Cameco reports first quarter results, Cigar Lake restart and the continued execution of strategy to support global clean-air transition
Cameco today reported its consolidated financial and operating results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2021 in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards . “Our first quarter results were as expected,” said Tim Gitzel, Cameco’s president and CEO. “With the continued execution of our strategy and the unplanned disruptions due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are not at the regular tier-one …
Cameco (TSX: CCO; NYSE: CCJ) today reported its consolidated financial and operating results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2021 in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
Fri, May 7th 2021 10:45am
Mike Masnick
I remember when Wired was the key magazine for understanding the potential of innovation. I subscribed all the way back in 1993 (not the first issue, but soon afterward, after a friend gave me a copy of their launch issue). Over the years, the magazine has gone through many changes, but I m surprised at how much its outlook has changed. The latest example is a big cover story by reporter Gilad Edelman, basically arguing that people who support Section 230 are wrong and holding the law up as a false idol. The piece is behind a paywall, because of course it is.
Apr 27, 2021
Despite being underage, Alex Polowin joined the navy after hearing about his mother’s family being murdered in the Holocaust.
By Yakir Benzion, United With Israel
Alex Polowin of Ottawa still wasn’t 18 when he joined the Royal Canadian Navy in 1942, determined to do something and fight back after learning that his mother’s family had been murdered in the Holocaust, the
Canadian Jewish News reported Monday.
While Polowin already has a chestful of military medals, the 96-year-old retired insurance agent was awarded Canada’s highest honor for his volunteer work, which as fate would have it started long after he took off his wartime navy uniform for good.
United StatesCanada top court rules U.S.-based First Nation has cross-border rights
ReutersMoira WarburtonSteve Scherer
4 minutes read
The Supreme Court of Canada is seen in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada November 4, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Helgren
Canada s Supreme Court ruled on Friday that U.S.-based descendants of the Sinixt indigenous nation maintained ancestral land rights in Canada, a landmark decision that opens the door to other groups with similar ties to assert their rights on matters from hunting to environmental concerns.
The ruling means any U.S.-based indigenous group whose ancestors lived in Canada before first contact with Europeans could claim rights laid out in Canada s constitution.