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Food services and drinking places, February 2022
Greenhouse, sod and nursery industries, 2021
World Intellectual Property Day
April 26 is World Intellectual Property Day—a day to learn about the role that intellectual property (IP) rights play in encouraging innovation and creativity.
World Immunization Week
Experts develop vaccines to protect us from viruses, bacteria and diseases. Vaccines have successfully lowered infection rates in countries with strong vaccination programs. Some diseases—such as polio, rubella and diphtheria—are now rarely seen in Canada because of long-term, high rates of vaccination in the population.
Canadian aviation amid the COVID-19 pandemic: Part 1. Impact on Canadian airlines
Study: Is undesirable answer behaviour consistent across surveys? An investigation into respondent characteristics
Study: Bayesian inference for a variance component model using pairwise composite likelihood with survey data
The last straw
Drinking straws have been around in some shape or form for thousands of years. How long, exactly? Archeological evidence suggests that Sumerian kings and Egyptian pharaohs used gold straws to drink beer.
Common folk have also been using straws for ages, albeit a humbler variety. These were originally made with reeds, then with paper at the end of the 19th century and with plastic since the 1960s.
While the plastic straw has ruled the drinking straw world for over half a century now, it is slowly being dethroned by its more decomposable predecessor, the paper straw.
Let’s look at how Canadians were using plastic drinking straws before the pandemic.
National Volunteer Week
The pandemic has posed tremendous challenges to volunteer organizations, given the repeated lockdowns and re-openings during the various waves of infection. Particularly challenging is that seniors—Canada’s most dedicated volunteers in terms of hours committed—were also among the most vulnerable to COVID-19.