Yearly Archives: 2022

Inuit company wins Arctic radar contract

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Legion Magazine
Front Lines
Inuit company wins Artic radar contract

Inuit company wins Arctic radar contract

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

An Inuit-owned company has been awarded a seven-year contract to operate and maintain North America’s early-warning radar system in the Canadian Arctic, placing the security and sovereignty of the northern expanse squarely in the hands of its traditional peoples.

The $592-million contract for the operation and upkeep of the North Warning System (NWS) went to Nasittuq Corp. The Iqaluit-based company takes over from Raytheon Technologies at a particularly sensitive time for Arctic sovereignty and management.

 

READ MORE

Infuser Tea Maker
Military Milestones
The first to fall in Korea

The first to fall in Korea

STORY BY SHARON ADAMS

On March 2, 1951, the Department of National Defence published the first casualty list of the Korean War, which included the name of the first Canadian to die there—Regimental Sergeant Major James D. Wood.

His death was not combat related so his story is easily overlooked among the hundreds who lost their lives in battle. Wood, a decorated Second World War veteran, died preparing comrades for the dangers they would face in combat.

 

READ MORE

HearingLife
Canvet Publication Ltd.

Salute! March 2022

A newsletter from the folks at Veterans Affairs Canada.


March 2022

You may notice something different

If you’re viewing this edition of Salute! in your email, then you’ve noticed a change. From now on, the full newsletter will be available for you to read on our website only.

This change is part of a special project we’ve been working on to enhance the Let’s Talk Veterans platform and improve your experience with it.

Stay tuned for a fresh look and some new features. Let us know what you think about Salute! by emailing us.


In this edition:

  • Funding announced to address wait times for Veterans
  • International Women’s Day
  • End of the mission in Afghanistan
  • Commemorating Peacekeepers in Cyprus
  • Veteran story: Helping others, healing herself
  • Help design mental health resources for Veterans
  • New VAC Assistance Service online chat
  • Supports for Veterans affected by military sexual trauma
  • Save the date: Virtual Careers & Employment Opportunities webinars
  • Veteran and Family Well-Being Fund recipients doing great work

To learn more about our consultations and to stay connected on Veterans’ issues, visit Let’s Talk Veterans.

Do you know other Veterans, family members or others who would benefit from the information in this newsletter? Please share this e-mail with your friends and contacts.

View the latest issues of Salute! online.


Sincerely,

Stakeholder Engagement and Outreach Team

Veterans Affairs Canada

You’re receiving this email because you are a registered participant on Let’s Talk Veterans.

Your Marine Club News for March 2022

An item from one of our fellow veterans organizations in the Bay Area.


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Newsletter not loading correctly? View in your browser.

MARCH 2022: LIVE

That’s L-I-V-E with a long I! We are excited to be building a schedule of live, in-person events again at the Marines’ Memorial Club. Stay tuned for more great commemorative and speaker programs to come in 2022. Of course, you don’t need to wait for a special occasion to visit your Club. The restaurant and bar are open and member room rates are great all year round. We look forward to seeing you!

 

The ongoing, generous donations of our Members and Patriot Supporters help us sustain our programs and carry on the values of the US Armed Forces. This month, please consider a donation to the program you hold most dear, or to the Marines’ Memorial’s area of greatest needThank you!

 

Also of note for March:

> HAPPY 107th BIRTHDAY to the US Navy Reserve!

> PLEASE BE PREPARED: The San Francisco Department of Public Health requires us to verify full vaccination status of all event attendees, as well as those wishing to use our Club’s bar, restaurant, and fitness center. We appreciate your understanding.

YOUR QUARTERLY CROSSROADS MAGAZINE IS HERE!

Watch your mailbox for the Spring 2022 edition of Crossroads of the Corps. Inside, you’ll find a recap of our 2021 USMC Birthday Ball, a roundup of military-centered sites in the Bay Area, plus this year’s scholarship offerings. Be sure to share your copy of the magazine with other Veterans you know.

 

Read Crossroads online

General David Petraeus, USA (Ret)

23 MARCH @ 6pm

LEADING FROM THE FRONT

Join us for our first in-person event of 2022, an opportunity to see former CIA Director, General David Petraeus on stage with PBS NewHour anchor and MMA Board Member Mike Cerre. Get ready for a lively conversation exploring GEN Petraeus’s thoughts on current military strategy and lessons learned during his military and civilian careers.

 

Click here for tickets

FANTASTIC FOOD, DELICIOUS VIEWS!

Named in honor of Marine Corps legend “Chesty” Puller, this is your place for a tasty cocktail, a hearty meal, and gorgeous views of San Francisco! Dinner is served Tuesday-Saturday 5-8pm; Breakfast daily 7:30-9:30am; Bar Hours Tuesday-Saturday 4-9pm and Sunday/Monday 4-7pm; and Happy Hour at the bar for members and hotel guests daily 4-6pm.

 

Email us for Dinner Reservations

See Chesty’s Menus

GREAT EVENTS HAPPEN HERE

There is just ONE place you’ll find superb service paired with that timeless Marine Club ambience. And our Special Events team has the expertise to help you create an unforgettable San Francisco WEDDING, REUNION, or MEETING.

 

We’re ready when you are!

Let’s start planning your event!

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SAY I DO, CELEBRATE, AND LET US DO THE REST.

Weddings at Marines’ Memorial Club are pure magic. Why? Because we are passionate about helping you create a a one-of-a-kind celebration of love in a one-of-a-kind location!

 

Our event spaces and special packages accommodate wedding parties from 30 to 260 guests.

 

Email us. Let’s start planning!

HONORING THE LEGACY

WHO DO YOU KNOW?

Every US service member and veteran you know can benefit from membership in the Marines’ Memorial, and every membership supports our mission to Commemorate, Educate, and Serve.

 

Make it a WIN-WIN-WIN when you earn a free night’s stay at your Club for every new veteran member you recruit!

 

Invite a friend to join TODAY!

MEMBERSHIP MATTERS. RENEW OR UPGRADE NOW!

Did you know that Benefactor members enjoy these extra privileges? Lifetime Membership, a special Benefactor Holiday (2 nights plus $50 for dinner in our restaurant), Suite Upgrades at no charge (based on availability at check-in), your choice of 2 complimentary cocktails or 1 bottle of house wine each time you have dinner at Chesty’s, 15% at Marine Club Store, and Advance Reservations for select MMC events. Upgrade now!

 

UPGRADE to Benefactor Status

RENEW your membership

ANOTHER GREAT WAY TO SUPPORT MMA

Sign up for Amazon Smile, and Amazon will donate on your behalf with every purchase! Here’s how:

On your computer, go to Smile.Amazon.com and follow the instructions.

On your iPhone’s Amazon App, open the main menu, tap Settings, tap AmazonSmile, and follow activation instructions.

SPRINGTIME IS THE RIGHT TIME!

Surprise your favorite veteran with a Marines’ Memorial gift card! It’s good for accommodations, meals and Marine Club Store items, and it will never expire! Purchase gift cards by calling us at (415) 673-6672.

YOUR HOME AWAY FROM HOME

A SPECIAL STAY-AND-DINE PACKAGE FOR MEMBERS

Members-only Package Includes:

5 NIGHTS in a Standard Room

$100 Credit for Chesty’s Bar & Grill

$50 Credit for Cesario’s Restaurant

2 Souvenir Chesty’s Coffee Mugs

Breakfast 7:30-9:30am Daily

Hosted Happy Hour 4-6pm Nightly

 

$439/person double occupancy

$799 single occupancy

Upgrades:

Deluxe Room / add $100

Suite / add $300

Tax & Parking not included

 

BOOK IT TODAY! 415-673-6672

PLANNING TO TRAVEL?

Book your next Reciprocal Club visit in TWO EASY STEPS!

 

1. Contact your destination club to confirm they can accommodate you on your desired dates.

 

2. Generate a Letter of Introduction. Log in to your MMA Member account. Then click on “Request Letter of Introduction,” enter a date, and submit. Your destination club will receive your letter automatically by email!

 

View our worldwide Reciprocal ClubsDownload a PDF of Club listings

Donate Join or Renew
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Marines’ Memorial Association & Foundation

609 Sutter St.

San Francisco, CA 94102

Copyright © 2021, All rights reserved

Tracking the LGB vote in Canada; The future of quantum tech; Big Give

A newsletter from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Upcoming event: Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
  • New study tracks voting trends among Canada’s LGB population
  • Applications close next week for summer research funding
  • Show your support for Canadian Studies – Big Give is next Thursday, March 10!
  • External event: “Canada and the United States in the New Quantum Tech Era”
NEXT EVENT
Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
Tuesday, March 15 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Moses Hall | RSVP here
Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present short overviews of their projects. This panel will have a special focus on the environment, development, and Indigenous resource sovereignty. This event will be held in-person as well as broadcast via Zoom.
Mindy Price, Ph.D. candidate, Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
“New Agricultural Frontiers: Land, Labor and Sovereignty in the Northwest Territories, Canada”
Now more than 1º Celsius warmer than a century ago and warming at three times the global average, the Arctic and Subarctic are being reimagined as a new frontier for food production. Despite a growing body of evidence that climate change will enable new possibilities for agriculture in the North, much research remains agnostic about how northern agricultural development will affect communities and landscapes and the relations between them. Mindy uses archival research and ethnography in three extended case studies to examine the implications of agriculture development on the social relations of production and consumption in the Northwest Territories, Canada.
Aaron Gregory, Ph.D. student, City and Regional Planning
“Kinship Infrastructures: Indigenous Energy Autonomy and Regulatory Sea Change in Beecher Bay”
Aaron’s research explores the social, technical, and regulatory impacts of a renewable energy system developed by the Scia’new First Nation in Beecher Bay, British Columbia. He examines this project as an emergent approach to Indigenous environmental governance, an infrastructural solution responding to the problem of Indigenous energy sovereignty, and a regulatory provocation designed to challenge a provincial monopoly on energy production and distribution.
New Study Tracks Trends Among Canada’s LGB Voters
A new study co-authored by a UC Berkeley political scientist sheds light on political trends in Canada’s lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) population. Titled “The Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Vote in a More Tolerant Canada“, the forthcoming article in the Canadian Journal of Political Science examines the effects of political mainstreaming on what has traditionally been a solid left-of-centre voting block. Its authors are Eric Guntermann, a Banting Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Political Science at UC Berkeley, and Edana Beauvais, an assistant professor of political science at Simon Fraser University.
It’s no surprise that lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) individuals overwhelmingly vote left-of-centre, and are on average less conservative than straight people. LGB policy priorities have traditionally been associated with progressive politics, and left-of-centre individuals were more likely to identify as LBG. These communities were traditionally very cohesive by virtue of forming around a strong shared experience of discrimination and persecution.
In recent decades, however, same-sex relationships have achieved widespread acceptance throughout Canada, with opponents being relegated to the political fringe. LGB political groups have also achieved many of their policy goals, most prominently same-sex marriage. Have these societal changes led to movement in individual political preferences? Guntermann and Beauvais hypothesize that the mainstreaming of LGB rights would lead to lower cohesion as a politically distinctive group.
The study partly confirms this expectation. While activism for same-sex marriage is historically tied to left-wing politics, the outcome of the push for gay marriage has moved some LGB individuals to the right. Guntermann and Beauvais’ estimates show that while marriage makes most people more conservative, it has a larger effect on gay men, bringing them roughly to the average ideological score of straight men.
However, when viewing the LGB community overall the study notes an important counterweight: bisexual women. This group is by far the most left-wing group as measured by self-identification, immigration preferences, and vote choice. While men are generally more conservative than women overall, bisexual women are not only more left-wing than gay men, but also significantly further left than lesbian women. This is important because data from the 2019 Canada Election Study show that the number of self-identified bisexual women increased fivefold from Gen X (born 1965-1980) to Gen Z (born 1997-2012). With over 20% of Gen Z women identifying as bisexual, this represents an extremely heavy counterweight to any movement among other groups in the LGB population.
The study’s conclusions? Despite some rightward movement among married gay men, the outsized increase in young bisexual-identified women suggests that the leftward tilt of the LGB community overall will persist for the foreseeable future.
Big Give is Next Thursday, March 10!
The big day is almost here! Join us next week for Big Give, Berkeley’s annual day of giving. Show your support for Canadian Studies by making a donation of any size in support of our program. Your generosity supports our public programs and student scholars. And a timely gift could help us earn $100s of dollars in matches at no extra cost to you – learn how here.
Applications closing for summer research funding
Deadline: Friday, March 11, 2022
The Canadian Studies Program is currently accepting applications for the Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship for Summer 2022 and AY 2022-23. The application is open to any UC Berkeley graduate student whose work focuses primarily or comparatively on Canada. This fellowship is meant to cover direct research costs.
The deadline for summer applications is next Friday, March 11; applications for AY 22-23 must be submitted by May 6. Please visit our website for more information and full eligibility criteria, and help us share this information with your friends and networks!
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Canada and the United States in the New Quantum Tech Era
Wednesday, March 9 | 10:00 am PT | Online | RSVP here
Join the Wilson Center’s Canada Institute for a discussion on the emerging revolution in quantum technologies and how the governments of Canada and the United States are approaching the opportunities and challenges it presents.
Emerging quantum technologies will have significant economic and national security ramifications, setting off a global race for leadership in this field. Quantum computers hold the promise of infinitely greater processing power and the ability to crack today’s digital security protocols. They will transform industries from finance to pharmaceuticals to logistics. Quantum sensors and quantum imaging will change fields from mining to warfare. Moreover, a quantum internet, with ultra-high speeds and security is under development. This session will explore what the U.S. and Canada are doing in the quantum field and how they are thinking about closer collaboration in the years ahead.
This event will feature an expert panel drawn from top levels of government, science, and industry, and will be hosted by Canada Institute director and Berkeley Canadian Studies board member Chris Sands. This event is being hosted in partnership with the Embassy of Canada.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720