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Ryerson and Stanley
* Stanley Brehaut Ryerson, Sam Carr, Charles Simms and Norman Freed were LPP Toronto aldermen while Stewart Smith was elected to the city's Board of Control.
* Stanley Brehaut Ryerson, historian, educator and political activist ( born 1911 )
* George F. G. Stanley The Story of Canada's Flag: A Historical Sketch ( 1965 ) Ryerson Press
She moved in the same intellectual circles as historian Stanley Ryerson and poet Dorothy Livesay.
Stanley Brehaut Ryerson ( March 12, 1911 – 1998 ) was a Canadian historian, educator, political activist.
During this period, numerous articles and pamphlets were published by the CPC, but it was not until the 1937 publication of Stanley Ryerson ’ s 1837-The Birth of Canadian Democracy, that the full Marxist analysis of the on the 1837 Rebellions would appear.
The leadership of the now underground party was placed in the hands of an Operations Centre, which was headed by Stewart Smith, Leslie Morris, and Stanley Ryerson.
This new leadership decided upon a slogan for the CPC ’ s anti-war protests: “ Withdraw from the British Empire .” Signalling a more radical approach to their anti-Imperialist protesting, the Operations Centre authorised Stanley Ryerson to write and publish two pamphlets in Quebec.
* PDF version of " French Canada " by Stanley Ryerson
fr: Stanley Bréhaut Ryerson
# REDIRECT Stanley Brehaut Ryerson
* Stanley Brehaut Ryerson ( 1911 – 1998 ), Canadian historian, educator and political activist
Though friendly with Tim Buck, Stanley Ryerson, Leslie Morris and other Canadian Communists, Endicott never joined the Communist Party of Canada though three of his children joined its predecessor, the Labour-Progressive Party.
Among the foremost of the Chicago industrialists, lawyers, financiers, and merchants were John Villiers Farwell, Edmund Dick Taylor, Potter Palmer, George Pullman, Charles Gray, Marshall Field, Richard Teller Crane, Martin Ryerson, John Jacob Glessner, Jacob Bunn, John Whitfield Bunn, John Graves Shedd, Cyrus Hall McCormick, Edward Avery Shedd, Charles Banks Shedd, Leander McCormick, Stanley Field, Charles Deering, James Deering, Robert Law, Francis Peabody, Leonard Richardson, Milo Barnum Richardson, Joseph Edward Otis, Frank Hatch Jones, Arthur Jerome Eddy, Arthur J. Caton, Nathaniel Kellogg Fairbank, Ezra Butler McCagg, Julius Rosenwald, Morris Selz, Harry Selz, William McCormick Blair, William Douglas Richardson, Charles Farwell, James Monroe Stryker and John Stryker of the Bunn-Richardson-Stryker-Taylor family ( See: John Whitfield Bunn and Jacob Bunn ), Samuel Insull, Max Adler, Lucius Fisher, Lucius Teeter, John Peter Altgeld, Walter Gurnee, Philip Danforth Armour, Gustavus Franklin Swift, Michael Morris, Jacob Best, Jonathan Y. Scammon, and many others.

Ryerson and Brehaut
* March 12-Stanley Brehaut Ryerson, historian, educator and political activist ( d. 1998 )
Ryerson could trace his paternal lineage back to Egerton Ryerson, the “ Pope of Methodism ” in nineteenth century Toronto, and to William McDougall, one of the Fathers of Confederation ; and, on his mother ’ s side, he was related to Louis Antoine Brehaut de l ’ Isle, French Commander at Trois-Rivières in 1638.

Ryerson and 1968
He resumed his academic career at Ryerson University, where he stayed as member of the psychology department from 1968 to 2006 ( as chair from 1998 to 2003 ).
Dance of the Happy Shades ( ISBN 0-099-27377-2 ) is a book of short stories by Alice Munro, published by McGraw-Hill Ryerson in 1968.
Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1968.

Ryerson and ).
M. J. Ryerson ( 6-8 ; 477 ).
( Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1914 ; Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1972 ; Toronto: Coles, 1973 ; Toronto: Prospero, 2000 ).
Workman Ranch was acquired by a married, screenwriting couple, Colin Clements and Florence Ryerson ( the latter co-wrote the screenplay for The Wizard of Oz while living here ).
It is the majority owner of the Canadian publisher McGraw-Hill Ryerson ( TSX ).
McGraw-Hill Education is also established in Asia, Australia, Canada ( as McGraw Hill Ryerson ) Europe, India ( as Tata / McGraw-Hill ), and Latin America ( as McGraw-Hill Interamericana ).
During the 1990s, MLSE considered a number of sites for a new, modern arena to replace Maple Leaf Gardens, including the southeast corner of Bay and Dundas Streets near the Toronto Eaton Centre ( the site of the new Ryerson University School of Business ).
His ideas on art were collected by former pupil Margery Ryerson and published as The Art Spirit ( Philadelphia, 1923 ).
The station was founded in 1949 as an experimental FM broadcaster, only the second in Canada, by the Ryerson Institute of Technology ( later Ryerson University ).
He remained as a professor until 1964, when he became the Martin A. Ryerson Distinguished Service Professor of Chinese History until 1974 ).
Strachan ( and the Family Compact generally ) was opposed by Methodist leader Egerton Ryerson ( 1803 – 1882 ).
The RSU is formally known as the Ryerson Students Administrative Council ( RyeSAC ), and Student Union of Ryerson Polytechnical Institute ( SURPI ).
Well-known Canadian student newspapers include The Cord Weekly ( Wilfrid Laurier University ), "" The Prince Arthur Herald "" ( National ), Imprint ( University of Waterloo ), The Martlet, The Ubyssey and The Peak in British Columbia ; The Gateway in Alberta ; The Sheaf in Saskatchewan ; The Manitoban in Manitoba ; The Charlatan, The Fulcrum, The Varsity ( University of Toronto ), The Eyeopener ( Ryerson University ), Arthur ( Trent University ), The Gazette ( the University of Western Ontario ) and the Excalibur ( York University ) in Ontario ; The Link, The Concordian ( Concordia University, Montreal ), The McGill Daily, The Campus ( Bishop's University ) and McGill Tribune in Quebec ; The Brunswickan in New Brunswick ; The Dalhousie Gazette in Nova Scotia, The Muse in Newfoundland and Labrador, and The Queen's Journal ( Queen's University ).
The Palin Foundation, which governs the student centre, consists of representatives of Ryerson University, the Ryerson Students ' Union and the Continuing Education Students ' Association of Ryerson ( CESAR ).
Ryerson operates 13 men's and women's interuniversity sports teams that compete nationally through Ontario University Athletics ( OUA ) and Canadian Interuniversity Sport ( CIS ).
Spence is a ghost town in the Canadian province of Ontario, at the crossroads of the Nipissing Colonization Road and the Ryerson Road ( now Nelson Lake Road ).
Podeswa graduated from Ryerson University's Film Studies program and the American Film Institute's Center for Advanced Film Studies ( now the AFI Conservatory ).
* Menaud maître-draveur, novel, Québec, Librairie Garneau, 1937 ( translation: Boss of the river, translated by Alan Sullivan, Toronto, Ryerson Press, 1947 ).
She has received four honorary doctorates, from McMaster University ( 2011 ), the University of Calgary ( 2011 ), University of Toronto ( 2002 ), York University ( 2000 ) and Ryerson Polytechnic University ( 1997 ).

Stanley and 1968
He first appears in the story 2001: A Space Odyssey by Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke, released as both a novel and a film in 1968.
As a professional, he joined the Boston Bruins in 1968 and was a member of their Stanley Cup championship teams in 1970 and 1972.
Buck was paired with Jay Randolph and Gus Kyle on Blues broadcasts and covered the 1968 Stanley Cup Final for KMOX radio.
Several film adaptations of the novel have been attempted, with director Stanley Kubrick expressing interest in the 1960s, but collaborating with Clarke on 2001: A Space Odyssey ( 1968 ) instead.
At a meeting in the town library in October 1968 the revival was initiated by Stanley Wotherington, and in August 1970 the new club played at a new ground, the Crown Ground.
Curtis ' comedies include Some Like It Hot ( 1959 ), Sex and the Single Girl ( 1964 ) and The Great Race ( 1965 ), and his dramas included playing the slave Antoninus in Stanley Kubrick's Spartacus ( 1960 ) co-starring Kirk Douglas and Laurence Olivier, The Outsider ( 1961 ), the true story of WW II veteran Ira Hayes, and The Boston Strangler ( 1968 ), in which he played the self-confessed murderer of the film's title, Albert DeSalvo.
* 1968: David di Donatello for Best Foreign Producer ( Stanley Kramer )
Stanley Dancer drove the New Zealand bred horse, Cardigan Bay to win $ 1 million in stakes in 1968, the first harness horse to surpass that milestone in American history.
In 1968, Stanley Kubrick's ground-breaking film, 2001: A Space Odyssey, depicted such a role for " Space Station V ".
* Jim Dowd, ( born 1968 ), former player in the National Hockey League ( NHL ), won a Stanley Cup with the 1994-95 New Jersey Devils and last played for the Philadelphia Flyers.
* 1968: Stanley Martell, Peter Almgren, George McConnell, Anne Jenks, Edward Brock
There have been many other wheel-shaped space habitats in science fiction, such as the Ringworld or the Earth-orbiting Space Station V invented by Arthur C. Clarke and Stanley Kubrick and depicted in Kubrick's 1968 movie 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Wodehouse, Dr. Simon Sparrow in BBC Radio 4's adaptions of Richard Gordon's Doctor in the House and Doctor At Large ( 1968 ) ( currently repeated on BBC Radio 4 Extra ), a retired thespian in a series of six plays with Stanley Baxter Two Pipe Problems, and later the play Not Talking, commissioned for BBC Radio 3 by Mike Bartlett.
In the 1968 release of The Small Faces ' LP Ogdens ' Nut Gone Flake, Stanley Unwin's narration for " Happiness Stan " is an example of his personal interpretation of Gobbledygook.
After Stanley Kubrick's 1968 landmark 2001: A Space Odyssey, the science fiction film genre was taken more seriously.
Stanley Kubrick ’ s 2001: A Space Odyssey ( 1968 ) brought new realism to the genre, with its groundbreaking visual effects and realistic portrayal of space travel and influenced the genre with its epic story and transcendent philosophical scope.
2001: A Space Odyssey, the landmark 1968 collaboration between filmmaker Stanley Kubrick and classic science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke featured groundbreaking special effects, such as the realization of the space ship Discovery One ( pictured here )
In 1967, Stanley Matthews took over ( from Jackie Mudie who spent two years as manager ), his reign ended in tears in 1968 as Vale were expelled from the Football League over seemingly ' illegal payments ' made to players ( this punishment was reduced on appeal to a re-election vote, which the club successfully won ).
* 1968: Stanley Turrentine: Always Something There
As the 60's progressed, he recorded some twenty additional albums as a leader, and continued to record as a sideman on the albums of other artists, including Wayne Shorter's Night Dreamer ; Stanley Turrentine's Mr. Natural ; Freddie Hubbard's The Night of the Cookers ; Hank Mobley's Dippin ', A Caddy for Daddy, A Slice of the Top, Straight No Filter ; Jackie McLean's Jackknife and Consequence ; Joe Henderson's Mode for Joe ; McCoy Tyner's Tender Moments ; Lonnie Smith's Think and Turning Point ; Elvin Jones ' The Prime Element ; Jack Wilson's Easterly Winds ; Reuben Wilson's Love Bug ; Larry Young's Mother Ship ; Lee Morgan and Clifford Jordan Live in Baltimore 1968 ; Andrew Hill's Grass Roots ; as well as on several albums with Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers.
*** The original format, used from 1947 through 1968 with two exceptions, saw the previous season's Stanley Cup champions take on an " All-Star " team made up of the First and Second NHL All-Star Teams plus other star players.
Boase Massimi Pollitt ( BMP ) is an advertising agency founded in October 1968 by Martin Boase, Gabe Massimi, and Stanley Pollitt.
A poster for Stanley Kubrick's 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, with the tagline " The Ultimate Trip ", is above the headboard.
It was formed from Liverpool Stanley ( 1934 – 1951 ) and Liverpool City ( 1951 – 1968 ).

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