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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.

Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press
The McNally Robinson Booksellers store at Grant Park Shopping Centre. 121003 October 03, 2012 Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press
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For a quarter-century, McNally Robinson's Grant Park location has tapped into local book lover's desires

Ben Waldman 9 minute read Preview
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For a quarter-century, McNally Robinson's Grant Park location has tapped into local book lover's desires

Ben Waldman 9 minute read Friday, Oct. 8, 2021

Twenty-five years ago this week, the staff of McNally Robinson were frantically preparing, bounding about their Grant Park store, a 20,000-square-foot behemoth that had yet to welcome its first customer.

The grand opening was near, and so was Margaret Atwood.

Atwood, if not the country’s most famous author then at least its second or third, was in Winnipeg to promote her latest book, Alias Grace, and to lend her authoritative support to what was to become the country’s largest independent bookstore, with a reading and book signing. A large crowd was anticipated.

There was a wild push to get ready for Oct. 15: staff were shifted from the company’s smaller locations, shipments were arriving in rapid succession. Shelves still had to be set up when Atwood arrived a few hours early to discuss the details of her reading, where she would be joined by a local literary icon, Carol Shields.

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Friday, Oct. 8, 2021
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Memorization and practice still important to learning

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Friday, Oct. 8, 2021

INSTEAD of making students memorize a bunch of useless facts, we should help them think like scientists and historians. This is best accomplished by an inquiry-based approach that allows students to guide their own learning process.

Does this reasoning make sense to you? It probably does if you’ve recently attended a faculty of education where teachers are trained. This is also what teachers are often told at their professional development sessions.

The problem is that this approach is wrong. Not just wrong by a little, but by a lot. Despite claiming to be based on solid evidence, the real science of learning points in the opposite direction.

In fact, students learn best when they are immersed in a content-rich learning environment that builds up their background knowledge. Practice is also a key part of helping students master new skills. Learning is hard work, and for this reason alone it is important for teachers, not students, to set the direction in the classroom.

SHANNON VANRAES / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Yusuf Abdulrehman opened Halal Meat Centre, Winnipeg’s first halal sore, nearly 35 years ago.
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City’s oldest halal shop a community cornerstone

Malak Abas 6 minute read Preview
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City’s oldest halal shop a community cornerstone

Malak Abas 6 minute read Monday, Oct. 4, 2021

To step into Manitoba’s longest-running halal store is to feel all your senses go off at once.

Colourful spices lining the shelves, hookahs of every size and variety, signage above each aisle in English and Arabic, the smell of warm samosas. On a small television a video of Muslim worshippers in Mecca with prayers overlaid plays, above one of the store’s tightly-packed lanes.

At the heart of it all, 70-year-old owner Yusuf Abdulrehman is somehow the most vibrant aspect of the store.

Seemingly unable to stop moving, he paces through the aisles of the Halal Meat Centre, located at 206 Maryland St., fixing products just so, talking to suppliers on speaker phone, but always stopping to greet customers, many he knows by name. It’s no wonder that many in Winnipeg’s Muslim community fondly refer to the store as simply “Yusuf’s.”

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Monday, Oct. 4, 2021
FILE - A Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2020 file photo of a Nobel Prize medal. The Nobel Prize in Medicine is due to be awarded on Monday Oct. 4, 2021. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)
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2 win medicine Nobel for showing how we react to heat, touch

David Keyton And Maria Cheng, The Associated Press 7 minute read Preview
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2 win medicine Nobel for showing how we react to heat, touch

David Keyton And Maria Cheng, The Associated Press 7 minute read Monday, May. 18, 2026

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Two scientists won the Nobel Prize in medicine on Monday for their discoveries into how the human body perceives temperature and touch, revelations that could lead to new ways of treating pain or even heart disease.

Americans David Julius and Ardem Patapoutian separately identified receptors in the skin that respond to heat and pressure, and researchers are working on drugs to target them. Some hope the discoveries could eventually lead to pain treatments that reduce dependence on highly addictive opioids. But the breakthroughs, which happened decades ago, have not yet yielded many effective new therapies.

Julius, of the University of California at San Francisco, used capsaicin, the active component in chili peppers, to help pinpoint the nerve sensors that respond to heat, the Nobel Committee said. Patapoutian, of Scripps Research Institute at La Jolla, California, found pressure-sensitive sensors in cells that respond to mechanical stimulation.

“This really unlocks one of the secrets of nature,” said Thomas Perlmann, secretary-general of the committee, in announcing the winners. “It’s actually something that is crucial for our survival, so it’s a very important and profound discovery.”

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Monday, May. 18, 2026
View from Gimli south beach.
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Biking to the Viking (statue) a great way to burn off tasty local treats

Steve Lyons 11 minute read Preview
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Biking to the Viking (statue) a great way to burn off tasty local treats

Steve Lyons 11 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2021

GIMLI — There are many things I enjoy about travel: learning about different cultures, seeing historic sites, experiencing varieties of natural beauty and meeting people from around the world, to list just a few.

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Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2021
Brandon Sun Hundreds gather for the Orange Shirt Day walk trekking from the Riverbank Discovery Centre to the site of the former Brandon Residential School Thursday.  (Chelsea Kemp/The Brandon Sun)
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Listening after decades of hearing

Melissa Martin 7 minute read Preview
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Listening after decades of hearing

Melissa Martin 7 minute read Friday, Oct. 1, 2021

It seemed that all of Canada glowed orange, in act or in mind. On the streets of Winnipeg, a sea of people marched in orange shirts, carrying orange signs. On social media, people shared text posts on orange backgrounds, urging more attention to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's 94 calls to action.

Even city buses — though not orange — marked the day on their digital signs.

If you'd come to me 10 years ago and told me this week would happen, I wouldn't have believed you. If you'd told me that on the last day of September 2021, everything from a cocktail bar to a Botox clinic would close to remember the children and survivors of residential schools, I would have said you were telling me about a dream.

Not the kind we seek to create, but the kind that disintegrates upon waking.

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Friday, Oct. 1, 2021
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We’re still fighting for basic accessibility

Luca Patuelli 4 minute read Friday, Oct. 1, 2021

People with disabilities have to fight for basic accessibility every day – and it's exhausting! I live with a disability that requires me to use crutches to get around. I work as a dance educator with students that have various disabilities. I’ve learned first-hand that "accessibility" is a word that is thrown around plenty but largely ignored in practice. It’s time this changed.

We live in a society with so much abundance of knowledge and experience to create accessible spaces for all, yet we are still so far behind. Accessibility is a basic right, enshrined in the Accessible Canada Act, adopted in 2019 to create a barrier-free Canada and enable the full and equal participation of persons with disability in all aspects of life.

Canada also joined the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities to protect and promote the rights and dignities of persons  with disabilities “without discrimination and on an equal basis with others.”

Yet I still encounter inaccessible spaces almost every day.

Evan McRae posts videos of passing trains he records when he’s out and about with his parents and they find themselves on the wrong side of a gate arm, or when he rides his bike to a predetermined location. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)
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Young railway enthusiast keeps busy posting original train videos

David Sanderson 8 minute read Preview
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Young railway enthusiast keeps busy posting original train videos

David Sanderson 8 minute read Friday, Oct. 1, 2021

If you’re like us, the first thing that pops into your head when you’re nearing a rail crossing and hear the ding-ding-ding of a warning signal is, “Great... a train.” It’s the same with Evan McRae; only in his case it’s more like, “Great! A train!”

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Friday, Oct. 1, 2021
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Mary Starr walks in a march that went from the Canadian Museum for Human Rights to St. John's Park on the first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation in Winnipeg on Thursday, Sept. 30, 2021. For --- story.
Winnipeg Free Press 2021.
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Heavy hearts, happy hearts

Melissa Martin 5 minute read Preview
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Heavy hearts, happy hearts

Melissa Martin 5 minute read Thursday, Sep. 30, 2021

The marchers arrive at St. John's Park at almost exactly the minute predicted. They arrive in a great orange wave, all wearing shirts the same colour. They arrive led by the drum, and the riders on horseback, and the tendrils of smudge that curl over Main Street, cleansing the path to the park where the powwow is underway.

"Are we all going to fit into the park, guys?" one young woman gasps, laughing as she surveys the scene.

In a way they do, in a way they don't. For hours, the people flow into the park from all directions. They flow by the hundreds, and then the thousands. They flow until the fields show less green than orange, until lines for the porta-potties stretch into the dozens, until the whole park is alive with laughter and conversation.

The crowd looks like Manitoba. It contains faces of all ages, all races. Most of the people here are Indigenous, but on this day they are joined in solidarity by people of all nations; a movement, generations in the making, to call for a way forward, to call for action on reconciliation, to call for justice for Indigenous people.

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Thursday, Sep. 30, 2021
Several thousand gathered for a Healing Walk through downtown Winnipeg on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation Thursday. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)
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Manitobans take to streets in name of truth, reconciliation

Julia-Simone Rutgers and Gabrielle Piché 6 minute read Preview
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Manitobans take to streets in name of truth, reconciliation

Julia-Simone Rutgers and Gabrielle Piché 6 minute read Thursday, Sep. 30, 2021

A sea of orange flooded downtown Winnipeg, as thousands of Manitobans came together to honour residential school survivors, mourn those lost to the system, and mark the first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

On Thursday morning, outside the towering Canadian Museum for Human Rights, a historic sight: crowds of people in orange shirts honouring a group of Sixties Scoop, residential school and day school survivors gathered on the steps.

"We went there as beautiful children; we wake up every day with these memories,” Gerry Shingoose — herself a residential school survivor — called into a megaphone, looking out at the growing crowd.

"Today is such a beautiful day to honour each one of us."

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Thursday, Sep. 30, 2021
Portraits of survivors, tales of strength
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Portraits of survivors, tales of strength

7 minute read Preview
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Portraits of survivors, tales of strength

7 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 29, 2021

Since 2013, Sept. 30 has been known as Orange Shirt Day — to honour the children who survived Indian residential schools and to remember those who did not return home.

It is also now the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, which asks all Canadians to reflect upon relationships with Indigenous people, remember the harms of the past, and focus on ways to commit to healthy and positive growth throughout all communities today.

Here are six inspiring stories of Manitoba survivors of the residential school, day school, and child welfare systems:

 

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Wednesday, Sep. 29, 2021
Claire Hutchings, co-owner of the independent Dilly Dally Kids toy store in Vancouver, is shown in this undated handout image. Hutching said nearly every supplier increased their price list this summer some for the second time in a year. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Dilly Dally Kids-Jay Gough*MANDATORY CREDIT*
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Toy industry grapples with supply chain issues ahead of busy holiday shopping season

Brett Bundale, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
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Toy industry grapples with supply chain issues ahead of busy holiday shopping season

Brett Bundale, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Ahead of the release of the Paw Patrol movie this summer, Toys “R” Us Canada and toy maker Spin Master Corp. did something rarely seen before in the toy industry.

They air freighted Liberty toys — the latest member of the animated search and rescue team — from China to Canada to get the new pup on store shelves in time for the film’s premiere.

“We really wanted to have Liberty available for our customers when the movie came out,” said Katrina Fyfle, Toys “R” Us Canada brand manager. "She was one that we put on an airplane in partnership with the vendor.”

The unusual step underscores the enduring difficulty of operating amid a pandemic and its related labour shortages, escalating material prices, rising shipping costs and lengthy delays.

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026
Artist Isaiah Binns (right) with the logo he designed on a shirt, with his former graphic-design teacher from Elmwood High School, Mathew Reis. (Mike Sudoma / Winnipeg Free Press)
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Bright orange safety shirts now beacon of hope, thanks to young designer

Ben Waldman 8 minute read Preview
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Bright orange safety shirts now beacon of hope, thanks to young designer

Ben Waldman 8 minute read Monday, Sep. 27, 2021

Isaiah Binns, who graduated last spring from Elmwood High School, arrives at the downtown headquarters of Richlu Industries, the manufacturer of Tough Duck workwear, to see the logo he helped create for a line of the company’s reflective safety clothing ahead of the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

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Monday, Sep. 27, 2021
The St. Vital Museum is reopening with new displays after an 18-month closure due to COVID-19. (Jessica Lee / Winnipeg Free Press)
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Renewed museum showcases history of former municipality with wealth of artifacts

Brenda Suderman 6 minute read Preview
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Renewed museum showcases history of former municipality with wealth of artifacts

Brenda Suderman 6 minute read Sunday, Sep. 26, 2021

Writer Brenda Suderman continues her tour of Winnipeg’s community museums with a stop at St. Vital Museum, 600 St. Mary’s Rd., operated since 1985 by the St. Vital Historical Society. Closed during the past 18 months due to the global pandemic, the doors to this former historic firehall, police station and municipal office are open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. every Saturday. Call 204-255-2864 for more information. Admission is free but donations are welcome.

• • •

An onstage curiosity for years, Jimmy Moore’s shovel fiddle now attracts interest without a string plucked or a note played.

“He was very creative,” recalled daughter Myrna Moore of the former St. Vital resident of Métis heritage who died in 1991.

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Sunday, Sep. 26, 2021
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Poverty greatest threat to children

John R. Wiens 5 minute read Saturday, Sep. 25, 2021

ON Sept. 12, 1977, the Carnegie Council on Children concluded that “The single greatest harm to children is poverty.” I believe this to be an apt description of the greatest threat to the education of a large number of children in Manitoba.

It remains worrisome that, even with the demise of Bill 64 (the Education Modernization Act), the most serious matters facing education are still off the table, and particularly so when it comes to the issue of child poverty, which presents probably the biggest challenge to any government wanting to achieve meaningful and lasting school change.

It’s the end of September. Children and young people are back at school for another year. This includes the children of the poor. The schools know who they are by now. They know they’ll have to pay special attention to these young people because they face challenges most of their other students do not.

Teachers will lie awake at night trying to think of new ways to mitigate the educational consequences for these children. They need help with this formidable task.

TREVOR HAGAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS files
Extracurricular activities can create pocketbook pain when parents are overcommitted to keeping their children busy.
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Cost of keeping junior(s) busy

Joel Schlesinger   5 minute read Preview
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Cost of keeping junior(s) busy

Joel Schlesinger   5 minute read Saturday, Sep. 25, 2021

Get them off the couch and screens… and keep them busy.

It’s a mantra many parents have had during 18-plus months of pandemic when in-person school and extracurricular activities were often off the child-care time-table.

Now parents are piling kids back into after-school programming, public health advisories permitting.

While doing the mental math regarding health risks, many parents are also engaged in basic budgeting arithmetic when enrolling progeny in swimming lessons, dance, Girl Guides, soccer, football, music and art lessons and, last but not least, the cult of hockey.

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Saturday, Sep. 25, 2021
The sand is exceptional, and the water is blue — and cold. (Photos by Gord Mackintosh / Winnipeg Free Press)
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Lake Winnipeg loaded with hidden treasures

Gord Mackintosh 5 minute read Preview
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Lake Winnipeg loaded with hidden treasures

Gord Mackintosh 5 minute read Saturday, Sep. 25, 2021

“Let’s walk to a Lake Winnipeg island!” I exclaimed to Margie. “Forget about Mont-Saint-Michel over in France!”

Folks usually boat or wade the kilometer to Manitoba’s Elk Island but, with low water, I heard you can walk on a mostly dry sandbar.

Elk Island is a nine square-kilometer provincial park west of broad Traverse Bay and north of Sandy Bay, least known of Lake Winnipeg’s east-side beach communities. The Cree name is Misse Ministik, meaning big island. The park is designated for natural wilderness with no development, amenities or, apparently, elk.

We first found Sandy Bay last year, surprisingly discovering two red tractors with trailers - sitting in the lake. Are farmers prepping for the next flood? Growing watermelons?

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Saturday, Sep. 25, 2021
JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

Winnipeg Art Gallery’s new Inuit Art Centre in Winnipeg Tuesday, March 16, 2021. 



Reporter: ?
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At 50, the WAG is embracing a spirit of reconciliation and reinvention

Alan Small 6 minute read Preview
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At 50, the WAG is embracing a spirit of reconciliation and reinvention

Alan Small 6 minute read Friday, Sep. 24, 2021

Paintings by Vincent Van Gogh and Group of Seven artists such as L.L. FitzGerald were among the famous paintings on display when the Winnipeg Art Gallery opened its doors 50 years ago today.

Grand works all, but it was a few sculptures by Inuit artists that were also on display that caught the eye of Princess Margaret, who gave the gallery its grand unveiling on Sept. 25, 1971, during her royal visit to the city, the Free Press reported then.

Perhaps the princess was onto something. Half a century later, works by Indigenous artists are no longer mere curiosities that add variety to exhibitions showcasing the old masters.

Indigenous art at the WAG has become the showcase.

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Friday, Sep. 24, 2021
SASHA SEFTER / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Cecil Rhodes School located at 1570 Elgin Avenue West in Weston.
190628 - Friday, June 28, 2019.
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Winnipeg School Division to review all its schools named after people

Maggie Macintosh 6 minute read Preview
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Winnipeg School Division to review all its schools named after people

Maggie Macintosh 6 minute read Thursday, Sep. 23, 2021

Manitoba’s largest school board is reviewing all of its K-12 building titles to determine whether the namesakes and their respective legacies are in line with modern-day morals.

Last week, Jamie Dumont, vice-chairwoman of the board of trustees in the Winnipeg School Division, introduced a motion to undertake an evaluation of all schools named after people and research each historical figure’s resumé.

“We operate, as a school division, under a number of values and, in many cases, we are very much a leader in diversity, equity, inclusion and Indigenous education — so I think it’s important that, as a board, we ensure that our schools and our buildings don’t contradict these values,” Dumont said during a virtual board meeting Sept. 13.

The review will identify whether any buildings are named after individuals with a history of actions that are discriminatory or not in accordance with WSD values, namely: inclusiveness, diversity, reconciliation, and respect for the rights and human dignity of others, or both.

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Thursday, Sep. 23, 2021
Joey Johnson (right) takes a shot during the gold medal game in men's wheelchair basketball in Beijing during the Paralympic Games in 2008. (Mike Ridewood / CPC files)
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Legendary wheelchair basketball player embraces new role with Manitoba Wheelchair Sport Association

Taylor Allen 6 minute read Preview
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Legendary wheelchair basketball player embraces new role with Manitoba Wheelchair Sport Association

Taylor Allen 6 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 22, 2021

When Joey Johnson tells his story, he describes it as the most devastating part of his life. He was eight years old when he sat in the doctor's office and found out that he had a degenerative hip disease.

"I remember sitting there and being like 'OK, what does that mean? When can I get back on the rink? I want to go play with my buddies.' And the doctor said 'No, there will be no more hockey for you,'" Johnson told the Free Press Wednesday.

"I literally sat in his office crying on my mom's lap for an hour before we got out of there."

Johnson, now 46, was an active child who grew up wanting to play in the NHL and represent Canada on the biggest stage. The diagnosis ruined his dream of one day hoisting the Stanley Cup over his head, but it did, however, open up a path for him to wear the red and white and be a trailblazer along the way.

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Wednesday, Sep. 22, 2021
City Couns. Brian Mayes and Devi Sharma run on the rubberized track, along with members of the Garden City Collegiate cross-country team, at the official opening of the school's new track Wednesday. Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press
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Runners’ high: School opens rubberized track

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Preview
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Runners’ high: School opens rubberized track

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 22, 2021

The burgundy race track Marlee Bragg's phys-ed students run on is unique in north Winnipeg.

Teens pounded Garden City Collegiate's 400-metre rubberized track, with Bragg's whistle sounding in the background, as city councillors Devi Sharma (Old Kildonan) and Brian Mayes (St. Vital) viewed the new upgrades they had helped spur.

"We feel very privileged," Bragg told the councillors Wednesday.

The Jefferson Avenue high school is one of three rubberized full-size tracks in the city. The University of Manitoba and Victor Mager School, in St. Vital, host the others.

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Wednesday, Sep. 22, 2021
Golly, a Harris Hawk, looks over the airfield at Vancouver International Airport as part of a program that uses predatory birds to scare off other birds from nesting and flying around the airport in Richmond, B.C., on Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward
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Roads quieted by COVID fill with birdsong: study

Bob Weber, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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Roads quieted by COVID fill with birdsong: study

Bob Weber, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026

The Conservative party has locked its MPs and candidates out of its central voter database in a move that critics say is an attempt by Erin O’Toole to protect his leadership.

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Saturday, May. 16, 2026
Dreamstime/TNS
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Me, hate cute little squirrels? You must be nuts

Doug Speirs  4 minute read Preview
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Me, hate cute little squirrels? You must be nuts

Doug Speirs  4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 18, 2021

I was standing in the backyard next to a very tall tree, sipping the first coffee of the day, trying to think of a topic for today’s column, when suddenly it hit me.

No, I was not struck by a sudden inspiration. I was bonked on the top of my head by a pine cone the size of a regulation volleyball.

In quick succession, several more potentially lethal pine cones plummeted from the sky and thudded into the ground near my feet.

“I can see you up there!” I shrieked, waving my fist at the sky. “You are not going to get away with this!”

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Saturday, Sep. 18, 2021
Marc Miller, federal Indigenous services minister, from left, Herb Redsky Jr. and Shoal Lake 40 Chief Vernon Redsky, stand in front of the Harvey Redsky Memorial School and toast safe tap water. Melissa Martin / Winnipeg Free Press
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Shoal Lake 40 toasts clean water

Melissa Martin 6 minute read Preview
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Shoal Lake 40 toasts clean water

Melissa Martin 6 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 15, 2021

SHOAL LAKE 40 FIRST NATION – As he raised his glass, Chief Vernon Redsky looked at the water and a memory came rushing back. It reminded him of when he was a kid, he said, and the water in Shoal Lake was crystal-clear like that, back when he and his friends would splash along the shore, drinking from the lake when they got thirsty.

So he thought about that as he clinked his glass against two others, and took a sip. A toast, to the first officially safe tap drinking water in Shoal Lake 40: on Wednesday, after 24 years, the Treaty Three First Nation’s boil water advisory officially ended.

“It’s surreal to be at this moment,” Redsky said at a ceremony to celebrate the achievement, as well as the opening of the community’s new school.

One day earlier, a government official in Kenora, Ont., had officially approved the latest test results from Shoal Lake 40’s new water treatment plant, which started pumping this summer. That night, Redsky couldn’t sleep; he called a former chief to talk about the long road they had travelled to get to this point.

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Wednesday, Sep. 15, 2021
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