Posted AT 6:36 PM EDT on 09/05/08
Hillary: bloodied but unbowed
It was Cat Stevens, when he was Cat Stevens (he is now, since conversion, Yusuf Islam) who penned the near-aphorism – “the first cut is the deepest.” It expresses an old truth: First encounters, painful or pleasurable, have the longest stay in our memories.
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Earlier panel debate
Earlier discussion

- Ask top 40 winners about the secrets to their success
- What does it take to be a young, successful entrepreneur?
Test yourself

- The week in questions

- How many times does the Harper government plan to apologize?
Collected Wisdom

- Forward thinking
- Why locomotives face both ways
public policy

- Peter Munk's golden rule
- At 80, the daring impresario of bold business ventures is now turning to bold philanthropy
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Related:
Munk Debates site
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Related:
Munk Debates aim to energize discussion on public policy
The Grano Series

- In the U.S., 'ordinary leadership will not be sufficient'
- David Gergen is uniquely positioned to size up the men and woman who would be president
- James Carville on the U.S. primaries
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In Pictures:
Grano lecture series
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Video:
Carville lecture
Insider Columnists
- Insight, analysis and opinion
- The Globe's regular columnists
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Jeffrey Simpson:
National Affairs
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Lawrence Martin:
From Ottawa
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Roy MacGregor:
This Country
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Margaret Wente:
General Interest
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Rex Murphy:
General Interest
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Rick Salutin:
From the left
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John Ibbitson:
The United States
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Marcus Gee:
International Affairs
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Doug Saunders:
Reckoning
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Gary Mason:
British Columbia
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Murray Campbell:
Queen's Park








