FACTOID # 142: Americans consume the sixth-most spirits, the eighth-most beer and the 18th-most wine. They’re also likely to view heavy drinkers as undesirable neighbors.
 
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Encyclopedia > Don Scott

Donald Arthur Scott (born August 5, 1948) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He was a member of the Manitoba legislature from 1981 to 1988, representing the New Democratic Party of Manitoba.


Scott was raised in Liverpool, Nova Scotia, and attended a number of higher-learning institutions, including St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, the University of Winnipeg and the University of Manitoba. He worked as a financial-government analyst, and at one stage worked for the Auditor General of Canada. Scott also held membership in a number of environmentally-oriented groups, including the Naturalists Society and the Solar Energy Society of Canada.


Scott was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in the Manitoba general election of 1981, in the riding of Inkster. This particular riding was notable for having been held by Sidney Green, a prominent cabinet minister in the government of NDP Premier Edward Schreyer, since 1966. Green had left the NDP in 1979, and was seeking re-election as a member of the Progressive Party of Manitoba.


At first, the NDP wanted Roland Penner to challenge Green; Scott, a relative unknown, was drafted only after Penner declined. Nevertheless, he was elected in Inkster with a clear majority, receiving 6283 votes, as Green placed third with only 783. Following this election, the Progressive Party was no longer taken seriously as a political force.


Scott was re-elected without difficulty in the provincial election of 1986, defeating his nearest competitor by almost 4000 votes. In the 1988 election, however, he was upset by Liberal Kevin Lamoureux, who outpolled him by 4466 votes to 4098. The 1988 election was called after NDP backbencher Jim Walding voted against his own party's budget, causing the government to fall two years before an election would normally have been called. Scott was one of several NDP members defeated in the following campaign; his loss in a seat previously regarded as safe for the party came as a particular surprise.


Scott later moved to British Columbia. Following the Manitoba general election of 2003, he wrote an op-ed piece for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, acknowledging the centrist approach of Gary Doer's government while also encouraging it to invest more in social programs.


  Results from FactBites:
 
SIGHTINGS (1454 words)
Don Scott Yes, very much so because you see the brucellosis is capable of entering usually the left ventricle of the heart and in the left ventricle it will damage the cells of the left ventricle causing lesions and these lesions interrupt the rhythm of the heart and consequently the effectiveness of the heart.
Don Scott Yes, we think there is and we're continuing research in this area and over the next six months we're going to be embarking on a couple of programs with volunteers participating through their own general practitioner in a couple of things we think will be effective.
Don Scott Yes, doctor, I appreciate you raising that point for me because in our studies we have found that there will be several families, one member will have, as you say, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, another member will have Parkinson's disease and a third member might have arthritis or some related disease.
Hawks may sign son of legend - www.realfooty.com.au (474 words)
Hawthorn is considering signing the son of club legend and former captain Don Scott as an unusually mature father-son recruit in November's draft.
A premiership captain in 1976 and 1978, Scott is most celebrated by supporters, however, for his role in averting the proposed merger with Melbourne in 1996.
Don Scott played 302 games for the Hawks, retiring in 1980 after a distinguished and colorful career that led to him being named in the ruck in the club's team of the century.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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