Project Jacmel

A city rebuilds

As other media organizations begin to leave Haiti, The Globe and Mail digs in to witness the rebuilding of the quake-shattered nation

Like many other Canadians, NDP leader Jack Layton is still on the job after his cancer diagnosis.
André Picard

Working with cancer is not always an option

Survivors need support to meet the physical, emotional and financial challenges of treatment

Passengers board a TTC streetcar; the TTC come under fire recently over rider photos and videos of what they deem unacceptable service.
Toronto

TTC to offer series of fixes to mend rider relations

Initiatives include using ‘secret shoppers' to monitor employee performance

Air Canada
Business

Air Canada takes aim at Porter

Airline launches legal proceeding against rival, Toronto Port Authority over space allocation at island airport

Archdeacon Christopher Page shown at St. Philip's Anglican Church in Victoria, B.C.
Religion

Anglican Church facing the threat of extinction

Anglicanism in Canada could disappear within a generation, says a report that recommends closing churches in B.C.

Jessica Lloyd

Mourners pay respects to slain Ontario woman

27-year-old Jessica Lloyd was found off a rural road on Monday shortly after her alleged killer, air force Colonel Russell Williams was arrested

Controversy brews over asbestos deaths in Mexico

Canada exports majority of dangerous mineral to developing countries

Notorious drunk driver gets eight-year sentence

Nova Scotia man with dozens of convictions in prison for slamming into a family's vehicle and fleeing the scene

Gloria Galloway

Risky products may be escaping controls: Health Canada audit

Bureau charged with determining safety and handling of chemicals and organisms struggles to meet deadlines

Critics decry Quebec plan on religious schools

Proposal to allow weekend classes seen as a move to accommodate the orthodox Jewish community

Grandmother charged with murder in deaths of two children

Wallaceburg, Ont., woman faces two first-degree murder charges after a car she was driving crashed into a river

Children of neo-Nazi parents ordered to stay in foster care

Manitoba court dismisses challenge from father arguing that province violated his right to raise children according to his beliefs

Quebec quietly promotes oil-sands opportunities

Ad on departmental website hails Alberta's business potential even as Charest government paints energy-rich province as environmental villain

Ontario, Quebec to allow EU to bid on hospital, school construction

Country's two largest provinces poised to open bidding process to foreign companies as part of a proposed trade accord with the European Union

Mass resignations deepen Tory riding rift

Twenty Calgary West board members quit over party decision to seize control of local group and protect MP Rob Anders from nomination battle

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Columnists

Adam Radwanski
Proroguing under the radar

To avoid a Harper-like taint, McGuinty will have the Ontario Legislature break for only a week

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty holds a press conference before signing a green power agreement on Thursday, Jan. 21, 2010, in Toronto.
Margaret Wente
The march of time? Get on with it

Turning 60: The lifestyle ads may be a crock, but don't mope. Aging has surprising upsides

Margaret Wente
Marcus Gee
Giambrone's paid the price - now let's let him fix the TTC

The sex scandal was enough to disqualify him from the mayoral race, but not sufficient to forfeit his promising political future

Adam Giambrone announced that he will no longer be running for mayor of Toronto at a press conference Feb. 10/2010.
Jeffrey Simpson
Here we are, finally, holding high the torch, set for glory

Whatever happens in the Games, the memory of the torch run across Canada will remain

Jeffrey Simpson
Lawrence Martin
The U.S. economy is in turmoil. Royal commission?

To redefine Canada's global prospects, we must develop alternative strategies

Lawrence Martin
Rick Salutin
Making do with tarnished spectacles – so enjoy the Olympics

One thing that moves us in sports is that those with merit tend to win. This is unlike the rest of life

Rick Salutin

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