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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.
Supreme Court says asylum seekers entitled to subsidized Quebec daycare
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026West has long history of vilifying Iran
5 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 6, 2026Dollarama violence, online video spark Indigenous group’s call for probe into security firms’ training, policies
3 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 6, 2026Not just tempests in teapots
4 minute read Friday, Mar. 6, 2026The Cambridge dictionary defines “a tempest in a teapot” as being an idiom for a great uproar, anger, or worry about a trivial, unimportant matter. It describes an excessive, exaggerated reaction to a minor issue.
As we review the outcome of the Olympic hockey USA/Canada gold medal game and the subsequent actions of star goalie Connor Hellebuyck, there are certainly many reasons to comment. Everyone, it seems, has an opinion that screams to be heard. These opinions cover all the fields of interest.
Politically, our hockey hero raised our hackles by accepting praise and honours from U.S. President Trump, who is generally held in great contempt by the vast majority of Canadians and elsewhere. Ethically, Hellebuyck is being judged as being disloyal to the many thousands who have enthusiastically cheered him on ice and in the community he lives. Called into question is his commitment to the essence of that community and in a much larger sense all that is fundamentally Canada.
Financially, it could be argued that Hellebuyck was enhancing his personal stock value in the market place by aligning himself with Trump. Does it raise eyebrows to know that our prized goalie earned US$8.5 million in 2025 and currently holds a seven-year contract with the Winnipeg Jets for US$59.5 million? It begs the question “how much is enough?”
Former Democratic presidents remember the late Rev. Jesse Jackson during final public tribute
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026Temporary supervised drug consumption site could open within weeks, addictions minister says
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026Eby says OpenAI’s Altman will apologize to Tumbler Ridge, B.C., in wake of shootings
4 minute read Preview Friday, Apr. 24, 2026Gathering of knowledge keepers at U of M brings ‘generations together’
3 minute read Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026The University of Manitoba is hosting a record number of visitors, ranging from schoolchildren to seniors, at its 20th annual gathering of knowledge keepers.
A sacred fire was lit on the Fort Garry campus shortly before sunrise Thursday to mark the occasion.
“This gathering is to bring many generations together so that we can spend time with one another and learn from each other,” said Vanessa Lillie, director of cultural integration, Indigenous, at U of M.
More than 700 people have registered for the 2026 Elders and Traditional Peoples Gathering. There are representatives from all over the province, as well as Ontario, B.C. and as far as the U.K.
VistaVision, a vintage format left for dead, is revived in ‘One Battle After Another’ and more
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026Carney to cap Indo-Pacific trip with Tokyo visit focused on trade, security
3 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 6, 2026No chance asteroid will slam into the moon in 2032, NASA says
1 minute read Preview Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026Three more citizen-led recall petitions against Alberta politicians fall short
4 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 6, 2026Spin Master sees loss, lower revenue in holiday quarter
3 minute read Preview Friday, Apr. 24, 2026Many Canadian women seeing limited pathways to promotions, according to study results
3 minute read Preview Friday, Apr. 24, 2026Kids’ book pulled from division shelves over map illustration
5 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 6, 2026Making infant sleep environments as safe as possible
4 minute read Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026Every year in Canada and around the world, families are devastated by the loss of an infant sleeping peacefully yet never waking. These heartbreaking tragedies, known as sleep-related infant deaths, encompass SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome), accidental suffocation, and other unexplained causes.
In 2024, the Manitoba Advocate for Children and Youth (MACY) released Shifting the Lens, reporting that between 2019 and 2021, Manitoba experienced 48 such deaths — each one a life cut short, a dream shattered, and a family and community forever changed. Although overall rates initially declined over previous decades, progress has stalled, and inequities persist. As we approach Safe Sleep Week 2026, let’s reimagine our collective approach — from policy to public messaging — to make infant sleep environments as safe as possible for all.
Families facing poverty, housing instability, histories of colonization and systemic inequities are disproportionately affected by sleep-related infant deaths. Addressing these deaths requires shifting the focus from blame and fear to structural solutions and opportunity.
Sleep-related infant deaths are often framed as matters of parental choice or individual behaviours, yet social determinants of health play a decisive role in shaping the conditions in which families care for infants. Factors such as income, housing stability, education, access to culturally safe health care, and systemic inequities influence whether families can consistently follow safe sleep recommendations. For example, overcrowded or unstable housing may limit access to a separate, safe sleep surface. Financial strain can make it difficult to obtain cribs or bassinets. Colonialism, racism and geographic isolation further compound risk. Experiences of racism create barriers to accessing prenatal and postnatal care as well as reduce opportunities for culturally relevant guidance about safe sleep. Systemic racism also takes the form of unfairly judging parents as being unable to properly care for their children, resulting in families being involved with the child welfare system and children being apprehended.