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Page "Moncton" ¶ 14
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CNR and continued
In Toronto, CFRB ( originally a CNR Radio affiliate ) continued to simulcast Maple Leaf games for many years alongside CBC Radio's Toronto station CBL.
West of Warren Lake, Highway 616 and Highway 624 continued to the CNR stop in Foleyet ; these would soon become part of Highway 101.
CNR also assumed control of Grand Trunk Western as a subsidiary and the tunnel company and continued operations much as before.
When the Federal Government took over operations of the CNR Network in the 1930s, CKY continued the relationship and much of CKY's programing originated with the CRBC ( which later became the CBC ).

CNR and economy
Although the economy of Moncton was traumatized twice — by the collapse of the shipbuilding industry in the 1860s and by the closure of the CNR locomotive shops in the 1980s — the city was able to rebound strongly on both occasions.

CNR and city
The quartet teaches at CNR in Paris and gives masterclasses in the mountain city of Flaine in France.
The city became a major transportation centre due to its proximity to the river, and later, the location of the main lines of the country's national railways passing through the community ( both the CPR and CNR Railways intersect in Portage ; the only place in Canada where the two railways meet ), all within a few hundred meters of each other.
Due to CNR ’ s proximity to New York City, most trips explore Manhattan and expose students to all the city has to offer.
At present, there are 14 faculties, 86 academic departments and 79 colleges spread all over the city, with 132435 regular students and 261169 students in non-formal education programmes and the annual honorary degrees ( Honoris causa ) of the University have been conferred upon several distinguished people, including Amitabh Bachchan, Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit, Cardiologist Dr. Jayantibhai Patel, cartoonist R. K. Laxman and scientist CNR Rao ( 2006 ); and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown ( 2008 ).
It consisted initially of the part of the City of St. Catharines bounded on the east by the eastern city limit, and on the north, west and south by a line drawn from the city limit southwest along Eastchester Avenue, south along Bunting Road, southwest along Rockwood Street, south along Hartzell Road, northwest along the Canadian National Railway ( CNR ) line, south along Glengarry Road, east along Glendale Avenue, south along Mountain Street and east along Bradley Street to the city limit.
In 1952, it was redefined to consist of a part of the city of Regina bounded by a line drawn from the intersection of Campbell Street and the right-of-way of the Canadian National Railway east along the right-of-way and McKinley Avenue, south along Park Street, west along Twenty-fifth Avenue, north along Campbell Street to the right-of-way of the Canadian Pacific Railway, northwest following the western limit of the property of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, east along Dewdney Avenue, and north along Campbell Street to the CNR.
Central Station consolidated CNR's passenger terminals in the city and also replaced Bonaventure Station which CNR had inherited from GTR.

CNR and with
After the coup, Sankara formed the National Council for the Revolution ( CNR ), with himself as President.
After the coup, he formed the National Council for the Revolution ( CNR ), with himself as president.
He left London on 21 March 1943 with orders to form the Conseil national de la Résistance ( CNR ), a difficult task since the five resistance movements involved ( beside the three already in the M. U. R.
While the name is used for all NHL broadcasts on CBC Television ( regardless of the time of day ), Hockey Night in Canada is primarily associated with its Saturday night NHL broadcasts, a practice originating from Saturday NHL broadcasts that began in 1931 on the CNR Radio network and its predecessors, and debuting on television beginning in 1952.
CNR was coordinated with the Free French Forces under the authority of the French Generals Henri Giraud and Charles de Gaulle and their body, the Comité Français de Libération Nationale ( CFLN ).
Stothart's Mercantile in downtown Newcastle, New Brunswick | Newcastle ( IR Walker 1974 ) CNR operated express passenger trains along the main line from Halifax to Montreal via Newcastle, most notably the Ocean Limited, along with various local trains to Fredericton, Moncton and Campbellton.
Brossolette's criticism of the old parliamentarian system, together with the role of communist networks inside the CNR, became the main point of disagreement with his southern counterpart Jean Moulin.
The Canadian National Railways ( CNR ) was incorporated on June 6, 1919, comprising several railways that had become bankrupt and fallen into federal government hands, along with some railways already owned by the government.
On December 20, 1918, the federal government created the Canadian National Railways ( CNR ) – a title only with no corporate powers – through a Queen's Privy Council for Canada Order in Council as a means to simplify the funding and operation of the various railway companies.
In 1923 CNR's second president, Sir Henry Thornton who succeeded David Blyth Hanna ( 1919 – 1922 ), created the CNR Radio Department to provide passengers with entertainment radio reception and give the railway a competitive advantage over its rival, CP.
Bennett ( who had been a corporate lawyer with Canadian Pacific as a client prior to entering politics ) to pressure CNR into ending its on-train radio service in 1931 and then withdrawing from the radio business entirely in 1933.
CNR was considered competitive with CPR in several areas, notably in Central Canada, prior to the age of the automobile and the dense highway network that grew in Ontario and Quebec.
CNR was also considered a railway industry leader throughout its time as a Crown corporation in terms of research and development into railway safety systems, logistics management, and in terms of its relationship with labour unions.
Integrated audio is implemented with the AC ' 97 Codec on the motherboard, a Communications and Networking Riser ( CNR ) card, or an audio / modem riser ( AMR ) card.
The Liberals proposed legislation to establish a government-financed corporation, with half the stock to be owned by the CNR and half by the privately owned Canadian Pacific Railway ( CPR ).
" Weird Al " Yankovic wrote and recorded a tribute song titled " CNR ", jokingly caricaturing Reilly with parodies of the internet phenomenon Chuck Norris Facts, with absurdities like winning the Tour de France " with two flat tires and a missing chain ", or how " every day he'd make the host of Match Game give him a piggyback ride ".
Along the southern boundary is the Gardiner Expressway which has an interchange with South Kingsway and the CNR railway lines.
At the age of 18, Morenz became an apprentice with the Canadian National Railways ( CNR ) factory in Stratford.
Singer Getty joined the band in 1971, when they got their first recording contract with producer and composer Eddy Ouwens ( label CNR records ).
The Federation has two Italian members: the Accademia della Crusca and the Opera del Vocabolario Italiano del CNR ( an initiative launched by the CNR with the collaboration of the Accademia della Crusca ).

CNR and railway
* Cisco was the usual 19th Century name for Siska, British Columbia, and also the name of the adjacent Cisco Bluff and a CNR railway point and a former CPR station in the area.
The railway was referred to as the Canadian National Railways ( CNR ) between 1918 and 1960 and as Canadian National / Canadien National ( CN ) from 1960 to present.
Many countries regard railway networks as critical infrastructure ( even to this day ) and at the time of the creation of CNR during the continuing threat of the First World War, Canada was not the only country to engage in railway nationalization.
Regardless of the political and economic importance of railway transportation in Canada, there were many critics of the Canadian government's policies in maintaining CNR as a Crown corporation from its inception in 1918 until its privatization in 1995.
As such, CNR lost money for many years, except during the Second World War when its extensive network reaching into the resource hinterland proved beneficial, and during the late 1980s and early 1990s following deregulation of the Canadian railway industry.
Another problem that hobbled CNR was in the sheer number of low-volume branch railway lines, which did not produce sufficient traffic to pay for their operation.
Without deregulation in the railway industry permitting abandonment or sale of a railway line, or even the ability to set prices to match those of trucks, both CNR and CPR paid dearly for owning these inefficient lines.
The estate's train stop on the Pacific Great Eastern ( now CNR ) railway is to the west of town and called Exeter.
The CNR stations had been created in the 1920s to provide broadcasting for railway passengers.
In 1887 a second railway opened, linking Chipping Norton to the Oxford and Rugby Railway at King's Sutton, and the CNR became part of the resulting Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway.
Another bankrupt western railway system, the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway ( GTPR ), was nationalized by the federal government on March 7, 1919, and became part of the CNR system on July 12, 1920.
Port Arthur thrived as a transshipment and grain handling port for the CNR after the railway line was opened to Winnipeg in December 1901.
At the time that the GTR was fully merged into CNR, approximately 125 smaller railway companies comprised the Grand Trunk system, totaling in Canada and in the United States.
Later that year, the federal government created the Canadian National Railways ( CNR ) as a means to simplify the funding and administration of the nationalized railway system ; this was formally brought about by an order issued on December 20, 1918, by the Privy Council.
CNR was extremely busy on Prince Edward Island during the Second World War when a spur line was built from St. Eleanors, west of Summerside, to service a new air force base ( CFB Summerside ), and the railway was pressed into service to supply a radar base in Tignish, as well as a flight training school in Mount Pleasant, mid-way between Summerside and Tignish.
This car is a plywood sided, former CNR, caboose and is located adjacent to a replica railway station.
In 1989, CNR sold the entire railway line from Montreal to Portland, via Richmond, to a short line operator.

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