Winnipeg Free Press | Newsletter
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WATCH: How we’re helping the next generation of news readers
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I grew up reading the Free Press. Like many of my friends, I spent time after school delivering the Free Press to homes at a time when newspapers were required reading.
But the newspaper Wonder Years of my youth are not the reality for today’s kids, who might be one or even two generations removed from ever seeing a front page.
To be honest, I wonder if anything approximating journalism is part of the media diet of most Manitoba students. What they consume as they try to navigate a frighteningly fraught information landscape poses risks unlike anything imagined when I was growing up.
That’s why our new media literacy initiative matters, and why I am so excited about the role the Free Press is playing to not only strengthen knowledge, but democracy itself. That’s why I am encouraging you to spend a few minutes watching this primer on our project.
I wouldn’t be where I am today without the time spent in my formative years reading the Free Press.
And after spending 37 years in this paper’s newsroom, I can’t think of a better way to give back than by helping kids move forward in a media-literate way.
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Paul Samyn, Editor
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COMING UP
It’s not a Winnipeg-specific crime, but it’s one that most Winnipeggers know all too well: stolen bikes.
Writer Conrad Sweatman takes a look at the underground gig economy connected to the theft of bikes and parts and how it’s interwoven into the complex web of homelessness and drug addiction.
In Arts & Life, Conrad Sweatman profiles Lubomyr Melnyk, a former Winnipegger who is arguably the world’s fastest pianist. Melnyk returns to Winnipeg this weekend for a concert featuring his “continuous technique,” which sees him play as quickly as 19 notes per second in each hand.

Classical pianist Lubomyr Melnyk performs Nov. 30 at First Presbyterian Church. (Mike Deal / Free Press)
As the Olympic curling trial playoffs heat up, Taylor Allen is on the ground in Halifax following the bevy of Manitoba curling teams as they make their bid to represent Canada at the Milan-Cortina Games.
ONE GREAT PHOTO

Siblings William and Brooklyn take in the Luminous light display that opened at The Leaf last weekend. The display, which runs until Jan. 11, features colourfully lit trees and seasonal plants. (John Woods / Free Press)
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BREAKING NEWS
Winnipeg Free Press | Newsletter
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WELL-READ STORIES THIS WEEK
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DEEP DIVES
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NEWS YOU CAN USE
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OPINIONS: COLUMNS AND ANALYSIS
Mel Marginet:
Finding a better option than bigger roads
When facing complex problems, governments often reach for the simplest and most familiar solutions. In Winnipeg, that tendency shows up in how we plan for growth of our transportation network.
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HOLIDAY SPIRIT
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ON THE LIGHTER SIDE
Ben Waldman:
Yes way!
Derelict historic apartment block gets makeover and thumbs up from neighbourhood
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WEEKLY NEWS QUIZ
Test your knowledge of current events with our weekly news quiz.
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