Howay, his buddy Robie Lewis Reid. Garnet Basque, T.W. Paterson, Mark S. Wade, Bill Barlee and a bunch of others
Miscellaneous
[edit]- See Category talk:French Canadians in the American Revolution for a short list of requests
- Daniel Joseph Daverne mentioned briefly in Perth,_Ontario#History
- Eric St-Cyr - [22] [23] [24] [25] [26]
- Marcel Leboeuf (fr:Marcel Leboeuf)
Legislative bodies
[edit]- List of senators in the 25th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 24th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 23rd Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 22nd Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 21st Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 20th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 19th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 18th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 17th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 16th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 15th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 14th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 13th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 12th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 11th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 10th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 9th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 8th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 7th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 6th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 5th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 4th Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 3rd Parliament of Canada
- List of senators in the 2nd Parliament of Canada
- Women in the 38th Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 37th Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 36th Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 35th Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 34th Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 33rd Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 32nd Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 31st Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 30th Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 29th Canadian Parliament
- Women in the 28th Canadian Parliament
- 7th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island 1802 - 1806
- 6th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island 1790 - 1802
- 5th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island 1787 - 1790 (Aug. 1787)
Legislation
[edit]- Fair Employment Practices Act (Canada) - apparently this was our own anti-discrimination act in the 50s, similar in name to the US Fair Employment Act, and since replaced...?
- Atlantic Procurement Agreement - Atlantic Canada trade agreement
- Judges Act (Canada)
- An Act Respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis Children, Youth and Families - Bill C-92
- Opium and Narcotics Drugs Act
- Labrador Inuit Lands Claims Agreement[19]
- Extradition Act (Canada)[27]
- Natural Area Protection Tax Exemption Program (NAPTEP) - a property tax exemption incentive to landowners in the Islands Trust Area to protect land through a covenant. [28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37]
- Impact Assessment Act: please find some links to help out Impact Assessment Act, Physical Activities Regulations, Information and Management of Time Limits Regulations, Legislation and Regulations Scleroux (talk) 15:17, 25 October 2019 (UTC)
Politics and government
[edit]For those topics (such as policies, programs, events, and trends) that are not "legislative bodies" and "government organizations"
General
[edit]- Office of Gaelic Affairs (Nova Scotia) [38]
- Green Party Shadow Cabinet (4 links) [39] (login required)
- Blue Sky Policy - Government of Canada bi-lateral air transportation policy[40]
Green Shift - Liberal Party controversial ecotax plan (currently a redirect).
- Universal Child Care Plan[41] created in 2006
- Sponsorship Program to distinguish the sponsorship scandal from the program as a whole
- Election finance in Canada
- New Deal for Cities and Communities - part of the 2005 federal budget and *New Deal for Cities useful link
- national quotient - number of people per electoral district (riding)
- New National Policy
- Monterrey Accord
- Target riding
- Manufacturers' Sales Tax - predecessor of the GST
- Royal Commission on Seals and the Sealing Industry in Canada[42]
- Canadian House of Commons Standing Committee on Railways, Canals and Telegraph Lines
- Government of Canada Communications Policy[43]
- Cabinet Confidences[44][45][46][47]
- Libertarianism in Canada
- Dickerson Report[48]
- Canada's Action Plan
- China-FIPA
- Nunavut Liquor Plebiscites
Leadership elections
[edit]- New Brunswick New Democratic Party leadership elections (results of all)
- New Democratic Party of Newfoundland and Labrador leadership election, 1992 - won by Jack Harris
- Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, 1930 (currently a redirect)
- Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, 1947 (currently a redirect)
- Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, 1950 (currently a redirect)
- Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, 1954 (currently a redirect)
- Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, 1958 (currently a redirect)
- Ontario Co-operative Commonwealth Federation leadership convention, 1942
- Ontario Co-operative Commonwealth Federation leadership convention, 1946
- Ontario Co-operative Commonwealth Federation leadership convention, 1953
- Ontario New Democratic Party leadership election, 1968
- Ontario New Democratic Party leadership election, 1970
- Ontario New Democratic Party leadership election, 1978
Cabinets/executive councils
[edit]- List of cabinets of Canada - Cabinet of Canada only covers the current cabinet. We could use an article covering former cabinets (List of Canadian ministries seems like a good start point).
- List of executive councils of British Columbia
- List of executive councils of Alberta
- List of executive councils of Saskatchewan
- List of executive councils of Manitoba
- List of executive councils of Ontario
- List of executive councils of Quebec
- List of executive councils of New Brunswick
- List of executive councils of Nova Scotia
- List of executive councils of Prince Edward Island
- List of executive councils of Newfoundland and Labrador
- List of executive councils of Yukon
- List of executive councils of the Northwest Territories
- List of executive councils of Nunavut
Courts
[edit]Administrative tribunals
[edit]- Alberta Human Rights and Citizenship Commission [49]
- Saskatchewan Human Rights Tribunal [50]
- Manitoba Human Rights Commission [51]
- New Brunswick Human Rights Commission [52]
- Newfoundland Human Rights Commission [53]
- Northwest Territories Human Rights Commission [54]
- Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission [55]
- Prince Edward Island Human Rights Commission [56]
- Yukon Human Rights Commission [57]
- The tribunals listed at List of Canadian tribunals
Film
[edit]Canadian films
[edit]- The Butler's Night Off - William Shatner's film debut.
Support programs
[edit]Historical events
[edit]- Canadian federal election results in Nunavut
- Canadian federal election results in the Northwest Territories
- Canadian federal election results in Yukon
- Daniel Joseph Daverne
- Kirkland Lake Gold Rush - early 20th century gold rush; alongside the Porcupine Gold Rush and the Cobalt Silver Rush, drove most of the settlement effort in northern Ontario
- Norman Morrison (ship) - figures prominently in early BC history as the mail ship from the UK and also, I think, the one that brought the first load of wives-to-be-married in the days when BC society was extremely "homosocial" (8:1 or 10:1 male:female within the non-native population). This would also be a collaboration with WP Australia, where the same vessel was one of the main ships for immigration; if you google ""Norman Morrison" ship" that's what mostly will come up. The existing Norman Morrison article is about a US journalist of note.
- Roads to Resources (no links)
Literature
[edit]Locations
[edit]- Alder Island (Haida Gwaii)
- List of places named after Sir John A. Macdonald
- Red links in List of old-growth forests#Canada
Central Canada
[edit]- Double Island, Ontario[20]
- Hay Township, Ontario
- Many entries in Lists of National historic sites of Canada by location are red links (like this one) but some may just need disambiguation.
- Labrador Plateau
- Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery (Toronto) - Cemetery damaged in Toronto propane explosion
- Shrewsbury, Ontario, Canada
- Glanworth, Ontario - (Currently redirects to Westminster, Middlesex County, Ontario). Moved here from Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Glanworth, Ontario, Canada - Middlesex County. Information there stated, "I suggest a small article on a town south of London, Ontario, called Glanworth. It is not a large town but is approx 150 years old, and has a colourful history that is worth reading. The town's history will help to share information about the county, southwestern ontario, etc."
- South Baymouth, Ontario: Redirect to Tehkummah, It should be it's own article.
- The test for whether an unincorporated community qualifies for its own separate article, or just a redirect to the municipality that it's part of, is not a question of every named dot on a map automatically qualifying for its own article as a matter of course — it's a question of how well the community can be reliably sourced as a standalone topic. For South Baymouth to warrant its own separate article, what you would need to do is show sources which support the standalone notability of South Baymouth as a separate topic from Tehkummah.
The Maritimes
[edit]- Elsipoctoq - largest New Brunswick native reserve
The Territories
[edit]- Populating Category:Mountain ranges of Yukon and Category:Mountains of Yukon. (Also articles on towns, alive or dead, that aren't already there.)
Western Canada
[edit]- Amai, British Columbia - town damaged by the tsunami following the 1964 Alaska earthquake
- Blood Alley (Vancouver) - not sure about that dab format...see Talk:Blood_Alley#Another_Blood_Alley_in_Vancouver.
- Clover Bar (townsite) Between Edmonton, modern Sherwood Park, and the Strathcona Refineries. Likely only needs a stub, but the stub is important to the history of Northeast Edmonton, Sherwood Park, the Strathcona Refineries, the highway system of Edmonton including the Anthony Henday, and the neighborhoods of Clover Bar in both Edmonton and (apparently) Fort Saskatchewan. Also belongs in the list "Ghost towns of Alberta".
- Ecoole, British Columbia - old town on Vancouver Island.
- Isle Pierre - mentioned on Disappearance of Maddy Scott
- List of Indian reserves in Saskatchewan - many of the links in the list link to towns close to the reserves, rather than the reserves themselves. Some of the reserves have their own pages, while others do not.
- Beardy's & Okemasis' 96 & 97- A, B, C
- Carry the Kettle 76- 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 84, 86, 87, 88, 89, 91, 110
- Clearwater River Dene 221, 223
- List of rivers of British Columbia - has LOTS of redlinks for important (and not-so-important) rivers in need of at least stubs.
- McDougall Centre McDougall Centre, the provincial government building in Calgary
- Winnipeg Remand Centre
- New Westminster, BC:
- New Westminster Law Courts and New Westminster Courthouse, the former being the modern building, the latter being its predecessor.
- Government House (New Westminster), currently a redirect to a very terse section on the cluttered New Westminster page, one of many sections there that should be split off into separate articles.
- various other New Westminster heritage structures and more.
- Westminster Building, important heritage building in New Westminster and that city's first skyscraper
- List of heritage buildings in New Westminster. see comments on Talk:New Westminster
- Columbia Street, New Westminster needs split from New Westminster#Columbia Street
- Southport, Manitoba
- redlinks on List of communities in British Columbia. Some can be redirects to certain other articles, though many need stubs where e.g. IRs can be redirected to.
- Talk:Tree_hollow#Hollow_Tree.2C_Stanley_Park
Military
[edit]- Canadian Forces Communications System now Canadian Forces Communications Command
- Defence Unlimited
- Joint Personnel Support Unit of the Canadian Forces
- List of Canadian battles during the Second World War to compliment the article List of Canadian battles during the First World War
Doing..., see Draft:List of Canadian battles during the Second World War
- National Military Family Council[58]
- National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy Secretariat[59]
- Operation Rolling Thunder (Canada) link
- Red links from Template:RCAF Squadrons
Organizations
[edit]Government bodies
[edit]- Anti-Dumping Tribunal, replaced by Canadian International Trade Tribunal [60]
- Canada–Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board
- Building Canada[61]
- Canada: Buy into It[62] Federal government economic protectionist campaign in 1992
- Commission of Inquiry Respecting the Muskrat Falls Project [63]
- Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance[64]
- Centennial Commission [65]
- Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario[66]
- Jules Léger Library[67]
- Office of the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs [68]
- Ontario College of Pharmacists [69]
- Opportunities for Youth - youth employment programme started by Pierre Trudeau
- RCMP International Police Peace Operations Program or Royal Canadian Mounted Police International Police Peace Operations Program or International Police Peace Operations Program
- RCMP Reform Implementation Council[70]
- Governor General Consultation Committee[71]
- Pépin-Robarts Commission/Task Force on Canadian Unity (1977)
- Comptroller General of Canada - Agency of the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat responsible for fiscal management[72]
- Islands Trust Fund[73][74][75][76][77][78][79][80][81]
- Western Frontier Constabulary (currently a redirect to Dominion Police)
- Inquiry into Treatment of Innu Children in Care [82][83][84][85][86][87][88]
Business and private
[edit]- Aberdeen Mall is a shopping mall in Kamloops, British Columbia. [89]
- Amherstburg Chamber of Commerce, Amherstburg Ontario
- Air Transport Association of Canada
- Bridge Drive-In aka BDI, ice cream shop on BDI Bridge in Winnipeg, Manitoba, website
- British Columbia Public School Employers Association
- Canadian Association of Internet Providers
- Canadian Labour and Business Centre
- Charlottetown Mall (Prince Edward Island) is a shopping mall in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. [90]
- Cottonwood Mall (Chilliwack) is a shopping mall in Chilliwack, British Columbia. [91]
- Daniels Corporation is a real estate developer in Toronto, Ontario. It has been covered in many national newspapers. [92]
- Galeries Terrebonne is a shopping mall in Terrebonne, Quebec. [93]
- Galeries Joliette is a shopping mall in Joliette, Quebec. [94] (in French)
- Galeries Rive-Nord is a shopping mall in Repentigny, Quebec. [95] (in French)
- Gateway Mall (Prince Albert) is a shopping mall in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. [96]
- Green Ribbon Task Force (1 link)
- Jardins St-Leon, outdoor farm market and garden center in Winnipeg, website
- La Grande Place des Bois-Francs is a shopping mall in Victoriaville, Quebec. [97] (in French)
- Les Rivières (mall) is a shopping mall in Trois-Rivières, Quebec. [98] (in French)
- Nanaimo North Town Centre is a shopping mall in Nanaimo, British Columbia. [99]
- Parkland Mall, a shopping mall in Yorkton, Saskatchewan. [100]
- Prairie Mall, a shopping mall in Grande Prairie, Alberta. [101]
- Phillips Hager & North
- Richelieu International
- Shoppers Mall (Brandon) is a shopping mall in Brandon, Manitoba. [102]
- Sprung Cucumbers, a Newfoundland produce company
- Surveyer, Nenniger & Chenevert Consulting Engineers (SNC), predecessor to SNC-Lavalin
- Tamarack Centre, a shopping mall in Cranbrook, British Columbia. [103]
- Treasury Management Association of Canada
- Articles for S&P/TSX Composite Index companies, currently ~80 are red-linked.
- Toronto Philharmonia (distinct from Toronto Philharmonic Orchestra)
- West Coast Cooperative of Sex Industry Professionals
- Voices/Voix Coalition - www.voices-voix.ca (the write-up is already completed, but needs to be reviewed and written by a sponsor)
- Perryscope Concerts formerly Perryscope Entertainment, Vancouver's main pop/rock concert promoter for over 40 years
- Westminster Club, founded 1889; one of the leading civic clubs in BC, located in the Westminster Building (see "locations"). Also if not extant the Empire Club in Victoria, and its very nice heritage building, likewise the Vancouver Club and Terminal City Club, if not already extant, clubs and buildings each notable.
- Empire Club exists as redirect to Empire Club of Canada, don't know if it's affiliated or not; Empire Club (Victoria) nonetheless deserves its own article as impressive/notable heritage building (near the Empress)
Scouting
[edit]- Salvation Army Scout Association
- Chief Scout of Canada
- CJ'01
- Scouts Canada Property Review
- Mike Reid (scouting)
Other
[edit]- British Columbia Historical QuarterlyWebsite re it and others
- Cambridge Army Cadets[104] - Third oldest Army Cadet Corps in Canada located in Cambridge, Ontario according to [105]
- Camp Ponacka - A summer camp for boys in Ontario, Canada
- Canada and the African Union[106]
- Foreign Credentials Referral Office
- Jamia Ahmadiyya Canada - Islamic University of Comparative Religions.
- Carrefour Richelieu ([107])
- Lakeside Preparatory Academy - private school, grades 7-12, located in Shawnigan Lake, British Columbia
- Le Festival du Bleuets du Lac-Saint-Jean- There's an entire curriculum based on this Quebec blueberry festival in Grade 11 FSL.
- Okanagan Historical Quarterly
- Okanagan Historical Societywebsite
- Subtle Technologies is a Festival of Art and Science that has been happening in Toronto since 1998. Several hundred people attend this 4-day event held in the downtown area. Last year's Festival exhibition, Transmute, was covered by a feature article in ETC magazine.[108][109].
- Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ, which is the name of the Doukhobor religious organization, is redlinked on Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood, their predecessor. I almost redirected it to Doukhobor but thought better of it, as that's a general article and not for the institution/organization.
- Urban Curvz/Handsome Alice (Canadian feminist theatre company) [110] [111]
- Wildlife Foundation of Manitoba
Sports
[edit]Hockey
[edit]- none at this time
Other sports
[edit]Miscellaneous
[edit]- 1997 Canadian Flying Loon Loonie
- Actar 911 CPR Mannequin that made #44 on The Greatest Canadian Invention
- Adoption in Canada
- Beer parlour (Canada) - the current Beer parlour link goes to a section on Pub that's only about UK history.....I'm not sure this term was ever used in Eastern Canada (meaning east of the Great Lakes ;-) ). or that it was used even in Alberta, where like Ontario and Quebec et al "Tavern" is more usual for the same thing....in BC and I think Manitoba these were always called beer parlours though the neon sign generally said "Licensed premises" and there was a "Men Only" and "Ladies and Escort Entrance"; in latter years there was no divider in the room like there was earlier. "Lounge" was where you could get highballs and cocktails; beer parlours were only beer (and tomato juice).
- Canada Mortgage Bond (notable relative of CMHC).
- Canadian superheroes
COVID-19 pandemic in Vancouver - The ongoing pandemic for the city of Vancouver, British Columbia. (sister article to COVID-19 pandemic in British Columbia)
Crown of the Continent Ecosystem
Detroit-Windsor vibrations [112]
- Eaton's catalogue homes or a subsection at Eaton's#Architecture — sold to customers in western Canada through the Eaton's catalogue — [113] [114] [115] [116] [117] — the Neils Hogenson House article can be merged into it per discussion at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Neils Hogenson House
- Environmental assessment: currently a redirect to Environmental impact assessment; whether a Canadian section in that article, or a separate topic
- Firefighting in Canada, I think it would be nice to have an article similar to Firefighting in the United States
- History of Child Protection Services in Canada
- Homeless Individuals and Families Information System
- Insurance in Canada
Invasive species in Canada[118]
- List of notable hotels in British Columbia (or without "notable" maybe), see Category_talk:Hotels_in_British_Columbia#draft_notes_towards_List_of_notable_hotels_in_British_Columbia.
- Manif Spaciale- An event that took place in Montreal, organized by a bicycle/performing arts group, that illustrated the space differential between bicycles and automobiles by the use of a decorated "space frame." Not only an event/public art demonstration, but an advocacy event illustrating the benefits of bicycles as transportation
- Newfoundland and Labrador Folk Festival - see ugly stick
- Peer education in Canada - the request for input and discussion on this is to begin to foster interest in the development of real resources with respect to education related to peer work.
- Queen's International Leadership Conference [119] Canada's first student-run international university & college leadership conference (with a focus on interconnectivity and unity - leadership embracing diversity)
- Rowdy World (Reference: [120])
- Segregation in Canada (currently only a section under racial segregation)
- Self Design Education there is a school called Wondertree in BC which uses this philosophy.
- Sexuality in Canada
- Special education in Canada
- Union of British Columbia Performers (UBCP)
- Vancouver Island dollar (there is an article for British Columbia dollar; query whether there was a VI equivalent)
- Red links in Canadian Medical Hall of Fame
References
[edit]- ^ May, Katie. "Costly compassion". Winnipeg Free Press. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- ^ "A new era in support for young people". The Winnipeg Foundation. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- ^ Reimer, Dantin. "Local Students Reflect On We Day Manitoba (VIDEO)". Pembina Valley Online. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- ^ "#HumboldtStrong: Messages of support from Kids Help Phone". Kids Help Phone. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- ^ "2018 Awards". Future Leaders of Manitoba. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- ^ "Ben Sabic Foundation". Ben Sabic Foundation. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- ^ "Sabic Leadership Scholarship". ScholarTree. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- ^ "Meet Ben Sabic". Student Mental Health Canada. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- ^ "Crisis on Campus: Youth Advocates Bridging Institutional Gaps" (PDF). Centre for Innovation in Campus Mental Health. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
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