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Free Press Head Start for Oct. 30

Good morning.

A convicted sex offender accused in the recent attack on a sleeping woman at a University of Manitoba dormitory told court earlier this year he wanted to “do well” in the community after completing high-risk sex offender and addictions programs behind bars. Dean Pritchard reports.

Peg City Car Co-op has added a second and third electric vehicle to an ever-expanding fleet that’s now up to 160 automobiles, and has partnered with Assiniboine Credit Union, to cover the cost of Level 2 chargers at the South Osborne Housing Co-op and Old Grace Housing Co-op locations. Martin Cash has the story.

— David Fuller

 

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Your forecast

Clearing this morning. High 6 C, UV index 2 or low.

What’s happening today

Manitoba Opera’s production of Donizetti’s comic masterpiece The Elixir of Love, starring Winnipeg’s Andriana Chuchman as feisty protagonist Adina, continues today at the Centennial Concert Hall, 555 Main St., at 7 p.m.

Holly Harris has a glowing review here.

Jen Zoratti talks to Chuchman about the role, in which she made her Metropolitan Opera debut in 2014, and her illustrious career, here.

For ticket information, click here.

Andriana Chuchman as Adina (Ruth Bonneville / Free Press files)

Andriana Chuchman as Adina (Ruth Bonneville / Free Press files)

Today’s must-read

The slaying of a 17-year-old girl in a quintuple homicide in southern Manitoba was a direct result of gross negligence and inaction by Child and Family Services, her mother claims in a lawsuit.

Juliette Hastings accused CFS of ignoring “obvious” warning signs and failing to act on pleas to remove her daughter, Myah-Lee Gratton, from the home of a Carman man charged with killing her, his three children and his partner.

“Ryan Howard Manoakeesick had a known history of physical violence and instability. He had a criminal record,” Hastings’ statement of claim said of the suspect. “It was foreseeable that all residents of the home were at risk of egregious harm or death.” Chris Kitching has the story.

Juliette Hastings (Ruth Bonneville / Free Press files)

Juliette Hastings (Ruth Bonneville / Free Press files)

On the bright side

Archaeologists in Cambodia have unearthed a dozen centuries-old sandstone statues in a “remarkable discovery” at the Angkor World Heritage Site near the city of Siem Reap, authorities said Wednesday.

The statues — depicting so-called “door guardians” — were discovered last week near the north gate leading to the 11th-century Royal Palace at Angkor Thom, the last capital of the Khmer Empire, said Long Kosal, spokesman for the Apsara National Authority, the government agency that oversees the archaeological park. The Associated Press has more here.

Centuries-old sandstone statues being arranged at Angkor Thom in Cambodia. (Phouk Chea / Apsaras National Authority / The Associated Press)

Centuries-old sandstone statues being arranged at Angkor Thom in Cambodia. (Phouk Chea / Apsaras National Authority / The Associated Press)

On this date

On Oct. 30, 1965: The Winnipeg Free Press reported in Montreal, CNR shipments of wheat to the Lakehead had increased to the point where the railway had exceeded its daily quota set by the Canadian Wheat Board. British prime minister Harold Wilson said the demand from African nationalist leaders that Britain “attempt to settle all Rhodesia’s constitutional problems with a military invasion is out.” 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

Tyler Searle:

Winnipeg churches raise walls to keep out crime

Places of worship fight break-ins, vandalism, violence Read More

 

Erik Pindera:

Shindico executive rejects longtime associate’s ‘false accusation’ of bribery in civil lawsuit testimony

An executive of Shindico, a commercial real estate firm, told a civil trial Tuesday the allegation made in court last week that his company had bribed the City of Winnipeg’s former top bureaucrat in 2... Read More

 

Joyanne Pursaga:

Councillor fears cleanup of needles, other dangerous debris in parks will prove too costly for colleagues

The city could hire crews to remove needles and weapons discarded at parks but a key supporter of the change fears its price tag will prevent action. Read More

 

Kevin Rollason:

Fire infractions spike at city’s rooming houses

The number of violations of fire prevention bylaws in Winnipeg’s 140 rooming houses jumped by more than 20 per cent in just one year, a city report says. Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Mike Sawatzky:

Bisons look to run wild against Rams

Manitoba’s top ground game faces tough Regina rush defence Read More

 

Mike McIntyre:

Tight-knit Jets out to prove naysayers wrong

There’s a few new additions to the decor inside the Winnipeg Jets dressing room this year, including a large map of North America etched on the wall with the team logo smack dab in the middle. It’s a fitting metaphor for a squad that seems to have embraced an “us against the world” mentality. Read More

 

Joshua Frey-Sam:

Kuntz, Kartusch take top honours

Pair dominated Manitoba amateur golf scene in 2024 Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

Conrad Sweatman:

Fans of Phantom find paradise

Filmmaker Kevin Smith in Winnipeg for anniversary screening of 1974 cult movie and documentary on city's love affair with it Read More

 

Staff:

Cake-ology pastry chef headed to national culinary finals

Pastry chef Austin Granados emerged a champion at Canada’s Great Kitchen Party Winnipeg, the regional qualifier for the 2025 Canadian Culinary Championships. Monday’s event at the Fairmont Hotel sa... Read More

 

Ben Waldman:

New spin on record store

Father and son team up to open music shop that doubles as a café Read More

 
 

New in Business

Gabrielle Piché:

Crunch Fitness eyes long-planned south Winnipeg opening date

For years, a two-storey former gym near Kenaston Boulevard has sat empty. Crunch Fitness is now targeting December to open a location on Nature Park Way. It follows months of slowdowns from equipment and material arrivals and construction, according to team leads. Read More

 

Aaron Epp:

Kicking off career development month

It’s beginning to look a lot like Career and Workforce Development Month. Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Tom Brodbeck:

ER wait times will remain a problem without more staffed beds

It’s no wonder emergency-room wait times continued to hover at record levels in Winnipeg in 2023-24. Despite promises by the previous Progressive Conservative government and, now, the NDP to expand ho... Read More

 

Editorial:

Pleasant outcome to the school phone ban

When the provincial government announced a provincewide ban on cellphones in classrooms in August this year, there were many reasons to bite one’s nails about the change — for educators and school administrators most of all. Read More

 

Pam Frampton:

The fight against loneliness

Human beings are highly social animals. We like to spend time in each other’s company, and we sometimes even shoot the breeze with strangers, so is it any wonder that being alone when you don’t want t... Read More

 
 

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