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Kehoe's nickname as a child was "Totty", which later became Toddy. Her brother, Jack Leore played for the Ottawa Rough Riders from 1935 to 1938. In 1946, she would marry Jack's friend, Ray Kehoe after he came back from fighting in World War II. [3] He died in 1977. One of their six children, Tim, served on Ottawa city council as well, from 1988 ...
Andrew Scott Haydon (February 26, 1933 – October 28, 2024) was a Canadian engineer and politician. He was reeve of Nepean Township, Ontario from 1970 to 1978 and Regional Chair of Ottawa-Carleton from 1978–1991.
The Ottawa Citizen's circulation in 2009 was 123,856 copies daily. Its circulation dropped by 26 percent to 91,796 in 2015. [16]In Spring 2022, the Ottawa Citizen's unduplicated print and digital average weekday audience was 231,000, and its unduplicated average weekly audience was 490,000.
Diane Elizabeth Deans (née Flaherty; September 16, 1958 – May 14, 2024) was a Canadian politician.A member of Ottawa City Council, she represented Gloucester-Southgate Ward, and its predecessor Southgate Ward in the city's southeast from 1994 to 2022.
[10] [15] The Ottawa Citizen stated that the writing "is crisp, plot top-notch and characters credible." [16] Saint Mike, published in 1987, was also a New York Times Notable Book. [17] Charles Willeford, reviewing for the Miami Herald, called Nowhere Man "a romp of a novel." [18] The Orlando Sentinel praised Oster's "sure grip on dialogue."
Born in Ottawa, Ontario, Catterall was a secondary school teacher. [2] She was educated at Carleton University. [1] She served as an alderman on Ottawa City Council from 1976 to 1985. She also ran for mayor of Ottawa in 1985 but lost to Jim Durrell by over 20,000 votes.
He began his junior career by playing for the Oshawa Generals of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) during the 1963–64 season, before joining the Ottawa Montagnards and Smiths Falls Bears. He then played two seasons for the Clinton Comets of the Eastern Hockey League (EHL) from 1966 to 1968. Zaine played the 1968–69 season with the Ottawa ...
With the Citizen, he held a variety of roles – including writing editorials, editing the local news and books sections, and writing his daily column [2] – until retiring from the paper in 2005. [1] He took a leave of absence from the paper in 2002 to serve for several months as writer-in-residence at the University of Ottawa. [3]