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WATCH: When will Canadian captain Marie-Philip Poulin return from injury?

WATCH BELOW: Postmedia’s Rob Wong speaks with Postmedia’s Rob Longley from Milano-Cortina about the Canadian women’s hockey team defeating Finland 5-0 to close out preliminary-round action. They discuss Canada’s bounce-back performance, if injured captain Marie-Philip Poulin will be back in the lineup for the quarterfinal against Germany on Saturday and what adjustments need to made in a possible rematch against Team USA. Read More
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Jamie Sarkonak: What RCMP didn’t tell Tumbler Ridge when students’ lives were in danger

Eight innocents were shot dead in B.C.’s northeastern community of Tumbler Ridge on Tuesday; a girl is fighting for her life in hospital, and two dozen more have been injured. This tragedy is one of the worst ever seen in Canadian history — and as it unfolded, police gave the public incorrect information and did not correct themselves afterward. Read More
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Women’s testimony at Frank Stronach’s trial expected to reveal pattern of unbridled sexual aggression, court told

Personal stories from seven women scheduled to testify at the trial of Canadian billionaire business titan Frank Stronach will reveal a pattern of his unbridled sexual aggression that not only proves each attack but also forms circumstantial proof of each of the other attacks, the prosecution told court Thursday. Read More
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Chris Selley: We can’t let politicians get away without an inquiry of the Eglinton Crosstown debacle

If Ontario Premier Doug Ford has his way, there will be no inquiry into Toronto’s Eglinton Crosstown debacle: 19 kilometres of light rail, roughly half underground and half at grade, for a cost of roughly $13 billion, over 15 years of construction. I, on the other hand, can scarcely think of anything more befitting an inquiry. But since there's no functional opposition at Queen’s Park, the people — Ford’s lodestar, forever and always — will have to  demand it. Read More
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Is Trump already a lame duck — or more dangerous to Canada than ever?

WASHINGTON, D.C. — ​​As Canada reels from another round of tariff threats and White House ultimatums, many in Ottawa and the business community are watching Washington for a different reason: U.S. President Donald Trump says he won’t run again in 2028, raising the question of whether his final years in office will finally bring relief — or more turmoil — north of the border. Read More
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