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#jubilee yukon
artsavi · 15 days
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Tumblr's ruining the resolution but. BIG ol' commission I finished for @fletchier! Featuring characters belonging to @marzibird, @spectralhaunts, @missmorior and myself!
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krakenator · 1 year
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so the Ruined Recollections mini campaign is going great
@missmorior @rjmeta
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wingedarrows · 2 years
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A cozy Inn, a warm hearth, good food - what more could a person want? How about a magical adventure where you are The Heroes™ who save the day! Or, at least, that's the outcome Kindly Dewey Page is hoping for when four adventurers answer his call to help an old friend with The Cure to Writer's Block. Aria, Dakota & Philip, Jubilee and Keris will surely be able to help this... ....book?! It's a book. Sure! Help this book with finding that spark of inspiration once more. And they'll do it all in one night!
@hexabeast: DM Noodle: Jubilee Yukon @cardinalart: Dakota & Philip @morskijez00: Aria Marionette Myself: Keris
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spectralhaunts · 1 year
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Commission I did for Noodle! Two crime bois ready to cause chaos and look awesome while they do it.
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bronzecats · 1 month
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National Rainbow Week of Action in Canada
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In this post I have compiled all the information I could find regarding upcoming events for the Rainbow Week of Action. There are two online events, and dozens on in-person events across the country.
"Within the Rainbow Week of Action, we are pushing governments and elected officials at every level to take action for Rainbow Equality and address rising anti-2SLGBTQIA+ hate. As such, we have identified calls to action for every level of government. These calls to action can be reviewed here."
Event list below:
Events are listed in date order, provinces in general west-to-east order. I have included as much detail as possible, please reference the links at the bottom of the post. At this time, there are no events in N.W.T. and Nova Scotia. Last updated: May 14th, 9:53pm PDT. Please note that I am not officially affiliated with / an organizer of these events, I have simply compiled all the dates to share on tumblr. Original post content.
B.C. EVENTS:
15th: Fernie; Fernie Seniors Drop-In Centre, 572 3rd Avenue, 6:00PM. (Letter writing and Potluck)
17th: Vancouver; šxʷƛ̓ənəq Xwtl'e7énḵ Square - Vancouver Art Gallery North Plaza, 750 Hornby St, 5:30PM. (Rally)
19th, Sunday: Abbotsford; Jubilee Park, 5:00PM. (Rally)
ALBERTA EVENTS:
15th: Lethbridge; McKillop United Church, 2329 15th Ave S, 12:00-1:00PM (letter writing)
17th, Friday: Calgary; Central Memorial Park, 1221 2 St SW, 5:30PM. (Rally)
17th: Edmonton; Wilbert McIntyre Park, 8331 104 St NW, 6:00PM. (Rally)
SASKATCHEWAN EVENTS:
17th: Saskatoon; Vimy Memorial Park, 500 Spadina Crescent E, 5:30PM. (Rally)
17th: Regina; Legislative Grounds, 2405 Legislative Dr, 6:30PM. (Rally)
May 18th: Saskatoon; Grovenor Park United Church, 407 Cumberland Ave S, 6:00PM. (Art event)
MANITOBA EVENTS:
16th: Carman; Paul's Place, 20 1 Ave SW, 7:00-9:00PM. (Letter writing)
19th: Winnipeg; Manitoba Legislature, 450 Broadway, 12:00PM. (Rally)
ONTARIO EVENTS:
15th: Barrie; UPlift Black, 12 Dunlop St E, 6:00-7:30PM. (Letter writing)
15th: Chatham; CK Gay Pride Association, 48 Centre St, 5:00-6:30PM. (Letter writing)
15th: Peterborough; Trinity Community Centre, 360 Reid St, 12:00-3:00PM. (Letter writing)
16th: Midland; Midland Public Library, 4:30-7:30PM. (Letter writing and pizza)
16th: Ottawa; Impact Hub, 123 Slater Street, 2:00PM. (Letter writing)
16th: Toronto; Barbara Hall Park, 519 Church St, 11:30AM. (Rally)
17th, Friday: Barrie; City Hall, 70 Collier St, 6:00PM. (Rally)
17th: Cornwall; 167 Pitt St, 5:30PM. (Rally)
17th: Essex; St. Paul's Anglican Church, 92 St. Paul St, 6:00-8:00PM. (Letter writing and pizza)
17th: Hamilton; City Hall, 71 Main St W, 6:00PM. (Rally)
17th: Kitchener; City Hall, 200 King St W, 6:00PM. (Rally)
17th: London; City Hall, 300 Dufferin Ave, 6:00PM. (Rally)
17th: Sarnia; City Hall, 255 Christina St N, 1:00PM. (Rally)
17th: Sault Ste Marie; City Hall, 99 Foster Dr, 11:30AM. (Rally)
17th: Ottawa; Confederation Park, Elgin St, 5:30PM. (Rally)
22nd: Renfrew; 161 Raglan St. South, 7:00PM. (Letter writing, fashion and makeup event, and pizza)
QUEBEC EVENTS:
May 15th: Lachute; CDC Lachute, 57, rue Harriet, 12:30PM. (Letter writing event)
NEW BRUNSWICK EVENTS:
17th: Woodstock; Citizen's Square, Chapel St, Next to the L.P. Fisher Public Library, 12:00-1:00PM. (rally)
17th: Saint John; City Hall, 15 Market Square, 12:30PM. (Rally, flag raising)
18th, Saturday: Fredericton; Legislative Grounds, 706 Queen Street, 1:00PM. (Rally)
NOVA SCOTIA EVENTS:
May 17th: Middleton; NSCC AVC RM 121, 6:30-8:30PM (letter writing and pizza)
P.E.I. EVENTS:
May 15th: Charlottetown; Peers Alliance Office, 250B Queen Street, 6:00-8:00PM. (Adult drop-in)
May 16th: Charlottetown, Peers Alliance Office, 250B Queen Street, 6:00-7:00PM.
May 17th: Charlottetown; PEI Legislative Assembly, 165 Richmond St, 12:00PM. (Rally)
YUKON EVENTS:
16th: Whitehorse; The Cache, 4230 4 Ave, 2:00-7:00PM. (Letter writing)
NUNAVUT EVENTS:
May 16th, Thursday: Iqaluit; Four Corners, 922 Niaqunngusiariaq St, 5:00PM. (Letter writing)
Reference links:
About the Rainbow Week of Action.
Website letter writing events list (does not include all events)
General events website list (does not include all events)
Instagram general events image list
Instagram letter writing / pizza party image list
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marzibirdart · 1 year
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:D anniversary art for me and some of my very good dnd friends! our characters are brothers ur honor theyre family
from left to right
Arata Satomi & Shiro Azumi @aviaviator
Jubilee Yukon @missmorior
Leonardo Layton is mine!
Camille Christie @fletchier
Timmy Onnet @spectralhaunts
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pnwpol · 4 years
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On January 13, Barry Shantz was pronounced dead at the scene at a home in Lytton after being shot by an officer shortly after 2 p.m.
The IIO has not identified him by name, but friends have told media outlets that Shantz is the dead man.
Kamloops This Week reported that court documents identified him as "Howard Schantz:, though he's also known as "Barry Schantz". He was a cofounder of a peer-support group called the B.C.–Yukon Association of Drug War Survivors.
On the Pivot Legal Society website, lawyer DJ Larkin credits Shantz and the association for proceeding with a charter challenge in 2015 on behalf of homeless Abbotsford residents being persecuted by the local government.
"The case is groundbreaking: never before has a group of homeless Canadians been able to challenge the constitutionality of their treatment and displacement by a city’s staff and police," Larkin wrote. "The Court would never have had the opportunity to hear this case were it not for the courage and determination of Pivot’s clients, Barry Shantz and the BC/Yukon Association of Drug War Survivors (DWS)."
In this case, Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson struck down a city bylaw banning homeless people from erecting temporary shelters without permits and for sleeping or staying in city parks overnight.
The city had sought damages against Shantz, who organized a tent city at Abbotsford's Jubilee Park, according to the ruling.
That came after the city had dumped chicken manure on another tent city known as the Happy Tree Avenue Camp.
Jan 27, 2020
Recommended reading: Abbotsford homeless lawsuit: What the decision means (Abbotsford (City) v. Shantz, 2015 BCSC 1909)
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directheat-stuff · 4 years
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First Nations Musicians and Native American Musicians There were no borders. Part Four.
·       Derek Miller.
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Derek Miller (born 29 October 1974 in Six Nations, Ontario) is an Aboriginal Canadian singer-songwriter.
He has received two Juno Awards.
He performed at the Closing Ceremonies of the
Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics with Eva Avila and Nikki Yanofsky
·       Eekwol.
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Eekwol (born Lindsay Knight) is a Muskoday First Nation rapper who is a solo female aboriginal hip hop artist."Her music offers  Natives, and Native Women in particular, a positive alternative to negative, violent stereotypes she is a graduate of the University of Regina and the University of Saskatchewan (M.A.).
Her master's thesis, completed through the Department of Native Studies, examines past and present Indigenous music and how both are interconnected.
·       Jerry Alfred.
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Jerry Alfred (born 1955 in Mayo, Yukon) is a Northern Tutchone musician living in Pelly Crossing Yukon, speaking the Northern Tutchone language. He received a 1996 Juno Award for his recording ETSI Shon (Grandfather Song) in the category Aboriginal Recording of the Year. His parents bought him his first guitar when he was seven, and he began learning in earnest in his teens, probably due to the influence of Bob Dylan.
·       John Angaiak.
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I’m Lost in the City (1971) is the sole vinyl LP offering from Yup’ik singer-songwriter, John Angaiak. Born in Nightmute Alaska in 1941 Angaiak began playing guitar at a young age, quickly learning the basics before serving in the U.S. Armed Forces.
Stationed in Vietnam and far away from home, Inspired by the program’s work and a friendship with music student Stephen Halbern, Angaiak recorded I’m Lost in the City, a project that helped to document and promote the previously oral Yup’ik language into a written one through a series of songs. Each side of the album, which showcases John’s intimate vocal and guitar style, shares a part of Angaiak’s culture and history: Side One is sung in Yup’ik, while the material on Side Two is delivered in English. Both are equally emotional, deeply personal and extremely affecting. Angaiak forged an astute outlook on his region, his country, and the world itself. Upon his return, Angaiak enrolled in the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, where he became active in the preservation of his native language as part of the school’s Eskimo Language Workshop.
·       Willy Mitchel.
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Willy Mitchell (born Percy Williams; 1953) is a Canadian First Nations musician. Mitchell recorded and toured mostly in the 1970s with his Desert River Band. He co-organized the 1980 Sweet Grass festival in Val-d'Or, Quebec, which gathered Inuit and First Nations musicians from across Canada. Mitchell was born Percy Williams in Malone, New York, in 1953, after his Algonquin and Mohawk parents were turned away from a hospital in Cornwall, Ontario. He was raised in Kitigan-Zibi in southern Quebec by his maternal grandmother. His grandmother gave him the nickname "Willy". In 1968, he started touring northern Quebec with his first band, called the Northern Lights Group. In January 1969, Mitchell was shot in the head by a police officer during an altercation over stolen Christmas lights. Mitchell was originally reported dead by the media. He used the money from a settlement resulting from the incident to buy a Fender Telecaster Thinline guitar. After recovering, he formed the Desert River Band, and began touring and recording. Mitchell wrote the song "Big Police Man" about the experience.
·       Morley Loon.
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Morley Loon was a Canadian First Nations musician, from Mistissini  Quebec. Loon played in several groups, including Red Cedar and Kashtin, but was mostly known for his solo work. He mostly wrote and performed in the Cree language, and was a prominent activist for First Nations issues. Morley Loon was the first performer in the Cree language to see significant radio airplay in Canada. His song "N'Doheeno" is featured on the 2014 compilation album Native North America, Vol. 1.
·       Tom Jackson.
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Thomas Dale Jackson, OC (born 27 October 1948), is a Canadian-born Métis actor and singer perhaps best known for the annual series of Christmas concerts, called the Huron Carole, which he created and starred in for 18 years. He was the Chancellor of Trent University from 2009 until 2013, and is also known for playing Billy Twofeathers on Shining Time Station.
·       George Leach.
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George Leach is a Canadian musician and actor, best known for his work as a lead singer and songwriter. Leach is a Stl'atl'imx from Lillooet, British Columbia.As an actor, Leach has appeared on “This is Wonderland”, “North of 60”, PSI Factor and” La Femme Nikita” he also appeared in the six-part miniseries” Into the West”, as Loved by the Buffalo. He released his first album” Just Where I'm At” in 2000. He subsequently performed at the National Aboriginal Achievement Awards, now the Indspire Awards. He won the Juno Award for Aboriginal Album of the Year in 2014 for his album Surrender.
·       Willie Dunn.
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William "Willie" Dunn (August 14, 1941 – August 5, 2013) a Canadian singer-songwriter, film director and politician. Born in Montreal, he was of mixed Mi'kmaq and Scottish/Irish background. Dunn often highlighted aboriginal issues in his work. Born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Dunn was a singer and acoustic guitarist. He released several full-length albums of recorded music including Willie Dunn (1971), The Pacific (1980) and Metallic (1999).Dunn also composed the song, "Son of the Sun", which Kashtin recorded on their second album Innu. In 2004 Dunn released the album Son of the Sun with sixteen songs (including three live versions).His songs "I Pity the Country", "Son of the Sun" and "Peruvian Dream" are featured on the 2014 compilation album Native North America, Vol. 1.
·       Joey Stylez.
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Joey Stylez (born Joseph Laplante) is an aboriginal Canadian hip hop artist based in Vancouver. A member of Moosomin First Nation, Stylez was moved to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan at an early age and raised by his single mother. Lorna Colleen Heiber (born c. 1960) is a Métis Catholic. She was formerly heavily involved in Métis politics, having served as a Métis leader including Acting President of the Métis Nation—Saskatchewan in 2004. Lorna is a recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal. Dale Gary LaPlante (born c. 1960) is Plains Cree and is active in First Nations and Canadian federal politics. He has worked hand in hand with Jean Chretien, Paul Martin and Phil Fontaine.Joseph Dale Marlin LaPlante (born May 14, 1981), better known for his stage name Joey Stylez is a First Nations Canadian singer-songwriter, rapper, hip-hop artist, First Nations activist, fashion designer. His break came when he was asked to open for 50 Cent in Saskatoon, only one night after his uncle Isho Hana was shot and killed in a drug related killing on Preston Avenue in 2004.
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rabbitcruiser · 5 years
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Parliament Hill, Ottawa (No. 3)
Ground was broken on December 20, 1859, and the first stones laid on April 16 of the following year, and Prince Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII), laid the cornerstone of the Centre Block on September 1. The construction of Parliament Hill became the largest project undertaken in North America to that date. However, workers hit bedrock earlier than expected, necessitating blasting in order to complete the foundations, which had also been altered by the architects in order to sit 5.25 metres (17 ft) deeper than originally planned. By early 1861, Public Works reported that $1,424,882.55 had been spent on the venture, leading to the site being closed in September and the unfinished structures covered in tarpaulins until 1863, when construction resumed following a commission of inquiry.
Two years later, the unfinished site hosted a celebration of Queen Victoria's birthday, further cementing the area's position as the central place for national outpouring. The site was still incomplete when three of the British North American colonies (now the provinces of Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick) entered Confederation in 1867, with Ottawa remaining the capital of the new country. Within four years Manitoba, British Columbia, Prince Edward Island, and the North-West Territories (now Alberta, Saskatchewan, Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut) were added and, along with the associated bureaucracy, the first three required representation be added in parliament. Thus, the offices of parliament spread to buildings beyond Parliament Hill even at that early date.
The British military gave a nine-pound naval cannon to the British army garrison stationed in Ottawa in 1854. It was purchased by the Canadian government in 1869 and fired on Parliament Hill for many years as the "Noonday Gun".
By 1876, the structures of Parliament Hill were finished, along with the surrounding fence and gates. However, the grounds had yet to be properly designed; Governor General the Marquess of Dufferin and Ava sent chief architect Thomas Scott to New York City to meet with Calvert Vaux and view Central Park. Vaux completed a layout for the landscape of Parliament Hill, including the present day driveways, terraces, and main lawn, while Scott created the more informal grounds to the sides of and behind the buildings. In 1901 they were the site of both mourning for, and celebration of, Queen Victoria, when the Queen's death was mourned in official ceremonies in January of that year, and when, in late September, Victoria's grandson, Prince George, Duke of Cornwall (later King George V), dedicated the large statue that stands on the hill in the late queen's honour.
Fire destroyed the Centre Block on February 3, 1916. Despite the ongoing war, the original cornerstone was re-laid by Governor General Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, on September 1, 1916; exactly fifty-six years after his brother, the future King Edward VII, had first set it. Eleven years later, the new tower was completed and dedicated as the Peace Tower, in commemoration of the Canadians who had lost their lives during the First World War.
Thereafter, The Hill hosted a number of significant events in Canadian history, including the first visit of the reigning Canadian sovereign—King George VI, with his consort, Queen Elizabeth—to his parliament, on May 19, 1939. VE Day was marked with a huge celebration on May 8, 1945, the first raising of the country's new national flag took place on February 15, 1965, the centennial of Confederation was celebrated on July 1, 1967, and the Silver Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II was marked on October 18, 1977. The Queen was back on Parliament Hill on April 17, 1982, to issue a royal proclamation of the enactment of the Constitution Act that year.
In April 1989, a Greyhound Lines bus with 11 passengers on board travelling to New York City from Montreal was hijacked by an armed man and driven onto the lawn in front of the Centre Block. A standoff with police ensued and lasted eight hours; though three shots were fired, there were no injuries. After a second incident in September 1996 where an individual forcibly drove his car into the Centre Block doors and proceeded to attack RCMP officers standing guard, it was decided in the interests of national security that Parliament Hill, which up to that time had been open to limited public traffic on the lower lawn, would be restricted to government and media vehicles only.
Crowds marked the beginning of the third millennium with a large ceremony on the quadrangle and the "largest single vigil" ever seen in the nation's capital took place in 2001, when 100,000 people gathered on the main lawn to honour the victims of the September 11 attacks on the United States that year. The following year, Queen Elizabeth II's Golden Jubilee was marked on October 13, as was her Diamond Jubilee on February 6 (Accession Day) 2012.
On October 22, 2014, several shooting incidents occurred around Parliament Hill. A gunman, after fatally shooting a Canadian Army soldier mounting the ceremonial guard at the National War Memorial, moved to the Centre Block of the parliament buildings. There, he was killed in a shootout with RCMP officers and the Sergeant-At-Arms, Kevin Vickers. The gunman also injured one House of Commons constable, who was shot in the foot.
Source: Wikipedia
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wingedarrows · 1 year
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After reuniting four out of the five Storybook Group, Jubilee was caught up to speed with what happening to Keris and was happy to help join Keris, Dakota and Phillip in raiding a most likely evil hospital. However, they still needed to get their last member Aria in the loop and all of them need to start preparing for the heist.
Angst rating: medium, talks of possession
Aria played by @morskijez00 Dakota and Phillip played by @cardinalart Jubilee Yukon played by Noodle Keris and Alex played by me
Following this game is a text rp where Alex and Jubilee have a late night talk, making up for when Jubilee had spooked them in Wanna Go Raid a Hospital?
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Thinking About Suicide? Find Local Crisis Centres Across Canada.
British Columbia:
Crisis Centres Serving British Columbia
If you are in crisis now please call any of the crisis line numbers listed below or dial the local emergency telephone number (often 911) in your area.
You can also call if you are not in crisis, seeking additional information. If you come across information in this page which is incorrect, please contact us so we can update it.
Crisis Line Association of BC
Association representing 14 crisis lines throughout the province of in BC
Contact: Treasurer Elizabeth Newcombe
Business: 250-753-2495
Fax: 250-753-2475
website: http://www.crisislines.bc.ca
Canadian Mental Health Association Crisis Line
Serving the entire east Kootenay region, from Golden to the Alberta and USA borders
Crisis 24 Hour: 1-888-353-2273
39-13th Avenue South, Cranbrook, BC V1C 3H1
Business: 250-426-7477
Fax: 250-426-2134
People in Need Crisis Line (CMHA Vernon)
Crisis 24 Hour: 1-888-353-2273
#3100 – 28th Avenue , Vernon, BC V1T 1W3
Business: 250-545-8074
Fax: 250-558-9958
Kelowna Crisis Line
Serves Kelowna, Westbank, Winfield, Lakecountry
Crisis 24 Hour: 1-888-353-2273
Kelowna Community Resources, 255 Lawrence Ave, Kelowna, BC V1Y 6L2
Business: 250-763-8008
Fax: 250-763-6282
website: http://www.kcr.ca
Crisis Prevention, Intervention & Information Centre for Northern BC
Serves all of Northern BC from the Alberta border to Haida Gwaii and from Quesnel to the Yukon border
24/7 Crisis Line: 250-563-1214 or 1-888-562-1214
310 Mental Health: 310-6789
BC Wide Line: 1-800-Suicide (1-800-784-2433)
Youth Line, 4-10 pm, 7 days a week: 250-564-8336 or 1-888-564-8336
Youth Crisis Texting, 4-10pm daily: 250-564-8336
Youth Online Chat, 4-10 pm daily: www.northernyouthonline.ca
5th Floor, 1600-3rd Ave., Prince George, BC V2L 3G6
Business: 250-564-5736
Fax: 250-563-0815 email: [email protected]
website: www.crisis-centre.ca
Crisis & Counselling Program (Williams Lake)
Jubilee Care/CMHA
Crisis 24 Hour: 1-888-353-2273
51 – 4th Avenue, Williams Lake, BC V2G 1J6
Business: 250-398-8220
Fax: 250-392-4456
VictimLINK (Information Services Vancouver)
Serving British Columbia and the Yukon
202-3102 Main Street, Vancouver, BC V5T 3G7
Business: (604) 875-6431
Fax: (604) 660-9415
website: http://www.victimlinkbc.ca
S.A.F.E.R. (Suicide Attempt Follow-up, Education, & Research
Provides counselling for individuals who are in a suicidal crisis, have made a suicide attempt, or are survivors of a suicide death.
Intake Worker, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm,
Monday to Friday: 604-675-3985
#301-1669 East Broadway, Vancouver, BC V5N1V9
Business: 604-675-3985
Fax: 604-879-7463
Vancouver Island Crisis Society
Serving Vancouver Island 24/7
1-888-494-3888
P.O. Box 1118, Nanaimo, BC V9R 6E7
Business: 250-753-2495
Fax: 250-753-2475
website: http://www.vicrisis.ca
Vancouver Child and Youth Mental Health Referral
For suicidal children and youth (18 & under) at risk to suicide.
Intake: 604-709-4111
Vancouver, BC
Province-Wide British Columbia, BC
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bronzecats · 1 month
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Original version.
B.C. EVENTS:
May 12th: Kamloops; Haus of Misfit, 275 Tranquille Rd, 1:00-3:00PM. (Letter writing)
13th: Fernie; Fernie Seniors Drop-In Centre, 572 3rd Avenue, 6:00PM. (Letter writing and Potluck)
17th: Vancouver; šxʷƛ̓ənəq Xwtl'e7énḵ Square - Vancouver Art Gallery North Plaza, 750 Hornby St, 5:30PM. (Rally)
19th, Sunday: Abbotsford; Jubilee Park, 5:00PM. (Rally)
ALBERTA EVENTS:
May 11th, Saturday: Fort McMurray; Jubilee Plaza, 9909 Franklin Ave, 12:00PM. (Rally)
12th, Sunday: Red Deer; Red Deer City Hall, 4914 48 Ave, 1:00PM. (Rally)
17th, Friday: Calgary; Central Memorial Park, 1221 2 St SW, 5:30PM. (Rally)
17th: Edmonton; Wilbert McIntyre Park, 8331 104 St NW, 6:00PM. (Rally)
SASKATCHEWAN EVENTS:
May 18th: Saskatoon; Grovenor Park United Church, 407 Cumberland Ave S, 6:00PM. (Art event)
17th: Saskatoon; Vimy Memorial Park, 500 Spadina Crescent E, 5:30PM. (Rally)
17th: Regina; Legislative Grounds, 2405 Legislative Dr, 6:30PM. (Rally)
MANITOBA EVENTS:
May 11th: Morden; Finer Spirit, 353 Thornhill St, 3:00PM. (Letter writing)
13th: Winnipeg; Rainbow Resource Centre, 545 Broadway, 6:30-8:30PM. (Letter writing)
16th: Carman; Paul's Place, 20 1 Ave SW, 7:00-9:00PM. (Letter writing)
19th: Winnipeg; Manitoba Legislature, 450 Broadway, 12:00PM. (Rally)
ONTARIO EVENTS:
May 11th: Hamilton; Redchurch Cafe, 68 King Street E, 2:00PM. (Letter writing)
11th: Kitchener; Willow River Park, 2:00PM.
11th: Orillia, Orillia Public Library, 36 Mississaga St W, 9:00AM-2:00PM. (Letter writing)
11th: Ottawa; Ten Oaks Project, 400 Cooper Street, suite 9004, 12:00-4:00PM. (Letter writing and donuts)
13th: Deep River; Deep River Public Library, 55 Ridge Rd, 5:00PM. (Letter writing)
13th: London; Aeolian Hall, 795 Dundas St. E, 5:30PM. (Letter writing)
14th: Kanata; Centre33, 33 Leacock Dr, 4:00-7:00PM, youth event (ages 12-17). (Letter writing and pizza)
14th: Killaloe; North Street Community Centre, 12 North St, 5:00PM. (Letter writing)
14th: St. Catherines; Quest Community Health Centre, 145 Queenston Street, 5:30-8:30PM. (Letter writing)
14th: Ottawa; 312 Parkdale Ave, 6:00PM. (Letter writing)
14th, Tuesday: Thunder Bay; Hillcrest Park 6:00PM. (Rally)
15th: Barrie; UPlift Black, 12 Dunlop St E, 6:00-7:30PM. (Letter writing)
15th: Chatham; CK Gay Pride Association, 48 Centre St, 5:00-6:30PM. (Letter writing)
15th: Peterborough; Trinity Community Centre, 360 Reid St, 12:00-3:00PM. (Letter writing)
16th: Midland; Midland Public Library, 4:30PM. (Letter writing)
16th: Ottawa; Impact Hub, 123 Slater Street, 2:00PM. (Letter writing)
16th: Toronto; Barbara Hall Park, 519 Church St, 11:30AM. (Rally)
17th, Friday: Barrie; City Hall, 70 Collier St, 6:00PM. (Rally)
17th: Cornwall; 167 Pitt St, 5:30PM. (Rally)
17th: Essex; St. Paul's Anglican Church, 92 St. Paul St, 6:00-8:00PM. (Letter writing and pizza)
17th: Hamilton; City Hall, 71 Main St W, 6:00PM. (Rally)
17th: Kitchener; City Hall, 200 King St W, 6:00PM. (Rally)
17th: London; City Hall, 300 Dufferin Ave, 6:00PM. (Rally)
17th: Sarnia; City Hall, 255 Christina St N, 1:00PM. (Rally)
17th: Sault Ste Marie; City Hall, 99 Foster Dr, 11:30AM. (Rally)
17th: Ottawa; Confederation Park, Elgin St, 5:30PM. (Rally)
22nd: Renfrew; 161 Raglan St. South, 7:00PM. (Letter writing, fashion and makeup event, and pizza)
QUEBEC EVENTS:
May 15th: Lachute; CDC Lachute, 57, rue Harriet, 12:30PM. (Letter writing event)
NEW BRUNSWICK EVENTS:
May 14th: Saint John; Chroma NB, 223 Germain St, 4:00-6:30PM, (use Queen St side door) (Letter writing and pizza)
17th: Saint John; City Hall, 15 Market Square, 12:30PM. (Rally, flag raising)
18th, Saturday: Fredericton; Legislative Grounds, 706 Queen Street, 1:00PM. (Rally)
P.E.I. EVENTS:
May 17th: Charlottetown; PEI Legislative Assembly, 165 Richmond St, 12:00PM. (Rally)
NFLD EVENTS:
May 13th: Grand Falls-Windsor; Harmsworth Public Library, 1 Cromer Avenue, 6:30PM.
YUKON EVENTS:
16th: Whitehorse; The Cache, 4230 4 Ave, 2:00-7:00PM. (Letter writing)
NUNAVUT EVENTS:
May 16th, Thursday: Iqaluit; Four Corners, 922 Niaqunngusiariaq St, 5:00PM. (Letter writing)
Reference links:
About the Rainbow Week of Action.
Website letter writing events list (does not include all events)
General events website list (does not include all events)
Instagram general events image list
Instagram letter writing / pizza party image list
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wingedarrows · 2 years
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Some more titlecards! I’d have thought there’d be more given that I haven’t posted any in eight months but I guess the others were all done by different people. This past year has had a lot of keris stuff in it!
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wingedarrows · 1 year
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PLEASE MIND THE CONTENT WARNINGS
It's been a long time coming. The storybook crew has done all they can to prepare for this hospital raid, to discover the circumstances behind Keris's possession, to figure out if there's any way to fix it, or at least to see if they can stop it from happening to others. Tensions are rising high. It's deep into the night now, and they're ready, as much as they can be, to break in.
Angst rating: medium to high CWs: medical malpractice, experimentation on children, possession, mentions of death, potential panic attacks depending on how the rolls go
DMed by me Aria Marionette played by @morskijez00 Dakota and Phillip played by @cardinalart Jubilee Yukon played by Noodle Keris and Alex Hope played by me
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wingedarrows · 1 year
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Dakota and Keris have begun to put together a plan to track down answers surrounding a certain children’s hospital from the latter’s past, and that means reuniting with an ally from their past adventure with a sentient storybook! Jubilee Yukon, the gambler and apparently dead man walking, is not a hard man to find. Seems the only real challenge will be getting his answer to their question- Wanna Go Raid A Hospital?
Angst rating: medium, discussion of possession and past PC death
Jubilee Yukon played by Noodle Dakota and Phillip played by @cardinalart Keris/Alex played by me
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wingedarrows · 1 year
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My drawing for @spectralhaunts for the annual Animas Gift Exchange! Hope you had a good Animas!
Featuring Grim Tome and Jubilee Yukon from the last scene in One (+1) Man Show
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