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Author: Sophie Laurent
Sophie Laurent is a contributor to Vaughantoday.ca, covering a wide range of topics including local news, politics, business, technology, sports, entertainment, and lifestyle. She focuses on delivering clear, balanced reporting that helps readers stay informed about current events and issues that matter to their communities. Sophie is committed to presenting accurate information, practical insights, and relevant stories in a straightforward and reader-friendly manner, making complex topics accessible to a broad audience.
A woman decided to take the restaurant chain’s case to court because she believed that good publicity had “forced” her to violate her dietary and religious beliefs. • Read also: The scale for Quebec’s favorite fast food restaurants Ksenia Ovchinnikova, a Russian Orthodox Christian who was doing Lent, broke her fast because she could not resist the temptation to taste the famous burger, after seeing an advertising poster with her doll, according to the British media “The Mirror”. The Zamoskvoretsky Court of Russia confirmed that it had received his complaint and suspended her for a preliminary hearing. “After watching the…
(Cap-aux-Meules, Îles-de-la-Madeleine) New gasoline vehicles will disappear from the Canadian scene by 2035. Is it possible to go all-electric without converting any road trip On a difficult pilgrimage? Our journalist used his vacation in the Magdalen Islands to test it. Posted Aug 7, 2021 at 11:30am Tristan Beloken Journalism There has never been a charging station in Saint-Jean-Port-Joli or those in Moncton, New Brunswick. And still nobody is in line in the small town of Surris, Prince Edward Island. Charging an electric car at one of the many express stations that dot the 1,300 kilometers of road that separates Montreal…
The business climate appears tense at the Marriott Château Champlain, a popular downtown Montreal hotel, as the union refers to its employer by claiming it is engaging in anti-union practices. A demonstration is scheduled for Saturday as a gesture of solidarity with the head of the union, who was unfairly dismissed in the eyes of a representative of the establishment’s workers. Posted Aug 7, 2021 at 8:00 AM Julian Arsenault Journalism According to the Trade Union Confederation of Nationals (CSN), hotel management is violating the collective agreement, which expired over a year ago, by turning to subcontractors and line managers…
Are we alone in space? This question has gripped the man for decades. Today, scientists know that none of the eight planets in the solar system can accommodate life. To find another with liquid water and oxygen, you have to look further. So astrologers point their telescopes at other stars and try to locate the planets orbiting around them. They estimate that there are 250 billion stars in our galaxy, and at least 80 billion planets capable of meeting the conditions necessary for the development of life.→ Read. For 30 years, Starry Night is back in sourcesMaximumserial interstellar epicProduced by…
The Ministry of Health has warned of the dangers of scorpion and snake bites, especially for children, during the summer season, which is known to increase cases in some areas, especially in rural areas. And the Ministry of Health recommended, in a statement, not to put your hands in pits, not to sit in grassy places and next to rocks, to wear shoes and protective clothing, not to collect firewood at night and not to walk in suspicious places. . In order to avoid the breeding of scorpions and snakes next to residential areas, the same source continues, it is…
A McGill University student was charged last week in the United States with the illegal export to Iran of laboratory equipment that could be used to build nuclear weapons. Reza Sarangpour Kafrani, a 46-year-old Montrealer of Iranian descent, faces two counts of violating US international trade law. The latter imposes a ban on the export of certain equipment to Iran to limit its nuclear program. Facebook photos Reda Sarangpour Kafrani The man, known as Reza Sarhang, will have to appear in this case for six other counts of money laundering, one can read in a document for the District of…
DrScientists at the University of California, Berkeley, have built custom obstacle courses to better understand how squirrels adjust their movements in flight to avoid fatal falls. They hope this research will one day help develop more agile robots.”Squirrels have a range of characteristics that make them so interesting: on the one hand, their acrobatic nature, their biological mechanisms and their strong muscles, which they can use to jump many times the size of their bodies,” explained Nathan Hunt. , lead author of the study. On the other hand, their cognitive abilities. They have a very good memory, are very creative…
The federal and provincial governments are investing in faster internet access on Bailey Island. Ottawa has committed up to $14.5 million to bring high-speed internet to every home and business on the island through a fiber-optic bridge, while the county government is adding $5 million to the project.Liberal MP for Windsor Tecumseh, Eric Kosmerczyk, who made the announcement Thursday, said work would begin this summer and a completion date set in July 2023. Infrastructure will also connect the first nation in CaldwellAnd A two-wheeled light vehicleAnd comberAnd WheatleyAnd scudder And Holiday Harborexplained. In a press release, Mr. Kusmierczyk wrote that…
Municipal and provincial authorities are jumping for joy after the federal government chose Kelowna as one of the recently announced subsites of the Pacific Economic Development Agency, also known as PacifiCan. Melanie Jolly, National Minister for Economic Development and Official Languages, presented Pacifican Thursday morning in Surrey. He also announced the creation of Prairie Economic Development Canada, which will help businesses in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. This is the first time in more than 30 years that the federal government has strengthened its presence in economic development and services in Western Canada. In addition to Kelowna, PacifiCan will have service…
In a press release published on Thursday, August 5, the regional health agency announced that 30.7% of the residents of Reunion Island have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19. The ARS insists: “This vaccination coverage is still insufficient to tackle the epidemic.” Now, 30.7% of Reunion Island’s residents have been vaccinated against Covid-19, it was announced in a press release Thursday, August 5, from the regional health agency.Still not enoughSince the start of the vaccination campaign, 361,877 Réunions have received at least one injection (or 42% of the total population) and 262,543 Réunions have a full vaccination schedule (30.7% of the…
