
As tickets to catch a moment of the Toronto Blue Jays' post-season run sold for thousands, Ford had mused about reviving anti-scalping legislation.
October 28, 2025 - 17:06 | Isaac Callan | Global News - Ottawa
Ottawa police want to speak with a person who may have lost earbud listening devices near St. Laurent Boulevard on or about Oct. 2, saying the request was made in connection with a stabbing death in that area. Read More
October 28, 2025 - 17:03 | Gord Holder, Postmedia | Ottawa Citizen
Hurricane Melissa is forecast to stay far offshore as it accelerates northward later this week, but the Canadian Hurricane Centre in Halifax says the storm is still expected to play a role in dumping some ugly weather across Eastern Canada.On Friday, a low-pressure system will make its way over the northeastern United States, where it will start pulling in moist, tropical air from Melissa, meteorologist Bob Robichaud said. The result will be strong winds and rain across the Maritimes and into parts of Ontario and Quebec.
October 28, 2025 - 17:02 | Michael MacDonald | The Globe and Mail
Police on Montreal’s South Shore say a 33-year-old woman has been released from custody on several conditions in connection with the death of a newborn found alone in a bus shelter Monday morning.
October 28, 2025 - 16:48 | | CBC News - Canada
OTTAWA — The aunt of a Kelowna, B.C., woman killed in an intimate partner violence case is set to discuss a bill aimed at addressing such violence with Justice Minister Sean Fraser on Wednesday.
Debbie Henderson, whose late niece, Bailey McCourt, was bludgeoned with a hammer in a downtown Kelowna lot earlier this year, appeared in Ottawa on Tuesday, joined by Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre.
Henderson implored the federal government to pass Bill C-225 – also known as Bailey’s Law – a private member’s bill put forward by Conservative MP Frank Caputo.
Henderson, ahead of...
October 28, 2025 - 16:37 | National Post | National Post
At Toronto’s Music Gallery in 1977, Japanese-Canadian multidisciplinary artist Nobuo Kubota installed a sound sculpture composed of five steel blades and a corresponding number of speakers and organ pedals. From this came a stream of growls and rumbles which had been passed through a synthesizer. When Globe and Mail critic Adele Freedman expressed to the artist that the noise left her “overwhelmed, even oppressed,” Mr. Kubota instantly understood the reaction and offered help.
October 28, 2025 - 16:23 | Brad Wheeler | The Globe and Mail

