MISE À JOUR - UPDATE
Le campus est sécuritaire! - Campus is safe!
Campus principal - Main Campus
Il n'y a aucun danger - There is no danger
+info: https://t.co/vDHleqwELJ
19:10:25
👇🏽 in roughly last 15 years, 27,463 cases of Lyme-disease have been reported across Canada. Only getting worse with weather warming up… this could be massive! #cdnpoli#medicine#lyme@shelleyayres
This piece by Peggy Noonan on the demise of the Washington Post is worth your time. I gifted it so you can read it.
“Finally, losing the one major newspaper left in the great nation’s capital—and during the Trump administration no less, during a time of the easy abuse of standards and traditions, of inching up to and then inching over the law, in a pattern that promises not to get better but worse—is more than a Jeffersonian nightmare, it is a kind of sin. The kind history doesn’t easily forgive.”
https://t.co/Pb29SIZAIq
This description is all to familiar for families like mine who have watched a love-one deteriorate quickly in overcrowded hospitals. My father struggled with delirium and never recovered after his experience, dying with stage 4 bedsores.
Former CP writer and photographer Stephen Thorne remembered as dogged, keen-eyed storyteller. By @JimBronskill https://t.co/8Oy4A1GMvq via @CdnPressNews
Weird to be on the other end of a news byline - also, I only dream of looking this young, lol! Former Ottawa Citizen journalist Joanne Chianello running for city council https://t.co/nffPTY4AIx via @ottawacitizen
Ink and Blood: Ottawa’s William Baldwin inscribed 66,000 names into the First World War Book of Remembrance. His own name would be added to Canada’s second book. https://t.co/m1F24c98DC
The Canadian War Museum is deeply saddened by the passing of our Chief Historian and Director of Research, Dr. Tim Cook.
We invite you to read our full statement and share condolences with his family, colleagues, and friends.
🔗 https://t.co/4EFRxrRAgk
This is the last post of 119,836 names of Canadian Armed Forces members who died while serving, bringing to an end @WeAreTheDead's online roll call that began on Remembrance Day 14 years ago. Thanks to everyone who followed.
The @WeAreTheDead projects is coming to an end. The account has been tweeting the names of Canadian fallen since 2011. After more than 119,000 hourly posts, the account will send out the final name on the list of our war dead at 4 p.m. tomorrow.
After 40 years, my last story: a reflection on the newspaper life. Sincere thanks to all those who trusted me with their own stories. https://t.co/2ZcLWfq60R
Congratulations Andrew! You’ve always approached your stories with such care, humanity, and insight. Thank you for being such an important part of Jonathan and my journey.
What it means to be a journalist: The Newspaper Life | Ottawa Citizen - https://t.co/REzu3CDTz0 #GoogleAlert