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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.
Is Canada in a recession? What to know after a volatile week of economic data
7 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026Legislation to create Manitoba-Indigenous Crown corporation pending as some First Nations express concerns
5 minute read Preview Sunday, Jun. 7, 2026‘Pick-up man’: Organizations work to address mental health of Canadian farmers
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026A raucous Copenhagen crowd cheers Denmark’s 2026 Mullet Championship
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026ITK president reflects on Mary Simon’s legacy as first Indigenous Governor General
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026Marketers not trained in marketing?
4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026A recent IPSOS survey asked marketers 10 questions designed to determine their level of basic marketing knowledge. In Canada, of the 350 respondents, only 31 per cent achieved a passing grade of seven correct answers.
I would suggest many Canadian companies stay in business because their competitors’ marketing capabilities are even worse than their own.
This survey result was alarming because it speaks to the credibility of marketers and the ability to drive profitable revenue growth and customer value. If we don’t understand basic marketing concepts, how can we have the organizational trust from our colleagues that what we propose to spend and where we recommend spending it is actually in the company’s best interest?
My first Free Press article, nearly eight years ago, was titled: “Marketing is more than making it pretty.” While a bit tongue-in-cheek, I made the case marketing is much more than just creating advertisements and hosting parties.
Bishop of the Arctic: Christopher Williams immersed himself in northern culture
6 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026Everyday business is human rights work: CMHR chief executive
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026Marilyn Monroe cursed to be Hot Forever
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026Fifty years ago this June, Manitoba Hydro destroyed one of the province’s finest lakes, its fourth-largest, when it began operating a newly constructed control structure at Missi Falls, the outlet where Southern Indian Lake flows into the lower Churchill River.
This raised the water level of the lake, creating a reservoir and diverting the flow southward via the Rat and Burntwood River systems to increase power output at its hydroelectric generating stations along the Nelson River.
More than 3,500 km of shorelines on the lake alone were permanently inundated, and along with its adjacent waterways, an area of 840 square kilometres was flooded. The entire Indigenous community of South Indian Lake had to be moved to higher ground to avoid the flooding, and the island community of Nelson House was irreparably harmed.
The Churchill River diversion project had a disastrous effect on the natural environment and the Indigenous people whose subsistence and way of life depended on the lake.