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Free Press Head Start for Aug. 19

Good morning.

A northern Manitoba First Nation is pleading for help in its fight against addiction after a rash of alcohol- and drug-fuelled violence on the weekend. O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation Chief Shirley Ducharme spoke to reporter Erik Pindera yesterday.

 

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Your forecast

Mainly cloudy with a high of 27 C. Hazy; chance of showers this morning with risk of thunderstorm. Humidex 32. UV index 6 or high. Low of 16 C tonight.

What’s happening today

This week, Winnipegger Marissa Naylor is representing Canada at the Pan Am Tenpin Championships in Reno, Nev.

Naylor, a member of the national senior team for three years, made her world championship debut in Salmiya, Kuwait, last year. Naylor won bronze in the women’s trios event with Canada’s Samantha and Jennifer Besana. She spoke to Mike Sawatzky before heading to the U.S. to compete.

Marissa Naylor (Jessica Lee/Free Press Files)

Marissa Naylor (Jessica Lee/Free Press Files)

Today’s must-read

The largest renewable energy infrastructure project of its kind in Manitoba is happening at a St. Vital high school. Solar panels installed on the roof of Collège Jeanne-Sauvé are powering roughly 17 per cent of the high school’s total energy costs.

“These types of things should be a no-brainer,” said former principal Alain Michalik, who oversaw the project before retiring in the spring.” Maggie Macintosh reports.

Former principal Alain Michalik (right) and Amarbeer Bhandari, director of facilities, maintenance and transportation check out the solar panels. (Ruth Bonneville/Free Press)

Former principal Alain Michalik (right) and Amarbeer Bhandari, director of facilities, maintenance and transportation check out the solar panels. (Ruth Bonneville/Free Press)

On the bright side

A garden has sprouted at a Whyte Ridge church, and the fresh produce is being spread to five local charitable organizations. The St. Gianna Harvest Ministry garden is located on the grounds of St. Gianna Beretta Molla Parish, with about 30 parish members tending to it. They’re harvesting vegetables and giving them to Missionaries of Charity, the Bear Clan, Willow Place, House of Hesed and Bruce Oake Recovery Centre.

“It’s a way to share our blessings with those in need,” said Rod Cantiveros, one of the members looking after the garden. John Longhurst has the story.

Rod Cantiveros tends to the parish garden. (Mikaela Mackenzie/Free Press)

Rod Cantiveros tends to the parish garden. (Mikaela Mackenzie/Free Press)

On this date

On Aug. 19, 1925: Manitoba Free Press reporter E. Cora Hind wrote from Yorkton, Sask., on a tour from Winnipeg to Edmonton examining the state of prairie crops, that the area between Wynyard and Yorkton, although having seen expansion of wheat production in recent years, also saw some of the largest oat yields in the West. A Winnipeg city council committee debated for hours on the proposed pact between the Hydro Electric system and the Winnipeg Electric Company. Read the rest of this day’s paper here. Search our archives for more here.

Today’s front page

Get the full story: Read today’s e-edition of the Free Press.

 
 

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Top news

Katrina Clarke:

Longtime broadcaster Adler named to Senate

Longtime broadcaster and Free Press columnist Charles Adler has been named to Canada’s Senate. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Saturday morning that Adler was one of two new independent sen... Read More

 

Erik Pindera:

Indigenous leaders call for addictions help as violence escalates in remote First Nations

A northern Manitoba First Nation is pleading for help in its fight against addiction after a rash of alcohol- and drug-fuelled violence on the weekend. It’s an issue harming First Nations communities across the province, Indigenous leaders say. “We are trying to help our people with addictions… we want to heal our people, that’s our goal,” O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation Chief Shirley Ducharme said Sunday, as she called for more resources from the federal government and First Nations leadership. FILE PHOTO Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak Acting Grand Chief Angela Levasseur is supporting the declaration of a state of emergency in O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree […] Read More

 

Dean Pritchard:

Aspiring 3D-printed gun maker, trafficker sentenced to three years

Headingley Correctional Centre inmate Ashlen Parris never had a chance to make or sell illegal 3D-printed handguns before he was arrested, but just talking about it was enough to land him a three-year... Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Jeff Hamilton:

Defence does it again

Blue Bombers clamp down on Leos once more, ruin return of QB Rourke Read More

 

Zoe Pierce:

Everything but a win

Weekend with the Goldeyes features big crowds, dogs and celebrities, but no victories Read More

 

Dan Ralph, The Canadian Press:

CFL reinstates Toronto Argonauts quarterback Chad Kelly with conditions

VAUGHAN, Ont. - Toronto quarterback Chad Kelly was back taking snaps at Argonauts practice Sunday after being reinstated by the CFL, with conditions. The league announced ... Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

Eva Wasney, Ben Sigurdson, Jen Zoratti, Thandi Vera, Jill Wilson:

An end-of-the-summer bucket list

Our staff’s top picks for a Manitoba adventure as summer winds down Read More

 

David Sanderson:

Keeping the spirit of Eaton’s alive

Mementoes hark back to heyday of Portage Avenue’s once-regal retailer Read More

 

Jen Zoratti:

Brat Green — the colour, the movement, the marketing

Brat Green is that affronting shade of not-quite-lime, not-quite-chartreuse you’re seeing everywhere online these days, from nail polish to political memes about U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris. It’s a repellent, polarizing colour — the colour of sour candy, the colour of slime. It’s this summer’s answer to Barbie pink. Read More

 
 

New in Business

Joshua Frey-Sam:

Building spaces for healing, empowerment

Ka Ni Kanichihk expansion ’significant milestone for our community’ Read More

 

Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press:

Back to school means back to the spotlight for Big Tech

Back to school could mean back to the hot seat for Big Tech. Social media platforms TikTok, Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat spent last school year embroiled in alawsuitaccusing them of disrupting learning, contributing to a mental health crisis among youth and leaving teachers to manage the fallout. When students return to class this September, experts say the clash between tech and textbooks will be reignited — and perhaps even ratcheted up — as schools and parents reckon with the impacts social media is having on education. Experts say this upcoming school year will put social media networks TikTok, Facebook, Instagram […] Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Editorial:

Banking species before it’s too late

Instead of shrugging our shoulders and accepting the potential loss of unique plant species, the idea goes, we can at least store their seeds and have the chance to bring them back. Read More

 
 

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