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roap Man found guilty in human trafficking case
« le: Novembre 10, 2024, 12:15:14 am »
Lhxy Ontario   s Superior Court of Justice to defer cases
 FREDERICTON 鈥?A Canadian writer and artist revered in Canada   LGBTQ arts scene has been found dead after going missing in his native New Brunswick earlier this month.Richard Vaughan   body was found on Friday, 10 days after he was reported missing, Fredericton police said, adding that his death is not being treated as suspicious.He was 55.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        The author and video artist, who wrote under the name RM Vaughan, was born in Saint John, N.B, and had recently returned to his home province from Montreal to serve as writer-in-residence at his alma mater, the University of New Brunswick, for 2019-2020.He wante stanley cup d to make everyone feel they were entitled to write, entitled to tell their story, 82 stanley becher 21; said Sue Sinclair, the director of creative writing at the University of New Brunswick   English department, in an interview Saturday.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 Vaughan   works often touched on queer stories of coming-of-age and eroticism. He also had a taste for the supernatural and macabre, and was captivated by the world of the celebrity.A contributor to a variety of publications and anthologies, Vaughan published the book of essays Compared to Hitler in 2013, featuring many of his takes on contemporary culture.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                          stanley cup                The editor and publisher of Momus, a publication Lalq Feds want Afghans on planes quickly: Freeland
 Cancer surgeons in Ontario are reporting a sharp rise in the number of people coming to hospital with advanced cancers, an unintended consequence of the sudden shutdown of non-urgent health-care services during the spring wave of COVID-19.I stanley cup n mid-March, the number of people getting routine cancer screening plummeted after the province halted its screening programs for breast, cervical and colorectal cancers.Physicians say theyve seen a corresponding drop in patients going for diagnostic imaging tests and that some patients are deferring care, over fears of contracting the coronavirus in hospitals or doctors offices.          stanley mug       ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        Now, seven months into the pandemic, experts wa stanley cup rn too many cancers are not being caught at their earliest stages, as patients arrive in hospital with more severe symptoms and advanced stages of disease. In turn, this leads to patients requiring more intensive surgery and longer hospital stays, and potentially seeing poorer long-term prognoses. Im worried for people,  said Dr. Frances Wright, the Temerty Chair of Breast Surgery at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.  Its upsetting as a cancer-care provider.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                  Over the years weve made huge strides in reducing the mortality and morbidity for cancer, and this is a step backwards. Surgeons and physicians are seeing this stark trend even as they work through the backlog of cancer surge