People have responded in a variety of ways in an outpouring of support for the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation and the families devastated by the…
For the last twenty years until the pandemic broke my streak I drove each fall to spend a week at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). Before making the trip, I took care to avoid reading anything about the subjects, characters, or narratives of the films; they did not matter. Instead, as my eye scanned the festival program, I took note of all the auteurs whose work I admired. Any year with a new film by Agnès Varda, Claire Denis, Hou Hsiao-hsien, or Christian Petzold was a good year. The films on the festival program that sparked my interest fell into two groups: auteurs of whom I was already a fan; and auteurs whose work held promise, beckoning me to explore further.
This is written to Radnor students, for you to consider. Yes, you do have a voice and it will be heard.
Come along with me to the spring of 1965 when a legendary Radnor coach, administrator, and mentor was retiring. His name was Emerson Metoxin and he came to Radnor, perhaps through the workings of Jules Prevost, but that story is âlost to history.â
I write to you as an unofficial archivist â out of love for both schools â of the Lower Merion-Radnor Football Rivalry, still considered to be âthe oldest,â or right up there, continuous public high school football rivalry in our nation.
Diana Doxtator is an important "aksotha" to those around her, a grandmother from southwestern Ontario's Oneida Nation of the Thames who takes care of relatives and people who have come into her life in other ways.
Posted: May 04, 2021 8:04 AM ET | Last Updated: May 4
Diana Doxtator sits on the porch of her daughter s home in London, Ont., after coming out of a coma caused by COVID-19. (Kate Dubinski/CBC News)
Diana Doxtator s eyes fill with tears when she remembers waking up from a coma, months after she went into the hospital with what at first was diagnosed as the flu, but turned out to the COVID-19. I didn t realize how sick I was. I was confused, I didn t know what was going on. I just knew I was really sick, said Doxtator, now home at her daughter s house in London, Ont., after spending four months in hospital, three in a coma.