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dawson college

Attention Montrealers! Here's a pop quiz to get you in the back-to-school spirit (no school attendance required): What do a block party, a harvest festival, a charity walk, a car show, and a game night have in common?

If you answered, "They're all free things to do in Montreal this weekend," you get an A+, bragging rights, and free admission to a whole lot of fun weekend events.

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Move over Palworld and Pokémon GO, Canada’s largest invertebrate expo is a real-life critter convention with a leg (or six) up on any video game or app. The Salon des Insectes de Montréal on March 9 will feature a sprawling showcase of live beetles, framed butterflies, carnivorous plants, reptiles, and more, to challenge any preconceived notions you have about creatures underfoot and overlooked.

Nearly 150,000 insects will be on display at Dawson College, allowing visitors to handle, learn about, or just see them up close, and maybe find a new appreciation of the insect world.

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Montreal's Dawson College has launched an investigation after a student was accused of wearing a Nazi uniform at the school on Halloween.

A video originally posted to Instagram shows the student marching through a common area wearing what appears to be a military uniform and gas mask. The details of the costume are not visible in the video, but several commenters interpreted the costume and strut as Nazi symbolism.

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In 2021, the government announced new scholarships for Quebec CEGEP and university students in specific courses of study. The idea is to incentivize students to enter fields where the province is in desperate need of expertise and labour.

The scholarship sums will go up to $1,500 per semester for college students and $2,500 per semester for university students.

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It's no secret that there is a language issue in Quebec, and every few years the argument finds a new arena. The most recent battleground for the language debate is Bill 96 and Dawson College, whose expansion project has been shelved in favour of funding French colleges in the province.

During a press conference on February 1, shortly after the funding change was announced, Premier François Legault made his position on the matter clear, saying, "It's better to expand French colleges before adding capacity to Dawson."

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Dawson College's long-awaited expansion project has been shelved. In a statement, college Director General Diane Gauvin said Minister of Higher Education Danielle McCann delivered the news on January 28 along with an explanation that funding for the expansion of colleges will prioritize francophone schools.

"[She] informed the college that its infrastructure project would not go forward," Gauvin said. "The government has chosen to prioritize, in her words, 'francophone' students. She urged Dawson to explore other options, such as leasing."

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Today marks the 15th anniversary of Montreal's Dawson College shooting. 18-year-old Anastasia De Sousa was killed and 19 others were injured.

Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante offered her thoughts to De Sousa's family and the victims of the shooting in a Twitter post. The mayor also implored the federal parties to make "better gun control" a priority so that a mass shooting doesn't happen again.

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