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The Free Press Education Subject News for young children
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News for young children

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Vertebrate paleontologist Maximilian Scott handles the fossilized jaw of a tylosaurus (a type of mosasaur) jaw in the University of Manitoba paleontology lab.
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Paleontologist makes strides toward understanding the way mosasaurs behaved

AV Kitching 6 minute read Preview
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Paleontologist makes strides toward understanding the way mosasaurs behaved

AV Kitching 6 minute read Monday, Jan. 20, 2025

Maximilian Scott is a vertebrate paleontologist who focuses on extinct animal behaviour and behavioural evolution. Scott, 27, from Ovid, Mich., is in the last year of his master’s degree at the University of Manitoba studying mosasaurs, an ancient marine lizard that lived in Manitoba during the late-Cretaceous period.

He also offers tutoring in geology, biology, animal behaviour and conservation to people of all ages. You can find him on Instagram.

Our story doesn’t start with the first book that was written, our story starts a long time before that, a long time before the first humans. It’s all one long story.

Humans have only existed for 200,000 years. The Earth has been around for 4.5 billion years. Life has been around for three billion years, and complex life has been around for 542 million years.

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Monday, Jan. 20, 2025
Marta Guerrero photo
                                Linh Tran avec certains des biscuits à trouver sur sa boutique en ligne.
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Le rêve sucré de Linh Tran

Jonathan Semah 4 minute read Preview
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Le rêve sucré de Linh Tran

Jonathan Semah 4 minute read Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025

Avec Rêverie, une boulangerie sans gluten, Linh Tran voit un projet qu’elle a en tête depuis plusieurs années se concrétiser. Si elle s’est lancée dans le sans gluten, c’est avant tout pour des raisons personnelles. Mais, elle observe une demande en hausse année après année.

Tartes, cookies, beignets, gâteaux, desserts et biscuits, en parcourant la page Instagram et le site web de Rêverie, difficile de résister à la tentation face à toutes ces douceurs. Mais pour en arriver là, il a fallu des années d’essais et de pratique à Linh Tran.

Alors qu’elle a quitté son emploi au Centre de santé Saint-Boniface il y a quelques mois, la pâtissière est maintenant totalement concentrée sur Rêverie.

Une passion dès l’enfance

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Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025
Marta Guerrero photo
                                Lacina Dembélé est né en Côte d’Ivoire et est arrivé au Manitoba à l’age de quatre ans.
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Lacina Dembélé: le chemin vers son identité

Ophélie Doireau 7 minute read Preview
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Lacina Dembélé: le chemin vers son identité

Ophélie Doireau 7 minute read Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024

Arrivé à l’âge de quatre ans au Canada, après une étape par le Québec, Lacina Dembélé pose ses valises au Manitoba. Son chemin se passe sans accroc jusqu’à un retour dans son pays d’origine, la Côte d’Ivoire, qui bouscule sa vie et son identité.

C’est une histoire de famille qui a amené Lacina Dembélé au Canada en premier lieu. “J’ai grandi dans le petit village de Kolia, à environ sept heures de route d’Abidjan. Mes parents étaient séparés. Après quelques années auprès de ma grand-mère paternelle, j’ai déménagé chez ma tante à Abidjan pendant une année.

“Mon père était déjà au Canada parce qu’il avait fui le pays en raison de l’instabilité politique. Il m’a donc sponsorisé pour que je puisse le rejoindre.”

Les souvenirs de Lacina Dembélé de son enfance sont heureux. “C’était une nouvelle aventure pour moi. Je vivais mon premier hiver, j’ai des photos de moi avec ma première combinaison d’hiver avec un pantalon vert et un blouson bleu. Impossible de me perdre dans la neige. Quand je pense à mon enfance, j’étais tout le temps content parce qu’il y avait toujours quelque chose de nouveau.”

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Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Hafsa Altaf moved to Saskatoon from Pakistan at age four; she came to Winnipeg to study fashion design.
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The gift of hijab: Fashion designer found empowerment in modesty

AV Kitching 7 minute read Preview
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The gift of hijab: Fashion designer found empowerment in modesty

AV Kitching 7 minute read Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024

As a Muslim woman living in Canada, Hafsa Altaf faced countless challenges on multiple fronts when navigating the fashion industry as a woman in a hijab.

Rejected by local trade shows and craft markets and criticized by detractors in the South Asian community who disapproved of her sartorial ambitions, the 27-year-old artist and designer remained undaunted.

Undeterred by naysayers, she relentlessly called and emailed event organizers, determined to convey the values and mission of her label, Fashion by Hafsa.

Facing down the conservatism of her community was an altogether different struggle, but it was also one of the “greatest things” she has ever done, says the Pakistani-born Canadian, who moved to Saskatchewan with her family when she was four.

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Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024
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Introductory course on Islam offered

John Longhurst 3 minute read Monday, May. 6, 2024

Delvinder Zamir converted to Islam and then began the journey to learn more about her new faith.

“I needed to learn the basics,” said the 34-year-old, who converted from Sikhism.

In 2021, Zamir took an introductory course about Islam through the Manitoba Islamic Association.

“It was about how Islam came to be, about the Prophet and about the basic obligations for Muslims such as prayer, fasting, charity and pilgrimage,” she said.

BROOK JONES / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                Grade 12 student Amy Klos puts her cell phone in a cell phone storage pouch fastened to the wall while in her pre-calculus classroom at West Kildonan Collegiate in Winnipeg, Man., Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. West Kildonan Collegiate is one example among a number of schools across school divisions in Winnipeg that are implementing strict cell phone guidelines for the second semester.

Classrooms don’t have to be smartphone-free zones, tech-fluent educators tell province

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview

Classrooms don’t have to be smartphone-free zones, tech-fluent educators tell province

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Friday, Feb. 9, 2024

A group of tech-savvy teachers is calling on the province to create guidelines on cellphone use in schools and offering to help get it done.

The Manitoba Association of Education Technology Leaders has taken a firm stance against introducing a sweeping ban of personal wireless devices in kindergarten-to-Grade 12 buildings.

Manitoba Education has no policy in place. School divisions create their own appropriate use policies, while most buildings allow teachers to make rules for their own classrooms.

Tuxedo’s Laidlaw School, Collège Béliveau in Windsor Park and West Kildonan Collegiate are among Winnipeg facilities that have imposed stricter measures this year.

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Friday, Feb. 9, 2024
BROOK JONES / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                Grade 12 students Calan Duchart, Amy Klos and Rachel Mickall put their cell phones in a cell phone storage pouch fastened to the wall while in their pre-calculus classroom at West Kildonan Collegiate in Winnipeg, Man., Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. West Kildonan Collegiate is one example among a number of schools across school divisions in Winnipeg that are implementing strict cell phone guidelines for the second semester.
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Frustrated educators disconnecting distracted students from devices

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview
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Frustrated educators disconnecting distracted students from devices

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024

More school leaders across Manitoba are asking students to unplug themselves entirely during lesson times and requesting staff to be role models around positive phone-use.

Tuxedo’s Laidlaw School, Collège Béliveau in Windsor Park and West Kildonan Collegiate are among those that have announced stricter guidelines surrounding personal devices in 2024.

“Ultimately, we want our kids to disconnect with their devices and reconnect with their classmates and teacher,” said Adam Hildebrandt, principal of West Kildonan Collegiate. “We think this really is the best thing for their learning.”

Hildebrandt began his career at the high school in 2004. It was around 2010 when it became commonplace for his students to carry personal devices everywhere they went, and his classroom was no exception.

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Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024
New Islamic school set to open in city
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New Islamic school set to open in city

Brenda Suderman 4 minute read Preview
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New Islamic school set to open in city

Brenda Suderman 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 17, 2023

While students and teachers look forward to the end of classes, new school trustee Delvinder Zamir anticipates piles of summer homework.

As the board chair of the yet-unnamed new Islamic elementary school supported by the Manitoba Islamic Association, Zamir plans to hire teachers, furnish classrooms and buy supplies before the institution opens its doors in September.

“It will be nice to see parents and kids come to a spiritual place where they can use it in a different way,” she says of the kindergarten to Grade 4 school to be based out of Winnipeg Grand Mosque and Community Centre on Waverley Street.

The fourth Islamic school in Winnipeg, this one is the first located at a mosque and run as a project by Manitoba Islamic Association, and the only one in southwest Winnipeg, says Zamir, who also serves as second vice-president of the MIA board. Members asked for a community-run Islamic school at the mosque since they faced waiting lists at other schools, she says.

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Saturday, Jun. 17, 2023
Mosquito Watch

How many mosquitos are buzzing around Winnipeg? Check our interactive map.

Map by Andrew Burton and Eric Bailey 2 minute read Preview

How many mosquitos are buzzing around Winnipeg? Check our interactive map.

Map by Andrew Burton and Eric Bailey 2 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Heading outdoors? Need repellent? Find out with our interactive map showing the number mosquitoes caught in traps around the city.

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Thursday, May. 14, 2026
MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS 
Howard Raber, the third-generation president of Raber Gloves and Mitts.
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Raber Gloves’ Garbage Mitts the must-have Winnipeg winter accessory

Ben Waldman 11 minute read Preview
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Raber Gloves’ Garbage Mitts the must-have Winnipeg winter accessory

Ben Waldman 11 minute read Monday, Feb. 28, 2022

‘I am the wrong person to complain to about the weather,” Howard Raber says jubilantly midway through a Winnipeg January, wearing a golf shirt as he opens the door to his family’s factory on McDermot Avenue.

Raber does not mind the cold. It’s the reason he is in business.

Had his grandparents immigrated in 1925 to a warmer place, their grandson’s opinion on the windchill might differ. But the ancestors chose Winnipeg — not such a bad place to be in the business of making gloves.

When it’s freezing outside, which in the wintertime is often, if not always, Howard Raber considers himself especially lucky. “When it’s cold out, we are everybody’s best friend.”

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Monday, Feb. 28, 2022
Simeon Rusnak photo
Carly Shuler (left) and Maya Kotecha have built Hoot Reading into a major player in online tutoring. The $3 million in equity the company raised — led by toy maker Spin Master — will allow Hoot to expand its reach and its offerings.
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City company set to expand online tutoring presence after raising large equity stake

Martin Cash 5 minute read Preview
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City company set to expand online tutoring presence after raising large equity stake

Martin Cash 5 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2021

Winnipeg education technology company Hoot Reading has landed one of the first investments in a new venture capital fund from toy maker Spin Master.

Interest in Hoot Reading, which has developed an online tutoring platform whose mission is closing the gap in what’s been identified as a reading slump in the fourth grade, has grown significantly through the pandemic.

With school-age children home in various parts of North America at various times during the pandemic, parents have been forced to look for more tools to help with early childhood educational habits and Hoot Reading has caught on.

“We have had incredible traction during the pandemic,” said Maya Kotecha, co-founder and co-CEO of Hoot Reading. “It has been a tailwind for us.”

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Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2021
Handout / THE CANADIAN PRESS
Ian Brackenbury Channell, 88, has been let go after 23 years of using his wizardly personal to promote the city of Christchurch, New Zealand. And just before Halloween, too!
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It’s a tough spell for official wizards

Doug Speirs  5 minute read Preview
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It’s a tough spell for official wizards

Doug Speirs  5 minute read Monday, Oct. 18, 2021

What with there being only two weeks until Halloween, I’m not sure this is a good time to fire your official wizard.

But that’s exactly what the New Zealand city of Christchurch did the other day when it dumped its official wizard from the payroll after 23 years of loyal service.

Ha ha ha! OK, I’m not kidding. Christchurch’s city council has ended its contract with the world’s only state-appointed wizard — “I’m going to have to ask you to turn in your wand!” — because it has decided to go in a more modern and diverse direction.

Anyone who has ever read a Harry Potter novel or seen one of the films is probably thinking: “Laying off your wizard just before All Hallow’s Eve can only end in tears, right?” Or as famed American columnist Dave Barry chirped in his blog: “Tomorrow’s headline: City council turned into frogs!”

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Monday, Oct. 18, 2021
JESSICA LEE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Faiza Malik, 16, shows off one of her untitled paintings at her Winnipeg home. Malik, who moved to Canada nine years ago from Afghanistan, credits art and creativity with helping her transition to her new life here.
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Teenage artist finds creative process helps her tap into emotions, find sense of self

Sabrina Carnevale 7 minute read Preview
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Teenage artist finds creative process helps her tap into emotions, find sense of self

Sabrina Carnevale 7 minute read Monday, Oct. 18, 2021

Faiza Malik found more than peace and safety when she and her family arrived in Canada from Afghanistan nine years ago — she also found art.

The 16-year-old credits art and creativity with helping her transition to a new life. Now she wants to work with local kids to give them access to resources she never had growing up.

“I started painting when I first arrived in Canada when I was in Grade 2 or Grade 3. We had those little art projects in school and I was always excited to do those things because I was using my hands and creating something new,” Malik says. “Art wasn’t really a thing that was available in Afghanistan.”

She admits the culture shock was all-consuming when she and her family, including her mom, dad and three siblings, first arrived here.

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Monday, Oct. 18, 2021
Doug Odjick, a council member of the Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg, holds a 4,000-year-old Indigenous knife, found on Parliament Hill during the site's renovation. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Doug Odjick*MANDATORY CREDIT*
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Feds to return parliamentary find to Algonquins

Marie Woolf, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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Feds to return parliamentary find to Algonquins

Marie Woolf, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Tuesday, May. 26, 2026

The Conservative Party of Canada must embrace rapid change to its methods of platform development, leadership and candidate selection, while pushing back on efforts to radicalize the party.

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Tuesday, May. 26, 2026
SHANNON VANRAES / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Being outside, like Anna Cooper Reid, with her dog in Assiniboine Park, is beneficial to health in many ways, including stress reduction.
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Nature prescription could be just what the doctor ordered

Kevin Rollason 3 minute read Preview
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Nature prescription could be just what the doctor ordered

Kevin Rollason 3 minute read Sunday, Oct. 17, 2021

Take a hike in the forest and call me in the morning.

Instead of prescribing just a pill or ointment, doctors could soon tell patients to head to the great outdoors.

PaRx, a national nature prescription program, has launched in Manitoba to help address mental and physical health problems and to encourage people to get outside to exercise.

Anna Cooper Reed, a social worker and doctoral student who is helping bring the program to this province, said she grew up being able to go to the family cottage in a provincial park in Manitoba so she knows first-hand the benefits of spending time outdoors.

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Sunday, Oct. 17, 2021
Among the items at the St. Boniface Museum is this hat, which belonged to curator Emilie Bordeleau-Laroche’s great-great grandfather Alfred Desorches, who fought in the 1885 Battle of Frog Lake. The suede hat bears marks of that battle and others. (Jessica Lee / Winnipeg Free Press)
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St. Boniface Museum home to 30,000 artifacts, many connected to founder of Manitoba

Brenda Suderman 8 minute read Preview
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St. Boniface Museum home to 30,000 artifacts, many connected to founder of Manitoba

Brenda Suderman 8 minute read Monday, Oct. 18, 2021

St. Boniface Museum is home to 30,000 artifacts, many connected to the founder of Manitoba.

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Monday, Oct. 18, 2021
A boat pulls a person on an inflatable tube on Lake Okanagan in Kelowna, B.C., on Tuesday July 21, 2009. The legal rights to an elusive British Columbia lake creature known as Ogopogo have been transferred to an alliance of Indigenous nations who say the legendary figure has always been part of their centuries-old spiritual teachings. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck
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Ogopogo copyright given to B.C. Indigenous nations

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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Ogopogo copyright given to B.C. Indigenous nations

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Monday, May. 25, 2026

VERNON, B.C. - The legal rights to the legendary creature in a British Columbia lake have been transferred to an alliance of Indigenous nations who say the Ogopogo has always been part of their spiritual teachings.

Council members in the Okanagan city of Vernon voted unanimously to transfer the Ogopogo copyright it has held for 65 years to the eight-member Okanagan Nation Alliance.

Ogopogo means spirit of the lake in the alliance's Syilx language.

"It just makes sense," Vernon Mayor Victor Cumming said in an interview. "The story comes from the Okanagan Syilx people and it makes sense for them to hold the copyright and not the City of Vernon."

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Monday, May. 25, 2026
JESSICA LEE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Spence Neighbourhood Association at the soft opening of their InnerCity Community Greenhouse Wednesday. From left to right: Kelly Romas, Director of Marketing Red River Co-op; Mandalyn Unger, Environmental and Open Spaces Coordinator at Spence Neighbourhood Association; Olivia Michalczuk, Director of Grants at Spence Neighbourhood Association; Lin Howes Barr, Executive Director at Spence Neighbourhood Association; Jocelyn Macleod, Building Sustainable Communities Program, Provincial Government; and Stephen Kirk, Greenhouse Coordinator.
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Greenhouse sprouts in inner-city neighbourhood

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Preview
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Greenhouse sprouts in inner-city neighbourhood

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021

AN inner-city greenhouse will soon burst with plants and people, and tackle food insecurity and unemployment.

The Spence Neighbourhood Association unveiled its community greenhouse at 689 Maryland St. Wednesday.

“In our neighbourhood, food access is a big issue,” said Mandalyn Unger, a co-ordinator with the non-profit.

The group regularlys accepts input from locals about their vision for the neighbourhood.

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Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021
The Homes for Heroes Foundation is building a tiny home village for veterans in Kingston, Ont. (seen in rendering). It is eyeing Winnipeg next.
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Short-term housing, on-site counselling seek to address veteran homelessness

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview
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Short-term housing, on-site counselling seek to address veteran homelessness

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021

A property in Transcona is being eyed to create a village of tiny homes for unsheltered veterans.

The Homes for Heroes Foundation wants to buy two acres of city land just north of Transcona Boulevard and west of the Transcona Library, where it hopes to build 20 tiny homes and a resource centre. That site would offer short-term housing and on-site counselling, with the ultimate goal of helping its residents secure stable jobs and permanent homes.

“We actually have the ability to end the issue of veteran homelessness in the City of Winnipeg,” said David Howard, the foundation’s chief executive officer.

Howard said such villages are either under construction, or have already proven successful, in many other Canadian cities.

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Thursday, Oct. 14, 2021
A page from Munschworks 2. Jean Levac / Ottawa Citizen
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When it come to Munsch stories, I’ll love them forever

Shelley Cook 5 minute read Preview
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When it come to Munsch stories, I’ll love them forever

Shelley Cook 5 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021

When bedtime rolls around in our home and it’s time to pick a story (or three), there’s usually at least one Robert Munsch book in the mix.

We love Munsch stories. They’re fun, they’re usually silly, and they’re often central to some of my most favourite memories.

My mom read them to me as a kid, and now I read them to my own kids. Reciting the familiar words of the stories I grew up with feels like a rite of passage, as my kids echo them back to me. You can’t read a Munsch book without emphasizing the words and becoming the characters. That’s what makes his stories so special. It’s a whole production.

When my daughter was born, my mom gave a copy of Love You Forever, the sweet and sad story Munsch wrote years after he and his wife suffered the loss of two stillborn children. The lullaby in the book was one that he made up in his head for his lost babies — words he couldn’t say out loud.

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Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021
Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press
Ian Scott and Landon Gibson with their children Moe Gibson Scott (left) and Freddie Gibson Scott (right). The couple opened the doors of the Red RIver Toy Library, in the basement of the Fort Garry United Church, this past April.
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Fort Garry toy library builds community, breaks down barriers

Aaron Epp  4 minute read Preview
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Fort Garry toy library builds community, breaks down barriers

Aaron Epp  4 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021

For Ian Scott and Landon Gibson, it’s always a good time to try to make a difference.

The Fort Garry couple are the founders and co-ordinators of the Red River Toy Library. Located in the basement of Fort Garry United Church at 800 Point Rd. and open every Saturday morning from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m., the library lends toys to young families, free of charge.

Scott and Gibson were inspired to start the initiative after a fall 2019 visit with friends in Saskatoon who volunteer at a toy library.

They started putting together a proposal for the toy library during the COVID-19 lockdown in spring last year.

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Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021
Retired astronaut Col. Chris Hadfield talks about his own extraordinary stories of leadership as one of the keynote speakers at the Greatness in Leadership business management event in Lethbridge, Alberta on Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016. THE CANADIAN PRESS/David Rossiter
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Hadfield urges Shatner to 'soak up' spaceflight

Adina Bresge, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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Hadfield urges Shatner to 'soak up' spaceflight

Adina Bresge, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

One Canadian spaceman to another, former astronaut Chris Hadfield is encouraging William Shatner to follow the wise words of Captain James T. Kirk as he braces himself for a real-life blastoff: "Boldly go."

Hadfield said he quoted the "Star Trek" star's iconic mantra in a note wishing him well on his voyage aboard Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin rocket ship on Wednesday.

The flight was originally planned for Tuesday but Blue Origin has announced it is being delayed 24 hours due to forecasted high winds.

Hadfield, a self-identified Trekkie who commanded the International Space Station, said he's thrilled that after decades of service in the fictional Spacefleet, the Quebec-raised actor will soon get to experience the final frontier for himself.

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026
Staying power
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Simplicity has kept Ticket to Ride steaming ahead

Olaf Pyttlik 7 minute read Preview
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Simplicity has kept Ticket to Ride steaming ahead

Olaf Pyttlik 7 minute read Saturday, Oct. 9, 2021

What defines a great board game? It is its theme, the accessibility and elegance of the rules, the design and production of the components, the depth of strategy, or the level of enjoyment one experiences when playing it? I believe it is a combination of all of these factors, and very few games are able to fulfil all of these criteria satisfactorily.

These are games that have staying power and that are loved not only by thousands, but by millions of people around the world. There is no doubt in my mind the game Ticket to Ride is one of them.

Ticket to Ride was created by the American designer Alan R. Moon and was first published in 2004 by the game publisher Days of Wonder. Since its inception it has sold more than eight million copies worldwide and has received dozens of international awards, including the much coveted “Spiel des Jahres” in Germany. It is one of the most popular modern board games in the world, an honour that can only be shared with other mammoth titles like Catan or Carcassone.

One of the reasons for its success is that it is deceptively simple. The game casts players as railroad developers, crossing North America in the age of steam. It is played on a large and colourfully illustrated map of the United States and southern Canada. It even features Winnipeg as one of its destination cities — something I am strangely proud of! In addition, it features a large deck of cards that depict train cars in different colours as well as a supply of mini plastic trains for each player in their colour. Most turns, a player can take one of two actions: They can either add cards to their hand from the card supply, or they can claim a route between two cities on the board. If they choose the latter, they trade in a set of cards of the same colour as the track and place their train tokens on that route. They then immediately receive points for that action. The longer the route they claim, the more points they get. The game ends when at least one player has two or fewer train tokens left. The player with the most points is declared winner after one final round. That’s pretty much the core of it. To add a little more depth, each player also receives another set of cards listing pairs of cities. At the end of the game, players receive bonus points for each card they were able to link up, but they lose points if they couldn’t. This adds a hidden point structure that can alter a player’s ranking at the very end.

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Saturday, Oct. 9, 2021
Photos by Shel Zolkewich / Winnipeg Free Press 
When Paint Lake is still, reflections are highly effective for capturing fall colours. Simply stroll through the picnic and beach areas for great views.
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Falling for a splash of colour

Shel Zolkewich 3 minute read Preview
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Falling for a splash of colour

Shel Zolkewich 3 minute read Saturday, Oct. 9, 2021

How silently they tumble downAnd come to rest upon the groundTo lay a carpet, rich and rare,Beneath the trees without a care,Content to sleep, their work well done,Colors gleaming in the sun.

Leaves, by Elsie N. Brady

The autumn equinox has come and gone, leaving a fully-fledged landscape to show off its finery every day. The luminescent yellow aspen leaves tip back and forth, back and forth. Maples slip into deep burgundy coats. And in the north, the delicate tamaracks blaze with gold. Fall foliage is in full swing. Time to grab a camera and hit the road.

Hecla Island Provincial Park promises a variety of landscape, offering plenty of diversity in not only its resident trees — including tamarack and birch — but also its stands of phragmites (common reeds) and cattails. You also have a great chance of spotting migrating bald eagles and plenty of waterfowl too.

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Saturday, Oct. 9, 2021
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