OPP identify victim of car wreck on Hwy 401
The U.N. Security Council is set to hold an emergency meeting on North Korea after a powerful nuclear test explosion added another layer of urgency for diplomats wrestling with what to do next.
Thousands of party-goers have taken to the Queen’s University district, forcing police to close a main artery to campus.
Attack mode, says the Conservative Party’s fresh foreign affairs critic, will not be the opposition’s very first instinct when dealing with the Liberal government’s renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Maine lobstermen Alex Todd has hauled in blue lobsters and even some lobsters that were half blue, or half orange. But he says those don’t compare on the scale of weirdness to the translucent crustacean that he recently pulled up in a trap.
Smoke packed the sky and ash rained down across Los Angeles Sunday from a devastating wildfire that the mayor said was the largest in city history — one of several blazes that sent thousands fleeing homes across the U.S. West during a sweeping holiday weekend fever wave.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has condemned North Korea’s latest nuclear weapon testing and is urging the United Nations to take further steps to contain the country’s nuclear proliferation efforts.
Rain or shine, the freshmen move-in starts early and gets busy quickly.
North Korea on Sunday claimed a “perfect success” for its most powerful nuclear test so far, a further step in the development of weapons capable of striking anywhere in the United States. President Donald Trump, asked if he would attack the North, said, “We’ll see.”
Authorities say a 17-year-old female has been charged with murder in the stabbing death of her one-year-old daughter in Ohio’s capital city of Columbus.
A Texas city that lost its drinking water system to Harvey struggled Saturday to restore service, and firefighters kept monitoring a crippled chemical plant that has twice been the scene of explosions and fires since the storm roared ashore and stalled over Texas more than a week ago.
U.S. President Donald Trump cupped a boy’s face in his palms and then gave him a high-five. He snapped on spandex gloves to palm out boxed lunches of hot dogs and potato chips. And he loaded ease supplies into vehicles, patted storm victims on the shoulder and announced the work “good exercise.”
Three quarters of Ontarians disapprove of the job Liberal Premier Kathleen Wynne is doing, a fresh Forum Research poll suggests.
As the thunderous roar of twenty nine historical and military aircraft — including the Canadian Coerces Snowbirds — coming from across Canada graced the skies during a “parade of aircraft” over Toronto, a fresh RCAF flag pridefully flaps on the ground below.
The children at the Boys and Damsels Club of Kingston and Area were a little more satisfied while climbing and sliding in the centre’s Kids Zone Friday afternoon.
The people who know Canada’s tax laws better than anybody are raising the alarm about proposed switches to the legislation.
Thick black smoke and towering orange flames shot up Friday from a flooded Houston-area chemical plant after two trailers of very unstable compounds blew up a day earlier after losing refrigeration.
The decision by a Brazilian judge to free a man who was arrested after allegedly ejaculating on a woman on a public bus is causing anger in a country where gender violence is prevalent.
When Florence Grimshaw found out some of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren would be travelling from British Columbia to visit her, she desired her Bath Road home to be in tip-top form. Instead, she’s had to cancel their visit for fear someone may fall off her brand-new front deck, built by a subcontractor hired by The Home Depot.
A municipal leader in British Columbia’s central Interior says he wouldn’t be astonished if wildfires that have chewed through more than Ten,600 square kilometres of woodland aren’t fully out until 2018.
News, The Kingston Whig-Standard
See life behind prison walls
A compilation of offences from Kingston’s Ontario Court of Justice for the period of July thirty one to Aug. Four, 2017. Only sentences that involved a large fine, probation or incarceration are included.
Two studs, one from Kingston and the other from Ottawa, were arrested Sunday morning after the latter was spotted by Queen’s University campus security injecting an unlocked residence.
A 54-year-old Mallorytown woman who had approximately three times the legal limit of alcohol in her system was stopped by Kingston Police and charged with impaired driving before she could get onto Highway four hundred one on Friday night.
Returning St. Lawrence College students got to see on the very first day of school Tuesday morning a revamped front entrance, more student space and an innovation area that wasn’t there when they departed in the spring.
A 20-year-old local woman is facing four charges of assaulting police after attacking officers who attempted to eliminate her from the middle of a downtown street early Friday morning.
A woman was taken to hospital with serious injuries and her former bf is facing numerous charges after forcing his way into her apartment and assaulting her.
A 58-year-old woman from Leeds and Thousand Islands Township has been charged with impaired driving after her vehicle went into a ditch on Brief Point Road on Sunday afternoon.
A 68-year-old man has been charged by Napanee OPP after the school bus he was driving ended up in a ditch Tuesday morning.
LYNDHURST – Volunteers have began an archeological dig in search of artifacts from the very first metal smelter in Upper Canada.
The provincial ombudsman’s office has turned down a councillor’s request that it investigate the conduct of the Township of Leeds and the Thousand Islands’mayor in the disciplinary activity against four township staffers last May.
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Workers in the northeast Caribbean cleared drains and pruned trees as authorities urged islanders to prepare for Hurricane Irma, a Category three storm that grew stronger Monday and was forecast to begin buffeting the region the following day.
KINGSTON – With flags swinging and music blaring, some might have mistaken the large group of people walking down Princess Street as incoming post- secondary students.
Rolling its way to Ottawa there’s a giant green RV featuring the words “Zach Makes Tracks” with a ample photo of a boy on the side of the vehicle. The boy, with a bashful, quiet voice, has a message that can’t be overlooked.
KINGSTON – City councillors are to consider a pair of noise bylaw exemptions at their next meeting.
KINGSTON – With an emphasis on light, sound and learning, the Algonquin and Lakeshore Catholic District School Board is ready to open the doors to its newest school, St. Francis of Assisi, in the city’s north end.
Rain or shine, the freshmen move-in starts early and gets busy quickly.
The U.N. Security Council is set to hold an emergency meeting on North Korea after a powerful nuclear test explosion added another layer of urgency for diplomats wrestling with what to do next.
Thousands of party-goers have taken to the Queen’s University district, forcing police to close a main artery to campus.
Attack mode, says the Conservative Party’s fresh foreign affairs critic, will not be the opposition’s very first instinct when dealing with the Liberal government’s renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement.