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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.

Grace Livingston shows the depth of a hole on the boulevard on Valour Road on Wednesday. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Free Press)

Months after reporting two-foot deep boulevard hole, West End homeowner still waiting for city to respond

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

Months after reporting two-foot deep boulevard hole, West End homeowner still waiting for city to respond

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

Grace Livingston feared an unsuspecting pedestrian would fall and break their leg after she discovered a thigh-deep hole in the boulevard in front of her West End home last year.

Livingston said she is still waiting for the City of Winnipeg to fill the hole and eliminate the safety hazard, six months after she called 311 and emailed her councillor to raise concerns.

“I was hoping they would send somebody by or at least put up a barricade or something,” she said Wednesday. “How many times do people have to complain about something before they acknowledge it?”

Livingston contacted the Free Press about the situation after reading about the plight of Wolseley resident Christine Keilback, who fell shoulders-deep into a hole on a boulevard across from her Lipton Street home Saturday night.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026
A Hanwha Ocean KSS-III (Batch 2) submarine sits docked in their port in Geoje Island, South Korea Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

Hanwha offers made-in-Canada military vehicles if it wins submarine deal

Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview

Hanwha offers made-in-Canada military vehicles if it wins submarine deal

Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

OTTAWA - South Korean defence manufacturer Hanwha says it's ready to build military vehicles in Canada in a partnership with the domestic auto sector, including mobile howitzers, rocket launch systems and infantry vehicles.

But that's only if it wins its bid to construct the Royal Canadian Navy's next fleet of submarines.

Hanwha said Wednesday it would forge a joint venture with the Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association to create a Canadian entity that would build a range of vehicles.

"It's not a secret Canada asked … 'Could you please take a look at the auto industry and understand what you can do?' They're under a tremendous amount of stress," said Glenn Copeland, CEO of Hanwha Defence Canada.

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Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman speaks during a discussion at the Federal Reserve Integrated Review of the Capital Framework for Large Banks Conference at the Federal Reserve in Washington, Tuesday, July 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
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Tumbler Ridge families likely to seek US$1 billion in lawsuit against OpenAI: lawyer

Chuck Chiang, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview
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Tumbler Ridge families likely to seek US$1 billion in lawsuit against OpenAI: lawyer

Chuck Chiang, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Thursday, May. 21, 2026

VANCOUVER - An American lawyer representing some of the victims of the Tumbler Ridge, B.C., mass shooting says they will likely be seeking more than US$1 billion in their California legal action against OpenAI and its founder Sam Altman.

Chicago-based Jay Edelson has represented a number of clients in wrongful death cases against the artificial intelligence platform and Altman in the past year.

But Edelson said Wednesday that the Tumbler Ridge shootings in which eight victims were killed was the most egregious case his law firm had encountered, citing catastrophic injuries suffered by child plaintiff Maya Gebala.

The other plaintiffs include the parents of children killed in the attack and the husband of Shannda Aviugana-Durand, a teacher's aide who was also shot dead.

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Thursday, May. 21, 2026
FILE - An Uber sign is displayed at the company's headquarters in San Francisco, Monday, Sept. 12, 2022. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)
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Uber moves toward becoming an ‘everything app’ with hotel bookings powered by Expedia

Dee-ann Durbin, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview
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Uber moves toward becoming an ‘everything app’ with hotel bookings powered by Expedia

Dee-ann Durbin, The Associated Press 3 minute read Thursday, May. 21, 2026

Uber is expanding into a different side of the travel business: hotels.

The ride-hailing and delivery company said Wednesday that users of its app can now book hotel rooms. Uber is using hotel listings provided by Expedia Group, a booking service that works with 700,000 hotels and other properties globally. More than 1 million vacation rentals from Vrbo – which is owned by Seattle-based Expedia – will be added to the app later this year, the company said.

Sachin Kansal, Uber’s chief product officer, said hotel booking is a big step toward San Francisco-based Uber’s goal of becoming an “everything app” that serves many customer needs. Uber, which was founded in 2009, launched Uber Eats for restaurant deliveries in 2015 and expanded with grocery deliveries in 2020.

“Consumers are spending too much time coordinating their life, using multiple apps. AI is in the air and they’re all trying to figure out, how does AI help me or does it not help me?” Kansal told The Associated Press. “Our goal with these announcements is to bring everything into one app, to help them save time, and to also help them save money.”

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Thursday, May. 21, 2026
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AI and new era of cyber threats

Kyle Volpi Hiebert 4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

The chief promise of artificial intelligence is turbocharged productivity. The trade-off? Epic disruption.

No Subscription Required

Time to act on provincial autism strategy

Suzanne Swanton 5 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

I was in attendance in the gallery of the Manitoba legislature on March 19 when Bill 232, The Autism Strategy Act, introduced by Liberal MLA Cindy Lamoureux, passed second reading and moved to the committee stage.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                U of M students Cieran O’Hara (left) and Daniel Belokurov will present their holistic supplement Amani at the Stu Clark Venture Championships this week.

Post-secondary students make their pitches at New Venture Championships in Winnipeg

Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview

Post-secondary students make their pitches at New Venture Championships in Winnipeg

Malak Abas 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Cieran O’Hara and Daniel Belokurov say they have the solution for getting through long days — no cups of coffee needed.

The pair of University of Manitoba business students will pitch their holistic daily supplement blend — the flagship product of their startup business Amani Health and Wellness — and faceoff against student entrepreneurs from across North America at the Stu Clark New Venture Championships from Thursday to Saturday in Winnipeg.

They’ve got what they say is a win-worthy proposition: a herbal option for busy people experiencing burnout who want relief without resorting to caffeine or medical stimulants. The capsules contain adaptogens and nootropics — found in plants such as ashwagandha, lion’s mane and reishi mushroom — purported to improve stress responses and mental clarity.

“People are coming back to nature and back to themselves, and at the end of the day, I think what’s so important is being able to improve your general health, and I think that’s why we do it,” O’Hara, 25, said Tuesday.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026
JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
                                Within 48 hours of the NDP’s announcement on Saturday, at least one student-initiated petition had been organized.
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Proposed social-media ban for Manitoba children gets likes, thumbs-down

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview
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Proposed social-media ban for Manitoba children gets likes, thumbs-down

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Mia Danyluk had a YouTube channel before she reached double digits. She was 11 years old when she signed up for Snapchat. In Grade 9, she joined Instagram.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, it was on social media that she learned about Manitoba’s plan to ban children and youth from accessing these platforms.

The irony was not lost on her — a 16-year-old who was raised in Winnipeg and on the borderless online world.

“We’re seeing younger and younger kids grow up with an iPad instead of toys in their hands. If we’re exposing kids to screens, we need to teach them online safety,” the high schooler said.

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026
Eric Zachanowich / Searchlight Pictures / 20th Century Studios
                                Zachanowich caught a dramatic shot of Ralph Fiennes on set in The Menu.
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Winnipeg photographer captures striking stills that market major motion pictures

AV Kitching 7 minute read Preview
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Winnipeg photographer captures striking stills that market major motion pictures

AV Kitching 7 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Eric Zachanowich is the most famous photographer you’ve probably never heard of.

He’s worked with Tinseltown heavyweights such as the late Robert Redford, Ralph Fiennes, Laura Linney, Woody Harrelson and Anya Taylor-Joy, and even appeared in Dwayne (The Rock) Johnson’s wrestling biopic The Smashing Machine, disguised as, you guessed it, a photographer.

“It was for one of the opening scenes so I could shoot Dwayne Johnson walking to the ring. I made the final cut of the movie — although it’s hard to place me — and also got a spectacular photo that was used heavily during marketing,” says Zachanowich, 32.

More often than not, he operates as a silent observer on the sets of cinema blockbusters and prestige television dramas alike, his lens capturing the world’s biggest A-listers at their most vulnerable and intense moments.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026
JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
                                Christine Keilback looks at the hole that she feel into Saturday on Lipton Street.

City gets to the bottom of how deep hole formed in boulevard

Joyanne Pursaga 3 minute read Preview

City gets to the bottom of how deep hole formed in boulevard

Joyanne Pursaga 3 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

A Winnipeg woman’s fall into a deep hole in a boulevard Saturday night marked a first in the city’s recent history, sparking an investigation to determine its cause and prevent it from being repeated.

Christine Keilback told the Free Press she was on her way home from a movie when she suddenly fell shoulders-deep into the hole across the street from her Wolseley home.

Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service came to the rescue and helped her return to solid ground. The city placed barricades around the large hole.

On Tuesday, Mayor Scott Gillingham said this is the only such incident he’s aware of since being elected to city council in 2014 as St. James councillor. He was elected mayor in 2022.

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
Premier Wab Kinew’s social media staff use an iPhone to capture his scrum with the media after speaking at the National Day of Mourning event at the Workers Memorial in Memorial Park on Tuesday. 
260428 - Tuesday, April 28, 2026.
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Kinew threatens billion-dollar fines for tech giants ignoring social-media ban for youths

Carol Sanders 5 minute read Preview
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Kinew threatens billion-dollar fines for tech giants ignoring social-media ban for youths

Carol Sanders 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Manitoba may impose billion-dollar fines on tech companies that violate a proposed ban on social media and AI chatbots for youths under the age 16.

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026
FILE - Bitcoin is for sale at an Automated Teller Machine at the Westfield Garden State Plaza shopping mall in Paramus, New Jersey, on Monday, March 13, 2023. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey, File)

Ottawa outlines plans to tackle financial crime, ban crypto ATMs

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 2 minute read Preview

Ottawa outlines plans to tackle financial crime, ban crypto ATMs

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 2 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

OTTAWA - The federal government plans to ban cryptocurrency ATMs as part of a suite of measures in its spring economic statement targeting financial crimes.

The government says scammers use the ATMs to defraud victims, while criminals use them to convert the proceeds of crime.

There are currently just under 4,000 cryptocurrency ATMs in Canada — the most per capita in the world, finance officials speaking on background said. The document says Canadians will still be able to buy cryptocurrencies from "brick-and-mortar" businesses.

The financial update outlined other measures to tackle criminal use of businesses that provide services like currency exchanges and digital payments. They include new powers around ministerial directives, stricter rules on registration and more criminal record checks for those businesses.

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Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026
Elon Musk arrives at the U.S. District Court in Oakland, Calif., Tuesday, April 28, 2026. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)

Elon Musk takes stand in trial vs. Sam Altman that could reshape AI’s future

Barbara Ortutay, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

Elon Musk takes stand in trial vs. Sam Altman that could reshape AI’s future

Barbara Ortutay, The Associated Press 6 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO, world's richest man and OpenAI cofounder, took the stand Tuesday in a high-stakes trial revolving around a bitter feud with his former friend Sam Altman that could reshape the future development of artificial intelligence.

His testimony at the Oakland, California, federal courthouse kicked off a legal drama that is expected to brim with intrigue and potentially embarrassing details about the two tech moguls. Musk filed the lawsuit against Altman and his top lieutenant, Greg Brockman, along with Microsoft over its investments in OpenAI, in 2024.

“Fundamentally, I think they’re going to try to make this lawsuit ... very complicated, but it’s actually very simple,” Musk said. “Which is that it's not OK to steal a charity.”

The nine-person jury was selected Monday and the trial is scheduled to take three weeks.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026
A selection of McDonalds new beverages, dirty sodas, refreshers and
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Move over Big Mac: McDonald’s Canada taps beverage craze with new drinks line-up

Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Move over Big Mac: McDonald’s Canada taps beverage craze with new drinks line-up

Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 20, 2026

TORONTO - Your next drink order from McDonald's Canada may come in a frosty cup all but glowing from its fluorescence or brimming with a layer of foam thick enough to give you a milk moustache.

The fast-food giant is reimagining the drink menu you grew up with in favour of a new roster launching May 5. It will keep the classics — pop, coffee, tea, milk and juice — but position crafted sodas, fruity refreshers and foamy iced coffees as new, permanent cornerstones.

The focus on fruit, froth and carbonation is meant to tap into a category the chain considers to be the Canadian quick-service industry's fastest growing and turn McDonald's into a restaurant people think of for more than Big Macs, fries or nuggets.

"We want to become a beverage destination," McDonald's Canada president Annemarie Swijtink told The Canadian Press.

Read
Wednesday, May. 20, 2026
58-year-old Keilback says she told her friend:

‘What a stupid situation’ as woman plunges into boulevard hole

Aaron Epp 3 minute read Preview

‘What a stupid situation’ as woman plunges into boulevard hole

Aaron Epp 3 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Talk about a hole in one.

Christine Keilback was getting home from the movie theatre Saturday night when she suddenly fell shoulders-deep into a hole in the boulevard across the street from her home in Winnipeg’s Wolseley neighbourhood.

Keilback tried to boost herself out but she couldn’t get a foothold because the dirt crumbled away.

The 58 year old, who serves as the executive director at a local non-profit, says she was not injured and immediately found the situation humorous.

Read
Monday, Apr. 27, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Manitoba Early Childhood Learning Minister Tracy Schmidt: “There has never been a better time in Manitoba’s history to be an early childhood educator.”

Funding to boost early childhood educators’ pay helps some, not others, longtime workers in field lament

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Preview

Funding to boost early childhood educators’ pay helps some, not others, longtime workers in field lament

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Although the federal and provincial governments are boosting early childhood educator wages by more than $14 million this year, some who’ve been working in the field a long time are feeling somewhat overlooked.

Read
Monday, Apr. 27, 2026
On Feb. 16, 2024, Premier Wab Kinew and Environment and Climate Change Minister Tracy Schmidt announce that the Manitoba government has decided to not issue an environmental licence for the Vivian sand extraction project in the Rural Municipality of Springfield. (Mike Deal / Free Press files)
No Subscription Required

Youth social media ban likely to begin in schools, provincial education minister says

Carol Sanders 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Youth social media ban likely to begin in schools, provincial education minister says

Carol Sanders 5 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

The first phase of a provincial social media ban for youth will likely start with Manitoba schools, which already restrict cellphone use, Education Minister Tracy Schmidt said Monday.

Read
Monday, Apr. 27, 2026
BROOK JONES/FREE PRESS
Darrell Warren, 64, who is the president of the William Whyte Neighbourhood Association is pictured at the intersection of Manitoba Avenue and McKenzie Street in Winnipeg, Man., Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2025. Warren has been the president of the local neighbourhood associaiton for the past eight years.

Community tip line making difference, but funds about to dry up, organizer says

Tyler Searle 5 minute read Preview

Community tip line making difference, but funds about to dry up, organizer says

Tyler Searle 5 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Six months after launching a community-run crime tip line in William Whyte, the group behind the initiative is preparing to ask the province for additional funding to keep the program alive.

Darrell Warren, president of the William Whyte Neighbourhood Association, said $20,000 provided through the provincial property crime forfeiture fund last year will dry up in May.

“It’s a big asset. I didn’t think it would be as popular as it is,” Warren said Monday.

“There are a lot of good people in these neighbourhoods who are affected by this stuff and they do want to get involved. This gives them the tools they need. The police are stretched to the limits right now and we need to be those eyes and ears out in the neighbourhood.”

Read
Monday, Apr. 27, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS 	 The 7-11 at 1871 Main Street, which has been closed, on Monday, April 27, 2026. For Scott story. Free Press 2026

West Kildonan 7-Eleven latest to close in city; crime the issue, area councillor says

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Preview

West Kildonan 7-Eleven latest to close in city; crime the issue, area councillor says

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Crime is again being blamed as another Winnipeg 7-Eleven convenience store has been shut down, adding to a growing list of closures across the city.

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Monday, Apr. 27, 2026
Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks during an announcement on the Canada Strong Fund, Canada's first sovereign wealth fund at the Canada Science and Technology Museum in Ottawa on Monday, April 27, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
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Canada is getting a sovereign wealth fund. What does that mean and how do they work?

Daniel Johnson and Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
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Canada is getting a sovereign wealth fund. What does that mean and how do they work?

Daniel Johnson and Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the creation of the country's first-ever sovereign wealth fund on Monday, called the Canada Strong Fund.

Carney pitched the new fund as a way for Canadians to invest in nation-building projects in areas that include energy, infrastructure, mining, agriculture and technology.

Here's what you need to know about sovereign wealth funds and how they operate.

What is a sovereign wealth fund?

Read
Tuesday, May. 19, 2026
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