WEATHER ALERT

On the night table: Robert Everett-Green

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 30/09/2017 (3207 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Author, In a Wide Country

A novel can bring you into intimate contact with a character you’d normally take pains to avoid. I recently finished Irish-Canadian writer Anakana Schofield’s Martin John, in which Schofield takes a deep dive into the mind of a deluded loner who enjoys holding his urine and exposing himself to women. It’s an uncomfortable read, though often quite funny, and sometimes reminiscent of Schofield’s Irish literary forebears, including Samuel Beckett and Flann O’Brien. My current non-fiction reading is Chelsea Vowel’s Indigenous Writes: A Guide to First Nations, Métis & Inuit Issues in Canada. Vowel, a Métis lawyer and activist from Lac-Ste. Anne, Alta., offers a crash course in the various ways Indigenous peoples relate to issues of culture, identity and justice. She also explodes many commonly held myths while writing in a clear and accessible style. Canada would be a better place if every Canadian would read this book.

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Indigenous theatre founder gets nod for prestigious prize

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Indigenous theatre founder gets nod for prestigious prize

Ben Waldman 3 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

For her work as the founding artistic director of Oshkagoojin Indigenous Theatre for Youth, Winnipeg’s Nova Courchene has been named the recipient of one of Manitoba theatre’s highest honours for emerging arts leaders.

Since 2023, the Cherry Karpyshin Arts Management Prize has been given out by Prairie Theatre Exchange to early-career or aspiring arts managers. Named for PTE’s longtime general manager, for whom the company’s mainstage is also named, the Cherry Prize is accompanied by professional supports and a $2,500 cash award.

Meaning “new moon” in Anishinaabemowin, Oshkagoojin runs a variety of initiatives in Winnipeg, including the teen-focused Rising Voices, the middle years Growing Voices, and the early years Young Voices programs. Through storytelling, movement, narrative games and guided play, the Young Voices program introduces Indigenous children aged five through nine to the fundamentals of collaborative and co-operative theatre with a curriculum devised through a cultural lens.

“As I continue to grow Oshkagoojin Indigenous Theatre for Youth, I look forward to strengthening the organization’s capacity, sustainability, and national reach so that more Indigenous young people can access theatre, cultural learning, and artistic leadership opportunities in their own communities,” says Courchene in a release. “I believe that when Indigenous youth are empowered to tell their stories, entire communities benefit, and I am excited to continue building these pathways for future generations.

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Today’s horoscope

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MOON ALERT: Caution! Avoid shopping (except food and gas) and important decisions all day until 6:15 p.m. After that, the moon moves from Gemini into Cancer.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

This is the perfect day to kick back and relax at home or in surroundings that make you feel good. Some of you might choose to work from home. Others will putter around doing something to make your home more attractive.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

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Rage politics meets its serious counterpart

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Rage politics meets its serious counterpart

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

Serious times call for serious politics. That means serious leaders offering serious solutions.

If all this sounds like a campaign slogan for the establishment, you’re probably right. But its rising resonance may well prove the unravelling of the conservative populist rage that has been driving politics in Canada, the United States and Europe.

Already we are seeing signs that the “burn it all down” rhetoric of more than a decade of MAGA Trump in the United States, Brexit and Faragism in the United Kingdom, and the angry and anti- establishment brand of Poilievre conservatism in Canada, has crested. Today, voters are yearning for stability and real solutions, the exact opposite of what divisive populist politics promise.

Events, current and past, rightly fuelled the anger. The 2008 financial crisis marked the beginning of our current “end times.” It was followed in short order by the first triumph of Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again movement in 2016, Brexit in Britain in 2016, the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas atrocities in Israel and that country’s two-year invasion and war in Gaza, and the triumphant return of Trump and MAGA in 2024. Now comes the ongoing war with Iran launched by the U.S. and Israel.

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Marla Somersall devoted her life to people in need

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Marla Somersall devoted her life to people in need

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Whether it was helping women build businesses in rural Tunisia, leading homeless and addiction support organizations or delivering meals to vulnerable Manitobans, Marla Somersall spent her life dedicated to lessening other people’s suffering.

Over a career that took her from North Africa to Prince Edward Island and back to Manitoba, Somersall held leadership roles in a range of social service and non-profit organizations, always drawn to work that centred on supporting people in need.

Most recently, she served as executive director of Meals on Wheels Winnipeg — a non-profit organization that provides meals to people who are unable to prepare them for themselves.

Kelly Scrivener, client co-ordinator with Meals on Wheels, said Somersall was a very calm and respectful person who led with gentle direction and fostered a collaborative workplace.

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Banned drunk driver in crash charged with getting behind wheel again

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Banned drunk driver in crash charged with getting behind wheel again

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A Winnipeg man who served time for drunkenly slamming a minivan into an off-duty police officer riding a motorcycle in 2023 is accused of getting behind the wheel, despite court orders.

Braedon Lee Gordon, 25, is charged with one count of driving while prohibited for an incident on March 2. His next court date is later this month.

Dan Léveillé, a veteran Winnipeg Police Service constable who was left with life-altering injuries in the June 14, 2023, collision, said he was not surprised to learn of the new charge.

“This is just another one of those stories, where a habitual, repeat offender is charged for the same offence. After having served time, his behaviour continues,” said Léveillé.

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