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Saturday, Feb. 4, 2006 |
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Photo: Tibor Kolley/The Globe and Mail
With canoe and paddle, Globe columnist Roy MacGregor watches the sun set in Algonquin Park at Lake of Two Rivers.
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Young Canadians see no reason to let colour or culture block the way to happiness See our photo gallery
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A new generation of Canadians are living their homosexual lifestyle in the open
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An effortless multiculturalism is emerging in Toronto
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Native 20s are preparing for the day when they will form the majority in Saskatchewan
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Canadians and Americans play the same games but occupy different lands
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Quebec's 20-somethings smash stereotypes and give ulcers to aging separatists
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One in five Canadian children growns up in poverty — but it doesn't have to be a legacy
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In a few short years, Brooks, Alta., has gone from white-bread trading post to one of the Canada's most youthful, diverse rural places
City and country: still apples and oranges
See our photo gallery
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Toronto's Bloor Street is a panoramic route to the mythology of a Canada for all
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Four of the country's most prominent writers under 30 discuss sex, identity, brand names and Canada Read samples of the writers' work
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| In Pictures |
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Recent immigrants describe when they realized they were Canadian.
See our photo gallery
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| Comment |
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Our youth: drifting or driven?
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Government policy is out of whack with the demands of young Canadians, says Matthew Mendelsohn
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Mark Starowicz says it's taken us two centuries to realize that we'll never stop redefining this nation
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Daniel Stoffman looks at how current immigration levels hurt newcomers and us
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Looking back
A glimpse of the old Canada from the archives of the Globe and Mail 
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