Counterfeiting Identification Du Maurier Cigarettes Constable Donald Salmon CSI 405 Product Risk Assessment Du Maurier cigarettes were launched in 1903 by peter Jackson when an actor named Gerald Du Maureir wanted a smoother cigarette, or less irritating to the throat. in the end Du Maurier has become Canada’s number one brand. But not until only recently, the Canadian Government deemed that on July 1st 2012 all tobacco products for sale anywhere in Canada must carry a federal excise stamp. No person shall sell, offer for sale, or possess these tobacco products unless they are stamped in accordance with the Excise Act, 2001. Any person who contravenes this requirement is liable to a fine, imprisonment, or both.
Canadians in the Second Battle of Ypres Sean Chia Wei Hsiung Social Studies 11 2-4 Mr. Schroeder November 4th Canada was dragged into an irrelevant war by Britain after its declaration of independence in 1867 against Germany due to its unchanged foreign policy. Canada played an essential role for Great Britain in many battles in World War I (WWI). The most important battle was the second battle of Ypres. In order to support its mother country, Canada shipped large amount of soldiers and volunteers to Britain, and provided numerous weapons and ammunition, which resulted in the success of the second battle of Ypres. Canadian forces saw their first engagement of WWI as part at the second battle of Ypres, showing their valour in the battle of Gravenstafel, Kitchener’s Woods, and Saint Julien.
A major oil field was discovered in the North Slope of Alaska in 1968. In June 1969, the oil companies constituting the consortium owning Alyeska submitted an application to the Department of the Interior for rights-of-way for a pipeline that would transport oil from the North Slope across land in Alaska owned by the United States a major part of the transport system which would carry the oil to its ultimate markets in the lower 48 States. The respondents brought suit in March 1970, and sought declaratory and injunctive relief against the Secretary of the Interior on the grounds that he intended to issue the right-of-way and special land-use permits in violation of s 28 of the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920, 41 Stat. 449, as amended, 30 U.S.C. s 185, and without compliance with the Nation Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969, the District Court granted a preliminary
There were circumstances existing within the Dominion which lead leaders to push for confederation. First of all, in 1865, United States cancelled the “Canadian/ American Reciprocity Treaty”, the free trade agreement which allowed goods to move between Eastern Canada and U.S.A. This meant that Eastern Canada would have to look for new places to ship their goods. A union of all of Canada could become this route of trade. Secondly, in the Province of Canada, the government had difficulty reaching agreement, because there was no party that could have majority support.
Commentary on Current Issue Target recently announced it would close all of its 133 Canadian stores after determining it would not become profitable until 2021. The article titled, “Why Target’s Canadian Expansion Failed” found in the Harvard Business Review, outlines factors leading to this to withdrawal from the Canadian market. Target picked Canada for its global expansion because of its geographical closeness to the US, its mostly English-‐speaking
Unit1 Describe the reason that sectional tensions increased in the United States after the War Of 1812? President James Monroe had hoped that an "Era of Good Feelings" would arise after the demise of the Federalist Party, but it did not. The partisan strife of earlier years had not abated but had, instead, infected the Republican party. what was the underground railroad and how did it operate?It was a secret group aiding slaves to escape. After the fugitive slave act allowed federal marshalls to arrest escaped slaves anywhere in the USA the Underground Railroad smuggled escapees to Canada, where slavery had long since been abolished.
As a member of the Canadian population, you are practically obligated to understand your own country. From this point on students in Canada taking grade 12 English should only study Canadian literature; this being because we are becoming completely swamped by the American culture around us. And losing touch with the Canadian roots. As said in David H. Flaherty’s novel The Beaver Bites Back? “…more needs to be done to help us avoid being Shaw 2 swamped by u.s. cultural products…” (Flaherty 29).
It is expected that this new law takes effect by the end of this year. The question now is: Why the other provinces in Canada did not legalize euthanasia and assisted suicide? The purpose of this report is to examine the many different points of view in favour and against euthanasia and assisted suicide. Euthanasia happens when terminal patients with excessive soreness are not able to kill themselves and require another person to do it. Normally, a doctor will induce the death with a lethal injection.
Bush lifted a 1990 executive order by the first President Bush banning offshore drilling, while at the same time calling for drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. As of August 2008, however, a 1982 congressional ban is still in place, making Bush's action a symbolic gesture, and now the congressional ban is being debated in terms of both environmental issues and U.S. energy independence. In an almost complete reversal of policy, on July 30, 2008, the U.S. Department of the Interior released a news report saying that the nation's energy situation has dramatically changed in the past year. Secretary of the Interior, Dirk Kempthorne, said, "Areas that were considered too expensive to develop a year ago are no longer necessarily out of reach based on improvements to technology and safety." Kempthorne went on to say that, "The American people and the President want action, and a new initiative (the development of a new oil and natural gas leasing program for the U.S.
In the past few years, the industry has mounted an effective, organized campaign against the legalized importation of drugs from Canada. "America's big drug companies are intensifying their lobbying efforts to change the Canadian health-care system and eliminate subsidized prescription drug prices enjoyed by Canadians," CanWest News Service reported on June 9, 2003. A prescription drug industry spokesman in Washington confirmed to CanWest News Service that information contained in confidential industry documents is accurate, and that $1 million U.S. is being added to the already heavily funded drug lobby against the Canadian system. PhRMA was the leading drug industry trade group behind the increased lobbying and public relations campaign in Canada. PhRMA was also independently spending $450,000 to target the booming Canadian internet pharmacy industry, which has been providing Americans with prescription drugs at lower prices than in the United