Oh, Canadians!
A Tribute to Canadians Who Make A Difference

Saturday, April 30, 2011

2 Canadians killed in Moroccan bombing

A pregnant Canadian mother and her husband were among 16 people killed after a bomb packed with nails detonated inside a bustling tourist café in Morocco on Thursday. Israeli-Canadian Michal Zekry and Moroccan-born Messod Wizman died after the blast in the city of Marrakech, a close family friend told The Canadian Press.

Zekry, 29, and Wizman, believed to be 31 or 32, moved to China a few months after their marriage so he could pursue a business opportunity, Stephanie Dadoun said, adding that their deaths have left family and friends in shock. "It's hard for me to put into words everything that she was," she said.

3-year-old left with grandparents

The couple were visiting Wizman's parents in Casablanca and left their three-year-old son with them when they headed to Marrakech for a day trip.The Moroccan government did not release names but said that two Canadians, two French citizens, a Dutchman and two Moroccans were among the dead. As well, more than 20 people were wounded. Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs said Friday it only had confirmation of one Canadian death.

Moroccan authorities said the explosive device was packed with nails when it was set off remotely just before noon local time on Thursday, blowing the facade off the two-storey café, which is popular with tourists.

'Big plume of smoke'

"There was a big detonation, a very big detonation, which made us stay still and lower our heads. We saw a very big plume of smoke, and a lot of objects go up in the air," Stéphane Le Pretre, a 46-year-old French tourist, told The Associated Press. Morocco's Interior Minister Taieb Cherqaoui took issue with an earlier report from Interpol that said the attack was a suspected suicide bombing."This was not a suicide attack," Cherqaoui told a meeting of government commission in Rabat, adding that the bomb contained aluminum nitrate, among other components.
The Argana café where the attack happened is on the Djemma el-Fna square, a UNESCO World Heritage site.



Friday, April 29, 2011

WikiLeaks cable notes Harper's Senate 'about-face'

WikiLeaks released hundreds of U.S. documents on Thursday, including those with comments about the Harper government's "about-face" on Senate appointments, remarks on the Liberals' "muted" response to the prorogation crisis and criticism of Canada's failure to enact copyright reform. A leaked cable from December 2008 suggests that U.S. Embassy officials in Ottawa saw Stephen Harper's appointment of senators as "a major about-face for a PM and a party that long campaigned for an elected upper chamber. The cost of the eighteen new senators also conflicts with political messaging about the need for official belt tightening."

The cable goes on to say, however, that "Harper will not pay a real political price. The staunchest advocates of Senate reform are Conservatives in western Canada." Another cable from January 2009 suggests that U.S. Embassy officials in Ottawa had been keeping a close eye on the December 2008 events in the House of Commons and the prime minister's request to have Gov. Gen. Michäelle Jean prorogue Parliament.
"Madame Jean and Prime Minister Harper appear to have a cordial but cool relationship," the leaked cable said.

It goes on to say that "some Conservatives reportedly suspect her private sympathies lean to the center left of the political spectrum, and have suggested her husband's alleged separatist sentiments may influence her own political views" in dealing with the political impasse. Another leaked document from January 2010 returns to the prorogation issue, this time with criticism of the federal Liberal Party's handling of the crisis, suggesting the party at the time was experiencing "a lack of energy and hands-on leadership."
"The Liberals face a tough road ahead if they hope to beat the Conservatives in the next federal election — whether in 2010 or 2011."

The cables released also contain one from January 2010, in which the U.S. ambassador to Canada was quoted as being critical of the Harper government's "tough on crime" stance."The Conservatives have used the crime agenda to great effect, making it an essential part of their 'brand,' in spite of the fact that they have not actually passed most of their proposed crime and security legislation," the cable said.

'Anti-American biases'

In 2009, a leaked cable discusses how "Canada's traditionally liberal universities have often displayed some anti-American biases" and goes on to suggest that "Canada's perennial desire to differentiate itself from its larger neighbour means that some anti-Americanism will inevitably creep back in academic and public discourse."

Another cable also refers to Canadian support for the United States, this time in a leaked document from March 26, 2003, pertaining to a meeting in which the war in Iraq was discussed.
The meeting — between the Halifax Coast Guard and Rear Admiral Glenn Davidson — included the comment from Davidson that "there is fairly strong support for the war within the military services. Many of his navy officers and enlisted personnel feel that they should be part of the war effort."
The leaked cable says that Davidson raised concerns that Ottawa's decision not to go to Iraq could damage the close relationship with the U.S. military.

Copyright delays

A cable from Feb. 29, 2008, suggests that the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa was unhappy with progress being made by the federal government on copyright legislation."Embassy Ottawa remains frustrated by the Government of Canada's continuing failure to introduce — let alone pass — major copyright reform legislation that would, inter alia, implement and ratify the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Internet Treaties," the cable says.
A document from November 2008 deals with the appointment of Lawrence Cannon as foreign affairs minister.An official at the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa describes Cannon as "an experienced and competent administrator who is likely to provide stability to a department that has had four ministers since the Conservatives took office in 2006."

The cable calls the new minister "one of very few in the national Conservative caucus with experience in government" and says "he has won high marks as a competent administrator and as a trusted advisor to PM Harper."A spokeswoman for the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa was not immediately available for comment, The Canadian Press reported.



Thursday, April 28, 2011

Patrick Chan is the World Champion!


Canada's Patrick Chan has claimed his first world figure skating title and rewritten the sport's record book in the process.
The 20-year-old from Toronto swept all three world records in Moscow, scoring 187.96 points for his long program for 280.98 points overall. Those marks came a day after he topped the previous world mark for the short program that gave him a virtually insurmountable lead."It's surreal, it's honestly surreal," Chan said of his new world title. "I think I knew that if I went out and did what I did back home, I knew I would be on top, and I didn't hold anything back. I didn't change my plan for my program which is very important to me."Skating to music from Andrew Lloyd Webber's Phantom of the Opera, Chan executed two quadruple jumps in the opening 40 seconds instead of playing it safe and taking one out of the program. He wobbled on the landing of his triple Axel but was virtually flawless the rest of the way.
Takahiko Kozuka of Japan scored 258.41 to take the silver, while 17-year-old crowd favourite Artur Gachinski of Russia won the bronze with 241.86.When asked if he was surprised by his high mark, Chan said he was hoping he could "hit 300.""Maybe next time," he said laughing. "I'm so happy … marks, I don't really know what it means, honestly, I just know that if I skate well, I'll get the marks I need to win and that's what I did today."

Japan's Daisuke Takahashi held the previous world records for overall score (264.41) and long program (175.84), set at the 2008 Four Continents championships.Takahashi, the 2010 world champion and Olympic bronze medallist, finished fifth after problems with his skate forced him to pull out of his first jump and head to the boards for a quick repair before a restart. Moscow's Megasport Arena was a last-minute substitute host for the event, which was delayed more than a month and relocated after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in Japan.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/sports/figureskating/story/2011/04/28/sp-isu-worlds.html#ixzz1KpkWHqvZ

An original piece of "living poetry" has been created in a lab in Canada.

Christian Bok has encoded his verse into a strip of DNA and had it inserted into a common bacterium, E.coli.DNA is at the heart of every cell. It is a string of molecules called nucleotides which come in four types - adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C) and thymine (T).
This genetic sequence is used as an instruction manual for cellular operations. Individual commands are contained in shorter chunks of the DNA called genes.

Dr Bok used cryptography to embed his poem into the genetics of the bacterium, devising a chemical alphabet in which each letter is represented by a specific triplet of nucleotides. So, for example, the nucleotide sequence "ATA" codes for the letter "y" and GTG stands for the letter "n".
It took him four years just to work out the code. This enabled him to design a novel gene called X-P13, which was constructed specifically for the project. The poem's opening words, "Any style..." translate as ACG(A) GTG(n) ATA(y) AGT(space) AAG(s) TGC(t) ATA(y) GCC(l) TAT(e) in his gene's DNA sequence.

Dr Bok has no formal scientific training, but he taught himself molecular biology and computer programming for the purpose of this project. His design was verified by biologists at the University of Calgary.
Similar biochemical feats have been achieved before. American scientist Dr Pak Wong encoded the lyrics to It's a Small World After All into a strand of DNA and lodged it inside the bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans.
And when Dr Craig Venter, of the J Craig Venter Institute (JCVI) in Maryland and California, created the world's first manmade bacterial genome, he embedded his own name and those of his colleagues into its DNA; alongside quotes from James Joyce and from the Nobel prize winning physicist Richard Feynman.
"I am producing something that will last over epochal time” Dr Christian Bok- University of Calgary

But Dr Bok, who teaches in the department of English at the University of Calgary, has gone one step further than just encoding his ode into DNA: he has induced his laboratory bacterium to give its own bio-poetry response. Cells use their DNA as a template for constructing proteins, which are strings of molecules called amino acids. The exact sequence of nucleotides within a gene dictates the order of the amino acids, because a specific triplet of nucleotides will serve as the command to attach a particular amino acid at that point. For example an ACG in the gene, means 'use the amino acid threonine next'.

Chemical cryptography

Dr Bok's chemical cryptography is designed to work on two levels. Not only did he devise a cipher to link letters of the alphabet to specific nucleotides, but he also designed a second cipher to allow the ensuing protein to be decoded back into a brand new poem, by assigning a different set of letters to specific amino acids.

For example his first poem's opening words "Any style", once encoded into DNA, instructs the cell to build a protein that starts with the following amino acid string: threonine, valine, isoleucine, serine, lysine, cysteine, isoleucine, alanine, tyrosine, which can in turn be decoded to spell out the start of the bacterium's new poetic response "The faery..."

His scientific collaborator at the University of Calgary, Professor Sui Huang, confirmed that their lab has now succeeded in implanting the poem gene as a free floating chunk of DNA into E. coli and witnessed the bug express its own poetic protein response. Dr Bok's next ambition for his Xenotext project is to create a literary work that will outlast humanity, by splicing X-P13 directly into the genome of the D. radiodurans bacterium.

Known as "Conan the bacterium" for its durability, this extremophile is the world's toughest organism, able to resist radiation, cold, dehydration and acid. "Biology is just like information science” Professor Sui Huang
University of Calgary

His hope is that once embedded into the genetics of D. radiodurans, his biochemical text could continue to reproduce for billions of years - outlasting any other human artefact. Although he has no intention of releasing it into the wild. He explained his aims. "Nothing we humans make will last more than a few million years," he said. "The only legacy we will leave is the background radiation of nuclear waste and the ecological and geological effects of climate change and that is not an appropriate one. By genetically engineering a poem into Deinococcus radiodurans I am producing something that will last over epochal time".

Literary criticism
But Dr Julian Parkhill of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute was sceptical of the chances for literary immortality. "His poem would be rapidly removed by natural selection, as it would confer no benefit on the host bacterium," he said. "Natural selection as literary criticism".Professor Huang conceded that this is a very real possibility. "If the poem protein conveys even a slight disadvantage on the bacterium, the gene could be kicked out over time," he said."We don't know what the selection pressure would be for it to be kept, if it isn't too much of a burden the gene might stay".
And he argued that there was a scientific value to the project. "It shows how biology is just like information science," he said. "There is already a poetry to nature and I see a parallel with the Xenotext project"
Dr Bok will be talking about his project and displaying the text of the two poems at the UK's Bury Text Festival on Saturday 30 April.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Retirees still in debt: StatsCan



Almost one-third of retired Canadians are in some form of debt, a report from Statistics Canada suggested Wednesday, throwing cold water on the notion that those in their golden years are financially secure.
A Statistics Canada survey shows that almost one-third of retired Canadians are in debt.

The study from the government agency showed that 34 per cent of retired individuals aged 55 and over, whether single or in a couple, held mortgage or consumer debt in 2009. The median amount owed was $19,000.However, the debt level was much higher among those in the same age group who had not yet retired. The survey showed that among pre-retirees aged 55 and over, two-thirds held mortgage or consumer debt and their median debt load was $40,000, more than double that of retirees.
Among retired people with debt, 25 per cent owed less than $5,000, 32 per cent owed between $5,000 and $24,999, while 26 per cent owed between $25,000 and $99,999, while 17 per cent owed $100,000 or more.

The study, which used data from 2009, showed that retirees who owned homes or who had higher household income, higher levels of education and better financial knowledge were most likely to hold debt.
But, these same groups tended to have solid finances — as home ownership, income, and education were all associated with higher levels of net worth and lower debt-to-asset ratios.And the survey also showed that marital status played a part in overall finances. Divorced people who were retired had the highest incidence of debt at 43 per cent, followed by couples at 35 per cent, those who never married at 30 per cent, and widows or widowers at 28 per cent. Divorced retirees also had the lowest annual median income and net worth, compared to all the other groups.

"This (study) is suggesting that retirees are going into retirement holding debt," said Paul Ferley, assistant chief economist at RBC. "I think there had been a pre-conception that as people move into retirement years that they are generally debt-free, their mortgages paid off. Certainly that is not the case."

Making ends meet

Retirees with debt had a median annual household income of $42,000 and a median net worth of $295,000. Overall, their debt was equivalent to about 7 per cent of their total assets. The study said that a debt of less than $5,000 among retirees may be tied to the use of credit as a convenience as 92 per cent of those with this amount of debt reported having consumer debt only.Older retirees were significantly less likely to have outstanding debt. Just 48 per cent of retirees aged 55 to 64 had some form of debt, compared to 20 per cent of retirees aged 75 and over.
Despite the figures, the majority of retirees reported that their finances were what they had expected them to be prior to retirement. The retirees also claimed that their income was sufficient to cover their expenses and that they were able to make ends meet while still honouring their financial commitments.



Tuesday, April 26, 2011

700th Post- 'Al-Qaeda assassin worked for MI6 and CSIS', secret cables claim



Thirteen people were killed in the bombing of the Karachi Sheraton in 2002. An alleged al-Qaeda militant suspected of bombing a luxury hotel and two churches in Pakistan in 2002 was an informer for MI6 and CSIS, it has been claimed.Adil Hadi al Jazairi Bin Hamlili was detained at Guantanamo Bay between 2003 and last year when he was sent back to his native Algeria by President Obama.The Guardian claims to have seen secret Wikileaks files in which he is described as an al-Qaeda "assassin".

But US interrogators believed he was also a British and Canadian intelligence informer.The revelations come as The Daily Telegraph revealed separate secret files which suggested London was the hub of a global terror network. The files, also believed to come from Wikileaks, alleged the Finsbury Park mosque in north London was a "haven" for extremists. BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner said some of the files show MI6 in a very bad light.He said: "A lot of it doesn't surprise me... In my view they completely under-estimated how dangerous recruiters and proselytisers like Abu Qatada and Abu Hamza were."

The Guardian says Mr Hamlili was described in his Guantanamo assessment file as a "facilitator, courier, kidnapper and assassin for al-Qaeda".

Sent back to Algeria

But despite the accusations, he was never brought to trial and although he was sent back to Algeria last year it is not clear whether he is still in custody.Wikileaks released the files of 759 Guantanamo detainees at the weekend.They included unverified claims that al-Qaeda had hidden a nuclear weapon in Europe for detonation should Osama Bin laden be captured and attempts by al-Qaeda to recruit workers at London's Heathrow Airport. Mr Hamlili was captured in Pakistan in June 2003 and taken to Bagram detention centre in Afghanistan where he was interviewed by the CIA.The CIA agents were apparently told he had been an informer for MI6 and the Canadian secret service since 2000.

But the CIA claimed he had "withheld important information from the Canadian Secret Intelligence Service and the British Secret Intelligence Service... and to be a threat to US and allied personnel in Afghanistan and Pakistan".Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who has apparently admitted being the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, allegedly told his interrogators Mr Hamlili was behind a March 2002 grenade attack on a church in Islamabad, which killed five people.

Mr Mohammed also alleged Mr Hamlili was responsible for an attack on a church in Pakistan in December 2002 which killed three children. Separate US intelligence reports said Mr Hamlili was "possibly involved" in a bombing outside Karachi's Sheraton hotel in May 2002 which killed 11 French engineers and two Pakistani citizens.

Monday, April 25, 2011

RCMP and Canadian Trust

A recent survey commissioned by the RCMP suggests many Canadians still have faith in the national police force, despite several incidents involving officer misconduct over the past few years.The RCMP introduced two new questions about trust and leadership in its latest annual public opinion poll, conducted last June.
Results show that nearly 85 per cent of the 5,800 Canadians surveyed last year trust the RCMP, while nearly 70 per cent say the Mounties have strong and reliable leaders.

But confidence levels in British Columbia, the Yukon and around Ottawa fell below the national average, with results as low as 68 per cent for trust and only 50 per cent for strong leadership in the Yukon.B.C. criminologist and former Mountie Rob Gordon says the low views in Western Canada and Ottawa are no surprise.Around the time of the survey, the four Mounties involved in the Tasering of Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski had been blasted by the head of B.C.'s inquiry into the death, while the daughter of a Yukon man who died while in RCMP custody in 2008 launched a lawsuit against the force.The survey is considered accurate to within just over a percentage point, 19 times out of 20.



A woman's Prayer in War

Friday, April 22, 2011

STEWART BLUSSON, Doctor of Science

Stewart Blusson is a Vancouver geologist who co-discovered Canada’s first diamond mine in the Northwest Territories in the early 1990s and has since become one of the most generous philanthropists in Canadian history.
His donations include more than $100 million to fund Canadian medical research and education, including a record $12 million to SFU to support work in its new Faculty of Health Sciences. Archon Minerals Ltd., Blusson’s Vancouver diamond company, is also the sponsor of the Archon X Prize for Genomics. The US$10-million prize will be awarded to a team with a device that can sequence 100 human genomes within 10 days.

Blusson completed an undergraduate degree at UBC (1960) and a doctorate in geology at the University of California, Berkeley (1964). After school, he spent the next 15 years with the Geological Survey of Canada, leading regional geological mapping and research programs in the central Yukon and northern B.C. During that time, he survived a serious helicopter crash and a Grizzly bear attack and, in 1969, he piloted a helicopter to rescue his future prospecting partner Chuck Fipke, who was stranded in the wilderness for almost a week. The pair went on to discover one of the world’s largest diamond fields, eventually establishing the Ekati diamond mine. Their discovery led Canada to become the third most valuable diamond-mining country.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Canadians are 2nd happiest in world: survey



Canadians share second place among the most contented people on the planet, according to a global survey that asked respondents to rate their own lives. Gallup's global well-being survey found that 69 per cent of Canadians polled fell into a category that Gallup called "thriving." Canada tied with Sweden, three percentage points below Denmark, whose citizens are apparently the most satisfied with their current situation and prospects for the future.

Country % thriving

Denmark 72%

Canada 69%

Sweden 69%

Australia 65%

United States 59%

United Kingdom 54%

Germany 44%

Italy 37%

Spain 34%

Russia 24%

Greece 21%

India 17%

Libya 14%

China 12%

Zimbabwe 9%

Haiti 2%

Central African Republic 2%

Chad 1%

Source: Gallup well-being survey

People in the "thriving" category rate their current lives at seven or higher on a 10-point scale and rated their future lives eight or higher, Gallup says. Only two per cent of Canadians were considered to be "suffering." People in this category rated their current life and future prospects at four or below.Another 30 per cent of Canadians were considered to be "struggling" — somewhere between the two extremes, the poll indicated. Gallup found a majority of respondents "thriving" in only 19 countries — most in Europe and the Americas.

The story was much less rosy in 67 other countries where fewer than a quarter of residents were thriving. In sub-Saharan Africa, the median thriving percentage was just eight per cent, with Chad coming in at the bottom with just one per cent of its respondents deemed to be thriving. Gallup said its well-being survey suggests little progress was made from the previous year."Gallup's global well-being data underscore the diversity of development challenges worldwide," the polling company said on its website.

"As the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt showed earlier this year, leaders should not rely on GDP alone as an indicator of how well their countries and their citizens are doing."The well-being survey results are based on interviews with about 1,000 adults carried out between February and December 2010 in each of 124 countries.



Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Hooray for Manitoba and their organ donation registry!

Manitoba sets up online organ donation registry

Manitoba is among the first in Canada to set up an online organ donation registry in a bid to boost the number of life-saving transplants.The $100,000 web-based registry means people can sign up as organ donors wherever they have access to the Internet. That information will then be available to health-care professionals.

Health Minister Theresa Oswald said the registry will make it easier for doctors at a time of crisis. Currently, British Columbia is the only other province with such an online system in place."The electronic organ-donation registry will help professionals identify patients' wishes even faster and more definitively and ensure that opportunities to honour wishes about organ donation aren't missed — not even one if we can help it," Oswald said. 'This is a good day for Manitobans and a good day for Canadians as well.'

—Brendan McCarthy, Transplant ManitobaThe registry is expected to be running within the year, but won't replace old-fashioned donor cards still associated with provincial health cards and drivers' licences.
Kristin Millar, a 27-year-old Winnipegger, has been waiting for a heart transplant for over a year. Her heart failed in 2009 and was only functioning at six per cent capacity. She's being kept alive now by a heart pump.
"I know dozens of people who are waiting for transplants," she said. "We're real people, all of whom have full lives ahead of ourselves — if we can make it to transplant." Millar said she hopes the new registry will raise awareness about organ donation.

215 Canadians died

According to Canadian Blood Services numbers, just 14 out of one million people give organs for transplant in Canada, less than half the rate of the United States. More than 4,000 people in Canada are on the transplant list. In 2009, about 215 Canadians died while waiting for transplants. Brendan McCarthy, medical director of Transplant Manitoba, said the online registry is good news for people across Canada since the donated organs could go to anyone on the list.
"This is a good day for Manitobans and a good day for Canadians as well," he said.
But Peter Nickerson, former director of Transplant Manitoba, said signing a donor card or registering online is only part of the donation process.
"Ultimately, it's to tell your family and that they understand what your wishes are because the family are always the ones that we talk to," he said.
"It's their consent that we're seeking."



Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Canadian photographer wins Pulitzer


Canadian wins Pulitzer
Montreal-born Barbara Davidson, a photographer working for the Los Angeles Times, is among the winners of Pulitzer Prizes announced Monday.
She won the feature photography award for a series of images about victims of street violence in Los Angeles. Davidson spent nearly two years gaining the trust of insular communities such as South Los Angeles, Compton and Watts before taking striking images of those who were shot, many of them innocent victims.

Los Angeles Times photographer Barbara Davidson won the Pulitzer for a series of images including one of Erica Miranda, 10, who was shot three times while playing basketball outside her home in Compton, Calif. (Barbara Davidson/Los Angeles Times/Associated Press)

This is Davidson's second Pulitzer — she won for her coverage of Hurricane Katrina when she worked for the Dallas News.
There are seven Pulitzer Prizes for drama, music and letters and 14 for journalism, although the award for breaking news was not given this year. The award is administered by Columbia University and comes with $10,000 US.

In fiction and drama, Chicago writers packed a punch, with Jennifer Egan taking a Pulitzer for her novel A Visit from the Goon Squad and Bruce Norris winning for Clybourne Park.
Jennifer Egan's A Visit from the Goon Squad won the Pulitzer for fiction.

Egan's novel is "an inventive investigation of growing up and growing old in the digital age, displaying a big-hearted curiosity about cultural change at warp speed," the Pulitzer jury said in its citation. A Visit from the Goon Squad also experiments with format, with one long section structured like a PowerPoint presentation.
Clybourne Park examines race relations and the effects of modern gentrification in a fictitious Chicago neighbourhood. The play premiered at Playwrights Horizons in New York in February 2010, before going on to London.

Other winners for writing and music:

History: The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery by Eric Foner.

Biography: Washington: A Life by Ron Chernow.

Poetry: The Best of It: New and Selected Poems by Kay Ryan.

Non-fiction: The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer by Siddhartha Mukherjee.

Music: Madame White Snake by Zhou Long.

In journalism, the New York Times took two Pulitzers — for international reporting and for commentary.Clifford J. Levy and Ellen Barry won the international reporting award for their examination of the faltering justice system in Russia, while David Leonhardt won the prize for his economic commentary on subjects ranging from the U.S. federal budget deficit to health-care reform.

The investigative reporting award went to Paige St. John of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune in Florida for an investigation of the state's murky property-insurance system that ended up stirring regulatory action.



Canadian Arctic coastline faces serious erosion

Arctic coastlines are on the retreat, especially in Canada, and their disappearance has significant implications for both the ecosystem and the economic and social life of the North, according to a group of international researchers.The changes are particularly dramatic in the Beaufort Sea along the coast of the Northwest Territories, Yukon and Alaska, and in the Laptev and East Siberian Seas, along Russia's north coast. Some sections have seen erosion rates reach more than eight metres a year as protective sea ice along the coast disappears.'Every single element of the North is going to be affected, right from the engineering side to how the Inuit interact with their environment.'—Wayne Pollard, McGillThe study found that on average, the Arctic coastline is retreating by half a metre a year.

"Every single element of the North is going to be affected, right from the engineering side to how the Inuit interact with their environment," Wayne Pollard, a McGill University geomorphologist who contributed to the study, told The Canadian Press.

The 2010 study, by a consortium of more than 30 scientists from 10 countries, was released Sunday in the journal Estuaries and Coasts. The consortium includes researchers from the German-based Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research. The project examined more than 100,000 kilometres of shoreline, or a quarter of all Arctic coasts. It's the first to compare different rates of erosion as well as consider its impact on northern people.
Increasing erosion

While they can't prove it because they have limited year-over-year data to work with, scientists suspect that gradual washing-away along thousands of kilometres of northern shoreline is speeding up.

The researchers say rising temperatures in the North due to climate change are causing coastal sea ice to disappear, leaving coasts unprotected against the eroding force of waves. The problem is especially acute in the Arctic because about two-thirds of its coast is made up of permafrost, which is much softer and therefore more susceptible to erosion than rock.The researchers say that since roughly a third of the world's coasts are located in the Arctic permafrost, coastal erosion may affect enormous areas in future. That's a concern for Arctic river deltas along the coast, which have high biodiversity and are extremely productive in relation to other parts of the Arctic. The researchers worry these productive areas may change as the coast erodes.

Pollard, who works extensively among the Inuvialuit of the N.W.T.'s Mackenzie Delta region, said the changes are already affecting traditional practices such as hunting seals, polar bears and beluga whales. People so attuned to their local environment that they can navigate in fog by the currents affecting their boats can no longer count on the old assumptions, he said.

"There's going to be shoals where there weren't shoals before, there's going to be storms coming from different directions," he said. "It's really starting to disrupt the traditional knowledge."



Monday, April 18, 2011

Windsor named City of the Future


Windsor, Ont., ranked among top 10 'American' cities by Financial Times of London

CBC News

Windsor Ont., is being called one of the "Top 10 American cities of the future" according to a list compiled by fDi Magazine, a publication of the Financial Times of London.
The magazine used a mixture of data and expert opinions, along with a submission supplied by the WindsorEssex Economic Development Corporation, to rank they city on its potential for foreign investment, economic development and business expansion. The list is used by business and economic development organizations to make decisions about foreign direct investment.
Cities of the Future were chosen from 405 entries across North and South America.

Windsor's second-place ranking in the "economic potential" category coincides with the Conference Board of Canada's expectation that the Windsor-Essex economy will outperform all other Canadian cities this year.

Jobs lost in auto sector

Windsor took a huge hit to its employment ranks when the auto sector collapsed more than two years ago and it is still struggling with some of the highest unemployment numbers in the country. But officials are optimistic about the region's potential recovery, citing recent large-scale investments in the energy and aerospace sectors.Overall, Windsor and surrounding municipalities across Essex County finished seventh among "large" cities in the report, defined as having a population between 250,000 to 750,000. The region received two other top 10 rankings in the categories of infrastructure and foreign direct investment promotion strategy.
Windsor Mayor Eddie Francis said it's quite an honour for the region."This is another positive step for us," Francis said. "It certainly provides us the opportunity to use this as a tool to further market our region, to further get our word out and tell our story, and to further promote the benefits of doing business in this region.""This award is further evidence that Windsor-Essex is on a path of reinvention," Lindsay Boyd, chair of the WindsorEssex Economic Development Corporation in a release.

Intelligent community accolades

The City of the Future ranking comes as Windsor, the county and 48 community groups are about to make a pitch for the title "the world's most intelligent community" this week. Windsor-Essex is among the top seven intelligent communities of 2011, according to the New York-based group, the Intelligent Community Forum.
The Forum measures workforce capacity, and how a community uses broadband to reach its citizens. Windsor was specifically recognized for having strong tourism and agricultural industries and for the way it uses technology to keep government, education and health-care providers connected.
Politicians have said the top seven designation has already generated interest from businesses looking to expand to the region, and many feel the money is well spent if it helps to promote the city internationally.
The judges from the Intelligent Community Forum planned to be in Windsor on Monday and Tuesday. The region is spending $240,000 to host the judges and make its pitch, and the province is forking over another $204,000 to finance the bid.

Kristina Verner, from the Centre for Smart Community Innovation at the University of Windsor, will be acting as tour guide for the judges. She said the tour will include a meeting with all the region's mayors, a preview of new facilities at the college and university, and a look at local health insurance provider Greenshield. The tour will also showcase Windsor's cross-border relationship with the U.S., she said.

Verner said that the City of Waterloo points to its recognition in 2007 by the Intelligent Community Forum as a key development tool that allowed the city to attract new business and retain what was already there. She said the bid could show Windsor-Essex as a good place for businesses to invest.
The winner of the most intelligent community in the world award will be announced in New York on June 3.



Thursday, April 14, 2011

Guest column: National Chief Shawn Atleo on First Nation concerns

There is an election on, isn't it time we talked?   By Shawn Atleo
The reality for First Nations in Canada is that we suffer the poorest socio-economic conditions of all our fellow citizens. A candidate in this election stated that there are no Third World conditions here.
My response: The rate of tuberculosis among First Nations is 31 times the national average. We suffer infant mortality rates that are three times the Canadian average, an education gap that will take over two decades to close and the realization that our children are more likely to end up in jail than to graduate from high school.

Hereditary Chief Shawn A-in-chut Atleo became the national chief of the Assembly of First Nations in July 2009, replacing long-time AFN leader Phil Fontaine. A former Regional Chief of the assembly for British Columbia, he is also chancellor of Vancouver Island University .

As I write this, 114 First Nation communities are living under boil water advisories.
I see this reality on a daily basis in my travels around the country. Recently I was speaking with a group of teenagers in Fort Qu'Appelle, Sask., when one boy said to me, "the rez is hard — it leaves you scarred."Those words capture the fear and struggle of our people. It is a fear I have seen in the eyes of young parents struggling to deal with poverty as well as in our elderly fearing for their grandchildren.
It is a fear I see in our people living in cities where gangs are the only family and drugs the only escape.

Passing reference

We must overcome this fear. And to do this will require the attention, energy and action of all Canadians.So it is troubling that there is so little discussion about our issues in this election, aside from a few media stories about racist, ignorant remarks on the part of some would-be candidates.The only mention during the English language leaders' debate on Tuesday was a passing reference that First Nation priorities are not being addressed.The AFN is working to raise the profile of these issues during this campaign. We have set out the facts and the priorities: affirmation, education, partnership and community safety.
Affirmation means moving forward on reconciliation, embracing the original relationships set out through treaties and implementing agreements.These efforts are fundamental in affirming the right of First Nations to govern their affairs, be responsible and accountable to their citizens and to make the decisions that affect their daily lives.It means resolving land claims so we create certainty for us and for business.In this regard, the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples is an important new road map and instructs us all to work in partnership and with respect.

Education

Education is a second critical component of our agenda. Every year, funding for our students is subject to cutbacks and realignment.Then prime minister Paul Martin, the provincial premiers and six major aboriginal leaders meet in Kelowna, B.C., in November 2005. The result, the $5 billion, multi-year Kelowna Accord to address native health and educational concerns, didn't survive the change in government. (Reuters) On average, a child going to school on a reserve is funded at $2,000 less per year than students in public schools.In some regions this inequity climbs to over $7,000 less per child. This is fundamentally unfair and unacceptable.If we abandon another generation to poverty and despair we will only serve to increase social costs and lost potential.In recent days, the Conservatives and Liberals were quick to commit to stable rates of growth for the provinces and territories for health, education and social costs at 6.6 per cent annual increase.

Yet for First Nations, funding for these same services has been capped at two per cent growth for more than a decade, despite the fact that we are the most rapidly growing population.I challenge all parties to commit to the same growth rate and to closing the funding gap, thereby committing to fairness and hope for our young population.We estimate that if we can close the education and labour-market gaps in one generation, First Nations will be able to generate $400 billion in additional output and save $115 billion in government expenditures.

A shared agenda

Our third priority is building and strengthening our economies.There is growing entrepreneurialism among our peoples, across all sectors. If we engage upfront, prior to any outside development, and create relationships, then energy and resource development could be the new fur trade — an economic lever that lifts First Nations into prosperity while fostering positive engagement between us and other communities.

Our fourth priority is safety and community security.
We must commit ourselves as a society to ensure that every child has access to safe, clean drinking water; that every mother knows that medical attention is at hand should she or her baby fall ill; that every youth has somewhere to turn, someone to talk to in moments of despair.Our communities suffer trauma too often and struggle without basic supports. We ask you, as neighbours, to help us rekindle our sense of community and extend a helping hand.

Our agenda requires action. Action that addresses the root causes of violence and despair. Action that shows our people that there is fairness. Action that keeps our families safe and our children in school.
All of Canada has a tremendous and shared stake in this agenda.We have a dynamic, young and rapidly growing population at a time when the rest of Canada is aging.
There is tremendous potential in this but — let's be clear — there are also serious negative consequences to inaction. There is anger. There is frustration. And rightfully so.

It is imperative, then, that just as our collective ancestors did in the time of treaty making, we commit to working together, to demonstrate our ability to respect one another and find the path forward.We can shape the future. We can heal the scars of that young man in Fort Qu'Appelle.We can light the path to a better tomorrow. But we must start now.



Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Make sure you get all your Medical Tax deductions

Tax time: medical expenses to consider


Things you should know, may know and perhaps some surprises

Time to gather medical expense receipts. (RA Hickey) Many people don’t even bother to add up and claim their medical expenses because they don’t think the effort will pay off. After all, the tax credit is the least of all the tax credits in all the provinces.

Further, the expenses must be more than three per cent of net income or $2,024 — whichever figure is lower. So for a person with a $40,000 net income, the first three per cent or $1,200 of allowable medical expenses, is excluded from the calculation.

As well, the tax department requires receipts.

Nevertheless, there may well be money to keep in your pocket. Over the years, tax rules have grown to include more than 400 separate tax credits and deductions across the country that can significantly reduce the amount of tax individuals pay. Many people miss out on the medical expenses tax break because they’re just unaware of the vast array of expenses that qualify.

“Although the CRA has been tightening rules in this area recently (such as eliminating expenses from strictly cosmetic procedures) people still tend to miss some eligible payments,” says chartered accountant James Gustafson of Victoria-based Gustafson Accounting.

Don't tax programs catch all those tax breaks?

While most tax software programs do a good job of prompting you about available credits and deductions, they don't know the specifics of your particular situation. So, they will ask you about medical expenses but you still have to know what to claim.

As one example, Gustafson points out that premiums paid to a private health insurance plan qualify as medical expenses, as long as your employer didn’t pay them on your behalf.

“There is, in fact, a very long list of medical expenses that people miss every year — common items like batteries for hearing aids, glasses, and treatments from naturopaths,” says Evelyn Jacks, president of the Winnipeg-based Knowledge Bureau.

"Even modifications to the family van required to accommodate a person in a wheelchair may be claimed on a limited basis.” Jacks adds that people with a gluten allergy can claim the higher cost of gluten-free products if a doctor prescribes them. The difference between the cost of the gluten-free product and a similar non-gluten-free product is the allowable medical expense.

For example, a loaf of gluten-free bread can cost as much as $9.99. A regular loaf costs around $2.99. The claim would be for the seven-dollar difference.

The Disability Tax Credit

The disability tax credit is the most lucrative non-refundable tax credit offered in Canada — worth more than $1,500 a year in real money, depending on the province. Our experts both cited this as an often-overlooked break. The credit is intended for those with severe and prolonged physical or mental impairments. To be eligible, the disability must significantly restrict activities of daily living. A physician or licensed practitioner must complete and certify the medical section on form T2201.

"In my experience, the disability tax credit has been frequently missed by Canadians who may otherwise qualify, particularly when they are infirm themselves, as another relative will typically have to become involved to obtain the necessary medical certification,” says James Gustafson. The disability tax credit is often forgotten. (CRA)

Evelyn Jacks adds that people who don’t qualify for the tax credit in one year, may qualify in subsequent years with progressive illnesses like cancer or Alzheimer’s disease. So it’s worth it to re-apply.

She also points out that people can go back and adjust previously-filed tax returns for the 2001 to 2009 tax years if they feel they could have qualified years ago but never filed. A doctor needs to certify that the disability was present earlier and then file a T-1 adjustment request for each year you’re seeking to change.

“Missing this [credit] over a 10-year period — and many families do — [can] leave you $15,000 short,” she says.

More credits

It appears the CRA has dealt with every possibility for health care expenses which has made for a wide range of products and procedures that can be claimed. Some you may know, some you should know and some may be surprising. Below is a partial list.

Air conditioner — the lesser of $1,000 and 50 per cent of the amount paid for the air conditioner for an individual with a severe chronic ailment, disease, or disorder — prescription required.

Attendant care expenses — Attendant care expenses are amounts you or your spouse or common-law partner, paid for attendant care or care in any of the following places: ·

Self-contained domestic establishments.

Retirement homes, homes for seniors, or other institutions.·

Nursing homes (full-time care).

Special schools, institutions, or other places (providing care or care and training).

Group homes in Canada.

Bathroom aids — to help a person get in or out of a bathtub or shower or to get on or off a toilet — prescription required.

Bone marrow transplant — reasonable amounts paid to locate a compatible donor, to arrange the transplant including legal fees and insurance premiums, and reasonable travelling costs including board and lodging for the patient, the donor, and their respective companions.

Cancer treatment — in or outside Canada, provided by a medical practitioner or a public or licensed private hospital.

Cosmetic surgery — generally, expenses for purely cosmetic procedures are eligible only if incurred before March 4, 2010. An expense will continue to qualify as a medical expense if it is necessary for medical or reconstructive purposes, such as surgery to address a deformity related to a congenital abnormality, a personal injury resulting from an accident or trauma, or a disfiguring disease.

Eyes — eyeglasses, contact lenses or other vision devices for the treatment of vision correction, and artificial eye — prescription required.

Furnace — the amount paid for an electric or sealed combustion furnace to replace a furnace that is neither of these, where the replacement is necessary because of a person's severe chronic respiratory ailment or immune system disorder — prescription required.

Hospitals services — public or private, that are designated as hospitals by the province, territory or jurisdiction where they are located.

International Treatments — The personnel doing the procedure have to be practitioners and be licensed under the jurisdiction, a tax expert interviewed by CBC News said. The procedure has to be performed in hospital or the fees paid to a hospital.

Call the CRA beforehand with the facts of who is doing the procedure, and where you're getting this procedure done and you can get an advanced tax ruling on whether the treatment can be claimed as a medical expense.

In vitro — fertility program, not including donations to a sperm bank.

Laser — eye surgery

Medical marijuana or marijuana seeds — the amount paid to Health Canada or a designated producer for a person authorized under the Marihuana Medical Access Regulations or exempt under section 56 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act to possess or use the drug for medical purposes.

Orthodontic work including braces — expenses for purely cosmetic procedures are not eligible.

Scooter — the amount paid for a scooter that is used in place of a wheelchair.

Tests — the cost of medical tests such as cardiographs, electrocardiograms, metabolism tests, radiological services or procedures, spinal fluid tests, stool examinations, sugar content tests, urine analysis, and x-ray services. Also claim the cost of any related interpretation or diagnosis — prescription required.

Travel Expenses — if medical treatment is not available to you within 40 kilometres from your locality, you may be able to claim the cost of public transportation (for example, taxi, bus, or train) to get the treatment somewhere else.

However, if public transportation is not readily available, you can claim vehicle expenses to get medical treatment. In addition, if you have to travel more than 80 kilometres from your locality for medical treatment, you may be able to claim the cost of your meals and accommodations.

You can also claim travel expenses for someone to accompany you if a medical practitioner certifies in writing that you are unable to travel without assistance.

Keep all your receipts for filing or use the simplified method: you may claim a flat rate of $17 a meal, to a maximum of $51 per day (Canadian or US funds), per person, without receipts.

Vaccines — prescription required.

Walking aids — the amount paid for devices designed exclusively to help a person who has a mobility impairment to walk — prescription required.

Water filter, cleaner, or purifier — the amount paid for a person to cope with or overcome a severe chronic respiratory ailment, or severe chronic immune system disregulation — prescription required.

Whirlpool bath treatments — the amount paid to a medical practitioner. A hot tub that you install in your home, even if prescribed by a medical practitioner, is not eligible.

Wigs — the amount paid for a person who has suffered abnormal hair loss due to a disease, accident, or medical treatment — prescription required.

The full list can be found at the CRA site. It's user-friendly and there is a search function in the upper right of the page.

No, noes

There are a number of expenses that are commonly claimed as medical expenses but don't qualify.

Here is the complete non-eligible expenses list from the CRA.

Athletic or fitness club fees.

Birth control devices (non-prescription).

Blood pressure monitors.
Cosmetic surgery — expenses for purely cosmetic procedures including any related services and other expenses such as travel, incurred after March 4, 2010, cannot be claimed as medical expenses. Both surgical and non-surgical procedures purely aimed at enhancing one's appearance are not eligible.

These non-eligible expenses include the following:

Liposuction.

Hair replacement procedures.

Botulinum injections.

Teeth whitening.

An expense, including those identified above, may qualify as a medical expense if it is necessary for medical or reconstructive purposes, such as surgery to address a deformity related to a congenital abnormality, a personal injury resulting from an accident or trauma, or a disfiguring disease. ·

Diaper services.

Health plan premiums paid by an employer and not included in your income.·

Health programs. ·
Organic food. ·

Over-the-counter medications.

Vitamins, and supplements, even if prescribed by a medical practitioner.·

Personal response systems such as Lifeline and Health Line Services. ·

The following provincial and territorial plans:

Alberta Health Care Insurance Plan.

Manitoba Health Plan.

Medical Services Plan of British Columbia.

New Brunswick Medicare Division of Provincial Department of Health.

Newfoundland Medical Care Plan.

Northwest Territories Health Insurance Services Agency of Territorial Government.

Nova Scotia Medical Services Insurance.

Ontario Health Insurance Plan.

Prince Edward Island Health Services Payment Plan.

Quebec Health Insurance Board (including payments made to the Health Services Fund).

Saskatchewan Medical Care Insurance Plan.

Yukon Territorial Insurance Commission.

Or ·travel expenses for which you can get reimbursed.

(Source: Canada Revenue Agency )



Cancer prevention benefits multiply fast: report

Prevention clinics that offer professional counselling on diet deserve attention from health planners and administrators, a report says. Mark Duncan/Associated PressSeveral thousand breast cancer cases could be prevented in Canada each year if prevention strategies such as better diets and more exercise were applied more widely, a new report concludes.
The Cancer Advocacy Coalition of Canada released its annual report on the disease on Tuesday in Toronto.
The document includes several reports on cancer prevention, clinical trials and progress on access to treatment for different forms of cancer.

"Truly, an ounce of prevention is worth many pounds of cure," concluded Dr. Joseph Ragaz, the group's director and a senior medical oncologist and clinical professor at the University of British Columbia.

Overhaul urged

If all of the research findings on prevention were put into practice today by Canadian women at high risk of breast cancer, several thousands breast cancers could be prevented in the country annually, Ragaz said.
The group said it was asking why governments make an already tough fight harder.
"Whether we look at the lack of prevention programs that could prevent thousands of women from developing breast cancer, or to the decline of clinical trials in Canada that provide patients access to new and potentially effective therapies, or to the under-utilization of nurse practitioners and pharmacists in cancer care, we see that our cancer care system needs an overhaul," added Dr. Pierre Major, the co-chair of the group's board of directors.

Ragaz reviewed the evidence supporting prevention approaches such as:
Reducing excess weight and obesity by switching away from the current Western diet, which is high in carbohydrates, animal fat and too few fruits and vegetables.
Increasing regular aerobic exercise.
Reducing high alcohol intake.
Drug treatments such as tamoxifen for women at high risk based on family history at a young age or abnormal pathology.

Canada lacks dedicated prevention facilities and organized prevention programs despite rising obesity rates among teenage girls, and women with low socio-economic background and aboriginal background, he noted.
Another section of the report reviews the benefits of clinical trials, noting that less than seven per cent of Canadian adults with cancer are enrolled in studies that give access to potentially effective treatments that may contribute to survival and high-quality care.

The group also renewed its calls for catastrophic drug coverage for cancer patients and more timely access to cancer surgery and treatments.



Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The Cure for Apathy

Research proves no two of us are alike, even identical twins

Study tries to pinpoint the genetic determinants of schizophrenia

London, ON –Just like snowflakes, no two people are alike, even if they’re identical twins
according to new genetic research from The University of Western Ontario. Molecular geneticist Shiva Singh has been working with psychiatrist Dr. Richard O’Reilly to determine thegenetic sequencing of schizophrenia using identical or monozygotic twins. The study is published in this month’s PLoS ONE.

Singh looked at about one million markers of identical twins (and their two parents) where only one twin had schizophrenia. “The most informative feature of schizophrenia is that it sometimes runs in the family. So, for example, the risk of developing schizophrenia is much higher if your brother, sister, mother or father have the disease,” says Singh, noting in the

general population about one percent have schizophrenia. “We started with the belief that monozygotic twins are genetically identical, so if one member of identical twins has schizophrenia, then the risk for the other twin should be 100 percent, if it’s all due to genes. However, studies over the years have shown that the risk of the disease in both twins is only 50 percent.” That means either the twins are genetically not identical or the familial disease involves non‐genetic (random) effects.

Singh and his team have now demonstrated that the monozygotic twins are not genetically identical. “So if schizophrenia is in the genes, then the difference in the genetic makeup of monozygotic twins, with only one disease twin, must have something to do with the disease.” Singh found about 12 per cent of DNA can vary across individuals, “Cells are dividing as we develop and differentiate. More importantly, these cells may lose or acquire additional DNA.

The genome is not static.”

Dr. O’Reilly hopes this research will lead to better understanding and improved treatments for schizophrenia. “If we had a genetic test for schizophrenia, it could be applied early in the disease when it’s hard to make that diagnosis,” says Dr. O’Reilly. The research was funded through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Ontario Mental Health Foundation and the Schizophrenia Society of Ontario.

Media contact; Kathy Wallis, Media Relations Officer, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry,

The University of Western Ontario, 519‐661‐2111 ext. 81136, Kathy.wallis@schulich.uwo.ca

Monday, April 11, 2011

IMF boosts Canada's outlook

OTTAWA — The International Monetary Fund boosted Monday its 2011 GDP outlook for Canada, citing business investment and higher commodity prices as the key drivers for what’s expected to be one of the best economies among industrialized countries.And unlike the United States, the IMF said Canada’s policymakers have the country on the right fiscal track, with a “sound and credible” plan to return to budget balance by mid-decade.

Still, the Washington-based global organization, in its latest world economic outlook, warned risks to the Canadian economy are tilted to the downside, led by a strong currency, deterioration in real estate prices, and bloated household balance sheets. As a result, the Bank of Canada is well within its right to take a “wait-and-see” approach when it comes to increases in interest rates.
Overall, the IMF kept its forecast for global real GDP growth unchanged from January, expecting a 4.4% advance in 2011 and a 4.5% expansion next year.“Given the improvement in financial markets, buoyant activity in many emerging and developing economies, and growing confidence in advanced economies, economic prospects for 2011–12 are good, notwithstanding new volatility caused by fears about disruptions to oil supply,” the IMF said.

The forecast for growth in emerging markets remained as is compared with January, with a 6.5% annual advance penciled in for 2011 and 2012.The IMF, however, slightly pulled down its 2011 outlook for most advanced economies, to 2.4% growth from 2.5%, led by downward adjustments to Japan, Britain, the eurozone and the United States.The one exception, though, was Canada. The Canadian economy is now expected to grow 2.8% in 2011, or at the same pace as the United States, and lead industrialized countries in terms of economic activity. The revision represents a half-percentage point jump from the January outlook.

Bay Street analysts expect the Bank of Canada to boost its forecast for the domestic economy in its quarterly economic outlook, to be released Wednesday, by a nearly similar amount. In its first-quarter outlook, the Canadian central bank anticipated a 2.4% advance in 2011 – a forecast economists say now looks stale given the strong data to date.For 2012, Canada is expected to grow 2.6%, or slightly less than the IMF’s January outlook.

The IMF said 2011 growth of 2.8% would be powered by domestic demand “and private investment in particular, in line with strong commodity prices.” Economists at CIBC World Markets recently said business investment by Canadian companies was set to take off this year and next -- led by heavy hitters in the manufacturing, energy and utilities sectors.

However, the IMF added the strong Canadian dollar was expected to be “a drag” on growth. Risks to the growth outlook are tilted to the downside, it said, with the main domestic risk being deterioration of housing markets and household balance sheets. Canadian household debt is at a record high level, although recent indicators suggest household borrowing has slowed.

In terms of monetary policy, the IMF said the Bank of Canada “rightly” remains in an accommodative mode given the size of the output gap – although Canadian economists believe it has shrunk faster than anticipated in recent months. “Given the downside risks to the growth outlook, muted inflation pressures, and the forthcoming withdrawal of [government] stimulus, a wait-and-see attitude seems appropriate regarding further increases in the policy rate,” which stands at 1%.

The Bank of Canada is expected to leave the rate as is Tuesday when it releases its latest policy decision.
On the fiscal front, the IMF applauded Canadian policymakers for developing “a sound and credible plan to return to budget surpluses” beginning as early as 2015. But last week the Conservative Party, seeking a third mandate, indicated budget balance could be achieved by 2014 through cuts to program spending of up to $4-billion a year – although it has not yet identified where those cuts would take place.
Meanwhile, the IMF noted challenges from population aging and health-care financing require further plans “to cement fiscal sustainability.”

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/fp/story/2011/04/11/4594814.html#ixzz1JEoqVrlU

BBC explains the Canadian election

Canadians will go to the polls in May to elect their fourth national government in seven years. BBC News looks at the candidates, parties and issues in play.

What triggered the election?

In late March, a parliamentary committee found the Harper government to be in contempt of parliament because of its failure to disclose the full costs of anti-crime programmes, corporate tax cuts and plans to purchase stealth fighter jets from the US.This was the first time in Canadian history that a government had been found to be in contempt of parliament.

Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff then offered a no confidence motion, which passed by 156 votes to 145.
That forced parliament to adjourn and compelled Prime Minister Stephen Harper to ask the Governor General, David Johnston, to dissolve the parliament. Mr Johnston issued the writs of election on 26 March, and the election will be held on 2 May.

Why has Canada held four elections in seven years?
Since the 2004 Canadian election, no party has won a majority of seats in the House of Commons.
The two major parties, the Conservatives and the Liberals, have been forced to forge coalitions with minor parties, then forming minority governments. But minority governments are by their nature unstable, and both parties have had difficulties sustaining workable coalitions.

Mr Harper's entire tenure as prime minister - he won election in 2006 - has been at the helm of a minority government. His is the longest-serving minority government in Canadian history. One result of the large number of recent elections is concern among commentators about voter apathy. Turnout is expected to be low on 2 May.

Who is Prime Minister Harper's main rival?
Michael Ignatieff unveiled his party's platform on 3 April Mr Harper is the leader of the Conservative Party, one of Canada's two main political parties. His opponent this year is Michael Ignatieff, head of the Liberal Party. Mr Ignatieff is a relative newcomer to Canadian politics having been first elected in 2006. He rose quickly, becoming Liberal leader in 2008.Prior to politics, Mr Ignatieff, a well known author, taught human rights at Harvard University in the US. He has also worked as a columnist and as a journalist on several BBC programmes.

Mr Harper began the election with a significant lead over Mr Ignatieff in the polls.
Mr Ignatieff has challenged Mr Harper to a one-on-one debate, in addition to the traditional multi-party debates.

What are the major political parties?
The two major political parties are the Conservatives, a center-right party, and the Liberals, a center-left party.There are also several smaller parties that in recent years have won enough seats to form minority governments with the dominant parties.

Gilles Duceppe (centre) leads the Bloc Quebecois The Bloc Quebecois, led by Gilles Duceppe, is currently the third largest party in the Canadian parliament. It is devoted to promoting the interests of the province of Quebec, and believes that Quebec should ultimately secede from Canada. The Bloc Quebecois is primarily supported by Quebec residents and campaigns most actively there.

The New Democratic Party (NDP), led by Jack Layton, is a social democratic party which has progressive policies on issues such as gay rights and health care.

The Green Party, led by Elizabeth May, is a centre-left party which promotes environmental sustainability and non-violence. Ms May and the Greens have not been invited to participate in the candidate debates, prompting a lawsuit which experts say is unlikely to succeed.

What are the major issues?

Conservatives are seeking to make the economy the dominant issue in the election. Canada fared much better than the US during the recession, but unemployment is still high at 7.8%.Mr Harper has promised to provide tax breaks for corporations and manufacturers and tax credits to encourage small businesses to hire new workers.

Elizabeth May and the Greens have been excluded from the televised debates

Mr Ignatieff opposes corporate tax reductions offered by Mr Harper, but Conservatives retort that eliminating the planned reduction in the corporate tax rate amounts to a tax increase, which would be harmful to the recovering economy.

Liberals want to establish a cap-and-trade system to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and are also seeking increased funding for social services including for poor seniors, carers and early childhood education.
Mr Ignatieff has unveiled a plan to promote affordable housing and reduce homelessness. But the proposed funding comes from a public-private partnership fund for infrastructure investment which Liberals say is unproductive, but which city governments around the country argue is an important funding stream.
The Liberals are also attempting to cast the debate as being over the honesty and integrity of government, highlighting the contempt of parliament ruling.

The NDP is focused on health care, particularly access to doctors. It has criticised Mr Harper's perceived lack of action on the issue.
In terms of foreign relations, Canada's ongoing commitment to the war in Afghanistan and its recent military engagement in Libya may become issues.

What are the main battlegrounds?
The key to a majority in any Canadian election is to win big in the populous provinces of Ontario and Quebec, which between them account for 181 of the 308 seats in the House of Commons.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Is Britain to blame for many of the world's problems?

Given Canada's colonial past- I thought I would paste a debate on the assertions made by David Camerson that the British Empire was responsible for many of the world's historic problems. It was published on the BBC news site. Two historians give their views.
David Cameron made the remarks in Pakistan David Cameron has suggested that Britain and the legacy of its empire was responsible for many of the world's historic problems. But is that view fair?Answering questions from students in Pakistan on Tuesday, the prime minister said: "As with so many of the problems of the world, we are responsible for their creation in the first place."

Here two historians give their view.
Nick Lloyd, lecturer in defence studies, King's College London

Mr Cameron's remarks about the painful legacy of colonialism could not be further from the truth and they reveal a disappointing lack of historical judgment. The British Empire in India, known as the Raj, was the greatest experiment in paternalistic imperial government in history.
By the time the British left India in 1947 they had given the subcontinent a number of priceless assets, including the English language, but also a structure of good government, local organisation and logistical infrastructure that still holds good today. Far from damaging India, British imperial rule gave it a head start.

"The empire gave its colonies real, tangible benefits” At the centre of this was the Indian Civil Service, the 1,000 strong "heaven-born" group of administrators that ran the country. Their role in laying the foundations for strong, efficient government in India has never been accorded the respect and admiration it deserves. While history has recorded that the ICS were aloof and disdainful of the "natives", in reality, the men who ran India were selfless, efficient and - most importantly of all - completely incorruptible. Not only did they oversee the spread of good government, western education, modern medicine and the rule of law, they also put in place local works, famine relief, and irrigation projects, most notably in the Punjab, which benefited enormously from what was then the largest irrigation project in the world.

Perhaps the most priceless asset of all was the English language itself, which gave a unity to the subcontinent that it had never known before and which is allowing India's people to do business around the world today with great success. Indeed, it is indicative of this that in February 2011, a Dalit (formerly untouchable) community in Uttar Pradesh built a shrine to the goddess English, which they believe will help them learn the English language and climb out of their grinding poverty.

Although Britain was not able to replicate its success in India everywhere across its vast colonial empire, it is still clear the empire gave its colonies real, tangible benefits. Wherever the British ruled, they erected a light, relatively inexpensive form of government that was not corrupt, was stable, and was favourable to outside investors.
Its imperial civil servants may not always have been completely sympathetic to local peoples, but they were always motivated by humanitarian impulses and did their best in often difficult circumstances. Indeed, when we look at Africa, many of the benefits of imperial rule were squandered in the generations after independence with a succession of corrupt and brutal regimes.

Dr Nick Lloyd is the author of the forthcoming book The Amritsar Massacre: The Untold Story of One Fateful Day


Andrew Thompson, professor of imperial and global history, University of Leeds

Does Britain's colonial legacy still poison its relations with Africa, the Middle East and Asia? Mr Cameron's remark raises important questions for society about how we relate to history.

"Detention without trial, beatings, torture, and killings punctuated the twilight years of colonial rule” There's the inheritance of colonial violence. What you saw in the later stages of empire was a series of British counter-insurgency operations, exported from one hot spot to another. In places such as Kenya, Palestine, Malaysia, Zimbabwe, and of course Northern Ireland, the British were forced to resort to repressive legal and military measures in what was to prove an ultimately vain attempt to curb the tide of political unrest and nationalist opposition.

Detention without trial, beatings, torture, and killings punctuated the twilight years of colonial rule. The disclosure this week of a large tranche of Foreign Office files, hitherto kept secret about full extent of British brutality against Mau Mau in Kenya, suggests there may be further revelations still to come. Will there be similar stories and claims from Palestine, Malaya, Cyprus or Nigeria?

There is also the question of whether the violence that characterised these counter-insurgency operations during decolonisation then set the scene for the way in which independent, post-colonial African and Asian governments dealt with political dissent from their own peoples.

The imperial past is far from being dead. On the contrary it is actually very much part of contemporary politics.
Perhaps we should not be surprised then when British foreign policy interests and interventions today are seen and perceived as "neo-colonial" in their nature. The reaction of Iran in 2007 when 15 Royal Navy personnel were seized is instructive here. As heavy-handed as it may have seemed to people in Britain, it needs to be understood in the wider context of Iranian sensitivities over the presence of any western powers in or near its territorial waters - sensitivities arising in part from a very fraught and fragile 20th Century relationship over oil and territory.

In a deeper and more fundamental sense still, Britain's colonial legacy can be seen in the ways in which globalisation is being experienced today. From the 1870s onwards, the integration of labour, capital and commodity markets promoted by empire was very much skewed towards its "white" settler societies.

The economic benefits of empire for the so-called dependent colonies were much more meagre in comparison or did not exist at all. When we find critics of globalisation questioning whether economic integration and cultural diversity can comfortably co-exist, we should remember that for much of the last century the form of globalisation the world experienced rested on a view of social relations governed by racial hierarchies.

Finally, we might reverse the colonial encounter and think about how empire has left an imprint on British society. Despite its multi-ethnic empire, Britain did not embrace ethnic diversity at home.
There was the rhetoric of an inclusive imperial citizenship for the peoples of all Commonwealth countries. But in reality in post-war Britain there was little desire to promote integration for immigrants from the likes of the West Indies and the Indian subcontinent.

The consequences are perhaps reflected in experiences today, especially in terms of the so-called ethnic penalty many of these communities face in education, employment or housing.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Proportional Representation- an old idea whose time has come?

De-clogging the veins of democracy


The problem is not minorities or coalitions, it is with how we vote

By Joe Schlesinger CBC News -Joe Schlesinger was a foreign correspondent for CBC for 28 years, covering natural disasters, political upheavals and conflicts from Vietnam to the Persian Gulf.


This election campaign's tug-of-war between the devil of a future dominated by minority governments and the deep blue sea of contrived coalitions is annoying enough to make many Canadians wish we had a better voting system.

It just so happens that there is such a system and it is closer to the old ideal of "one person, one vote." It is called proportional representation, or PR. And with so many Canadians disillusioned with today's politics, this may be a good time to take a closer look at it. Our current first-past-the-post system is far from equitable and is quickly becoming ever more so.

On average, an MP from B.C. represents more than three times the number of constituents as an MP from PEI. A similar disparity exists between many ridings within provinces. It takes far fewer voters, for example, to elect MPs in rural ridings than it does in cities and their suburbs. Unless tackled, this inequality is bound to rise as Canada becomes more urbanized.

Among those hardest hit would be the fast-growing ethnic communities concentrated in the underrepresented ridings of our largest metropolitan areas.The discrepancy between rural and urban representation is also aggravated by several grandfathered provisions, some entrenched in the Constitution, that guarantee certain provinces more seats than the number of their inhabitants would warrant.

The Maritimes have 11 excess seats. Manitoba and Saskatchewan have eight and Quebec seven.
This leaves the fast-growing urbanizing provinces of B.C., Alberta and Ontario shy of their fair share in the 308-seat House of Commons.

A bill to increase Ontario's number of seats by 18, Alberta's by five and B.C.'s by seven was introduced last year. Vehemently opposed by the Bloc Quebecois, it died with the outgoing Parliament.

Too fair?

The biggest fault line in our electoral system, though, is that you don't need a majority to win — a third or even less of the vote will do. Stephane Dion and Jack Layton trying to sell the idea of coalition government at a rally in Toronto in December 2008. It didn't really work out. (Mike Cassese/Reuters) It is the kind of anomaly that has landed us in the controversy about the legitimacy of minority governments and coalition rule, and has no doubt put off voters and led to lower turnouts on election day.

Inequities such these have made PR the dominant voting choice of democracies everywhere outside of North America and Britain. It is used by more than 80 countries from the model democracies of Scandinavia in the North down to New Zealand and Australia in the South.

PR's attractions are obvious. The number of seats won accurately reflects the number of votes cast for specific parties. There are no wasted votes. Minority parties have a better chance. So have independent candidates. But there is such a thing as having too fair a system. For one thing, it almost always requires — oh, dreaded word — a coalition. Such coalitions can be unstable.

The instability trap

Israel is the best example. As little as two per cent of the national vote is enough to get a party seats in the Knesset. That may make for an all but perfect voting system. But not for stability. In Israel, the need for coalitions turns tiny parties, some of them with as few as three seats, into the tail that wags the dog. The current Israeli coalition of more than a dozen parties is totally dependent on the support of fringe groups that use their power to push through hard-line special interest policies that are not supported by the majority of voters.

Other coalitions, like the current British one involving Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron  and deputy PM Nick Clegg, a Liberal Democrat, are more stable. Though not always popular.
It is no wonder then that the average lifespan of Israeli governments has been just 25 months.
The instability trap can be avoided by raising the threshold for winning seats.Germany and New Zealand, for instance, have a five per cent threshold and consequently, for all the vagaries of coalitions, stable governments.More importantly, perhaps, both have a modified PR system called mixed-member proportional representation or MMR.

In MMR, voting is held under the traditional first-past-the-post method. If a party wins more ridings than it is entitled to by its national PR share, it gets to keep these excess seats.But additional seats are then allocated to the other parties to bring everyone up to the percentage of the overall national vote they received.

In Canada, the MMR system has been studied over and over again by several provinces. A form of MMR was even used in Alberta and Manitoba between the 1920s and1950s. More recently, however, the system was rejected by PEI voters in a plebiscite in 2005, and a similar vote in Quebec has been shelved.
The veins of democracy

Changing over from the system Canadians have used throughout their history to the more complicated MMR method would certainly take some getting used to. But it could solve some of our current problems.
Take this election. Whatever comes out of it, the result will not be representative of Canada as a whole. Never mind minority governments, even most majority governments fall far short of being elected by an actual majority of Canadians.

In 1993, when Jean Chretien's Liberals reduced Kim Campbell's Tories to two seats, the Grits took only 41 per cent of the vote but ended up with 60 per cent of the seats. It can also happen the other way around with the party that gets the most votes losing because, thanks to the unfairness of vote distribution, it has won fewer seats. As for coalitions, the Liberal-NDP regime that has been bruited about would be just be another minority. The support of the Bloc would help keep it afloat, but it would also make it highly vulnerable to the Bloc's narrow interests and demands.

The plan now in the hopper, to add 30 MPs to the 308-seat House, can only go so far. Even if passed, it would only help correct the imbalance for a decade or so. No one is likely to favour a bloated Parliament in which the only thing that changed was the ever-growing size of the chorus of backbenchers cheering and jeering on command. Somehow, while we safeguard the splendid traditions of our parliamentary system, we must modernize it to make it more equitable and effective. If we don't, we could end up clogging the veins of democracy.

A hard look at our current system and replacing or combining it with a form of PR might be just the ticket for Canada in the 21st century. We could always retain the Speaker's mace and 18th-century tricorne hat as a reminder of where we came from.



Tuesday, April 5, 2011

U of Montreal scientists publish Human Brain mapping of Autism

by Jane Hughes Health correspondent, BBC News

People with autism use their brains differently from other people, which may explain why some have extraordinary abilities to remember and draw objects in detail, according to new research. University of Montreal scientists say in autistic people, the brain areas that deal with visual information are highly developed.

Other brain areas are less active.
The National Autistic Society says the findings significantly increase understanding of the condition.
The research, published in the journal Human Brain Mapping, pulls together 15 years of data on the way the autistic brain works.

Better at visual tasks

It suggests that the brains of autistic people are organised differently from those of other people; the area at the back of the brain, which processes visual information, is more highly developed. That leaves less brain capacity in areas which deal with decision-making and planning.Areas where autistic brains are more active That may be why people with autism can be better than others at carrying out some types of visual tasks. For example, some are able to draw highly accurate and detailed images from memory.

However, they can find it difficult to interpret things like facial expressions.

The condition varies in severity, with some people functioning well, but others completely unable to take part in normal society.The researchers believe their findings may lead towards new ways of helping people to live with the condition.

"For example, this may show a means to help people to literacy in a much more natural way than the usual methods of helping autistic people," said Dr Laurent Mottron from the University of Montreal."The natural tendency is to think that autism is a form of disorganisation. Here, what we see is that it is a reorganisation of the brain," he said.

Understanding autism

Autism experts regard the research findings as significant. "This review highlights that autism should not only be seen as a condition with behavioural difficulties, but should also be associated with particular skill," said Dr Christine Ecker from the Institute of Psychiatry at Kings College, London."It offers us unique insights into the way people with autism perceive their environment and helps us to understand some of their behaviour."She said it added to the understanding of autism. "Knowing the strengths and difficulties of someone with autism may help to better understand their needs and help them maximize their potential."

Carol Povey of the National Autistic Society said: "This study is interesting as it begins to demonstrate why people with autism often show a strong single channel for focus and attention. "Some adults with autism develop their own ways of coping with this experience, some seek out calm and quiet places, whilst others find creative outlets, like art, can help them both process the information as well as give others an insight into how they see the world. "The more insight we have into the way autism affects sensory processing, the more people with autism, their families and professionals can develop strategies to make daily life easier."



Sunday, April 3, 2011

Tak Mak- Canadian Scientist- Prof at U of T

Tak Mak was the son of a successful businessman in southern China. After the Communists took power in 1949, Mak’s father moved the family to Hong Kong to escape the turmoil of political revolution. They were very well off and lived in a predominantly white, upper-middle-class district made up mainly of Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and British families. They lived next door to the consulates of Norway and Denmark. “It was a rich neighbourhood,” says Mak. He was the only Asian kid on his street, but like all the other boys he liked to play marbles in the dirt and kick soccer balls around.


Mak wasn’t particularly interested in school, but his mother insisted that he do well and study hard. It helped that at school he was in a very bright group of about 20 kids. Most of them went to universities all over the world. Mak went to the University of Wisconsin in Madison.

In the early 1970s, after he had received his doctorate (PhD) from the University of Alberta, Mak began his research at the Ontario Cancer Institute in Toronto. He is still a senior scientist there today. After his discovery of the T-cell receptor he became a professor at the University of Toronto, and in 1993 he also became director of the Amgen Research Institute in Toronto, which develops, patents and markets transgenic mice — animals that carry immune-system genes transferred from human beings. During his years at Amgen, Mak led a team that produced 20 patented molecular discoveries for use in drug development. In 2004 Mak left Amgen to become director of a new Institute for Breast Cancer Research.
Tak Mak is a very imaginative fellow. When asked to describe his work as an immunologist, instead of telling a story about himself he came up with the following tale concerning the life of an imaginary T-cell.


Tommy T-Cell is a biodetective. His job is to patrol the human body, investigating suspicious characters. Think of the cells in the human body as shops on a city street. Billions and trillions of police detectives like Tommy T-Cell are driving by all the time, looking in all the shop windows for something unusual going on. Each T-cell is trained to find one — and only one — type of criminal. There are several different kinds of T-cells. Tommy is known as a helper T-cell, part of the body’s immune system, but you can think of him as a cop.

As Tommy cruises through blood and tissue he meets a macrophage, a specialized cell that’s a combination reconnaissance and disposal unit in the body. Macrophages go around collecting bits of your own living and dead cells. They find parts of invading viruses and bacteria, dust, pollen and any junk that’s floating around. They stick pieces of this garbage on their outside surfaces in special places where detectives like Tommy can see them. Tommy has unique Y-shaped spikes called receptor sites all over his surface, and they recognize one kind of garbage. (In 1983 Tak Mak discovered these T-cell receptors.) Tommy’s got about 5,000 receptor sites and each one is exactly the same. No other T-cell has spikes like Tommy’s. His are specially designed to collect a tiny bit of protein from a virus that causes colds. Tommy tries his receptors on the macrophage, but nothing happens, so he moves on. The whole thing takes less than a second.

As Tommy floats along, he remembers his days years ago at the body’s police academy, the thymus, where he learned how to tell foreign invaders from good cells that belong to the body. The T in T-cell is for “thymus,” because that’s where T-cells come from. The thymus is a fist-sized gland located just above the heart. It’s bigger and more active in babies than in adults. In the first years of life, the thymus gives all the T-cell detectives in the body their lifelong assignments. T-cells start out in the thymus as police cadets. They are trained by special macrophages that show new T-cells every possible little bit of garbage that a normal healthy body produces. These bits are called “self.” T-cells whose receptors recognize “self” are killed in the thymus before they can leave; if they ever got out, they would become bad cops that attack good cells instead of invaders.

Tommy finally cruises up to a macrophage that shows him a piece of a cold virus. He checks it with his receptors. It’s a match. The virus has been in the body for only five minutes, but Tommy leaps into action. First he sends out chemicals that signal regular police officers in the body — B-cells — to make antibodies. Antibodies are like heat-seeking missiles that zero in on a particular virus and kill it. Tommy, the helper T-cell, also calls in a SWAT team of killer T-cells and together they go out in search of the invader. They start dividing rapidly, doubling in number about every six hours. It takes four days before millions of T-cells, B-cells and killer T-cells are mobilized to kill all the virus in the body. Immune-system cells are some of the fastest-dividing cells we have inside us.

One day, Tommy is cruising the body on his usual rounds when he meets a thug in a black leather jacket, an AIDS virus. He decides to check him out with his receptors, but before he can do anything the little creep gets right inside Tommy through a tiny hole near the handle that Tommy uses when he visits macrophages. Viruses don’t usually attack T-cells, but AIDS does. That’s what makes AIDS so bad. Now that Tommy has the AIDS virus, little bits of AIDS proteins will appear on his surface. This makes him look very bad to other cells in the immune system. Tommy sees a killer T-cell coming and says his prayers: he knows that a killer T-cell is trained to kill anything that looks foreign. The killer T-cell sees that bit of AIDS on Tommy and, without a second thought, kills his boss. That’s the end of Tommy.

The tragedy of AIDS is that T-cells are the mastermind detectives of the body’s defence system, the ones that organize the other cops. Once AIDS is inside a T-cell, those T-cells look like spies to the rest of the immune system. So the body kills off its best cops, which then makes it harder to fight AIDS and any other infection. Most people with AIDS actually die of a common disease, such as a chest infection that would never kill some-one with a healthy immune system.

As a young scientist ...

Tak Mak was the son of a successful businessman in southern China. After the Communists took power in 1949, Mak’s father moved the family to Hong Kong to escape the turmoil of political revolution. They were very well off and lived in a predominantly white, upper-middle-class district made up mainly of Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and British families. They lived next door to the consulates of Norway and Denmark. “It was a rich neighbourhood,” says Mak. He was the only Asian kid on his street, but like all the other boys he liked to play marbles in the dirt and kick soccer balls around.



Mak wasn’t particularly interested in school, but his mother insisted that he do well and study hard. It helped that at school he was in a very bright group of about 20 kids. Most of them went to universities all over the world. Mak went to the University of Wisconsin in Madison.



In the early 1970s, after he had received his doctorate (PhD) from the University of Alberta, Mak began his research at the Ontario Cancer Institute in Toronto. He is still a senior scientist there today. After his discovery of the T-cell receptor he became a professor at the University of Toronto, and in 1993 he also became director of the Amgen Research Institute in Toronto, which develops, patents and markets transgenic mice — animals that carry immune-system genes transferred from human beings. During his years at Amgen, Mak led a team that produced 20 patented molecular discoveries for use in drug development. In 2004 Mak left Amgen to become director of a new Institute for Breast Cancer Research.



The Science






The Science