Source Feed: Global News - Ottawa
Author: Aaron D’Andrea
Publication Date: September 24, 2025 - 09:37
Blue Jays fans ate 826K hot dogs during 2025 ‘Loonie Dogs’ nights, team says
September 24, 2025
During Tuesday’s home game against the Boston Red Sox, Blue Jays fans ate 92,896 $1 hot dogs – bringing the season total to 826,308 franks consumed during those nights.
« Le Traité numéro 5 est un outil puissant. Ce n’est pas simplement un document ou un accord du passé. C’est un document vivant, » affirmait l’avocate et défenseure des droits des peuples cris, Deanne Kasokeo. Depuis 150 ans, il façonne la vie des peuples cris et anichinabés du nord du Manitoba et de la Saskatchewan, et cette question demeure loin d’être résolue. Également connu sous le nom de Traité de Winnipeg, il a impliqué le plus grand nombre de communautés des Premières Nations au Canada, offrant des promesses de terres, d’outils, d’éducation et de soins de santé. Cependant, ces...
September 24, 2025 - 10:49 | The Walrus Lab | Walrus
There are many ways in which the offices of the Montreal advertising firm Sid Lee would be unrecognizable to a midcentury ad man. Instead of two-martini lunches and Scandinavian furniture, the self-described creative agency that came up with the Toronto Raptors’ We The North campaign has fizzy water on tap in its white-on-white temple of millennial cool. No one smokes. A woman is CEO.
September 24, 2025 - 10:48 | Eric Andrew-Gee | The Globe and Mail
“Treaty is powerful. It’s not just a document or an agreement of the past. It’s a living agreement,” says Cree lawyer and advocate Deanne Kasokeo. For nearly 150 years, Treaty 5 has shaped the lives of Cree and Anishinaabe communities across northern Manitoba and Saskatchewan—and its story is far from settled. Also called the Winnipeg Treaty, it included more First Nation communities than any other in Canada and promised land, tools, education, and health care. In practice, those agreements have been unevenly realized, and communities continue to navigate their impacts today...
September 24, 2025 - 10:24 | The Walrus Lab | Walrus
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