Archive for November, 2004
Defence Today
Canada Day In The USA
by Ray Dick
The Mounties are there with their scarlet tunics and Stetson hats, the wail of the bagpipes echoes through the sculpted gardens of a posh resort, a huge cake with a Canadian Maple Leaf takes centre place as some 500 celebrants listen to patriotic speeches and mingle with food and drink in what would seem a typical Canada Day celebration.
The difference at this July 1 event, however, is that it is in Colorado Springs, Colo., home of Norad, the joint Canada-U.S. aerospace defence command, and the celebrants [...]
November 1, 2004
Defence Today
Inside Norad
by Ray Dick
It’s a short flight from Denver, Colo., to Colorado Springs, and at first glance there is little to indicate that this community nestled on the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains is anything but a popular destination for tourists to experience the attractions of this high desert country.
But a different scene unfolds as the plane loses altitude to land at this expansive and ultra-modern civilian airport. On the southern outskirts is the busy Peterson Air Force Base, headquarters for Norad, the joint Canada-U.S. aerospace defence command, [...]
November 1, 2004
Defence Today
Firefight In The Pocket
by Norman Brown
The involvement of Canadian Forces in the former Yugoslavia is winding down, bringing to a close an eventful chapter in our military history that saw more than 40,000 Canadians serve in the theatre of operations. The most dangerous and dramatic episode in that chapter was the 1993 Medak Pocket incident, in which Canadian soldiers, trying to keep warring sides separated, themselves came under attack. The Canadians’ response involved them [...]
November 1, 2004
Defence Today
Interpreting Afghanistan
by Stephen J. Thorne
My fixer Manilay never ceased to surprise me. He had lied about his age, it turned out, to get the job working for me translating and attempting to overcome whatever obstacles my living and working in Afghanistan for 81/2 of the past 12 months would present. Manilay was just 18 during my second stint with the Canadian army in Kabul, but for what I [...]
November 1, 2004
Canada Corner
Art On The Rocks
Imagine you’re the curator of a huge museum, full of so many precious works that most of them haven’t even been catalogued. Yet even as you’re racing to document and interpret them, vandals are destroying some of them with graffiti and thieves are carting others away. The ones that remain are slowly fading before your eyes—and there’s not a thing you can do to preserve them.
That, in a nutshell, is the conundrum facing the archaeologists [...]
November 1, 2004, by Laura Byrne Paquet
War Art
Paraskeva Clark
Paraskeva Clark believed the art of a nation is not made by a few elite artists of the time, but by the many who give us variety in subject, composition, technique and ideology. Her beliefs came naturally.
Born in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1898, Clark studied at the Free Studio. Widowed in her early 20s, she moved to Paris with her infant son. When her boy [...]
November 1, 2004, by Jennifer Morse
Canada & the Victoria Cross
Vimy And More: Part 6 of 18
The Battle of Vimy Ridge, which historian George Nasmith called “probably the most brilliant success of the war” on the British front, was sandwiched between the actions of two other feats in the spring of 1917 for which Canadians earned the Victoria Cross.
Frederick Maurice Watson Harvey was decorated with the VC for “most conspicuous bravery and devotion to duty” for leading a cavalry charge on the village of Guyencourt, France, on March 27, 1917.
On May [...]






