Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Wendy Cox
Publication Date: May 2, 2025 - 06:38
Morning Update: The victims of the Vancouver attack
May 2, 2025
Good morning. We look at what we’ve learned about the tragedy in Vancouver’s Filipino community – more on that below, along with Ontario’s measles outbreak and a change on Donald Trump’s national security team. But first:Today’s headlines
- Conservative caucus will meet to select an interim opposition leader amid concerns that Liberals are trying to poach disgruntled MPs
- Alberta‘s Justice Minister has a personal relationship with a man whose businesses are tied to the province’s health authority investigation
- General Motors cuts its profit outlook on tariff exposure risk while China signals it is willing to open trade talks with the U.S.
- The Toronto Maple Leafs downs the Ottawa Senators 4-2 to set up the second round of Stanley Cup playoffs against the Florida Panthers
During World War II, the United States was desperate to develop the nuclear bomb ahead of Germany and maintain a technological advantage. To do so, they needed to produce plutonium, and lots of it. They would produce that plutonium at a site in Hanford, Washington, due to its proximity to the Columbia River and its distance from people, given the concern over an accidental explosion. The plutonium manufactured there would be used in the first nuclear bomb ever detonated. Over the following forty years, the site would produce two-thirds of the plutonium in the US nuclear arsenal.
As...
May 3, 2025 - 06:30 | Nicholas Chesterley | Walrus
When Simon McKay’s high-school guidance counsellor told him about a new class where students learn skilled trades by building a house from the ground up, which is then donated to a member of a nearby First Nation, the teenager was eager to enroll.By his own admission, sitting at a desk while a teacher lectures from the blackboard has never been the way the 18-year-old learns best, and so the new class had an instant appeal.
May 3, 2025 - 06:30 | Dave McGinn | The Globe and Mail
King Charles will visit Canada to deliver the throne speech on May 27. This will be the first time a reigning monarch delivers the speech in Canada since 1977.
The visit will mark the King’s 20th trip to Canada. The last visit was in May 2022. Queen Camilla will also be in attendance.
According to the Government of...
May 3, 2025 - 06:00 | National Post | National Post
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