Wednesday, 11 March 2026

London Bicentennial (Snippet 4)

 Disaster in London -1898


Source: Daily Capital Journal, Jan. 4, 1898 (Oregon). The information below is found on Facebook, see "Vintage London, Ontario":
   "On election night in 1898, a major disaster happened at the old City Hall on the west side of Richmond St, between Dundas & King.
  A large crowd assembled on the second floor to cheer on London's new mayor-elect, Dr. John Wilson. By 9pm that evening the room was at capacity. Around 10pm a loud crack was heard as a wood support beam under the room snapped. A portion of the floor collapsed, taking with it a couple of hundred people - along with a 500 lb safe. At least 23 people were killed and 150 people were seriously injured. Many prominent Londoners were among the people killed. Various reasons were given for the collapse including blaming the crowd & poor building construction techniques."
photo source - Western Archives The Leonard Family Fonds Box X1920

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

London's Bicentennial (Snippet 3)

  If one goes searching for recent news about London, Ontario, the stories and reports often involve Western University and the city's robust STEM and health sciences sectors. They are usually positive. Here are a couple examples from this month.

"Jaundice; New Jaundice Research from Western University Discussed (Open-source light calibration system for hyperbilirubinemia phototherapy..."

Biotech Week, 4 March 2026.

Press Release: "Aduro Clean Technologies Announces Participation in the 38th Annual ROTH Conference"

Dow Jones Newswires, 14:00, 5 March 2026.

"Life Sciences; University of Western Ontario Researchers Discuss Findings in Life Sciences (Better data for better predictions: data..."

Life Science Weekly, 3 March 2026.


Canada Health Journal Panned - 1870 While searching for snippets for London's Bicentennial, this put-down was noticed. It is my duty to report the bad along with the good. This very harsh review is from the Medical and Surgical Reporter in the year of 1870.


Western Men's Squash Wrap-up

 The Hoehn Cup
   Back in February in "Squashing It" I noted that the squash team at Western won the OAU Championship again. I also mentioned that the team would probably be competing for the Hoehn Cup at the College Squash Association Divisional Championships. They did and perhaps they didn't do as well as expected. Although Western had been ranked higher, they lost to Franklin & Marshall. The picture and the results are provided by the victor.



#19 Franklin & Marshall 6, #18 Western Ontario 3
Kyle Broadhurst (F&M) over Daniel Deverill (Western); 3-0 (11-9, 11-9, 11-5)
Sharan Punjabi (F&M) over Josh Kay (Western); 3-0 (11-6, 11-7, 11-4)
Aditya Chandani (F&M) over Rohan Paliwal (Western); 3-2 (11-9, 11-7, 10-12, 5-11, 16-14)
William Znidarec (Western) over Toby Clegg-Petri (F&M); 3-1 (11-6, 4-11, 11-8, 12-10)
Noah Katzer (F&M) over Liam McKay (Western); 3-0 (11-3, 11-8, 12-10)
Jamie Stait (F&M) over Rio Schafer (Western); 3-2 (9-11, 8-11, 11-5, 11-8, 11-5)
Akshat Agarwal (F&M) over Arin Khot (Western); 3-1 (12-10, 13-15, 11-6, 11-7)
Dylan Erb (Western) over Dean Vahlsing (F&M); 3-0 (11-9, 12-10, 13-11)
Michael Knapp (Western) over Teerth Jilka (F&M); 3-0 (12-10, 11-6, 11-5)

  As you can see, there were a lot of good games. The teams were closely matched and Western had beaten Franklin & Marshall earlier in February. Here are the results of that match, taken again from the website of Franklin & Marshall.

 LANCASTER, Pa. – The No. 18 Franklin & Marshall men's squash team (8-6) was held off in a 5-4 loss to No. 19 Western Ontario (3-6) Sunday morning in F&M's first match on the Mayser Center Squash Courts since November 23. Tied at 4-4, the Mustangs earned a 3-2 victory in the No. 8 match to secure the victory over the Diplomats.
 
#19 Western Ontario 5, #18 Franklin & Marshall 4
Daniel Deverill (Western) over Sharan Punjabi (F&M); 3-1 (11-8, 12-10, 9-11, 11-8)
Kyle Broadhurst (F&M) over Rohan Paliwal (Western); 3-0 (11-4, 11-3, 11-3)
Aditya Chandani (F&M) over William Znidarec (Western); 3-1 (11-3, 13-11, 6-11, 11-4)
Toby Clegg-Petri (F&M) over Liam McKay (Western); 3-2 (4-11, 11-8, 5-11, 11-1, 11-9)
Rio Schafer (Western) over Noah Katzer (F&M); 3-0 (12-10, 11-8, 11-9)
Arin Khot (Western) over Jamie Stait (F&M); 3-2 (5-11, 11-2, 11-9, 4-11, 11-6)
Akshat Agarwal (F&M) over Dylan Erb (Western); 3-2 (9-11, 7-11, 12-10, 11-9, 11-5)
Eesa Huq (Western) over Dean Vahlsing (F&M); 3-2 (12-10, 11-8, 9-11, 5-11, 11-4)
Michael Knapp (Western) over Teerth Jilka (F&M); 3-0 (11-3, 11-3, 11-7)
Lucas Quon (Western) over Eeshan Sawant (F&M); 3-1 (12-10, 8-11, 11-8, 11-8) (Exhibition)
   The Hoehn Cup was won by MIT after a tight match against Colby. Colby had defeated Western in the quarterfinals. In last year's quarters, Western defeated Colby, 7-2. It is too bad the final was not between Western and Colby since it would have been the MUSTANGS VS THE MULES. 

   For a lengthy account of UWO/Western participation in the United States see:
MM, March 15, 2024. 

Note: I am retired from Western where I attempted to play squash. I followed the teams back then and even sold some squash racquets for Coach Fairs to help support the teams financially. The squash tradition at Western is worth noting and supporting. The information supplied in these squash-related posts is gathered by me and I am solely responsible for the content and any errors that may be found. I have never met Coach Hanebury or any of the team members, but wish them well.

Monday, 9 March 2026

London's Bicentennial (Snippet 2)

For International Women's Day

Early Feminism in London, Ontario - 1890
    An example is found in The Woman's Tribune, which is suitably situated in Beatrice, Nebraska. See the issue for Nov.8,1890. Under the heading "New Women's Papers", it notes "that new periodicals of, for and by women are springing up on every hand." 



   Ms. Wetherald is accomplished enough to have her own Wikipedia entry, from which the photograph was taken. A cursory search quickly found this: "Wives and Daughters," Isabel Campbell, The Mirror, Vol.1, No.1. 
   "Wives and Daughters" was published in London, Ontario as a monthly supplement to the London Advertiser between 1890 and 1892. Subscribers were expected to pay twenty-five cents per annum to receive it in the first year and fifty cents annually afterwards. Why and exactly when the publication folded is not known. The last known issue is Volume III, No. 1 in October of 1892 and there is no mention of the publication’s demise in it or in the London Advertiser at this time."
  The complete article is available online or in the Special Collections in the D.B. Weldon Library. It is published by the History Department at Western. 

Sunday, 8 March 2026

Operation Epic Fury

 

Basic Numbers
   Given the rather operatic title of this post and the actual Operation, it will seem odd to do a bit of elementary accounting. It also may seem a bit crass to focus on the money being spent, rather than the lives being lost. But, it will be pointed out below that the thousands of technicolour explosions seen on our TV screens are expensive to produce and would strain even the budget of Paramount Skydance and the Ellisons. 
   I am as bad at accounting as I am most other subjects and am only doing this because I happened upon an article based on a list, provided by the US Central Command, of  "assets" being used to support Operation Epic Fury. The citation follows and I will present here, just a list of some of the "assets" which are well described in it: "
Warships, Explosive Drones and Stealth Bombers: The High-tech Weapons and Hardware the US is Using to Attack Iran," Brad Lendon, CNN, Mar.2, 2026.
B-2 stealth bombers
LUCAS one-way drones

US warships
Patriot and THAAD missile defense systems:
Fighter jets
EA-18G Electronic Attack Aircraft
Airborne Early Warning and Control Aircraft (AWACS):
Airborne Communication Relay aircraft
P-8A Maritime Patrol Aircraft:
RC-135 Reconnaissance Aircraft:
MQ-9 Reapers:
M-142 HIMARS
Refueling assets
Cargo aircraft

   There are other assets being used and there are support assets needed for support for the assets, which also need support.
   One is reminded of Rumsfeld's remark, "because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns—the ones we don't know we don't know."
It was made back when Iraq was the issue and the Department of War operated under the dainty name of the Department of Defense.

   Although the costs of employing and maintaining the assets are not provided in the article mentioned, I did find a piece, from which we can know some of the costs involved. It is:
" Aircraft Carriers and Stealth Bombers are Expensive to Use," Ryan Cooper, The American Prospect, March 3, 2026.

   Let's just look at the B-2s. The first article provides
these data relating to the last time the U.S. totally destroyed the Iranian nuclear bases.

   "The bat-winged bombers, priced at more than a billion dollars each, are the most potent platform in the US Air Force. Powered by four jet engines, the B-2 can carry conventional or nuclear weapons, with intercontinental range and aerial refueling. Piloted by a crew of two, the B-2s usually fly from their home at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, as they did last year when they struck Iranian nuclear complexes in a 34-hour round-trip mission. That mission last June was undertaken by seven of the 19 B-2s in the fleet, with others used for a feint trip to Hawaii. They used the biggest of the US conventional bombs – the 30,000-pound massive ordnance penetrator – to attack three Iranian nuclear sites." The Cooper piece supplies the numbers US taxpayers will be interested in, especially those taxpayers who are "America Firsters: "
CNN compiled a partial list of the ships and planes being used in the bombing campaign. They include B-2 bombers (about $88,000 per hour to operate), F-15 fighters ($25,000 per hour), F-16 fighters ($14,000 per hour), F-22 fighters ($56,000 per hour), F-35 fighters ($17,000 per hour), F-18 fighters ($25,000 per hour), E/A-18G electronic warfare planes ($20,000 per hour), P-8A Poseidon reconnaissance planes ($9,000 per hour), plus several other manned planes, and a large number of drones, all using up an untold amount of fuel and ordnance. All this air power is operating from two full-scale carrier strike groups, each of which costs something like $8 million per day to operate. The military is also chewing through its supply of Patriot ($4 million per shot) and THAAD ($13 million per shot) missile interceptors so fast that it is reportedly considering stripping South Korea of some of its missile defense batteries." The Missouri to Iran round-trip flight for one B-2 is about 34 hours at $88,000 per hour. President Trump and many MAGAS don't trust CNN, the source for some of these numbers, but that may change now that it is owned by the Ellisons. I am sure they have more faith in the Wall Street Journal, but it also reports that all this locking and loading is not cheap:

"Repositioning U.S. military forces to the Middle East before U.S. and Israeli strikes began on Saturday is estimated to have cost taxpayers about $630 million, according to Elaine McCusker, a top budget official at the Pentagon during the first Trump administration who is now a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute think tank. Moving more than a dozen ships and flying more than 100 aircraft to the region accounts for the bulk of cost, McCusker said. It's likely that these costs incurred before the strikes started could be absorbed by the Pentagon's $839 billion budget appropriation for fiscal 2026, she said.Now that strikes have begun, those costs will increase to account for warplane sorties, aerial refueling, and replacement of the munitions used, McCusker said."

The Bonus: "Friendly Fire" It was also the Wall Street Journal that reported that the three jets shot down by the Kuwaitis cost more than $30 million each. "Kuwaiti Jet Fighter Mistakenly "Downed U.S. F-15s, Initial Reports Say...", by Marcus Weisgerber, Lara Seligman, WSJ, March 4, 2026 and "How Much Does an F-15 Jet Fighter Cost?", Georgi Kantchev, WSJ, March 2, 2026: "The three U.S. F-15 jet fighters mistakenly shot down in Kuwait come at a steep price. The F-15E Strike Eagle model, which the U.S. said was involved in the incident, costs $31.1 million, according to a U.S. Air Force fact sheet. That price uses 1998 constant dollars, meaning its value would be higher in today's money. The F-15E Strike Eagle is a fighter introduced in the 1980s and designed to perform air-to-air and air-to-ground missions. Newer models of the F-15 aircraft cost close to $100 million.

Source:
  The graphic at the top is from: the Anadolu Agency, about which I know nothing:
"US Offensive on Iran Burned Through an Estimated $779M On First Day," Efe Ozkan, AA, 04/03/2026. 
  For those of you suspicious about some of the sources above, here is a document from the US government, back before the wimpy Department of Defense was renamed. 
SUBJECT: Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 Department of Defense (DoD) Fixed Wing and Helicopter Reimbursement Rates effective October 1, 2024. 
The attached FY 2025 DoD fixed wing and helicopter reimbursement rates are now available on the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) (OUSD(C)) website:

 


Saturday, 7 March 2026

London's Bicentennial (1826-2026)

    This year, London has been around officially for 200 of them. The following information about the events planned is from this website, where you can learn more: Celebrating 200 Years: London's Bicentennial: 
   "In 2026, London is officially marking 200 years since its founding in 1826. This timing follows historical precedent: in 1926, London celebrated its Centennial, and the London & Middlesex Historical Society confirms that 1826 is recognized as the year London was formally established. As we prepare for this once-in-a-generation celebration, 2026 is the year we come together to honour London’s history, growth, and future."

The website says to "get involved", so I will.  During the year, I will attempt to present frequent posts about London. They will be short snippets and here is the first one.



  The photograph is found in the London Public Library and is part of the London Room Digital Collections. Here is some of the description provided:
    "Two similar side by side black and white photographs mounted on card, showing a standing woman in profile and three young girls seated at the water's edge looking towards three people in row boats and four people wading in the Thames River at the Forks. On the opposite bank two riverboats are tied to the dock. In the right background is the courthouse and jail. In the left background notice the tower for the Ontario White Sulphur Springs and Mineral Baths. Printed on the back of the card: [Barron's Artistic Series of Canadian Views; London, Springbank, and Vicinity.] Also handwritten: [Showing Thames R. & Jail Turrets.] ca. 1880s 
[I only took one side of the photo which is probably from a stereoscope.]


Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Slow-Speed Rail

     For a long time there has been talk about developing a high-speed rail network across Canada.The volume of the discussions has increased along with the troubles with our next-door neighbour. The decrease in airline alternatives and the even more dramatic decrease in the quality of the services they provide have caused people to wish for other options. At least, some argue, we should be able to run a Choo Choo through the Golden Horseshoe.
   Well, recently the government announced that a high-speed rail line would be constructed, but only part of the way across the country. More specifically, between Montreal and Ottawa. After approval (which may take a while) the construction is projected to start around 2029. Completion would likely be at some point in the year 2037. This would be good news for your grandchildren if they are very young.

Lowering Expectations

   A solution might be to just put the trains back where they once were. Credit for this forward thinking should be given to Mr. Taras Grescoe who wrote this article in The Globe and Mail: "Across Canada, There is a Grassroots Clamouring for the Return of Railway Lines That 0nce Provided a Reliable and Affordable Alternative to Cars and Planes," Jan. 30, 2026. The clamour has already been reduced to a degree by this development:
   "One evening at half past six, some time in 2026, a minor miracle is scheduled to occur in Toronto. For the first time in 14 years, a passenger train headed for the eastern shores of Ontario’s Lake Nipissing and points north will roll out of Union Station. If all goes well, eight hours and 40 minutes later, passengers in three Venture cars, pulled by a Siemens Charger locomotive in a fresh livery of brilliant blue and yellow, will arrive at a newly built station in Timmins, more than 700 kilometres north of downtown Toronto.
   The inaugural run of the Northlander – the precise date this year is still to be determined – will mark the return of Ontario Northland passenger rail service to a storied line that links the Great Lakes to the frigid waters of James Bay."

   It is suggested that perhaps the focus be shifted.
   "These days, the media is focused on the proposed 1,000-kilometre Alto high-speed rail line, the first segment of which will link Montreal and Ottawa. The corridor between Quebec City and Toronto is home to nearly half the country’s population.    But 6.6 million Canadians live in remote, rural, and northern communities, many of which have been petitioning for better public transportation. For them, the long-overdue revival of the Northlander and other passenger trains will dramatically change their lives for the better."


Examples of local approaches are offered from across the country:
Quebec:
   "In 2013, VIA Rail ended service east of Matapédia on the southern shore of the Gaspé peninsula. While the 325-kilometre ride to the town of Gaspé, one of the country’s most scenic rail routes, was loved by tourists, it is local residents who have campaigned hardest for its return. Last October, as townspeople gathered at abandoned stations along the route, Alexis Deschênes led a group of his fellow Bloc Québécois MPs on a 15-hour trip from Ottawa to Matapédia to make the case for the restoration of service."
Alberta:
   "Alberta, as always, is a special case. Seventy per cent of the province’s population lives along the 312-kilometre corridor between Edmonton and Calgary, but train service there ended with the last run of VIA Rail’s Dayliner train in 1985. Transcontinental trains used to call at Calgary and Banff, but VIA Rail’s Canadian now follows the northern route through Edmonton and Jasper. Last year, a proposal was submitted to the Major Projects Office – which is overseeing the Alto project – to link the Calgary airport to Banff with a hydrogen-powered train. The project is the brainchild of banker-turned-oil tycoon Adam Waterous, the chair of crude oil producer Strathcona Resources."
British Columbia:
   "
On the other side of the country, the last passenger train ran on Vancouver Island in 2011, over the tracks of the old Esquimalt & Nanaimo Railway, a line founded by coal baron Robert Dunsmuir.
   The Island Corridor Foundation, which is jointly owned by 14 First Nations and five regional districts, is campaigning to restore trains to the 289-kilometre corridor from Victoria to Courtenay, which parallels the chronically congested highways up the island’s east coast. (The right-of-way is intact, except for a kilometre-long stretch through the territory of the Snaw-Naw-As First Nation, where the tracks have been torn up to make way for a residential development.)"

News From Elsewhere   
   Grescoe, in the G&M piece, notes that in other countries, including India, our new friend, progress is being made.
   "If we’re serious about a passenger rail revival, we need look no farther than India, which has electrified 100 per cent of its rail network in the last decade. And remoteness and long distances needn’t be an obstacle: Russia powers its Trans-Siberian train – through more than 9,000 kilometres of tundra, taiga and boreal forest – entirely with electricity drawn from overhead wires."



   South of here, in the country that used to be a friend, rail travel is being improved with more and newer trains, if not high-speed ones. If you go to the
Amtrak website you will find the picture above, a video and much more. Reporters from the NYT visited the Siemen's plant near Sacramento where the Airo is made and reported back:
   "Airo trains aren’t high speed — with an upper limit of 125 miles per hour, they’re not any faster than those they’ll supplant. But the new rail cars feature sleek interiors, grab-and-go food options and accessible designs for people with disabilities. Passengers will start to see Airo trains this summer on the Cascades route, in the Pacific Northwest, followed by more than a dozen East Coast routes beginning next year, including the Northeast Regional, the Carolinian, the Pennsylvanian and the Vermonter.
  Amtrak has ordered 83 Airo trains for a total of $8 billion, the largest fleet replacement since the company was founded in 1971. The trains will be built over the next several years at the Sacramento plant, which also makes light-rail and intercity trains for other customers, and at another factory in North Carolina.
   “We’re jumping about 50 years into the future,” said Derek Maier, a senior director of Amtrak’s Airo program. “It’s a more open experience. It’s better lit. It’s newer materials.”
  It is surprising that the President has not been bragging about this, but he is undoubtedly saving his praise for the new plane he is about to receive from the Qataris. 

Luxurious Train Travel
   
If, like the President, you are a billionaire, but don't have your own plane or hate to fly, then you can rent a private rail car. If you are a billionaire, you will know how to do that, or have someone do it for you. If you just want a very nice train, there are many and many places to go. For example:
Great Britain:
The Britannic Explorer
   "Launched in the summer of 2025 by Belmond — the LVMH-owned company behind the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express — the Britannic Explorer allows passengers to take in the coastal charms of Cornwall, the quaint villages and dramatic valleys of Wales and the postcard-perfect landscapes of the Lake District."
U.S. 
Canyon Spirit
   "Canyon Spirit’s routes between Denver and Salt Lake City or Moab, Utah, are too gorgeous to sleep through. The solution: Guests spend nights in comfortable hotels and days in the train’s glass-domed coaches, enjoying the sights of Ruby Canyon, Mount Garfield and the Continental Divide."

And Even in Canada:
Rocky Mountaineer
  Just go to the website from which the picture is taken. There are other routes.

For more examples see: 
"Are Trains Now the Most Luxurious Way to Travel?: From Angola to Turkmenistan, Sumptuously Outfitted Railroad Cars are Taking Passengers on Over-the-top Journeys Back in Time," Matthew Kronsberg, NYT, Jan.6, 2026.

About the Hand-Car Painting
   
The painting was done back when there were better rail options in Canada. Here is the caption:
DESCRIPTION
"One of the most interesting expeditions which I have ever made in my life was a trip on a hand-car," Hölzlhuber wrote. Julius Movius, the General Agent for all the railroads in British America, asked Hölzlhuber to sketch some of the stations near the Great Western Railroad from Hamilton to Quebec along the St. Lawrence River. In America and Canada the interiors of passenger cars were painted with the most interesting aspects of the country and towns through which they journeyed. Thus, artists in the countryside "are always busy." Two negroes were ordered to drive the hand-car, and a higher official, Mr. Muir, accompanied him. Here the hand-car labors across a bridge over a river while two ships ply the lake in the background. This hand-car was driven by turning a large crank rather than pump handles. Taken from Hölzlhuber's description of the scene, translated by Vera Kroner."
  The artist: Franz Hölzlhuber. It is from the Wisconsin Historical Society.

Post Script: The Trans-Canada Highway
 
It is also difficult to even drive across the country. This is a piece by the Editorial Board of the G&M:
"Upgrade the Trans-Canada at all Due Speed,", Mar. 4, 2026.
   "For decades, northern Ontario residents have feared driving on their local stretches of the Trans-Canada Highway, the hazard-filled lifeline that connects their communities.
   And for decades, their requests for the provincial and federal governments to fund upgrades have been (mostly) ignored. But Ottawa’s new spending commitments for defence-related infrastructure could be the key to making much needed improvements on these roads – an essential link for this country.
    Highway 11 and Highway 17 – both parts of the Trans-Canada Highway system – are the only east-west road links connecting the country through northern Ontario. The 1,000 kilometre section of Highway 11 that runs between North Bay and Nipigon is mostly two lanes, and long stretches of both roads have no passing lanes, medians or roadside stops.....
   The impacts aren’t only local. The highway closings cut the country in half, and the 8,400 commercial trucks that pass both routes each day (including $200-million of goods travelling on Highway 11) are either delayed or detour through the U.S....
   A focus from Ottawa would be a catalyst, however: the long overdue upgrade of the Trans-Canada needs to proceed with all due speed.