Neighbourhood Dept: Video: Marcus Gee explains the fight over public transit, according to Globe and Mail. Just look what happens on my Halloween-mad, west-end street. We get more than 200 trick-or-treaters on a typical night, sometimes 300. The neighbourhood comes alive as the autumn light dims, the jack-o -lanterns come on and excited kids throng the street and video: How Halloween became a multibillion-dollar industry A TTC streetcar takes on passengers in Toronto on Nov. 17, 2009. video Halloween has no religion, no ethnicity. It is the festival that fits our modern, multicultural society best. Anyone with a cheap plastic mask or a kerchief and eye patch can take part. Every neighbourhood, rich and poor, can get into the spirit.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
@t Marcus Gee, neighbourhood
1.11.12