Monthly Archives: March 2018

Reminder: ANZAC Day Commemorative Ceremony

ANZAC Day remembers the campaign waged by the Australian-New Zealand Army Corps in Gallipoli against the Turkish forces during World War I.  While not part of Canada at the time, one of often forgotten participants of this engagement were the Royal Newfoundland Regiment (see here and here).  This year the Royal Canadian Legion will be participating in the services below, so please join us.

Please note the location has been changed to the Log Cabin at the Presidio, San Francisco.

More information or to buy tickets at http://www.sfaussies.com/event-2788838

Spring Savings from $25 to $50 Off!

From the Legion Magazine.


Legion Magazine Shop
Best-Selling 5-Volume Set!

Step into Canada’s rich military past with fascinating tales of Canadian heroes and notorious villains. Now choose any five or ten of our 17-volumes available in the Canada’s Ultimate Story premium series.

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Tulip flower prints for spring!
Canadian SafeStep Walk-In Tub Co.

New 2018 Co-Chair | ourstories_ | Canadians in Tech

From one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay area.


Subscribe to our stories
 RSVP to C100 Events

22 March 18

New 2018 Co-Chair

We are pleased to announce Shari Hatch Jones as incoming Co-Chair of the C100 Board of Directors. Shari has been an active Charter Member and served as a Board member for the past year. She joins Co-Chair Sean Harrington, who is starting his 2nd year in this position. We are grateful to our outgoing Co-ChairTerry Doyle, for his service to the C100 as a Board Member, Co-Chair, and Charter Member.

As a brand and growth marketing expert, former CMO and long-time consumer marketer for brands including Levi’s, XOJET, and Stitch Fix, Shari not only brings a genuine passion for entrepreneurs, but also some of the most in-demand expertise to the Canadian tech ecosystem.

This episode of ourstories_ we get to hear her thoughts on the landscape of building a brand today.

Marketing Experimentation Levels the Playing Field
Subscribe Here
Together with RBC, “our stories” is a collection of real-life stories of successes, failures and insights into how to make the most of the connection between Silicon Valley and Canada.
our stories
Watch. Consider. Share. Repeat.

Last chance to sign up for today

March 22nd 
5:30 PM – 7:30 PM
Palo Alto
Registration are closing! Join us at a collaborative Canadians in Tech meet up! We have partnered with Lazaridis InstituteDMZ, and Canadian Technology Accelerators for a one of a kind networking event.
RSVP below.
RSVP for Canadians In Tech

Updates and Other News

Canada continues to demonstrate its dedication to mother Earth. Government of Canada is investing $25M in the clean agritech industry. Read about it here.
Hootsuite and Shopify were among the 2018 Top Companies to work for in Canada, according to LinkedIn’s latest roundup. More extensive list here.
Vision Critical acquires Vancouver-based startup Aida, to integrate AI applications into their customer intelligence platform. Full article.
Follow us on Twitter. Like us on Facebook.

Other Upcoming Events

Canadians in Tech
April 19, 2018
Can’t attend March Canadians in Tech? Don’t miss our next one.
48Hrs in the Valley
June 19 & 20, 2018

A two-day event where we introduce Canada’s most promising startups to Silicon Valley’s top mentors, investors and industry executives

Other Events

#BCTECH Summit: PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF INNOVATION

May 14 – 16, 2018
1055 Canada Place
Vancouver, BC, Canada

Connect, Explore, & Learn @ Western Canada’s largest tech conference!

Register Here

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Belgian king returns field gun to Canada

From the Legion Magazine.


Best-Selling 5-Volume Set!
Front lines
Belgian king returns field gun to Canada
Belgian king returns field gun to Canada
Belgian king returns field gun to Canada

Belgian king returns field gun to Canada

Story and photography by Stephen J. Thorne

It’s been nearly a century since Canadian guns fell silent at Mons, Belgium, the last city they liberated before Germany surrendered and the war to end all wars was ended. Two of those guns were left behind as gifts from Canada to the City of Mons in 1919. One has come back to Canada on long-term loan to the Canadian War Museum where the occasion was marked on March 13 by a visit from Belgium’s King Philippe and Queen Mathilde.

READ MORE

The liberation of Zeeland
The liberation of Zeeland

The liberation of Zeeland

Story and photography by Adam M. Tindal

The Battle of the Scheldt was a massive Canadian victory that was largely overshadowed by British and American triumphs of the Second World War. But not everyone has forgotten Canada’s Cinderella Army and the importance of its victory along the Scheldt River in the fall of 1944.

READ MORE

Best Selling WW I Centenary Mailing Labels!
This week in history
This Week in History

March 20, 1917

The preparatory artillery bombardment for the assault on Vimy Ridge, France, begins.

READ MORE

Medipac Travel Insurance

CAN Upcoming Events

From one of our fellow Canadian-focused Bay area organizations.


Canadian Studies Upcoming Events
Dear Friends of Canadian Studies,
Colloquium: March 21
Wednesday March 21, 12:00 Noon
Game Changers: Economics, Politics, and the Transformation of the Canadian Spectator Sport Business
Prof. Neil Longley (Economics & Management, University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
The lecture is based on research conducted for my forthcoming book, entitled Game Changers: Economics, Politics, and the Transformation of the Canadian Spectator Sport Business(University of British Columbia (UBC) Press, 2019).
The book examines the profound transformation that has occurred in the Canadian spectator sport business over the past half-century. It argues that this transformation should not be viewed in isolation, or only within the narrow context of sport, but rather should be viewed as a microcosm and manifestation of a complex set of economic, political and social changes that have occurred in broader Canadian society. It asserts that the freer movement of goods and services, globalization, immigration, urbanization, Quebec sovereignty, and western alienation, were all factors that impacted the Canadian sport industry.
Looked at another way, sport also reflects and mirrors these broader changes in society – in a sense, sport becomes a metaphor for the world around it. The nature of sport – with its high public visibility, relative transparency as a business, and its widespread following amongst large segments of the population – makes it a particularly unique vehicle to witness societal shifts and transformations.
223 Moses Hall
Colloquium events are free, and open to everyone. No ticket or RSVP is required.
The Canadian Studies Colloquium Series is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Consulate General of Canada San Francisco | Silicon Valley
Thomas Garden Barnes Lecture:April 13
Elizabeth May OC MP
Friday APRIL 13, 3:00 PM
Can Canada claim climate leadership? Can the Paris Accord succeed in avoiding the worst of the climate crisis?
Speaker: Elizabeth May OC MP
Leader, Green Party of Canada
What role can Canada play to advance global climate goals, especially in 2018 as chair of the G7? As politics and governments change, Canada and the US have changed places, relatively speaking, on climate change. In Canada, global climate saboteur, former Prime Minister Stephen Harper, has been replaced by self-avowed climate champion, current Prime Minister Justin Trudeau; in the US, Barack Obama has been replaced by Donald Trump. As A.A. Milne wrote of Two Bad Bears, “All of a sudden, just like us, one got better and the other gut wus.”
Despite the fact that Canada’s total emissions are only 2% of the global total, as saboteur, Canada was more effective than the US has been under Trump. Prime Minister Trudeau has made less of an impact on Canada’s domestic policies than one would imagine. Canada has not changed our NDC (nationally determined contribution), our target filed with the UNFCCC. It remains the same as under the Conservatives. Where does this leave the Paris Accord and our global pact to ensure emissions are cut such that global average temperature does not exceed 1.5 degrees C above what they were before the Industrial Revolution?”
About the Speaker:
Elizabeth May is the Leader of the Green Party of Canada and its first elected Member of Parliament, representing Saanich-Gulf Islands in southern Vancouver Island. Elizabeth is an environmentalist, writer, activist and lawyer, who has a long record as a dedicated advocate — for social justice, for the environment, for human rights, and for pragmatic economic solutions.
Born in Connecticut, she moved to Nova Scotia with her family in 1973. Elizabeth grew up working in her family’s small business, a restaurant and gift shop on the Cabot Trail. She first became known in the Canadian media in the mid-1970s, through her leadership as a volunteer in the grassroots movement against proposed aerial insecticide spraying on forests near her home on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. Her efforts helped prevent aerial insecticide spraying from ever occurring in Nova Scotia.
Years later, she and a local group of residents went to court to prevent herbicide spraying. They won a temporary injunction in 1982 to hold off the spray programme, but after two years, the case was eventually lost. In the course of the litigation, her family sacrificed their home and seventy acres of land in an adverse court ruling to Scott Paper. However, by the time the judge ruled the chemicals were safe, the export of dangerous 2,4,5-T herbicides from the U.S had been banned. The forests of Nova Scotia were spared being the last areas in Canada to be sprayed with Agent Orange.
Her early volunteer work also included successful campaigns to prevent approval of uranium mining in Nova Scotia, and extensive work on energy policy issues, primarily opposing nuclear energy.
About the Event:
The 2018 Thomas Garden Barnes Lecture is presented by Canadian Studies and co-sponsored by the Institute of Governmental Studies. Talk from 3:00 to 4:30 PM, IGS Library, 109 Moses Hall. A reception will follow the lecture in 223 Moses Hall from 4:30 PM to 5:30 PM. Free, and open to everyone. Registration is requested via Eventbrite.
109 Moses Hall (IGS Library)
RSVP Requested at
Co-Sponsored by the Institute of Governmental Studies
Spring 2018
Colloquium Series
Free | Open to Everyone
223 Moses Hall
Friday April 27, 5:00 PM
The Influence of Immigration on Tourism – The Case of Canada
Prof. Frederic Dimanche (Hospitality and Tourism Management, Ryerson University)
Co-Sponsored by the Tourism Studies Working Group
Colloquium events are free, and open to everyone. No ticket or RSVP is required.
The Canadian Studies Colloquium Series is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Consulate General of Canada San Francisco | Silicon Valley
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308 WEBSITE | EMAIL
9.98 GB (58%) of 17 GB used