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Columnists

Minding the language of Supreme Court appointees

New Brunswick MP Yvon Godin wants the House of Commons to approve a motion saying new appointees to the Supreme Court should be bilingual, meaning able to follow proceedings in both official languages without using an interpreter. Eight of the nine sitting justices already meet this criteria.

The Conservatives are opposing the motion, led by Justice Minister Rob Nicholson. Michael Ignatieff is likely to be embarrassed if some Liberal M.P.s break ranks to oppose it. The Bloc hopes it will be rejected, creating front page news in Quebec.

Watch me: movie reviews with Cathi Bond

Watch Me: Cathi Bond reviews Sarah's Key

November 30, 2011
| Sarah's Key is a heart-stopping, soul-breaking cinematic examination of the Jewish roundups during World War II.

3:37 minutes (2.49 MB)

Paradise by the River

Oct 28 2010 - 8:00pm
Dec 5 2010 - 2:00pm

Location

The City Playhouse in Vaughan and the Lower Ossington Theatre
1000 New Westminster Ave; 100a Ossington Avenue
Vaughan; Toronto, ON
Canada
Phone: 905-882-SHOW; 416-915-6747 Ext.

Vittorio Rossi's Paradise By The River

Contact name: 
Heather
Street Cred

Esperanto

March 28, 2010
| Bridging the linguistic divide in Canada.

7:07 minutes (6.52 MB)
Columnists

Happy 100th birthday Le Devoir

Le Devoir, the Montreal newspaper about ideas -- take note, important ideas about Canada -- celebrated its 100th birthday Jan. 10. Not well recognized outside Quebec, the French language daily was founded by the political leader, and journalist Henri Bourassa. Bourassa was the man who made the case for Canadian independence from Britain and its empire, thus becoming the patron saint of Canadian nationalists, you might say, except ... Le Devoir was not founded to urge Canadians to stand on their two feet.

Columnists

The battle for Quebec

Today the Plains of Abraham serves Quebec City well as a city park, though strangely it is still run by a National Battlefields Commission established by Ottawa 100 years ago. Two hundred fifty years ago last Sunday, the Plains were the site of the Battle of Quebec, where the forces of the King of France, commanded by the Marquis de Montcalm were defeated by the British Army headed by General James Wolfe. This past weekend, the Plains hosted the Moulin à Paroles (Chatterbox) a public reading of poetry and prose, to mark the historic battle that changed the direction of Canadian history.

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