Project Jacmel
Audio blog: Faith amid the ruins
An impromptu church service and steel drums in the park draw hundreds of faithful
Required reading
FOCUS
Racial change was slow in coming – until Nashville
How the South has changed - and how it hasn’t - since the lunch counter protests 50 years ago
In Photos
World Press Pictures of the Year
See the 2009 pictures of the year, including the winning shot that captured the spirit of protest in Iran
Geoffrey York
Zimbabwe: A nation with little to celebrate
On the anniversary of historic coalition deal between reformists and Mugabe, few of the changes it promised have come through
Timothy Garton Ash
Ukraine's not yet lost to Europe
After the Yanukovych reversal, how can the EU help Kiev gravitate toward a freer future?
Fatal shooting at staff meeting in Alabama university rocks community
Faculty member shoots colleagues during meeting; instructor reportedly denied tenure
Canadians play key role in NATO offensive
Griffon helicopters ride shotgun as Chinooks ferry British and Afghan troops into Taliban stronghold
Project Jacmel
One month later, Haiti's despair deepens
On a national day of mourning, a mood of weary fatalism grips the earthquake-stricken country
Switzerland won't extradite Polanski while appeal is before U.S. courts
As new film premieres in Berlin, exiled director's decades-old legal fight takes another twist
Last Kennedy in Washington won't run for re-election
Patrick Kennedy says his life is 'taking a new direction' just months after the death of his father and mentor, Edward Kennedy
military
U.S. Air Force destroys target missile with high-powered laser
Weapon mounted on jumbo jet fired energy beam that blew up missile in milestone test
Snowfall surprise in Florida, Texas
Vancouver can't buy a snow storm, but schools close as Deep South struggles with rare snow
Bowing to opposition, Holder may abort civilian 9/11 trial
Attorney General Eric Holder is leaving open the possibility of trying professed Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed before a military commission
Marketplace
In Depth
More Sections
Obituaries
More from today's Globe and Mail
- BANKER BONUSES
- Japanese firms wary of U.S. backlash
- U.S. facing bleak outlook on property, new jobs
- Dow Jones sells index business to CME
- Google takes aim at re-wiring Internet
- Governor-General appeals to Vancouver Haitians
- CHART OF THE DAY
- 'THE LEHMANN BROTHERS FOR THE EURO ZONE'
- Texting in a time of trauma
- Why a debt crisis in Greece matters to the rest of the world
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Foreign correspondent blogs
Geoffrey York's
Africa Diary
Zuma's polygamy undermines AIDS fight
It may play well politically, but the South African leader's multiple sexual partners weakens and contradicts all of the work that he has done in the fight against the epidemic
Mark MacKinnon's Points East
Google and China go to war
Stephanie Nolen's Subcontinental
Invoking Indira
Gloria Galloway's Witness: Kandahar
What this woman wants
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Bollywood superstar's cricket comments trigger angry protests |
Focus
Dateline Peking
Fifty years ago, The Globe and Mail became the first Western newspaper to open a bureau in what was then known as Red China.