Canada's Capital Cappies celebrates creativity, collaboration, and student excellence | Unpublished
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Source Feed: Ottawa Citizen
Author: Lois Kirkup
Publication Date: December 6, 2025 - 04:00

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Canada's Capital Cappies celebrates creativity, collaboration, and student excellence

December 6, 2025
The 21st season of Canada's Capital Cappies has begun, and with it comes a revived celebration of creativity, collaboration, and student excellence across our region. Each year, the Cappies program spotlights the remarkable talent in our local high schools onstage, backstage, and through written reviews. It fosters a vibrant community for learning, mentorship, and artistic growth. This season promises to bring bold storytelling and unforgettable performances as students share their love of the performing arts with eager audiences. Read More


Unpublished Newswire

 
Spotify Wrapped, the music streaming platform’s annual summation of user listening habits presents data on most listened-to songs and artists. The feature of this year’s report that has become the talk of the town is the inclusion of the listener’s so-called “listening age.” After discovering their assigned ages, many users have taken to social media, expressing a mix of reactions. Here in Canada, two prominent politicians, Prime Minister Mark Carney and Conservative Deputy Leader Melissa Lantsman had some fun with their Spotify ages. In an...
December 6, 2025 - 08:00 | Stewart Lewis | National Post
In December 2024, when United States president-elect Donald Trump started making implicit threats of annexation, Canadians became suspicious of the outside world. It’s not just America that put us on edge. We used to be friends with everyone. Who didn’t like Canada? We were peaceful, funny, and everyone’s pal. Everyone wanted to sit with us at the United Nations cafeteria. But then it started to feel like people were using us. Maybe because we were pals with the popular kid, America. But then he turned on us, and we couldn’t tell who our real friends were anymore. In January, Justice...
December 6, 2025 - 06:30 | Mark Critch | Walrus
The Alberta government rejected expert advice to expand public reporting of measles to include probable cases, despite the measure being supported by local and provincial public health officials, documents obtained by The Globe and Mail show.Since the outbreak began in Alberta last spring, only confirmed cases of measles have been publicly reported. New data provided through a Freedom of Information request show at least 450 probable cases of measles have also been identified in the province, bringing the total to nearly 2,500.
December 6, 2025 - 06:15 | Alanna Smith | The Globe and Mail