Search Results Heading

MBRLSearchResults

mbrl.module.common.modules.added.book.to.shelf
Title added to your shelf!
View what I already have on My Shelf.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to add the title to your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Are you sure you want to remove the book from the shelf?
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
    Done
    Filters
    Reset
  • Is Peer Reviewed
      Is Peer Reviewed
      Clear All
      Is Peer Reviewed
  • Item Type
      Item Type
      Clear All
      Item Type
  • Subject
      Subject
      Clear All
      Subject
  • Source
      Source
      Clear All
      Source
  • Year
      Year
      Clear All
      From:
      -
      To:
  • More Filters
10 result(s) for "Clarry, Paul"
Sort by:
Resident wants more done to stop smoking at Southlake
Hospital staff has also been trained to deal with situations when a person insists on smoking on the hospital campus. Not only can smokers be asked to leave hospital property, but hospital security can be called to enforce the hospital's policy, Mr. [Paul Clarry] added. A visitor who refuses to comply can be issued a trespass notice that bars him from hospital property except for the purpose of receiving medical care, Mr. Clarry said, adding no one has ever refused to comply. If staff or volunteers refused to comply, progressive disciplinary action would be taken, which means a written warning on the person's file. Repeated warnings can lead to suspensions without pay and even termination, consistent with the hospital's human resources policies. \"We've never had to take such measures,\" Mr. Clarry said. \"For the most part, people understand why health care institutions implement these policies.
Idaho-based Predator Inc. markets modules to boost truck engine power
\"It's just fast and fun,\" said [John Hatcher], who credits the Dodge's power to an electrical control module made by Predator Inc. of Post Falls. \"Your big truck is able to keep up with the fast cars.\" \"It's always crowd pleaser,\" [Karl Lange] said. Predator's control modules are currently produced at a plant near [Barry Sadler]'s retail store in Weatherford, Texas. Next year, Sadler said the manufacturing operation and its 25 jobs will move to either Kootenai County or Liberty Lake. Predator Inc. already owns land in Post Falls, but may need more room, he said. The manufacturing plant was initially based in Texas because the state has such a \"truck culture\" and a high per-capita ownership of trucks, Lange said. But Sadler lives on a ranch in Mullan, Idaho, and Lange works out of a home office in Post Falls.
Is RVH paving paradise to put up a parking lot?
In Barrie, the Royal Victoria Hospital is also preparing to build a regional cancer centre. It's proposed to be built east of the hospital, on the current staff lot. The RVH, however, is preparing to add a parking lot on an area previously zoned EP. It discounted the parking garage option as too expensive. The Southlake structure being proposed would hold 470 cars and feature a cladding to make it look less like a parking garage - as requested by the Town of Newmarket, because the garage would be on a high-profile corner. As well, it would have a covered, lit entrance, much like those at downtown Toronto hotels, so patients could be dropped off out of the elements. On almost 37 acres, the RVH now has 1,557 surface parking spots. Phase 1 expansion plans - which includes the cancer centre and an expansion to the hospital to make room for 120 more beds to 409 - calls for 2,050 parking spots. The short-term needs are about 500 - similar to the project in Newmarket.
Blackout left region in dark
Ms [Susan Kadis] was also impressed by staff's performance during the blackout and public co-operation in reducing usage once power was restored. In Markham, 19 natural gas-fuelled generators installed on 14th Avenue to stop summer brown-outs were not used during the blackout because there was no working grid into which they could feed power. In case of an emergency at police headquarters in Newmarket, such as a blackout, the communications staff members have practised moving operations to the Richmond Hill backup centre.
On the trail with Paul Macklin
Dressed casually in party colours -- a red pullover beneath his ski jacket -- Mr. [Paul Macklin] quickly engaged people in conversation and despite the cold, few were anxious to close the doors to end it. \"Are there any thoughts you'd like me to take with me if I'm elected?\" asked Mr. Macklin, receiving varied replies. Another Frei Street resident, Bonnie Yates, described herself as someone who has known Mr. Macklin for some time and knew about his background in this community. \"I've made a decision... I'm a Liberal supporter,\" she said. Photo: Ted Amsden Photo / SPREADING THE WORD: Dick Jones, is one of Paul Macklin's countless volunteers who donate two or three hours of their time to keep the federal candidate apprised of who he is talking to when he goes door to door. ; Photo: Above: Mr. Macklin talks to Bonnie Yates who is a Liberal supporter. She said he can count on her vote. ;
Canvassing door-to-door: On the trail with Paul Macklin
Dressed casually in party colours -- a red pullover beneath his ski jacket -- Mr. [Paul Macklin] quickly engaged people in conversation and despite the cold, few were anxious to close the doors to end it. \"Are there any thoughts you'd like me to take with me if I'm elected?\" asked Mr. Macklin, receiving varied replies. Another Frei Street resident, Bonnie Yates, described herself as someone who has known Mr. Macklin for some time and knew about his background in this community. \"I've made a decision... I'm a Liberal supporter,\" she said. Photo: Ted Amsden / SPREADING THE WORD: Dick Jones, is one of Paul Macklin's countless volunteers who donate two or three hours of their time to keep the federal candidate apprised of who he is talking to when he goes door to door. ; Photo: Mr. Macklin talks to Bonnie Yates who is a Liberal supporter. She said he can count on her vote. ; Photo: When no one answered the door, Mr. Macklin left his campaign literature in the mailbox with a hand written note apologizing for having missed the homeowners. ;
Assassin ready to slay the Sires
\"When I decided to bring this colt to Brisbane I didn't have the Sires Produce on the horizon,\" [Peter Moody] said. \"My goal was to send him straight into the T.J. Smith next weekend. \"Even on Tuesday morning when the course proper out wide was slow she only worked average. She just isn't comfortable when it's soft,\" [Clarry Conners] said. Conners also has the improving Kick 'N' Chase in the Sires but he prefers Apercu.
Olympus aiming for Silver lining
CLARRY Conners, an acknowledged master trainer of two-year-olds, is banking on boom colt Olympus erasing the one glaring omission from his curriculum vitae. Despite training the winners of four Golden Slippers, four AJC Sires Produce Stakes, five Champagne Stakes and numerous other Sydney juvenile feature races, success has eluded Conners in the Group Two Silver Slipper Stakes. Perhaps Olympus is the two-year-old to finally give Conners an overdue Silver Slipper win when he takes on a crack field in the $200,000 feature event at Rosehill on Saturday.
On the campaign trail with Paul Macklin
Photo: Ted Amsden / Dick Jones, is one of [Paul Macklin]'s countless volunteers who donate two or three hours of their time to keep the federal candidate apprised of who he is talking to when he goes door to door. ; Photo: Ted Amsden / Mr. Macklin talks to [Bonnie Yates] who is a Liberal supporter. She said he can count on her vote. ; Photo: Ted Amsden / When no one answered the door, Mr. Macklin left his campaign literature in the mailbox with a hand written note apologizing for having missed the homeowners. ;
CANADA / IN THE PROVINCES; IT'S TORONTO'S TURN; SHREWD SUPERGOVERNMENT AND A RIVAL CITY'S DECLINE HELPED CREATE A VITAL; METROPOLIS; NOW, CHALLENGE IS TO KEEP IT GREAT
The area-wide supergovernment that [Paul V. Godfrey] heads, called Metro, deserves a lot of the credit for shaping Toronto's fast but relatively graceful growth. In terms of power to govern, there's no match for Metro anywhere in North America; it's the ultimate in consolidation, a federation of the city of Toronto with its suburbs. An enormous postwar stream of Italians, Germans, Greeks, Hungarians, Portuguese, Chinese and other non-English-speaking men, women and children revitalized the rather bland postwar Toronto simply by immigrating here. More than 300,000 Italians alone have settled in Toronto since the end of the war. The immigrants were happy to take on the boom-time dirty work, subway construction and other jobs, and Toronto welcomed them. To some degree, Toronto's rise came at Montreal's expense. As Quebec tilted toward separatism and a spate of laws were passed regulating the use of English in business and schools, people and businesses abandoned Quebec and Montreal for Ontario and Toronto. By one count, 1500 companies left Quebec between 1976 and 1982, and a big share came straight to Toronto.