1972.
A member of the Sugar Shoppe lands the lead in Godspell with supporting players Eugene Levy, Gilda Radner, and Martin Short.
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You know, not all bad things are bad. I think that that can really be fostered as motivation for the whole group. We were close, and we felt it, and we know that we can get there again. So I think just holding onto that. Just remembering that feeling. [You say not all bad things are bad. When you look at it, you wanted to win in college, but if Northeastern had gone a long way—] I wouldn't be here. [Right.] One door open, another one closes. For the better, for the worse... (shrugs) who knows? You gotta go through the door to figure it out.
— Devon Levi | End-Of-Season Media Availability
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The Saskatchewan government says its natural gas utility is to stop collecting the carbon levy as of Monday from residential customers.
The move comes after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau exempted those who use home heating oil from paying the levy, mostly benefiting residents in Atlantic Canada.
Saskatchewan asked for the exemption to cover all other forms of heating, but Ottawa denied the request. In response, the province said it would stop collecting the charge at the start of 2024.
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Tagging @politicsofcanada
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Ten days ago Schitt's Creek celebrated its first day on set. And like Kim's Convenience, I haven't finished watching its last season! I've perhaps watched a couple of episodes a year since the pandemic. For two reasons: first, because I can't watch without my sister and we don't live together anymore, and also because the Roses are family too, and I'm not ready to say goodbye!
Source: Schitt's Creek's Instagram Page
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02.06.24
#Mira-Marathon | Night at the Museum
Film
Name: Night at the Museum (2006);
Production Studios: Twentieth Century Fox, 21 Laps Entertainment, Ingenious Media, Dune Entertainment, 1492 Pictures, Sun Canada Productions;
Director by: Shawn Levy;
Screenwriters: Robert Ben Garant, Thomas Lennon;
Starring: Ben Stiller, Jake Cherry, Carla Gugino, Robin Williams, Steve Coogan;
Genres: Fantasy, Adventure, Comedy, Family;
Running Time: 1 hour 48 minutes;
"Night at the Museum" (2006) is a comedy with Ben Stiller, where museum exhibits come alive at night. The film is distinguished by light humor, good acting and visual effects. Although the plot is predictable and the secondary characters are weakly developed, the film is ideal for family viewing.
My rating:
⭐⭐⭐
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"FAMILY CONTINUES HUNT FOR DINOSAUR," Sault Star. May 8, 1934. Page 12.
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Sternberg Father and Sons Comb Hinterlands For Animal Bones
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(By Guy E. Rhoades, Canadian Press Staff Writer)
Toronto, May 8. - (C. P.) - If Levi Sternberg goes to the field this year, and he hopes he will, it will be his 14th expedition as a dinosaur hunter in 16 years, but that, he says, is nothing compared with the record of his father and two brothers.
Levi, preparator of paleontology at the Royal Ontario Museum, is the youngest member of a dinosaur-hunting family that has gained the plaudits of scientists for almost six decades. His father, C. H. Sternberg, made his first expedition to the Kaлsas fossil beds in 1876 with the late Edward Drinker Cope, professor of geology at the University of Pennsylvania and one of the most noted pal- eontologists of the last century.
The old man, now 84, is still working on the Pacific Coast, making his headquarters at San Diego, Cal., Levi has been working for the Oftario museum since 1919. Charles has been with the National Museum in Ottawa since 1912 and George is now at Kansas Teachers College in Hays.
Sternberg senior started collecting fossils in Kansas when he was 17, at a time when many people did not know the strange rocks with patterns in them were remains of plants and animals that lived millions of years ago. He did little work in museums, but he was recognized as one of the greatest fossil hunters and is now the veteran of them all.
He and all his sons worked for the National Museum before the war, searching the badlands of Alberta for the petrified bones of monsters that roamed that weather-scarred, barren country when the land was a steaming swamp covered with tropical vegetation.
The father and George returned to the United States, but Charles and Levi remained in Canada and continued to make trips to Alberta, usually along the Red Deer Valley, bringing back their specimens in the fall and spending the winter mounting them for exhibition in the halls of their museums.
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