Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Publication Date: June 12, 2026 - 16:07
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'I've got goosebumps': Team Canada fans welcome their first World Cup
June 12, 2026
For many ardent soccer fans in Toronto, seeing a World Cup game on home soil has been a dream for years. Ahead of the city’s first match, the Voyageurs, a Canadian supporters group, marched through the streets waving the maple leaf and shooting plumes of red smoke in celebration. Video by The Globe’s Sarah Espedido and Deborah Baic
Nearly 500,000 Canadian addresses will lose home delivery as Canada Post forges ahead with conversions to community mailboxes. In an announcement made on Thursday , the crown corporation said it “is moving forward with community mailbox conversions as part of its broader transformation to modernize the postal service and return to financial self-sustainability.” In the coming weeks and months, Canada Post will be connecting with 37 communities across the country, the initial stage of converting 485,000 addresses from door-to-door delivery to community mailboxes in 2027. That’s on top...
June 13, 2026 - 07:00 | Stewart Lewis | National Post
Fertility Inc. is a multi-part series by the Investigative Journalism Bureau that delves into the Wild West of the egg-freezing industry, its aggressive marketing, the high cost and the chances of an eventual successful pregnancy. Megan Robinson, 37, isn’t sure if she wants to have children, but if she does become a mother she hopes it will be with a partner the natural way. In the meantime, as a backup plan, she decided to freeze her eggs. Still, she faced moments of uncertainty as she jabbed herself daily with painful needles, paying $10,000 out of pocket for the procedure, which is...
June 13, 2026 - 07:00 | Investigative Journalism Bureau | National Post
The year the iPhone 3G came out, the one with the GPS chip installed and working Google Maps, Todd Humphreys spent a lot of time on the floor of his Bay Area apartment, surrounded by a jumble of wires and his three-year-old son Ramon. Humphreys had just moved with his family across the country to California to co-found a navigation startup based on GPS. (It was later acquired by Apple.) The startup job took up most of his time, but the reason for the wires on the beige carpet, plugged into a spread of laptops, switchboards, and radios, was pure curiosity. Humphreys and a college friend...
June 13, 2026 - 06:30 | Katherine Dunn | Walrus






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