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The Free Press Media Literacy & Learning Search
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Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

FILE - This photo shows a McDonald's restaurant in Ridgeland, Miss., Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2018. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis, file)
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Coming price cuts at McDonald’s may signal a broader fast food price war

Dee-ann Durbin, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview
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Coming price cuts at McDonald’s may signal a broader fast food price war

Dee-ann Durbin, The Associated Press 3 minute read Friday, Oct. 10, 2025

McDonald’s is cutting prices on some combo meals to woo back customers who’ve been turned off by the rising costs of grabbing a fast food meal.

The price drop may induce its rivals, who have run into some of the same pricing issues, to follow.

Starting Sept. 8, McDonald’s will offer Extra Value Meals, which combine select entrées like a Big Mac, an Egg McMuffin or a McCrispy sandwich with medium fries or hash browns and a drink. Prices will vary by location, but McDonald’s said Extra Value Meals will cost 15% less than ordering each of those items separately.

To kick off the promotion, McDonald’s will offer an $8 Big Mac meal or a $5 Sausage McMuffin meal for a limited time in most of the country. Customers in California, Alaska, Hawaii and Guam will have to pay $1 more for those meals.

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Friday, Oct. 10, 2025
photos by BROOK JONES / FREE PRESS 
                                ClearSecure Manufacturing & Distribution fabricator Braeden Hay measures a panel of RockGlass while working at the company’s headquarters at CentrePort Canada (8-3149 Red Fife Rd.) in the RM of Rosser.
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CentrePort Canada-based ClearSecure Manufacturing & Distribution pitches protection premier product RockGlass

Aaron Epp 6 minute read Preview
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CentrePort Canada-based ClearSecure Manufacturing & Distribution pitches protection premier product RockGlass

Aaron Epp 6 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 2, 2025

RURAL MUNICIPALITY OF ROSSER — It’s not unusual for staff at ClearSecure Manufacturing & Distribution to encourage people to take a baseball bat or sledgehammer to the company’s signature product.

As far as visuals go, it’s a striking one. The company manufactures and distributes crystal clear security panels for windows and doors known as RockGlass.

“We’re a solution for broken glass,” says Colleen Munro, the company’s founder and president. “That’s kind of our catchphrase.”

People who visit the company, located just north of Winnipeg in the Rural Municipality of Rosser, can don protective gear and swing a sledgehammer at a door-sized panel to see if they — like the legend of Arthur removing Excalibur from the stone — might be the first to successfully reduce RockGlass to pieces.

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Tuesday, Sep. 2, 2025
FILE - The TikTok app logo is shown on an iPhone on Friday, Jan. 17, 2025, in Houston. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, File)

The RCMP and TikTok

Christopher J. Schneider 4 minute read Preview

The RCMP and TikTok

Christopher J. Schneider 4 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 2, 2025

A trend on TikTok has Canadians “challenging” RCMP officers to fake foot pursuits.

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Tuesday, Sep. 2, 2025
Margaret Atwood pauses for a photo after posing on the red carpet for the Scotiabank Giller Prize in Toronto, on Monday, Nov. 13, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
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Margaret Atwood takes aim at Alberta’s school library books ban with satirical story

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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Margaret Atwood takes aim at Alberta’s school library books ban with satirical story

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025

EDMONTON - Margaret Atwood is taking aim at Alberta's controversial ban on school library books containing sexual content with a new, satirical short story after the famed author's novel "The Handmaid's Tale" was yanked from some shelves due to the province's sweeping new rules.

In a social media post on Sunday, Atwood said since the literary classic is no longer suitable in Alberta's schools, she has written a short story for 17-year-olds about two "very, very good children" named John and Mary.

"They never picked their noses or had bowel movements or zits," she said at the beginning of her story.

"They grew up and married each other, and produced five perfect children without ever having sex."

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Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025
Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun
                                Lynnianna Swan scrapes a bison hide during a family wellness day of cultural and entertainment activities at Sioux Valley Dakota Nation Friday, for families displaced by fires.
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Hotel-weary evacuees guests at powwow

Connor McDowell 2 minute read Preview
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Hotel-weary evacuees guests at powwow

Connor McDowell 2 minute read Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025

SIOUX VALLEY DAKOTA NATION — Evacuees displaced from their communities in northern Manitoba were invited to Sioux Valley Dakota Nation on Friday for what the chief called a mental health day.

A hundred people were at the afternoon event when the Brandon Sun visited.

The event, which included live music, games and children’s entertainment, was a way to give a day of fresh air to evacuees, Chief Vince Tacan said.

“We thought we’d give our relatives from the north a mental health day, because staying in hotels gets hard after a while,” Tacan said.

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Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025
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The Canadian government, mining and human rights

Peter McKenna 5 minute read Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025

Environmentally speaking, foreign mining companies are often more concerned about extracting profits than they are about protecting the local ecological space. There have been innumerable cases of these extractive businesses releasing dangerous chemical pollutants into the air, causing physical damage to nearby homes through soil and bedrock disturbances and dumping mining effluent that poisons local drinking water systems.

Marta Guerrero
                                Albert LeGatt est l’archevêque du diocèse de Saint-Boniface.
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Un nouveau souffle pour les paroisses

Hugo Beaucamp 4 minute read Preview
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Un nouveau souffle pour les paroisses

Hugo Beaucamp 4 minute read Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025

Longtemps confrontées à un déclin de fréquentation, plusieurs paroisses manitobaines trouvent un nouveau dynamisme grâce à l’immigration. Fidèles et prêtres venus d’ailleurs redessinent aujourd’hui le visage du catholicisme francophone au Manitoba.

Pour le meilleur comme pour le pire, l’Église catholique est étroitement liée avec l’histoire du Manitoba.

À ce jour, le catholicisme est encore la première religion de la province puisqu’environ 21,2 pour cent de la population est de confession catholique selon Statistique Canada.

Au même titre que la religion, l’immigration a elle aussi contribué à façonner le visage du pays d’abord, puis de ses provinces.

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Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Avelia Stewart, founder and executive director of new not-for-profit social enterprise Student Catalyst Gateway, in her Winnipeg home this week.

Not-for-profit Student Catalyst Gateway launches with career focus on equity-deserving backgrounds

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Preview

Not-for-profit Student Catalyst Gateway launches with career focus on equity-deserving backgrounds

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

Tinotenda Mashavave chuckles when he thinks about his first winter in Winnipeg.

“The shock on my face with how cold this place is was unbelievable,” he said. “(Someone) should have told me what it was going to be like.”

Mashavave moved to Manitoba from Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe, in 2016 to study business administration at the University of Winnipeg. Today, he has a job as a sales representative at Western Financial Group, but the path that led him there had obstacles.

Navigating finances, learning how to network with professionals and finding a job after graduation can be challenging for anyone, but for newcomers like Mashavave, it’s especially difficult.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Jenny Steinke-Magnus, executive director of the Manitoba LGBT* Chamber of Commerce
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Manitoba LGBT* chamber starts entrepreneur development program

Aaron Epp 3 minute read Preview
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Manitoba LGBT* chamber starts entrepreneur development program

Aaron Epp 3 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

A new program aims to support LGBTTQ+ entrepreneurs in Manitoba.

The Manitoba LGBT* Chamber of Commerce is accepting applications for Emerge, the queer entrepreneur development program it’s launching next month. The six-month program is designed for members of the LGBTTQ+ community to gain essential business skills and strategies, and to build a supportive network of mentors and colleagues in the process.

The program is the first of its kind for the chamber, said Jenny Steinke-Magnus, executive director. “There’s really some unique challenges that queer entrepreneurs face, so we wanted to address those challenges and offer this tailor-made program for queer entrepreneurs in Manitoba.”

Steinke-Magnus cites findings from Canada’s 2SLGBTQI+ Chamber of Commerce (CGLCC) that shows one in four LGBTTQ+ entrepreneurs have lost business opportunities because of their identity. Two in five have difficulty obtaining financing for their business because of their identity, and one in three have been unable to access mentoring and coaching.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
                                Housing, Addictions and Homelessness Minister Bernadette Smith said the government isn’t going to rush the establishment of an overdose prevention site.

Supervised consumption site expected this year will ‘definitely’ open before NDP’s first term ends, addictions minister says

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Preview

Supervised consumption site expected this year will ‘definitely’ open before NDP’s first term ends, addictions minister says

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

The province will have a supervised consumption site before the next election, Manitoba’s addictions minister promised Friday after unveiling a memorial stone to those who’ve died of drug overdoses.

Housing, Addictions and Homelessness Minister Bernadette Smith told reporters that the government isn’t going to rush the establishment of an overdose prevention site.

“We want to do our due diligence in terms of consulting, making sure that we’re getting it right,” Smith said on the grounds of the Manitoba legislature after an International Overdose Awareness Day rally.

Last month, Smith said the province was “forging ahead” with opening a supervised consumption site in Winnipeg this year. On Friday, she was asked again about an opening date — if it might not be until next year or later in the government’s four-year mandate, which is nearly half over.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
Man Doctor With Stethoscope In Coat (Dreamstime/TNS)

Eight docs recruited to work in western Manitoba

Malak Abas 3 minute read Preview

Eight docs recruited to work in western Manitoba

Malak Abas 3 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

Eight doctors from around the world have signed on to work in clinics across the Prairie Mountain Health region through a provincial program.

Six doctors have set up practice in Swan River, Neepawa, Roblin and Virden, while two physicians are scheduled to begin in Souris and Swan River in mid-September. All were recruited by the Medical Licensure Program for International Medical Graduates, which helps physicians gain Canadian citizenship or permanent residency in exchange for working in communities in desperate need of doctors.

The physicians are from Nigeria, Pakistan, Iran, the Philippines and Bangladesh. In exchange for assisting foreign-trained doctors to become fully licensed to practise in Manitoba, they’ve agreed to practise in those communities for at least four years.

While the program has been used since 2001 to recruit doctors to the underserved Westman area , the local health authority has ramped up efforts in the past two years to improve the chance that internationally trained doctors establish roots in rural Manitoba. The hope is that they’ll stay more than four years.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
Supplied
                                The remains of one of the covered players bench that was burnt in a fire started be a group of youths at the Bonivital Soccer Club.

Soccer facility closed after purposely set fire destroys $25,000 covered bench, damages turf

Tyler Searle 3 minute read Preview

Soccer facility closed after purposely set fire destroys $25,000 covered bench, damages turf

Tyler Searle 3 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

Police are searching for suspects after a group of people torched a players bench at the Bonivital Soccer Club in the early morning hours Thursday.

“It’s pretty disheartening,” Steven Gzebb, the club’s executive director, said by phone Friday.

“Certainly, a moment of disbelief that someone would go to that extent and do something like that.”

Winnipeg Police Service Const. Claude Chancy confirmed the incident is being investigated as arson. As of Friday afternoon, no arrests had been made, he said.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
TIM SMITH / THE BRANDON SUN
                                28082025 Adam Vanstone readies kayaks for customers while working at The Clear Lake Marina in Riding Mountain National Park on Thursday. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun)
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Second summer of motorized boat ban, uncertainty going forward raise longer-term concerns for tourism-driven economy inside Riding Mountain National Park

Gabrielle Piché 9 minute read Preview
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Second summer of motorized boat ban, uncertainty going forward raise longer-term concerns for tourism-driven economy inside Riding Mountain National Park

Gabrielle Piché 9 minute read Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025

WASAGAMING — As the sun shimmers over Clear Lake’s still waters, everything appears smooth. But there is an undercurrent of uncertainty running through Manitoba’s most popular national park.

Riding Mountain, and other national parks across Canada, are increasingly facing difficult environmental challenges.

For Riding Mountain, it’s the invasive zebra mussel species. In Alberta’s Jasper National Park, it was 2024’s devastating wildfire that caused more than $1 billion in damages. In Nova Scotia, tinder-dry conditions this summer led to the controversial decision to close back-country access in two national parks — Cape Breton Highlands and Kejimkujik.

This is the new reality for places such as Wasagaming, Riding Mountain’s picturesque townsite that borders on Clear Lake — where bureaucratic decisions to address environmental threats run counter to the desires of residents and tourists who want to enjoy popular summer destinations to the fullest.

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Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025
BORIS MINKEVICH / FREE PRESS
                                Deftones frontman Chino Moreno at the MTS Centre in Winnipeg in 2006, before photo approvals were a thing.
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Increasing restrictions could silence culture critics

Jen Zoratti 6 minute read Preview
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Increasing restrictions could silence culture critics

Jen Zoratti 6 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

It’s getting harder to see where reviews and other forms of cultural criticism fit in the current media ecosystem. Arts writing positions are being axed at outlets all over North America — but a landscape of all influencers and no critics means all promotion and no journalism.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
A for rent sign is displayed on a house in Ottawa on Friday, Oct. 14, 2022. A new report says Canada’s average asking rent reached a new record in July. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

Landlords can hike rent by 1.8 per cent in 2026, province announces

Tyler Searle 2 minute read Preview

Landlords can hike rent by 1.8 per cent in 2026, province announces

Tyler Searle 2 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

The Manitoba government will allow landlords a marginal rent increase when new rent guidelines take effect in January.

The province announced its updated rent-increase guideline for 2026, setting the maximum rate landlords can increase rent at 1.8 per cent — up from a rate of 1.7 per cent in 2025.

Landlords must send written notices of rent increases at least three months before they takes effect. For a rent increase on Jan. 1, therefore, renters must be notified of the change by Sept. 30, the province said in a news release Friday.

The guideline is updated annually and calculated using a formula based on Manitoba’s consumer price index, the province said. It applies to most residential rental properties, including apartments, single rooms, houses and duplexes.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
NICOLE BUFFIE / FREE PRESS
                                The Exchange Event Centre, 291 Bannatyne Ave., is the latest downtown building to be hit by fire.

Latest in recent string of suspected arsons downtown guts part of Exchange Event Centre

Nicole Buffie 6 minute read Preview

Latest in recent string of suspected arsons downtown guts part of Exchange Event Centre

Nicole Buffie 6 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

Concerns are being raised about businesses being targeted in the Exchange District after a concert venue was fire-bombed early Friday morning.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
FILE - Finnish aerobatics group Midnight Hawks performs during a celebration marking the Russian air force's 100th anniversary in Zhukovsky, outside Moscow, Russia, on Aug. 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Misha Japaridze, File)

Swastikas still linger on some flags in Finland’s air force, but are on the way out

Jamey Keaten, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

Swastikas still linger on some flags in Finland’s air force, but are on the way out

Jamey Keaten, The Associated Press 4 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025

GENEVA (AP) — Finland’s Air Force, now part of NATO, still flies swastikas on a handful of unit flags — but is preparing to phase them out, largely to avoid awkwardness with its Western allies.

The history of the Finnish air force’s use of the swastika, which since the 20th century has largely been associated with Nazi tyranny and hate groups, is more complex than at first appearance. It is an ancient symbol and Finland's air force began using it many years before the birth of Nazi Germany.

Change has been underway for years. A swastika logo was quietly pulled off the Air Force Command’s unit emblem a few years ago. But swastikas have remained on some Finnish air force flags, raising eyebrows among NATO allies, tourists and other foreigners who spot them at military events.

“We could have continued with this flag, but sometimes awkward situations can arise with foreign visitors. It may be wise to live with the times, Col. Tomi Böhm, the new head of Karelia Air Wing air defense force, was quoted as saying in a report Thursday by the public broadcaster YLE.

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Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025
A rebuilt highland outpost, Eilean Donan is one of Scotland’s thousands of castles.

A roadtrip through Scotland’s rolling hills, ancient history and the zany spectacle of Fringe

Eva Wasney 4 minute read Preview

A roadtrip through Scotland’s rolling hills, ancient history and the zany spectacle of Fringe

Eva Wasney 4 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

Caravanners, backpackers and daredevil cyclists.

Roadtripping in Scotland is a chance to explore the country’s awe-inspiring landscape on your own schedule, while dodging droves of eclectic travellers doing the exact same.

My partner and I spent eight days in July navigating the Scottish countryside in a rented campervan.

We picked up our home on wheels — a well-appointed Volkswagen van — near Edinburgh and headed north for the highlands. Rolling farmland quickly gave way to rolling hills and tall evergreens. A wee taste of what was to come.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
Aviatrice Riette Bacon photo
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Amid geopolitical uncertainty, Manitoba poised to become a hub for increased efforts to assert Canada’s Arctic sovereignty

Conrad Sweatman 21 minute read Preview
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Amid geopolitical uncertainty, Manitoba poised to become a hub for increased efforts to assert Canada’s Arctic sovereignty

Conrad Sweatman 21 minute read Friday, Aug. 29, 2025

Political ground is shifting, ice is melting and Winnipeg and Manitoba appear poised to play a role worth considering in this uncertain new era of Arctic politics.

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Friday, Aug. 29, 2025
Members of the Louisiana National Guard patrol at Union Station, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Trump suggests more US cities need National Guard but crime stats tell a different story

Ed White And Christopher L. Keller, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview

Trump suggests more US cities need National Guard but crime stats tell a different story

Ed White And Christopher L. Keller, The Associated Press 5 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025

President Donald Trump has threatened to deploy the National Guard to Chicago, New York, Seattle, Baltimore, San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, to fight what he says is runaway crime. Yet data shows most violent crime in those places and around the country has declined in recent years.

Homicides through the first six months of 2025 were down significantly compared to the same period in 2024, continuing a post-pandemic trend across the U.S.

Trump, who has already taken federal control of police in Washington, D.C., has maligned the six Democratic-run cities that all are in states that opposed him in 2024. But he hasn't threatened sending in the Guard to any major cities in Republican-leaning states.

John Roman, a data expert who directs the Center on Public Safety & Justice at the University of Chicago, acknowledged violence in some urban neighborhoods has persisted for generations. But he said there's no U.S. city where there “is really a crisis.”

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Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025
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