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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.

A clown shouts slogans during a protest against the government's ban on holiday parties at schools during teaching hours, outside the Ministry of Education in La Paz, Bolivia, Monday, March 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)
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Clowns take to the streets of Bolivia to protest decree that could crush their livelihoods

The Associated Press 2 minute read Preview
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Clowns take to the streets of Bolivia to protest decree that could crush their livelihoods

The Associated Press 2 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — Dozens of clowns marched through the streets of Bolivia’s capital on Monday to protest a government decree that limits extracurricular activities, threatening their livelihoods.

Wearing full face paint and their signature red noses, the clowns gathered in front of the Ministry of Education in La Paz to oppose a decree published in February. The new mandate says schools must comply with 200 days of lessons each year — effectively banning schools from hosting the special events where these entertainers are frequently employed.

“This decree will economically affect all of us who work with children,” said Wilder Ramírez, a leader of the local clown union, who also goes by the name of Zapallito. The clown told journalists that “children need to laugh” while his colleagues wondered out loud if Bolivia’s Education Minister had ever had a childhood.

Clowns in Bolivia are often hired for school festivities to entertain children during breaks from their regular lessons. One such upcoming event is Children’s Day, which the country celebrates on April 12.

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
Dominic LeBlanc, minister responsible for Canada-U.S. Trade, Intergovernmental Affairs, Internal Trade and One Canadian Economy speaks after the conclusion of a Committee on Internal Trade meeting in Ottawa, Monday, March 30, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

Canada not worried U.S.-Mexico trade talks will upend trilateral deal, LeBlanc says

Catherine Morrison and Sarah Ritchie, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

Canada not worried U.S.-Mexico trade talks will upend trilateral deal, LeBlanc says

Catherine Morrison and Sarah Ritchie, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

OTTAWA - Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc said on Monday he isn't worried Mexico will sign a trade agreement with the Americans that excludes Canada.

LeBlanc told reporters at a news conference that the Mexicans are also committed to a trilateral deal as the countries work to renew the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade, better known as CUSMA.

"We've also said all along that there will be a bilateral element to these discussions and there will also be a trilateral element," he said.

"The American administration and our government and the Mexicans have also been clear that there are bilateral issues that properly will be worked on together by two countries and it will necessarily form part of the discussion around the trilateral review of CUSMA as well."

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
A Montreal police shoulder patch is seen on an officer in Montreal on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi

Hate crimes numbers stayed steady in 2024 after years of increases: StatCan

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Hate crimes numbers stayed steady in 2024 after years of increases: StatCan

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

OTTAWA - The number of police-reported hate crimes stayed steady in 2024, after sharp increases in prior years, Statistics Canada said Monday.

There were 4,882 hate crimes in Canada in 2024, a one per cent increase over the previous year, StatCan reported.

The numbers follow a 34 per cent rise between 2022 and 2023, and come after the number of police-reported hate crimes more than doubled since 2018.

"The relative stability in the total number of police-reported hate crimes in 2024 was shaped by variation in motivation," StatCan said.

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
Air Canada Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft sit parked at Vancouver International Airport, in Richmond, B.C., on Monday, Aug. 18, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

Air Canada CEO to step down later this year after backlash over lack of French

Christopher Reynolds, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview

Air Canada CEO to step down later this year after backlash over lack of French

Christopher Reynolds, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

MONTREAL - Air Canada chief executive Michael Rousseau will leave the company later this year after coming under fire last week for his failure to deliver a video condolence message in French following a plane crash that killed two Air Canada Express pilots.

Rousseau has told the board he will step down before October, the airline said Monday. He is expected to continue to lead Canada's largest carrier and serve on its board of directors until they part ways.

The announcement leaves Air Canada scrambling to find a replacement amid the challenge of soaring fuel prices and depressed cross-border travel, and follows a half-decade marked by both COVID-19 hurdles and profit wins under the watch of a CEO known more for his financial finesse than fine-tuned community relations.

Rousseau, 68, was widely criticized for his lack of French in the four-minute condolence video posted online that included only two words in the language — "bonjour" and "merci."

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
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Scott Kirk learned to donate his time to kids sport watching his father ‘who just showed up and gave his time.’
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Brandon resident‘s volunteer journey grounded in giving kids sport opportunities

AV Kitching 8 minute read Preview
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Brandon resident‘s volunteer journey grounded in giving kids sport opportunities

AV Kitching 8 minute read Monday, Apr. 6, 2026

Brandon resident Scott Kirk’s volunteering journey with Sport Manitoba started in 2019 when he applied to serve as mission staff for the Western Canada Summer Games.

Since then Kirk has volunteered in multiple provincial and national competitions in summer and winter, taking on various essential roles.

“Mission staff are the conduit between host society and the teams,” he explains. “We make sure the games run as smoothly as they can. Our goal is to make sure coaches, managers and athletes can focus on the sport while we deal with everything else that may pop up along the way.”

“Everything else” ranges from logistics to problem-solving. Last summer Kirk found himself co-ordinating meals when scheduling conflicts left athletes without their lunches.

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Monday, Apr. 6, 2026
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Local - Tree Cleanup City of Winnipeg workers clean up the broken tree branches that line the boulevards along Mathers Bay West in south River Heights on Thursday. A winter storm that pounded the city last weekend broke off many trees and branches throughout the city with the weight of the heavy, wet snow freezing onto the branches. See Maggie’s story on cleanup. Oct 17h, 2019

City hiring consultant to plan for cleanup after future weather disasters

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Preview

City hiring consultant to plan for cleanup after future weather disasters

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

When the next disaster hits, the City of Winnipeg hopes to have a detailed plan in place to clean it up.

The city is seeking a consultant to create a disaster debris management plan, noting the risk of such disruptions is increasing.

“Winnipeg is known for extreme weather conditions, including winter storms and spring floods. Climate change is anticipated to intensify these conditions and frequency of events,” a request for proposals states.

The document notes hazards such as tornadoes, floods, storms and fires can damage trees, buildings, infrastructure and homes, while producing a large amount of debris.

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Monday, Mar. 30, 2026
A man is silhouetted as buildings cast their shadows in front of the Peace tower on Parliament Hill, in Ottawa, Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
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Liberals dismiss call for law to ensure political fibs and flubs don’t eclipse facts

Jim Bronskill, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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Liberals dismiss call for law to ensure political fibs and flubs don’t eclipse facts

Jim Bronskill, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

OTTAWA - The Liberal government has dismissed a Toronto man's proposal to keep politicians honest in an age of misinformation, saying there are already several ways to fight falsehoods.

Federico Sanchez initiated an electronic petition to the House of Commons to propose legislation that would help correct the record when members of Parliament stray from the truth intentionally or simply because they are ill-informed.

Sanchez said he was "very upset" by the lack of federal interest in his pitch.

"It made me feel like they didn't take it seriously," he said in an interview. "If they don't think that there's a problem, then I think we're going to have a lot worse days ahead."

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
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Solving the problem of ‘disappearing’ children

John R. Wiens 6 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

On Feb. 28, American bombs struck a primary girls’ school in Minab, Iran, killing over 150 people, mainly children and wounding an estimated 100 more. This abhorrent attack was carried out by a military whose leadership proudly boasted they knew everybody’s whereabouts, something making it possible to “take out” the rulers of Iran and earlier, Venezuela.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Justice Minister Matt Wiebe
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Prison overcrowding has no simple fix

Editorial 4 minute read Preview
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Prison overcrowding has no simple fix

Editorial 4 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

Rarely, if ever, does government respond so quickly to a demand for more money. On March 20, the Manitoba Government and General Employees’ Union said that overcrowding in provincial jails was causing mayhem and putting their members at risk.

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Monday, Mar. 30, 2026
Incarcerated women read books in the library of the Djanira Dolores de Oliveira women's prison in Rio de Janeiro, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

Brazilian inmates find relief and reduce sentences through reading

Eléonore Hughes, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

Brazilian inmates find relief and reduce sentences through reading

Eléonore Hughes, The Associated Press 6 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — When 33-year-old Brazilian woman Emily de Souza heard about a program allowing her to shave off four days from her prison sentence by reading a book, she seized the opportunity to reconnect with a cherished habit.

Like tens of thousands of detainees across the country — including former President Jair Bolsonaro — she signed up for a sentence reduction program that encourages inmates to immerse themselves in literary works in exchange for reducing their sentences by up to 48 days per year.

The possibility of reuniting earlier with her 9-year-old autistic son, who her mother and aunt are looking after, only ramped up her motivation to participate in the project.

“One day is an eternity because it feels like it’s never going to end,” said de Souza, who is incarcerated at the Djanira Dolores de Oliveira Women’s Prison in Rio de Janeiro, which houses approximately 820 female detainees.

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Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026
The remote site in eastern Greenland where Texas-based Greenland Energy Company plans to drill exploration wells later this year is shown in this undated handout photo. Canadian companies are helping in the project. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Greenland Energy Company (Mandatory Credit)
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‘Massive operation’: Canadian driller, shipper enlisted to help tap Greenland oil

Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Preview
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‘Massive operation’: Canadian driller, shipper enlisted to help tap Greenland oil

Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

CALGARY -

The promotional video shows a small creek trickling through a mossy patch in an otherwise brown, barren landscape, icebergs looming just offshore.

A petroleum engineer dips a hand into the stream, then takes a sniff.

"It smells like crude oil," he says, grinning at the camera.

Read
Friday, May. 1, 2026
The Bekevar Wind Facility near Kipling, Sask., is pictured in this undated photo. The project was built in November 2024 and received some complaints from community members. Another wind farm, called the Seven Stars Energy Project, is proposed to be built near Weyburn, Sask., and has received intense pushback. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - SaskPower (Mandatory Credit)
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‘Neighbours hating each other’: Proposed Saskatchewan wind farm divides community

Jeremy Simes, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview
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‘Neighbours hating each other’: Proposed Saskatchewan wind farm divides community

Jeremy Simes, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

Don Bourassa says a proposed wind farm near his home in southeast Saskatchewan has ruined relationships in his community — to the point where he feels he has been bullied.

A resident of the Rural Municipality of Weyburn, Bourassa said one of his neighbours approached him about buying his property to keep him quiet on Enbridge's Seven Stars Energy Project.

"He wants me out of there, to shut up," Bourassa said in an interview. "That's bullying and I'm not falling for that.

“It’s neighbours hating each other."

Read
Friday, May. 1, 2026
Chelsea Howgate photo
                                Les deux équipes du Collège Louis-Riel (les Extra-terrestres rocambolesques en noir, les Grenouilles grotesques en vert) partageant leur victoire et les médailles au championnat de La LISTE pour la saison 2025-2026.
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C’est l’amitié qui a gagné

Chelsea Howgate 5 minute read Preview
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C’est l’amitié qui a gagné

Chelsea Howgate 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

Lors de la finale de la 30e saison de la Ligue d’improvisation secondaire tellement époustouflante (LISTE), un moment historique s’est joué: les Grenouilles grotesques et les Extra-terrestres rocambolesques, deux équipes du Collège Louis-Riel, ont remporté ensemble la victoire, partageant le trophée.

La soirée du 17 mars, une quinzaine de jeunes joueurs d’improvisation de la Division scolaire franco-manitobaine (DSFM) se sont rencontrés pour la finale de la trentième saison de la LISTE. Accueillies par une foule passionnée d’environ cinquante personnes, les deux équipes finalistes se sont rencontrées dans la Salle Pauline-Boutal du Centre culturel franco-manitobain (CCFM).

D’une part, en chemises vertes et représentés par des cartes de vote vertes, on retrouvait les Grenouilles grotesques, du Collège Louis-Riel (CLR). L’équipe s’est ralliée sous la houlette de leur capitaine Gabrielle Pagé, élève de 12e année.

De l’autre, en chemises noires et représentés par des cartes de vote jaunes, il y avait les Extra-terrestres rocambolesques, également du CLR. Cette équipe était dirigée par Nathan Perkins, lui aussi en 12e année.

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026
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AI literacy and confidence tricksters

Riley Enns 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

Canada’s first AI Literacy Day was March 27.

Y MATT GOERZEN / THE BRANDON SUN
                                Commonwealth Air Training Plan Museum director general Zoe McQuinn poses in front of a 1943-built Boeing Stearman Kaydet, a recent addition to the historic hanger.

Brandon plane museum needs to land cash for major overhaul

Connor McDowell 3 minute read Preview

Brandon plane museum needs to land cash for major overhaul

Connor McDowell 3 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

BRANDON — Brandon’s warplane museum is planning a roughly $15-million “major redevelopment” to stabilize the hangar and potentially build a new half-hangar on site.

The Commonwealth Air Training Plan Museum issued a negotiated request for proposals in February and is receiving regular on-site visits from interested parties, director Zoe McQuinn told the Brandon Sun on Friday.

Museum officials are searching for the best way to repair the hangar’s concrete floor, which is affecting the historic wooden structure on top of it.

“You can see (the effects) all throughout the hangar in different ways,” McQuinn said Friday, while stepping over cracks. “We need a way to stop the heaving in the floor and the twisting in the frame.”

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026
thequadfather03/TikTok
                                Boy Kibble is trending on TikTok.
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Boy Kibble craze a soul-destroying approach to maxxing meal plans

Jen Zoratti 4 minute read Preview
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Boy Kibble craze a soul-destroying approach to maxxing meal plans

Jen Zoratti 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

Sometimes, when I am filling my dog’s bowl with tiny brown triangles, I have the (depressing) thought: I wish there was such a thing as human kibble, so I didn’t have to work out what to feed myself all the time. Pre-portioned, perfectly macro-balanced sustenance, so I can just eat my People Chow and move on with my day.

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026
Francisco Seco / The Associated Press
                                A racing pigeon.
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Racing pigeons, airports and compassion

Editorial 4 minute read Preview
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Racing pigeons, airports and compassion

Editorial 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

It may be there is such a thing as too much precaution.

A family in Winnipeg’s West End was left disappointed this week when they were informed they have to take down their backyard aviary, which is home to 12 racing pigeons. The pigeons are beloved companions of one of the children in the family who is autistic and non-verbal, and for whom the pigeons provide important emotional support.

It is a bit of a saga. The coop was constructed about one year ago by Ronald Lobo, who was not aware he needed a permit for the birds. After being visited by a bylaw officer following up on complaints, the family sought and obtained approval for the structure.

Neighbours appealed the decision, citing sanitary and other concerns, but the decision not to allow the family to keep the coop came partly as a result of concerns raised by the Winnipeg Airport Authority as well. The family’s home falls within the bounds of the WAA’s airport vicinity protection area, and the airport was concerned the birds’ flights to and from the property could pose a risk.

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
                                A historic five Manitobans were named to Team Canada’s tenpin bowling team including Chase McVicar (left), Kristen Jolly (centre) and Israel Potter (right).

Five Manitoba bowlers named to Team Canada, including back-to-back Marinelli champ Naylor-McCall

Ben Little 7 minute read Preview

Five Manitoba bowlers named to Team Canada, including back-to-back Marinelli champ Naylor-McCall

Ben Little 7 minute read Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

In the final frame of her semifinal match, bowler Marissa Naylor-McCall needed to strike and mark to advance and defend her title as Winnipeg’s tenpin champion.

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Friday, Mar. 27, 2026
Leaders like former AFN chief Phil Fontaine were followed, watched, and documented.(Tijana Martin / The Canadian Press files)

Spying on Indigenous peoples fuels mistrust, threatens Canada’s economy and society

Niigaan Sinclair 4 minute read Preview

Spying on Indigenous peoples fuels mistrust, threatens Canada’s economy and society

Niigaan Sinclair 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association published thousands of pages in 2019 that it had fought for years to be released by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.

The heavily redacted documents, the association said, show Canada’s spy agency spent years illegally conducting surveillance and documenting peaceful Indigenous protesters and community environmental organizations that opposed the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline project. They include the Dogwood Initiative, ForestEthics (now Stand.earth), Sierra Club BC, Leadnow.ca, and the #IdleNoMore movement.

This discovery followed a report by two researchers in 2016, who found that from 2014 to 2015, the RCMP operated project SITKA, which involved a list of more than 300 political activists in the country — most of whom were Indigenous — with 89 marked as “threats” to national security.

If this wasn’t enough, access to information requests by activists found that from 2009 to 2011, Gitxsan professor and child advocate Cindy Blackstock was monitored by officials at Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada and the justice department – an act that Canada’s privacy commissioner later called a violation of her privacy rights.

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026
PHIL HOSSACK / FREE PRESS FILES
                                The Manitoba government is letting post-secondary institutions like the University of Manitoba raise tuition by the highest level in close to a decade – as much as four per cent for the upcoming 2026-27 academic year.

U of M tuition poised to climb four per cent

Kevin Rollason 4 minute read Preview

U of M tuition poised to climb four per cent

Kevin Rollason 4 minute read Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

University of Manitoba students are facing the highest tuition hike in years.

Prabhnoor Singh, president of the University of Manitoba Students’ Union, said the province’s decision to allow post-secondary institutions to increase tuition by as much as four per cent will put a huge burden on students who already struggle to make ends meet.

“Why is this being allowed?” Singh said on Friday.

“It’s crazy for an NDP government to do something like this. Students are already having to make sacrifices. They are deciding between putting food on their table or buying textbooks, paying for tuition.”

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Friday, Mar. 27, 2026
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