Source Feed:     The Globe and Mail  
  
      Author:     Miriam Lafontaine  
  
      Publication Date:     October 5, 2025 - 11:20  
  Montreal march honours missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls
    October 5, 2025  
  Shirley Pien spends a lot of time in Cabot Square, a park in downtown Montreal where many homeless people gather.
The woman works as health navigator for an Indigenous-led health clinic in the city and makes it a priority to come to gathering spot on weekly basis. It’s a site many missing Indigenous women she knows used to frequent – until they disappeared.
    A landmark court ruling has ignited fierce debate and uncertainty over the future of private property rights in the province and across the country.  
  October 31, 2025 - 12:50 | Sean Boynton | Global News - Canada 
    
    
    The rockslide forced the closure of the section between Callan and North Beach roads, reducing the highway to two lanes and causing repeated delays and detours.  
  October 31, 2025 - 12:49 | Victoria Femia | Global News - Canada 
    
    
    In 2008, at the age of fifty-one, André Alexis published his second novel. He had come rather late to the game, putting out his first collection of short stories at thirty-seven and his debut novel a few years later. But his work was well received, and that first novel, Childhood, garnered him a brace of major literary prizes. Four hundred and eighty pages long and a decade in the making, Asylum was a suitably ambitious follow-up. Exploring the intersecting lives of a cast of characters in Ottawa during the early Brian Mulroney administration, the action is driven by a bureaucratic hero...
  October 31, 2025 - 12:44 | André Forget | Walrus 
    
    


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