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How the First World War changed Canada
Maclean s· 4 hours agoCanada, whose population in 1918 was eight million, sent 620,000 men to the Great War; almost 250,000 soldiers were killed or wounded. The Great War, lasting from August 1914 to November 1918, had a huge effect on Canada.
Lévy Gorvy Dayan to Close Hong Kong Space: ‘Client Behavior Has Changed’
ARTnews· 1 day agoLévy Gorvy Dayan (LGD) will close its Hong Kong outpost after five years of operations, the...
What was the 'first American novel'? On this Independence Day, a look at what it started
National Post· 6 days agoAround 100 pages long, Brown’s narrative tells of two young New Englanders whose love affair...
More heat records expected to be broken as dangerous temperatures hit both coasts
AOL· 2 days agoWith more than 59 million people under various heat warnings Saturday, the hot weather was expected to simmer unabated for the next few days. The sweltering weekend conditions affected cities ...
B.C. heat wave: Warnings expanded as temperatures could hit low 40s in some areas
Vancouver Sun· 1 day agoEnvironment Canada says a heat wave covering more than three dozen regions in B.C. is expected to...
Romance Bookstores Are Booming, Dishing ‘All the Hot Stuff You Can Imagine’
New York Times· 2 days agoLast summer, when Mae Tingstrom had the idea to open a romance bookstore in Ventura, Calif., the...
An ancient earthquake rerouted the Ganges River | CNN
CNN.com· 6 days agoEarthquakes, caused by the shifting of Earth’s tectonic plates, have the potential to transform the...
Burgum set to decide on massive pipeline project that’s pitting his rural constituents against GOP...
CNN via Yahoo Canada News· 6 days agoNorth Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum could play a deciding role in allowing a massive carbon dioxide...
The Historical Echo Biden Has Tried to Suppress
New York Times· 6 days agoDemocrats have rebuffed comparisons between 2024 and 1968. More Democrats aired doubts about President Biden’s candidacy on Tuesday, the most public and...
How the Rise of the Camera Launched a Fight to Protect Gilded Age Americans' Privacy
Smithsonian Magazine· 4 days agoIn 1904, a widow named Elizabeth Peck had her portrait taken at a studio in a small Iowa town. The...