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if-you-fan-a-fire · 2 years ago
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“MARITIME PRISON QUIET AFTER RIOT,” Montreal Gazette. January 10, 1933. Page 15. ---- Staff Busy Repairing Damage Done by Convicts on Saturday --- Dorchester, N.B., January 9. Peace continued at Dorchester   penitentiary tonight In striking contrast to the feverish hours of Saturday when 300 of the 476 prisoners provoked fierce rioting that ended the same evening with five convicts wounded, two guards slightly injured and the staff again in complete control.
Warden George T. Goad reported tonight that the wounded were progressing favorably. The prison doctor said the most seriously injured, a brawny negro who figured prominently in the uprising, would recover unless complication developed. He suffered a groin wound from one of the 20 shots fired by guards to quell the riot. 
For the third night in succession the convicts shivered in cold cells as a result of the damage they wrought. The staff was busy all day repairing windows through which the enraged prisoners had rained upon the guards everything they could tear loose. As many windows as possible were covered temporarily with tarpaulin and the staff did all it could to protect the men, but the atmosphere in the cell blocks remained frigid. 
A great deal of work also was required to restore the cupboards, lockers, chairs and plumbing equipment wrecked by the rioters. 
The stable, farm, bakery and kitchen gangs carried on as usual today. Warden Goad expected the pipe, tailor, carpenter, machine and stone-cutting shops would resume operations later in the week. He said the utmost care would be exercised in proceeding toward restoration of the normal routine. 
The usual menu was served to day without any "bread and water" punishment. As a precautionary measure the men were fed in groups at a time. Yelling that continued spasmodically after the disorder was suppressed had ceased tonight.
Warden Goad’s report of the disturbance had gone forward to Ottawa. Hon. Hugh Guthrie. Minister of Justice, said today that decision as to whether or not an inquiry would be made depended upon a study of this report.
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countyflagchampionship · 1 year ago
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On to Round 2!
This is a wrap-up of the current standings. Polls for round 2 will be published starting this Saturday (12/16).
Congratulations to all the counties that progressed!
The state that is standing the strongest is New York, with 39 counties progressing to round 2! Albany, Allegany, Allegany, Broome, Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Chemung, Chenango, Clinton, Columbia, Delaware, Franklin, Greene, Hamilton, Jefferson, Kings, Livingston, Nassau, New York, Niagara, Oneida, Orange, Otsego, Putnam, Rensselaer, Richmond, Rockland, Saint Lawrence, Saratoga, Schuyler, Steuben, Suffolk, Sullivan, Ulster, Warren, Washington, Wayne, Westchester, and Wyoming.
Next most powerful state is Virginia, which has 36 winning counties. Alleghany, Alleghany, Amherst, Augusta, Bedford, Brunswick, Caroline, Carroll, Charlotte, Chesterfield, Fairfax, Fauquier, Fluvanna, Gloucester, Goochland, Grayson, Halifax, Isle of Wight, James City, King and Queen, King George, King William, Lee, Louisa, Montgomery, Patrick, Pittsylvania, Prince Edward, Pulaski, Rockingham, Scott, Smyth, Southampton, Tazewell, Warren, and Wise.
Ohio is also standing strong with 27 advancing counties. Brown, Butler, Columbiana, Coshocton, Crawford, Defiance, Erie, Fulton, Geauga, Holmes, Jackson, Lake, Lawrence, Licking, Madison, Mahoning, Medina, Mercer, Monroe, Muskingum, Perry, Pickaway, Ross, Scioto, Seneca, Trumbull, and Van Wert.
North Carolina is up next with a solid 24 wins. Beaufort, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Camden, Carteret, Craven, Currituck, Granville, Harnett, Henderson, Hoke, Jackson, Johnson, Lenoir, Lincoln, Macon, Madison, Mecklenburg, Northampton, Onslow, Person, Robeson, Tyrrell, and Wake.
Only 1 more state has over 20 counties that made won their match-ups and that's my wonderful Washington. Adams, Asotin, Chelan, Clallam, Cowlitz, Ferry, Garfield, Grant, Grays Harbor, King, Kitsap, Kittitas, Klickitat, Lewis, Pacific, Pend Oreille, Skagit, Snohomish, Thurston, Walla Walla, Whatcom, Whitman, Yakima. Stay strong my soldiers.
A much higher number of states are comfortably in the middle of the pack. They are as follows:
Texas: 19 counties. Bosque, Collin, Dallas, Denton, Fort Bend, Goliad, Hockley, Jones, Lipscomb, Live Oak, Llano, McMullen, Milam, Ochiltree, Orange, Panola, Parker, San Patricio, and Travis.
California: 17 counties. Amador, Calaveras, El Dorado, Imperial, Lake, Mariposa, Monterey, Orange, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Solano, Tulare, Tuolumne, and Yolo.
Pennsylvania: 16 counties. Allegheny, Blair, Butler, Carbon, Dauphin, Franklin, Greene, Jefferson, Lancaster, Lycoming, Mifflin, Montgomery, Perry, Potter, Venango, and York.
Tennessee: 15 counties. Blount, Campbell, Carter, Cumberland, Hardin, Houston, Johnson, Knox, Madison, Maury, McNairy, Obion, Union, Williamson, and Wilson.
Nebraska: 13 counties. Adams, Buffalo, Cass, Cherry, Dakota, Keith, Knox, Nuckolls, Platte, Saunders, Stanton, Thayer, and Webster.
Nevada: 13 counties. Churchill, Clark, Douglas, Esmeralda, Eureka, Lander, Lincoln, Lyon, Mineral, Pershing, Storey, Washoe, and White Pine.
Illinois: 12 counties. Cook, DeKalb, Franklin, Jasper, Kane, Marion, McDonough, McHenry, Morgan, Peoria, St Clair, and Winnebago.
Maryland: 12 counties. Anne Arundel, Calvert, Carroll, Cecil, Dorchester, Frederick, Montgomery, Prince George’s, Queen Anne’s, Talbot, Washington, and Worcester.
Michigan: 12 counties. Barry, Berrien, Clinton, Genesee, Gogebic, Kalamazoo, Lake, Oceana, Ottawa, Rocommon, Sanilac, and Wexford.
Iowa: 11 counties. Dickinson, Fayette, Hancock, Hardin, Henry, Humboldt, Jefferson, Jones, Polk, Pottawattamie, and Wright.
Louisiana: 11 parishes. Ascension, Bossier, Cameron, Catahoula, Concordia, Jefferson, Lincoln, Natchitoches, St Bernard, St James, and St Tammany.
New Jersey: 11 counties. Bergen, Cumberland, Essex, Middlesex, Morris, Passaic, Salem, Somerset, Sussex, Union, and Warren.
Kentucky: 10 counties. Boone, Boyle, Breckinridge, Daviess, Leslie, Logan, Pike, Shelby, Trimble, Woodford.
Many of these poor cute states are barely hanging on. Please wish them luck.
Florida: 8 counties. Alachua, Bay, Miami-Dade, Monroe, Okaloosa, Osceola, Palm Beach, and St Johns.
New Mexico: 8 counties. Colfax, Curry, Doña Ana, Lincoln, Mora, Otero, Roosevelt, and Socorro.
Georgia: 6 counties. Bartow, Cherokee, Floyd, Fulton, Pierce, and Rockdale.
Indiana: 6 counties. Benton, Elkhart, Jennings, Marion, Marshall, and Starke.
Minnesota: 6 counties. Aitkin, Clearwater, Hennepin, Hubbard, McLeod, and Pipestone.
Wisconsin: 6 counties. Calumet, Fond du Lac, Osaukee, Portage, Racine, and Sheboygan.
Wyoming: 6 counties. Big Horn, Converse, Lincoln, Natrona, Park, and Teton.
Missouri: 5 counties. Clay, Gentry, Greene, Newton, and St Louis.
South Carolina: 5 counties. Anderson, Calhoun, Dillon, Dorchester, and Lexington.
Utah: 5 counties. Beaver, Summit, Utah, Washington, and Wayne.
Alaska: 4 boroughs. Anchorage, Juneau, Matanuska-Susitna, and Wrangell.
Arkansas: 4 counties. Cross, Searcy, Washington, and White.
Colorado: 4 counties. Douglas, El Paso, Fremont, and La Plata.
Oklahoma: 4 counties. Bryan, Payne, Rogers, and Washington.
West Virginia: 4 counties. Fayette, Marion, Monongalia, and Roane.
Alabama: 3 counties. Bullock, Cleburne, and Mobile.
Arizona: 3 counties. Coconino, Maricopa, and Yavapai.
Maine: 3 counties. Androscoggin, Hancock, and Washington.
Idaho: 2 counties. Bannock and Bonner.
Kansas: 2 counties. Atchinson and Johnson.
Massachusetts: 2 counties. Barnstable and Berkshire.
Montana: 2 counties. Gallatin and Silver Bow.
North Dakota: 2 counties. Benson and LaMoure.
Some states only have 1 county that progressed. They are: Delaware (Kent County), Hawaii (Maui County), Mississippi (Adams County), New Hampshire (Hillsborough County), Oregon (Linn County), and South Dakota (Bennet County).
```
In addition to all the winning counties above, there will be 83 new county flags folded into round 2!!! (Because of math reasoning this had to happen) Get hyped
They are as follows:
Alexander NC, Allen OH, Alpena MI, Alpena MI, Alpine CA, Arapahoe CO, Ashe NC, Avery NC, Baldwin AL, Baltimore MD, Bell KY, Benzie MI, Bernalillo NM, Black Hawk IA, Brevard FL, Camden NJ, Campbell WY, Canyon ID, Centre PA, Charles City VA, Cheatham TN, Chester PA, Clark WA, Clarke VA, Cleveland OK, Cochise AZ, Columbus NC, Coweta GA, Darke OH, Davidson NC, Elko NV, Erie PA, Florence SC, Garrett MD, Goshen WY, Greene VA, Grundy IL, Gwinnett GA, Hidalgo TX, Highland OH, Hocking OH, Holt NE, Hot Springs WY, Howard MD, Huntingdon PA, Ingham MI, Island WA, Kankakee IL, Lackawanna PA, Lawrence PA, Leelanau MI, Lehigh PA, Leon FL, Liberty TX, Lucas OH, Madera CA, Mahaska IA, Manitowoc WI, McLennan TX, Meigs OH, Milwaukee WI, Nashville and Davidson TN, Northumberland VA, Orleans NY, Page VA, Porter IN, Sacramento CA, Salt Lake UT, San Diego CA, Sangamon IL, Sevier TN, Shelby TN, Skamania WA, Spotsylvania VA, Stafford VA, Sussex VA, Terrell TX, Trinity CA, Tulsa OK, Tuscarawas OH, Ventura CA, Wahkiakum WA, Yuma AZ
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atlanticcanada · 1 year ago
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Canadian Baptists of Atlantic Canada
Old Regular Baptists
Photo: Calhoun United Baptist Church, Dorchester, New Brunswick (CBAC)
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goalhofer · 6 months ago
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2023-24 Players Currently on Rosters
Prince Edward Island
Charlottetown: Ross Johnston (Anaheim) & Zack MacEwen (Ottawa)
Newfoundland
Carbonear: Dawson Mercer (New Jersey)
St. John's: Alex Newhook (Montreal)
Nova Scotia
Halifax: Morgan Barron (Winnipeg), Sidney Crosby (Pittsburgh), Alex Killorn (Anaheim), Nathan MacKinnon (Colorado) & Liam O'Brien (Arizona)
Halifax Municipality: Brad Marchand (Boston)
Yarmouth: Ryan Graves (Pittsburgh)
New Brunswick
Fredericton: Jake Allen (New Jersey)
Moncton: Calvin Pickard (Edmonton)
Saint-François: Bradly Nadeau (Carolina)
Quebec
Amos: Nicolas Roy (Vegas)
Beaconsfield: Marshall Rifai (Toronto)
Bécancour: Sam Montembeault (Montreal)
Bromont: Fréddy Gaudreau (Minnesota)
Chambly: Mathieu Joseph (Ottawa) & Raphaël Lavoie (Edmonton)
Châteauguay: Sam Laberge (New Jersey)
Kirkland: Joe Veleno (Detroit)
Laval: Simon Benoit (Toronto), Samuel Bolduc (New York Islanders), Vincent Desharnais (Edmonton) & Pierre-Olivier Joseph (Pittsburgh)
L'Islet: Xavier Bourgault (Edmonton)
Longueuil: Max Comtois (Carolina) & Anthony Mantha-Pronovost (Vegas)
Montmagny: Sammy Blais (St. Louis)
Mont-Saint-Hilaire: Louis Boileau-Domingue (New York Rangers)
Montreal: William Carrier (Vegas), Nicolas Deslauriers (Philadelphia), Julien Gauthier (New York Islanders), Kris Letang (Pittsburgh), Marco Scandella (St. Louis) & Marc-Édouard Vlasic (San José)
Notre-Dame-Des-Prairies: Anthony-John Greer (Calgary)
Pointe-Claire: Anthony Duclair (Tampa Bay) & Mike Matheson (Montreal)
Quebec: Alexandre Carrier (Nashville), Max Lajoie (Toronto), Kurtis MacDermid (New Jersey) & Jonathan Marchessault (Vegas)
Roberval: Sam Girard (Colorado)
Saguenay: Rafaël Harvey-Pinard (Montreal) & Olivier Rodrigue (Edmonton)
Saint-Eustache: Alex Lafrenière (New York Rangers)
Saint-Hyacinthe: David Savard (Montreal)
Saint-Jérôme: Jonathan Huberdeau (Calgary)
Saint-Narcisse-De-Beaurivage: Yanni Gourde (Seattle)
Sainte-Agathe-Des-Monts: Jonathan Drouin (Colorado) & Pierre-Luc Dubois (Los Angeles)
Sainte-Marie: Thomas Chabot (Ottawa)
Sherbrooke: David Perron (Detroit)
Sorel-Tracy: Anthony Beauvillier (Nashville) & Marc-André Fleury (Minnesota)
Val-d'Or: Jérémy Lauzon (Nashville)
Victoriaville: Phillip Danault (Los Angeles) & Tristan Luneau (Anaheim)
Ontario
Ajax: Michael Carcone (Arizona), Connor McMichael (Washington) & Matt Poitras (Boston)
Aurora: Morgan Frost (Philadelphia) & Robert Thomas (St. Louis)
Barrie: Brent Burns (Carolina)
Belleville: Brian Cousins (Florida)
Bowmanville: Declan Chisholm (Minnesota) & Evan Cormier (Florida)
Brampton: Sean Monahan (Winnipeg), Tyler Seguin (Dallas) & Scott Wedgewood (Dallas)
Brantford: Adam Henrique (Edmonton)
Burlington: Josh Anderson (Montreal)
Caledon: Andrew Mangiapane (Calgary), Darren Raddysh (Tampa Bay) & Taylor Raddysh (Chicago)
Center Wellington Township: Brock McGinn (Anaheim)
Central Huron: Ryan O'Reilly (Nashville)
Chatham-Kent: T.J. Brodie (Tampa Bay)
Dorchester: Boone Jenner (Columbus)
Dysart Et Al: Matt Duchene (Dallas)
East Gwillimbury: Sam Bennett (Florida)
Georgina: Joel Hanley (Calgary), Chris Tierney (New Jersey) & Sean Walker (Colorado)
Guelph: Logan Couture (San José)
Haldimand County: Cam Talbot (Los Angeles)
Halton Hills: Jason Dickinson (Chicago) & MacKenzie Entwistle (Chicago)
Hamilton: Quinton Byfield (Los Angeles), Ben Chiarot (Detroit), Mark Jankowski (Nashville), Johnathan Kovacevic (Montreal), Darnell Nurse (Edmonton), Arber Xhekaj; Jr. (Montreal) & Carter Verhaeghe (Florida)
Hearst: Claude Giroux (Ottawa)
Kingston: Tye Kartye (Seattle) & Gabe Vilardi (Winnipeg)
King Township: Adam Fantilli (Columbus) & Alex Pietrangelo (Vegas)
Kitchener: Nathan Bastian (New Jersey), Nic Hague (Vegas), Mike Hoffman (San José), Steven Lorentz (Florida), Tanner Pearson (Montreal), Mark Scheifele (Winnipeg) & Logan Stanley (Winnipeg)
London: Josh Brown (Arizona), Jacob Bryson (Buffalo), Dylan DeMelo (Winnipeg), Drew Doughty (Los Angeles), Sam Gagner (Edmonton), Bo Horvat (New York Islanders), Nazem Kadri (Calgary), Travis Konecny (Philadelphia), Nick Suzuki (Montreal) & Ryan Suzuki (Carolina)
Markham: Warren Foegele (Edmonton), Mitch Marner (Toronto), Jeff Skinner (Buffalo) & Steven Stamkos (Tampa Bay)
Milton: Michael Sgarbossa (Washington)
Mississauga: Vince Dunn (Seattle), Sean Durzi (Arizona), Robby Fabbri (Detroit), Ryan McLeod (Edmonton), Nick Paul (Tampa Bay), Owen Power (Buffalo), Dylan Strome (Washington), Ryan Strome (Anaheim) & John Tavares (Toronto)
Newmarket: Travis Dermott (Arizona)
New Tecumseh: Tyson Foerster (Philadelphia)
North Bay: Ken Appleby (New York Islanders)
North Dumfries Township: Kyle Clifford (Toronto)
Oakville: Evan Bouchard (Edmonton), Scott Laughton (Philadelphia), Spencer Martin (Carolina) & Michael Vukojevic (New Jersey)
Oshawa: Justin Danforth (Columbus)
Ottawa: Cody Ceci (Edmonton), Calvin De Haan (Tampa Bay), Erik Gudbranson (Columbus), Jean-Gabriel Pageau (New York Islanders) & MacKenzie Weegar (Calgary)
Peterborough: Barrett Hayton (Arizona) & Owen Tippett (Philadelphia)
Prescott: Ben Hutton (Vegas)
Richmond Hill: Jordan Binnington (St. Louis), Ryan Lomberg (Florida) & Connor McDavid (Edmonton)
Sault Ste. Marie: Michael Amadio (Vegas) & Colin Miller (Winnipeg)
Scugog: Ty Dellandrea (Dallas)
St. Catherines: Conor Timmins (Toronto)
Six Nations Of The Grand River: Brandon Montour (Florida)
Stratford: Jared McCann (Seattle)
Strathroy-Caradoc: Lawson Crouse (Arizona)
Sudbury: Tyler Bertuzzi (Toronto) & Brendan Gaunce (Columbus)
Tecumseh: Jack Studnicka (San José)
Temiskaming Shores: Justin Brazeau (Boston) & Corey Perry (Edmonton)
Thunder Bay: Mackenzie Blackwood (San José), Robert Bortuzzo (New York Islanders), Matt Murray (Toronto), Jordan Staal (Carolina), Marc Staal (Philadelphia) & Tyler Tucker (St. Louis)
Toronto: Connor Brown (Edmonton), Michael Bunting (Pittsburgh), Casey Cizikas (New York Islanders), Andrew Cogliano (Colorado), Will Cuylle (New York Rangers), Jamie Drysdale (Philadelphia), Luke Evangelista (Nashville), Jake Evans (Montreal), Mario Ferraro (San José) Jean-Luc Foudy (Colorado), Mark Friedman (Vancouver), Mark Giordano (Toronto), Barclay Goodrow (New York Rangers), Dougie Hamilton (New Jersey), Zach Hyman (Edmonton), Wyatt Johnston (Dallas), Jordan Kyrou (St. Louis), Jack McBain (Arizona), Jamie Oleksiak (Seattle), Adam Pelech (New York Islanders), Michael Pezzetta (Montreal), Evan Rodrigues (Florida), Brendan Smith (New Jersey), Givani Smith (San José), Reilly Smith (Pittsburgh), Brandon Tanev (Seattle), Chris Tanev (Dallas), Tyler Toffoli (Winnipeg), Jake Walman (Detroit) & Tom Wilson (Washington)
Uxbridge Township: Mason Marchment (Dallas)
Vaughan: Andrew Agozzino (Anaheim), Andreas Athanasiou (Chicago), Anthony Cirelli (Tampa Bay) & Phil Di Giuseppe (Vancouver)
Welland: Cal Clutterbuck (New York Islanders)
Whitby: Jonah Gadjovich (Florida) & Cole Perfetti (Winnipeg)
Whitchurch-Stoufville: Sam Carrick (Edmonton) & Trevor Carrick (Anaheim)
Whitewater Region Township: Jack Quinn (Buffalo)
Windsor: Michael DiPietro (Boston), Aaron Ekblad (Florida) Cam Fowler (Anaheim) & Matt Martin (New York Islanders)
Manitoba
Arborg: James Reimer (Detroit)
Brandon: Calen Addison (San José), Joel Edmundson (Toronto), Keegan Kolesar (Vegas), Jordan Martinook (Carolina), Damon Severson (Columbus) & Zach Whitecloud (Vegas)
Dauphin: Ryan Pulock (New York Islanders)
De Salaberry Municipality: Travis Hamonic (Ottawa)
Springfield Municipality: Brett Howden (Vegas)
The Pas: Connor Dewar (Toronto)
Wallace-Woodworth Municipality: Travis Sanheim (Philadelphia)
Winnipeg: Nick Cicek (Vancouver), Max Domi (Toronto), Cody Glass (Nashville), Joel Hofer (St. Louis), Seth Jarvis (Carolina), Ryan Reaves (Toronto) & Mark Stone (Vegas)
Yellowhead Municipality: Morgan Geekie (Boston)
Saskatchewan
Carlyle: Haydn Fleury (Tampa Bay)
Davidson: Brayden McNabb (Vegas)
Estevan: Brayden Pachal (Calgary) & Derrick Pouliot (Dallas)
Melfort: Jaden Schwartz (Seattle)
Oxbox: Tanner Jeannot (Tampa Bay)
Prince Albert: Braden Schneider (New York Rangers)
Regina: Ethan Bear (Washington), Kale Clague (Buffalo), Mat Dumba (Tampa Bay), Jordan Eberle (Seattle) & Reese Johnson (Chicago)
Saskatoon: Brandon Hagel (Tampa Bay), Connor Ingram (Arizona), Kevin Korchinski (Chicago), Darcy Kuemper (Washington), Lane Pederson (Edmonton), Brayden Schenn (St. Louis), Luke Schenn (Nashville), Chandler Stephenson (Vegas) & Connor Zary (Calgary)
Yukon
Whitehorse: Dylan Cozens (Buffalo)
Alberta
Airdrie: Jake Neighbours (St. Louis)
Beaumont: Noah Gregor (Toronto)
Calgary: Jaret Anderson-Dolan (Nashville), Jake Bean (Columbus), Taylor Hall (Chicago), Dylan Holloway (Edmonton), Brett Leason (Anaheim), Cale Makar (Colorado), Josh Morrissey (Winnipeg), Brayden Point (Tampa Bay), Matt Rempe (New York Rangers), Logan Thompson (Vegas) & Olen Zellweger (Anaheim)
Camrose: Parker Kelly (Ottawa)
Canmore: Jacob Bernard-Docker (Ottawa)
Edmonton: Eric Comrie (Buffalo), Jake DeBrusk (Boston), Brendan Gallagher (Montreal), Dylan Guenther (Arizona), Keaton Middleton (Colorado), Stuart Skinner (Edmonton) & Jared Spurgeon (Minnesota)
Ft. Saskatchewan: Kirby Dach (Montreal)
Lethbridge: Ridly Greig (Ottawa)
Lloydminster: Mason Shaw (Minnesota)
Okotoks: Peyton Krebs (Buffalo)
Slave Lake: Nicolas Aubé-Kubel (Washington)
St. Albert: Matt Benning (San José) Mike Benning (Florida), Tyson Jost (Buffalo), Josh Mahura (Florida), Matt Murray (Dallas) & Colton Parayko (St. Louis)
Stony Plain: Brett Kulak (Edmonton)
Strathcona County: Kaiden Guhle (Montreal), Carter Hart (Philadelphia) & Sam Steel (Dallas)
Viking: Carson Soucy (Vancouver)
Wainwright: Bobby McMann (Toronto) & Jake Middleton (Minnesota)
British Columbia
Abbotsford: Noah Juulsen (Vancouver) & Devon Toews (Colorado)
Burnaby: Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (Edmonton)
Chilliwack: Zach Benson (Buffalo)
Comox: Adin Hill (Vegas)
Coquitlam: Mathew Barzal (New York Islanders) & Dante Fabbro (Nashville)
Cranbrook: Bowen Byram (Buffalo) & Dryden Hunt (Calgary)
Delta: Beck Malenstyn (Washington)
Duncan: Dylan Coghlan (Carolina)
Golden: Dillon Dubé (Calgary)
Kamloops: Logan Stankoven (Dallas)
Kelowna: Justin Schultz (Seattle)
Langley: Dennis Cholowski (New York Islanders), Danton Heinen (Boston) & Shea Theodore (Vegas)
Maple Ridge: Brad Hunt (Colorado)
New Westminster: Kevin Bahl (New Jersey) & Brenden Dillon (Winnipeg)
North Vancouver: Connor Bedard (Chicago), Martin Jones (Toronto), Sam Reinhart (Florida) & Colton Sissons (Nashville)
Port Alberni: Laurent Brossoit (Winnipeg)
Port Moody: Kent Johnson (Columbus)
Richmond: Glenn Gawdin (Anaheim), Justin Sourdif (Florida) & Troy Stecher (Edmonton)
Salmon Arm: Curtis Lazar (New Jersey)
Surrey: Arshdeep Bains (Vancouver), Brenden Dillon (Winnipeg), Tristan Jarry (Pittsburgh), Parker Wotherspoon (Boston) & Tyler Wotherspoon (New Jersey)
Trail: Jake Lucchini (Minnesota)
Vancouver: Kyle Burroughs (San José) Ryan Johansen (Philadelphia), Evander Kane (Edmonton), Boris Katchouk (Ottawa), Alexander Kerfoot (Arizona), Milan Lučić (Boston), Michael Rasmussen (Detroit) & Morgan Rielly (Toronto)
Victoria: Tyson Barrie (Nashville), Jamie Benn (Dallas), Dylan Garand (New York Rangers) & Matt Irwin (Vancouver)
Maine
Biddeford: Brian Dumoulin (Seattle)
Yarmouth: Oliver Wahlstrom (New York Islanders)
New Hampshire
Manchester: Luke Hughes (New Jersey) & Michael Kesselring (Arizona)
Rochester: Casey DeSmith (Vancouver)
Massachusetts
Barnstable: Max Willman (New Jersey)
Boston: Matt Grzelcyk (Boston), Noah Hanifin (Vegas), Kevin Hayes (St. Louis), Connor Murphy (Chicago) & Jimmy Vesey (New York Rangers)
Boxford: Chris Kreider (New York Rangers)
Canton: Kevin Rooney (Calgary)
Chelmsford: Jack Eichel (Vegas)
East Longmeadow: Frank Vatrano (Anaheim)
Easton: John Marino (New Jersey)
Hanover: Colin White (Montreal)
Haverhill: Jordan Harris (Montreal)
Hingham: Matty Beniers (Seattle)
Lawrence: Colin Blackwell (Chicago)
Lincoln: Collin Graf (San José)
Millville: Matt Boldy (Minnesota)
Natick: John Carlson (Washington)
Needham: Chris Wagner (Colorado)
North Andover: Joel Daccord (Seattle) & Brian Pinho (New York Islanders)
Scituate: Ryan Donato (Chicago) & Conor Garland (Vancouver)
Southborough: Henry Thrun (San José)
Stoneham: Sam Colangelo (Anaheim)
Weymouth: Charlie Coyle (Boston)
Winchester: Conor Sheary (Tampa Bay)
Rhode Island
Johnston: Noel Acciari (Pittsburgh)
Connecticut
Darien: Spencer Knight (Florida)
Greenwich: Cam Atkinson (Philadelphia) & Phil Kemp (Edmonton)
Milford: Jonathan Quick (New York Rangers)
New Canaan: Max Pacioretty (Washington)
New Haven: Adam Erne (Edmonton)
Newtown: Matthew Samoskevich (Florida)
Stamford: Scott Morrow (Carolina)
New York
Amherst: Nick DeSimone (New Jersey)
Bedford: Trevor Zegras (Anaheim)
Brookhaven: Keith Kinkaid (New Jersey)
Buffalo: Justin Bailey (San José) Marcus Foligno (Minnesota), Nick Foligno (Chicago), Dennis Gilbert; Jr. (Calgary), Patrick Kane; Jr. (Detroit) & Miles Wood (Colorado)
Canton: Jordan Greenway (Buffalo)
Cicero: Joel Farabee (Philadelphia)
Eden: Alex Iafallo (Winnipeg)
Elmira: Johnny Beecher (Boston)
Greenburgh: Brett Pesce (Carolina)
Hempstead: Shane Pinto (Ottawa)
Long Beach: Charlie McAvoy; Jr. (Boston)
Massena: Zach Bogosian (Minnesota)
New Rochelle: Kevin Shattenkirk (Boston)
New York: Jack Drury (Carolina)
Oyster Bay: Adam Fox (New York Rangers), Frank Milano (Washington) & Tyce Thompson (New York Islanders)
Smithtown: Kyle Palmieri (New York Islanders)
Staten Island: Kevin Labanc (San José)
Syracuse: Thomas Harley (Dallas) & Alex Tuch (Buffalo)
Waywayanda: Nick Abruzzese (Toronto)
New Jersey
Bellmawr: Eric Robinson (Buffalo)
Chatham: Alex Laferriere (Los Angeles) & Drew O'Connor (Pittsburgh)
Edison Township: Anthony Stolarz (Florida)
Livingston Township: Kyle MacLean (New York Islanders)
Long Branch: Connor Clifton (Buffalo)
Mantua Township: Tony DeAngelo (Carolina)
Middletown Township: James Van Riemsdyk (Boston) & Trevor Van Riemsdyk (Washington)
Robbinsville Township: Ross Colton (Colorado)
Salem: Johnny Gaudreau (Columbus)
Southampton Township: Kyle Criscuolo (New Jersey)
Toms River Township: Cam Dineen (Edmonton)
Vorhees Township: Mattias Samuelsson (Buffalo)
Pennsylvania
Hollidaysburg: Sam Lafferty (Vancouver)
Pittsburgh: Logan Cooley (Arizona), John Gibson (Anaheim), Brandon Saad (St. Louis) & Vincent Trocheck (New York Rangers)
Maryland
Chevy Chase: Patrick Giles (Florida)
Virginia
Henrico County: Zac Jones (New York Rangers)
North Carolina
Raleigh: Logan Brown (Tampa Bay) & Nikolai Kovalenko (Colorado)
South Carolina
Hilton Head Island: Ryan Hartman (Minnesota)
Florida
Boca Raton: Jakob Chychrun (Ottawa)
Coral Springs: Brandon Duhaime (Colorado)
Lee County: Gavin Brindley (Columbus)
Naples: John Hathaway; Jr. (Philadelphia)
Orlando: Jack Hughes (New Jersey) & Quin Hughes (Vancouver)
Oviedo: Ryan Carpenter (San José)
Parkland: Andrew Peeke (Boston)
Pembroke Pines: Shayne Gostisbehere (Detroit)
Plantation: Jaycob Megna (Chicago)
Michigan
Ann Arbor: Ian Cole (Vancouver), Andrew Copp (Detroit), Jeff Petry (Detroit) & Austin Watson (Tampa Bay)
Bloomfield Hills: Will Lockwood (Florida)
Brandon Township: Ben Gleason (Edmonton)
Canton Charter Township: Paul Cotter (Vegas) & Matt Roy (Los Angeles)
Clinton Charter Township: Kyle Connor (Winnipeg)
Commerce Charter Township: Connor Hellebuyck (Winnipeg)
Dearborn: Dakota Joshua (Vancouver)
East Grand Rapids: Luke Glendening (Tampa Bay)
Farmington Hills: Alex DeBrincat (Detroit) & Cayden Primeau (Montreal)
Grosse Pointe: Michael McCarron (Nashville) & Zach Werenski (Columbus)
Holland: Lane Hutson (Montreal)
Mt. Clemens: Frank Nazar III (Chicago)
Oxford Township: Josh Norris (Ottawa)
Pontiac: Bryan Rust (Pittsburgh)
Port Huron: Jack Campbell (Edmonton)
Rochester: Max Jones (Anaheim) & Jacob Trouba (New York Rangers)
Rochester Hills: Alec Martinez (Vegas)
Rockford: Mitchell Chaffee (Tampa Bay)
Royal Oak: Torey Krug (St. Louis)
St. Clair: Tyler Motte (Tampa Bay)
Waterford Charter Township: Dylan Larkin (Detroit)
Ypsilanti: Jalen Chatfield (Carolina)
Ohio
Cleveland: Jansen Harkins (Pittsburgh)
Columbus: Jack Roslovic (New York Rangers), Kiefer Sherwood (Nashville) & Cole Sillinger (Columbus)
Dublin: Sean Kuraly (Columbus)
Parma: Alex Nedeljkovic (Pittsburgh)
Powell: Carson Meyer (Columbus)
Unity Township: J.T. Miller (Vancouver)
Indiana
Ft. Wayne: Drake Batherson (Ottawa)
Indianapolis: Jack Johnson III (Colorado)
South Bend: Landon Slaggert (Chicago)
Alabama
Huntsville: Nic Dowd (Washington)
Mississippi
Biloxi: Mathieu Olivier (Columbus)
Wisconsin
Eau Claire: Ty Emberson (San José) & Jake McCabe (Toronto)
Green Bay: Mason Appleton (Winnipeg)
Linwood Township: Joe Pavelski (Dallas)
Madison: Nick Schmaltz (Arizona), Craig Smith (Dallas) & Ryan Suter (Dallas)
Milwaukee: Hudson Fasching (New York Islanders)
Mosinee: Cole Caufield (Montreal)
Illinois
Alton: Dakota Mermis (Minnesota)
Chicago: Christian Fischer (Detroit) & Mike Reilly; Jr. (New York Islanders)
Downers Grove Township: Josh Manson (Colorado)
New Trier Township: Alex Vlasic (Chicago)
Northfield Township: J.T. Compher (Detroit)
Palos Township: Christian Dvorak (Montreal)
Minnesota
Baudette: Alex Lyon (Detroit)
Blaine: Nick Bjugstad (Arizona), Jonny Brodzinski (New York Rangers)
Bloomington: Erik Johnson (Philadelphia)
Brainerd: Cole Smith (Nashville)
Burnsville: Brock Boeser (Vancouver) & Jarred Tinordi (Chicago)
Coon Rapids: Riley Tufte (Colorado)
Delano: Ben Meyers (Anaheim)
Duluth: Derek Forbort (Boston)
Eden Prairie: Jackson LaCombe (Anaheim), Nick Leddy (St. Louis) & Nick Seeler (Philadelphia)
Edina: Anders Lee (New York Islanders) & Casey Mittelstadt (Colorado)
Elk River: Matt Kierstad (Florida) & Nick Perbix (Tampa Bay)
Excelsior: Vinni Lettieri (Minnesota)
Fridley: Mikey Anderson (Los Angeles)
Grand Rapids: Alex Goligoski (Minnesota)
Hermantown: Dylan Samberg (Winnipeg)
Hibbing: Scott Perunovich (St. Louis)
Hopkins: Travis Boyd (Arizona)
Lakeville: Charlie Lindgren (Washington), Sam Malinski (Colorado), Jake Oettinger (Dallas), Ryan Poehling (Philadelphia) & Brady Skjei (Carolina)
Lindstrom: Blake Lizotte (Los Angeles)
Maple Grove: Brock Faber (Minnesota)
Minneapolis: Brian Halonen (New Jersey), Ryan Lindgren (New York Rangers), Brock Nelson (New York Islanders) & Zach Parisé (Colorado)
Moorhead: Will Borgen (Seattle)
Plymouth: Blake Wheeler (New York Rangers)
Roseville: Joey Anderson (Chicago)
Savage: Jack Ahcan (Colorado)
South St. Paul: Justin Faulk (St. Louis)
St. Cloud: Nate Schmidt (Winnipeg)
St. Paul: Nick Jensen (Washington), K'Andre Miller (New York Rangers), Tommy Novak (Nashville), Kyle Okposo (Florida) & Alex Steeves (Toronto)
Stillwater: Noah Cates (Philadelphia)
Thomson Township: Karson Kuhlman (New York Islanders)
Tonka Bay: Justin Holl (Detroit)
Waconia: Graeme Clarke (New Jersey)
Iowa
Dubuque: Tucker Poolman (Vancouver)
Missouri
Chesterfield: Clayton Keller (Arizona) & Luke Kunin (San José)
Dardenne Prairie: Joseph Woll (Toronto)
St. Louis: Trent Frederic (Boston), Adam Lowry (Winnipeg), Patrick Maroon (Boston) & Scott Mayfield (New York Islanders)
Louisiana
Baton Rouge: Mason Lohrei (Boston)
North Dakota
Fargo: Jackson Blake (Carolina)
Grand Forks: Paul LaDue (New York Islanders)
South Dakota
Sioux Falls: Walker Duehr (Calgary)
Nebraska
Omaha: Jake Guentzel (Carolina) & Neal Pionk (Winnipeg)
Oklahoma
Oklahoma City: Jon Merrill (Minnesota)
Texas
Arlington: Caleb Jones (Colorado) & Jared Jones (Chicago)
Houston: Thomas Bordeleau (San José) & Tyler Myers (Vancouver)
Missouri City: Logan O'Connor (Colorado)
Plano: Blake Coleman (Calgary) & Stefan Noesen (Carolina)
Montana
Whitefish: Jake Sanderson (Ottawa)
Colorado
Colorado Springs: Brandon Carlo (Boston)
Denver: Brendan Lemieux (Carolina) & Troy Terry (Anaheim)
Englewood: Cal Foote (New Jersey) & Nolan Foote (New Jersey)
Erie: Jaccob Slavin (Carolina)
Littleton: Mikey Eyssimont (Tampa Bay)
Utah
Salt Lake City: Trevor Lewis (Los Angeles)
Arizona
Phoenix: Sean Couturier (Philadelphia), Mark Kastelic (Ottawa), Matthew Knies (Toronto) & Tage Thompson (Buffalo)
Scottsdale: Braeden Tkachuk (Ottawa) & Matthew Tkachuk (Florida)
Alaska
Anchorage: Jeremy Swayman (Boston)
North Pole: Phoenix Copley (Los Angeles)
Washington
Bonney Lake: Dylan Gambrell (Toronto)
Liberty Lake: Tyler Johnson (Chicago)
Mt. Vernon: T.L. Oshie (Washington)
Spokane: Derek Ryan (Edmonton) & Kailer Yamamoto (Seattle)
Oregon
Portland: Jacob MacDonald (San José)
California
Anaheim: Cam York (Philadelphia)
Arcadia: Jason Robertson (Dallas) & Nicholas Robertson (Toronto)
La Mirada: Chase De Leo (Anaheim)
Long Beach: Matt Nieto (Pittsburgh)
Los Gatos: Devin Cooley (San José)
Manhattan Beach: Brendan Brisson (Vegas)
Newport Beach: Jason Zucker (Nashville)
Rancho Cucamonga: Collin Delia (Winnipeg)
San Diego: Thatcher Demko (Vancouver) & Chad Ruhwedel (New York Rangers)
San Ramon: Auston Matthews (Toronto)
Thousand Oaks: Trevor Moore (Los Angeles)
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Every North American NHL Player’s Birth City
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brookstonalmanac · 6 months ago
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Events 5.18 (before 1920)
332 – Emperor Constantine the Great announces free distributions of food to the citizens in Constantinople. 872 – Louis II of Italy is crowned for the second time as Holy Roman Emperor at Rome, at the age of 47. His first coronation was 28 years earlier, in 844, during the reign of his father Lothair I. 1096 – First Crusade: Around 800 Jews are massacred in Worms, Germany. 1152 – The future Henry II of England marries Eleanor of Aquitaine. He would become king two years later, after the death of his cousin once removed King Stephen of England. 1268 – The Principality of Antioch, a crusader state, falls to the Mamluk Sultan Baibars in the Siege of Antioch. 1291 – Fall of Acre, the end of Crusader presence in the Holy Land. 1302 – Bruges Matins, the nocturnal massacre of the French garrison in Bruges by members of the local Flemish militia. 1388 – During the Battle of Buyur Lake, General Lan Yu leads a Ming army forward to crush the Mongol hordes of Tögüs Temür, the Khan of Northern Yuan. 1499 – Alonso de Ojeda sets sail from Cádiz on his voyage to what is now Venezuela. 1565 – The Great Siege of Malta begins, in which Ottoman forces attempt and fail to conquer Malta. 1593 – Playwright Thomas Kyd's accusations of heresy lead to an arrest warrant for Christopher Marlowe. 1631 – In Dorchester, Massachusetts, John Winthrop takes the oath of office and becomes the first Governor of Massachusetts. 1652 – Slavery in Rhode Island is abolished, although the law is not rigorously enforced. 1695 – The 1695 Linfen earthquake in Shannxi, Qing dynasty causes extreme damage and kills at least 52,000 people. 1756 – The Seven Years' War begins when Great Britain declares war on France. 1783 – First United Empire Loyalists reach Parrtown (later called Saint John, New Brunswick), Canada, after leaving the United States. 1794 – Battle of Tourcoing during the Flanders Campaign of the War of the First Coalition. 1803 – Napoleonic Wars: The United Kingdom revokes the Treaty of Amiens and declares war on France. 1804 – Napoleon Bonaparte is proclaimed Emperor of the French by the French Senate. 1811 – Battle of Las Piedras: The first great military triumph of the revolution of the Río de la Plata in Uruguay led by José Artigas. 1812 – John Bellingham is found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging for the assassination of British Prime Minister Spencer Perceval. 1843 – The Disruption in Edinburgh of the Free Church of Scotland from the Church of Scotland. 1848 – Opening of the first German National Assembly (Nationalversammlung) in Frankfurt, Germany. 1860 – United States presidential election: Abraham Lincoln wins the Republican Party presidential nomination over William H. Seward, who later becomes the United States Secretary of State. 1863 – American Civil War: Union forces under Ulysses S. Grant begin the Siege of Vicksburg during the Vicksburg campaign in order to take full control of the Mississippi River. 1896 – The United States Supreme Court rules in Plessy v. Ferguson that the "separate but equal" doctrine is constitutional. 1896 – Khodynka Tragedy: A mass panic on Khodynka Field in Moscow during the festivities of the coronation of Russian Tsar Nicholas II results in the deaths of 1,389 people. 1900 – The United Kingdom proclaims a protectorate over Tonga. 1912 – The first Indian film, Shree Pundalik by Dadasaheb Torne, is released in Mumbai. 1917 – World War I: The Selective Service Act of 1917 is passed, giving the President of the United States the power of conscription.
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canada4news · 4 years ago
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Killer Gregory Despres ordered to remain in N.B. secure psychiatric facility
Killer Gregory Despres ordered to remain in N.B. secure psychiatric facility
By The Staff The Canadian Press Posted March 17, 2021 12:55 pm Smaller font Descrease article font size –A Larger font Increase article font size A+ A New Brunswick man who was found not criminally responsible after brutally killing his elderly neighbours in 2005 has been ordered to remain under treatment in a secure psychiatric facility. A trial in 2008 determined Gregory Despres was…
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bumbumtugboat · 5 years ago
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soft winter colours by the ocean ~ the waves are frozen in time and i am in love  dorchester cape, new brunswick
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mobilekitchensrentalsusa · 4 years ago
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Mobile Kitchen Facility Rental - + 1-800-205-6106
kitchen for rent; commercial kitchen for rent;mobile kitchen trailor;Temporary Kitchen Trailers, Mobile Kitchen For Rent, Dishwashing Trailers, Catering Trucks, Refrigerated Containers, Freezer Trailers, Mobile Restrooms, Mobile Showers. For more information visit our website:http://mobile-kitchen-facility-rental.com/ We serve Across the USA ALABAMA - Birmingham, Mobile,MontgomeryALASKA - AnchorageARIZONA - Mesa,Phoenix,TucsonARKANSAS - Little RockCALIFORNIA - Anaheim, Bakersfield, Berkeley,Fremont,Fresno,Glendale,Huntington Beach,Long Beach,Los Angeles,Oakland,Riverside,Sacramento,San Diego,San Francisco,San Jose,Santa Ana,StocktonCOLORADO - ,Aurora,Colorado Springs,DenverCONNECTICUT - Bridgeport,Hartford,Middletown,New Haven,New London,Norwich,WaterburyDELAWARE - WilmingtonDISTRICT OF COLUMBIA - Alexandria,Georgetown,WashingtonFLORIDA - Fort Lauderdale,Hialeah,Jacksonville,Miami,St. Petersburg,TampaGEORGIA - Atlanta,Augusta,Columbus,SavannahHAWAII - HonoluluILLINOIS - Peoria,Quincy,Rockford,SpringfieldINDIANA - Evansville,Fort Wayne,Gary,Indianapolis,Madison,New Albany,South Bend,Terre HauteIOWA - Burlington,Davenport,Des Moines,Dubuque,Sioux CityKANSAS - Kansas City,Leavenworth,Topeka,WichitaKENTUCKY - Covington,Lexington,Louisville,NewportLOUISIANA - Baton Rouge,Lafayette,Metairie, New Orleans, ShreveportMISSOURI - Kansas City,St. Joseph,St. LouisNEBRASKA - Lincoln,OmahaNEVADA - Las VegasNEW HAMPSHIRE - Concord,Dover,Manchester,Nashua,PortsmouthNEW JERSEY - Bayonne,Camden,Elizabeth,Hoboken,Jersey City,Newark,New Brunswick,Passaic,Paterson,TrentonNEW MEXICO - AlbuquerqueNEW YORK - Albany,Auburn,Binghamton,Brooklyn,Buffalo,Cohoes,Elmira,Hudson,Lockport,Newburgh,New York,Oswego,Poughkeepsie,Rochester,Schenectady,Syracuse,Troy,Utica,West Troy,Williamsburgh,YonkersNORTH CAROLINA - Charlotte,Fayetteville,Greensboro,New Bern,Raleigh,WilmingtonMAINE - Augusta,Bangor,Bath,Gardiner,PortlandMARYLAND - Annapolis,Baltimore,Frederick,HagerstownMASSACHUSETTS - Andover,Barnstable,Beverly,Boston,Brockton,Cambridge,Charlestown,Chelsea,Chicopee,Danvers,Dorchester,Fall River,Gloucester,Haverhill,Holyoke,Lawrence,Lowell,Lynn,Marblehead,Middleborough,Nantucket,Sherburne,New Bedford,Newburyport,Plymouth,Roxbury,Salem,Somerville,Springfield,Taunton,WorcesterMICHIGAN - Bay City,Detroit,Flint,Grand Rapids,Saginaw,WarrenMISSISSIPPI - Jackson,NatchezMINNESOTA - Duluth,MinneapolisOHIO - Akron,Canton,Chillicothe,Cincinnati,Cleveland,Columbus,Dayton,Springfield,Steubenville,Toledo,Youngstown,ZanesvilleOKLAHOMA - Oklahoma City,TulsaOREGON - PortlandPENNSYLVANIA - Allegheny,Allentown,Altoona,Carlisle,Easton,Erie,Harrisburg,Johnstown,Kensington,Lancaster,Moyamensing,Northern Liberties,Philadelphia,Pittsburgh,Pottsville,Reading,Scranton,Southwark,Spring Garden,Wilkes-Barre,Williamsport,YorkRHODE ISLAND - Cumberland, Newport,North Providence,Pawtucket,Providence,WarwickSOUTH CAROLINA - Charleston,ColumbiaTENNESSEE - Chattanooga,Knoxville,Memphis,NashvilleTEXAS - Amarillo,Arlington,Austin,Corpus Christi,Dallas,El Paso,Fort Worth,Galveston,Garland,Houston,Lubbock,San AntonioUTAH - Salt Lake CityVIRGINIA - Alexandria,Arlington,Fredericksburg,Lynchburg,Norfolk,Petersburg,Portsmouth,Richmond,Virginia Beach,WheelingWASHINGTON - Seattle,Spokane,TacomaWEST VIRGINIA - WheelingWISCONSIN - Madison,Milwaukee
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mindofmim · 5 years ago
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I spent my Easter Sunday walking around an old town looking at abandoned places and checking out cemeterys with my mom. These are some of the pictures I love the most
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Was such a beautiful day! All pictures taken around Dorchester New Brunswick Canada
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 2 years ago
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“INMATES OF PENITENTIARY GIVE EVIDENCE,” Moncton Transcript. April 8, 1933. Page 1. ---- Testify At Riot Trial To-day - Case To Go To Jury This Afternoon --- (Special to The Transcript) Dorchester, April 8 - Thirteen witnesses, twelve inmates and one guard at the Maritime penitentiary, were called by James Weatherbee, Martelle Silver, Edward Roberts and John MacDonald, the four men in group two of the seventeen convicts in the penitentiary being tried for rioting and causing property damage at the prison on January 7, when their hearing was resumed before Judge Bennett in County Court here this morning. The evidence of these witnesses was the feature of the session, as it denied the allegations that the four men had participated in the uprising in which extensive damage was done and in which several prisoners were wounded.
The case against the men, conducted by H. Murray Lambert, of Moncton, and Col. E. C. Weyman, was completed this morning with the hearing of the evidence of Frank A. Dobson, who was the officer in charge of the change room at the time of the riot. The thirteen witnesses heard in the defense case presented by the men completed the case. Court adjourned until this afternoon, when the address to the jury by Crown counsel and Judge Bennett's charge was to be given. The case was expected to go to the jury later this afternoon.
Frank A. Dobson told of having 22 men in his gang on the day of the trouble and of the barbers coming to him at 2 o'clock and turning in their razors. saying when questioned as to why they were doing this that they did not want the razors laying around loose.
John MacDonald, who like Weatherbee, Roberts and Silver was not represented by counsel, called inmates Wallace. Valley, John Byers and Jerry O'Brien. Weatherbee called Angus Campbell, George Walker and Corbett Boyd, Silver called Clarence Cameron, Joseph MacDougall, Melvin Savoie. Thomas McKay, Robert Ewart. John Harlem and William Case. Officer Johnson of the penitentiary staff testified for Roberts.
John Byers was the first of the thirteen inmates to testify. He told of John MacDonald asking him if there had been a man shot and saying that he was going to look after him. MacDonald had told him to tell the officer in charge where he was if he asked for. This testimony was corroborated by Wallace Valley.
Jerry O'Brien, employed in the cutting shed under Keeper Fred. C. Bowes told of bandaging the wound inflicted upon an inmate named Webber, who had been shot, and told of MacDonald coming to his cell and asking if there was anything he could do. He said that he replied that there was not was and that MacDonald had said he might as well return to his cell.
George Johnson, guard called by Edward Roberts, testified that be did not remember locking the man in his cell.
George Walker, called by Weatherbee, told of working in the stone shed on the day of the riot and of seeing Weatherbee with a flashlight and wrench in his hand on the day of the trouble. He said he had heard him tell inmate Izzard when the party was being searched, to step up in line and do as the officers told him.
Angus Campbell told of picking up the first coat he saw at the time of the riot and of clearing out to get rid of the rioters and of Weatherbee coming to him for his coat, taken in mistake.
Corbett Boyd told of several inmates opening cells and saying "come out and get going." He said he went to Weatherbee's cell and told him to go to the dome to get clear of the shooting, which they did. He said he heard Weatherbee request the rioters to go to their cells and keep quiet and let the officers talk.
Clarence Cameron, called by Martelle Silver said he had not heard Silver yelling nor had he seen him throw his plate. Joseph MacDougall and Thomas MacKay corroborated this testimony. 
Melvin Savoie said he did not see Silver at all and John Harlem said he had not heard Silver say he intended to take part in the riot. Robert Ewart said that he had not heard Silver remark "they stopped us outside, but we will tear her down when we get inside." Cass told the court he had not heard Silver say anything out of the ordinary. He was the last witness.
Yesterday afternoon the witnesses for the prosecution included Roy Doyle, William J. DeVarrenne, guards, Nelson P. Ward, keeper, R. T. LeBlanc, guard, Fernley A. Lyne, guard, A. H. Gallant, guard, Henry Belliveau, guard, Edward K. Irving, blacksmith instructor and C. Edgar Cook, guard. All told of seeing the accused men taking part in the riot.
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damanbeatty · 13 years ago
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Chimney Point, Rockport and Dorchester Cape, New Brunswick: First Engagement Anniversary
Original Post Date June 19, 2011
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On June 28, 2010, Fatima and I celebrated our first engagement anniversary while visiting my family in New Brunswick. I took her to another hidden away spot of mine: Chimney Point, Rockport and Dorchester Cape. We finished the day off with oysters and lobster in Moncton!
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See more photos here.
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atlanticcanada · 17 days ago
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dailynewswebsite · 4 years ago
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Solitary confinement by any other name is still torture
Isolating prisoners in cells with no contact and little exercise over a sustained time period quantities to torture. (Shutterstock)
In October 2020, criminologists Anthony Doob and Jane Sprott launched a report on Correctional Providers Canada’s (CSC) use of structured intervention models (SIUs). SIUs had been meant to exchange the usage of solitary confinement in federal prisons however are a catastrophic failure, particularly for imprisoned individuals with psychological sickness.
Advocates, together with authorized scholar Lisa Kerr and Sen. Kim Pate, have criticized the introduction of SIUs as a mere rebranding of longstanding and dangerous isolation practices in federal prisons.
As researchers and volunteers in prisons, we’ve instantly witnessed what it appears to be like like for individuals with psychological sickness behind bars. The entire incapability of prisons to “care” for individuals with psychological sickness should be underscored. Prisons make issues a lot worse, and SIUs quantity to torture.
Prisoners and their family members have been talking out for years, with no significant response. Within the phrases of Farhat Rehman, co-founder of Moms Providing Mutual Assist and mom of an imprisoned man with psychological sickness:
“For households like mine, prisoners are usually not anonymous and faceless: They’re our family members. We’re terrified for them, and devastated by latest information that this gained’t change any time quickly.”
SIUs are a failure to offer care
In administrative segregation models (now rebranded as SIUs), prisoners are positioned in solitary confinement the place they’ve little room for motion, a slim concrete mattress and a metal rest room and wash basin. Usually, there isn’t a pillow or blanket and shiny fluorescent gentle stays fixed. There may be little or no entry to counselling, applications or significant human contact. Prisoners have been confined to solitary confinement for days, weeks, months and generally years.
Jail directors argue it’s generally essential to segregate prisoners to take care of the safety and order of the jail. Whereas separating a prisoner from the overall jail inhabitants is rationalized as sustaining security, this apply has confirmed harmful and inhumane. Prisoners who’ve skilled solitary confinement say the expertise is torturous.
Invoice C-83 was enacted in response to the B.C. Supreme Courtroom’s discovering that extended solitary confinement in prisons violates Constitution rights. Critics of C-83 declare that it truly made it simpler to position prisoners in solitary confinement.
Change in language however not motion
The federal authorities dedicated $448 million to pay for 950 new employees and constructing renovations. SIUs had been supposed to permit higher entry to programming and psychological well being care. Prisoners transferred to the models had been alleged to be allowed out of their cells for 4 hours every day, with two of these hours engaged in “significant human contact.”
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A solitary isolation cell at Dorchester Penitentiary, New Brunswick. (Workplace of the Correctional Investigator/Authorities of Canada)
CSC has hindered makes an attempt at oversight to make sure these adjustments have been made. The SIU Implementation Advisory Panel requested administrative information at common intervals, from the time SIUs started working in November 2019. These requests had been ignored by CSC till mid-October 2020. CSC then launched 9 months value of administrative information.
The October report ready by Doob and Sprott says necessities had been seldom met within the first 9 months of the SIU system. Solely 21 per cent of prisoners spent 4 hours outdoors their cells on half or extra of their days within the models. Solely 46 per cent had two hours of significant contact on a minimum of half of the times. Practically half of stays lasted for greater than 15 days, and 16 per cent lasted for greater than two months. A number of stints had been frequent.
Doob and Sprott additionally determine that prisoners despatched to SIUs are disproportionately Indigenous (39 per cent) and Black (13 per cent); Indigenous individuals make up 30 per cent of the jail inhabitants and Black individuals comprise seven per cent.
The United Nation’s Mandela guidelines prohibit solitary confinement of prisoners for 22 hours or extra a day with out significant human contact, and extended solitary confinement of greater than 15 consecutive days. Breaking these parameters is outlined as torture.
Psychological diseases produced, exacerbated in jail
Many individuals enter jail with pre-existing psychological sickness. The situations of prisons additionally produce psychological sickness. Imprisonment shouldn’t be mandated to place life in danger, exacerbating situations to the purpose of psychological disaster. CSC is remitted to offer “affordable, secure, safe and humane management.”
But disaster is precisely the expertise of many prisoners. What’s extra, behaviours perceived as defiant or self-harming are sometimes a direct impact of confinement, which leads prisoners to be transferred to SIUs.
CBC Information appears to be like at solitary confinement in Canada.
Solitary confinement is disproportionately used for individuals with psychological sickness. Doob and Sprott discovered that 35 per cent of individuals had been transferred to SIUs greater than as soon as; these tended to be male with identifiable psychological well being wants. These positioned in SIU due to concern concerning the prisoner’s personal security ended up staying within the SIU a considerably longer time period.
Solitary confinement has been discovered to provide extraordinarily excessive psychological misery, and better ranges of isolation is related to a better fee of suicide.
With restricted funding for psychological well being applications and companies, prisons and jails have grow to be a catchment for a lot of people who expertise psychological well being challenges. However prisons are usually not the suitable place to handle these challenges. Prisoners with psychological well being points are paying for this failing with their lives.
Jewish-Indigenous prisoner Timothy Nome, talking from a cell throughout his 60th day of solitary confinement on the Stony Mountain Establishment in Manitoba:
“These are guys who’re attempting to kill themselves as a result of they’d moderately die than stay in segregation. So, when you’re asking me the query, is segregation torture? I believe that, in and of itself, is a response… After you’ve spent 30, 60, 90, 120 days in a room the place you don’t see no one, apart from a plastic meal tray being handed via your slot twice a day, you perceive.”
Nome ended up spending 20 extra days in solitary.
Prisons lack accountability
In September, Kim Beaudin, vice-Chief of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples, spoke concerning the toll of SIUs:
“We’ve got no oversight. I’ve counted 4 individuals who died in jail on account of suicide alone. I consider two out of federal (jail) and two provincial (jail) in Saskatchewan. … That was simply within the final month and a half.”
The COVID-19 pandemic has been used as an excuse by CSC for why it has failed expectations. On Nov. 15, Sprott and Doob launched a response report analyzing the information to counter this declare, eradicating information of prisons that had COVID-19 circumstances to see if the findings would differ. The findings had been the identical and the pandemic can’t be used as an excuse.
Canada’s jail service lacks the flexibility and willingness to vary. Beaudin has referred to as for defunding the jail system and for the resignation of Anne Kelly, the CSC Commissioner. We should always take heed to him.
Now’s the time to useful resource group helps and supply individuals with ample help, particularly individuals with psychological well being challenges the place jail and SIUs are used as a crutch to handle them. We additionally want to carry officers accountable for perpetuating solitary confinement in all however identify.
Accountability is required. Permitting torture to proceed is unconscionable.
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Linda Mussell receives doctoral funding from PETF and SSHRC.
Marsha Rampersaud receives doctoral funding from SSHRC. She is affiliated with John Howard Society Ontario.
from Growth News https://growthnews.in/solitary-confinement-by-any-other-name-is-still-torture/ via https://growthnews.in
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brookstonalmanac · 2 years ago
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Events 5.18
332 – Emperor Constantine the Great announces free distributions of food to the citizens in Constantinople. 872 – Louis II of Italy is crowned for the second time as Holy Roman Emperor at Rome, at the age of 47. His first coronation was 28 years earlier, in 844, during the reign of his father Lothair I. 1096 – First Crusade: Around 800 Jews are massacred in Worms, Germany. 1152 – The future Henry II of England marries Eleanor of Aquitaine. He would become king two years later, after the death of his cousin once removed King Stephen of England. 1268 – The Principality of Antioch, a crusader state, falls to the Mamluk Sultan Baibars in the Siege of Antioch. 1291 – Fall of Acre, the end of Crusader presence in the Holy Land. 1302 – Bruges Matins, the nocturnal massacre of the French garrison in Bruges by members of the local Flemish militia. 1388 – During the Battle of Buyur Lake, General Lan Yu leads a Ming army forward to crush the Mongol hordes of Tögüs Temür, the Khan of Northern Yuan. 1499 – Alonso de Ojeda sets sail from Cádiz on his voyage to what is now Venezuela. 1565 – The Great Siege of Malta begins, in which Ottoman forces attempt and fail to conquer Malta. 1593 – Playwright Thomas Kyd's accusations of heresy lead to an arrest warrant for Christopher Marlowe. 1631 – In Dorchester, Massachusetts, John Winthrop takes the oath of office and becomes the first Governor of Massachusetts. 1652 – Slavery in Rhode Island is abolished, although the law is not rigorously enforced. 1695 – The 1695 Linfen earthquake in Shannxi, Qing dynasty causes extreme damage and kills at least 52,000 people. 1756 – The Seven Years' War begins when Great Britain declares war on France. 1783 – First United Empire Loyalists reach Parrtown (later called Saint John, New Brunswick), Canada, after leaving the United States. 1794 – Battle of Tourcoing during the Flanders Campaign of the War of the First Coalition. 1803 – Napoleonic Wars: The United Kingdom revokes the Treaty of Amiens and declares war on France. 1804 – Napoleon Bonaparte is proclaimed Emperor of the French by the French Senate. 1811 – Battle of Las Piedras: The first great military triumph of the revolution of the Río de la Plata in Uruguay led by José Artigas. 1812 – John Bellingham is found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging for the assassination of British Prime Minister Spencer Perceval. 1843 – The Disruption in Edinburgh of the Free Church of Scotland from the Church of Scotland. 1848 – Opening of the first German National Assembly (Nationalversammlung) in Frankfurt, Germany. 1860 – United States presidential election: Abraham Lincoln wins the Republican Party presidential nomination over William H. Seward, who later becomes the United States Secretary of State. 1863 – American Civil War: The Siege of Vicksburg begins. 1896 – The United States Supreme Court rules in Plessy v. Ferguson that the "separate but equal" doctrine is constitutional. 1896 – Khodynka Tragedy: A mass panic on Khodynka Field in Moscow during the festivities of the coronation of Russian Tsar Nicholas II results in the deaths of 1,389 people. 1900 – The United Kingdom proclaims a protectorate over Tonga. 1912 – The first Indian film, Shree Pundalik by Dadasaheb Torne, is released in Mumbai. 1917 – World War I: The Selective Service Act of 1917 is passed, giving the President of the United States the power of conscription. 1926 – Evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson disappears in Venice, California. 1927 – The Bath School disaster: Forty-five people, including many children, are killed by bombs planted by a disgruntled school-board member in Bath Township, Michigan. 1927 – After being founded for 20 years, the Nationalist government approves Tongji University to be among the first national universities of the Republic of China. 1933 – New Deal: President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs an act creating the Tennessee Valley Authority. 1944 – World War II: Battle of Monte Cassino: Conclusion after seven days of the fourth battle as German paratroopers evacuate Monte Cassino. 1944 – Deportation of Crimean Tatars by the Soviet Union. 1948 – The First Legislative Yuan of the Republic of China officially convenes in Nanking. 1953 – Jacqueline Cochran becomes the first woman to break the sound barrier. 1955 – Operation Passage to Freedom, the evacuation of 310,000 Vietnamese civilians, soldiers and non-Vietnamese members of the French Army from communist North Vietnam to South Vietnam following the end of the First Indochina War, ends. 1965 – Israeli spy Eli Cohen is hanged in Damascus, Syria. 1969 – Apollo program: Apollo 10 is launched. 1973 – Aeroflot Flight 109 is hijacked mid-flight and the aircraft is subsequently destroyed when the hijacker's bomb explodes, killing all 82 people on board. 1974 – Nuclear weapons testing: Under project Smiling Buddha, India successfully detonates its first nuclear weapon becoming the sixth nation to do so. 1977 – Likud party wins the 1977 Israeli legislative election, with Menachem Begin, its founder, as the sixth Prime Minister of Israel. 1980 – Mount St. Helens erupts in Washington, United States, killing 57 people and causing $3 billion in damage. 1980 – Students in Gwangju, South Korea begin demonstrations calling for democratic reforms. 1990 – In France, a modified TGV train achieves a new rail world speed record of 515.3 km/h (320.2 mph). 1991 – Northern Somalia declares independence from the rest of Somalia as the Republic of Somaliland. 1993 – Riots in Nørrebro, Copenhagen, caused by the approval of the four Danish exceptions in the Maastricht Treaty referendum. Police open fire against civilians for the first time since World War II and injure 11 demonstrators. 1994 – Israeli troops finish withdrawing from the Gaza Strip, ceding the area to the Palestinian National Authority to govern. 2005 – A second photo from the Hubble Space Telescope confirms that Pluto has two additional moons, Nix and Hydra. 2006 – The post Loktantra Andolan government passes a landmark bill curtailing the power of the monarchy and making Nepal a secular country. 2009 – The LTTE are defeated by the Sri Lankan government, ending almost 26 years of fighting between the two sides. 2015 – At least 78 people die in a landslide caused by heavy rains in the Colombian town of Salgar. 2018 – A school shooting at Santa Fe High School in Texas kills ten people. 2018 – Cubana de Aviación Flight 972 crashes in Santiago de las Vegas after takeoff from José Martí International Airport in Havana, Cuba, killing 112 of the 113 people on board. 2019 – United States presidential election: Joe Biden announces his presidential campaign.
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 2 years ago
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“6 More Witnesses Tell of Riot In Dorchester Pen.,” Moncton Daily Times. March 6, 1933. Page 5. ---- Preliminary Hearing Continued Saturday in Case of Five Convicts Charged with Rioting at Institution Early in January - Adjournment Made Until Wednesday. ---- (Special to the Times) Dorchester, N. B. March 4th - Following the evidence of six witnesses here this forenoon before Magistrate C, J. M. Chapman, the preliminary hearing of Alexander Carvery, James Izzard. Charles Jackson and George Walker, all Inmates of the Maritime penitentary here, charged with rioting in the institution on January 7 last with intent to damage the workshops and prison buildings, was adjourned until Wednesday more to March 8th, at 10 o'clock.
Col. E. C. Weyman of Saint John, is appearing in the interests of the Attorney General's Department and the accused are not represented by counsel.
The first witness called this morning was guard Clarence T. Douglas, who told of being on duty this day of the rioting, and had in his charge two convicts of the farm gang with the teamsters. He said he had taken his men to the prison at 4.10 o'clock and from the yard had taken them into the dome. He said he had then gone to D4 landing and from there to C 3 landing where three men were locked in their cells. "Let's Tear Her Down" The first intimation he had of trouble, he said was when he saw Izzard come to C3 landing and shout "come on boys, let's tear her down." He saw a convict named Silver throw his dishes into the dome and that Izzard had thrown a cupboard into the corridor. The witness said he recognised Jackson, who was also throwing articles over the landings and that he also seen Carvery, who was also heaving furnishings out of the cells. One convict, he said, had yelled at him "come on get out of here and help us tear this place down or we will throw you over the landing." He said he also saw a convict named Gaudet run up a ladder. There was a variety of articles thrown about, he said, and a lot of noise. He continued to say that Carvery, was not in his own cell on A 3 landing but to the one next to it. Mr. Douglas said there was from 20 to 56 convicts throwing things about in the north wing with Izzard and Jackson being the most active.
Harry E. lson, chief engineer, told a story of the commencement of the riot which agreed with others already told. He said he had first heard convicts shouting as they came out of the carpenter shop and that he had heard Silver yell "tear her down, boys." Mr Ison said he had been on the lookout for fire because of the water being shut off due to many toilets being broken and water running over the landings. He listed the damage done in his department alone as having a total monetary value of 1963.75.
Threw Tear Gas Bomb Thomas Nelson, hospital overseer, told of being one of members of the armed squad and of throwing a tear gas bomb into the cracking shop. He said be had recognized Carvery, lssard, Gaudet and a convict named Murphy coming cat of the shed.
David H. Cormier told of the riot and of recognizing Issard and of seeing Jackson in his cell. Jackson, he said, was making considerable noise and threatened to beat anybody in the staff if be could get out.
Fernley A. Lyne also said he saw Izzard throw a box of rubbish over the landing and the man Silver was also throwing articles.
There were approximately 3000 window panes smashed in the building, 305 window sashes broken, these sashes were in North and South wings, cracking shed and hospital. There were 300 cupboards broken, the damage to windows would run into hundreds of dollars, the cupboards damaged would be around $300.00, there were 300 chairs broken, also mattresses, pillows and wash basins destroyed.
H. T. Leblanc. librarian. told of damages done to books as follows: school books destroyed about 300 at an estimated value of $240.24, 254 novels and French novels, a typewriter and its cover at a value of $360.16, 
The hearing was then adjourned until ten o'clock Wednesday
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