Spring 1991

 Christina Senjug

Federal Budget, Native Deficit

Federal Budget, Native Deficit

As the lights dim in the auditorium of Halifax’s Micmac Native Friendship Centre, a chanter breaks into song. It’s graduation for 24 native adult students. Anita Martell, a 32-year-old mother, is one of them. Graduation, after years away from school, is a significant achievement. It’s an event that would have been well covered and widely […]

 Anastasia Silva

It’s A Risque Business

It’s A Risque Business

Sex-for-sale classifieds made headlines when they came under attack by the police, but many feel sexist display ads are the ones that should be targeted for the way they degrade women

It was no surprise when police dropped charges against NOW magazine last September. The surprise had come when the charges were laid: essentially they amounted to charges of soliciting-“communicating for the purposes of prostitution.” The “communicating” law was introduced in 1985 to curb street solicitation by and of prostitutes, without making prostitution itself illegal. The […]

 Diane Talbot

Divided We Stand

Divided We Stand

Fueled by two different visions of Canada, the English and French media failed to convey the true nature of the Meech Lake Accord

“Two nations warring in the bosom of a single state.” That was how Lord Durham perceived the relationship between Upper and Lower Canada in the late 1830s. According to Durham the only way to resolve the tensions between the two Canadas was to unite them. Once French Canadians developed political and economic ties to Upper […]

 James Watts

The Fortunes and Arrows of Outrageous Slinger

The Fortunes and Arrows of Outrageous Slinger

The Toronto Star columnist takes arms against a sea of troubles and by pondering, lampoons them

For me to write that I think Brian Mulroney is an asshole,” says Joey Slinger, “is every bit as inconsequential as if my mother phones up and tells me she thinks Brian Mulroney is an asshole. My opinion is perhaps interesting to her and hers is to me, but it has no place in journalism.” […]

 Eve Drobot

Just the Feelings, Ma’am

Just the Feelings, Ma’am

Sentimental journalism-when the facts sink into the mush

The day my daughter started kindergarten we received a sheet of paper from her school that we were advised to keep for handy reference. The dread communication-which occasionally slips out from under the plastic french fry magnet on our fridge door-lists all the “PA days” for the year. To our horror, the very first one […]

 Debbie Madson

Indecent Exposure?

Indecent Exposure?

When it comes to printing tragic photos, editors don't always see eye-to-eye

Two male students boosted Montreal Gazette photographer Allen McInnis to the cafeteria window at the University of Montreal’s l’Ecole polytechnique and held him steady on the narrow sill. Police officers had drawn all the cafeteria’s drapes, but at this window a 15-centimetre gap in the curtains remained. The gap was all McInnis needed to photograph […]

 Kate Pocock

The Shallow End

The Shallow End

It was mesmerizing. As bombs rained on Baghdad, we were glued to our radios and televisions. We heard the air raid sirens and felt the tension of reporters as they resisted the Iraqi authorities’ requests to go to bomb shelters. We flinched at the jolts of the antiaircraft missiles and listened in as the Cable […]

 Fina Scroppo

Flagship of the Trade

Flagship of the Trade

When Toronto Life executive editor Lynn Cunningham gets her Esquire, Saturday Night, Canadian Business and Masthead magazines on the same day, it’s Masthead she reads first. “The information is so vital to me in what I do on a day-to-day basis,” says Cunningham. “While other publications are optional reads, Masthead is a must read.” In […]

 John Shoesmith

Saturday Night

Saturday Night

And someday mourning?

JOHN FRASER WALKS IN SHORT, staccato steps, shuffling his feet as he moves around the offices of Saturday Night magazine, Canada’s most venerable periodical. In many ways, Fraser’s small steps symbolize the change in the magazine since he took over as editor from Robert Fulford in 1987-slight 3 movements away from the liberal leaning magazine […]

 Peter Trueman

No Sexism, Please, We’re Broadcasters

No Sexism, Please, We’re Broadcasters

Slowly women are gaining equality in the newsroom

There is an impression on the street that the only places in which female journalists don’t get the same treatment as men in the business are in the locker rooms of some of the major sports franchises. But women in television news generally agree that the sexual equality officially on display for viewers of the […]