Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Canada's territories to become new provinces, Martin tells Brazilian official

Canadian Press via Yahoo! News, Mon, 22 Nov 2004 2:06 PM PST
Canada's territories to become new provinces, Martin tells Brazilian official http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/cpress/20041122/ca_pr_on_wo/martin_provinces_1
SAO PAULO, Brazil (CP) - The three territories of Canada will ultimately become new provinces, Prime Minister Paul Martin predicted Monday, as he gave an impromptu geography lesson to a state governor here.

CTV.ca, Tue, 23 Nov 2004 3:46 AM PST
Territories will become provinces, PM believes http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1101163793054_18/?hub=TopStories
Prime Minister Paul Martin with Sao Paulo state governor Geraldo Alckmin. Canada's three territories will probably become provinces one day, Prime Minister Paul Martin predicted Monday on a working visit in Brazil.

Canada.com, Tue, 23 Nov 2004 1:44 AM PST
PM wants territories to be provinces http://www.canada.com/news/story.html?id=14106bb3-acda-457f-b407-6990e413675d
SAO PAULO, Brazil - Prime Minister Paul Martin predicts Canada's three territories will become provinces and play an important role in maintaining the country's sovereignty in the Arctic.

The Globe and Mail, Mon, 22 Nov 2004 10:58 PM PST
New provinces in Canada's future, PM says http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20041122.wmarty1123/BNStory/National/
Sao Paulo, Brazil ’Äî Canada's three northern territories will one day be provinces and need to be granted more powers even before then to entrench Canada's claim over the Far North, Prime Minister Paul Martin said yesterday.

Toronto Star, Tue, 23 Nov 2004 2:04 AM PST
PM wants territories to get provincial clout http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1101163810321&call_pageid=970599119419
Sao Paulo, Brazil Paul Martin says he thinks it is inevitable that Canada's three territories will become provinces. "I believe that to be the case," he told reporters yesterday. "I'm not in a position to give dates, but I believe it has always been the expectation (for) the territories."

CBC News, Mon, 22 Nov 2004 6:14 PM PST
Northern territories 'eventually' to be given provincial status http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/11/22/provinces041122
SAO PAULO, BRAZIL - Prime Minister Paul Martin speculated on Monday that Canada's northern territories might soon enjoy full provincial status.

CBC North, Mon, 22 Nov 2004 7:17 PM PST
Martin sees provincehood for northern territories in future http://north.cbc.ca/regionalnews/caches/martin-territory-11222004.html
SAO PAULO, BRAZIL - Prime Minister Paul Martin speculated on Monday that Canada's northern territories might one day enjoy full provincial status.

Ice melts in the Arctic; Bush's head in the sand

Omaha World-Herald, Mon, 22 Nov 2004 8:17 AM PST
Tom Teepen: Ice melts in the Arctic; Bush's head in the sand http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_np=0&u_pg=609&u_sid=1264313
Really, when you think about it, who needs polar bears? Oh, they are OK to look at in a zoo, although they don't do tricks like the monkeys and they are pleasant enough as extras in Christmastime kiddie movies. But they make no political contributions and have no lobbyists in Washington.

Climate decisions a litmus test for Arctic Council: ICC president


Climate decisions a litmus test for Arctic Council: ICC president
north.cbc.ca - Canada
... on. The chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference says her confidence in the Arctic Council hinges on decisions made by the group. ...

Arctic Council's marathon session ends with climate change consensus



Marathon session ends with climate change consensus

CBC North Tue, 23 Nov 2004 7:02 AM PST
REYKJAVIK, Iceland - The Arctic Council's eight member nations have averted a political crisis by reaching a deal on policy recommendations on climate change.

Results show N.W.T. split on rural-urban lines

CBC North, Mon, 22 Nov 2004 4:18 PM PST
Results show N.W.T. split on rural-urban lines http://north.cbc.ca/regionalnews/caches/nwt-poll-result-11222004.html
YELLOWKNIFE - The poll-by-poll results of last summer's federal election shows the Northwest Territories was dramatically divided politically. The N.W.T.'s incumbent, Liberal Ethel Blondin-Andrew, beat NDP challenger Dennis Bevington by just 52 ballots.

Google Scholar welcomed : New academic search service is applauded but librarians, academics have some reservations | By Doug Payne

Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 17:27:23 -0600
From: Paul Nielson <p.nielson@shaw.ca>
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Subject: [CPI-UA] Google Scholar welcomed : New academic search service is applauded but
 librarians, academics have some reservations | By Doug Payne

SCIENTIST - November 23, 2004

Links for this article

Google Scholar
<http://scholar.google.com/>http://scholar.google.com

Association of Research Libraries
<http://www.arl.org/>http://www.arl.org/

BioMed Central
<http://www.biomedcentral.com/>http://www.biomedcentral.com

Michael B. Eisen
<http://mcb.berkeley.edu/faculty/GEN/eisenm.html>http://mcb.berkeley.edu/faculty/GEN/eisenm.html

Public Library of Science
<http://www.plos.org/>http://www.plos.org/

Canadian Association of Research Libraries
<http://www.carl-abrc.ca/frames_index.htm>http://www.carl-abrc.ca/frames_index.htm

The beta version of <http://scholar.google.com/>Google Scholar, launched last Thursday (November 18), has been warmly welcomed in the scientific world. But questions remain about some aspects of the academic search engine.

The tool is targeted squarely at scientists and academic researchers wanting to find scholarly literature across broad areas of research. It searches a subset of the main Google index, open repositories, and the Web sites of academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories, and universities.

Duane Webster, head of the http://www.arl.org/ Association of Research Libraries, said the arrival of the new service was welcome but noted the need for an open dialog as it develops. "As their experiment moves forward, there will be a range of important questions that will need to be addressed," he told The Scientist. "We encourage the company to find ways to report on their experiences and to engage these questions."

For example, Webster pointed out that Google has declined to name the participants in the development of the service. There are concerns over this lack of information, and with "Google's unwillingness to describe how it determines what is scholarly," he said.

That said, "it is likely that their criteria over time will evolve and, like their other services, I am sure this is a capability that will improve significantly with experience," Webster added. The Association of Research Libraries is an umbrella group of 123 North American research libraries.

Although Google has been quiet on a number of matters relating to Google Scholar, the engineer who led the project, Anurag Acharya, has http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/18/technology/18google.html told the median the company received good cooperation from publishers in the sector. "Google as a company has greatly benefited from academic research, and this is one of the ways we can give back to the community," he added.

Open-access publisher http://www.biomedcentral.com/ BioMed Central (which is a partner with The Scientist) also welcomed the new service. BioMed Central Publisher Jan Velterop said in a statement that the tool maximizes the opportunities offered by Open Access journals and open repositories.

"We, along with others in the scientific community, have been talking to Google about offering a service like this for some time. We are very pleased that they have taken this step," Velterop said.

However, http://mcb.berkeley.edu/faculty/GEN/eisenm.html Michael Eisen, co-founder of another open-access publisher, http://www.plos.org/>Public Library of Science (PLoS), pointed out that people using the service will face an important obstacle—many of the articles are only available to journal subscribers.

"While Google may have the noble goal of making 'the world's scientific literature universally accessible, ' the fact remains that most of the articles returned in a Google Scholar search can only be accessed by those fortunate enough to have a subscription to the relevant journal," he told The Scientist.

A PloS spokeswoman added: "Google will find that they can better serve their searchers' needs for access to complete scholarly articles by 'flagging' as open access or ranking more highly those that are freely available online. Such a system would minimize people's frustration at finding an article that looks perfect for their research needs but discovering that they are unable to access it. This frustration is already quite evident in the various threaded discussions occurring online."

The new search service also provides citation information about the articles retrieved by stating how often a paper has been cited in scholarly literature, Google said. But the company conceded that "your search results may include citations of older works and seminal articles that appear only in books or other offline publications."

Nor is it entirely clear yet how the citation ranks given by Google relate to those on more established services. "I think [the citations are] a potentially very valuable tool," said Tim Mark, the executive director of the http://www.carl-abrc.ca/frames_index.htm Canadian Association of Research Libraries. However, "I think the research community needs to test drive [Google Scholar] for a while," he told The Scientist.

Mark said he was enthusiastic about any tool that brings together information that researchers need. But he cautioned, "This is not a panacea. We still need the human judgement to sift [the results]."

Mark was also concerned about the potential lack of access to subscription-only material and added that he, too, would like more information on the search algorithm.

Some features for narrowing searches will be added in the future, Acharya said, including a way to limit results by the date of publication. "We will gradually refine it once we figure out which things are important," he said.

India and the regulation of satellite radio


Date: 23 Nov 2004 13:40:45 -0000
From: "sajan venniyoor" <venniyoor@rediffmail.com>
Subject: [cr-india] regulating satellite radio
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        A list on community radio in India <cr-india@sarai.net>
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TRAI is consulting AIR and private FM radio stations for formulating satellite radio norms (see story below). This raises a couple of interesting issues:

1.     Why is TRAI consulting only AIR and commercial broadcasters? Does TRAI assume that commercial FM broadcasters have a special interest in and/or knowledge of satellite radio that is somehow beyond the grasp of lesser mortals like, say, community radio groups? As far as I know, there are 36 WorldSpace channels available over India, and none of the private FM channels appear on that list. Besides, as the CEO of one of the private networks puts it, "What they (WorldSpace) sell is alternative music, not radio; radio is about offering local colour and content. Plus it is not mobile like FM radio." So much for private FM operators' passion for WorldSpace.

2.     Does this mean we are going to have entirely separate norms for FM radio and satellite radio? Will they now proceed to legalize news on FM radio, or ban it on satellite radio, or tie themselves in regulatory knots? And what about all those foreign channels on WorldSpace?

3.     Ever noticed how they rush in to regulate everything without encouraging anything? TRAI is concerned about “the implications of having more players in satellite radio,” when the only player in the Indian market is $1.4 billion (thatÂ’s a billion, not a typo) in debt and having a pretty torrid time drumming up customers.

And what have they achieved with all this regulation?

a)     There are more government departments (33) giving clearances for private radio stations than there are private radio stations in the country (21).
b)     The number of private radio stations is actually coming down. Or as the head of Radio Mirchi puts it, “By now, you should have had at least 400 radio stations in India. And here we are looking at whoÂ’s going to shut down next.”
c)     There is one campus radio station in India.
d)     There are no community radio stations in India.
e)     92% of all radio stations in India is owned by one corporation.
f)     Digital (terrestrial) radio is unheard of in India.
g)     Radio listenership across India has fallen from a peak of 56% to 15%.

Sajan.
------

Department of space advising Trai on sat radio norms
November 22, exchange4media

The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) is in consultation with the Department of Space, private FM radio stations and All India Radio (AIR) for formulating norms in the area of satellite radio. In addition, US-based consulting firm Telecomm Strategies is in the process of giving an overview of the international scenario in satellite radio.

Sources indicated that Trai would submit its report to the government in another two months or so.

Currently, there are no regulatory norms for satellite radio in India. Significantly, even in the US, thereÂ’s no government or regulatorÂ’s control over content in satellite radio. But, US satellite radio stations need to obtain licence from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).In India, even as there are norms for private FM radio, thereÂ’s none for satellite radio.

US-based consulting firm Telecomm Strategies was recently appointed by Trai for recommending norms in the satellite radio segment. Telecomm Strategies would be expected to give an overview of the international scenario and also suggest a growth path for the India market. It would also focus on the implications of having more players in satellite radio. The idea is also to have a more organised satellite radio market.

For more India specific inputs, the department of space and radio players such as AIR and private FM operators will offer their views, sources added.

At present, WorldSpace is the only satellite radio platform available in India. The country receives satellite radio signal through WorldSpaceÂ’s AsiaStar satellite, and it is uplinked from Singapore.
Globally speaking, well-known satellite radio players are Sirius Satellite Radio and XM Satellite Radio. Both operate in the US.
Trai had recently appointed Ernst & Young and Media Partners Asia (MPA) for advice on digitisation of cable TV in the country.

Source: Financial Express

Via / From:
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Chomsky on radioActive sanDiego


From: lotus lotus@riseup.net
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 09:28:07 -0800
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You can get the audio here:


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COUNTRIES: CANADA: ARCHIVES

Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 05:05:31 EST
From: BradLin000@aol.com
Subject: COUNTRIES: CANADA: ARCHIVES


Archives Canada

http://www.archivescanada.ca/


The objective of the Canadian Council of Archives is to provide the
Canadian public greater access to the documentary heritage held by
archives in this country. Our means of doing this is by improving the
administration, proficiency, capacity, and efficiency of archives
through initiating and supporting national priorities, policies, and
programmes for the development and operation of a Canadian archival
system.

On October 20, 2001, the Canadian Council of Archives launched the
Canadian Archival Information Network, an electronic initiative
designed to provide online access to holdings in over 800 archival
institutions across the country. Known initially as CAIN, the network
has now become Archives Canada.

The initiative was established and continues to grow with the support
of the Canadian Council of Archives, the Library and Archives of
Canada and the Department of Canadian Heritage through the Canadian
Culture Online Program. "We need more information about our history,
our culture and our heritage," said Minister of Canadian Heritage,
Sheila Copps, in launching the initiative back in 2001. "Partnerships
like the Canadian Archival Information Network web site make a
valuable
contribution to the creation of Canadian reference resources and play
an important role in fostering shared values. They are deepening our
understanding of our country, its institutions and its people."

Through the Archives Canada national database, hundreds of individual
archival institutions across the country (each with holdings such as
documentary records, maps, photographs, sound recordings, videos and
more) regularly produce descriptions of these holdings, and make
those descriptions accessible to the Archives Canada portal via their
provincial/territorial network. The Archives Canada portal also
provides links to virtual exhibits and photo databases residing on
the web sites of individual archives or Provincial/Territorial
Councils. In turn, Archives Canada provides searchable access to
these entries with links to participating institutions. Archives
Canada is an ongoing project that benefits Canadians of all ages from
coast to coast, by making the contents of archives increasingly
accessible to everyone, thus enabling us to explore the richness of
our Canadian past.

Yukon
Yukon Archival Union List

Northwest Territories
Northwest Territories Archives Council

Nunavut
Archives Council Nunavummi

British Columbia
British Columbia Archival Information Network

Alberta
Archives Network of Alberta

Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan Archival Information Network

Manitoba
Manitoba Archival Information Network

Ontario
Ontario Archival Information Network

Québec
Réseau de diffusion des archives du Québec

New Brunswick
Council of Archives New Brunswick / Conseil des archives Nouveau-Brunswick

Prince Edward Island
Archives Council of Prince Edward Island

Nova Scotia
Council of Nova Scotia Archives

Newfoundland and Labrador
Association of Newfoundland and Labrador Archives

Canada
National Archives of Canada
National Library of Canada

Français
Search Archives
Networks
Virtual Exhibits
Help
Contact Us
About Us
Survey
Contributors Section
Home

Comparable to NARA in the United States although you can't
order records. If you are researching in Canada this is the place
to go.



Linda Bee
Temple Terrace, FL


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J-H-R traffic report for Monday, November 22, 2004


                Journalists for Human Rights               
             http://groups.yahoo.com/group/J-H-R/
                Current # of Subscribers:192                         

                    -- Site Summary ---                    
          Visits

            Total ........................ 2,558 (Since 11/28/2002)           
            Average per Day .................. 3           
            Average Visit Length .......... 0:00           
            This Week ....................... 22           

          Page Views

            Total ........................ 3,035 (Since 11/28/2002)           
            Average per Day .................. 3           
            Average per Visit .............. 1.0           
            This Week ....................... 22           

More statistics publicly available at:

PANOS INITIATIVE CONNECTS JOURNALISTS WITH RESEARCH

--------------------------------------------
PANOS INITIATIVE CONNECTS JOURNALISTS WITH RESEARCH
--------------------------------------------
A new initiative from the U.K.-based Panos Institute aims to bridge the gap between journalists in developing countries and academic research that could better inform their reporting.

The goal of the Relay initiative is to help important research find a wider audience. Panos says it will do this by providing editors and producers with free print and broadcast material, and also by awarding fellowships to increase journalistsÂ’ skills and knowledge.

The dual approach is intended to popularize academic knowledge while assisting developing media outlets that are often poor and understaffed.

"Important research is often ignored by the media, particularly in developing countries, who find it inaccessible as a source of news," Relay coordinator Joanne Carpenter said in a Panos news release.

"In turn, academics are often wary of their work being misinterpreted by the media, or donÂ’t know what journalists need in order to turn their research into engaging articles and programs," she said.
The Panos Institute in London is part of the global Panos network of media assistance groups. For more information: http://www.panos.org.uk/.


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"You must be the change you wish to see in the world."
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"We cannot become what we need to be by remaining what we are."
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"Try? There is not try. There is only do or not do."
(Yoda)

WEST AFRICAN MEDIA ADOPT AGREEMENT ON WORKING CONDITIONS

--------------------------------------------
WEST AFRICAN MEDIA ADOPT AGREEMENT ON WORKING CONDITIONS
--------------------------------------------
The West African Journalists' Association (WAJA) has adopted a collective agreement on minimum working standards for journalists in the region, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) reported.

Representatives from WAJA member organizations met in Dakar, Senegal on November 8 and 9. The union representatives drafted the agreement to encourage high professional standards in the region. They hope government ministers validate the standards at an upcoming Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) meeting. The agreement would serve as the basis for similar agreements across the region.

The document includes articles that give journalists the right to create unions and protect their sources. It sets a defined number of working hours for each country, and ensures that salaries are equivalent to public service jobs at the same level. The agreement also requires employers to set aside funds to support professional training for its reporters.

"The employer shall set aside a special fund to enable journalists working for his establishment to undergo further training and keep abreast of new techniques in a dynamic profession," the agreement says. It also states that employers must pay the journalists their full salary while they participate in the training, which can take place either locally or abroad.

IFJ welcomed the agreement, and called on ECOWAS ministers to validate the framework.

"This unique initiative opens a window of opportunity for a major improvement of journalists' working conditions in 16 countries," IFJ projects officer Bertrand Ginet said.
The agreement is available at http://tinyurl.com/3pfut.
--------------------------------------------


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************************

Produced by the International Center for Journalists (ICFJ)
1616 H Street, NW - Third Floor - Washington, D.C. 20006
Telephone: (202) 737-3700 - Fax: (202) 737-0530
E-mail: editor@icfj.org - Web Site: http://www.icfj.org

*********************************************************

(c) 2004 International Center for Journalists.
All rights reserved.

IJNet grants permission for its material to be reproduced or republished provided IJNet is credited. Failure to provide credit will be considered a violation of copyrighted material.

*********************************************************


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Due to the nature of email & the WWW, check ALL sources.
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"You must be the change you wish to see in the world."
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Chile/anti-APEC audio interview


From: lotus <lotus@riseup.net>
Date: Sun, 21 Nov 2004 16:54:56 -0800
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We just did an amazing interview, just over an hour, with a Chilean native and organizer about the history of Chile, the anti-APEC demonstrations and the larger Latin American context in which they're occurring.


On Nov 21, 2004, at 11:25 AM, kevin wrote:

> the indybrasil artical looks like a good starting point, its already
> linked
> together al lot info:
>
> hopefully by the end of the week i can help with this.
>
> kevin
>
>
>> Hey Lotus,
>>
>> In imc-brasil we did a feature about it. But if you write something >> about >> it it would be very nice! Unfortunatelly i have not much time this >> end of >> the year. But I can find some links to add in the article.
>>
>> Salud!
>> Report
>>
>>
>>>
>>> i hope we can put something together for this. i can try to compile a >>> story this weekend if no one else can. we should really have >>> something >>> on global also.
>>>
>>> espero que podemos crear un historia de estos protestas. puedo tratar >>> crear algo esta fin de semana si nadia mas pueden. tambien nosotros >>> tengo que poner algo en el sitio global.
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Imc-ftaa mailing list
>>> Imc-ftaa@lists.indymedia.org
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Northern pipeline stories


PANEL NEGOTIATIONS STALL, DEH CHO WALK OUT
     Negotiators for the Deh Cho First Nations have walked out of talks with Ottawa aimed at settling two high-profile suits over the review of the Mackenzie Valley pipeline.
FULL STORY
http://north.cbc.ca/regional/servlet/View?filename=deh-cho-walkout-11222004

RIVALS TO TRY TO WRESTLE PIPELINE FROM TRANSCANADA'S GRASP
   TransCanada Corporation, the permit holders for the Alaska Highway gas pipeline, are in for a challenge over their right to build the $20-billion project.
FULL STORY

BIAS CHARGES DON'T STAND UP, SAYS PIPELINE PANEL
     The chair of the joint review panel for the Mackenzie Valley pipeline project is rejecting allegations of bias against a member of his staff.
FULL STORY