File contains report(s).
Item is a copy of paper given to Zingrone by Marshall McLuhan in 1979.
File consists of correspondence and information about a copycat channel in the United States, VISN (Vision Interfaith Satellite Network).
Item consists of a documentary film. “Provides a guided tour of four historic Ontario homes. Two of them were once residences of Canadian prime ministers, Sir John A. Macdonald and William Lyon Mackenzie King; another, the birthplace of Dr. Norman Bethune; and the fourth, the home of a wealthy Cornwall landowner. Gives a comparative view of Victorian architecture, a close-up examination of restoration work done by Parks Canada, and a glimpse at the way Canadians lived 100 years ago.”
File consists of photographs of Grossman meeting with members of the Portuguese community at an event on Augusta Ave. in Toronto.
File pertains to Swan's research for her book, The Dead Celebrities Club, including an e-mail interviews/correspondence with Charlie Shrem while he was in prison and her visit to Sing Sing prison in New York State to attend a Rehabilitations Through the Arts (RTA) prisoner performance of The Wizard of Oz. Records in this file are e-mail, transcripts, a program, articles by Shrem, and news articles about the RTA program.
File consists of letter of introduction from Tim Buck, General Secretary of the Labor-Progressive Party, to European and Israeli counterparts, invitation to attend the meeting of the Central Committee of Jews in Poland, a letter from J.B. Salsberg regarding a Jewish girl brought up by a Catholic family in Poland whose biological mother desires that her daughter be brought out of Poland, a poster for speech in Vancouver on Israel and the Cold War by Sam Lipshitz, newspaper articles regarding Lipshitz's visit to Poland and Israel to attend communist meetings, closure of a Jewish community centre and school in Montreal by police, economic and cultural growth of Jewish communities in Romania, the Canadian Peace Congress at Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens in 1950, the status of Yiddish in Israel, warnings about rebuilding West Germany's military weapons industry, conditions in post-war London, and speeches across Canada regarding his recent trip to Poland, and notes for a speech on the sixth anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. See also 2003-061/005 (01) for records relating to this trip.
File consists of 36 prints showing Sam Lipshitz with various groups, workers in factories, and the public hanging of the former camp commander in Majdanek in December 1945.
File consists of photographs, postcards, and Royal Nepal Airlines documents relating to Maj. Michael Burke's trip to Nepal.
File contains photographs of 1994 visit to India
Item is a bound volume with a schedule of events for the 1983 state visit of former Greek Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou and Mrs. Papandreou to Canada.
File consists of Drache's typescript notes from a trip to Budd Manufacturing in Kitchener to evaluate its labour conditions.
Files contains photographs of 1995 Barbados visit
File consists of a report on the Dharan Blind School created by Hon. Capt. Dalbahadur Sing, detailing the enrollment numbers and budget of the school and recommendations for construction improvements.
File consists of correspondence and memos related to VisionTV's programming; licence renewal application; financial statements and budget; and the defense of religious broadcasting in Canada.
File consists of correspondence and memos related to VisionTV's programming; licence renewal application; financial statements and budget; and the defense of religious broadcasting in Canada.
File consists of correspondence and memos related to the "Summit Meeting" of 21 Oct. 1986, discussing the transition from the Canadian Interfaith Network (CIN) to its replacement, Vision TV.
Item consists of a poster featuring VisionTV's original logo and slogan.
File consists of a book of documents related to the 10th anniversary of VisionTV, including: a VisionTV fact sheet; advertisements from Marketing Magazine and Canadian newspapers; press release of review excerpts of VisionTV programs; and a biographical profile of Peter Flemington.
File consists of correspondence, memos, and minutes related to Flemington's work as Head of Programming and Development at VisionTV.
File consists of memos, notes, reports, and correspondence about the day-to-day operations of VisionTV.
File consists of memos, notes, reports, and correspondence about the day-to-day operations of VisionTV.
File consists of correspondence, memos, minutes related to the operations of VisionTV and it's programming, CRTC licence renewal, application for increase in pass-through fees, and proposal for new facilities at 189 Church Street, Toronto.
File consists of correspondence, notes, reports, and memos about the day-to-day operations of VisionTV.
File consists of correspondence, memos, and minutes related to Flemington's work as Head of Programming and Development at VisionTV.
File consists of memos, notes, reports, and correspondence about the day-to-day operations of VisionTV.
File consists of memos, notes, reports, and correspondence about the day-to-day operations of VisionTV.
File consist of a report from Charles Doucet about VisionTV's Atlantic Region Office.
Series consists of records created and accumulated by Peter Flemington as co-founder and Head of Programming and Development of VisionTV. Vision TV was the world’s first multifaith and multicultural national television channel which went on air in September 1988. Records in this series document the transition from the Canadian Interfaith Network, preparation for the successful application to the CRTC for a television license in 1987, planning for the channel’s launch in the fall of 1988 and subsequent day-to-day operations of the channel.
Includes: minutes, briefs, memos, policy documents, correspondence; programming files; CRTC applications and submissions; promotional materials including posters, press kits, viewer guides, press releases, and clippings; and files related to external partnerships and collaborations including the development of a new channel named Wisdom (“Canada’s Body, Mind, and Spirit”), later renamed ONE.