Vue normale
- National Post
- Conservatives say they’ll shrink federal workforce by 17,000 yearly by not replacing leavers
Fearing a new ‘Roxham’ because of Trump, Quebec is not joking about the border
- National Post
- Trump has signed a flurry of executive orders. What are they and does Canada have an equivalent?
Trump has signed a flurry of executive orders. What are they and does Canada have an equivalent?
- National Post
- Moe, Legault inch closer to Smith on energy exports, pushing back on major Trump retaliation
Moe, Legault inch closer to Smith on energy exports, pushing back on major Trump retaliation
- National Post
- Former Haitian soldier from corps that staged coup gets another shot at staying in Canada
Former Haitian soldier from corps that staged coup gets another shot at staying in Canada
‘Back-breaking’: Toronto lawyer drawn into service in Israel — harvesting tomatoes
- National Post
- To boost numbers, CAF eases restrictions on anxiety, allergies and other medical conditions
To boost numbers, CAF eases restrictions on anxiety, allergies and other medical conditions
Trumps Threatens Tariffs Feb. 1 on Canada, Mexico and China
- National Post
- Asylum-seeking Jan. 6 convict still detained in Canada while awaiting Donald Trump’s pardon
Asylum-seeking Jan. 6 convict still detained in Canada while awaiting Donald Trump’s pardon
Man found near U.S. border in 2023 died of drowning, hypothermia: Quebec coroner
Amazon Canada says it will close all seven of its warehouses in Quebec
- National Post
- Two suspects in fatal shootout with U.S. Border agent wanted privacy while staying at nearby hotel
Two suspects in fatal shootout with U.S. Border agent wanted privacy while staying at nearby hotel
Doug Ford’s Conservatives would win Ontario election if called today: new poll
Poilievre vows to shrink size of federal public service: ‘Work isn’t getting done’
Trump Is Said to Push for Early Reopening of North American Trade Deal
CRTC’s CanCon rules could worsen trade conflict, U.S. business groups warn
Netflix is raising its prices in Canada — here’s what it will cost subscribers
Trump Says He Plans to Impose 10% Tariffs on Chinese Imports on Feb. 1
- National Post
- U.S. pulling out of WHO a threat to public health around the world, including Canada: doctor
U.S. pulling out of WHO a threat to public health around the world, including Canada: doctor
Masked man repeatedly stabs dog in Toronto park
- National Post
- U.S. border agent shot dead in gunfight near Canadian border identified, dead civilian was German citizen
U.S. border agent shot dead in gunfight near Canadian border identified, dead civilian was German citizen
Most Americans oppose tariffs on Canadian imports, annexation: poll
With ‘diplomatic’ stance on Trump tariffs, Alberta premier increasingly stands alone
Garth Hudson obituary
Innovative organist with the Band, the rock group who changed the way their contemporaries thought about music
His high forehead and long, bushy beard, suggestive of a country preacher or a backwoods boffin, offered an early sign that Garth Hudson, who has died aged 87, was bringing something different to the world of rock music in the 1960s. As the organist with the Hawks, who backed Bob Dylan on a famous series of concerts before turning into the Band, he looked and sounded like a figure from a different age, or perhaps one in whom many ages and cultures were being magically combined.
Music from Big Pink, the Band’s widely influential first album, released in 1968, bore witness to a process to which each of the five musicians – four Canadians and an American – made a distinctive and equal contribution. Levon Helm, the drummer, awakened memories of the old South. Robbie Robertson played guitar with a rare and pointed economy. Rick Danko, the bassist, evoked the intimacy of backporch music-making. Richard Manuel, the pianist, sang with an aching fragility. And Hudson, an enigmatic figure half-hidden behind his organ console, brought the sound of mystery.
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