Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Bank Of Canada Releases Short List Of Women To Be Featured On Next Bank Note

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Nov, 2016 01:34 PM
    OTTAWA — Two activists, a poet, an engineer and an athlete are on the short list of five women whose image could appear on the next new series of Canadian bank notes due out in 2018.
     
    The Bank of Canada released the list ahead of an announcement on Dec. 8 when the winner will be chosen.
     
    The short list includes Viola Desmond, who fought racial discrimination in Nova Scotia, Pauline Johnson, a poet who was the daughter of a Mohawk chief and an English woman, and Elsie MacGill, the first woman in Canada to receive a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering and a master's degree in aeronautical engineering.
     
     
    Also on the list is track and field athlete Bobbie Rosenfeld, who won a silver and gold medal at the 1928 Olympics and went on to become a sports columnist, and Idola Saint-Jean, a feminist and pioneer in the fight for suffrage in Quebec.
     
    The Bank of Canada says the list was selected from 461 eligible nominees submitted by Canadians.
     
    An independent advisory council reduced that to a long list of 12 before further cutting the number to five for consideration by Finance Minister Bill Morneau.
     
    The central bank says that in compiling the short list the council agreed the final five best articulated the criteria including having broken or overcome barriers, making a significant change, leaving a lasting legacy, and being inspirational.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sudden Rise In Interest Rates Could Cause Home Prices To Drop 30 Per Cent: CMHC

    Sudden Rise In Interest Rates Could Cause Home Prices To Drop 30 Per Cent: CMHC
    TD Bank (TSX:TD) has quietly increased its fixed mortgage rates ahead of a similar move by Royal Bank of Canada (TSX:RY) to take effect Thursday, the latest sign that Canada's big banks are hiking the costs of borrowing for homeowners.

    Sudden Rise In Interest Rates Could Cause Home Prices To Drop 30 Per Cent: CMHC

    Mental Illness Among Manitoba Kids Higher In Inner-City, North

    Mental Illness Among Manitoba Kids Higher In Inner-City, North
    A new study says mental illness is a widespread problem among Manitoba children, and is much more pronounced in the province's north and Winnipeg's downtown.

    Mental Illness Among Manitoba Kids Higher In Inner-City, North

    B.C. Man Accused Of Profiting From Reselling Stolen Baby Formula In China

    Vancouver police say they've arrested a man linked to the theft of hundreds of thousands of dollars of baby formula.

    B.C. Man Accused Of Profiting From Reselling Stolen Baby Formula In China

    Opioid Crisis Prompts Federal Ministers To Meet B.C. Premier Ahead Of Summit

    Opioid Crisis Prompts Federal Ministers To Meet B.C. Premier Ahead Of Summit
    B.C. Premier Christy Clark is meeting with federal health and public safety ministers in Ottawa to talk about Canada's opioid crisis in advance of this week's summit meeting in the national capital.

    Opioid Crisis Prompts Federal Ministers To Meet B.C. Premier Ahead Of Summit

    Saskatchewan Doctor Accused Of Trading Marijuana To Get Stereo Speakers Back

    Saskatchewan Doctor Accused Of Trading Marijuana To Get Stereo Speakers Back
    The allegation posted on the website of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan claims Dr. Ian Cowan gave two people who lived in Swift Current pot in 2011.

    Saskatchewan Doctor Accused Of Trading Marijuana To Get Stereo Speakers Back

    Fire Guts Historic Montreal Building That Hosted Country's First Movie Theatre

    Fire Guts Historic Montreal Building That Hosted Country's First Movie Theatre
    MONTREAL — Firefighters are battling a massive blaze in a historic Montreal building that once hosted Canada's first movie theatre.

    Fire Guts Historic Montreal Building That Hosted Country's First Movie Theatre