950 resultados para Niagara
Resumo:
Contient : Réception d'ambassadeurs (1663-1686) ; Pièces sur l'Acadie et le Canada ; « Lettera scritta da Venetia da un partiale del popolo di Messina all' Eccellentiss. Senato de quella città ». Impr. S. l. n. d., in-8° de 14 pages ; « Arrest de la Cour du Parlement contre la nommée Jeanne Moyon, veuve Jean Lesur, et autres, accusées de prostitution publique. » Impr. Paris, P.-G. Simon, 1750, in-4° de 4 pages ; Extrait de la relation envoyée par M. de Terron du combat naval du 8 janvier 1776 ; Inscriptions de l'Arsenal de Brest, par Victorin Santeul et P. Corneille ; « Discorso sopra le due comete apparse l'anno corrente 1682 gl'ultimi giorni d'agosto... dedicate all' ill. et eccell. sig. Nicolo Doria, senatore della Republica de Genova... » Impr. Gênes, Antonio Casamara, s. d., in-4° de 8 pages ; « Coppie d'une lettre qu'un François écrit à un de ses amis, contenant ce qui s'est passé à Gênes pour célébrer la naissance de Mgr le duc de Bourgogne. » Impr. Marseille, P. Mesnier, 1682, in-4° de 12 pages ; Liste des vaisseaux danois armés à Copenhague en 1683 ; « Liste des officiers qui sont dans les forts Cataracoüy et Niagara. » ; Pièces sur Cayenne ; Pêche de la baleine ; Envoi de denrées en Irlande
Resumo:
The 1964-65 Board of Governors. Pictured here are those who attended the first meeting on December 8, 1964. From left to right - Front Row: E. E. Mitchelson, Niagara Falls. Mrs. J. J. Bench, St. Catharines. W. B. Gunning, Chippawa. Dr. J. A. Gibson, St. Catharines. D. G. Willmot, St. Catharines. J. M. Trott, Welland. C. B. Hill, St. Catharines. A. C. Rae, Fonthill. Back Row: E. S. Howard, Fort Erie. W. J. Freeman, Port Colborne. M. L. Swart, Thorold. C. F. Anderson, Port Colborne. W. S. Martin, Queenston. E. R. Davey, Niagara Falls. R. L. Hearn, Queenston. C. W. Morehead, Welland. S. J. Leishman, Thorold. F. H. Leslie, Chippawa. F. C. Cullimore, Chippawa. W. B. C. Burgoyne, St. Catharines. H. C. Blenkhorn, St. Catharines. M. A. Chown, St. Catharines. B. P. R. Newman, St. Catharines. R. S. Misener, St. Catharines. Missing: R. M. Schmon, Niagara on the Lake. E. J. Barbeau, St. Catharines. P. E. Roberts, Toronto. L. R. Williams, Welland.
Resumo:
The founding members of the Niagara Peninsula Joint Committee On Higher Education. The two men on the right are Ivan Buchanan and Fred Campbell. The Committee later grew into the Board of Governors which was then renamed the Board of Trustees.
Resumo:
Members of the Niagara Peninsula Joint Committee on Higher Education receiving cheques for their cause. Ivan Buchanan is second from the left and on the far right are Robert Schmon and his father Arthur Schmon (Chairman of the Committee).
Resumo:
Pictured here from left to right are: Premier John Robarts, Mrs. Grover Egertor of the Allanburg Women's Institute, the woman who first came up with the idea of forming a University in the Niagara Region, Mrs. Bearss, the former chairwoman of the Women's Institute when the project was proposed, and Dr. Arthur A. Schmon, chairman of the Founder's Committee. This photo was taken at a dinner in Niagara Falls in 1963 that marked the official launch of the Brock University Project.
Resumo:
A special meeting of several Founders Committee members took place at Arthur A. Schmon's House in Niagara on the Lake immediately after the announcement in September of 1963 that Dr. James Alexander Gibson would be the first president of Brock University as of January 1964. Pictured here from left to right are: Dr. Gibson, Dr. Schmon, Dr. Deeks, and Mr. Willmot.
Resumo:
A special meeting of several Founders Committee members took place at Arthur A. Schmon's House in Niagara on the Lake immediately after the announcement in September of 1963 that Dr. James Alexander Gibson would be the first president of Brock University as of January 1964. Pictured here from left to right are: Mr. W. B. C. Burgoyne, Mr. D. G. Willmot, Dr. J. A. Gibson, Dr. A. A. Schmon, Mr. E. J. Barbeau, Dr. S. H. Deeks, and Mr. C. W. Morehead.
Resumo:
A special meeting of several Founders Committee members took place at Arthur A. Schmon's House in Niagara on the Lake immediately after the announcement in September of 1963 that Dr. James Alexander Gibson would be the first president of Brock University as of January 1964. Pictured here from left to right are: Mr. Willmot, Dr. Gibson, Dr. Schmon, and Dr. Deeks.
Resumo:
Dr. Arthur Kahn with Mrs. John W. Reed, a member of the Niagara Peninsula Archaeological Society, and artifacts from the Chesnola Collection.
Resumo:
In October of 1969, Governor General Rolland Michener along with the Bailiff of Guernsey were invited to tour the Niagara Region with Dr. Gibson as part of a series of events to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Sir Isaac Brock's birth. Here they are visiting a stone monument erected in Queenston years ago by Albert Edward, Prince of Wales. Pictured in the foreground are Mrs. Michener, Dr. Gibson, and Governor General Michener - the man speaking with Dr. Gibson with his back to the photographer.
Resumo:
Pictured here from left to right are Henry Tomarin, Board of Trustees, St. Catharines Mayor Roy Adams, R. Campbell, Niagara Region chairman, Peter Misener, and R. Misener, Chancellor, during the 1984 Science Complex opening - an addition to the Mackenzie Chown Complex now simply known as H Block.
Resumo:
Pictured here from left to right are: Dr. Gibson, President of Brock University; James N. Allen, Chairman of the Niagara Parks Commision; MacKenzie Chown, Mayor; and Prof J. M. S. Careless co-chairman of the provinces archaelogical and historic sites board and professor at U of T.
Resumo:
Pictured here from left to right are: Front - John Donald, Greg Reid, Steve Thomas, John Glennie, and Mike Wilder. Back - Ed Davis (Coach). The 1971-72 curling team boasted a number of achievements including being the Niagara Distrcit Major Champions, University of Toronto Bonspiel Champions, and the Ontario University Athletic Association Champions.
Resumo:
The building, which is attached to the Mackenzie Chown complex, holds facilities for Brock's Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture Institute. The Institute, which studies grape growing and wine production, is the only one of its kind in Canada, and only the third of its kind in North America. It includes specialized research laboratories, a climate-controlled wine cellar, a wine library, and a museum. The building is named after a Niagara winery, Inniskillin Wines.
Resumo:
This study explores the tension that has emerged around the rise of home schooling in a faith-community strongly committed to establishing and maintaining day schools in the tradition of John Calvin. It aims to identify and understand factors that contributed to this tension and to find ways to bridge, diffuse, reduce, or eliminate it. In line with Calvin, personal convictions, and the nature of the community, the study takes a Christian epistemological and axiological stance. Its premise is that the integrity of the commvmity is more important than the manner in which its children are taught. The study reviews relevant literature and several interviews. It considers both secular and Christian literature to understand communities, community breakdown, and community restoration. It also examines literature about the significance of home, school, and community relationships; the attraction of Reformed day schools; and the appeal of home schooling. Interviews were conducted with 4 home schooling couples and 2 focus groups. One focus group included local school representatives, and the other home schoolers and school representatives from an area with reputedly less tension on the issue. Interviews were designed for participants to give their perspectives on reasons for home schooling, the existing tension, and ways to resolve the issues. The study identifies the rise of home schooling in this particular context as the initial issue and the community's deficiency to properly deal with it as the chief cause for the rising tensions. However, I argue that, within the norms the community firmly believes in, home schooling need not jeopardize its integrity. I call for personal, social, and spiritual renewal to restore the covenant community in gratitude to God.