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词条 1968 in Canada
释义

  1. Incumbents

      Crown    Federal government    Provincial governments    Lieutenant governors    Premiers    Territorial governments    Commissioners  

  2. Events

     January to June  July to December  Full date unknown 

  3. Arts and literature

     New works  Poetry  Awards  Theatre  Art 

  4. Sport

  5. Births

     January to March  April to June  July to September  October to December 

  6. Deaths

  7. See also

  8. References

{{More citations needed|date=December 2009}}{{Year box}}{{History of Canada}}

Events from the year 1968 in Canada.

Incumbents

Crown

  • Head of state (monarch) – Elizabeth II

Federal government

  • Governor general – Roland Michener
  • Prime minister – Lester B. Pearson (until April 20) and then Pierre Trudeau
  • Chief Justice – John Robert Cartwright (Ontario)
  • Parliament – 27th (until April 23) then 28th (from September 12)

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

  • Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – Grant MacEwan
  • Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – George Pearkes (until July 2) then John Robert Nicholson
  • Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Richard Spink Bowles
  • Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick – John B. McNair (until January 31) then Wallace Samuel Bird
  • Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland – Fabian O'Dea
  • Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Henry Poole MacKeen (until July 22) then Victor de Bedia Oland
  • Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – William Earl Rowe (until July 4) then William Ross Macdonald
  • Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Willibald Joseph MacDonald
  • Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – Hugues Lapointe
  • Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan – Robert Hanbidge

Premiers

  • Premier of Alberta – Ernest Manning (until December 12) and then Harry Strom
  • Premier of British Columbia – W.A.C. Bennett
  • Premier of Manitoba – Walter Weir
  • Premier of New Brunswick – Louis Robichaud
  • Premier of Newfoundland – Joey Smallwood
  • Premier of Nova Scotia – G.I. Smith
  • Premier of Ontario – John Robarts
  • Premier of Prince Edward Island – Alexander B. Campbell
  • Premier of Quebec – Daniel Johnson, Sr. (until September 26) and then Jean-Jacques Bertrand (from October 2)
  • Premier of Saskatchewan – Ross Thatcher

Territorial governments

Commissioners

  • Commissioner of Yukon – James Smith
  • Commissioner of Northwest Territories – Stuart Milton Hodgson

Events

January to June

  • February 1 – The three branches of the Canadian Forces are merged into one, adopting a common green uniform and Army-derived ranks
  • February 20 – Prime Minister Pearson gives the first ever televised address to the nation as he tells Canadians that he will table a confidence motion the next day to prove his party still has control. After a week of filibustering by the Opposition, the motion passes.[1]
  • April 1 – The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) is formed
  • April 6 – Pierre Trudeau wins 1968 Liberal Party leadership election[2]
  • May 14 – The grand opening of the Toronto-Dominion Centre is held
  • June 1 – The flag of Alberta is authorized
  • June 24 – Separatists riot in Montreal on St-Jean-Baptiste Day
  • June 25 – Federal election: Pierre Trudeau's Liberals win a majority

July to December

  • July 1 – The laws creating Canada's Medicare system come into effect
  • July 18–August 9 – Canada Post workers represented by the Canadian Union of Postal Workers go on strike
  • August 20 – Warsaw Pact troops invade Czechoslovakia to end the "Prague Spring" of political liberalization. Thousands of refugees flee to Canada.
  • September 26 – Daniel Johnson, Sr, Premier of Quebec, dies in office
  • October 2 – Jean-Jacques Bertrand becomes premier of Quebec
  • October 15 – The Mouvement Souveraineté-Association merges with the Ralliement National to create the Parti Québécois, René Lévesque is selected as the party's first leader
  • December 12 – Harry Strom becomes premier of Alberta, replacing Ernest Manning
  • December 31 – Quebec's Legislative Assembly is renamed the National Assembly

Full date unknown

  • IMAX technique invented
  • Canada's new Divorce Act introduces no fault divorce
  • The Rochdale College experiment begins in Toronto

Arts and literature

New works

  • Alice Munro – Dance of the Happy Shades
  • Mordecai Richler – Hunting Tigers Under Glass
  • Margaret Atwood – The Animals in That Country
  • Robert Fulford – This Was Expo
  • John Newlove – Black Night Window
  • Kildare Dobbs – Reading the Time
  • Mordecai Richler – Cocksure
  • Robert Kroetsch – Alberta
  • Marian Engel – No Clouds of Glory
  • Gordon R. Dickson – Soldier, Ask Not
  • Farley Mowat – This Rock Within the Sea: A Heritage Lost

Poetry

  • Mary Alice Downie and Barbara Robertson, editors, The Wind Has Wings, anthology of 77 Canadian poems for children (anthology)
  • Dennis Lee, editor, T. O. Now, anthology of 13 "apprentice poets living in Toronto" (anthology)
  • Joe Rosenblatt, Winter of the Luna Moon
  • Irving Layton, The Shattered Plinths, 60 new poems
  • Leonard Cohen, Selected Poems, 1956-1968
  • Al Purdy, Wild Grape Wine
  • Dorothy Livesay, The Documentaries, poems from the 1930s and 1940s, and including "Roots", a long poem

Awards

  • David Suzuki wins UNESCO's Kalinga Prize for science writing
  • See 1968 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
  • Stephen Leacock Award: Max Ferguson, And Now...Here's Max
  • Vicky Metcalf Award: Lorraine McLaughlin

Theatre

  • August 28 – Michel Tremblay's Les Belles-Sœurs premiers in Montreal.

Art

  • December 18 – Henry Moore donates hundreds of works to the Art Gallery of Ontario.

Sport

  • March 10 - Alberta Golden Bears won their Second Memorial Cup be defeating the Loyola Warriors 5 to 4. The Final game was played at the Montreal Forum
  • May 11 - Montreal Canadiens won their Fifteenth Stanley Cup by defeating the St. Louis Blues 4 games to 0. The deciding Game 4 was played at the Montreal Forum. Jean Beliveau wins his Second Conn Smythe Trophy
  • May 27 – Montreal Expos are established as Major League Baseball's First Canadian team.
  • November 22 - Queen's Golden Gaels won their First Vanier Cup by defeating the Waterloo Lutheran Golden Hawks by a score of 42-14 in the 4th Grey Cup played at Varsity Stadium in Toronto
  • November 29 - Ottawa Rough Riders won their Sixth Grey Cup defeated the Calgary Stampeders 24 to 21 in the 56th Grey Cup played at Exhibition Stadium in Toronto

Births

January to March

  • January 5 – Joé Juneau, ice hockey player
  • January 7 – Tara Croxford, field hockey player
  • January 13 – Pat Onstad, international soccer player
  • January 14 – Michael Meldrum, swimmer
  • January 28 – Sarah McLachlan, musician, singer and songwriter
  • February 1 – Mark Recchi, ice hockey player
  • February 9 – Joel Brough, field hockey player
  • February 22 – Shawn Graham, politician and 31st Premier of New Brunswick
  • February 27 – Matt Stairs, baseball player
  • March 17 – Patty Sullivan, television personality
  • March 30 – Celine Dion, singer, songwriter and actress

April to June

  • April 18 – David Hewlett, actor who was born in the United Kingdom before emigrating to Canada
  • April 20 – Evan Solomon, writer, magazine publisher and television host
  • May 8 – Louise Stratten, actress and younger sister of the murdered actress Dorothy Stratten
  • May 12 – Jane Kerr, swimmer
  • May 20 – William Irwin, boxer
  • May 30 – Jason Kenney, politician and Minister
  • June 7 - Macha Grenon, actress
  • June 10 – Susan Haskell, actress
  • June 16 – Lyne Poirier, judoka
  • June 27 – Pascale Bussières, actress
  • June 29 – Theoren Fleury, ice hockey player

July to September

  • July 2 – Mark Tewksbury, swimmer and Olympic gold medalist
  • July 11 – Michael Cram, actor and singer-songwriter
  • July 22 – Harry Taylor, swimmer
  • August 20 – Jody Holden, beach volleyball player
  • September 19 – Shawn Doyle, actor
  • September 20 – Leah Pinsent, actress
  • September 22 – Lisa Alexander, synchronised swimmer
  • September 23 – Donna McGinnis, swimmer

October to December

  • October 2 – Sandy Goss, swimmer
  • October 2 – Glen Wesley, ice hockey player
  • October 26 – Tom Cavanagh, actor
  • November 1 – Andrea Nugent, swimmer
  • November 14 – Serge Postigo, actor
  • November 19 – Gord Fraser, road racing cyclist
  • November 25 – Jill Hennessy, actress and musician, and Jacqueline Hennessy, actress and journalist
  • December 2 – Darren Ward, swimmer
  • December 3 – Brendan Fraser, actor
  • December 10 – Caroline Wittrin, hammer thrower
  • December 17 – Paul Tracy, racing car driver

Deaths

  • January 31 – George Arthur Brethen, politician (b.1877)
  • February 5 – Frances Loring, sculptor (b.1887)
  • February 13 – Portia White, singer (b.1911)
  • February 16 – Healey Willan, organist and composer (b.1880)
  • February 17 – Ernest Charles Drury, politician, writer and 8th Premier of Ontario (b.1878)
  • April 29 – Aubin-Edmond Arsenault, politician and Premier of Prince Edward Island (b.1870)
  • May 30 – Charles Gavan Power, politician, Minister and Senator (b.1888)
  • June 14 – John B. McNair, lawyer, politician, judge and 22nd Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick (b.1889)
  • August 1 – Maurice Spector, Chairman of the Communist Party of Canada (b.1898)
  • September 26 – Daniel Johnson, Sr., politician and 20th Premier of Quebec (b.1915)
  • December 15 – Antonio Barrette, politician and 18th Premier of Quebec (b.1899)

See also

  • 1968 in Canadian television
  • List of Canadian films

References

1. ^Idiot box channeling the Prime Ministers{{Dead link|date=August 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
2. ^"Pierre Elliott Trudeau." Prime Minister of Canada. August 26, 2013. Accessed April 8, 2015.
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