Ottawa’s Rockcliffe Park designated a National Historic Site | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Alex Bozikovic
Publication Date: May 30, 2025 - 06:00

Ottawa’s Rockcliffe Park designated a National Historic Site

May 30, 2025
In Ottawa’s Rockcliffe Park, the past is not only present – it’s fiercely protected. This green enclave just northeast of the city’s core has a thick cover of trees, curving streets without sidewalks, and hundreds of houses built for Ottawa’s elite and occupied by diplomats from around the world.Now it also has a plaque marking it as a National Historic Site. In a ceremony on Friday, Parks Canada will formally offer the 1.8-square-kilometre neighbourhood with that distinction. For some heritage advocates among the area’s 2,000 residents, this is an accomplishment that has been decades in the making – despite rising tensions around what heritage means.


Unpublished Newswire

 
In May 2024, Adam applied for a UX designer role at the US-based grocery chain Kroger (he asked to be identified only by his first name to protect his identity). Adam heard back from a company called HireVue. After emailing him a brief set of instructions—“Show passion!!” “NO headphones can be used”—the AI-based HR management platform invited him to do a recorded one-way interview online. The bot asked Adam five questions about his work experience. He was given exactly three minutes to answer each. “I had to prepare, focus and concentrate, repress my anxiety, and force a...
June 2, 2025 - 06:30 | Mihika Agarwal | Walrus
In Whatì, Northwest Territories, there are two big questions on everyone’s mind right now: When will the lake be ice-free to set fishing nets, and will their beloved Edmonton Oilers win the Stanley Cup? “We’ve been Oilers fans since the beginning, since birth,” Gerry Nitsiza says, adding in a boisterous cheer, “We want Cup! We want Cup!”
June 2, 2025 - 06:00 | Pat Kane | The Globe and Mail
Canadian biophysicist James Till, who changed the future of medicine by proving the existence of stem cells with cell biologist Ernest McCulloch, was, by all accounts, a man of rare scientific rigour. If there’s any doubt, consider his pioneering research at the curling rink.Dr. Till loved curling, or, as he liked to call it, “chess on ice.”
June 2, 2025 - 05:00 | Carolyn Abraham | The Globe and Mail