From the monthly archives:

June 2006

Un llamadito a los lectores de Calgary…

by Guillermo on June 26, 2006

… que se que hay uno o dos. Transcribo un mensaje de un argentino que necesita alquilar en Calgary por un par de meses. Al que peuda darle una mano, pls le contesta por mail.

Gracias!!

Busco Habitacion en Calgary

Hola,

Alguien conoce a alguien en Calgary que tiene una habitacion a alquilar en un apartamento o bien una casa?

Yo voy a Calgary para trabajar y como estare 1-2-3 meses me gustaria alquilar algo semi temporal y no estar en hoteles, donde podria pagar al dia o bien a la semana. Me gustaria estar alli para el principio de Julio.

Soy una persona de confianza y no fumador, tengo referencias:

Mi telefono en Montreal:
514 214-7587

email: danieldargis@yahoo.com

Saludos

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Los canadienses y la Copa del Mundo

by Guillermo on June 26, 2006

Publicado en “The Record”, 22 de junio 2006

We love the World Cup

Millions of Canadians watching, Brazil, England our favourite sides
ASSOCIATED PRESS (Jun 22, 2006)

Canada may not have a team entered but that hasn’t stopped millions of Canadians from being bitten by the World Cup bug, a new poll suggests.

The poll, conducted by Decima Research and provided to Canadian Press yesterday, indicates more than seven million Canadian adults are interested in the tournament, which began June 9 in Germany and concludes July 9.

“I think this absolutely speaks to a bright future for soccer in Canada,” said Bruce Anderson, the chief executive officer of Decima Research, a public opinion and marketing research company. “The World Cup is an international spectacle, a sport that people seem to find increasingly appealing.

“The thing about the long-term potential is if you look at the nature of the audience, you see young, urban, higher income, more highly educated people and those demographics are obviously going to be quite appealing to advertisers and they’ll be more inclined, I think, to get behind the game in the future.”

The poll found 23 per cent of those surveyed said they were somewhat interested in the tournament while 15 per cent were very interested.

Decima said its figures, applied to the country as a whole, suggest seven million Canadian adults are interested in the World Cup.

Decima polled 1,023 adults via telephone from June 16 to June 18. Its results, when considered as a reflection of countrywide attitudes, are accurate to within plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

Television ratings suggest World Cup interest is on the rise.

Yesterday, the Globe and Mail reported that the first week of games carried on TSN averaged 426,000 viewers while Rogers Sportsnet drew 343,000 fans.

The last time World Cup games were carried during the day in Canada was 1998, and the average audience then was 259,000 on TSN.

“I think these numbers suggest interest in soccer is growing,” Anderson said. “If we look at how many people say they’re hockey fans, and we find that’s about 40 per cent of the public, these numbers suggest soccer has had a growing fan base within Canada.”

Earl Cochrane of the Canadian Soccer Association was pleased to hear details about the poll, but was cautious in his interpretation of the results.

“I think it says far more about the appeal of the game worldwide than it does about the interest in Canada,” he said. “I think we’ll see the support we have for soccer in Canada next year when we host the under-20 World Cup.

“I think it (poll) is an indication the game in Canada is growing but I think the World Cup is also an event that transcends sport a bit.”

He said participation in soccer is growing each year, with the majority of participants being under the age of 12.

“Ten years down the road we could have an enormous base of people who grew up playing soccer and loving it much like we have with hockey and that will definitely help the state of soccer in Canada,” Cochrane said.

Not surprisingly, the biggest Canadian World Cup fans are men under the age of 25 but also those who have higher incomes and more education. Students, however, are the most enthusiastic group, according to the poll.

Isaac Ling, a 17-year-old high school student from Toronto, would seem to support that finding.

Ling, sporting a yellow Brazil jersey, was trying to sell pals Basil Metcalfe, 16, and Robert Allen, 17, on the virtues of buying such a shirt as the three sifted through various World Cup gear at a downtown Toronto sporting goods store.

“Brazil is going to smoke everyone,” Ling boasted. “Brazil all the way.”

Brazil, the defending World Cup champion, sits atop Group F with an unblemished 2-0 record and has secured a spot in the second round.

Allen, however, isn’t so sure.

“I watched Spain win (a 3-1 decision over Tunisia on Monday) and they looked like they could be a dangerous team,” he said.

The Spanish are definitely a World Cup contender, having already qualified for the next round after two straight victories to stand first in Group H.

Canadians surveyed were divided when asked which team they wanted to see win the World Cup. The poll suggested 15 per cent supported Brazil while 13 per cent favoured England.

Italy was a distant third with eight per cent support, followed by Germany (six per cent), Argentina (four per cent) and France and Portugal (both with three per cent).

Canadian female soccer fans also have a favourite team. The poll suggests women were three times more likely than men to root for Italy, and Anderson said their interest wasn’t necessarily based solely on the Italians’ play on the pitch.

“I’m not sure I could make the case based on these numbers that women have really studied the differentiated soccer skills of the teams,” Anderson said with a chuckle. “I think they’re pretty happy how that team comes across overall.”

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De Yapa

by Guillermo on June 23, 2006

Les dejo un link a unos videos de la empresita medianamente potable en la que tengo la suerte de trabajar. Algunos son divertidos, otros mas o menos. Que los disfruten…

El link pertenece a RIMarkable, un weblog sobre tintorerí­as canadienses.

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From globeandmail.com

by Guillermo on June 23, 2006

Como para que lean entre hoy y el fin de semana les dejo links a algunos artí­culos de globeandmail.com. Son de temas varios pero todos relacionados con la cosa de “todos los dí­as” aquí­. Supongo que al que está en camino le peude interesar un poco las cosas que pasan por acá. Enjoy. Nos vemos el lunes.

Drug makers expected to shun Canada
Price disputes will likely keep new products off shelves, group predicts

Tech recovery leads rebound in Ottawa
Alberta’s not the only economic hot spot, according to a CIBC World Markets study

Economy looks the best in 50 years
National Bank says economic conditions are the best in half a century, a move that could push loonie close to parity

Care needed to keep Canadian kids healthy, report says
Communities, government must ensure well-being of children, Health Council of Canada declares

Canadians cool to immigration, poll suggests
New survey finds more Canadians dissatisfied with country’s immigration policy in the wake of terror arrests.

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Cortitas II

by Guillermo on June 23, 2006


Nuevo “Amigo de la casa”: Saludamos a los amigos Marí­a y Fede de “No puedo estar en todas” blogueando desde Notingham Hill, Londres.

Corriendo el horario… La semana que viene es el cumpleaños de Fabián Lim. Fabián es de padres coreanos pero nacido en Argentina. Hace unos 10 años que vive en Canadá. Según unos de sus compañeros de trabajo lo vamos a saludar atrasado por que Argentina esta “1 day-time ahead” en el horario… O sea que ahora Argentina queda en Asia. OK.

Canadá y su relación con USA: Estoy leyendo un libro de historia canadiense muy interesante. Se llama “The Fight for Canada” by David Orchard, Editorail RD (ISBN 1-55207-025-5) El foco está puesto en la tormentosa relación con USA desde la época de las colonias y como siempre estos intentaron conquistarlos de alguna manera. Algunos links…

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Orchard
http://www.davidorchard.com/online/fight/fightfor.html
http://www.northguard.com/mbs/archive/fightcanada.htm

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