Source Feed: Global News - Canada
Author: Prisha Dev
Publication Date: November 15, 2025 - 16:52
Pilot dead after two small planes collide in Ontario: OPP
November 15, 2025
One pilot is dead after two small planes collided near Martintown, Ont., OPP say. One aircraft landed safely and the Transportation Safety Board is investigating.
A Jewish Montreal woman says she was told by a Canadian passport office employee that she could not indicate Israel as her country of birth because it is “a conflict zone.”
Anastasia Zorchinsky is a Canadian citizen but she was born in Kfar Saba, in central Israel. However, she says in a Nov. 13 video posted on X that the official told her because of the “political conflict we cannot put Israel in your passport.”
Alternatively, she was told she could have indicated her birth country as Palestine, and that Kfar Saba was one of several cities that was allegedly caught by this policy shift...
November 16, 2025 - 08:00 | Stewart Lewis | National Post
Timothy Rohan headed out from his home in Holyoke, Mass., eight years ago on an unlikely mission.
The construction worker planned to shoplift supermarket bags of shrimp, then sell the purloined shellfish to bodegas in the city’s gritty downtown. The cash proceeds would feed his desperate need for fentanyl.
The scheme ended abruptly when two police cruisers pulled up beside him, the officers ordering the young man onto the pavement and locking him in handcuffs. A few hours later, guards hauled Rohan from a cell in the local courthouse and brought him before a judge – though he had stolen...
November 16, 2025 - 07:00 | Tom Blackwell | National Post
Amanda Shaw has worked at St. Lawrence College’s Cornwall campus for more than a decade, long enough to have lived through the international student boom. And now the bust.When she started, foreign enrolment was low. Then it seemed to skyrocket. The small campus on the shores of the St. Lawrence River in eastern Ontario started to bustle; the college ran budget surpluses and introduced innovative programs. Even during the chaos of COVID-19 the numbers continued to grow. The same thing was happening at colleges across the province and in other parts of the country.
November 16, 2025 - 07:00 | Joe Friesen | The Globe and Mail


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