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One in 10 young Black adults have contracted COVID-19 in Canada: survey
montrealgazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from montrealgazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Analysis: How the Black Lives Matter movement benefited Montreal during the pandemic
montrealgazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from montrealgazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The way forward is together, experts say.
Author of the article: Susan Schwartz • Montreal Gazette
Publishing date: Mar 12, 2021 • March 12, 2021 • 9 minute read • At the same time as much is outside our control, there are ways we can make choices to feel better about ourselves,” says Shelby Levine, a doctoral student in clinical psychology at McGill University. She takes walks in the middle of the day. She has learned to knit. She has also gotten into baking and cooking. Photo by Allen McInnis /Montreal Gazette
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At the one-year mark of COVID-19’s upheaval in Quebec, the Montreal Gazette takes stock in a six-part series. This is the fifth instalment.
Science and Technology Editor
As students, we often become accidental archivists: Whether it be old class notes or miscellaneous campus merch, our lives are often full of these collections. Sometimes, our collections of what initially appears as trash become treasured. Students also move a lot, resulting in an annual cycle of packing and unboxing, which makes it difficult to sustain one’s collections. Getting rid of belongings should be easy, but sometimes parting with the things one spent time and money collecting seems impossible.
I have been collecting books ever since I first learned to read, and it was not until I moved away for university that I even considered giving them away. Moving halfway around the world to attend university sounded like an adventure, until I realized that I had to fit my whole life into two 23-kilogram suitcases. I had not reread many of the books in my collection in years being too busy with academics, life, and discovering new books and they were c
Making the ârightâ choices
Navigating the fraught landscape of making decisions in young adulthood.
Jonathan Giammaria, Arts & Entertainment Editor
Ten years ago, Robin Marantz Henig published an
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The New York Times Magazine whose opening header read, âWhy are so many people in their 20s taking so long to grow up?â The question referred to those who had entered adulthood in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis and failed to meet the societal milestones of a generation prior. In 2010, the question echoed the vocal concerns of a nation of worried parents inasmuch as it commented on and empathized with the realities of a new cohort of emerging adultsâinformally called the boomerang generation.
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