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"devoir" Definitions
  1. DUTY, RESPONSIBILITY
  2. a usually formal act of civility or respect

570 Sentences With "devoir"

How to use devoir in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "devoir" and check conjugation/comparative form for "devoir". Mastering all the usages of "devoir" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Mon cœur est 100 % français, mais j'ai le sentiment de devoir prouver ma "francité," et avec tout ce qui se passe en ce moment, je suis fatiguée de devoir justifier mon identité.
"The theater needs distance and transformation," she told Le Devoir.
Canada's French-language newspaper Le Devoir and the radio station 98.5 FM reported the allegations Wednesday night.
But in an interview with the French-language Le Devoir newspaper, he made clear the timetable was likely to slip.
As a member of France's exalted guild, Les Compagnons du Devoir, Vatinet gave Alexander a trajectory to model his career on.
Then came "Kanata" and an open letter from Indigenous artists and activists, published in the Quebec newspaper Le Devoir in July.
Salomé Corbo told Le Devoir Rozon penetrated her with his finger at a party in 1990—when she was 14 years old.
La Banque d'Angleterre a musclé son discours jeudi pour avertir que la prochaine hausse pourrait finalement devoir intervenir plus tôt que prévu.
Montreal newspaper 'Le Devoir' on Thursday reported allegations by nine women who said they had been sexually harassed or abused by Rozon.
According to Le Devoir, in 1998 Rozon pleaded guilty to touching a woman's breasts without consent and was later given an unconditional discharge.
As part of a program called the Compagnons du Devoir, he traveled throughout France in his early 22001s studying regional cuisines and mastering traditional techniques.
Quand le burkini est apparu, j'étais heureuse pour ma sœur, qui était en vacances et pouvait enfin jouer sur la plage avec ses enfants plutôt que de devoir rester à l'ombre.
The survey, conducted by Canadian polling firm Leger and sponsored by the newspapers Le Journal de Montréal and Le Devoir, also found majority support for Hillary Clinton becoming the 45th president.
Because of differences in format, this can be more complicated than just selling a European edition of the game in the Canadian province, a report in Le Devoir noted that same year.
Pour Peter Dixon, économiste chez Commerzbank, la Banque d'Angleterre a certes prévenu les marchés financiers qu'elle pourrait devoir agir plus énergiquement sur les taux mais cela ne signifie pas encore qu'elle le fera.
In an open letter published this weekend in Le Devoir, a leading French-language newspaper, the signatories lamented that the production was abetting the lack of Indigenous faces and voices in the cultural arena.
Legoube is one of around 10,000 students trained every year by Les Compagnons du Devoir, a guild association created over 70 years ago, with a nod to medieval traditions, to train people in different crafts.
On July 14 a group led by Indigenous activists, artists and academics wrote an open letter in Le Devoir, a Quebec daily, responding to comments made in that newspaper by Ariane Mnouchkine, the director of Théâtre du Soleil.
" The line echoed Ms. Mnouchkine's own words in an interview with Le Devoir: "If we start saying 'We Jews' or 'We blacks' because of our legitimate bitterness about the past, we will only reproduce the same crazy irreparable suffering.
Jean-Claude Bellanger, who heads up the Compagnons du Devoir association, alerted the French government in the wake of the fire that there was a lack of manpower in the building trade, which could slow down Notre-Dame's reconstruction.
Interviewers on Mattis' book tour have pressed him about Trump, but he has largely maintained what he refers to as the French virtue of the "devoir de réserve" -- the duty of silence -- that he says former public servants should keep about their work.
On n'ose plus répondre favorablement à une invitation "d'amis", car nous en avons marre de devoir refuser un verre d'alcool et justifier poliment en y mettant les formes, tout ça en veillant à ne pas dire de choses préjudiciables dans ce que l'on peut presque appeler des excuses.
In its second report, issued in November but first reported Wednesday by Le Devoir, the Quebec government's scientific panel found that oil is still lingering in sediments on the riverbed and that the years since the disaster have seen a dramatic increase in the presence of lesions, fin erosion and other deformities in many species of fish.
Le Devoir, March 30, 2019. She followed up with Irréversible in 2019,Bruno Lapointe, «On a un gros devoir de société à faire».
It was an important part of the political debates in Quebec until the foundation in 1910 of Bourassa's Le Devoir newspaper, to which Asselin contributed for two months before tendering his resignation. In September 1922, Le Nationaliste merged with Le Devoir to become the later's Saturday edition, titled Le Nationaliste et le Devoir.
Le Devoir, November 26, 2013 The decision was reiterated in February 2015 in Quebec Superior Court."Le parti Union Montréal ressuscite".Le Devoir, February 11, 2015 The party is no longer active politically.
Le Devoir (, "Duty") is a French-language newspaper published in Montreal and distributed in Quebec and throughout Canada. It was founded by journalist, politician, and nationalist Henri Bourassa in 1910. Le Devoir is one of few independent large-circulation newspapers in Quebec (and one of the few in Canada) in a market dominated by the media conglomerate Quebecor (including Le Journal de Montréal). Historically Le Devoir was considered Canada's francophone newspaper of record,"Les parlementaires québécois et Le Devoir dans le monde des médias".
In 2016, Le Délit is named "best student journal", receiving the Le Devoir de la presse étudiante prize for its publications throughout 2015 – 2016, ex aequo with l'Artichaut from UQAM. This prize, bestowed by "Les Amis du Devoir" – an organization attached to the daily newspaper Le Devoir — is a journalism contest destined for students at pre-university (CEGEP) and university level.
"La vengeance anonyme selon J. D. Kurtness". Le Devoir, September 23, 2017.
In 1980, he was elected without opposition as a Mouvement scolaire confessionnel candidate in the commission's sixteenth district.Le Devoir, 6 June 1980, p. 2; Le Devoir, 10 June 1980, p. 1; Montreal Gazette, 11 June 1980, p. 118.
Le Devoir, October 6, 2017. It had its Canadian premiere at the Festival du cinéma international en Abitibi-Témiscamingue in October."Première nord-américaine de «Tadoussac»: incursion sur la planète femmes du réalisateur Martin Laroche". Le Devoir, October 30, 2017.
"Un week-end au Festival du nouveau cinéma", Le Devoir, Montréal, 9 October 2009.
"Prix du Gouverneur général - Un autre prix pour Perrine Leblanc". Le Devoir, November 16, 2011.
"Grogne chez les musiciens de l'OM" by Christophe Huss, Le Devoir, April 12, 2006, Page B 7. "En bref: Le Métropolitain hors de l'eau," Le Devoir, May 6, 2006, Page A 9. "Goyer quitte l'OM" by Claude Gingras, La Presse, Montreal, May 23, 2006.
The article in Le Devoir misspells Yeomans's names as "Yeomals." He served for one four-year term.
It was designed by Armedieval CCB Compagnons du Devoir, artisan craftsmen and women who specialize in ancient buildings.
After Radio-Canada appointed Hébert to cover federal politics on Parliament Hill, she worked as bureau chief for Montreal's Le Devoir and La Presse. She has written columns appearing in The London Free Press, the Ottawa Citizen, and the National Post, and currently in Le Devoir, Metro, and the Toronto Star.
The party's activities included protesting against the construction industry."En bref - «Yo» Gourd en tête". Le Devoir, September 24, 2011.
Montreal Gazette, January 3, 1987. She continued writing the column in Le Devoir until the 1940s, and died November 17, 1946.
Philippe Renaud, "La Montréalaise Backxwash remporte le prix Polaris". Le Devoir, October 19, 2020. Born and raised in Lusaka, Zambia, Mutinta began rapping and producing music in FL Studio before moving to British Columbia, Canada at age 17 to attend university for a computer science degree.Philippe Renaud, "Backxwash, elle et son autre". Le Devoir, May 30, 2020.
Nominations were announced on February 8.Odile Tremblay, "Maurice Richard et C.R.A.Z.Y. dominent la course aux Jutra". Le Devoir, February 8, 2006.
Odile Tremblay, "Les Invasions barbares, La Grande Séduction et Gaz Bar Blues dominent la course aux Jutra". Le Devoir, January 22, 2004.
Le Devoir, April 1, 2006. In addition to his writing, Audet was a longtime professor at the Université du Québec à Montréal.
Descôteaux also developed the presence of the newspaper on the Internet. In February 2016 Descôteaux retired from the editorship of Le Devoir.
CBC Books, September 26, 2016. She published the short story collection Madame Victoria in 2015."Madame Victoria: l'effacée". Le Devoir, September 26, 2015.
Le Devoir, March 21, 2020. His second album, Naked, followed in 2020.Marissa Groguhé, "Naked d’Aliocha: aller ailleurs". La Presse, March 21, 2020.
The Globe and Mail, October 4, 2016. His second novel, Bunyip, was published in 2014."Une histoire d’épave". Le Devoir, September 13, 2014.
Voir, November 27, 2012. and followed up with The Torrent (Le Torrent) in 2012."La ferveur d’un Torrent". Le Devoir, October 20, 2012.
The newspaper's original slogan was "Fais ce que dois" (Do what [you] must). "Le Devoir" means "the duty" in French. Its current slogan is "Libre de penser" (Free to think). In 1993, following a redesign by Lucie Lacava, a Montreal-based design consultant, the Society for News Design awarded Le Devoir Best of Show award for "Overall Design Excellence" and in 1994 the same group awarded it its Gold award in the Feature Design category. In September 2011, the National Film Board of Canada and Le Devoir announced that they will be jointly hosting three interactive essays on their websites, ONF.
Odile Tremblay, "Monsieur Lazhar, Coteau rouge et Café de Flore dominent la course à la 14e Soirée des Jutra". Le Devoir, February 1, 2012.
As a journalist he mainly wrote for Le Devoir. He won the Ludger-Duvernay Prize in 1951 and the Lorne Pierce Medal in 1963.
This will dry gradually to become a fen.Article of "journal Le Devoir" - Beaver Lake (Lac aux Castors) on Mount Royal He was regrooved artificially in 1938.
Saint-Pierre, Brigitte. "Architecture - Sur un site naturel spectaculaire." Le Devoir, May 19, 2007. Web. He has also advocated for community consultation within the design process.
In November 2017 Yaroshevskaya, then aged 94, released her biography, Mon voyage en Amérique."Kim Yaroshevskaya dans l’oeil de la mémoire". Le Devoir, November 18, 2017.
With Richard Blaimert, he is the screenwriter of the Radio-Canada television show Cover Girl (2005). He is a regular contributor to Montreal newspaper Le Devoir.
Chouinard, Marie-Andrée. "Financement des festivals - La boîte à surprises." Le Devoir. 15 May 2010 2020 saw a drive-thru Ribfest caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Dufort became the station's morning host until June 22, 2007."En bref - Dufort quitte CKOI", Le Devoir, June 2, 2007. Braithwaite joined CITE-FM in August 2011.
473 pages. Louis Carmain: écrire contre le néant Le Devoir September 21, 2019 It is a finalist in the 2020 edition of the Prix litteraire des collégiens.
Le Devoir, November 15, 2019. Le Devoir described the film as "not a documentary, not a fiction, not a direct cinema, but a little bit of all three forms." The film was shot in October 2018 in a variety of communities in Quebec, including Bécancour and several small towns in the Montérégie region. The film premiered at the 2019 Locarno Film Festival."Denis Cote’s Wilcox to world premiere at Locarno".
In 2018, filmmaker Marc Bisaillon released With Love (L'Amour), a thriller film inspired by Marshall's case."Marc Bisaillon, au-delà du fait divers". Le Devoir, October 29, 2018.
After his death on October 5, 1925 in Ottawa at the age of 82, a tribute was paid to him by Georges Pelletier, a journalist with Le Devoir.
In a 2010 interview with Le Devoir, Madame Langlois said that her husband tried to avoid talking politics at home, especially due to their disagreements on Quebec sovereignty.
Le Devoir, April 19, 2012. His second film, X500, debuted at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival."Dolan leads the Quebec contingent at TIFF". Montreal Gazette, August 4, 2016.
Cargnello was born in Montreal to an Argentine immigrant father of Italian descent and a Canadian mother of Lithuanian heritage."Paul Cargnello: French connexion". Le Devoir, March 9, 2007.
"Un orchestre se trouve une âme", by François Tousignant, Le Devoir, October 9, 1996, Page B 7. Rescigno made four commercial recordings with the orchestra. In addition, under his leadership, the Orchestra won Quebec's Prix Opus for a program of all five Beethoven piano concertos with Anton Kuerti in the summer of 1997 at the Festival de Lanaudière."Les premiers prix Opus" by Louise Leduc, Le Devoir, January 9, 1998, Page B 11.
Yambo Ouologuem (August 22, 1940 – October 14, 2017) was a Malian writer. His first novel, Le devoir de violence (English: Bound to Violence, 1968), won the Prix Renaudot. He later published Lettre à la France nègre (1969), and Les mille et une bibles du sexe (1969) under the pseudonym Utto Rodolph. Le devoir de violence was initially well-received, but critics later charged that Ouologuem had plagiarized passages from Graham Greene and other established authors.
In recent work, Bastien-Charlebois critiques the medical treatment of intersex voices. Bastien-Charlebois speaks internationally, and has been interviewed by the Montreal Gazette, Le Nouvelliste, Le Devoir and Être.
"Littérature québécoise - André Major: entendre passer le vent". Le Devoir, May 11, 2013. He was awarded the Prix Athanase-David in 1992."Prix du Quebec winners include Taylor of McGill".
The three films in the trilogy were released as a DVD box set in 2007.Odile Tremblay, "La Trilogie de l'Île-aux-Coudres en DVD". Le Devoir, April 24, 2007.
She was the New Democratic Party of Quebec's candidate in La Pinière for the 2018 Quebec general election.Hélène Buzzetti, "La filière fédérale du NPD-Québec". Le Devoir, September 7, 2018.
Scott A. Gray, "Thus Owls The Mountain That We Live Upon". Exclaim!, September 28, 2018.Sophie Chartier, "The Mountain That We Live Upon, Thus Owls". Le Devoir, September 28, 2018.
Catherine Martin (born 1958) is a Canadian screenwriter and film director."Les fines antennes de Catherine Martin". Le Devoir, February 10, 2018. Martin was born in Hull, Quebec (now Gatineau).
"Junos 2019: the complete list of winners". CBC Music, March 16, 2019. Born and raised in Port- au-Prince,"Wesli présente «Rapadou»: les trésors des lakous". Le Devoir, July 20, 2018.
"Une pluie de prix au Salon du livre de Montréal". Le Devoir, November 15, 2003. He died of cancer in October 2005.Jean-François Nadeau, "Décès de l'écrivain Michel van Schendel".
Le Devoir, January 28, 2017. and was defended by Antonine Maillet in the 2018 edition of Le Combat des livres."Le retour du Combat des livres". La Presse, May 1, 2018.
Fugue solaire dans les îles et plateaux du langage, Triptyque, 2008, p. 37-56. Artists and landowners were evicted in the seventies.Thierry Haroun, « Une autre Gaspésie », Le Devoir, 23 aout 2003.
The service was discontinued in May 2013, with its content and staff integrated into espace.mu, Radio-Canada's online music streaming service."Ici gît Bande à part". Le Devoir, May 8, 2013.
As reported by Bryan Miles in Le Devoir, Natania, the writer's widow, said: "He died in my arms" at their home in Côte Saint-Luc, "asking me to help him get dressed for writing." She added that he died "standing up totally straight, really."Bryan Miles, "Mort d'un écrivain engagé - Gérard Étienne n'a pas dit son dernier mot" ("Death of a committed writer; Gérard Étienne has not had the last word."), 8 January 2009, Le Devoir.
Le Devoir, April 6, 2017. At the 5th Canadian Screen Awards, the film was shortlisted for Best Live Action Short Drama."2017 Canadian Screen Awards nominees revealed". Global News, January 17, 2017.
Delisle's controversial PhD political science dissertation and the book entitled The Traitor and the Jew based on her thesis, argued that Groulx and the newspaper Le Devoir were antisemitic and supported fascism.
Régine Robin, "Une juste mémoire, est- ce possible?", in Thomas Ferenczi (ed.), Devoir de mémoire, droit à l'oubli?, Éditions Complexe, Paris, 2002, p.109. ; Bucur (2004), pp.158, 178–179; Deletant, pp.
Martin Stevens is the stage name of Roger Prud'homme"Sonne ma cloche! Encore, encore, encore!". Le Devoir, May 2, 2003. (born October 3, 1953), a Canadian pop singer prominent in the disco era.
Napoléon Bourassa was married to Azélie Papineau, the daughter of the Quebec politician Louis-Joseph Papineau. One of his sons was Henri Bourassa, a journalist and the founder of the newspaper Le Devoir.
Lucie Papineau (born April 26, 1962) is an award-winning writer living in Quebec, Canada who mainly writes children's books. She was born in Longueuil, Quebec and received a bachelor's degree in communications from the Université du Québec à Montréal. From 1987 to 1989, she wrote for Petit Devoir, a weekly insert in Le Devoir for children 6 to 12 years old. Since 1990, she has been a regular contributor to Magazine Enfants Québec, writing a column about children's books.
Zulma Carraud (24 March 1796 – 24 April 1889) was a French author. She is best known for her children's books and textbooks particularly La Petite Jeanne ou le devoir and Maurice ou le travail.
Ici Musique, March 27, 2020. was the band's full-length debut album following a number of EPs and standalone tracks.Philippe Papineau, "Montagnes russes, pulsions et symétrie chez Zen Bamboo". Le Devoir, April 1, 2020.
Williams-Jones has been interviewed by LaPresse, CBC, Le Devoir, Toronto Star, National Post, and appeared on radio and television shows such as Tout le monde en parle, ICI Radio-Canada, and CBC Newsworld.
"En bref - Elle veut le chaos, de Denis Côté, sera présenté à Locarno". Le Devoir, July 16, 2008. It won the festival's award for Best Direction.Kevin Laforest, "Elle veut le chaos : Tout est chaos".
Le Devoir, February 18, 2017. and was a finalist for the Trillium Award and the Grand prix littéraire d'Afrique noire. In Le Combat des livres, the novel was defended by journalist Marie-Maude Denis.
"La marche vers la mort de Keith Kouna". Le Devoir, December 7, 2013. Les Goules reunited for a new album in 2016. Kouna then released his most recent solo album, Bonsoir shérif, in 2017.
"Simple Dans Ma Vertu, Forte Dans Mon Devoir" a French motto which means "Simple in my Virtue, Strong (for a female speaker) in my Duty", loosely anglicized as "Simple in Virtue, Steadfast in Duty".
Marie-Christine Blais, "Sylvie Drapeau: plonger au fond de la lumière". La Presse, August 27, 2015. She followed up with Le Ciel in 2017,Fabien Deglise, "Le ciel, Sylvie Drapeau". Le Devoir, February 11, 2017.
Josée Legault (born 1966) is a Canadian journalist. She has been a political columnist for the English-language Montreal, Quebec newspaper The Gazette as well as Le Devoir, L'Actualite and, currently, Le Journal de Montreal.
Le Devoir, July 25, 2018. The film premiered in July 2018 at the Fantasia International Film Festival, where it won the Barry Convex Award for Best Canadian Feature."Deux réalisateurs québécois primés au festival Fantasia".
"Le prix Écho de la SOCAN à Koriass". Canadian Press via Le Devoir, October 20, 2012. She followed up in 2014 with 27 fois l'aurore.Julie Ledoux, "Salomé Leclerc: 27 fois l'aurore". Voir, September 16, 2014.
Pierre Laporte Bridge Pierre Laporte, grandson of the Liberal politician Alfred Leduc, was born in Montreal, Quebec, on 25 February 1921. He was a journalist with Le Devoir newspaper from 1945 to 1961, and was known for his crusading work against Quebec's then-Premier Maurice Duplessis. During his years in journalism, he published a number of series targeting the management of the Duplessis government. In 1954, Le Devoir ran a six-part series on problems during the construction of the Bersimis-1 generating station.
After St-Jacques' death, Dessaulles began writing a column for La Patrie under the pseudonym Jean Deshayes. She also wrote for Le Journal de Françoise, Le Courrier de Montmagny, La Revue de la femme, La Revue moderne, Le Canada and Le Nationaliste before joining Le Devoir in 1910. For Le Devoir, she wrote a long-running column under the pen name Fadette. Compilations of her Fadette columns were published as Lettres de Fadette in 1914, 1915, 1916 and 1918,Carole Gerson, Canadian Women in Print, 1750–1918.
According to sources, the Court of Voraces would have served as a refuge for canuts workers during their revolts.Catherine Lagrange, "La cour des Voraces conserve son mystère", 18/07, Le Parisien Given the date of construction, they may be fights during the second uprising of Voraces in 1849. But there is another hypothesis: the building would have housed the lodge of a mutual organization of canuts : Le Devoir mutuel. The deformed word Dévoirant, namely Le Devoir mutual members, would eventually have given the word "Voraces".
"Dolan et Nguyen dominent la course aux prix Iris". Le Devoir, April 6, 2017. At the 5th Canadian Screen Awards, the film was shortlisted for Best Live Action Short Drama."2017 Canadian Screen Awards nominees revealed".
Le Devoir, March 27, 2018. Stay Tuned!, which explores jazz music, followed in 2019 as the second album in the trilogy,"Dominique Fils-Aimé talks about her northern soul and SLAV". Montreal Gazette, February 27, 2019.
Le Devoir, June 4, 2018. and the Canadian Screen Award for Best Actor at the 7th Canadian Screen Awards."'Anne With an E,' 'Letterkenny' Win Big at Canadian Screen Awards". The Hollywood Reporter, March 31, 2019.
La Presse, July 6, 2019. Prior to releasing Barokan as a solo artist, she was associated with the group Afrikana Soul Sister.Philippe Renaud, "Djely Tapa à Nuits d’Afrique: à feu doux". Le Devoir, July 17, 2019.
Christian Mistral (born November 3, 1964) is a Canadian novelist, poet and songwriter from Quebec."Mistral pour tous". Le Devoir, July 3, 2004. He is most noted for his debut novel Vamp,"Canadian literature in French".
One day, however, they decide to try their hands at undertaking an auto theft themselves."Montréal, la grise". Le Devoir, April 7, 2017. The film's cast also includes Fanny Mallette, Oluniké Adeliyi, Patrick Goyette and Théodore Pellerin.
Le Devoir, September 29, 2007. and was screened on October 18 at the Festival du nouveau cinéma in Montreal, before opening commercially on October 26.Normand Provencher, "Le ring : leçon de courage". La Presse, October 27, 2007.
"Les Méduses". MediaQueer. The film's screenings included the 2015 Image+Nation festival"28e édition d’Image + Nation". Le Devoir, November 26, 2015. and the 2015 San Francisco International Festival of Short Films, where it won the Vanguard Award.
The film was shot in Montreal, primarily in the Mile End.Odile Tremblay, "Jean-Sébastien Lord au bord du gouffre". Le Devoir, March 1, 2014. The film premiered at the Rendez- vous du cinéma québécois in February 2014.
Le Devoir, February 24, 2018. She won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Original Screenplay at the 7th Canadian Screen Awards in 2019 for Slut in a Good Way."Cinq prix Écrans canadiens à La grande noirceur".
Vinçotte was born in Antwerp. His father was Jean-Henri Vinçotte (1807-1890), a man who started out as a communal teacher but eventually, through studies in Leuven and Liège, became first a professor in Antwerp, then Ghent, and ended his career as a high school inspector (a function that was brand new and very prestigious at the time). Vinçotte Sr. was a highly respected man, once described as "la personnification du devoir et du devoir austère. Ses inspections étaient conduites de la façon la plus consciencieuse"Quoted in Jaumotte, page 11.
For Le Devoir, Jérôme Delgado praised Labrèche-Dor's performance, but wrote that the film overall was riddled with plot holes, most notably the fact that the film's physical and social setting showed virtually no traces of actually having been torn apart by war.Jérôme Delgado, "«Le rire»: faut-il (en) rire?". Le Devoir, February 1, 2020. André Duchesne offered a similar assessment for La Presse, criticizing the lack of any significant information in the film about an event that would have been far more traumatic to society than was evident in the screenplay.
From when the riding was created in 1981 until 2014, the riding had always voted for the winning party in every general election."Le libéral Saul Polo a raison de Léo Bureau-Blouin". Le Devoir, April 8, 2014.
Le Devoir, May 4, 2019. The film premiered on February 22, 2019 at the Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma. Ruiz won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Cinematography in a Documentary at the 8th Canadian Screen Awards in 2020.
Montreal Gazette, May 1, 2005. and On aura tout lu,"Elle en lira tant!". Le Devoir, June 28, 2011. as well as the television series Écran libre for Télé-Québec, Génération T for TVA and Flash for TQS.
Montreal Gazette, August 11, 2002. theatrical flash mobs, and podcasted "déambulatoire" plays. In 2014, he was awarded both the Canada Council's Victor Martyn Lynch-Staunton Award"Les prix Victor-Martyn-Lynch-Staunton révélés". Le Devoir, May 8, 2014.
Originally from Bogota, Colombia,"On revient toujours à Bogotá". Le Devoir, May 5, 2014. he has resided primarily in Montreal, Quebec since commencing graduate studies in film at Concordia University in 2006."Un Montréalais en sélection officielle à Cannes".
Le Devoir, February 8, 2017. garnering the band two more Canadian Folk Music Award nominations, for Traditional Singer of the Year and Pushing the Boundaries, at the 13th Canadian Folk Music Awards."Canadian Folk Music Awards Reveal 2017 Nominees".
Tyrrell's involvement with Idle No More led to his participation in Indigenous-led protests against shale gas exploration in New Brunswick.Robitaille, Antoine. "The Green Party wants you to remember the name of its leader", Le Devoir, 7 October 2013.
In 1910, while he was serving in the Provincial Assembly as the member for Saint-Hyacinthe, he founded the newspaper Le Devoir to promote the Nationalist League and served as its editor until 1932. Bourassa's main objective was to position Le Devoir outside the control of the established parties in Quebec and in Ottawa, which had authority over press organs devoted to their electoral interests and attempted to control public opinion by their partisan actions. Bourassa chose the name Le Devoir for his newspaper because of its emphasis of his commitment to integrity and justice and his desire to serve the public good. In 1913, Bourassa denounced the government of Ontario as "more Prussian than Prussia" during the Ontario Schools Question crisis (see Regulation 17) after Ontario had almost banned the use of French in its schools and made English its official language of instruction.
Sophie Chartier, "Supermercado, Corridor". Le Devoir, May 26, 2017. They signed to Bonsound in Canada and Sub Pop internationally in 2019,Calum Slingerland, "Corridor Sign to Sub Pop / Bonsound". Exclaim!, July 23, 2019. and released Junior on October 18 that year.
Le ministre Goodyear est accusé d'ingérence. Le Devoir. October 1, 2009 Retrieved on 2011-09-27. Goodyear responded, saying that he did call the SSHRC to ask for a funding review, but denied he asked them to cancel the grant.
85 (1997). pp. 61–62. Many of his films were released in a VHS compilation in 1995, and as a DVD compilation in 2009.Odile Tremblay, "Treize films du cinéaste québécois passionné d'art disponibles sur DVD". Le Devoir, January 5, 2009.
8, 1992) : Section C-9 Her work is compared to that of Willem De Kooning, Jean-Paul Riopelle Cron, Marie-Michele. Catherine Everett, Lise Landry; A l'Ouest, rien de nouveau, Le Devoir, (March 23, 1985) : pp. 31 and Anselm Kiefer.Aquin, Stephane.
Le Devoir, October 6, 2018. before releasing her debut album Sous les arbres in 2011.Ralph Boncy, "Salomé Leclerc – Sous les arbres". L'actualité, November 2, 2011. She received a SOCAN Songwriting Prize nomination in 2012 for the song "Dans la prairie".
Monique Miller, (born 9 December 1933) is a French Canadian actress. She is known for her live theatre performances,"Monique Miller, à toutes les aubes". Le Devoir, Odile Tremblay. 5 May 2018 and also performs in films and on television.
Le Devoir, February 1, 2012. Barbeau won the award for costume design. At the Shanghai International Film Festival in 2012, the film won the Golden Goblet Jury Grand Prix."Pour l'amour de Dieu de Micheline Lanctôt honoré au Festival de Shanghai".
Croft has led writing workshops for people from various professions; she also established Les Ateliers d'écriture Esther Croft. She has written for various periodicals such as Châtelaine, La revue de la nouvelle, Arcade, XYZ, Le Devoir and La parole métèque.
This station is named for Henri Bourassa Blvd. which in turn is named for Henri Bourassa (1868-1952), a journalist and politician, who served in municipal, provincial, and federal governments, but is best known for founding the newspaper Le Devoir in 1910.
Lund: Bokförlaget Prisma, 1977. p. 145. Hassen Saadaoui was the chairman of USTT.Mouvement Ettajadid. Devoir de mémoire et appel pour la sauvegarde d’un patrimoine syndical pluriel - Hassen Saadaoui In September 1956 USTT dissolved itself, and called upon its members to join the UGTT.
He was president-director general of the Fonds de solidarité des travailleurs du Québec (FTQ), a major union fund, between 1997 and 2001. He was also part of the administration of Montreal newspaper Le Devoir and member of Montreal's Chamber of Commerce.
In 2014, Dickner and Dominique Fortier published Révolutions, a collaborative project for which they each wrote a short piece each day for a year based on a word chosen from the French Republican Calendar."Un mot, un jour". Le Devoir, September 20, 2014.
His first book of poetry, Nœud coulant, won the Prix Émile-Nelligan,"Le prix Nelligan à Michaël Trahan". Le Devoir, May 6, 2014. the Prix Alain-Grandbois"Les lauréats des prix de l’Académie des lettres du Québec". Les Libraires, October 12, 2014.
"En bref - Tournage d'À l'origine d'un cri". Le Devoir, June 3, 2009. The film premiered on September 10, 2010 at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival,Jason MacNeil, "Toronto festival to feature string of world premieres". London Free Press, August 11, 2010.
De synthèse won the Prix Jacques-Brossard in 2018."Le prix Jacques-Brossard remis à Karoline Georges". Le Devoir, May 5, 2018. It was selected for the 2019 edition of Le Combat des livres, where it was defended by broadcaster Manal Drissi.
Le Devoir, March 3, 2017. López has also composed for documentary films, and was nominated at the Prix Gémeaux for best original score for his work on the documentary program Esperanza."Three SOCAN composers honoured at 2012 Gémeaux Awards". SOCAN, September 18, 2012.
TFO, March 2, 2017. Following "Notre place", Demers returned to touring, both as a solo artist and with musicians Robert Paquette and Marcel Aymar in the group Paquette-Aymar- Demers,«Notre place», nous l’avons prise en chantant. Le Devoir, November 5, 2016.
Accessed through Collections Canada. In 1979 Ellard was chosen to head the Music Department at the Université de Sherbrooke."Dix ans de présence musicale en Estrie". Le Devoir, Madeleine Leblanc, 19 October 2002 In 1981 he founded Le Chœur symphonique de Sherbrooke.
Le Devoir, March 3, 2018. The film premiered at the Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma in 2018, and was broadcast on television by Ici Radio-Canada Télé in April 2019.Helen Faradji, "Isla Blanca en quelques pages". Ici Radio-Canada, April 23, 2019.
Prior to his career in politics, Houde worked as a physical education teacher. Following his defeat in the 1976 election, he joined Le Devoir as a sportswriter, and later hosted sports and health programming for both Télévision de Radio-Canada and TVA.
Rose also remained unrepentant. In an interview he gave to Le Devoir, he said: :I regret nothing: 1970, the abductions, the prison, the suffering, nothing. I did what I had to do. Placed before the same circumstances today, I would do exactly the same thing.
On November 3, 2017, Loud released his first full-length album titled Une année record."Loud présente «Une année record»: l’instinct du rappeur". Le Devoir, November 3, 2017. The success of this album led to Loud's first concert in France to a sold-out venue.
Christian Guay-Poliquin (born 1982) is a Canadian novelist from Quebec."Christian Guay-Poliquin, l’hiver de force". Le Devoir, September, 2016. His second novel, Le Poids de la neige, won the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction at the 2017 Governor General's Awards.
He worked in a bookstore before becoming a journalist, first for Le Devoir, and then for Cité Libre, for which he later became the director. as cited in Vallières, White Niggers of America, p. 120. He then went to cover international news for La Presse.
In December 2018, some of its founding members were shown to have ties to American white nationalist and anti-immigrant groups. The party later told Le Devoir that they did not have enough resources to vet them at the beginning of the PPC's formation.
After some negotiation, Le Devoir published a letter from Raël condemning the charge as "ignominious defamation" and asserting that the Raëlian Movement had "always condemned pedophilia and promoted respect for laws that justly forbid the practices that are always the fault of unbalanced individuals".
Chinatown also recorded their own version of "Retour à Vega" on their second album."Chinatown: exploser en 3D". Le Devoir, April 27, 2012. Chinatown released their debut EP, L'amour, le rêve et le whisky, in 2007 on the Tacca Musique label,"Chinatown, invasion chinoise".
In 2001, he received the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society's Prix Patriote de l'année for his lifetime of work in support of the sovereigntist cause.Marcel Henry, "Jean- Marie Cossette (1928–2007) - Racines profondes et larges horizons", Le Devoir, 19 September 2010, accessed 5 May 2013.
She writes a weekly article on Quebec affairs for the Canadian daily newspaper The Globe and Mail, as well as monthly articles for the magazines L'actualité and Montreal Magazine. In 1990, she returned to Le Devoir, where she served as editor-in-chief until 1998.
Champagne argued that this arrangement devalued both paid and voluntary work, adding that the government should concentrate on providing real job opportunities.Damien Gagnon, "Travail non rémunéré pour les assistés," Le Soleil, 13 August 1993, A5; Danny Vear, "Le bénévolat des assistés sociaux serait une idée «simpliste»," Le Devoir, 13 August 1993, A2. In the same year, she criticized the government's cutbacks to literacy programs."Rattrapage scolaire," Le Soleil, 25 September 1993, A14. Champagne supported the sovereignty option in the 1995 Quebec referendum.Michel Venne, "Le OUI des exclus," Le Devoir, 11 October 1995, A8; Caroline Montpetit, "Des groupes populaires pour le OUI," Le Soleill, 11 October 1995, A4.
Bernard Descôteaux (born 1947 in Quebec, Canada) is a Québécois journalist. He was the 8th editor-in-chief of the Montreal-based newspaper Le Devoir, a post he occupied from 1999.Les cahiers du journalisme. Centre de recherche, École supérieure de journalisme de Lille, Département d'information et de communication, Université Laval- Page 36 "Bernard Descôteaux Dans un style sans doute plus sobre que certains de ses illustres prédécesseurs, Bernard Descôteaux explique dès son arrivée à la tête du journal, en mars 1999, que l'indépendance du Devoir fait quasiment figure ..." Under his leadership, the newspaper recorded profits and increased its circulation, in contrast to much of the rest of the sector.
She has received accolades from the New York Times, Le Monde, The Washington Post, Le Devoir, and has been featured in ARTnews, American Craft Magazine, ETC, Parachute, Canadian Art, C Magazine, Monopol, and ESSE. In 2012, she became a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.
"Governor General Literary Awards announced: Joel Thomas Hynes wins top English fiction prize". CBC News, November 1, 2017. Guay-Poliquin was born in Saint-Armand, Quebec. The novel also won the 2017 Prix des collégiens"Christian Guay- Poliquin rallie les collégiens"Le Devoir, April 7, 2017.
Odile Tremblay, "Domination musclée de Louis Cyr aux nominations des Jutra". Le Devoir, January 28, 2014. She has also appeared in the films Ville- Marie and The Decline (Jusqu'au déclin), the television series Unité 9, Les Argonautes, Trauma and 19-2, and the web series Féminin/Féminin.
The 12th Jutra Awards were held on March 28, 2010 to honour films made with the participation of the Quebec film industry in 2009."12e Soirée des Jutra - J'ai tué ma mère, sacré meilleur film". Le Devoir, March 29, 2010. The nominees were announced on February 16.
Hayder is a 20-year-old from Quebec, Canada. His secret is that he has a bullet in both his head and neck, as a result of being shot at during the 2006 Dawson College shooting.Le Devoir, 2 November 2006. (French.) Last checked: 11 July 2008.
"Cargnello's passion for fatherhood; 'Just because we get older and have kids doesn't mean we have to become lame,' singer/songwriter says". Montreal Gazette, September 25, 2012. Papa Paul also included two songs in Haitian Creole,"Leçons de vie pour fiston". Le Devoir, September 7, 2012.
It was released in collaboration with the magazine L'Itinéraire. Profits from the album have gone towards the fight against poverty in Montreal."Intense Cité Paul Cargnello". Le Devoir, December 15, 2017 MTL RnB is a bilingual musical project conceived by Cargnello, released digitally in May 2018.
"Sol Zanetti est le nouveau chef d'Option nationale". Le Devoir, October 27, 2013. A candidate for the party in the 2012 provincial election, Zanetti won the party's leadership on October 26, 2013, winning 67 per cent of the leadership vote against musician and activist Nic Payne.
"Les Soeurs Boulay au Club Soda: pareilles, pas pareilles". Le Devoir, Sylvain Cormier, 10 November 2017 In late 2017 the sisters took a break from touring because of Mélanie's pregnancy."Les sœurs Boulay annulent tous leurs spectacles d’ici les Fêtes". CBC Radio-Canada, 21 November 2017.
Decades later, Filion credited Duplessis as being a boon to his career. Without having the Premier as an opponent, Filion doubted he ever would have published such excellent work during his time with Le Devoir. After Duplessis’ death in 1959, Filion continued pushing to modernize Quebec.
He released his debut album, Plume, in 2011,"La Plume sensible de Karim Ouellet". Le Devoir, February 4, 2011. and was the second-place finisher in that year's Francouvertes competition. He has toured extensively, including appearances at the Francofolies de La Rochelle, Osheaga and SXSW festivals.
CKLM initially ignored that order, but early on July 20, 1994, the station's transmitter was apparently hit by lightning and CKLM went off the air.Daniel Lemay. "CKLM 1570 a quitté les ondes", La Presse, July 22, 1994."En bref... CKLM n'est plus", Le Devoir, July 23, 1994.
"Julie Perron, semer la suite du monde". Le Devoir, May 3, 2014. Geoffroy Beauchemin, Alex Margineanu, Sami Mermer and Francois Vincelette received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Cinematography in a Documentary at the 3rd Canadian Screen Awards in 2015."Prix Écrans canadiens: Mommy 13 fois finaliste".
She went on to study drawing, painting and sculpture at the École des beaux-arts de Montréal. In 1950, she married Gaston de Lamirande. De Lamirande published her first novel Aldébaran ou la fleur in 1968. She contributed to Le Devoir, the Journal of Canadian Fiction, and Le Droit.
Marchessault contributed as a journalist to publications such as Le Devoir, Châtelaine, La Vie en rose, La Nouvelle barre du jour, Fireweed and 13 Moon. She co-founded the publishing house Squawtach Press, and was a lecturer in the theater department at the Université du Québec à Montréal.
Jeanne Leblanc (born September 27, 1978) is a Canadian film director and screenwriter from Quebec,François Lévesque, "Jeanne Leblanc, une petite ville, ici ou ailleurs". Le Devoir, February 21, 2020. whose full-length directoral debut Isla Blanca was released in 2018.François Lévesque, "«Isla Blanca»: Mathilde est revenue".
In 2000, the Government of Canada honored him with a postage stamp. His semi- autobiographical novel Pieds nus dans l'aube was adapted by his son, filmmaker Francis Leclerc, as the 2017 film Barefoot at Dawn."«Pieds nus dans l’aube» — La poésie de l’enfance". Le Devoir, October 21, 2017.
La Presse, May 31, 2013. and for the play Le journal d'Anne Frank."Le journal d’Anne Frank, Jorane". Le Devoir, Geneviève Tremblay, January 30, 2015 In 2019 she performed as part of the festival Santa Teresa near Montreal.Philippe Rezzonico, "Santa Teresa : MGMT, Jorane et Hubert Lenoir au tableau d’honneur".
"Nicolas Dickner et Fabien Cloutier parmi les lauréats". Le Devoir, October 29, 2015. He was previously shortlisted for the same award at the 2012 Governor General's Awards, and won the Prix Gratien-Gélinas in 2011, for Billy (Les jours de hurlement)."Quebec playwright on the verge of a breakthrough".
In the essay Les luttes fécondes. Libérer le désir en amour et en politique, she defends polyamory, which she herself practices, and discusses the revolutionary potential of desire, which, left free, is for her a means of deconstructing institutions.Josée Blanchette, « Le sexe en grippe ». Le Devoir, June 2, 2017.
He received Quebec's Prix Albert-Tessier for contributions to Quebec cinema in 2002,"Prix Albert-Tessier - L'homme de la cinémathèque: La vie en images de Robert Daudelin". Le Devoir, November 9, 2002. a Special Achievement Genie in 2003,"Genies award 'Ararat' as best movie". canoe.ca, February 14, 2003.
Jacques Giraldeau (July 16, 1927 - February 28, 2015) was a Canadian documentary filmmaker from Quebec,Odile Tremblay, "Scruter le passé avec Jacques Giraldeau". Le Devoir, March 31, 2007. who was known primarily for his films about visual arts and artists.Odile Tremblay, "La mémoire de nos arts visuels s’éteint".
Le Devoir, March 2, 2015. A longtime director, writer and producer for the National Film Board of Canada, he is most noted as the winner in 1996 of the Prix Albert-Tessier, the lifetime achievement award in cinema from the Prix du Québec."Prix et distinctions". Lettres québécoises, Vol.
Le Devoir, October 14, 2017. At the 2016 Governor General's Awards, he was shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for English to French translation for his translation of Yann Martel's novel The High Mountains of Portugal. Born in Maria, Quebec and raised in Rimouski, he currently lives in Vermont.
Le Devoir, Christophe Huss, 4 March 2017. In 1979 she was made a Member of the Order of Canada. In 2003 she was made a Grand Officer of the National Order of Quebec. In 1980 she was awarded a Doctor of Laws, honoris causa degree from Concordia University.
On July 9, 2018, Laverdière announced she would not run for a third term in the 2019 federal election. She told Le Devoir that she was due to turn 64 in 2019, and felt she needed to "pause for a little" and give "new blood" a chance to run.
He appeared as the titular character in the video for Blur's 1996 single, "Charmless Man".YouTube – the charmless man-blur In 2010 he starred in Kim Nguyen's film City of Shadows (La Cité).Odile Tremblay, "Kim Nguyen - Au Sahara quand la cité vacille". Le Devoir, April 3, 2010.
"Babine,ou l'ode à la folie". Le Devoir, October 4, 2007. A lifelong outcast because his mother (Isabel Richer) was believed to be the town witch, he becomes the immediate suspect when the town's church catches fire, killing the parish priest (Julien Poulin)."Babine – Film de Luc Picard".
Cossette became associated with the Quebec independence movement when living in Montreal. During the 1970 October Crisis, he was detained without charge for a period of three weeks.Marcel Henry, "Jean-Marie Cossette (1928–2007) - Racines profondes et larges horizons", Le Devoir, 19 September 2010, accessed 5 May 2013.
"L'Autre Rio". Le Devoir, October 27, 2018. The film premiered in 2017 at the Montreal International Documentary Festival. In 2019, Étienne Roussy received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Cinematography in Documentary at the 7th Canadian Screen Awards."“Anthropocene”, “Amazing Race Canada” among Canadian Screen Award nominees".
"Une victime du devoir", L'Intransigeant, 14 November 1898, p. 3 read online (in French). During World War I, she married her childhood friend, Jean Sabourdin (1890–1918), who died in the front. It was in 1917, with Sabourdin, that she gave birth to her first son, Roger Sabourdin.
In 2005, Robert Lepage optioned the rights to Martin Villeneuve's Mars et Avril photo novels through his Quebec city-based motion picture company, Films Ex æquo (who had already produced The Far Side of the Moon in 2003), with the intent of adapting them into a science fiction feature film. While Villeneuve was to write the script, Lepage was attached to the project as producer and as an actor.Du papier glacé au grand écran, article from Le Devoir, October 17, 2006 A year later, Lepage shut down Films Ex æquo.Robert Lepage ferme sa boîte de production Ex aequo, article from Le Devoir, July 8, 2006 Nevertheless, he strongly encouraged Villeneuve to produce and direct the film himself.
Michel David (born in 1951) has been a Québécois journalist since 1978, and is a columnist for the Montreal, Quebec, Canada, newspaper Le Devoir. David was parliamentary correspondent at the National Assembly of Quebec for Quebec City's Le Soleil from 1980 to 1991 and became President of the press galleryCharest calls inquiry into judicial nominations at the end of the 1980s. From 1994 to 2001, he was a regular contributor to the English-language Montreal paper The Gazette. Now a columnist for the newspaper Le Devoir, he contributes each year to its publication of a bulletin (school report), giving grades to prominent Members of the National Assembly for their work during the year.
The Compagnons du Devoir, full name Compagnons du Devoir et du Tour de France, is a French organization of craftsmen and artisans dating from the Middle Ages. Their traditional, technical education includes taking a tour, the Tour de France, around France and doing apprenticeships with masters. For a young man or young woman today, the Compagnonnage is a traditional mentoring network through which to learn a trade while developing character by experiencing community life and traveling. The community lives in a Compagnon house known as a cayenne and managed by a mère (mother) or maîtresse (mistress), a woman who looks after the well-being of the residents, of which there are more than 80 in France.
On December 5, 2001, after 35 years of service, Lester quit Radio-Canada. Since then, he has written for various newspapers, such as le Devoir. In 2002, TVA hired him as a news commentator. In September 2005, he decided to quit for a similar job at TQS, with Jean-Luc Mongrain.
Le Devoir, January 17, 2018. and a Prix Iris nomination for Revelation of the Year at the 20th Quebec Cinema Awards. She had her first acting role in Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette and André Turpin's 2012 short film Ina Litovski;"Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette : pouvoir briller un peu...". La Presse, August 6, 2012.
"Entrevue avec Michel Langlois et Andrée Lachapelle - Mer et Monde, un échec intéressant". Le Devoir, March 5, 2009. The film first entered development in 1984 as La Traversée, with Léa Pool originally slated to direct. However, she dropped out of the project, and Langlois brought it to French director Paul Vecchiali.
Michel Venne in 2012 Michel Venne (born in 1960) is a Quebec journalist, author and intellectual. He is a columnist for the Montreal newspaper Le Devoir. He is founder and director of the Institut du Nouveau Monde. Venne is a vocal advocate of Quebec independence and of progressive, social democratic politics.
"Ce silence qui tue : documentaire- choc sur les femmes autochtones disparues et assassinées". Ici Radio-Canada Espace Autochtones, March 5, 2018. The film's original French version premiered theatrically at the Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma in 2018,"Femmes autochtones: celles qui meurent et celles qui restent". Le Devoir, February 27, 2018.
The 13th Jutra Awards were held on March 13, 2011 to honour films made with the participation of the Quebec film industry in 2010.Odile Tremblay, "13e gala des Jutra - Incendies: la grande moisson". Le Devoir, March 14, 2011. Nominations were announced on February 9."‘Incendies’ leads Quebec’s Jutra Awards".
"Le Devoir Article" In 2006, the winners were Quebecor Inc. (Large enterprise category), the Caisse populaire Desjardins Group du Mont-Royal (SME category), and Alvin Segal, president and CEO of Vêtements Peerless Clothing Inc. (Arts/Business personality category). A citation of excellence was also presented to the Fasken Martineau law firm.
Amylie Boisclair (born 1982) is a Canadian singer-songwriter from Quebec.Philippe Papineau, "Amylie retourne à l’essentiel". Le Devoir, May 13, 2016. She is most noted for her 2012 album Le Royaume, which was a shortlisted Juno Award nominee for Francophone Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2013.
The film premiered in December 2011 at the Sommets du cinéma d'animation."En bref - Paula ouvrira les 10es Sommets du cinéma d'animation". Le Devoir, October 26, 2011. The film won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Animated Short Film at the 1st Canadian Screen Awards,"Rebelle dominates at Screen Awards".
"Lumière sur les finalistes des Prix littéraires du Gouverneur général". Le Devoir, October 4, 2018. Also in 2018, Bruce Campbell published the book The Lac-Mégantic Rail Disaster: Public Betrayal, Justice Denied. For his work on Lac-Mégantic, Campbell was awarded a Law Foundation of Ontario Community Leadership in Justice Fellowship.
Le Devoir, Yves Hébert 6 January 2015 a work of historical fiction."Le Premier Jardin d'Anne Hébert et La Maison Trestler de Madeleine Ouellette-Michalska". SCL, Volume 27, Number 1 (2002) . Elena Marchese, Université d'Ottawa Her diary, La Tentation de dire, was published in 1985 and broadcast on CBC Radio-Canada.
"La femme en soi". Le Devoir, July 28, 2016. His other plays have included Guide d’éducation sexuelle pour le nouveau millénaire. His play La loi de la gravité was translated into German Das Gesetz der Schwerkraft by Sonja Finck (Gatineau) and performed at the Theaterfestival Primeur in Saarbrücken in 2016.
Le Devoir, October 2, 2019. As an actress she has appeared in the films Miraculum, It's the Heart That Dies Last (C'est le cœur qui meurt en dernier) and Ghost Town Anthology (Répertoire des villes disparues), and the television series Trauma, Karl & Max, Boomerang, Au secours de Béatrice and Les Simone.
Le Devoir, March 29, 2010. and was nominated for Best Supporting Actor at the 15th Jutra Awards in 2013 for his performance as Ji-Guy in Before My Heart Falls (Avant que mon cœur bascule)."Jutra : Laurence anyways et Rebelle en tête des nominations". Ici Radio-Canada, January 31, 2013.
Stéphanie Marin, "Jean-François Beauchemin et Jonathan Safran Foer gagnent les Prix des libraires". Le Devoir, May 15, 2007. La fabrication de l'aube was selected for the 2009 edition of Le Combat des livres, in which it was defended by actor Emmanuel Bilodeau.Chantal Guy, "Un 6e combat des livres sans classiques".
L'Allier was born in Hudson, Montérégie in 1938 and received a law degree from the University of Ottawa. He practised law in the Ottawa and Outaouais regions in the 1960s. He worked for the Montreal newspaper Le Devoir in the 1980s. He was a self-proclaimed Liberal, sovereigntist and social democrat.
Dubois and Biz opted to cast the film in a color-blind way, choosing the best actor for each role regardless of whether they corresponded to their character's stated or presumed racial background in the original novel."«La chute de Sparte»: l’âge des premières fois". Le Devoir, May 26, 2018.
Njock arrived in Montreal (Quebec, Canada) in 1991. Joining the Quebec music scene as Zekuhl, he at first played the guitar,"Disque - I Bolo, Zekuhl". Le Devoir, Yves Bernard, 19 July 2013 and later developed a style which included his diverse African influences. In 1992 he released a self- titled album.
Boutet de Monvel, Violaine (2008) "La destruction comme point de départ à une sémiotique libérée". Paris Art. Couchot, Edmond (2007) Des images du temps et des machines dans les arts et la communication. Éditions Jacqueline Chambon-Actes Sud. Paris Doyon, Frédérique (11 October 2007) "Le septième art de demain" Le Devoir, Montréal.
Daniel Latouche compared the book to Mein Kampf."Le Grand Silence", Le Devoir, March 28, 1992. Nadia Khouri believes that there was a discriminatory undertone in the reaction to Richler, noting that some of his critics characterized him as "not one of us"Richler, Trudeau, "Lasagne et les autres", October 22, 1991.
Martine Audet (born October 15, 1961) is a Canadian poet from Montreal, Quebec."Envoûtante Martine Audet". Le Devoir, September 6, 2014. She is a four-time nominee for the Governor General's Award for French-language poetry, garnering nominations at the 2000 Governor General's Awards for Orbites,"Writing and dreaming in different voices".
Stéphane Larue (born 1983 in Longueuil, Quebec) is a Canadian novelist from Quebec."Stéphane Larue, barman au nom de l’adrénaline et de l’amitié". Le Devoir, August 12, 2017. His debut novel, Le Plongeur, was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction at the 2017 Governor General's Awards.
He has also performed as "Pierre Rival" in the duo Les Freres Rivaux with Damien Robitaille ("Michel Rival").Marie-Christine Blais, "Sunny Duval: soleil, soleil", La Presse, May 22, 2010.Sylvain Cormier, "Coup de coeur francophone - Luc inside", Le Devoir, November 11, 2009. Under his own name he has produced four albums.
Saul Polo is a Canadian politician in Quebec, who was elected to the National Assembly of Quebec in the 2014 election."Le libéral Saul Polo a raison de Léo Bureau-Blouin". Le Devoir, April 8, 2014. He represents the electoral district of Laval-des-Rapides as a member of the Quebec Liberal Party.
Odile Tremblay, "Kim Nguyen - Au Sahara quand la cité vacille". Le Devoir, April 3, 2010. The cast also includes Claude Legault, Pierre Lebeau, Sabine Karsenti, Lotfi Abdelli and Lotfi Dziri. The film was shot in Tunisia in 2008,Nicolas Gendron and Luc Laporte- Rainville, "Kim Nguyen, scénariste et réalisateur de La Cité"].
"Mémoire de tableau". Le Devoir, April 27, 2013. Her film L'héritier, about her grandfather's quest to reclaim art lost by the family to the Nazis during World War II, won a Prix Gémeaux in 2017"La Soirée des artisans et du documentaire des Gémeaux : sortez de l’ombre!". Québec Spot, September 16, 2017.
Lâcher prise is a Canadian television comedy series, which premiered in 2017 on Ici Radio-Canada Télé."Pas de répit pour Valérie". Le Devoir, January 7, 2017. The series stars Sophie Cadieux as Valérie Danault, a single mother struggling to keep it together after suffering burnout in her professional and personal life.
Le Quotidien, October 30, 2018. Lavoie is an independent foreign correspondent whose work has appeared primarily in La Presse and Le Devoir. His book was written about a trip to Cuba that he undertook in 2016 after learning that George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four had been published there for the first time.
He added that it was essential to prove any perpetrators of genocide "had this bigger motivation to destroy the group in whole or in part". Canadian newspaper Le Devoir reported on MacDonald's view that John A. Macdonald, and his government, committed "quasi-genocidal" actions against indigenous peoples in Canada during the 19th century.
At its conclusion, the organization's only project was a dépanneur in Montreal.Mathieu Perreault, "Quand les étudiants jouent les hommes d'affaires... et perdent!" 4 November 1995, A5. He succeeded Jean-Yves Desgagnés as FCPASQ coordinator in 2004.Tommy Chouinard, "Jean-Yves Desgagnés épouse la cause de Françoise David," Le Devoir, 19 August 2004, A4.
In his resignation letter, published by Le Devoir, a left-leaning periodical, he expressed his opinion that the strike movement had raised deeper issues and "questioned corrupt institutions". However, he regretted the fact that Jean Charest was still Premier [of the province of Quebec], saying that his government was "the incarnation of corruption".
In the fall of 2007, Bande à part worked with 27 unsigned hip hop musicians from Quebec to produce the compilation album 93 tours."Hip-hop: 93 tours et puis reviennent". Le Devoir, October 26, 2007. Each of the album's nine tracks features different rappers collaborating with producers Mash, Boogat and DJ Horg.
In Canada, Susan Walker of The Toronto Star assessed the film as "moving, funny, truthful". Martin Bilodeau praised the film in Le Devoir for its ambition and magic. In Exclaim!, Allan Tong praised it as "a funny, infectious ride through Quebecois pop culture of the '60s and '70s", and honest with vitality.
"Lumière sur les finalistes des Prix littéraires du Gouverneur général". Le Devoir, October 4, 2018. She previously published the Zan series of children's books, as well as the novel La jouissance du loup à l'instant de mordre. She was a Green Party of Canada candidate in Hochelaga in the 2015 federal election.
The Saguenay International Short Film Festival () is an annual film festival in Saguenay, Quebec, Canada, which presents a program of short films.François Lévesque, "Regard sur le court métrage au Saguenay - Une édition réussie pour un rendez-vous incontournable". Le Devoir, March 19, 2012. Presented since 1996,"Regard sur le court métrage au Saguenay".
Mylène Bouchard (born 1978) is a Canadian writer from Quebec."Le troisième roman imparfait de Mylène Bouchard". Le Devoir, February 4, 2017. She is most noted for her 2017 novel L'Imparfaite Amitié, which was a shortlisted nominee for the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction at the 2017 Governor General's Awards.
Laplante taught at Université Laval. He became a journalist for Le Devoir, L’Action, Le Jour, Le Droit and Le Soleil. He was also a television and radio presenter, an essayist and the author of 20 books, including detective fiction. He was a member of the Union des écrivaines et des écrivains québécois.
She also wrote for the publications Le Devoir, Jeu and Trois. She has been artist-in-residence at the Art Studio at the Banff Centre, at the Festival des francophonies en Limousin and at the Chartreuse de Villeneuve-lès-Avignon. She has served as president of the Centre des auteurs dramatiques du Québec.
The purpose of the travel venture was, said Napoleon Lafortune, to "extend the 'work' of the newspaper to defend the French language and the Catholic faith, but by other means."Paul Bennett, "Prendre la route avec Le Devoir," 9 January 2010 The unusual service officially lasted from 1924 to 1947, though it effectively ended at the start of World War II when international civilian travel became very difficult. Le Devoir has a relatively low circulation of about 34,000 on weekdays and 58,000 on Saturdays. Its financial situation has often been precarious, and recent years are no exception: in 2002, it had revenues of $14,376,530, with a meager profit of $13,524, while the previous year it had made a small loss.
At the top of every piece of work, pupils used to be asked to write the words 'With My Duty', or in German lessons "Meine beste arbeit" and French lessons "C'est mon devoir" to show their acknowledgment of their duty to themselves, their parents, the school, and to God. This Is rarely done now.
Venne studied communications at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQÀM) and political science at Université Laval, in Quebec City. At Le Devoir, he has been parliamentary correspondent at the National Assembly of Quebec, editor, and news director. He is editor of L'annuaire du Québec, an exhaustive annual publication on Quebec affairs, sold in bookstores.
He first worked at the Government of Quebec and the Quebec Employers Council, then began to write for Le Devoir, La Presse, Quebec City's Le Soleil and Ottawa-Gatineau's Le Droit. He was also contributor for L'actualité, CKAC and the Société Radio-Canada. He died in Bedford, Quebec on August 28, 2008 from throat cancer.
Richard Roy is a Canadian director, actor and screenwriter. He has directed several feature films in French as well as television films and series for the English-language market."Cinéma—Quand tout semblait possible", Le Devoir, April 9, 2011 (in French).Michel Coulombe, "Entretien avec Richard Roy", Ciné- Bulles 101 (1990): 28-31 (in French).
A weekly edition with a different staff was published from February 1977 and January 1978. While other Quebec newspapers would eventually come to be in favour of sovereignty (like Le Devoir), the next one to be specifically devoted to it would be Le Québécois (although different in many regards), founded in 2001 in Quebec City.
She studied art and film at the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi, and art history at the Université du Québec à Montréal. Her debut novel, La Mue de l'hermaphrodite, was published in 2001, and she has since published novels, short stories, poetry and children's literature."Karoline Georges - Forcément sublime". Le Devoir, September 3, 2011.
Gérard Latulippe (born November 5, 1944) is a Canadian diplomat and former politician, currently serving as Canada's high commissioner to Trinidad and Tobago."Gérard Latulippe nommé ambassadeur". Le Devoir, November 24, 2012. Born in Montreal, he studied economics at Sir George Williams University and law at the Université de Montréal and the University of Ottawa.
Its platform called for workers to be given a greater influence in the governing of society.Hubert Bauch, "Chasing votes on the political fringe," Montreal Gazette, 28 March 1981, A25. A 1978 advertisement also indicated that the party was not aligned with existing Marxist-Leninist or Trotskyist groups. See Le Devoir, 25 October 1978, p. 2.
Le Devoir, October 13, 2017. He has also recorded a number of non-album singles as duets with other vocalists, including "Amour, amour" with Monia Chokri,"Monia Chokri et Félix Dyotte reprennent Amour, amour". Voir, November 7, 2016. "Effeuille-moi le cœur" with Kandle"Félix Dyotte et Kandle reprennent (ensemble) une chanson de Françoise Hardy".
With the assistance of the journalist Gérard Filion, he published a series of articles in Le Devoir (from November 1949 to February 1950) where he affirmed that police "protection" encouraged the activities of the underworld. With Jean Drapeau, he took part in the Caron Inquiry, which led to the arrest of several police officers.
Martin Ouellet is a Canadian politician, who was elected to the National Assembly of Quebec in a by-election on November 9, 2015."Le PLQ et le PQ en voie de conserver leurs sièges". Le Devoir, November 9, 2015. He represents the electoral district of René-Lévesque as a member of the Parti Québécois.
Dor undertook a career in radio as a disk jockey and news director. In the 1950s he worked at CHLN in Trois-Rivières."Décès de l’animateur et journaliste André Payette". Le Devoir, Jean-François Nadeau, May 8, 2018 Beginning in 1957, he worked for Radio-Canada where he became a director for the Evening News.
Virginie Blanchette-Doucet (born 1989 in Val-d'Or, Quebec) is a Canadian novelist from Quebec."La faille". Le Devoir, August 27, 2016. Her debut novel, 117 Nord, was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction at the 2017 Governor General's Awards"Finalists named for 2017 Governor General's Literary Awards".
Monique Sauvé is a Canadian politician, who was elected to the National Assembly of Quebec in a by-election on November 9, 2015."Le PLQ et le PQ en voie de conserver leurs sièges". Le Devoir, November 9, 2015. She will represent the electoral district of Fabre as a member of the Quebec Liberal Party.
Jennifer Alleyn Jennifer Alleyn (born 1969) is a Canadian filmmaker, writer and photographer who lives and works in Montreal. The daughter of artist , she was born in Switzerland. She studied film at Concordia University. Alleyn worked as a journalist for the newspapers Le Devoir, Montreal Gazette and La Presse and for Elle Québec magazine.
Marc Bisaillon is a Canadian film director and screenwriter from Quebec."Marc Bisaillon, au-delà du fait divers". Le Devoir, October 29, 2018. He is most noted for his 2018 film With Love (L'Amour), for which he received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay at the 7th Canadian Screen Awards in 2019.
Manic is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Kalina Bertin and released in 2017."La documentariste Kalina Bertin sur les traces d’un père fantôme". Le Devoir, November 13, 2017. The film depicts Bertin's efforts, in response to a family history of bipolar disorder, to investigate parts of her father's prior life in Montserrat that she did not know about.
For La Presse, Marc-André Lussier awarded Family First four stars, calling it a rare great debut for a Quebec director, proclaiming "Wow!" Le Soleils Éric Moreault assessed the film as a poignant exploration of the dysfunctional family, citing Dupuis' direction and Théodore Pellerin's performance. Le Devoir critic Odile Tremblay cited Pellerin and Maude Guérin for their acting.
Alexander Odyssey () is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Pedro Pires and released in 2019.François Lévesque, "Alexandre le fou". Le Devoir, September 21, 2019. The film centres on Alexandre Demard, a man who is at a new crossroads in his life 15 years after first experiencing a mental breakdown which led to his being diagnosed with schizophrenia.
Asselin slapped him in the face, earning him a stay in jail. The imprisonment was notably criticized by Henri Bourassa. From 1902 to 1910, he worked closely with Henri Bourassa and collaborated with him in the founding of Le Devoir in 1910. He was President of the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society of Montreal from 1913 to 1914.
Lévesque, Kathleen, La Corporation professionnelle des médecins serait incapable de protéger le public, Le Devoir, August 5, 1993, page A2 Mulcair was also a board member of the group Conseil de la langue française, and at the time of his appointment to the Office des Professions he had been serving as president of the English speaking Catholic Council.
Le Devoir, November 4, 2016 He released his solo debut album Les Années monsieur in 2008, and followed up with Du plaisir et des bombes in 2012."Keith Kouna: Le voyage sans fin". Voir, February 3, 2015. Following his award win for "Batiscan", he released Le voyage d’hiver, an album which reimagined and reinterpreted Franz Schubert's Winterreise.
Red () is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Maxime Giroux and released in 2005."En bref - Le Rouge au sol à Sundance". Le Devoir, December 9, 2005. The film stars Martin Dubreuil as Christian, a man struggling with alcoholism who opens up about his feelings to his mother (Monique Pion) during a shopping trip to Ikea.
"Separatism killed the Expos". The National Post, October 23, 2002. suicide rates in Quebec and has affected tourism in the province.David Stonehouse, "Quebec's suicide rate blamed on separatist tension in new book", Ottawa Citizen, September 27, 1999, retrieved September 26, 2006Pierre O'Neill. "Bertrand compare la «dictature» péquiste à celle du IIIe Reich", Le Devoir, December 3, 1997.
Smart, Pat. "Daring to Disagree with Mordecai," Canadian Forum May 1992, p.8. He notably compared some Quebec nationalist writers in the newspaper Le Devoir in the 1930s to Nazi propagandists in Der StürmerHarry M. Bracken, Words Are Not Deeds Praeger Publishers, 1994, p. 63. and criticized the Quebec politician, René Lévesque, before an American audience.
Le Devoir, April 25, 2015. He followed up with the novellas Rosemont de profil in 2013 and Des lames de pierre in 2015. Both Atavismes and Des lames de pierre have been published in English translation, as Atavisms (2015)Pasha Malla, "Too Different and Too Familiar: The Challenge of French-Canadian Literature". The New Yorker, May 26, 2015.
Karoline Georges (born 1970) is a Canadian writer and multidisciplinary artist from Quebec,"Karoline Georges: le culte absolu de l'image". La Presse, December 5, 2017. whose novel De synthèse won the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction at the 2018 Governor General's Awards."Zoom sur les prix du Gouverneur général 2018", Le Devoir, October 30, 2018.
In 2012, Leopold founded AudaCité Montréal, a not-for-profit organization composed of Montréal business leaders ],to mobilize public opinion to support the creation of an iconic bridge to serve as the replacement of the structurally-unsound Champlain Bridge ."Le nouveau pont Champlain - Source de pollution ou symbole mondial du génie montréalais?" Le Devoir. Retrieved 2015-09-09.
"Richler, Trudeau, Lasagne et les autres", October 22, 1991. Le Devoir or that he wasn't a "real Quebecer." Sarah Scott, Geoff Baker, "Richler Doesn't Know Quebec, Belanger Says; Writer 'Doesn't Belong', Chairman of Panel on Quebec's Future Insists", The Gazette, 20 September 1991. Additionally some passages were deliberately misquoted, such as the section about Quebec women being like "sows".
Le Devoir, François Lévesque, 17 September 2011 Brault composed music for the children's television show Passe-Partout. In 1985, an album of songs for the show, Le Noël de Cannelle et Pruneau, was released. The album was remixed and re-released in 2013."L'album «Le Noël de Cannelle et Pruneau» revisité pour le temps des fêtes".
David Paquet is a Canadian playwright, who won the Governor General's Award for French-language drama at the 2010 Governor General's Awards,"Remise des Prix du GG et du Grand Prix du livre de Montréal - L'année des premiers romans". Le Devoir, November 17, 2010. and the Prix Michel-Tremblay,"Quebec playwrights honoured". Montreal Gazette, December 7, 2010.
"Le crash du 7 décembre 1998 face à Baie-Comeau - Le pilote manquait d'expérience", Le Devoir, November 23, 2002 (in French). The crash was one cause for the airline's diminished success, which eventually led to its sale in 2007 to Exact Air."Air Satellite passe aux mains d'Exact Air" , Radio-Canada, August 1, 2007 (in French).
Motifs in both films suggest Masonic imagery; though Méliès was not a Freemason, he appears to have been familiar with some of its visual elements, if only through stage spectaculars in the style of Mozart's The Magic Flute. In addition, Méliès's father was a member of the Compagnons du Devoir, a non- Masonic craftsmen's guild with some initiation rites.
Claude Ryan, (January 26, 1925 - February 9, 2004) was a Canadian journalist and politician. He was the director of the newspaper Le Devoir from 1964 to 1978, leader of the Quebec Liberal Party from 1978 to 1982, National Assembly of Quebec member for Argenteuil from 1979 to 1994 and Minister of Education from 1985 to 1989.
Le Devoir, Paul Cauchon, 19 April 2003 became the most popular recording ever by a Quebec chansonnier,"Another Kind of Explosion in Quebec Talent". McLeans, Jon Ruddy, June 1 1969 winning the Felix Leclerc award at the 1968 Festival du Disques. He wrote another well-known song, "Une boîte à chanson" (A Music Box)."Georges Dor ".
Avec pas d'casque is a folk band from Montreal, Quebec, Canada, composed of members Stéphane Lafleur, Joël Vaudreuil, Nicolas Moussette, and Mathieu Charbonneau. The band's French name literally means "with no helmet" and derives from an expression referring to hockey players who don't wear helmets, popularized by Jean Dion, a Québécois sports journalist for Le Devoir.
Of Paraguayan and Mexican descent,"Boogat: Du Québec à Mexico DF". Huffington Post, February 16, 2016. he was born in Quebec City to immigrant parents and raised in the Beauport borough of the city, then moved to Montreal in 2001 where his career took off."Boogat, le Latino-Québécois qui trace son propre chemin". Le Devoir, February 9, 2013.
During the 1970s, Thériault began contributing to publications such as Lettres québécoises and Le Devoir. She worked as an editor for various magazines including XYZ, Vice & Versa and Liberté. She also worked as a translator and as a literary commentator on radio. In 1987, she founded the publishing house Les Éditions Sans Nom, which mainly produces artist's books.
Daniel Grenier (born 1980) is a Canadian writer from Quebec,"Daniel Grenier: la conquête de l’Amérique". Le Devoir, September 12, 2015. who was a shortlisted nominee for the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction at the 2016 Governor General's Awards for his debut novel, L’année la plus longue."Prix littéraires du gouverneur général: les finalistes sont connus".
She also contributed to various publications including Le Devoir. In 1984, she was elected president of the Association des éditeurs de périodiques culturels québécois. In 1993, she was elected to the for her contributions to French language literature. In 2000, she became a member of the Académie des lettres du Québec and the Royal Society of Canada.
Alexis Martin (born June 9, 1964 in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian actor and writer."Alexis Martin, acteur malgré lui d’un mauvais film policier". Le Devoir, April 28, 2012. A 1986 graduate of the Conservatoire d'art dramatique de Montréal, he has acted in film, television and stage productions, and has written both theatrical plays and film screenplays.
Several videos posted to YouTube have captured footage of the inside and rooftops of the building. An article written by Bernard Lamarche in Le Devoir in May, 2005, described the interior of the building as being in a state of deep disrepair. Lamarche described the building having a pungent smell, with empty cans of spray paint and broken glass littering the floors.
He was also the president of the comité des textes fondamentaux, responsible for drafting fundamental text for the 2010 Constitution of Niger. In 2011, Gazibo was named a Grand officier of the Order of the Niger. Gazibo has been interviewed, or his work has been covered, in media outlets including Jeune Afrique, AllAfrica, Radio France Internationale, Le Devoir, and Agence Ecofin.
French, like some other Romance languages, does not have a grammatically distinct class of modal auxiliary verbs; instead, it expresses modality using conjugated verbs followed by infinitives: for example, pouvoir "to be able" (Je peux aller, "I can go"), devoir "to have an obligation" (Je dois aller, "I must go"), and vouloir "to want" (Je veux aller "I want to go").
Mélisande [électrotrad] is a Canadian folk music group, who perform a contemporary spin on traditional Québécois folk music."Melisande (electrotrad): Les Metamorphoses". PopMatters, May 6, 2015."Mélisande (électrotrad)". Le Devoir, Yves Bernard, 13 December 2014 The group's core members are Alexandre « Moulin » de Grosbois-Garand and Mélisande Gélinas- Fauteux, a married couple from Beloeil, Quebec,"La Grande Rencontre: trad de famille".
Di Ciocco was re-elected in the 1982 municipal general election, and the party won nine out of twelve seats.Le Devoir, 8 November 1982, p. 1. Di Coccio died in 1984, at which time the party split into two factions. Raymond Renaud formed the Ralliement de Saint-Léonard party, while his rival Dominic Moschella formed Action civique de Saint-Léonard.
Roger Dorsinville (March 11, 1911 - January 12, 1992) was a Haitian poet, journalist, novelist, politician, and diplomat. Born in Port-au-Prince, Dorsinville attended military school before serving as the Minister of Public Health and ambassador to Venezuela. Some of his most notable works are Barrières (1946), Pour Célébrer la Terre (1954), Le Grand Devoir (1962), and Toussaint Louverture (1965).
On May 1, 1973, Antonio Mucci, a Montreal Mafia member, fired three times at him in the offices of Le Devoir. One shot hit him in the arm. He was back at work two months later. Charbonneau first entered politics in 1976 when he was elected in Vercheres and the Parti Québécois, led by René Lévesque defeated Robert Bourassa's Liberals during that election.
"L'entrevue - La télé réalité". Le Devoir, February 3, 2003. Following that show's conclusion in 2004, he created the sequel series Un monde à part. Cover Girl debuted in 2005,"Cover Girl is no reality show". Montreal Gazette, January 8, 2005. Les Hauts et les bas de Sophie Paquin in 2006,"Highs and lows on new show". Montreal Gazette, October 7, 2006.
Linguists tend to eschew this term, but historically some have reserved the term joual for the variant of Quebec French spoken in Montreal.Gilles Lefebvre, «Faut-il miser sur le joual?» Le Devoir 1965, 30 octobre; «L'étude de la culture: la linguistique.» Recherche sociographiques 3:1–2.233–249, 1962; Henri Wittmann, 1973. «Le joual, c'est-tu un créole?» La Linguistique 1973, 9:2.83–93.
Born in Maria, Quebec, he published two books of poetry in the 1960s before publishing his debut short story collection Quand la voile faseille in 1980."Noël Audet et la langue québécoise". Le Devoir, January 13, 2006. L'Ombre de l'épervier, his most successful novel, was published in 1988 and was adapted into a television series for Télévision de Radio-Canada in 1998.
Sara Mishara is an American-Canadian cinematographer,"Sara Mishara au RVQC: complice de la lumière". Le Devoir, February 26, 2019. who won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Cinematography at the 7th Canadian Screen Awards, for her work on the film The Great Darkened Days (La grande noirceur)."Cinq prix Écrans canadiens à La grande noirceur". La Presse, March 31, 2019.
Jovette Marchessault () (February 9, 1938 – December 31, 2012)"Jovette Marchessault, écrivaine et artiste, est décédée à l'âge de 74 ans". Le Devoir, January 2, 2013. was a Canadian writer and artist from Quebec, who worked in a variety of literary and artistic domains including novels, poetry, drama, painting and sculpture. An important pioneer of lesbian and feminist literature and art in Canada,W.
Jeanne Coriveau, Le CEPSUM sera rajeuni au coût de 12 millions, Le Devoir (in French) These important renovations were completed at the beginning of 2011.Le CEPSUM fait peau neuve (in French) The CEPSUM also accommodates the Sports Medicine departmentClinique de médecine du sport (in French) and the clinic of kinesiologyClinique de kinésiologie (in French) of the Université of Montréal.
In 2013, the newspaper dropped from weekly to biweekly publication."Le Voir devient bimensuel". Le Devoir, May 15, 2013. On April 29, 2015, it was announced that all shares owned by Paquet were purchased by a group of buyers composed of XPND Capital, a Quebec-based private equity firm, and two members of Voir's management team, Michel Fortin and Hugues Mailhot.
Boubacar Boris Diop is a writer. His book Murambi, le livre des ossements was written for the Rwanda: écrire par devoir de mémoire [Rwanda: write out of a duty to remember] initiative of 1998. He is the author of Doomi Golo, a novel entirely in Wolof. He also writes for the cinema and theatre and contributes to numerous publications, including ' and Chimurenga.
In 2018, writer Anne-Marie Saint- Cerny published the book Mégantic: Une tragédie annoncée,"De Wall Street à Lac-Mégantic, enquête sur la tragédie du 6 juillet 2013". Le Devoir, June 16, 2018. an examination of the disaster. The book was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for French-language non-fiction at the 2018 Governor General's Awards.
Le Devoir, February 22, 2010. He served in the cabinet of premier Robert Bourassa from 1985 to 1987 as solicitor general. He did not run for reelection to the legislature in the 1989 provincial election, but was appointed as Quebec's provincial delegate general to Mexico. He served in that role until 1994, when he was appointed as the provincial delegate general in Brussels.
"Paul dans le bayou". Le Devoir, April 11, 2009. He was a shortlisted nominee for the 2009 Echo Songwriting Prize in the francophone category for the album's title track,"En écoute libre: Paul Cargnello – The Hardest Part is You May Never Know". Voir, November 17, 2014. and for Francophone Songwriter of the Year at the 5th Canadian Folk Music Awards.
In 1973, Beausoleil moved to Longueuil to teach at Cégep Édouard-Montpetit. He was Director of the magazine Lèvres Urbaine, and he also wrote in Estuaire, Europe, and The American Poetry Review. He had a poetry column in the newspaper Le Devoir from 1978 to 1985. In 1991, Beausoleil won the Prix littéraires du Journal de Montréal for Une certain fin de siècle.
Coulon attended the Université de Montréal and obtained a diploma in political sciences. He later became a columnist and journalist for Montreal newspaper Le Devoir and was in charge of the international news section. He worked as a journalist between 1985 and 1999 and later wrote opinions at La Presse.Jocelyn Coulon He was also director of monthly revue Aéromag from 1981 to 1984.
In September 2011, the NFB and the Montreal French-language daily Le Devoir announced that they would jointly host three interactive essays on their websites, ONF.ca and ledevoir.com. The NFB is a partner with China's ifeng.com on NFB Zone, the first Canadian-branded web channel in China, with 130 NFB animated shorts and documentary films available on the company's digital platforms.
Royer was a literary critic for the daily newspaper Le Devoir from 1971 to 1982. He was President of Académie des lettres du Québec from 1998 to 2004. Royer's writings are kept in the archives of The National Library and Archives of Quebec. In 1989, he was awarded Prix Alain-Grandbois, and in 2014, he received the Prix Athanase-David.
Guillaume de Fontenay (born March 6, 1969) is a Canadian film director and screenwriter from Montreal, Quebec.François Lévesque, "Guillaume de Fontenay, souvenirs de Sarajevo". Le Devoir, November 22, 2019. He is most noted for his feature film debut Sympathy for the Devil (Sympathie pour le diable), which received three Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 8th Canadian Screen Awards in 2020.
Jean-François Beauchemin (born 1960 in Drummondville, Quebec) is a Canadian writer from Quebec.Danielle Laurin, "Jean-François Beauchemin: allons vers l'Homme". Le Devoir, December 14, 2013. He is most noted as a two-time nominee for the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction, receiving nominations at the 2008 Governor General's Awards for Ceci est mon corps"Governor General's Literary Awards Nominees".
She became a writer for television with a series of successful soap operas. She founded the television production company Focus, with whom she first conceived the documentary series "Les quatre chevaliers de l'apocalypse" and "Femmes" and other fiction series, as a producer or author. In 2004, Payette began writing columns for the Journal de Montreal. In 2007, she switched to Le Devoir.
Le Devoir, February 8, 2017. and won the Echo Songwriting Prize in the French division in 2012 for his song "St-Eustache". He received another Juno Award nomination for Francophone Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2020, for his 2019 album La nuit des longs couteaux.Melody Lau, "Alessia Cara and Tory Lanez lead the 2020 Juno nominations".
Catherine Lalonde (born 1974) is a Quebec poet and journalist. She was born in Montreal and studied theatre and contemporary dance. At the age of 16, she published her first collection of poems Jeux de brume. She has worked in media and communications, as a physical trainer and has written for Le Devoir, Le Libraire, Livre d'Ici and Entre les lignes.
Jacques Fauteux (January 29, 1933 – June 30, 2009) was a Canadian radio and television announcer and presenter, best known for his work with Télévision de Radio-Canada."Décès de l'animateur Jacques Fauteux". Le Devoir, July 2, 2009. Over the course of his career, he was seen on programs such as Appelez-moi Lise, Point de mire, Le Téléjournal and Tous pour un.
Henriette Dessaulles (February 6, 1860 – November 17, 1946), also known by the pen name Fadette, was a Canadian journalist and diarist from Quebec."De remarquables oubliés: Henriette Dessaulles". Première Chaîne, November 13, 2007. An important pioneer of women's writing in Quebec, she is best known for her longtime column in Le Devoir and for her childhood diaries which were posthumously published in 1971.
Le Devoir, April 6, 2007. In 2006, he founded the second iteration of the Rhinoceros Party, the successor to the historical Rhinoceros Party dissolved in 1993. As the party's candidate in the September 17, 2007 federal by-election in Outremont, he listed his profession as poetHistory of Federal Ridings since 1867 on his nomination papers. He received 145 votes (0.61%).
Le Devoir, October 13, 2012. and his 2012 novel La fiancée américaine was a competing title in the 2013 edition of the program;"Le Combat des livres kicks off with talk of independence and throwing books". Montreal Gazette, March 18, 2013. the latter novel's English translation, Songs for the Cold of Heart, was shortlisted for the 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize.
Marianne Apostolides is a Canadian novelist and memoirist."Écriture-thérapie, fiction ou vérité vraie?". Le Devoir, March 28, 2015. She is best known for her 2009 novel Swim, whose French-language translation by Madeleine Stratford was shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for English to French translation at the 2016 Governor General's Awards,"Des auteurs de la région finalistes pour les Prix littéraires du gouverneur général".
Deschamps worked as an insurance broker in private life."Who is running for seats on eight school boards," Montreal Gazette, 14 November 1986, H16. He was elected as a commissioner for the MCSC's tenth ward in the 1977 school board elections, as a candidate of the conservative Movement scolaire confessionnel (MSC),Le Devoir, 7 June 1977, p. 3; Montreal Star, 14 June 1977, A10.
The film received six Jutra Award nominations at the 14th Jutra Awards in 2012, for Best Actor (Perreault), Best Actress (Le Breton), Best Supporting Actor (Papineau), Best Costume Design (Ginette Magny), Best Hair (Martin Lapointe) and Best Makeup (Diane Simard).Odile Tremblay, "Monsieur Lazhar, Coteau rouge et Café de Flore dominent la course à la 14e Soirée des Jutra". Le Devoir, February 1, 2012.
Parent was secretary and vice-chair of the Montreal Catholic School Commission's Regional Advisory Committee of Parents from 1970 to 1972.Marcel Parent, National Assembly of Quebec, accessed 9 October 2017. He sought election to the commission in the first direct elections for commissioners in 1973 with the combined endorsement of Mouvement scolaire confessionnel and Les parents solidaires, but was defeated.Le Devoir, 19 June 1973, p. 6.
"Littérature - Les noms des finalistes aux Prix du Gouverneur général sont dévoilés". Le Devoir, October 3, 2012. Born in Cotonou, Benin, Assani-Razaki first moved to North America in 1999, to study computer science at the University of North Carolina. After graduating in 2002, he struggled to find a job until registering for a master's in computer science at the Université de Montréal in 2004.
Di Ciocco was re-elected in the 1982 municipal election, in the course of which his Équipe du renouveau de la cité de Saint-Léonard won nine out of twelve seats on council.Le Devoir, 8 November 1982, p. 1. He was the target of a car bombing in 1983, an act that he described as political intimidation. No one was inside the vehicle at the time.
Rickard apparently told a reporter that the "H" on the Canadiens' sweaters was for "Habitants". In French, the "Habitants" nickname dates back to at least 1914, when it was printed in Le Devoir to report a 9–3 win over Toronto on the 9th of February. Team uniforms The team's colours since 1911 are blue, red, and white. The home sweater is predominantly red in colour.
Xalko is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Sami Mermer and Hind Benchekroun and released in 2018.André Lavoie, "«Xalko»: partir pour un morceau de pain". Le Devoir, October 25, 2019. The film profiles Mermer's own birthplace of Xalko, a Kurdish village in Turkey where the women are preserving Kurdish tradition after most of the men have left as refugees from the Kurdish–Turkish conflict.
Noël Audet (December 23, 1938 – December 29, 2005) was a Canadian novelist and poet from Quebec."Décès du poète et romancier Noël Audet". Le Devoir, January 4, 2006. He is most noted as a two-time nominee for the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction, receiving nominations at the 1981 Governor General's Awards for Ah, l'amour l'amour,"Governor General's finalists announced". Montreal Gazette, April 24, 1982.
He released his debut EP as a solo recording artist in 2016, and followed up with his full-length debut album Apu Peikussiaku in 2017."Shauit et Matiu à Coup de coeur francophone: du reggae innu et du folk bipolaire". Le Devoir, November 7, 2017. In 2018 he won an Indigenous Music Award for Best Indigenous-Language Album,"Shauit remporte un prix aux Indigenous Music Awards".
Le Devoir, March 3, 2018. She previously directed the short films Sortie de secours (2002), Le temps des récoltes (2009), One Night with You [Une nuit avec toi] (2011), Sullivan's Applicant (2012) and Carla en 10 secondes (2016). Her second feature film, Our Own (Les Nôtres), premiered at the Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma in 2020."Le suspense «Les nôtres» lancera les prochains Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma".
The provincial government of Premier Jean Charest appointed Bazin as mediator, to help resolve the dispute."L'ancien sénateur conservateur Jean Bazin est appelé en renfort - Un médiateur tentera de ramener la paix à Kanesatake," Le Devoir, January 29, 2004."Ex-senator to help resolve crisis at Kanesatake", Globe and Mail, January 29, 2004. Bazin has been on the board of directors of a number of bodies.
We Are Gold () is a Canadian drama film, directed by Éric Morin and released in 2019."«Nous sommes Gold»: riche filon". Le Devoir, March 30, 2019. The film stars Monia Chokri as Marianne, a successful indie rock musician returning to her hometown in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region of Quebec for the first time since the death of her parents in a mining accident ten years earlier.
Robert Caron is a sociologist and former labour leader in the Canadian province of Quebec.Marc-André Côté, "Une entrevue avec Robert Caron: Pour des États généraux du syndicalisme," Le Devoir,29 April 2000, E8. He served two terms as president of the Syndicat des professionnels du government du Quebec (SPGQ) and ran for provincial office in 2003 as a candidate of the Parti Québécois (PQ).
He obtained the Doctorat d'État from La Sorbonne and was featured in the pages of Paris Match. He made enemies with his political writing and general exploration. There was still resistance to open-mindedness among the clergy who ran the university. A Le Devoir editorial criticized the university for not recognizing Pierre Trudeau's value; after Décarie complained to the rector of the university, Trudeau was hired.
Carmen Juneau (August 25, 1934 – June 18, 1999) was a Canadian politician, who served in the National Assembly of Quebec from 1981 to 1994 and as mayor of Windsor, Quebec from 1995 until her death in 1999."Des maires morts en fonction". Le Devoir, August 25, 2007. In provincial politics, she represented the electoral district of Johnson as a member of the Parti Québécois.
She was born in Quebec City and studied literature at the Université du Québec à Montréal and the Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail in France. She is literary critic and editor for the literary journal Nuit blanche. She also has contributed to various publications including Le Devoir. Quinn published three collections of poetry: L'émondé (2008), Six heures vingt (2010) and Les damnés inflationnistes' (2012).
Grand-Pré), 1924 Le Devoir began as several other businesses besides the newspaper. These ventures included a general printer and publishing house, a bookstore, and a travel agency. Trips were initially organized to coincide with Catholic congresses around the world, as well as for "pilgrimages", allowing Quebecois to visit the French diaspora across North America. Such trips included Acadia (1924, 1927), Ontario (1925), and Louisiana (1931).
Duplessis' Union Nationale party had long been closely allied to the Catholic Church, but parts of the church would move to support the workers. The population and media of Quebec were sympathetic to the strikers. The lead reporter for Le Devoir was Gérard Pelletier, who was deeply sympathetic to the cause of the workers. Pierre Elliott Trudeau also covered the strike in a sympathetic manner.
Playback, February 7, 2000. and a Genie Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 20th Genie Awards, and his 2009 film Through the Mist (Dédé, à travers les brumes), which received Jutra nominations for both Best Director and Best Screenplay at the 12th Jutra Awards.Odile Tremblay, "Dédé à travers les brumes part favori avec 10 nominations aux 12es Jutra". Le Devoir, February 17, 2010.
The term clerico- nationalism was coined by Paul-André Linteau. Henri Bourassa publicized clerico-nationalist views, as did the editors of his newspaper Le Devoir, and the League des droits du français (League of French Rights). Clerico- nationalist thinking was most thoroughly developed and spread by Lionel Groulx and the Ligue d'Action française (French Action League), which he led. Clerico-nationalism was focused on the past.
Since medieval times, these craftsmen have made a Tour de France as they acquire their knowledge from masters (maîtres) and progress from apprenti to compagnon and perhaps ultimately to maître. To become a master of the Compagnons du Devoir (founded 1347), each must create a masterpiece (chef d'œuvre) which is then judged by a college of masters; the museum contains some of these impressive pieces.
"Visite au pied des murs". Le Devoir, January 11, 2019. Bonfires, a short film which was screened at a number of film festivals before being incorporated into Les murs du désordre, won the Prix Farel for best short film at the Festival international du film à thématique religieuse in Neufchâtel, Switzerland"Un prix Farel pour un court métrage canadien". Présence Info, October 29, 2018.
Convicted killer Bertrand Cantat will not perform in Canada: theatre Mouawad responded to the controversy by publishing an open letter to his three-year-old daughter Aimee in the newspaper Le Devoir, arguing for Cantat's right to complete reintegration into society.Aimee, my little darling/ Aimée, ma petite chérie Since April 2016, Mouawad has been the director of the Théâtre national de la Colline in Paris.
During the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, he helped defend the country. In 1871 Godin was elected deputy for Aisne, but retired in 1876 to devote himself to the management of the Familistère. In 1878 he founded the journal Le Devoir (Labor). In 1880 Godin created the association documents for the Familistère, converting it as he had long intended into a co-operative society, eventually to be owned by the workers.
He was subsequently appointed to the MCSC's executive and was re-elected in 1983."Nouvelle victoire du MSC à la CECM," Le Devoir, 14 June 1983, A1. He served as president from 1983 to 1984, in what appears to have been a contentious time for the board; one source has described his presidency as "raucous."Catherine Solyom, "Ex-MNA flees city hall spats," Montreal Gazette, 29 May 2002, A1.
On 7 December 2016, it was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top 10 list. In La Presse, Nathalie Petrowski wrote the film was unusual, amazing and occasionally shocking, and was long but not dull at any time. Odile Tremblay, writing for Le Devoir, called the film poetic, and said the film received applause at TIFF but was also divisive. Martin Gignac called the film dense and unrestrained, with great cinematography.
"Jorane devant Vigneault, Desjardins, Cohen et les autres". Le Devoir, Yves Bernard, January 26, 2011 The next summer she performed at the Montreal Jazz Festival."Montreal International Jazz Festival 2012: Jorane at Maison Symphonique; June 30, 2012". The Gazette (Montreal), July 1, 2012 Jorane composed the film score for films including Kamataki (2005) and Louis Cyr (2013),"La musique de Jorane couplée à la force de Louis Cyr".
From 1971 till his retirement in 2001 he was a journalism professor at the Université de Moncton. From 1972 to 1987 he wrote a column for the Montreal newspaper "Le Devoir". From 1974 to 1980 he also edited a review published by the Université de Moncton. Later he wrote for the now defunct daily Le Matin and the weeklies Le Voilier and Le Moniteur acadien in Shediac, New Brunswick (1986-1987).
This is the glory of > humanity. This is the good pleasure of God. I ask God for this with a > contrite heart. ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's visit to Montreal provided notable newspaper coverage; on the night of his arrival the editor of the Montreal Daily Star met with him and that newspaper along with The Montreal Gazette, Montreal Standard, Le Devoir and La Presse among others reported on ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's activities.
"Sous l'œil distrait de l'étranger". Le Devoir, March 17, 1997. Unfavourable depictions of Quebec have been made in books such as Bilingual Today, French Tomorrow, as well as political cartoons.Réal Brisson, Oka par la caricature: Deux visions distinctes d'une même crise, Septentrion, 2000, Another example of Quebec bashing is found in pop culture: Don Cherry, a sports commentator on the CBC, has occasionally been accused of Quebec bashing.
In 1997 Lawrence Martin published The Antagonist: Lucien Bouchard and the Politics of Delusion. In it he created a psychobiography of Lucien Bouchard, then premier of Quebec. He described Bouchard as "mystical", and his culture as "most uncanadian".Robert Dutrisac, "Dérapages racistes au Canada anglais", Le Devoir, 24 November 2001 Martin based his book on the psychological analysis of Bouchard made by Dr. Vivian Rakoff, which has been disputed.
Spénard continued as a spokesperson for the FCPASQ in the 1990s. She offered qualified support for minister André Bourbeau's reforms to provincial disabled services in 1992,"Accessoires des paraplégiques et incontinents," Le Soleil, 16 March 1992, A6. but called for his resignation the following year after media reports of new restrictions for social assistance recipients.Christian Leclerc, "Les assistés sociaux demandent la démission de Bourbeau," Le Devoir, 7 April 1993, A2.
United to Boost Senegal (, BSS) is a Senegalese Political coalition, active in the 22 March 2009 Municipal elections in that country.Benno Siggil Senegaal : 2012 vaut mille sacrifices. Mody Niang ARC / Devoir Cityoen 04-04-2009 The coalition is made up of members of a number of parties opposed to President Abdoulaye Wade's ruling Senegalese Democratic Party (Parti Démocratique Sénégalais) and its Sopi Coalition.Govt admits setbacks in Senegal elections.
Odile Tremblay, "Domination musclée de Louis Cyr aux nominations des Jutra". Le Devoir, January 28, 2014. A graduate of the Conservatoire d'art dramatique de Montréal, she has also appeared in the films The Barbarian Invasions (Les Invasions barbares), Nouvelles, nouvelles and Waiting for April (En attendant avril), and the television series Providence, Les Hauts et les bas de Sophie Paquin, Une grenade avec ça?, Trauma and District 31.
Pelletier initially worked as a journalist for Le Devoir, a French-language newspaper in Montreal, Quebec. In 1961 he became editor-in-chief of the Montreal daily and North America's largest French circulating newspaper, La Presse. Pelletier, with other French-Canadian intellectuals, Pierre Elliott Trudeau included, founded the journal Cité Libre. First elected to Parliament in 1965, he served as a member of the cabinet of Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
Le Devoir, November 22, 2019. According to Biron, the film was made with the intention of exploring the life trajectory of the many hockey players who don't make it to the big leagues rather than the relatively few who do. The film held an advance screening event in Montreal on November 18, 2019 before opening in theatres on November 22."Les Barbares de La Malbaie lancent et comptent".
He was mobbed by people who needed medical attention. The following spring he returned to Labrador with two doctors and nurses, where he set up two hospital bases for the Eskimos who populated Labrador. A third hospital was set up at St. Anthony in about 1898. Sir Wilfred Grenfell gave the school permission to use his personal motto, Loyal Devoir, and coat of arms when the house was established.
Alain Joissains va-t-il devoir rembourser son trop gros salaire?, La Provence, 02/11/200 He stepped down after he was accused of being paid too much for his position due to possible cronyism.Yvan Stefanovitch, La caste des 500: enquête sur les princes de la république, Lattès, 2010, p. 290 However, his wife suggested he was paid as much as former assistants to the Mayors of Aix.
Born in Sherbrooke, Quebec, Jean-Benoît Nadeau received a bachelor's degree from McGill University in 1992 where he majored in Political Science and History. He began his journalism career in 1987, as a theatre critic for the Montreal weekly Voir. He is best known as a regular contributor to Canada's national French-language magazine L’actualité. Since September 2014, he also writes a column for the French language Montreal daily Le Devoir.
Playback, February 15, 2015. and at the 6th Canadian Screen Awards in 2018 for We Are the Others (Nous sommes les autres),François Lévesque, "Le Québec brille aux prix Écrans canadiens". Le Devoir, January 17, 2018. and a three-time Quebec Cinema Award nominee for Best Cinematography, receiving nominations at the 15th Jutra Awards in 2013 for The Torrent (Le Torrent),"Jutra : Laurence anyways et Rebelle en tête des nominations".
In 1910 he founded Le Devoir as an outlet for his anti-imperialist Ligue nationaliste and to fight for the rights of French Canadians within Confederation. In its maiden edition, published January 10, 1910, Bourassa explained the name ("the duty" in English) and mission of the newspaper thus: "To ensure the triumph of ideas over appetites, of the public good over partisan interests, there is but one means: awake in the people, and above all in the ruling classes, a sense of public duty in all its forms: religious duty, national duty, civic duty."Avant le combat – Le Devoir Bourassa headed the newspaper until August 3, 1932, when he was replaced by Georges Pelletier. After the death of Pelletier in early 1947, the role of editor-in-chief would pass to Gérard Filion, ex-editor of La Terre de chez nous, under whose reign the paper would publish highly controversial critiques of Maurice Duplessis's government in Quebec by journalists and figures such as André Laurendeau.
Louise Arbour and Louise Otis, two ex- judges joined the project a few days later. However, on June 10, Le Devoir reported that it would seem that it was Shopify, who developed a digital tracking tool called Covid Shield, that the Trudeau government would prefer. On April 14, the McConnel Chair in Research-Creation on the reappropriation of maternity at the Université de Montréal launched a participatory and collective work project called Pregnancy in confinement.
Velton, p. 28. Amadou Hampâté Bâ, Mali's best-known historian, spent much of his life writing these oral traditions down for the world to remember. The best-known novel by a Malian writer is Yambo Ouologuem's Le devoir de violence, which won the 1968 Prix Renaudot but whose legacy was marred by accusations of plagiarism. Other well-known Malian writers include Baba Traoré, Modibo Sounkalo Keita, Massa Makan Diabaté, Moussa Konaté, and Fily Dabo Sissoko.
Designed in an Elizabethan style, the new theater has 190 seats and the atrium 350 seats. In mid- November, when the award was announced, Prime Minister Jean Charest said: "This theater is the future of Dawson College to bring out the best talent in Quebec."Journal Le Devoir, November 11-12, 2006, article "Quebec and Ottawa will pay 8.5 million for a new theater in Dawson", by Marie-Andrée Chouinard, p. A5.
David Clerson (born 1978 in Sherbrooke, Quebec) is a Canadian novelist from Quebec, who won the Grand Prix littéraire Archambault in 2014 for his debut novel Frères."Le Grand Prix littéraire Archambault va à David Clerson". Le Devoir, February 5, 2014. Brothers, the novel's English translation by Katia Grubisic, was published in November 2016 and was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for French to English translation at the 2017 Governor General's Awards.
Libération described the series as philosophical and scatological. Charb also drew the character "Marcel Keuf, le flic" ("Marcel Pig, the cop") in Fluide Glacial.Fabien Deglise (8 January 2015) Mort au combat Le Devoir Charb's column in Charlie Hebdo was titled "Charb n'aime pas les gens" ("Charb does not like people"). One of his regular pieces was the monthly La fatwa de l'Ayatollah Charb (The Fatwa of the Ayatollah Charb) in Fluide Glacial.
He also played in several ensembles for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. From 1965-1969 he wrote record reviews for Jeunesses musicales Chronicle and from 1975-1979 he wrote music criticism for the newspaper Le Devoir. In 1977 he helped establish the Orchestre des jeunes du Québec. He has also hosted or served as interviewer for multiple CBC Radio programs, including Music de chez-nous, Invitation à la musique, and Faisons de la musique.
Yeomans was elected as a councillor in Dorval in the 1978 municipal election, narrowly defeating incumbent Michel Rioux to win a seat in the city's east ward.Rodolphe Morissette, "Quatre nouveaux maires sur l'île de Montréal," Le Devoir, 6 November 1978, pp. 1-3. This source lists Rioux as Yeomans's opponent and incorrectly states that Rioux won the election by 1,449 votes to 1,227. Several other sources indicate that Yeomans was elected to council in 1978.
One of the Guys () is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Doris Buttignol and released in 2018."«Ti-Gars»: le parcours du combattant". Le Devoir, August 25, 2018. The film profiles Vincent Lamarre, a trans man who was one of the first transgender soldiers ever to come out and begin gender transition while actively serving in the Canadian Forces."«Ti-Gars»: le caporal Vincent-Gabriel Lamarre vit sa transition de genre devant les caméras".
Roberto C. López is a Colombian-Canadian composer, musician and producer from Montreal, Quebec, whose style blends Afro-Colombian rhythms such as cumbia, porró, mapalé, chandé, champeta and currulao with urban styles such as funk, jazz, rock and afrobeat."Le Roberto Lopez Project: nouvelles latinités urbaines". Le Devoir, January 25, 2008. He has released albums both under his own name and with the bands Roberto López Project and Roberto López Afro- Colombian Jazz Orchestra.
Radio-Canada, the newspaper Le Devoir and political journal Cité Libre were intellectual forums for critics of the Duplessis government. Prior to the Quiet Revolution, the province's natural resources were developed mainly by foreign investors. As an example, the process of mining iron ore was developed by the US-based Iron Ore Company of Canada. In the spring of 1949, a group of 5,000 asbestos miners went on strike for three months.
Anne-Marie Saint-Cerny is a Canadian writer and political activist from Quebec."De Wall Street à Lac-Mégantic, enquête sur la tragédie du 6 juillet 2013". Le Devoir, June 16, 2018. She is most noted for her 2018 book Mégantic: Une tragédie annoncée, an examination of the Lac-Mégantic rail disaster of 2013, which was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for French-language non-fiction at the 2018 Governor General's Awards.
"En bref: Démission de Jean-Pierre Goyer," Le Devoir, May 23, 2006, Page B 8. Through this litigation and beyond, Rescigno has continued conducting guest engagements in North America, Asia, and Europe while remaining with the Florentine (until 2019). He has also continued tackling new repertory, with such works as Der Rosenkavalier, Falstaff, Idomeneo, La gazzetta, Little Women, Macbeth, Río de Sangre, The Magic Flute, and Tristan und Isolde as well as symphonic works.
She was also co-host for the television program Voix de femmes and then host of Sans détour on CHLT – Sherbrooke. She was also a contributor to the newspapers La Presse, Le Devoir, Montréal-Matin, Le Nouvelliste and La Tribune. In 1946, she founded the Centre Social Claire-Vallée and served as its director until the early 1960s. In 1974, she founded a cultural and educational centre, the Gaudet Bourg Centre, in Aston-Jonction.
Loïc Kauffeisen was born in Roubaix in northern France.Philippe Mollé, "Bienvenue chez le Ch'ti des Laurentides", Le Devoir, 14 March 2009, accessed 21 January 2011. He has a bachelor's degree in business administration from the State University of New York at Buffalo (1993), lived in Gore, Quebec from 2001 to 2008 and later moved to Saint-Jérôme.Mychel Lapointe, "Loïc Kauffeisen avec Québec solidaire," Journal Le Nord, 18 November 2008, accessed 21 January 2011.
Article "The fireworks help the families of the island Goyer", by Gilles Provost, Le Devoir newspaper - notebook 2, March 26, 1976,.]. The floods of 1986, 1993 and 1998 required the use of a shuttle bus allowing the inhabitants of the island to go to the town hall of Carignan to shelter the victims.Article "Municipalities organize", by Martha Gagnon, La Presse newspaper, April 1, 1998, p. 13. This island has several private marinas or wharves.
After the plagiarism controversy over Le devoir de violence, Ouologuem returned to Mali in the late seventies. Until 1984, he was the director of a youth centre in the small town of Sévaré near Mopti in central Mali, where he wrote and edited a series of children's textbooks. He is reputed to have led a secluded Islamic life as a marabout until his death on 14 October 2017 in Sévaré, aged 77.
It centres on "the stories of disappeared women" and "the violence against journalists, union leaders, social rights activists, and priests", primarily through the personal testimonies of surviving friends, colleagues and family members of murder victims.Jérôme Delgado, "«Soleils noirs»: noirceur et rage de vivre". Le Devoir, September 7, 2019. The film premiered at the Montreal International Documentary Festival in November 2018, and received a commercial run in 2019 alongside other film festival screenings.
The late 1960s saw a schism form between the francophones in Quebec, and the other francophone communities of Canada, notably the francophones in Ontario. The emergence of a separate québécois identity during the Quiet Revolution; also resulted in the development of a unique Franco-Ontarian identity, with francophones in Ontario forced to re-conceptualize their identities without relying on francophones in Quebec."La mort présumée du Canada français". Le Devoir, July 17, 2017.
She has also been a cultural journalist for Le Devoir, Elle Québec and La Presse. During this period, she also curated several exhibitions, including L'Empreinte du vide (André Jasinski), Mois de la photo in Montreal, Galerie Clark and Galerie Trois Points (1999); Antidote (lightness at work), and Galerie Plein Sud (1998); Tattoos (Mark Garland), Gallery B-312 (1997) and Louis Muhlstock, The Draftsman / Un dessinateur at the Saidye Bronfman Arts Center (1989).
The lower half was divided vertically, depicting a swallow on a red background and a sunflower on a black background. The swallow was taken from the arms of Gill College and the sunflower from the badge of a local school.'J.P.' 'Onze gemeentewapens' in NUZA (August 1971). The crest was a phoenix issuing from a golden crown, the supporters were a goat and a ram, and the motto was Foy pour devoir.
Legault earned a degree in history and political science and subsequently taught at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQÀM). Before the 1995 Quebec referendum, she published a report on the Charter of the French Language (Bill 101). From 1995 to 1998, she was a columnist for Le Devoir. For the Quebec general election of 1998, she defied the party establishment and ran unsuccessfully for the PQ nomination in the Mercier riding for the Parti Québécois (PQ).
He was a professor at various institutions, including Université Laval and the National University of Rwanda. He wrote for various newspapers including Le Devoir and Le Jour, and various magazines including L'Actualité. He co-wrote various works with Gérard Dion, including the 1956 manifesto L'immoralité politique dans la Province de Québec, a denunciation of "Duplessism". He ran unsuccessfully for the Parti Québécois in Mercier in the 1973 Quebec general election, but won a seat in Chauveau in 1976.
The creation of the new savings account also had positive reviews from several Canadian newspapers including Le Devoir, La Presse, The Globe and Mail and the National Post. Aaron Freeman, policy director for the Environmental Defence, criticized the government for having no clear direction on the environment making reference to the suspension after 2008 of the tax-rebate program on fuel-efficient vehicles but praised the funding for transit and for the protection of consumers from toxins in products.
Canada Reads is an annual "battle of the books" competition organized and broadcast by Canada's public broadcaster, the CBC. The program has aired in two distinct editions, the English-language Canada Reads on CBC Radio One, and the French-language Le Combat des livres on Ici Radio-Canada Première. The English edition has aired each year since 2002, while the French edition aired annually from 2004 to 2014,"Radio-Canada revoit sa «stratégie littéraire»". Le Devoir, March 30, 2015.
Léon Trépanier Léon Trépanier (June 29, 1881 - September 19, 1967) was a Quebec journalist, historian and politician. He was president of the Saint- Jean-Baptiste Society of Montreal from 1925 to 1929. The son of François Trépanier and d'Élise Huard, he was born in Quebec City and was educated at the University of Ottawa. He began his career as a journalist in Montreal at La Presse in 1901 and later worked at La Patrie and Le Devoir.
Caron called for Quebec to adopt "whistle blower" legislation in 1997, wherein Quebec workers could report inappropriate government actions without fear of losing their jobs.Denis Lessard, "Le droit de siffler," La Presse, 23 October 1997, B1. At the end of his second term, he expressed regret at the lack of cooperation between Quebec's larger and independent unions.Marc-André Côté, "Une entrevue avec Robert Caron: Pour des États généraux du syndicalisme," Le Devoir,29 April 2000, E8.
254 his militant activity for independence was limited to writing letters in newspapers on the topic of the hour. He wanted to do much more. He wrote a memoir to the attention of the chancellerie of the Ordre de Jacques Cartier (OJC), a secret organization of which he was a member. In response to Chaput's initiative, Pierre Vigeant, editorialist at Le Devoir and grand chancelier of the OJC, created a study committee on the question of independence of Quebec.
For fifteen years, Demers worked under L'actualité, Châtelaine, and Le Devoir as a journalist, where her contributions earned her the Judith-Jasmin Award in 1987. In 1991, Demers wrote her first novel, a children's novel titled Dominique Picotée. The first of the "Alexis" series, the story of the novel was based on her three children: Simon, Alexis, and Marie. Marie-Tempête was adapted into a television movie in 1998, dubbed Un hiver de tourmente, directed by Bernard Favre.
Two major floods have been reported in the history of the Niagarette River and the Little Niagarette River, in 1939 and in 1973. The waters of the Little Niagarette River rose by almost 4 meters during the night of September 5 to 6, 1973, following a 6 cm rain accumulation.Article "La pluie a causé des dégâts dans la région de Québec" (The rain caused damage in the region de Québec), Le Devoir newspaper, September 8, 1973, p. 27.
Action Montreal ceased operations on April 5, 1994, when Beauchamp announced his resignation from the mayoral contest and gave his support to prospective Vision Montreal candidate Pierre Bourque. Shortly before his resignation, a Le Devoir poll indicated that Beauchamp was in fourth place among declared or likely mayoral candidates.Michelle Lalonde, "Two parties unite to unseat Dore," Montreal Gazette, 6 April 1994, p. 1. Many Action Montreal members later joined either Vision Montreal or the Montrealers' Party.
Allegation of mistreatment of workers on the worksite stirred controversy in early 1954. Reporter Pierre Laporte published a six- part series in Montreal's Le Devoir on the construction of Bersimis-1 in January 1954. In his stories, Laporte reports on the long hours, bad pay and unhealthy working conditions, mismanagement and shady contracting practices. The stories, published a few days after 10 men died in a scaffolding collapse on January 22, 1954, generated heated debates at the Legislature.
When she was ten, she came down with polio, which left her with a weak leg and caused her to miss half a year of schooling. In 1924, at the age of 17, she contracted tuberculosis, which left her with health issues for the rest of her life. Gauvreau attended the University of Montreal for one year (1929-30). In 1930, the newspaper Le Devoir, encouraged by the prominent botanist Marie- Victorin Kirouac, launched a botanical contest.
In the 1930s, Gauvreau became involved with a new organization, the Circles of Young Naturalists (CYN), founded to encourage young scientists and supported by the Canadian Society for Natural History (CSNH). In 1932, she became the editor of a weekly chronicle of CYN activities published in the youth magazine L'Oiseau bleu. She continued there until the magazine folded in 1940. Between 1938 and 1954, she also wrote a weekly column about the CYN in Le Devoir.
He held several responsibilities in the city, including serving as president of Verdun's sports, recreation, and culture committee for ten years.Antoine Robitaille, "Un conseiller municipal accusé d'agression sexuelle sur un mineur," Le Devoir, 21 October 2004. Verdun was amalgamated into the city of Montreal in 2001, and Dugas was elected as one of the community's three representatives on the Montreal city council in the 2001 municipal election as a candidate of the Montreal Island Citizens Union (MICU).
Marc-André Lussier awarded it three and a half stars in La Presse, positively reviewing the style. Le Devoir critic François Lévesque described it as oddly beautiful. In December, TIFF named the film to its annual Canada's Top Ten list of the ten best Canadian films. In March for The Martlet, John Ledingham declared it "not a film for the faint of heart" but in which some viewers may find "something sublime in a suffering timeless and universal".
Celles touchant au devoir de mémoire sont de celles-là. Parce que sur la palette du nationalisme breton, du rouge au brun, l'amnésie semble totale. Quand la presse nationale, en une volée d'enquêtes, rappelle les dérives de l'Emsav (mouvement breton) durant l'occupation, en écho ne revient que le suprême anathème: "jacobinisme!" » are worried by the "collective amnesia" of the current Breton autonomist movement about World War II or by their attempts to rehabilitate the nationalist collaborationnists.
A recovery plan, required by the Ministry of Education, Sport and Leisure, is still in progress, raising significant challenges from groups of employees, students, lecturers and professors. With the addition of the Télé- université in June 2005, UQAM, with a student population of close to 60,000, was the largest French-speaking university in the world.Rencontre avec le recteur Roch Denis : Vers la plus grande université bimodale de la francophonie - Le Devoir, November 26 -27, 2005. Retrieved, October 2006.
Le devoir de violence has been defended by a number of critics including Kwame Anthony Appiah, who views it as a rejection of the "first generation of modern African novels — the generation of Achebe's Things Fall Apart and Laye's L'Enfant noir".Richard Serrano, Against the Postcolonial: Francophone Writers at the Ends of the French Empire, Lexington Books, 2006, , p. 23. Jean-Frédéric de Hasque's 2009 documentary Où est l'Eldorado? (In Search of Eldorado) sporadically mentions Ouologuem's life and writings.
101 On 8 April 1991 he was appointed Minister of the Interior. In his memoirs, Prime Minister Habib Thiam described as an "excellent interior minister".Habib Thiam, Par devoir et par amitié : essai, Éd. du Rocher, Monaco, Paris, 2001, p.155 Both have had to face a particularly tense situation at the time of the election of 9 May 1993 and assassination of Vice President of the Constitutional Council Babacar Sèye, a few days later, on 15 May 1993.
Nathalie Petrowski (born 1954) is a French-born Canadian journalist and writer living in Quebec. She was born in Paris, lived in the Lorraine region and came to Canada at the age of five. She attended the Collège International Marie de France and went on to receive a bachelor's degree in Communications from Concordia University in 1975. She began working for Le Journal de Montréal, joining Le Devoir in 1976, where her work appeared in the culture section.
Thierry Marx was born and raised in Paris in the area of Ménilmontant. His grandfather, Marcel Marx, was a Polish Jewish refugee and communist resistant during World War II.Libération, 14 September 2005. "Ceinture noire et cordon-bleu" Thierry Marx thought of becoming a baker, but later joined the Compagnons du Devoir in 1978 and graduated with a degree (CAP) of pastry chef, chocolatier and ice cream parlor. At age 18, he joined the army as a paratrooper in the marines.
Beyond the Walls () is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Guy Édoin and released in 2008."Cinéma - Le retour à la terre de Guy Édoin". Le Devoir, October 8, 2011. The third and final film in his trilogy of short films on rural themes, following The Bridge (Le pont) in 2004 and The Dead Water (Les eaux mortes) in 2006, the film centres on a young woman's troubled relationship with her mother, who regularly forces her to go hunting against her will.
Montreal has one all-sport radio station, the English- language CKGM (TSN 690). Sport is covered daily in the city's newspapers by beat writers in The Montreal Gazette, La Presse, Le Journal de Montréal and Le Devoir. The French-language cable television channel, Réseau des Sports (RDS) focuses much of its coverage on Montreal-based sport clubs and events, however also features standard North American sports programming much like its Toronto-based English-language sister station, The Sports Network (TSN).
Scully was born in Ottawa, Canada, in 1950 and is of Irish and French ancestry. Scully grew up in the working- class district of Hochelaga-Maisonneuve in Montreal and was educated at McGill University.The Irish in Quebec - General Facts. Canadian Irish Studies Foundation. Retrieved 8 Feb 2011. Encouraged by Claude Ryan to pursue journalism at the age of 19, Scully learned the ropes of journalism at Le Devoir, first as Latin American correspondent, notably landing an interview with Salvador Allende.
Sébastien Dulude, Yan Giroux, Guillaume Corbeil, Martin Dubreuil & Henri Picard photographed photographed in Montréal , Québec, Canada at the Salon du livre de Montréal 2018. Yan Giroux is a Canadian film director and screenwriter."Le cinéaste et le poète". Le Devoir, November 17, 2018. He won the Prix Iris for Best Screenplay, and was a nominee for Best Director, for his film For Those Who Don't Read Me (À tous ceux qui ne me lisent pas) at the 21st Quebec Cinema Awards in 2019.
His second feature film, Barbarians of the Bay (Les Barbares de La Malbaie), was released in 2019.François Lévesque, "Vincent Biron, la belle «feinte»". Le Devoir, November 15, 2019. He has also made the short films Audition, Annie et Claude, Soldats, Au bout du rang, Les chose horribles and Une idée de grandeur, and has been a cinematographer for films such as X500, Stone Makers, 9 (9, le film), Mutants, With Love (L'Amour) and I'll End Up in Jail (Je finirai en prison).
Guylaine Maroist has a DEC degree in Communications from College Jean-de-Brébeuf, a BAC in Arts from Université de Montreal, and a Certificate in Law from Université de Montreal. After graduation, Maroist worked as a music columnist for Le Devoir from 1992 to 1995, specializing in modern music. During that period, she also wrote for various magazines like The Artist (which she was the editor of in 1993) and Vamp. She freelanced for La Presse and Journal de Montreal on various topics.
After reading "Où va le Canada français? L'exercice de la pleine souveraineté est essentiel à l'épanouissement du Québec"Where is French Canada going? The exercise of full sovereignty is essential to the blooming of Quebec by Raymond Barbeau, interviewed by Jean-Marc Léger in Le Devoir, Chaput was determined to enter into contact with Barbeau, founder of the Alliance laurentienne. Chaput invited Barbeau to hold a conference in Hull on August 28, 1959, in an old parish room of the Notre-Dame Church.
He was also an author for TV series such as Dominique, Métro, boulot, dodo and L'or du temps. He played acting parts in CaïnMontpetit, Caroline (2004) "Livres - Michel Tremblay: Les dessous d'une ville propre", Le Devoir, 20 November 2004, retrieved 2010-10-09 – a play that he authored – and in La Cage aux Folles. In 2001, Giguère was inducted into the Canadian Broadcast Hall of Fame. He died at Hôpital Maisonneuve-Rosemont in Montreal on 11 February 2019 from pulmonary complications.
With this aim he wrote the Devoir des catholiques, an episcopal charge which attracted wide attention and earned for him the pope's congratulations. In addition he was summoned to Rome to be a cardinal at the curia (19 June 1899). Having resigned the See of Toulouse (14 December 1899), his activities were thenceforward absorbed in the work of the Roman congregations and some secret diplomatic negotiations. Nevertheless, he found leisure to write on the Concordat of 1801 and the conclave of 1903.
A fellow guest on the show, Parti Québécois Member of Quebec Legislative Assembly Pauline Marois, who would later become Premier of Quebec, called Raël "insane". The Raëlian Movement asked Marois to apologize, which she refused. A Swiss newspaper, who called Raëlians "rat heads", was sued for defamation. Another suit was brought against journalist Stephane Baillargeon for writing in the Montreal daily Le Devoir that the Raëlians defended pedophiles and that certain ex-Raëlians claimed the "gourou" liked very young girls.
3; Elizabeth Thompson, "Beauchamp wins support from third councillor," Montreal Gazette, 17 March 1994, p. 4. Some of Beauchamp's opponents criticized his focus on business issues, charging that he was little more than a representative of the city's business lobby.Richard Mackie, "Montreal mayor wants tax deal Dore prepares for election," Montreal Gazette, 23 March 1994, p. 3. After a Le Devoir poll put him in fourth place, he withdrew from the contest in April 1994 to support Vision Montreal candidate Pierre Bourque.
Velton, p28. Amadou Hampâté Bâ, Mali's best-known historian, spent much of his life recording the oral traditions of his own Fula teachers, as well as those of Bambara and other Mande neighbors. The best-known novel by a Malian writer is Yambo Ouologuem's Le devoir de violence, which won the 1968 Prix Renaudot but whose legacy was marred by accusations of plagiarism. It is a dark history of a loosely disguised Bambara Empire, focused on slavery, injustice and suffering.
While running for re-election in 2005, Garon declared that opposition in city politics is a nuisance. The controversial remark undermined his campaign.Jean Garon défait à Lévis, Isabelle Porter, Le Devoir, November 7, 2005 He lost the election, finishing second (with 28% of the vote) behind Lévis Force 10 candidate Danielle Roy-Marinelli (42%).Changement de garde à Lévis, Radio-Canada, November 7, 2005 His party won four seats out of fifteen on the City Council, becoming the Official Opposition.
Velton, p28. Amadou Hampâté Bâ, Mali's best-known historian, spent much of his life recording the oral traditions of his own Fula teachers, as well as those of Bambara and other Mande neighbors. The best-known novel by a Malian writer is Yambo Ouologuem's Le devoir de violence, which won the 1968 Prix Renaudot but whose legacy was marred by accusations of plagiarism. It is a dark history of a loosely disguised Bambara Empire, focused on slavery, injustice and suffering.
Norman Wilner, writing for Now, assessed the film as "a gripping story", citing Johnson as "riveting ... At times animalistic, at times tender and ethereal, she's whatever the role requires". Odile Tremblay wrote in Le Devoir that the adaptation would appeal to fans of the novel, and the deceased Soucy would have accepted the interpretation. For The Canadian Press, David Friend called it "viscerally unsettling". The Hollywood Reporters Boyd van Hoeij declared "this is art house fare that's challenging but also rewarding".
Gérard Filion, (August 18, 1909 - March 26, 2005) was a Canadian businessman and journalist. Born in L'Isle-Verte, Quebec, the youngest of 17 children, he received a Bachelor of Arts from Université Laval in 1931 and a diploma in 1934 from École des Hautes Études Commerciales de Montréal. From 1935 until 1947 he worked for the l'Union catholique des cultivateurs, a group representing farmers. From 1947 until 1963 he was the publisher of Le Devoir, a French-language newspaper published in Montreal.
His book Le grand combat du XV de France was adapted into a documentary film in 2006 by Serge Tignères and Étienne Bellan Huchery. A limited edition box set was released by the French Rugby Federation. In 2011, Lalanne founded the Festival Singe-Germain in Saint-Germain-des-Prés with Jean Cormier, a sports and cultural festival. Novels written by Lalanne include Un long dimanche à la campagne and Le devoir de français, the latter of which was adapted into a film.
Le Devoir, February 10, 2018. He won the Vancouver Film Critics Circle award for Best Canadian Screenplay at the Vancouver Film Critics Circle Awards 2017,"Never Steady, Never Still takes the big prizes at the Vancouver Film Critics Circle awards". The Georgia Straight, January 9, 2018. and the film's lead actress Rose-Marie Perreault received a Prix Iris nomination for Revelation of the Year at the 20th Quebec Cinema Awards in 2018,"Cinq bonnes raisons de regarder le Gala Québec Cinéma".
Le devoir de violence (published in English as Bound to Violence) was published in 1968 by Editions du Seuil. It was met with wide critical acclaim, winning the Prix Renaudot that very year, the first African author to do so. Ouologuem became a celebrity, and Le Monde called him one of "the rare intellectuals of international stature presented to the world by Black Africa", comparing him to Leopold Sedar Senghor. It was translated into English (Bound to Violence) by Ralph Manheim in 1971.
Today, The Gazettes audience is primarily Quebec's English-speaking community. The Gazette is one of the three dailies published in Montreal, the other two being French- language newspapers: Le Journal de Montréal and Le Devoir. (La Presse is only published digitally since 2018.) In recent years, The Gazette has stepped up efforts to reach bilingual francophone professionals and adjusted its coverage accordingly. The current editor-in-chief is Lucinda Chodan and the associate managing editors are James Bassil and Jeff Blond.
However, English Canada is not the main target of complaint. The text denounces the economic and cultural imperialism of dominant social classes worldwide. In 1964, during the Laurendeau-Dunton Commission, the phrase was described in a private journal by Le Devoir publisher André Laurendeau as an insult to people heard speaking French. He noted that fellow commissioner Frank Scott, Dean of Law at McGill University, and translator of French poetry to English, was sceptical about its usage, and thought it was an Americanism.
Sergei Babayan (; born 1 January 1961) is an Armenian-American pianist. Described by Le Devoir as a "genius", Babayan is the winner of numerous international competitions, including the Robert Casadesus International Piano Competition in 1989 and the Hamamatsu International Piano Competition in 1991. He appears as soloist with leading orchestras, including the Cleveland Orchestra, Gewandhausorchester, London Symphony Orchestra, Bamberger Symphoniker, and the Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra, under such conductors as Valery Gergiev, Yuri Temirkanov, Tugan Sokhiev, Neeme Järvi, Rafael Payare, and David Robertson.
The Conservatoire opened its doors in January 1943; at the time it was the first North American music institution of higher learning to be entirely state-subsidized. Orchestra conductor Wilfrid Pelletier served as the school's first director from 1943 through 1961;"La mezzo-soprano québécoise Huguette Tourangeau s’est éteinte ". Le Devoir, Sylvain Cormier, 25 April 2018 Champagne was the first assistant director. The school's first classes were held at the Saint-Sulpice Library at 1700 Saint Denis Street and in nearby buildings.
Some of these were framed decorations painted using dyes made by Rougier de Camarès. These paintings formed the basis of many frescoes, particularly the ceilings. Themes of these frescoes included symbols of the Compagnons du Devoir, other icons of esoteric significance, rich decorations with precious stones, and also representations of the arts. The castle belonged to the scions of Jacquette and Jean V of Arpajon, among them François, count of Roussy, whose daughter married the duke and marshal of Biron.
Mahalia Melts in the Rain is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Emilie Mannering and Carmine Pierre-Dufour and released in 2018. The film stars Kaiyonni Banton-Renner as Mahalia, a young Black Canadian girl who feels self- conscious about her African-Canadian hair setting her apart from her classmates at ballet school, leading her mother Anika (Sagine Sémajuste) to take her to a hair salon to get her hair straightened."Festival Filministes: quand la relève prépare la relève". Le Devoir, March 8, 2019.
The evolution of Espace Go from its roots as a feminist theatre group has not been without controversy. In January 2010, Pol Pelletier, a co-founder of the Théâtre Expérimental des Femmes, took out an advertisement in Le Devoir attacking Espace Go for abandoning the founding group's feminist principles. This was not the first time that Pelletier had leveled such a charge at Espace Go: ten years earlier, a condemnatory letter from Pelletier earned a "terse response" from the theatre's then-director of the board, Louise Beaudoin.
In addition to Martin and Malinowski, several members of the American punk rock band The Bronx participated in the recording, playing primarily in the mariachi style of their 2009 album Mariachi El Bronx."Armistice, le temps d'une paix". Le Devoir, Philippe Papineau, 11 February 2011 The album's tracks blended this with Malinowski's alt-rock, Martin's French indie-pop, and a little reggae."Armistice". AllMusic, biography by James Christopher Monger After 2011 Armistice was no longer active due to Béatrice Martin and Jay Malinowski's end of relationship.
After the war, it was returned to the Rothschilds. Robert de Rothschild and his wife Nelly donated it to establish a professional lycée for 400 boarders.Lycee Professionel Donation Robert & Nelly de Rothschild However, due to lack of refurbishment, all residents had to move out of the château temporarily in 2006.Victor Fortunato, Les lycéens vont devoir abandonner leur château, Le Parisien, September 27, 2006 The left wing is home to the Maison d'enfants de Laversine Shatta-et-Bouli-Simon, a non- profit organization for at-risk youth.
After studying at Montreal's Ahuntsic College in social sciences, Charbonneau attended the Université de Montréal in criminology and obtained a bachelor's degree in 1972. He later had a lengthy journalistic career in which he worked for several media outlets in the Montreal region including radio stations CKAC and CKVL, newspapers including Le Devoir and La Presse and various magazines and revues. He was mostly a journalist and specialist in crime news. He also published several books related to organized crime which gave him an award.
A Woman, My Mother () is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Claude Demers and released in 2019.André Lavoie, "«Une femme, ma mère»: rien, ou si peu, sur ma mère". Le Devoir, January 31, 2020. The film documents Demers's efforts to learn more about his birth mother, who gave him up for adoption but later died before Demers ever had the opportunity to meet her as an adult, leaving him with many gaps in his understanding that he could fill in only with imaginative speculation.
L'Extraordinaire Tour de France d'Adélard Rousseau, dit Nivernais la Clef des Cœurs, Compagnon Charpentier du Devoir (1978) was very much a concept album, concerning a guild craftsman's travels around France, with an implied spiritual exploration. It is perhaps the most exciting of their albums, with some gothic and prog-rock elements in the music. Like their next album Le Bestiaire, it consists mostly of songs by Gabriel, with a few by Zdrzalik and de Courson. The range of sounds of these albums is huge.
A Toronto Tory newspaper indicated Niobe was on her way to the scrap heap, while Bourassa's Le Devoir proclaimed her canadienne en temps de paix, impériale en temps de guerre (Canadian in peacetime, Imperial in wartime).Friends of the Canadian War Museum The Mail and Empire called Niobe a cruiser which the Royal Navy has discarded. The Naval Service of Canada was eventually given Royal consent on 29 August 1911, and was from then on officially designated as the Royal Canadian Navy.Milner (1999), p. 20.
In 1979, Tadjo chose to teach English at the Lycée Moderne de Korhogo (secondary school) in the North of Côte d'Ivoire. She subsequently became a lecturer in the English department at the University of Abidjan until 1993. In 1998, she participated in the project "Rwanda: Ecrire par devoir de mémoire" (Rwanda: Writing for the sake of memory) with a group of African writers who traveled to Rwanda to testify to the Rwandan genocide and its aftermath. Her book L'Ombre d'Imana emerged from her time in Rwanda.
Head First () is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Mathieu Arsenault and released in 2019.Louise-Maude Rioux Soucy, "Tenir tête". Le Devoir, March 23, 2019. Inspired by Arsenault's own diagnosis with bipolar disorder in the mid-2010s, the film profiles his experiences and those of two other people living with the disease, photographer Frédérique Ménard-Aubin and former musician Louis Parizeau, both to educate viewers about mental health and to portray their efforts to avoid allowing their lives to be consumed or controlled by the condition.
The Bloc Québécois claimed that the Coalition was biased in favor of Israeli policies and noted that they "consider that the Coalition is tainted, partisan and presents a single side of the coin. We desired a much more moderate approach, more consensual, and still with the outlook to find peace.""Coalition de lutte contre l'antisémitisme: le Bloc se retire", Le Devoir, March 10, 2010 The CPCCA hosted the Second Annual Inter-parliamentary Conference to Combat Antisemitism which was held in November 2010 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Le Devoir, Améli Pineda, with Jeanne Corriveau, and Guillaume Bourgault-Côté, 7 February 2018 The Montreal Gazette says that Poulin is facing a combination of fraud, abuse of confidence, conspiracy to commit fraud and municipal corruption charges by Quebec's anti-corruption unit (UPAC). On September 21, 2020, the Commissioner of Canada Elections charged Poulin with five counts of illegally soliciting monies from his employees to support partisan political activities and obscuring or attempting to obscure the source of the funds in contravention of the Canada Elections Act.
The ' (National Unity Party), formerly the (Christian Democracy Party of Quebec), is a social conservative political party in Quebec, Canada. It was founded in 2000 by Roman Catholics associated with the Centre d’Information nationale Robert Rumilly. The founding leader of the party was Gilles Noël.Le Devoir newspaper, April 12, 2003, "Le Parti Democratic Chretienne defended Les valeurs chretiennes" The party's leader since 2010 has been Paul Biron, a retired engineer, whose brother, Rodrigue Biron, was leader of the conservative Union Nationale party from 1976 to 1980.
The party also proposed eliminating the $5/day universal child care program offered by the Government of Quebec at the time.Jeanne Corriveau, "Le parti Démocratie chrétienne du Québec - Défendre les valeurs chrétiennes", Le Devoir, 12 Avril 2003 The party won 1,620 votes in the March 2007 general election, or about 0.04% of the popular vote. Logo of the former Parti démocratie chrétienne du Québec On 29 June 2012 the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec approved the name of the party to be changed to "Parti Unité Nationale".
Article "The camp de l'Ordre de Bon Temps", July 7-16, Le Devoir newspaper, June 4, 1956, p. 5. At the time, as a complement, the La Cordée Youth Center operated a youth hostel in Val-Morin in winter and offered winter sports activitiesArticle "La Chanson Populaire au Centre de Jeunesse La Cordée" (Popular song at Youth Center La Cordée), Le Nouvelliste newspaper, February 1, 1957, p. 9. The historic press does not indicate any other mention of this Youth Center after February 1957.
In La Presse, Mario Girard hailed Hochelaga, Land of Souls as powerful and a meaningful way to mark Montreal's 375th anniversary. Girard especially cited its depiction of Indigenous peoples in Quebec. For Le Devoir, Odile Tremblay praised the film as beautiful and a story of reconciliation, giving fair weight to different sociological nations. Franco Nuovo of Radio- Canada described being overwhelmed by Hochelaga, comparing the cinematography to paintings and finding the abundant symbolism erased any dullness that the historic subject matter could have threatened.
From 1962 to 1978, Ryan was editorialist at Le Devoir, a French-language daily newspaper in Montreal, and he was the director of the newspaper from 1964 to 1978. During his tenure at the head of the editorial staff he became known for his probity and his mastery of contemporary political issues. His advice was sought by the provincial governments of Quebec and by opposition parties. During the 1970 October Crisis Ryan was accused of participating in a plot to overthrow Robert Bourassa's recently elected government.
ChickenBones: A Journal. and from 1964 to 1966 he taught at the Lycée de Clarenton in suburban Paris, while studying for a doctorate in sociology at the École Normale Supérieure. His major work, Le devoir de violence (1968), resulted in controversy and a continuing academic debate over charges of plagiarism. In 1969, he published out a volume of biting essays, Lettre à la France nègre as well as an erotic novel, Les mille et une bibles du sexe, published under the pseudonym of Utto Rodolph.
Payette continued to write for the paper until May 6, 2016, when she signed off with the phrase "Le Devoir ends the chronicle of Lise Payette," without further explanation, although she has since claimed that editor Brian Myles let her go without explanation from one day to the next. In 2007, Payette wrote a song for Celine Dion entitled "Je cherche l'ombre" which is included on Dion's D'Elles album. In 1994, Payette was recognized as "Woman of the Year" by Canadian Women in Communications.
The daughter of Dr. Henri Choquette, She was born in Shawinigan and studied with the Ursulines at Trois-Rivières from 1924 to 1931. Choquette began work with the Quebec public service but soon gravitated towards journalism. She contributed to various newspapers and journals, including Le Bien Public, Le Nouvelliste, ', La Revue populaire, Le Jour, Amérique française, Le Devoir and Les Cahiers de l'Académie canadienne-française. From 1937 to 1948, she worked at radio station CHLN in Trois-Rivières, serving as host and director for the station.
Gilles Potvin, (23 October 1923 - 4 September 2000) was a Canadian music critic and music historian. He was a music critic for Le Devoir (1961–66, 1973–85) and La Presse (1966–70). From 1970-1976 he served as the editor of The Canada Music Book and from 1976-1980 he was President of the Jeunesses musicales du Canada. He was notably the co-editor, with Helmut Kallmann and Kenneth Winters, of The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada; also contributing more than 300 articles to that publication.
Instances of this view can be found in both his campaign for Franco-Ontarian rights as well as his ardent opposition to controversial priest and historian Lionel Groulx in the 1920s following Groulx's musing on the possibility and desirability of a separate Quebec state. That said, the history of Le Devoir would become characterized by varying phases (as well as shades) of French-Canadian and later Québécois nationalism, opening its pages in the troubled 1930s to Groulx and his followers, yet seeing a federalist at its helm in 1964 in the form of Claude Ryan, who in 1978 would go on to become leader of the federalist Quebec Liberal Party. Ideologically, Le Devoir has been a chief voice against military intervention and in favour of pacifism and social democracy, opposing conscription in World War II (see Conscription Crisis of 1944) and endorsing, under federalist Ryan's tenure, the election of René Lévesque's new socialist- inspired Parti Québécois in the 1976 election, despite its platform centred on Québécois nationalism. Once considered a reformist paper, it has recently been associated less with ideas that challenge the status quo of Quebec's economic, political and cultural issues.
Jean Charpentier learned Spanish in 1953 while his father was posted at the Canadian embassy in Uruguay. In the 1950s, Charpentier began working as a journalist for two French-language Canadian newspapers, Le Devoir and Le Droit. A colleague at the Le Droit, Denis Gratton, coined Charpentier's nickname, "The Count," while working at the newspaper, for his courtesy and manners. He became a television reporter for Radio-Canada, the French-language broadcaster for the CBC, in 1961, where he reported from Paris, London, Toronto and Lima, Cambodia, Vietnam, Argentina and Nigeria's breakaway region of Biafra.
Ménétra speaks in order to impress > the way people do in bars: as if to say "Wait till you hear what happened to > me!" He tells of his fights with his father, his workplace accidents, his > run-ins with highwaymen, his amorous adventures with maidservants and > masters' wives, and above all his glorious activities as member of the > secret journeymen's brotherhood, Les Compagnons du Devoir. The tales succeed > one another without any attempt to develop specific themes or organize an > argument or explore particular issues, dilemmas, or problems. There is no > tension or plot.
She has also appeared in the television series Les Masques, Catherine, François en série, Musée Eden and Mémoires vives, and the films Congorama, Monsieur Lazhar, Tuktuq, Fake Tattoos, Les Salopes, or the Naturally Wanton Pleasure of Skin and Before We Explode (Avant qu'on explose). She directed the 2012 documentary film Over My Dead Body, which was shortlisted for the Canadian Screen Award for Best Feature Length Documentary at the 1st Canadian Screen Awards in 2012."Brigitte Poupart aux Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois - D'urgence et d'amitié". Le Devoir, February 24, 2012.
He published columns on international politics in Le Soleil, Le Droit, and Le Devoir. He participated in making documentaries, including the series Soleil dans la nuit for TV5 Europe- Afrique-Canada, on the first anniversary of the Rwandan genocide. He also filmed a documentary on AIDS entitled The Gospel of AIDS. Furthermore, he helped produced various documentaries and advertisements on the third-world for Le Cardinal Léger et ses œuvres and OXFAM-Québec: leprosy in Haiti, the politics of water, agricultural development in the Philippines, education for disabled children in Thailand, etc.
His work was used to promote many of the films that marked the beginning of independent Québécois cinema, and appeared in magazines as varied as Time and (the cinema magazine) Take One. He created the logo for the Le Château chain of clothing stores, and the green mascot Victor of the Just For Laughs festival. He died from a stroke on July 30, 2008, "Cure de Jouvence pour Vittorio", Le Devoir. L'affichiste montréalais n'est plus, Radio-Canada, 2008-07-30 and was entombed at the Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery in Montreal.
Pelletier initially intended to become a lawyer and accordingly pursued law studies at the Université de Montréal where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1924 and a Bachelor of Laws in 1927. While a student he began working as a music critic in 1922 for publications like Le Devoir and La Revue moderne. From 1928-1933 he worked as a notary in Montreal. In 1933 Pelletier began working for the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission as a host and commentator for the Canadian national broadcasts of the Metropolitan Opera and the New York Philharmonic.
The party also announced a number of non-incumbent candidates in other races, including former Radio-Canada journalist Philippe Schnobb."Philippe Schnobb se joint à l'équipe de Denis Coderre". Le Devoir, June 19, 2013. However, the party also faced some criticism for the fact that of the 19 candidates announced by the party as of early August, fifteen were incumbents and only four were new candidates, resulting in media speculation that Coderre could potentially fall short of his early promise to put forward a slate of candidates that was at least 50 per cent new.
Mad Dog Labine is a Canadian docufiction film, directed by Jonathan Beaulieu- Cyr and Renaud Lessard and released in 2018."«Mad Dog Labine»: irrésistiblement «rough»". Le Devoir, April 6, 2019. Set in the rural Pontiac region of western Quebec, the film stars Ève-Marie Martin as Lindsay Labine, a young girl who is feeling alienated because her father would not take her hunting with her older brothers; hanging out with her friend Justine (Zoé Audet), the girls' lives may be transformed when they unexpectedly find an abandoned winning lottery ticket.
Shots did reach the building during the shooting.Le Soleil (article from la Presse), Fusillade au Collège Dawson, "Il tirait au hasard" (He was shooting randomly), Le Soleil, Quebec City, September 14, 2006, page 3Myles, Brian & Bourgault-Côté, Guillaume, Montréal, ville blessé : Panique, pleurs et attente insoutenable dans les rues du centre-ville (Panic, tears and interminable wait in downtown's streets), Le Devoir, Montréal, September 14, 2006, page A3 On April 5, 2017, a minor fire broke out near the roof of the food court. Minor damage occurred as a result.
In April 2011, the artistic director of Théâtre du Nouveau Monde, Lorraine Pintal, announced that Cantat would not be performing in Chœurs.Convicted killer Bertrand Cantat will not perform in Canada: theatre Wajdi Mouawad responded to the controversy by publishing an open letter to his three-year-old daughter Aimee in the newspaper Le Devoir, in which he argued for Cantat's right to full reintegration into society. In November 2011, Cantat released the album Chœurs, composed for Mouawad's namesake production with musicians Pascal Humbert, Bernard Falaise, and Alexander MacSween.
Two members of the Lavigueur family are still alive: Yve and Sylvie. Yve published a book in 2000 about the family's story and helped with the production of a 6-episode TV series which was broadcast by SRC, the French-language branch of the CBC, in 2008. Sylvie chose to remain away from public life. Louise Lavigueur died from heart failure in 1991,Les Lavigueur n'étaient pas des « morons », Le Soleil, December 13, 2007 at age 22.Dramatique saga de la famille Lavigueur, Le Devoir, December 13, 2007.
" He became Vice-President, Corporate Affairs for Imperial Tobacco Limited in September 1996. In January 1997, he was appointed publisher of The Jerusalem Post. In the 1990s and 2000s, he appeared on numerous TV panels in English and French and wrote a column in The Globe and Mail and in Le Devoir. While at The Globe and Mail, Mr. Spector wrote "Why Ms. Harper joined the PM's CTV Christmas interview," citing a veteran Ottawa Citizen columnist who reported that "in Ottawa, tongues have been wagging for two years about trouble in one political marriage.
Plaster was formed in 2001 by Goncalves and keyboardist Alex McMahon; a year later they were joined by bassist François Plante, also of Afrodizz.Plaster's official website Retrieved Nov 9, 2008 The trio's sound has been described as a mixture of electro-jazz, funk, and drum and bass.Lamarche, Bernard. "Un Plaster à la bonne place", Le Devoir, Nov 4, 2005 (French text) Retrieved Nov 8, 2008 Their first album, First Aid Kit, was released in 2005 and won the ADISQ award for Best Electronic or Techo Album in 2006.
Le Devoir, February 16, 2018. The film received Prix Iris nominations for Best Documentary, Best Editing in a Documentary (Michel Giroux) and Best Sound in a Documentary (Catherine Van Der Donckt, Jean Paul Vialard) at the 20th Quebec Cinema Awards in 2018, winning the award for Best Sound. It received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Feature Length Documentary, and Michel Giroux was nominated for Best Editing in a Documentary, at the 7th Canadian Screen Awards in 2019."“Anthropocene”, “Amazing Race Canada” among Canadian Screen Award nominees".
To prepare, he asked conductor Richard Woitach, his friend and neighbor, for an introduction to conductor Erich Leinsdorf, and Leinsdorf became the last of his generation to leave his mark on Rescigno., Rescigno has been credited with bringing the "Latin sun" to Richard Wagner's music."Adieux magnifiques, succès magistral" by François Tousignant, Le Devoir, April 29, 2000, Page C 11, citing Wieland Wagner's formulation. "I hope the audience regards this piece as a beautiful, lyrical work with its essence in song," he is quoted as saying regarding Die Walküre.
"An analysis of the discrepancies between Madeleine Ouellette-Michalska's diaries broadcasted by Radio Canada and her published version, La 'Tentation de Dire' - The theory and practice of autobiography". Etudes Litteraires, 31(2):107-118 · December 1999 As well as fiction, Ouellette-Michalska also published a number of essays, including L'Amour de la carte postale in 1987.Making and Breaking the Rules: Women in Quebec, 1919-1939. 2010. Andrée Lévesque Translated by Yvonee M. Klein She has contributed as a journalist to publications such as Perspectives and Le Devoir.
In some cases, verbs that function similarly to auxiliaries, but are not considered full members of that class (perhaps because they carry some independent lexical information), are called semi-auxiliaries. In French, for example, verbs such as devoir (have to), pouvoir (be able to), aller (be going to), vouloir (want), faire (make), and laisser (let), when used together with the infinitive of another verb, can be called semi-auxiliaries.Concerning the term semi-auxiliaries for French, see Warnant (1982:279). There has also been a study on auxiliary verb constructions in Dravidian languages.
He returned to France and stayed there from 1949 to 1959. He continued to work for La Nouvelle Relève, La Presse, La Patrie and Le Devoir. He also wrote an article on Jacques Chevalier in the newspaper La Patrie on April 5, 1959, entitled "Visite à Jacques Chevalier" (Visit to Jacques Chevalier), which evokes his visit to the philosopher's home in rue Pierre-Leroux in Paris; it was reprinted in the Cahiers bourbonnais in the 3rd quarter of 1962, following Chevalier's death. Baillargeon died while undergoing heart surgery, August 15, 1967, in Rochester, Minnesota.
He was married to Françoise Servêtre and had nine children. Born in L'Isle- Verte, Quebec, Gérard Filion’s journalism career began when he was 26. Working for the Terre de Chez Nous, a paper run by the Catholic Union of Farmers, Filion became a lifelong ally of many Quebec unions. In 1947 he began publishing Le Devoir and used the paper to rise to the unions’ defence against Maurice Duplessis, the province’s Premier. Duplessis was the leader of Quebec’s conservative Union Nationale government and Filion became one of his fiercest opponents.
In 2007, Gabriel Anctil, a journalist of Montreal daily Le Devoir, discovered in Kerouac's personal archives in New York almost 200 pages of his writings entirely in Quebec French, with colloquialisms. The collection included 10 manuscript pages of an unfinished version of On the Road, written on January 19, 1951. The date of the writings makes Kerouac one of the earliest known authors to use colloquial Quebec French in literature. The original scroll of On the Road was bought in 2001 by Jim Irsay for $2.43 million (equivalent to $ million in ).
Tremblay is a public intellectual who is known for his contributions to the understanding of international, Canadian and Quebec politics. His political analyses have been published in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Globe and Mail, in French-language newspapers such as Le Devoir, La Presse, Le Soleil, and several other publications. He writes an international blog about economics, finance, politics and geopolitics, in many languages.(17) Tremblay has served as an arbiter on the Committee of Dispute Settlements of NAFTA, from 1989 to 1993.
In 2007, Le Devoir said Poulard became "a legend during her lifetime" and is considered one of the "mothers" of France, along with and Mère Brazier. In his 2016 book Les illustres de la Table, Simmat Burniat wrote, "with her famous omelet, she is the first woman to write her name for eternity in the grimoire of planetary gastronomy". Anne Poulard's husband died on October 10, 1924, and she died on May 7, 1931. The couple are buried in the parish churchyard of eglise St-Pierre on Mont-Saint-Michel.
Le Devoir, February 5, 2011. He studied mathematics, philosophy, urban planning and architecture at university, and worked for Le Corbusier, before moving to Montreal, where he became a Canadian citizen in 1961. In Montreal, he was a longtime art and literary critic for La Presse alongside his work as a novelist. He won the Prix Québec-Paris in 1974 for Une aurore boréale, the Prix Molson in 1983 for Le Valet de plume, and the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction in 1988 for Le silence, ou Le parfait bonheur.
Diane-Monique Daviau (born 1951) is a Quebec educator, writer, translator and journalist. She was born in Montreal. Daviau wrote literary columns for Le Devoir, Lettres québécoises and Liberté, also contributing to the radio programs En toutes lettres, Littératures actuelles and Paysages littéraires on Radio Canada FM. She has taught literature, German and translation at McGill University, at the Université de Montréal and at the Goethe-Institut. Daviau was an editor for several publishing houses and also worked as a translator from German to French and from French to German.
I'll End Up in Jail () is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Alexandre Dostie and released in 2019.Natalia Wysocka, "Je finirai à Sundance". Le Devoir, January 30, 2020. The film stars Martine Francke as an unhappy housewife who is attempting to escape her life, when she arrives at the scene of a fatal car accident and is convinced by its perpetrator Jelly (Émile Schneider) to help him try to hide the dead body in the forest.Frédéric Desjardins, "Décor beauceron pour le nouveau court-métrage d’Alexandre Dostie". Beauce Média, October 3, 2019.
Patrice Michaud (born November 1, 1980) is a Canadian singer-songwriter from Cap-Chat, Quebec."Patrice Michaud sur les Plaines: le rêve exaucé du gars de Cap-Chat". Le Devoir, July 11, 2018. He won the SOCAN Songwriting Prize in the French division in 2014 for his song "Mécaniques générales","Patrice Michaud remporte le Prix de la chanson SOCAN avec Mécaniques générales". Ici Radio- Canada, July 8, 2014. and his 2017 album Almanach was a Juno Award finalist for Francophone Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2018.
Prior to his resignation from the Conservative Party, Bernier had begun reestablishing contact with individuals who had supported his 2017 Conservative leadership bid; they believed he had the necessary support to register a party with Elections Canada. Le Devoir reported that members of seven Conservative constituency associations defected to the party. A few days after announcing the party name, Libertarian Party leader Tim Moen, who had previously offered the leadership of that party to Bernier, stated that he was open to the idea of a merger with the People's Party.
The province sole French-language daily, L'Acadie Nouvelle, supported the transaction in a nuanced piece, stressing the "political and financial impasse" facing the New Brunswick utility. In Montreal, business columnist Sophie Cousineau of La Presse called it a bold deal providing benefits to both provinces, but worried it would face steep opposition in New Brunswick while Jean-Robert Sansfaçon of Le Devoir stated that the proposed deal provided an initial response to those in Quebec who have expressed concerns about recurring electricity surpluses caused by Hydro-Québec's large dam construction program.
Ferretti argued that Quebec was "in a mortal struggle against all who contribute to our exploitation, whether they be American Imperialists, Canadian capitalists or the French-Canadian bourgeoisie." After a confrontation with then-president of the RIN Pierre Bourgault, she resigned from the party and founded the short-lived Front de libération populaire (FLP) in March 1968. Bourgault asked his followers to join René Lévesque's then-fledgling Parti Québécois using entryism, thus uniting the indépendantiste forces. During the 1970s, she published a number of writings in favour of independence within Le Devoir and Parti pris, while studying philosophy.
She defends the afropéenne identity at a time of globalization, which could regenerate French culture through the bias French-speaking literature. Daniel S. Larangé also adds that "jazzy writing" is based on a popular and musical culture that integrates impromptu rhythms and rhapsodies specific to jazz. In 2013, Léonora Miano won the Prix Femina for La Saison de l'Ombre which recounts, in keeping with Yambo Ouologuem's Devoir de Violence, the beginning of the slave trade. The novel, rich in emotions, would be a parable of globalization which leads to the exploitation of humanity as a product of consumption.
After moving to Nohant, Carraud volunteered as a country doctor and as a teacher at a rural school from 1852 until 1868. She began writing books and textbooks for children in rural areas after struggling to get proper books while she was a teacher. She wrote books aimed specifically at children from peasant families and their parents and was one of the first children's authors to focus on main characters that were not from noble, bourgeois or working- class families. Her first book, La Petite Jeanne ou le devoir was published in 1852 and was aimed at girls.
With financial assistance from the Canada Council for the Arts and the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec, she was able to pursue further studies in Seville and Madrid. Her album of flamenco music was chosen as one of the five best world music albums of 2010 by Le Devoir. Two of her compositions were used as the soundtrack for the short film Invernadero which received third prize at the Flamenco Short-Films Festival in Madrid. She was invited to perform as a soloist at the second Festival Sangre Nueva Jóvenes Flamencos held in Madrid.
Jean-Pierre had been the film critic for Le Devoir and editor of Cinema Quebec and had been a contributor to Cinema Canada. At first it was published 10 times a years, then it went monthly until its last issue in 1989. In all, there were 169 issues published over the span of 18 years. A home for Canadian nationalists and cinema activists in the 1970s, Cinema Canada became the voice for The Council of Canadian Filmmakers, a lobby group of filmmakers and industry professionals campaigning for a quota for Canadian movies in the American-owned theatres.
Inspired by another song, "Experience" by Ludovico Einaudi, he wrote a scene about a mother fantasizing about a future with her son that will never come to be, and wrote a story around it. Dolan stated it was important to show how unpredictable mental illness can be in a home. The concept of the S-14 law was inspired by an article he had read about a mother who used a law to transfer custody of a child to the state, although in an interview with Le Devoir, Dolan could not recall which country this happened in.
Cameroun Express editor Ngota Ngota Germain (aka Bibi Ngota) died in Yaoundé's Kondengui Central Prison on April 22, 2011, an incident opponents cite as government intimidation; other reporters subjected to arrest and incarceration without being charged include editors Serge Sabouang of the bimonthly La Nation and Robert Mintya of the weekly Le Devoir. In 2009, the freedom of the press global classification released each year by Reporters Without Borders ranked Cameroon 109 out of 175 countries.Reporters sans frontières : Classement mondial 2009 "Sensitive issues" were reported there. 88 proposals to create private radio and television services are under examination by the Minister of Communication.
From 1953 until the end of the decade, Miron worked at the Beauchemin Bookstore and other book related jobs in Montreal. In his off hours, he read manuscripts and handled the correspondence for his publishing company. In addition, Miron wrote poetry (notably La Marche à l'amour), which he occasionally published in newspapers like Le Devoir, and sometimes left in his drawer, waiting for the right word or phrase to come to mind, as he sought to perfect them. On June 10, 1957, Miron was a candidate in a Canadian federal election in the Outremont riding for the socialist Co-Operative Commonwealth Federation.
After a return to Le Devoir in 1991, he became in 1996 a cartoonist at La Presse, a post that he continues to occupy. From 2004 to 2019, his puppet character Gérard D. Laflaque, returned to television in CGI form on Et Dieu créa Laflaque. He and fellow Montreal cartoonist Terry Mosher were the subject of a 2003 documentary film, Nothing Scared, directed by Garry Beitel. Chapleau suffers from Dupuytren's contracture, a hand disease in which the formation of scar tissue under the skin of the palm causes fingers to curl inward and lose the motion of the tendons' ability to grip.
He served as an on-air psychiatrist for the Quebec version of the reality show Loft Story, where he made remarks that upset the parents of a participant while analyzing her behaviour. Le Collège des médecins fustige Loft Story et le Dr Mailloux, Le Devoir, November 15, 2003. On February 10, 2005, the Quebec Regional Panel of the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, answering a listener's complaint, determined that Mailloux had made "specifically-focused abusive and unduly discriminatory remarks" toward ethnic groups when talking about immigration in a broadcast. He referred to Sikhs as a "gang of bozos" (translated).
After the 1995 referendum, Mulcair was eminent in demanding an inquiry about the rejection of thousands of ballots for the 'No' side. According to Le Devoir journalist Michel David, Mulcair is the person who coined the expression Pinocchio syndrome, which was the title of a book by André Pratte published in 1997 about lies in politics. In the book, Mulcair speaks about why he believes lying is common in politics, because, according to him, "people feel free to manipulate journalists and say just about anything." Newly elected Premier Jean Charest named Mulcair minister of sustainable development, environment and parks.
Philpot was an unsuccessful candidate for the riding of Saint-Henri–Sainte-Anne in the 2007 Quebec general election, representing the Parti Québécois. During the campaign, remarks by Philpot about the Rwandan Genocide were publicised, including the statement: "In none of my writings have I denied that there were mass killings, some even of an ethnic character. However, I categorically reject the abusive use of the expression 'genocide'", from a 2004 opinion piece in Le Devoir. The Parti Québécois was criticised over these remarks; PQ leader André Boisclair defended Philpot, stating that Philpot's words had been misrepresented.
Sophie Dupuis is a Quebec film director and screenwriter, from Val-d'Or who studied at Concordia University and the Université du Québec à Montréal "La quête viscérale de Sophie Dupuis". Le Devoir, March 3, 2018. whose feature film debut Family First (Chien de garde) premiered in 2018 and was selected as Canada's submission for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards. The film was nominated for eight Prix Iris at the 20th Quebec Cinema Awards, including a Best Director nomination for Dupuis."«Hochelaga» et «Le problème d'infiltration» dominent les nominations aux prix Iris".
"CABINET DU CHEF DE L'OPPOSITION OFFICIELLE - LE CHEF DE L'OPPOSITION OFFICIELLE ANNONCE LA COMPOSITION DE SON "CABINET FANTÔME"" [press release], Canada NewsWire, 9:19am. As a legislator, he took part in all-party efforts to ensure that future Quebec legislation would be free of homophobia.Martin Ouellet, "Les partis de l'Assemblée nationale s'associent à la cause gaie," La Presse Canadienne, 20 November 2007, 4:10pm. He later helped promote his party's controversial social security reforms in the 2008 Quebec election.Antoine Robitaille, "Dumont veut mettre un terme à l'aide sociale comme «mode de vie»," Le Devoir, 21 November 2008, A5.
Chant de Marche: Contre les Viets featuring:1er Régiment Etranger de Parachutistes I Contre les Viets, contre l'ennemi, Partout où le devoir fait signe, Soldats de France, soldats de pays, Nous remonterons vers les lignes. Refrain O légionnaires, le combat qui commence, Met dans nos âmes, enthousiasme et vaillance, Peuvent pleuvoir grenades et gravats, Notre victoire en aura plus d'éclat. Peuvent pleuvoir grenades et gravats, Notre victoire en aura plus d'éclat. II Et si la mort nous frappe en chemin, Si nos doigts sanglants se crispent au sol, Un dernier rêve: adieu à demain, Nous souhaiterons faire école.
Fulgence Charpentier, OC (June 29, 1897 - February 6, 2001) was a French Canadian journalist, editor and publisher. Born in Sainte-Anne-de-Prescott, Ontario, Charpentier's career included diplomatic, political and bureaucratic positions, but his first love had been journalism ever since he began his reporting career at Montreal's Le Devoir in 1915, during which he earned $20 a week. In 1918, Charpentier joined the Canadian army, but the war ended before he could be sent overseas. He stayed in the army after the Armistice to work in a military hospital on the campus of McGill University in Montreal.
Keita, Daba Balla. 2007. "Interview exclusive du Directeur Général de TRANSRAIL-SA : "Réinscrire Transrail dans son environnement social et économique", a dit Eric Peiffer", Nouvel Horizon, 12/09/2007 CIDA's contribution to CANAC has come under criticism, including from the group Le Collectif Citoyen pour la Restitution et le Développement Intégré du Rail, which described the consequences of the rationalization process as "disastrous"; passenger traffic was reduced with the closure of 26 of 36 stations, to focus on the rapid export of cotton to the Dakar coast.L'Écuyer, François. "En mal de mondialisation, l'Afrique?", Le Devoir, 24 janvier 2007, p. a7.
She contributed to various newspapers including La Presse, Le Devoir and Le Soleil, as well as several literary and cultural journals, notably Arcade. Gourdeau's 2002 story "Gros Câlisse" led to a suit for defamation by a former colleague from Laval University, who claimed that a character based on him was portrayed in a derogatory fashion in that work of fiction. On the other hand, Gourdeau herself claimed that the character was not based entirely on that specific person. However, she did not deny that actions by that person may have played a part in her departure from the university.
Jean-Pierre Martin, Alain Le Ray, le devoir de fidélité : un officier alpin au service de la France (1939-1945), Presses universitaires de Grenoble, 2000, Le Ray returned to France, where he held a position in Vichy Army and was posted at the Uriage Leader's School, under Pierre Dunoyer de Segonzac, a pro-Pétain but anti-German officer. Along with Dunoyer de Segonzac, Le Ray chose Resistance in January 1943. He assumed military command of the maquis du Vercors in February 1943. Le Ray left the Vercors in January 1944 and become the Forces Françaises de l'Intérieur local commanding officer.
Bosco enrolled at the University of Montreal in the Faculty of Arts and received her Masters in 1951 and her PhD in 1953. In 1961 she published An Unsteady Love , her first novel, and a year later she was appointed Professor of French Literature and Creative Writing at the University of Montreal. Bosco is considered one of the pioneers of modern Québécois studies. She worked for Radio Canada International from 1949 to 1952, as a researcher for the National Film Board of Canada from 1960 to 1962 and as a columnist for La Presse, Le Devoir and Maclean's.
La presse canadienne fait assaut de critiques sur la Francophonie Agence France-Presse, 1 September 1999.Christian Rioux, "La Franco... quoi?", Le Devoir, 4 September 1999. Given that during his 12-year tenure, President Chirac, dubbed Papa Afrique or Chirac l'Africain, had confided more than once that Africa was not ready for multipartism (l'Afrique n'est pas mûre pour le multipartisme) and was known for his close relationship with many entrenched African strongmen, calling Omar Bongo of Gabon, Gnassingbé Eyadéma of Togo, Denis Sassou Nguesso of the Congo, Blaise Compaoré of Burkina Faso "personal friends", nothing came out of this declaration.
The Ligue nationaliste canadienne, also known as the Ligue nationaliste, was a nationalist and anti-imperialist organization in Quebec, Canada, during the early 20th century. Founded by Henri Bourassa and journalist Olivar Asselin, the newspaper Le Nationaliste was its official organ until 1910, when Bourassa founded Le Devoir which became the Ligue's mouthpiece. The party was created in 1903 to counter what was perceived to be the evils of imperialism and to instill a pan-Canadian nationalist spirit in the Francophone population. The League opposed political dependence on either Britain or the United States, supporting instead Canadian autonomy within the British Empire.
Currently, Hébert is a national affairs writer with the Toronto Star as well as a guest columnist for Le Devoir and L'actualite. She frequently appears on CBC Television's The National as a member of the At Issue political panel and is a regular participant in various other French- and English-language television and radio current affairs programs. Hébert received the 2005 Public Service Citation of the Association of Professional Executives of the Public Service of Canada (APEX). In February 2006, the Public Policy Forum voted her the Hyman Solomon Award for Excellence in Public Policy Journalism.
Studin has also served as an associated member of the faculty of Chaire Raoul-Dandurand en études stratégiques et diplomatiques at Université du Québec à Montréal. He was an appointed member of the first-ever advisory board for the Canadian Foreign Service Institute, Canada's diplomatic academy. Studin has written, in various languages, for papers and publications ranging from the Financial Times to Le Monde, the Globe & Mail, Toronto Star, National Post, Ottawa Citizen, La Presse, Le Devoir, Policy Options, the Montreal Gazette, the Indian Express, Vedomosti, the South China Morning Post, The Australian and The Straits Times.
Richard Louis Duckett (January 30, 1885 – July 19, 1972) was a Canadian athlete, lawyer and coroner, who held office in the judicial district of Montreal between 1937 and 1961. Born in Montreal, the eldest son of a second- generation Irish Canadian shopkeeper and a French Canadian mother, Duckett was educated at the Collège Sainte-Marie before earning a law degree at the Université Laval à Montréal in 1908.Obituary: Le Devoir, July 20, 1972, p. 6 Representing Canada as a member of the Ottawa Nationals Lacrosse Club, Duckett won a gold medal at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London.
In 2014, Fortier and Nicolas Dickner published Révolutions, a collaborative project for which they each wrote a short piece each day for a year based on a word chosen from the French Republican Calendar."Un mot, un jour". Le Devoir, September 20, 2014. Fortier is also a three-time nominee for the Governor General's Award for English to French translation, garnering two nominations at the 2006 Governor General's Awards for her translations of Mark Abley's Spoken Here: Travels Among Threatened Languages and David Suzuki and Wayne Grady's Tree: A Life Story,"Local authors up for Governor General's Awards".
Montreal is Canada's second-largest media market, and the centre of francophone Canada's media industry. There are four over-the-air English-language television stations: CBMT-DT (CBC Television), CFCF-DT (CTV), CKMI-DT (Global) and CJNT-DT (Citytv). There are also five over-the-air French-language television stations: CBFT-DT (Ici Radio-Canada), CFTM-DT (TVA), CFJP-DT (V), CIVM-DT (Télé-Québec), and CFTU-DT (Canal Savoir). Montreal has three daily newspapers, the English-language Montreal Gazette and the French-language Le Journal de Montréal, and Le Devoir; another French- language daily, La Presse, became an online daily in 2018.
On 25 October 2017 Clermont-Dion claimed on her Facebook page to have filed a sexual assault complaint against Michel Venne, journalist and founder of the Institut du Nouveau Monde, for an alleged incident that occurred when he was her boss in the summer of 2008. She was a minor at the time. During 2014–2015 she made a public release about the alleged incident without naming her attacker. Clermont-Dion claimed that Lise Payette, a feminist and columnist, pressured her to sign a retraction as rumours spread, affecting Venne's opportunity to become an editor at Le Devoir.
A spokesperson for the party stated that his past didn't come up during the vetting process since he came from the United States. The two other members denied having racist views and the party later told Le Devoir that they did not have enough resources to vet them at the beginning of the PPC's formation. In November 2018, Minister of Democratic Institutions Karina Gould said that Maxime Bernier would qualify for debates hosted by the Leaders' Debates Commission if the party nominated candidates in 90% of ridings. The party held rallies in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, Ottawa–Gatineau, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, and Quebec City.
The Musée – Librairie du Compagnonnage is a museum devoted to French trade guilds. It is located in the 6th arrondissement at 10, rue Mabillon, Paris, France, and open weekday afternoons; entry is free. The museum is operated by the Compagnons du Tour de France in the former seat of the Compagnons Charpentiers du Devoir de Liberté ("Indiens"), and documents the history of French trade guilds () from their medieval origins to the present day. It contains artifacts, tools, photographs, and documents pertaining to these diverse associations of skilled craftsmen in fields such as cooking, pastry, plumbing, ironworks, masonry, cabinetmaking, carpentry, etc.
Following the War it broke from typical American clichés and took on more of a savage bite, especially compared to the more allegorical tendencies of American editorial cartoons. At Le Devoir, Robert Lapalme was the first to cartoon in this particularly Canadian idiom, and in 1963 organized an International Salon of Caricature and Cartoon in Montreal. Lapalme was later followed by Duncan Macpherson at the Toronto Star, Leonard Norris at the Vancouver Sun and Ed McNally at the Montreal Star. These cartoonists frequently took political positions contrary to those of the papers in which they were published.
Le Devoir or that he was not a "real Quebecer".Sarah Scott, Geoff Baker, "Richler Doesn't Know Quebec, Belanger Says; Writer 'Doesn't Belong', Chairman of Panel on Quebec's Future Insists", The Gazette, September 20, 1991. She found that some critics had misquoted his work; for instance, in reference to the mantra of the entwined church and state coaxing females to procreate as vastly as possible, a section in which he said that Quebec women were treated like "sows" was misinterpreted to suggest that Richler thought they were sows. Québécois writers who thought critics had overreacted included Jean-Hugues Roy, Étienne Gignac, Serge-Henri Vicière, and Dorval Brunelle.
The sumptuous house was built after Louis-Joseph Papineau returned from political exile in Europe, during the mid-1800s; he lived in the manor from 1846 with his wife and four children until his death. His descendants lived on at the house until the 1920s. Some of the more notable of these included his youngest daughter Azélie, mother to Henri Bourassa the famous journalist and founder of Canadian newspaper Le Devoir. Also, Talbot Mercer Papineau (great grandson of Louis-Joseph Papineau) lawyer and decorated soldier, one of four Canadians featured in the book Tapestry of War: A Private View of Canadians in the Great War, by Sandra Gwyn.
Other honors came to her; she was awarded a Gold Medal in the Salon of 1804, and received a governmental allowance. During this time she opened an atelier for the artistic training of women. Her career was harmed by political developments, however, when her husband, the supporter of royalist causes, Comte Benoist, was nominated in the Conseil d'État during the post-1814 Bourbon Restoration. Despite being at the height of her popularity, "she was obliged to abandon painting" and pursuing women's causes, due in part to her devoir de réserve or "tactful withdrawal" in English, in the face of the growing wave of conservatism in European society.
Arms of Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell: Quarterly, per fess, indented, azure and or, four lions passant counterchanged; motto: Faire mon devoir Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell, KB ( – 4 July 1551) was an English peer. He was the only son of the Tudor statesman Thomas Cromwell, 1st Earl of Essex ( – 1540) and Elizabeth Wyckes (d. 1529). Gregory's father Thomas Cromwell rose from obscurity to become the chief minister of Henry VIII, who attempted to modernize government at the expense of the privileges of the nobility and church. He used his office to promote religious reform and was one of the strongest advocates of the English Reformation.
9 July 1536 Territorial designation: Wimbledon Earl of Essex Creation: let. pat. 17 April 1540 All titles Extinct: 29 June 1540 Thomas Cromwell was attainted on 29 June 1540 and all his titles forfeited The arms he adopted were: quarterly, per fess, indented, azure and or, four lions passant counterchanged and his motto, "Faire mon devoir". He was now Lord Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell in his own right. When Thomas Cromwell was created Earl of Essex on 17 April 1540, his son, Gregory had assumed the courtesy title of Lord Cromwell from his father's secondary title, Lord Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell (of Wimbledon in the County of Surrey).
Following the Commission's request for proposal, the Canadian Debate Production Partnership was selected to produce the debates. The CDPP consisted of a consortium of English- and French-language broadcasters and newspapers: CBC News/Radio-Canada, Global News, CTV News, the Toronto Star, HuffPost Canada/Quebec, La Presse, Le Devoir, and L'Actualité. The English debate was moderated by Rosemary Barton (CBC News), Susan Delacourt (Toronto Star), Dawna Friesen (Global News), Lisa LaFlamme (CTV News) and Althia Raj (HuffPost Canada), each responsible for a portion of the debate. The French moderator was Patrice Roy (Ici Radio-Canada Télé), who was assisted by several journalists from prominent Quebec newspapers.
Memorial Plaque in honour of Donald Caskie as seen in 2013 at the rue de Forbin in Marseille, France He was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in June 1945 for services to the Forces in France. He was honoured by the French government for his wartime service. The Alliance France-Ecosse society erected a memorial plaque at the rue de Forbin in Marseille, France. On 26 October 2019 a memorial plaque marking his work was unveiled at the Fort de la Revere near Nice by the Le Devoir du Memoire organisation, which honours those affected by the war, including Resistance fighters.
Born in Montreal, Quebec, the youngest in a family of seven children, Serge Chapleau grew up in a blue collar neighbourhood in Montréal, where his childhood kingdom was the back alley of rue Drolet. After studying painting and graphic art at the School of Fine Arts in Montreal, Chapleau created in 1971 a caricature of the songbook Gilles Vigneault for Perspectives, a weekly paper distributed with the Saturday Editions of several Quebec dailys. During the following years, Chapleau collaborated in several other publications, such as Montréal-Matin, Week-End, Actualité and Nous. Following Le Devoir in 1985, he worked at Le Matin in 1987, and 7 Jours from 1989 to 1992.
Dame Nature then crowns the Eagle as King of the birds and sharpens his feathers 'like steel darts'. He is commanded to let 'no ravening bird cause trouble'. :Syne crownit scho the Egle, king of fowlis, :And as steill dertis scherpit scho his pennis, :And bawd him be als just to awppis and owlis :As unto pacokkis, papingais, or crennis, :And mak a law for wycht fowlis and for wrennis, :And lat no fowll of ravyne do efferay, :Nor devoir birdis bot his awin pray. The Eagle appears to symbolise the King's determination to keep the peace within Scotland and, perhaps, to keep the peace with England.
He was removed from the party on August 29, 2019 after his past came to light. The PPC's spokesperson said that it did not come up during the vetting process since he came from the US. They later cited to Global News that his removal was an example of the Party taking a stand against racism. The party told Le Devoir that they did not have enough resources to vet them at the beginning of the PPC 's formation and the two other members denied having racist views. On July 30, 2019, Cody Payant, People's candidate for Carlton Trail—Eagle Creek, attracted attention for a social media post defending Lindsay Shepherd.
The initiative influenced the Parti Québécois and, in March 2008, shortly before the Parti Québécois National Council, leader Pauline Marois presented the party's plan to propose a conversation nationale to Quebecers as part of Marois' renewal of the party's approach on independence and social democracy. In this case, however, the conversation is to be solely on independence, instead of three options. The expression was met with less enthusiasm in Quebec and arose cynicism in the press and objection with some party hardliners.Logique impériale by François Brousseau, 25 March 2008, Le Devoir Shortly after, the Parti Québécois replaced the term with débat sur la souveraineté ("debate on sovereignty").
Cormier, Sylvain. “Ben et Betty voient triple”, Le Devoir, Jan 9, 2004 (French text) Retrieved Nov 5, 2008 She has collaborated with composer and saxophonist, François D'AmoursBonifassi’s interview with Monique Giroux of Radio-Canada, Sep 13, 2004 (French text and audio) Retrieved Nov 5, 2008 and has performed and toured with musician Maxime Morin (also known as DJ Champion).“Oscar nominee headlines M For Montreal”, NME news, Oct 31, 2006 Retrieved Nov 5, 2008 Bonifassi appeared as a guest vocalist on Deweare's album High Class Trauma (2006),Bottenberg, Rupert. “Viable geometry, instant poetry >> French transplant Deweare finds momentum in Montreal”, Montreal Mirror, Apr 19–25, 2007, Vol.
Known as the Sel de devoir, translated to "salt duty", citizens in the Pays de grandes gabelles region were forced to buy up to 7 kilograms (15lb) of salt per year. Furthermore, they were unable to use this salt for making salted products, which was considered illegal and could lead to charges of faux saunage, or salt fraud. Failing to adhere to this could lead to imprisonment and, if repeated, death. Each province had a Greniers à sel (a salt granary) where all salt produced from that region needed to be taken in order to be bought (at a fixed price) and sold (at an inflated price).
He also insisted that all his meetings be open to all races. His visit and talks were the subject of hundreds of newspaper articles. In Boston newspaper reporters asked ʻAbdu'l-Bahá why he had come to America, and he stated that he had come to participate in conferences on peace and that just giving warning messages is not enough. ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's visit to Montreal provided notable newspaper coverage; on the night of his arrival the editor of the Montreal Daily Star met with him and that newspaper along with The Montreal Gazette, Montreal Standard, Le Devoir and La Presse among others reported on ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's activities.
Her articles have appeared in Le Monde, Le Devoir, L'Express de Toronto, Châtelaine, Le Point and L'Actualité. She has written La Voix de la France (1975), Une enfance à l'eau bénite (1985), Aimez-moi les uns les autres (1999), Nos chères amies (2008), or more recently L'énigmatique Céline Dion (2009). In 2003, she was fired via e-mail from the public television network Radio-Canada for engaging in a debate on same-sex marriage against Louis Godbout, spokesperson for the Quebec Gay Archives, during an interview-format segment of Le Point, an evening information show. She has been scathing about reality television programs, especially Quebec's Star Académie.
In 1958, he was part of a team of Le Devoir reporters exposing the natural gas scandal, leading to the formation of the Salvas Commission, soon after the election of 1960. After Duplessis' death, Laporte successfully ran for a seat in Chambly in the Quebec National Assembly and served in the government of Premier Jean Lesage. Laporte was a member of the Quebec Liberal Party, and considered to be a leading member of the party's left wing. After Lesage announced in 1969 that he would step down as party leader, Laporte ran to succeed him, but lost the 1970 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election to fellow cabinet member Robert Bourassa.
Scared that she may be taken by children's aid and separated from her younger brother Mimi (Anthony Bouchard), she takes inspiration from the contemporaneous October crisis and kidnaps elderly neighbour Rose (Clare Coulter) so that she, Mimi and their cousins Martin (Henri Richer-Picard) and Denis (Alexis Guay) can safely travel to an isolated rural cabin where Manon hopes to live free of parental interference.«Les rois mongols»: il était une fois dans l’Est. Le Devoir, September 23, 2017. The film was written by Nicole Bélanger, as an adaptation of her novel Salut mon roi mongol!."Nicole Bélanger - Les rois mongols: une ado rebelle raconte la crise d’Octobre".
In an interview with Montreal's Le Devoir, the former economist and public servant who later became premier of Quebec commented: "We don't have to dam every single river just because they're French Canadian and Catholic." However, Bourassa himself and Hydro-Québec senior management — including President Roland Giroux and commissioners Yvon DeGuise and Robert Boyd — were firmly behind the large hydroelectric development to be built in northern Quebec. At the time Giroux, a financier, argued that large international investors "are still wary about nuclear energy. If we bring them a good hydroelectric project, and James Bay is a good one, they'll soon show where their preferences lie".
Plante would lead a crusade against organized crime and institutionalized vice in Montreal. Even after he was fired from his position as head of the Morality Squad in 1948,Pierre de Champlain, "Le crime organisé à Montréal, 1940-1980" (Hull: Éditions Asticou, 1986),49, 50,80. he continued to target vice and organized crime through his newspaper column, "Sous le règne de la pègre" in Le Devoir.Plante worked in conjunction with Gérald Pelletier writing daily articles for Le Devoir with the intent to inform and mobilize the public against organized crime.Magaly Brodeur, Vice et corruption à Montreal: 1892-1970 (Quebec : Presses de l’Université du Québec, 2011),48.
His policies challenged the traditional agrarian society that the dominance and influence of the Roman Catholic Church had been able to maintain in Quebec longer than elsewhere in North America. The Liberals of Taschereau were primarily opposed by ultramontane nationalists such as Henri Bourassa, editor of Le Devoir, and Roman Catholic priest Lionel Groulx, editor of L'action canadienne-française. Taschereau (right), November 1927 Credit: National Film Board of Canada. Photothèque / Library and Archives Canada / PA-125133 Taschereau introduced a measure in 1930 to create a Jewish board that would have provided for Jewish participation on the highest decision-making educational body in Quebec, the Quebec Council of Public Instruction.
With Love () is a Canadian thriller film, directed by Marc Bisaillon and released in 2018."Marc Bisaillon, au-delà du fait divers". Le Devoir, October 29, 2018. Based on the 2006 murder spree of Stephen Marshall, the film stars Pierre-Luc Lafontaine as Alex, a young man who travels to Maine under the pretext of visiting his father (Paul Doucet), but is instead planning to use the state's sex offender registry to track down and murder sex offenders; meanwhile, his mother Rose (Fanny Mallette), having awareness of his intentions, is travelling to Maine to try to stop him."Amour, L’ – Film de Marc Bisaillon".
New issues arising in 2002 were local residents' complaints and the ascendacy of a law and order discourse on both left and right, leading to a heated debate,Claude Boucher Défendre les travailleuses du sexe; Elizabeth Badinter Si c'est leur choix; Wassila Tamzali Le devoir d'interdire; Françoise de Panafieu Pourquoire j'ai tapé le poing sur la table. Le Nouvel Observateur 22 August 2002 notably the suggestion by Françoise de Panafieu (UMP) that the maisons closes (see Maisons closes below) be re-opened. Pourquoi la prostitution ne s'exercerait-elle pas dans des lieux précis, maisons closes ou autres structures ? Le Journal du Dimanche July 2002.
His first published work was the French novel Zoom Papaye, and his second, After, won the 2005 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non- FictionFaculty of Arts, 2006, Edna Staebler Award , Wilfrid Laurier University, Previous winners, Francis Chalifour, Retrieved November 27, 2012 and was nominated for the Governor General's Award 2005.Canada Council for the Arts, Finalists – Children's Text, Retrieved November 27, 2012 He wrote the book called Le fils du pendu. He has also contributed articles to Maclean's, the Toronto Star, The Walrus, Le Devoir and La Presse. He has hosted the radio program Ondes De Choc, and worked for the TV show Volt.
Huguette Tourangeau was born in Montreal, Quebec, and graduated in pedagogy and piano from the Montreal Marguerite-Bourgeoys College, before entering the Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal in 1958,"La mezzo-soprano québécoise Huguette Tourangeau s’est éteinte ". Le Devoir, Sylvain Cormier, 25 April 2018 where she was a pupil of Ruzena Herlinger (voice), Otto-Werner Mueller (repertory) and Roy Royal (declamation). In 1962, she was a soloist in Monteverdi's Vespro della Beata Vergine, in Montreal. She made her operatic debut as Mercédès in Carmen, under Zubin Mehta, in 1964, also in Montreal. In 1964 Tourangeau won the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions.
French- language newspapers including La Presse (Canadian newspaper) in 1884 and Le Devoir in 1910 and the Monument National theatre stood as pillars of cultural life. McGill University, founded in 1821, and the Montreal Star (1869) and Montreal Gazette (1785, originally a French language publication) newspapers stood as testaments to the vitality of the English-speaking community. The Golden Square Mile, a residential area on the south slope of Mount Royal, became the home of Canada's wealthiest citizens, including William Dow, John Redpath, William Notman, James McGill, John Molson, Sir George Simpson (administrator) and Sir Hugh Allan. By 1921 the city had 618,000 inhabitants.
Threads () is a Norwegian-Canadian animated short film, directed by Torill Kove and released in 2017.Jérôme Delgado, "Torill Kove, la cinéaste montréalaise à la fiche parfaite". Le Devoir, November 23, 2017. Based on Kove's own experience as an adoptive parent, the film depicts a woman who catches a thread in the sky which carries her to a baby girl, whom she rears and remains connected to with a red thread of love and emotional connection until the girl is a young woman old enough to go seek her own thread of connection to a baby of her own.Stéphane Dreyfus, "Rubans, de Torill Kove : un très joli film sur l’adoption". La Croix, September 16, 2018.
On March 20, the EPIC Centre, one of the largest cardiovascular prevention centre in Canada with more than 5,303 registered members, suspended its activities until further notice. As of April 28, four of the five surgical units at Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital were infected with COVID-19 patients. On May 7, Le Devoir newspaper revealed that a patient with COVID-19 had been in the emergency room of Maisonneuve-Rosemont hospital for more than 100 hours. On March 27, while Quebec had 2,021 cases confirmed to COVID-19 and the Jewish General Hospital treated approximately 40% of the 50 intensive care patients, the hospitals of Verdun and Hôpital Notre-Dame did not treat any COVID-19 patient.
He operated a medical practice in Montreal for a little while, but abandoned it in favour of a career as a journalist and musician. He worked as a reporter and editor for various daily newspapers in Montreal up until 1914. He also was a music columnist for various periodicals from 1900 up until the end of his life; including La Patrie (1904–1910), La Presse (1904–1910), La Musique (1919–1921), Musical America (1923–1925), Association française d'action artistique (1920–1944), L'Art musical, La Lyre, Musical Canada, and the Quinzaine musicale et artistique among others. For Le Devoir he authored a dozen reviews between 1911 and 1913 before being appointed its long-time music editor and critic (1916–1944).
In the first few weeks after André Boisclair was elected leader of the PQ, polls showed that Charest and the Liberals would be roundly defeated in the next election. Boisclair did not perform well as Leader of the Opposition, and Charest's numbers recovered somewhat. A poll conducted by Léger Marketing for Le Devoir placed the Liberals at 34 per cent against 32 per cent for the PQ and 24 per cent for the ADQ, with Charest obtaining a higher personal approval rating than the PQ leader. Liberal support, however remained heavily concentrated in Anglophone and Allophone ridings in the west of Montreal, meaning that the increase in support would not necessarily translate into seats.
In 1848 he represented the Côtes-du-Nord in the National Assembly, and next year entered the Council of State, but was retired on account of his republican opinions. His refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the government of Louis Napoleon after the coup d'état was followed by his dismissal from his professorship, and he devoted himself to philosophical and political writings of a popular order. Le Devoir (1853), which was translated into modern Greek and Swedish, was followed by La Religion naturelle (1856, Eng. trans., 1887), La Liberté de conscience (1857), La Liberté politique (1859), La Liberté civile (1859), L'Ouvrière (1861), L'Ecole (1864), Le Travail (1866), L'Ouvrier de huit ans (1867) and others.
The opposition Conservative coalition, the imperialists under Sir Robert Borden and the Nationalistes led by Henri Bourassa, vehemently opposed Laurier's plans for a Canadian Navy, but for totally different reasons. Bourassa founded the daily newspaper Le Devoir, with the express purpose of defeating the Naval Service Act through insinuations and allegations that conscription would soon follow. His camp claimed that the cruisers proposed were more than Canada needed for fisheries and sovereignty protection, but were sufficient to attract the attention of other navies. He further stated that Canadian squadrons, paid by and for Canada, put under the command of the Admiralty in times of war, meant an automatic involvement on every imperial war.
His work has been reviewed in leading peer reviewed journals of political science, public policy and public administration and some of the world's leading newspapers including The Sunday Times (UK), Financial Times (UK), The Daily Telegraph (UK), The Times of India, the Globe and Mail (Canada) and several leading American newspapers. He has published op.eds in the Globe and Mail, National Post, Le Devoir, La Presse, The Guardian (UK) and Time Magazine. He was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1993,Government of Canada Order of Canada record a member of the Order of New Brunswick in 2011 and elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1992.
Parizeau argued that reductions were necessary in all departments, in light of anticipated cuts from the federal government.Rheal Seguin, "Quebec tightens belt, blames No vote," Globe and Mail, 25 November 1995, A7. The following year, Champagne compared the policies of Lucien Bouchard (Parizeau's successor as PQ leader and premier) with those pursued by the right-wing governments of Mike Harris and Ralph Klein in Ontario and Alberta.Lia Levesque, "Les groupes populaires comparent Bouchard à Harris," Le Devoir, 29 March 1996, A3. She called on the government to combat poverty by increasing taxes on corporations and those earning more than $70,000 per year, rather than by imposing further restrictions on low-income Quebecers.
Michael Derek Behiels (born 1946) is a Canadian historian who served as a professor and University Research Chair in the Department of History at the University of Ottawa, specializing in twentieth-century Canadian politics. A student of Ramsay Cook, he is a prominent defender of Pierre Trudeau's conception of federalism: no special status for Quebec and maintenance of linguistic minority rights. In 1985, while a faculty member at Acadia University, his published doctoral dissertation Prelude to Quebec's Quiet Revolution was nominated for the Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction. Thanks to this book's success, he is still considered to be a major authority on the thought of former Le Devoir editor André Laurendeau.
Lux Éditeur is a Québécoise publishing house, based in Montréal, specialising in the history of the Americas and left-libertarian politics.Site of Lux Éditeur Its works are distributed by Harmonia Mundi in Europe and Flammarion in Canada. Founded in 1995 under the name Comeau & Nadeau by historians Robert Comeau and Jean-François Nadeau, it took the name Lux Éditeur in 2002, after the departure of Jean-François Nadeau, who became literary editor of Devoir. Since then, Lux has become part of the independent publishing scene in Québec, and part of the French market since the end of the 1990s, especially since the emergence of publishes such as Agone, La Fabrique, Les Prairies ordinaires, Syllepse, Éditions Amsterdam and Éditions Aden.
This is considered to be Richier's first Calvary and Paul Denis wrote that "Parmi le groupe assez important des calvaires pouvant être rattachés à l'atelier, celui de Génicourt nous paraît devoir être regardé comme le premier en date. La très intéressante église de ce village, situé à mi-chemin entre Saint-Mihiel et Verdun, renferme en effet un Christ en croix et deux statues de bois polychrome, la Vierge et saint Jean". The Génicourt work is thought to have been executed shortly after the retable at Hattonchâtel. The work is in polychromed wood and comprises a depiction of Jesus Christ on the Cross with the two robbers on either side and depictions of the Virgin Mary and St John.
"It's important to choose balances and tempi to allow the singers to sing beautifully.""Joseph Rescigno conducts Virginia Opera's 'The Valkyrie'" by Emily Cary, The Washington Examiner, February 7, 2011, Page 20. Rescigno has also embraced new works like Minoru Miki's Jōruri for Opera Theater of Saint Louis, Don Davis's Río de Sangre at the Florentine Opera, Denis Gougeon's Piano Concerto with l'Orchestre Métropolitain, and Ernesto Cordero's Concierto de Bayoán (for guitar) at the Casals Festival—all world premieres under his baton. As music director of a symphony orchestra, he explicitly committed to showcasing the works of living—and local—composers,, "De la fosse au podium" by François Tousignant, Le Devoir, December 6, 1995, Page A 1.
La France est un pays amazonien. La forêt amazonienne, ce patrimoine écologique universel, dépasse les frontières des hommes. Nous avons le devoir d'agir, Monsieur Bolsonaro.Le Monde - Emmanuel Macron assure le chef amazonien Raoni du soutien de la France - 16/5/2019 - « En tant que pays amazonien » avec la Guyane, « la France est naturellement engagée dans la lutte contre la déforestation » et « défend les droits des autochtones, notamment en tant qu'acteurs essentiels de la préservation des forêts et de la biodiversité, et par conséquent engagés dans la lutte contre les dérèglements climatiques » Macron called the Amazon wildfires an "international crisis", while claiming the rainforest produces "20% of the world's oxygen"—a statement disputed by academics.
He also published popular works like La religion de mon père (The Religion of My Father) in 1986 and La foi de ma mère (The Faith of My Mother) in 2001. He also took part in a number of radio and television shows about the popular religion. Between 1987 and 2010, Benoît Lacroix wrote and published a number of essays with a spiritual and poetic tendency in Montreal French-language daily Le Devoir. In 2012, Quebec journalist Josée Blanchette published a long documentary about Father Benoît Lacroix and the Convent of Saint-Albert-le-Grand of the Dominicans, on chemin de la Côte-Sainte-Catherine à Montréal, under the title Bonté divine: 24 heures au couvent des dominicains.
In the lead up to the 2015 election, the CYND had been openly critical of leader Thomas Mulcair when he broke with long standing NDP principles, in particular on matters of foreign policy. After the stunning 2015 election that saw Thomas Mulcair lose official opposition status, the party was heading into a leadership review at 2016 convention in Edmonton. One month before the leadership review CYND members from two Montreal Universities published an open letter in Le Devoir calling on Thomas Mulcair to resign. Pressure continued to mount on Mulcair when it was reported that NDP McGill had submitted a resolution to CYND convention that would urge all CYND member delegates to vote for a leadership race.
Honorary doctorate recipient at University of Ottawa Lise Bissonnette (born December 13, 1945) is a Canadian writer and journalist. Born in Rouyn, Quebec, Bissonnette studied education science at the Université de Montréal from 1965 to 1970. She later pursued doctoral studies at the University of Strasbourg and the École pratique des hautes études in Paris. In 1974, she became a reporter for the daily newspaper Le Devoir. She became the parliamentary correspondent in Quebec City, then in Ottawa, before taking on the position of editorialist and, finally, that of writer-in-chief in 1982. From 1986 to 1990, she worked as an independent journalist and consultant, and collaborated with many Quebec and Canadian media organizations.
She holds seven doctorates honoris causa: from the Université de Sherbrooke, State University of New York, Concordia University, Laurentian University, Université Laval, Université de Montréal, and the University of Ottawa.Le Devoir, le jeudi 15 juin 2006 - Lise Bissonnette est honorée par l'Université de MontréalUniversity of Ottawa - Honorary Doctorates Lise Bissonnette, 2011 In 2000, she was awarded the French Légion d'honneur, and received the new mérite d'honneur of French and of Francophone education, bestowed by the Quebec Minister of International Relations, Louise Beaudoin. She is a member of the Union of Quebec Writers. Lise Bissonnette is the president and general director of the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec, formerly known as the Bibliothèque nationale du Québec.
In early June, the Deputy Minister of Health and Social Services, Dominique Savoie, was mandated to make a good diagnosis of what did not work in Montreal and "see to it that it is improved for the second wave ". Le Devoir reported on June 2 that Montreal had 150 investigators doing contract-tracing, and that 18,000 investigations had been conducted, a number deemed clearly insufficient in the event of a second wave. In the weekly pandemic survey presented by Léger on June 8, 2020, 72 percent of Quebec respondents were of the opinion that there would be a second wave. On June 11, Horacio Arruda ruled out the possibility of a total lockdown in the event of a second wave.
Dessau-Soprin was an engineering firm that was supervising the project operations. The city of Laval affirmed that, prior to the collapse, it discovered unspecified problems with some of the beams of the overpass. Beaver Ridge president Mario D'Errico told Le Devoir that the failure was caused by a rupture of one of the beams—which was later confirmed by a Transports Quebec employee—citing an instability of one of them which then consequently caused the collapse of every single beam on the south side. Generally, beams are fixed together in the form of an X Inspectors from the Commission de la Santé et de la Sécurite du Travail (CSST) noticed some irregularities in the workplace several months before the incident.
In the 1960s and early 1970s he hosted the supper-hour news and current affairs show on Montreal television station CBMT, and in the 1970s was co-anchor and Ottawa Bureau Chief for the Global Television Network, winning the 1977 ACTRA Award for best news broadcaster. Desbarats wrote 13 books, including René: A Canadian in Search of Country, a best-selling biography of René Lévesque; Somalia Cover-Up: A Commissioner's Journal, a book about his stint on the Somalia Inquiry;, and Guide to Canadian News Media, a standard journalism text; as well as several children's books"L'ancien journaliste et auteur Peter Desbarats est décédé à l'âge de 80 ans". Le Devoir, February 12, 2014. and a 2002 stage play, Her Worship, about controversial London mayor Dianne Haskett.
348: "..., nous avons cru devoir la nommer quinine, pour la distinguer de la cinchonine par un nom qui indique également son origine." (..., we thought that we should name it "quinine" in order to distinguish it from cinchonine by means of a name that also indicates its origin.) Prior to 1820, the bark was simply dried, ground to a fine powder and mixed into a liquid (commonly wine) for drinking. An English trader, Charles Ledger, and his Amerindian servant spent four years collecting cinchona seeds in the Andes in Bolivia, highly prized for their quinine but whose export was prohibited. Ledger managed to get seeds out; in 1865, the Dutch government cultivated 20,000 trees of the Cinchona ledgeriana in Java (Indonesia).
The Prix Arts-Affaires de Montréal are an initiative of the Conseil des arts de Montréal and the Board of Trade of Metropolitan Montreal, in partnership with Quebecor Inc., SITQ, in collaboration with daily newspaper Le Devoir, to reward businesses and individuals who have shown their support for Montréal arts and cultural organizations. A multidisciplinary design collective called Rita, composed of Stéphane Halmaï-Voisard, Karine Corbeil, and Francis Rollin, created the work of art that is presented to Prix Arts-Affaires winners."Board of Trade of Metropolitan Montreal Press Release" The winners of the 2007 Prix Arts-Affaires de Montréal were as follows: SSQ Financial Group (Large enterprise category), TP1 (SME category), and Florence Junca-Adenot, UQAM professor, (Arts/Business personality category).
She first moved from Uruguay to France in 1960 to study literature at the Université de Paris, later moving to Canada to pursue her doctorate at the Université de Montréal. She was a lecturer at the Université du Québec à Montréal from 1978 to 1988, and wrote as a journalist for publications including Châtelaine, L'Actualité, Perspectives, La Gazette des femmes, Le Devoir, La Liberté and La Nouvelle barre du jour. She received the Judith Jasmin Award in 1988 for her Gazette article "Quelle vieillesse vous préparez-vous: un âge d'or ou d'argent?" She has also published novels, short stories and radio plays for Radio-Canada's Première Chaîne, as well as numerous policy documents for the Government of Quebec on disability, LGBT and human rights issues.
MacArthur writes a monthly column, in French, for Le Devoir on a wide range of topics from politics to culture and is a regular contributor to the Spectator (U.K.), the Toronto Star, Le Monde Diplomatique and Le Monde. Though John D. MacArthur disinherited his son J. Roderick MacArthur, the latter served on the board of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation until his death in 1984. In 1980, John R. MacArthur persuaded the foundation to partner in creating and funding a Harper's Magazine Foundation to acquire and operate the magazine of the same name. This new entity acquired Harper's Magazine (which was then losing nearly $2 million per year and was on the verge of ceasing publication) for $250,000.
For instance, chansonnier Georges Dor penned his 1966 hit song, La Manic, which tells the story of a construction worker at the remote jobsite who describes his loneliness to his wife in words that captured the collective imagination of the Quebec public."Télévision - Là où le Québec s'inventait". Le Devoir, Paul Cauchon, 19 April 2003 Belgian-born novelist Henri Vernes was also inspired by the gigantic project and made the Manic-5 project the setting of one of his Bob Morane adventure novels. Terreur à la Manicouagan is about an attempt by arch-villain Roman Orgonetz to breach the dam by destroying the surge chamber by remote-controlled detonation, a plan foiled by Morane and his Scottish sidekick, Bill Ballantine.
Bourassa lost the 1976 election and his own MNA seat to the Parti Québécois under René Lévesque, in part due to the editorial position of Le Devoir under Ryan's stewardship. Subsequently, Ryan won the 1978 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election and served as party leader from 1978 to 1982, where he opposed Lévesque in two prominent campaigns (a referendum and an election). Ryan led the victorious "No" side in the 1980 Quebec referendum on sovereignty which captured 60% of the vote. One particular turning point in the campaign was when Quebec PQ cabinet minister Lise Payette criticized Ryan's wife, Madeleine, as an "Yvette", a stay-at-home character in a popular Quebec storybook, then further suggesting that all females who were against sovereignty were acting as "Yvettes".
In partnership with the Canadian Jewish Congress, Naim Kattan founded Le Cercle Juif, a publication dedicated to building cultural ties between Jewish and French Canada in the 1950, which was the first non-Catholic French-language periodical published in Montreal.“Naim Kattan – Cercle juif de langue française – Canadian Jewish Congress,” Museum of Jewish Montreal, accessed November 15, 2016. Kattan went on to write a literary column in Le Devoir, and for close to 25 years he headed the writing and publishing division of the Canada Council for the Arts Writing and Publication program. Kattan was also an Associate Professor in the Department of Literary Studies at the Université du Québec à Montréal.Norma Baumel Joseph, “Honorary Degree Citation – Naim Kattan” (speech, Montreal, QC, June 2006), Concordia University.
Black October is a 2000 documentary film written, directed and narrated by Terence McKenna and produced by Stephen Phizicky for CBC television on the October Crisis in Canada which aired in October 2000. It focuses on the autumn of 1970, following the kidnapping of British Trade Commissioner James Cross and Quebec Minister of Labour Pierre Laporte by the Front de libération du Québec in October. The War Measures Act was declared by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau a day before it was discovered Laporte was executed. The film includes interviews with Pierre Trudeau, his then Principal Secretary Marc Lalonde, Quebec Minister of Justice Jerome Choquette, then British Trade Commissioner James Cross, and former Le Devoir Editor Claude Ryan who became a key participant in the crisis.
Maurras was a major intellectual influence of national Catholicism, far-right movements, Latin conservatism, and integral nationalism.Miguel Rojas-Mix, "Maurras en Amérique latine", Le Monde diplomatique, November 1980 (republished in Manières de voir n°95, "Les droites au pouvoir", October–November 2007) He and the Action Française influenced many people and movements including General Francisco Franco, José Antonio Primo de Rivera, António Sardinha, Leon Degrelle, and autonomist movements in Europe. The Christian Democrat Jacques Maritain was also close to Maurras before the papal condemnation of the AF in 1927, and criticized democracy in one of his early writings, Une opinion sur Charles Maurras ou le devoir des catholiques. Furthermore, Maurrassism also influenced many writings from members of the Organisation armée secrète who theorized "counter- revolutionary warfare".
In the speech he gave on the first meeting of the board, Adan strongly expressed his faith in private initiative instead of state interference: The speech Henri Adan gave on the first board meeting of AIB. > Comme le disait M. Westerroiien van Mesteren, le promoteur de l'Association > Néerlandaise pour prévenir les accidents dans les fabriques et chantiers, il > est de la plus haute importance pour un petit pays de se joindre au > mouvement international qui permet à l'initiative privée de l'industriel, de > faire le bien sans qu'une loi coercitive lui prescrive ce devoir et le rende > odieux. Cette appréciation trouvait particulièrement application en notre > pays; il était impossible que nos traditions de liberté nous permissent > d'hésiter entre un régime coercitif et les enseignements d'un régime > libre.Quoted in de Brouwer, pages 8-9.
During this time, Fournier wrote a book, Souvenirs de prison, about his experiences in prison and the unsanitary conditions there. In 1910, Fournier worked at Le Devoir for three months before travelling to France as a correspondent for La Patrie. Fournier formed his own weekly newspaper L’Action in April 1911, featuring contributions by his friend Asselin as well as Arthur Beauchesne, a parliamentary expert and National Historic Person of Canada, several writers and many poets. The paper was sued twice during its existence - once by the editor of Fournier's former employer, La Patrie, and once by the Mayor of Montreal for calling him a 'big thief', the latter of which Fournier won. These lawsuits during the paper's infancy led Fournier to joke that the paper should have been called L’Action pour libelle ("libel lawsuit").
Gardiner was firing a warning shot in his rival's direction. Still rising in royal favour, Thomas Cromwell was created Earl of Essex on 17 April, and his son, Gregory assumed the courtesy title of Lord Cromwell (from his father's secondary title of Baron Cromwell, of Wimbledon in the County of Surrey). The arms granted to Gregory Cromwell were four coats, quarterly; 1st, quarterly, per fess indented, azure, and or, four lions passant, counterchanged; 2nd, per fess, or and gules, on a pale between two lis, azure, and two pelicans of the first, a pelican and lis, all counterchanged; 3rd, azure, on a fess, between three lions rampant, a rose, gules, between two Cornish choughs; 4th, Prior, as before, and the motto, "Faire mon devoir". On 18 April, Thomas Cromwell was made Great Chamberlain.
He won the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction in 1989 for his novel La Rage, and was nominated for the same award in 1995 for his novel Betsi Larousse, ou l'ineffable eccéité de la loutre and in 2006 for his short story collection Sauvages. Educated at McGill University and the Université du Québec à Montréal, he has also worked as a journalist and literary critic for Le Devoir. His 2010 novel La Constellation du Lynx, a fictionalized account of the 1970 October Crisis, won numerous literary awards in Quebec, including the Prix littéraire des collégiens, the Prix des libraires du Québec, the Grand Prix littéraire de la Presse québécoise and the Prix Ringuet."Louis Hamelin reçoit un autre prix pour son roman La constellation du lynx".
Quebec is dominated by French-language media, although there are a small number of English-language media centred in Montreal, and Quebecers also have access to Canadian English- language media, and media from the United States, France, and elsewhere. Québecor Média is a significant corporate presence in Quebec media; the company also controls the large Sun Media chain across Canada. The major newspapers in Quebec include the broadsheets La Presse (Montreal), Le Devoir (Montreal) and Le Soleil (Quebec City), the tabloids Le Journal de Montréal (Montreal) and Le Journal de Québec (Quebec City), and the English-language broadsheet The Gazette (Montreal). Other smaller centres have their own newspapers, and there are also several free papers including "alternative weeklies" and daily micro-presses available in cafes and the Montreal Metro.
In an open letter published in both the Toronto Star and Le Devoir on May 26, 1987, Trudeau attacked the Accord as a capitulation to provincialism and the end of any dream of "One Canada". Portraying "patriation" as the equalization of the bargaining power of Federal and provincial governments that would allow Canada to survive indefinitely, Trudeau wrote that the new agreement made further devolution of powers inevitable. He referred to Mulroney as a "weakling," the Premiers as "snivelers," and invoked Bourassa's previous reneging of the Victoria Charter as suggesting that the Accord would be the beginning of concessions to Quebec and provincial interests. Trudeau's well-known position as an ardent Federalist and a prominent Québécois helped express the opposition to the Accord for many of its opponents.
"Nézet-Séguin remplace Rescigno à l'Orchestre Métropolitain" by Claude Gingras, La Presse, Montreal, March 10, 2000, Page B 5. Rescigno replaced the lawyers at Lavery, de Billy with the law firm Stikeman Elliott and sued."Les archets volent bas à l'Orchestre Métropolitain" by Louise Leduc, Le Devoir, June 14, 2000, Page A 1. The Honourable Sylviane Borenstein, J.S.C., ultimately found that the "Defendant fired Plaintiff without cause and his contract was terminated in a brutal, abusive, cavalier and malicious manner." In addition, the Court labeled comments Goyer made at the March 9, 2000 press conference, immediately afterward, and into the Fall of 2000, as "false," "insulting," "gratuitous," and "malicious."The Honourable Sylviane Borenstein, J.S.C., Superior Court, Canada, Province of Quebec, District of Montreal, No. 500-17-011286-013, September 8, 2003, ¶53, 58, 60.
In 1992 he published Le Crépuscule du devoir. In this work he states that the vision of a secular world started with Martin Luther's revolt against the Catholic Church, and developed by thinkers such as René Descartes, Kant and Thomas Aquinas [beware: this is not possible, since Thomas Aquinas lived more than two centuries before Martin Luther; there must be a misunderstanding], leading to the idea that one purpose of God is to define and protect individual rights. In La Troisième femme in 1997 he argues the idea that the women's liberation movement is strongly connected to hyper consumerism as women are the main customers of luxury goods. In Métamorphoses de la culture libérale – Éthique, médias, entreprise in 2002, he examines the paradoxes of hyper modern democracies, with emphasis both on the individual, regionalization vs.
Corridor is a Canadian indie rock band from Montreal, Quebec, consisting of vocalist and bassist Dominic Berthiaume, guitarist Julian Perreault, guitarist and vocalist Jonathan Robert and drummer Julien Bakvis, with the addition of multi-instrumentalist Samuel Gougoux in live performances.Philippe Renaud, "«Junior», l’album qui va tout va changer pour Corridor". Le Devoir, October 12, 2019. The first francophone band ever signed to the influential indie label Sub Pop,Lorraine Carpenter, "Montreal’s Corridor makes a bit of music history". Cult MTL, November 18, 2019. they are most noted for their 2019 album Junior, which was a longlisted nominee for the 2020 Polaris Music Prize.Allie Gregory, "Here's the 2020 Polaris Music Prize Long List". Exclaim!, June 15, 2020. The band released their debut EP Un magicien en toi in 2013, and followed up with their full-length debut Le Voyage Éternel in 2015.
As a Quebecer, Parizeau was strongly associated with Montreal's intellectual and sovereigntist scenes, respectively. While best known as a novelist and journalist -- she wrote for Cité libre, La Presse, Châtelaine, Le Devoir, La Patrie and Maclean's -- Parizeau held a number of other positions. These included civil servant with the City of Montreal, researcher for Société Radio-Canada and, most notably, criminology researcher, lecturer and secretary-general of the Centre international de criminologie comparée at the Université de Montréal, where she served for many years as the de facto assistant director to Denis Szabo, founder of modern criminology in Quebec. Parizeau's writing was known for its outstanding storytelling and sensitive treatment of themes relating both to the Quebec people, which she portrayed in romantic terms congruent with the sovereignty movement's ideals, and life in and exile from Poland.
Federation CJA is one of the oldest Canadian Jewish organization.(in French) King, Joe (2002) Les Juifs de Montréal, trois siècles de parcours exceptionnel, pages 92 to 102, Editor Édition Carte Blanche.(89590-002-7) CJA was founded in 1916 with the hope of uniting Montreal's Jewish community and providing a central fundraising organization to serve the 14 founding organizations.(in French) Linteau, Paul-Andre (1992) Histoire de Montréal depuis la Confédération, Édition Boréal. pages 325 to 330 () It has been involved in all the major issues facing the community over 90 years, including government restrictions on immigration beginning in the 1920s, extreme poverty during the depression, the rise of fascism not only in Europe but also in Quebec during the thirties,(In French) Légaré Tremblay, Jean-Frédéric (1 April 2010) Adrien Arcand, un fasciste bien de chez nous, Le Devoir.
Cousineau worked for the Commission municipale du Québec from 1992 to 1998, when was appointed by the Canadian government to the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada in Montreal.Gaétan Cousineau, Commission des droits de la personne et des jeunesse, accessed 13 April 2011. He was not re- appointed in November 2006, amid suggestions that new prime minister Stephen Harper was attempting to pack the board with its ideological allies.Andrew Mayeda, "Critics say PM is staging refugee board power grab," Ottawa Citizen, 28 February 2007, A3. After leaving the Immigration and Refugee board, Cousineau was appointed to a five-year term as president of the Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse, which began in September 2007.Robert Dutrisac, "Choix contesté à la présidence de la Commission de l'équité salariale", Le Devoir, 27 June 2007, accessed 13 April 2011.
" In 2017, she served as historical consultant for Wajdi Mouawad's new play Tous des Oiseaux that premiered in Paris at the Théâtre de La Colline. Set in present-day New York and Jerusalem, the play follows a German/Israeli family riven by conflict when the geneticist son wants to marry an Arab-American woman who is doing her doctoral dissertation on Hassan al-Wazzan/Leo Africanus, the subject of Davis' Trickster TravelsChristian Rioux, "Wajid Mouawad triomphe a Paris,"Le Devoir, December 5, 2017. Her book (in-process), Braided Histories on 18th-century Suriname studies networks of communication and association among families, both slave and free, on the plantations of Christian and Jewish settlers. Though Davis's historical writings are extensively researched, she sometimes resorts to speculation, using analogous evidence and inserting words like "perhaps" and phrases like "she may have thought.
The first full academic school year began the following October with 175 students enrolled. Pelletier and Champagne hired an international staff which included bassoonist Simon Kovar and Louis Letellier; cellists Jean Belland and Roland Leduc; clarinetist Joseph Moretti; double bass players Roger Charbonneau and Anselme Fortier; flautists Hervé Baillargeon, René Le Roy, Arthur Lora, and Marcel Moyse; harpist Marcel Grandjany; horn players Harry Berv and Bernard Baker; pianists Lubka Kolessa, Fleurette Beauchamp, Jean Dansereau, Auguste Descarries, Yvonne Hubert, Arthur Letondal, Germaine Malépart, Isidor Philipp, and Edmond Trudel; oboists Harold Gomberg, Bruno Labate, and Michel Nazzi; organists Joseph Bonnet and George M. Brewer; percussionist Saul Goodman; trombonist Charles Gusikoff; and violinists Noël Brunet, Albert Chamberland, Camille Couture, Maurice Onderet, and Ethel Stark."Ethel Stark, créer son orchestre pour pouvoir tenir la baguette". Le Devoir, Christophe Huss, 4 March 2017.
According to Carolyn Cassady and others, he constantly rewrote and revised his work. Although the body of Kerouac's work has been published in English, recent research has shown that, in addition to his poetry and letters to friends and family, he also wrote unpublished works of fiction in French. The existence of his two novels written in French, La nuit est ma femme and Sur le chemin was revealed to the general public in a series of articles published by journalist Gabriel Anctil, in the Montreal newspaper Le Devoir in 2007 and 2008. All these works, including La nuit est ma femme, Sur le chemin, and large sections of Maggie Cassidy (originally written in French), have now been published together in a volume entitled La vie est d'hommage (Boréal, 2016) edited by University of Pennsylvania professor Jean-Christophe Cloutier.
Born in 1930, Maurice Dufresne began his training as a blacksmith at the age of fourteen and joined the "Compagnons du Devoir", an organization of journeymen -craftsmen, to begin a tour of France, working for twenty different employers. In 1958, he created his own company in Villeperdue in the region Indre-et-Loire. He started out in the salvage business and began saving things which he thought worthy of placing later in his museum, thereby avoiding the destruction of part of the French heritage. Thirty years later, on 24 October 1992, the prefect, the notables of the region and the press inaugurated the Museum Maurice Dufresne in Marnay near Azay-le-Rideau, on the banks of the Indre river in an old mill on a site owned by Geoffroy de l'Ile in 1026, which later became a paper factory in the time of Balzac.
Appendix 5 (Association of Sovereign States) is a dossier on the functioning of the European Union and Scandinavia. The appendix includes an excerpt of the Treaty of Rome of March 25, 1957, which is at the origin of the Common Market of Europe. Appendix 6 (Other Testimony) reprints two texts: Sovereignty, Condition of Salvation by Jean-Marc Léger (writer) (not to be confused with the pollster of the same name), initially published in Le Devoir on October 23, 24 and 25, 1967, and Quebec's Independence: Condition of Quebec's Salvation, Guarantee of Peace for Canada by Doris Lussier, excerpted from an interview he gave to Échos-Vedettes on November 11, 1967. Appendix 7 (Operation Panic) analyzes the flight of capital from Quebec which made the news soon after October 18, 1967, which is to say just after René Lévesque released the manifesto that forms the first part of An Option for Quebec.
In 1978 he traveled south to study at the Cégep de Jonquière, and then in 1976 obtained a post-graduate degree in political sciences from Université Laval. He became a speechwriter for the government of Quebec and penned many speeches on the "cultural diversity" issue for the Parti Québécois.Alain Brunet, "De l'eau sur Mars, de la musique dans l'infosphère", in La Presse, Montreal, January 14, 2004. He also worked for André Boisclair, then the leader of the official Opposition, and published many op-ed pieces in the Montreal newspapers, including a final piece meant as a symbolic act of political hara-kiri, in which he took a stand against his former boss on the day of the announcement of his candidacy for party leadership,Philippe Navarro, "Un candidat tiède", in La Presse, Montreal, June 15, 2003; Michel David, "Le spectre de PMJ", in Le Devoir, Montreal, June 18, 2005.
In November 2000, a consortium consisting of Groupe TVA (45.05%), CanWest (45.0%), and Rogers Communications (9.9%), were granted approval by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to launch a television channel called 13ème Rue, described as "a national French-language Category 1 specialty television service consisting of mystery, fantasy suspense and horror."Decision CRTC 2000-469 CRTC 2000-12-14 Prior to the channel's launch in September 2004, the CRTC approved an application by Groupe TVA to acquire both CanWest's and Rogers' shares in the service, later tentatively renamed as Canal Mystère.Broadcasting Public Notice CRTC 2004-89 CRTC 2001-11-24 The channel launched shortly thereafter as Mystère on October 21, 2004,Le Québec à l'heure de la télévision numérique, Le Devoir, 2004-10-20 focusing on mystery, horror, and fantasy programming. In June 2010, Groupe TVA announced that Mystère would be renamed addikTV on August 23, 2010.
Les Louanges is a Canadian indie pop act from Quebec, that consists of Vincent Roberge."Les Louanges: par la grande porte". Le Journal de Montréal, June 15, 2019. His debut album, La nuit est une panthère, was a shortlisted nominee for the 2019 Polaris Music Prize,"Dominique Fils-Aimé, Les Louanges et Elisapie nommés sur la courte liste du prix Polaris". Voir, July 16, 2019. and won the Juno Award for Francophone Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2020.Shakiel Mahjouri, "2020 Juno Awards Winners List: Find Out Who Came Out On Top". ET Canada, June 29, 2020. Originally from Lévis, Roberge released his first EP Le Mercure in 2016."«La nuit est une panthère»: tout est de la chanson". Le Devoir, September 21, 2018. He participated in the Francouvertes competition in 2017, finishing as a top three finalist behind winner Lydia Képinski.
The two-hour bilingual debate, organized by the National Action Committee on the Status of Women, took place at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto among Prime Minister John Turner (Liberal party), Conservative party leader Brian Mulroney, and Edward Broadbent of the New Democratic Party. Panelists were Eleanor Wachtel, a Vancouver freelance writer, Kay Sigurjonsson, an NAC founding member and director of the Federation of Women Teachers' Associations of Ontario, Francine Harel-Giasson, a professor at the University of Montreal business school, and Renée Rowan, columnist for Le Devoir, and the moderator of the debate was Caroline Andrew, chairman of the political science department at the University of Ottawa. The debate was jointly broadcast by four TV networks: CBC, Radio-Canada, CTV and Global. The debate consisted of separate confrontations involving only two leaders at a time, therefore not all candidates were asked to address every issue.
Cultural institutions such at La Presse and Le Devoir newspapers and the beautiful Place des Arts (1963) performing arts theatre, symbolized the vigour of the French language in the city as did the development of a very vibrant popular music and theatre scene in the sixties and seventies with noted performers including Robert Charlebois, Louise Forestier, Diane Dufresne, Claude Dubois, Rene Claude and Denise Pelletier to name but a handful among dozens. Further intellectual growth was symbolized by the founding of the Université du Québec in 1968. The Montreal Forum was home to the iconic Montreal Canadiens hockey team which won five Stanley Cup victories in a row from 1955 to 1960 becoming in the process the most successful professional sports team in history up to that time. The star player of the team Maurice Richard gained a reputation that lives to this day.
The patient was then released from intensive care. As WHO suspended clinical trials of hydroxychloroquine following the publication of an article in The Lancet, Le Devoir reported that Dr. McDonald, director of the Clinical Practice Assessment Unit of the McGill University Health Centre (MUHC), continued its clinical trial of hydroxychloroquine On June 1, a project led by professors Michael Tyers (IRIC University of Montreal), Yoshua Bengio (Mila / University of Montréa) and Anne Marinier (IRIC / University of Montreal) was launched. This project, funded to the tune of one million dollars by Génome Québec, is a mixture of artificial intelligence, genomics and medicinal chemistry On June 3, a team of researchers from UQAM had recruited 2,000 participants for a study on the psychological impact of COVID-19. On July 3, a team of researchers from the University of Quebec in Montreal and Manitoba received funding of $622,782 from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to develop a nanovaccine against the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
The Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism (, also known as the Bi and Bi Commission and the Laurendeau-Dunton Commission.) was a Canadian royal commission established on 19 July 1963, by the government of Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson to "inquire into and report upon the existing state of bilingualism and biculturalism in Canada and to recommend what steps should be taken to develop the Canadian Confederation on the basis of an equal partnership between the two founding races, taking into account the contribution made by the other ethnic groups to the cultural enrichment of Canada and the measures that should be taken to safeguard that contribution". Page 174 The Commission was jointly chaired by André Laurendeau, publisher of Le Devoir, and Davidson Dunton, president of Carleton University. As a result, it was sometimes known as the Laurendeau-Dunton commission. Ten commissioners representing each of the provinces were also included in the commission as areas such as education were provincial responsibilities.
Brulotte's publications received favorable reviews worldwide, including in the Time Literary Supplement (London), The French Review (USA), L'Humanité (Paris), Littératures (France), Le Devoir, Voir, Globe and La Presse (Montreal), Le Soleil and Québec français, (Quebec City), The Globe and Mail (Toronto), Modern Language Review (England), Lettres romanes (Belgium) and Transcanadiana (Poland). He made the cover of the 2005 winter issue of the Canadian literary magazine Lettres québécoises. His works are attracting more and more critical attention every year: book reviews, articles, theses, and dissertations; they are also subject of courses at a number of colleges and universities around the world from New-Zealand to Morocco, as well as of communications and sessions at conferences. These critical activities about his works include a monograph entitled Gaëtan Brulotte: Une Nouvelle Ecriture edited by Claudine Fisher (NY: Mellen Press, 1992), a collection of critical essays by seventeen scholars that won in Strasbourg (France) the 1992 International Prize for Francophone Studies.
Des filles de joie bien à la peine. Libération 13 June 2003 Sarkozy had made a sharp distinction between the "classic prostitution" of the traditional French Fille de Joie, who he depicted as unproblematic, even a cultural icon (see Culture), and the presence of "ces malheureuses filles étrangères" (these poor foreign girls) on the streets of France, who he depicted as the security threat. By "rescuing" these victims of trafficking and returning them home, he proposed to solve the situation. He argued that the only way to achieve this was to arrest them and then send them back to their families (Si le racolage est reconnu comme un délit, les forces de l'ordre pourront, parce qu'elles auront commis un délit, ramener ces filles chez elles), which he stated to be a humanitarian duty "c'est un devoir, dirai-je, humanitaire que de raccompagner cette personne chez elle" (I will say it is a humanitarian duty to return such a person to their home).
Despite denials by Hydro-Québec officials, the operation of the Tracy plant was seen by many observers as evidence of low reservoir levels. A few months later, the company was forced to admit levels of its reservoirs were low. After being idle for two years to complete repairs, the plant was run at capacity for 5 weeks, from June 14 to July 23, 2001, to take advantage of high prices on neighbouring electricity markets and cheap fuel and generated close to 200 GWh. That summer, Hydro-Québec took delivery of 480,000 barrels of heavy oil, and a 270,000-barrel load in August. When operating at full capacity, the plant consumed 20,000 bpd. The plant's units were put back to service in mid-June 2003 in response to a further decline in reservoir levels after two years of improvement. In October, Le Devoir newspaper reported that three strategic reservoirs (Manic-5, LG-2 and Caniapiscau) reached levels described as "alarming" as of May 2003. With a runoff deficit reaching 23 TWh, the Tracy generating station ran for 11 months out of 12 in 2003.
Ionesco's earliest theatrical works, considered to be his most innovative, were one-act plays or extended sketches: La Cantatrice chauve translated as The Bald Soprano or The Bald Prima Donna (written 1948), Jacques ou la soumission translated as Jack, or The Submission (1950), La Leçon translated as The Lesson (1950), Les Salutations translated as Salutations (1950), Les Chaises translated as The Chairs (1951), L'Avenir est dans les oeufs translated as The Future is in Eggs (1951), Victimes du devoir translated as Victims of Duty (1952) and, finally, Le Nouveau locataire translated as The New Tenant (1953). These absurdist sketches, to which he gave such descriptions as "anti-play" (anti-pièce in French) express modern feelings of alienation and the impossibility and futility of communication with surreal comic force, parodying the conformism of the bourgeoisie and conventional theatrical forms. In them Ionesco rejects a conventional story-line as their basis, instead taking their dramatic structure from accelerating rhythms and/or cyclical repetitions. He disregards psychology and coherent dialogue, thereby depicting a dehumanized world with mechanical, puppet-like characters who speak in non-sequiturs.
In addition to the 22 European arrest warrants issued in December 2005 and the arrest of the above-mentioned SISMI officers, an Italian judge issued additional arrest warrants for four Americans, three CIA agents and for Lieutenant Colonel Joseph L. Romano III, commander of security forces at the Aviano Air Base at the time, now working at Section 31b of the Pentagon. Ultimately, twenty-six Americans and nine Italians (including head of SISMI Nicolò Pollari, n°2 of the same intelligence agency Marco Mancini, as well as General Gustavo Pignero; and also the junior ROS officer Giuliano Pironi) were indicted.Rapt d'un imam à Milan: la CIA va devoir s'expliquer, Libération, February 16, 2007 The trial would be the first criminal trial related to the U.S. practice of extraordinary rendition. The start of the trial was set for June 8, 2007, although it was adjourned until October 2007, pending an upcoming ruling by Italy's Constitutional Court regarding the possible violation of state secrecy laws by Milan prosecutors who used phone taps on Italian agents during their investigation.
The third part (68 pages) consists of seven appendices which serve as documentation of the first two parts of the essay. Appendix 1 (Some Varieties of Special Status) cites authors who wrote on the special status which Quebec would in their opinion need to ensure the future of its development and the conservation of its particular collective personality within the framework of a reformed Canadian federalism. The works cited are Equality or Independence by Daniel Johnson, Sr. (published in 1965), Le Québec dans le Canada de demain (published in 1967) and comprising texts by Marcel Faribault, Jean-Guy Cardinal and Claude Ryan, as well as an excerpt of the report of the Committee on Constitutional Affairs of the Quebec Liberal Federation presided by Paul Gérin-Lajoie and prepared for the Congress of October 1967. Appendix 2 (Neo-Centralization) contains the point of view of senator Maurice Lamontagne, who, in two articles published in Le Devoir on September 23 and 25, 1967, rejected the special status thesis of Claude Ryan and proposed a "cooperative federalism" in which René Lévesque saw nothing but a way to re-centralize powers in Ottawa.
Rescigno has been described as "a conductor to treasure""Theatricality makes up for weaknesses in 'Algeri'" by Octavio Roca, The Washington Times, January 4, 1988, Page E 3. and "a conductor's conductor.""The Valkyrie Wings into Norfolk" by Montague Gammon III, Veer Magazine, January 15, 2011, Page 30. He has been recognized for programming imaginatively (often in collaboration with other arts organizations),"MSO offers Berlioz's rich Christmas meditation" by Tom Strini, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, December 9, 2005, Page 6 B. "Hänsel und Gretel: un enchantement" by Claude Gingras, La Presse, Montreal, December 2, 1998, Page E 1. "Molière et Shakespeare à l'OM" by Claude Gingras, La Presse, Montreal, January 12, 1999, Page A 16. "Music and slide artistry add up to superb concert" by Ilse Zadrozny, The Gazette, Montreal, March 17, 1998, Page C 9. rethinking old standards,"'Barber' in Washington" by Will Crutchfield, The New York Times, January 27, 1989, Page C 16. "Rescigno plus Tchaïkovski: oui!" by François Toussignant, Le Devoir, July 26, 2001, Page B 7. venturing into unexpected repertory,"Orchestra rises to challenge" by Arthur Kaptainis, The Gazette, Montreal, January 25, 2000.
CBC, "Montreal woman wants 'pickup artist' banned from Canada", July 24, 2015Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (ICI Radio Canada), "Protestation contre la venue à Montréal d'un blogueur qui banalise le viol", August 4, 2015 Quebec Member of the National Assembly Carole Poirier called on Stéphanie Vallée, Quebec Minister of Justice for Conditions for Women, to ban Valizadeh and his rhetoric from the province.Poirier, Carole, "Venue à Montréal d'un blogueur misogyne – La ministre de la Condition féminine va-t-elle laisser Daryush Valizadeh propager sa haine des femmes au Québec?", Government of Quebec, August 4, 2015 Vallée responded by condemning Roosh's statements, but declined to make further comments regarding whether he should be denied entry to Canada.Richer, Jocelyne, "La ministre Vallée ne s’oppose pas à la venue du blogueur Roosh V", Le Devoir, August 5, 2015 Reportedly in response to the negative publicity and threat of protest, the Hotel Omni Montreal, where the speech had been scheduled to be held, cancelled the event.Dumont, Marie-Eve, "Roosh V aurait perdu sa salle pour sa conférence à Montréal", Le Journal de Montréal, August 5, 2015 Valizadeh asked that his followers assist him in a "counter-attack" against the demonstrators by collecting personal information about them.
In Europe he has appeared at major houses such as the Vienna State Opera, La Scala, Milan, the Opéra National de Paris, Munich's Bayerische Staatsoper, the Staatsoper and Deutsche Oper in Berlin, Barcelona's Liceu, La Monnaie in Brussels, the Grand Théâtre de Genève, Madrid's Teatro Real, Zurich Opera House (Falstaff, Otello), Oper Köln (Tosca, La Forza del Destino), and Teatro dell'Opera di Roma (Curlew River). In North America Michaels-Moore has appeared at all of the major houses and some of the regional ones including New York's Metropolitan Opera, the San Francisco Opera, the Lyric Opera of Chicago (Attila), Pittsburgh Opera (Otello), Opera Colorado, Florida Grand Opera, Los Angeles Opera (Billy Budd), Lyric Opera of Kansas City (La traviata), Opera Philadelphia (Cold Mountain),"Press Release from Opera Philadelphia: Cold Mountain makes East Coast Premiere February 5-14, 2016 at the Academy of Music" Retrieved 11 January 2016. and Opéra de Montréal (Rigoletto)."Classical - Rigoletto and Canadian Pacific" from Le Devoir, 27 September 2010. In the US, Michaels-Moore has a particularly strong relationship with the Santa Fe Opera; in their summer festivals he has appeared in classic Verdi parts such as Simon Boccanegra (2004), Falstaff (2008), and Germont pere (2009).
Retrieved March 14, 2011. Speaker Peter Milliken found on prima facie that the controversy warranted further investigation by a formal parliamentary committee; however, the committee was not able to reach a decision regarding Oda, as the parliamentary session was brought to an end following the non-confidence motion that triggered the 2011 federal election.Speaker hits Tories with two more contempt rulings . The Globe and Mail, March 9, 2011. Retrieved March 9, 2011.Tories slapped by 2 rulings. CBC News, March 9, 2011. Retrieved March 9, 2011. That election saw Oda retain her seat with 54% of the popular vote.2011 General Election Preliminary Results, Durham When Bev Oda resigned in 2012, the Quebec newspaper Le Devoir ran a front-page headline Bev Oda démissionne ("Bev Oda resigning"), with the ne and pas "scratched out" as if by handwriting, in a reference to the scandal. On April 23, 2012, it was reported that during a 2011 conference on immunization of poor children Oda had refused to stay in the conference hotel (the Grange St. Paul) furnished by hosts. She instead stayed at the Savoy Hotel at a cost of $665 per night for three nights, ordered orange juice at a cost of $16 and hired a limousine to transport her between her new hotel and the conference.

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