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Thunder Bay mills on the come-back
The long-awaited plan to re-start the shuttered Cascades mill in Thunder Bay under new ownership has been finalized.
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 | Stumped by government fees A Sault Ste. Marie mill operator calls the Ontario government's decision to appeal an Ontario Superior Court judge's ruling "obscene" and accuses Queen's Park of trying to put him out of business. |  | Northern inventor sells idea and technology A Wawa entrepreneur who developed an innovative wood pelletizing machine has sold his technology to a southern Ontario manufacturer who is taking his invention to a world market. |  | Opasatika booming in biomass Results from the wrapped-up biomass estimation study indicates Opasatika has the potential to be “the biomass capital of Canada.” |  | Thunder Bay mills on the come-back The long-awaited plan to re-start the shuttered Cascades mill in Thunder Bay under new ownership has been finalized. |  | Backtracking on forestry standards A recent Ontario government decision to change its paper procurement policy does little more than threaten an already volatile forestry industry, according to Jamie Lim, president of the Ontario Forest Industries Association (OFIA). |
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Golf instructor scores national successes A national treasure in golf instruction lies at the heart of North Bay’s golfing community, though one of the great teaching secrets of the North is a secret no more. |
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Gaming guru on campus The creative spark behind a next generation video game just might be among the fresh faces in Jay Rajnovich’s first-year computer science class. |
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The do's and don'ts of golfing and etiquette With April comes thoughts of spring and with spring, for many, comes thoughts of golf. Golf can be a frustrating game and that frustration can be traced back to a handful of common errors, many amateurs make. |
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Training, an opportunity and an obstacle for First Nations While the growing Aboriginal population stands to help with the anticipated labour shortage in industries throughout Northern Ontario, the true problem lies in ensuring they have the proper training, according to Stan Beardy, Grand Chief of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN). |
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