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Good morning. As fans, new and old, are still recovering from the Toronto Blue Jays’ World Series loss, we are turning our attention to the week to come. Trade is back in focus as Ottawa prepares to deliver the budget. Let’s get to it.
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The Los Angeles Dodgers celebrate as Toronto Blue Jays' Vladimir Guerrero Jr. walks off the field after the Dodgers won Game 7 of the World Series in Toronto on Saturday. Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press
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Baseball brought the country together
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What else: Our favourite memories will not be from Game 7 but from ones that preceded it.
Trey Yesavage’s mesmerizing 12-strike-out performance in Game 5. Addison Barger’s pinch-hit grand slam in Game 1. Thanks to the Jays, we got to experience unity, fellowship and, yes, the power of love.
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The business: At Rogers Communications Inc., there was still a win. The gutting Game 7 loss is vindication of executive chair Edward Rogers and CEO Tony Staffieri’s decision to make sports a tentpole strategy at the telecom company.
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A forensic officer inspects the London North Eastern Railway train where a series of stabbings took place, at Huntingdon Station, near Cambridge, on Sunday. Jack Taylor/Reuters
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Stabbing on U.K. train left 11 wounded
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The latest: Police said on Sunday that they have arrested the man they view as the lone suspect after a knife attack on a train Saturday night that left 11 people wounded, including a crew member with life-threatening injuries. British Transport Police have ruled out terrorism in the case.
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The context: The attack is the latest in a series of deadly stabbings that have put the country on edge. Last week, a 49-year-old man was killed and two others injured in a knife attack in London.
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COVID-19 gave researchers data on our wildly subjective internal clocks and the way time feels different at various points in our lives. Illustration by Maya Nguyen
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Why time feels like it’s speeding up
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The latest: It’s a strange phenomenon, but emerging from the pandemic, there’s a sense that time is accelerating again into a busy blur. The older we get, the faster each year seems to pass. But it’s more than that. Today’s hustle culture, over-programmed kids, the longevity movement: They’re all attempts to maximize time and keep up with the galloping pace of life.
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What’s next: So, no. You’re not wrong to think time is running away from you. The Globe spoke with five thinkers about why time flies and how to give our days more space, meaning and value. One idea from the feature? For our sense of time to slow, the hours need to be marked with meaning and memories. To start, shake up your routine and stop doomscrolling.
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Preparing for Canada’s budget
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