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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.
‘One more step… to re-imagine downtown’: Air Canada Window park redesigned as colourful Indigenous-themed meeting place
3 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026Trump ‘not looking to renew’ CUSMA trade pact, says no need for Canadian imports
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026Tory MP says 4,000 letters sent urging Carney to amend Indian Act status rules
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Jul. 2, 2026At 356, the HBC charter is about to get a Manitoba Museum welcome
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Jul. 2, 2026Restaurant bridges Ethiopian-Eritrean divide at the dinner table
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026AI project halted early, without much clarity
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026Yiddish fest highlights comfort of knish crafting
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026Taxing billionaires — just like everyone else
5 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026These days, billionaires act like they own the world — which they pretty much do.
So, it’s not surprising they’re facing an uprising coming from the struggling masses below.
That uprising, led by unionized health-care workers in California, has collected more than a million signatures with the goal of getting a wealth tax — aimed exclusively at billionaires — onto a statewide ballot. California voters would then decide whether to tax some of the world’s largest mega-fortunes in order to replace funds the Trump administration is taking out of health care.
The showdown in California could be a harbinger of what lies ahead in Canada.
Odd pairing of Kraft Dinner and cheesecake a hit for city bakery
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026Encampment numbers down since ban
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 10, 2026Sea Bears president proof there’s no one path to pro sports success
7 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026Cree name chosen for new Waverley West school
2 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026Waverley West’s newest elementary school will be named after a Cree translation of its address.
École Iskonakwa School — the kindergarten-to-Grade 8 building that’s being constructed at 175 Skyline Dr. — is anticipated to open in September 2027.
Iskonakwa was chosen because it means “as far as the eye can see,” a reference to the skyline, said Shelley Amos, superintendent of the Pembina Trails School Division.
“It represents living in a good relationship with the land, where hope, possibility and connection extend as far as the eye can see,” Amos told an afternoon news conference on the grounds in southwest Winnipeg.
Education a key to getting young people ‘on the right path,’ Gillingham says at inner-city scholarship fundraiser
3 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026Mayor Scott Gillingham talked inner-city education funding and its role as a tool to combat poverty and homelessness in Winnipeg at a fundraising event Tuesday.