It is lunchtime at St. Anne Catholic School in Kanata, Ont., and a squabble is under way at a hockey net in the playground. Hannah Gartland, 10, and Sarah Cousineau and Nick Kidd, both 11, march over, a mini riot squad in their bright yellow vests that read “Peer Mediator.” The Grade 1 boys, immersed in bickering over who should get to play goal, stop immediately and spill their sides of the story. “How about every goal, you guys switch,” Nick suggests. “You can be defence,” Sarah tells one boy. “Does that sound fair?” Problem solved, a little grudgingly. “Great,” Hannah says cheerfully. “Have a good game.” The three walk off, alert to more playground mayhem.
Over the past two decades, a series of inquiries has led to more than 30 reports and 700 recommendations on how to improve the state of West Coast salmon resources, but none managed to halt a “steady and profound decline” of stocks in the Fraser River.
In a preliminary report released on Friday, the head of the latest investigation, British Columbia Supreme Court Justice Bruce Cohen, said he hopes his judicial inquiry will both help restore the fishery and “end the cycle of reviewing the same issues over and over again.”
My best friends are wonderful people – talented, accomplished, generous, smart and caring. So it’s hard to see them in such fear and pain. The way they see it, the Visigoths have battered down the gates of Rome, and the Vestal Virgins had better scramble for cover. In the aftermath of Toronto’s election rout, their only consolation is that Rob Ford is probably too stupid and incompetent to completely sack the place. If only they lie low for the next four years, sanity will surely return to city politics.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel recently made headlines when she pronounced multiculturalism in Germany a failure. Shortly before, a Globe and Mail editorial argued that Canadians should eradicate “multiculturalism” from their vocabulary and refocus on “citizenship.” Multiculturalism isn’t just out of style, these statements suggest – it’s dangerous for building unity in increasingly diverse societies.
It's by the Journal's photographer and videographer, Ryan Jackson. The video, shot at the downtown farmers' market, captures why it is that we look forward to Saturdays in summer.
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We've got two tickets for the Rocky Mountain Wine and Food Festival to give away. The festival is at the Shaw Conference Centre on Nov. 5 and 6. E-mail your contest entry to mailto:livingwell@edmontonjournal.com Put wine and food festival contest in the subject line and please put your name and day time phone number in the body of the e-mail. The tickets will be left for the winner at the Will Call office at the Shaw Conference Centre. The contest ends on Friday Oct. 29. For information on the festival go to Rocky Mountain Wine and Food Festival.
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The main revelation in the latest cache of documents from WikiLeaks is not the collateral damage inflicted by American troops on innocent Iraqis (although there’s plenty of that). It’s the damage inflicted by Iraqis on one another. The liberation of Iraq from Saddam Hussein and his chamber of horrors turned the entire country into a chamber of horrors. Of the 109,000 deaths recorded in these newly released U.S. military documents, which span the period from 2004 to 2009, the vast majority were Iraqi civilians murdered by other Iraqis.