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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.

The 11th Canadian Field Ambulance War Memorial lists the names of 30 university students who died during the First World War. (Brook Jones / Free Press)
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Our monuments, statues and memorials give form to honouring, grieving lives lost in war

Kevin Rollason 14 minute read Preview
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Our monuments, statues and memorials give form to honouring, grieving lives lost in war

Kevin Rollason 14 minute read Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025

Tucked at the end of a walkway, which dead-ends between the University Centre and the Helen Glass Centre for Nursing on the University of Manitoba campus, stands a monument in memory of students who never returned from the First World War.

Carved from local Tyndall stone and at just over a metre high, it commemorates the 30 medical students, from both the Manitoba Agricultural College, which later became part of the University of Manitoba, and other universities across the western provinces, who were killed while serving with the 11th Canadian Field Ambulance.

It’s just one of several monuments at the university marking student sacrifices during the First World War and one of many markers — from cenotaphs to statues and even lakes — across the province commemorating Manitobans who have served in conflicts since the province was created in 1870.

Many of those monuments are either hidden or in hard-to-find places. Even veterans from the Second World War — who not so long ago were part of marching parades and outdoor services marking Remembrance Day — are mostly tucked away living the remaining days of their lives in personal care homes.

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Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025
SUPPLIED
                                Puppy Sphere offers yoga classes led by certified instructors while puppies roam the studio and interact with participants.
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Puppy Sphere yoga chain rolls out ‘mood-boosting’ first classes in Winnipeg

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Preview
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Puppy Sphere yoga chain rolls out ‘mood-boosting’ first classes in Winnipeg

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Friday, Nov. 7, 2025

Winnipeg yogis seeking to do a downward dog while surrounded by dogs are in luck: puppy yoga is here.

Toronto-based company Puppy Sphere began offering weekend yoga classes at Yoga Public (280 Fort St.) earlier this fall.

Each class consists of a 45-minute yoga flow led by a certified instructor, while puppies from local rescues and breeders roam the studio. The class is followed by a 30-minute wind-down that includes refreshments and canine cuddles.

Puppy Sphere founders Francesca Albo and Lea Burbidge Izquierdo said the classes began selling out almost immediately, which led them to add Thursdays to the schedule. The entrepreneurs are actively looking for a Winnipeg studio of their own.

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Friday, Nov. 7, 2025
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Construction workers continue improvements at Winnipeg’s North End Sewage Treatment Plant. Part of the plant’s $3-billion upgrade will add biosolids facilities that improve the end byproduct.
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City tries to get the most bang for its (sewage) buck

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview
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City tries to get the most bang for its (sewage) buck

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Friday, Nov. 7, 2025

The City of Winnipeg is exploring new ways to reuse its treated sewage sludge.

An expression of interest seeks feedback on the best options and technology available to recycle biosolids, a byproduct of the sewage treatment process. The document notes the treated sludge can be composted, used like a fertilizer, or even be transformed to produce energy.

A massive $3-billion upgrade to the city’s North End sewage treatment plant will add new biosolids facilities that improve the end byproduct, which means the city could soon have more options to reuse it, said Cynthia Wiebe, Winnipeg water and waste’s manager of engineering services.

“The key difference is that there are no pathogens in the (biosolids from the new facility),” said Wiebe.

Read
Friday, Nov. 7, 2025
Daniel Crump / Free Press Files
                                The Indigenous Veterans Day Act marks November 8 as the official day to honour Indigenous veterans in Manitoba.
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Indigenous veterans prepare to ‘recognize our own’ on official day

Scott Billeck 3 minute read Preview
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Indigenous veterans prepare to ‘recognize our own’ on official day

Scott Billeck 3 minute read Friday, Nov. 7, 2025

When the Canadian Armed Forces issued a formal apology for the abuses inflicted on Indigenous service members, Jack Park said it hit home.

He was deeply moved when the Indigenous Veterans Day Act — making Nov. 8 the official day to honour Indigenous veterans in Manitoba — was granted royal assent and became law.

“It was so well-received,” Park said on Friday as he prepared for the fourth annual Indigenous Veterans Day ceremony to honour Red River Métis veterans, which will take place on Saturday on Lac du Bonnet.

“I can tell you as an Indigenous person serving, it wasn’t a good thing to be me. They knew we were a different breed, I guess you could say, and they picked on that. The abuse was real. It was absolutely real. When I got out of the armed forces, I was treated like a regular Canadian citizen again. It was a welcome relief to come out of there.”

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Friday, Nov. 7, 2025
Canada's Brendon Rodney runs the baton in the men's 4 x 100m relay during the Paris Summer Olympics in Saint-Denis, France, Friday, Aug. 9, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

Canadian sprinter Brendon Rodney helping with hurricane relief aid in Jamaica

Abdulhamid Ibrahim, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Canadian sprinter Brendon Rodney helping with hurricane relief aid in Jamaica

Abdulhamid Ibrahim, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025

Brendon Rodney knows even helping a few people is enough to make a big difference.

The three-time Olympic medallist sprinter from Toronto lives in Jamaica where Hurricane Melissa caused significant damage, mainly in the northwest and southwest parts of the country. The Category 5 hurricane hit the island last week and took a number of lives as well.

"It's always tough because it's my home, ... I live here, but it's my home away from home," he said. "And the people that have been affected are not just people that I don't know. But of course my training partners, the students at the school and many different people that I interact with on a day to day, month to month basis.

"So for me, this is difficult because you can't help everybody, but as long as you can help one, two or three people then it does make a big difference. So for us, it's just finding ways that we can help in any possible way."

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Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS 
                                Open Doors Adult Literacy Program director Margaret Banasiak says the legal language on bail forms is impenetrable to many applicants: ‘Very few people have the guts to say, “I do not (understand)”.’

Amid bail-reform debate, some argue court orders must suit low literacy levels

Toni De Guzman 8 minute read Preview

Amid bail-reform debate, some argue court orders must suit low literacy levels

Toni De Guzman 8 minute read Friday, Nov. 7, 2025

Several red flags jump off the page when literacy expert Margaret Banasiak examines a Manitoba provincial court bail form.

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Friday, Nov. 7, 2025
SUPPLIED
                                Ashley Munro had 164 pairs of socks — donations to charity — stolen when her car was broken into on Monday.
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Donation drive back on its feet after sock theft

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Preview
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Donation drive back on its feet after sock theft

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Friday, Nov. 7, 2025

There’s a cold-hearted thief in Winnipeg who won’t have cold feet.

Someone made off with more than 160 pairs of socks, to be donated to people in need, that were in Ashley Munro’s car, which was parked downtown Monday afternoon. They had smashed a window to get into the vehicle.

“The first thing (I thought) was ‘My socks are gone,’” said Munro. “I didn’t think of anything else in the car, it was just like, ‘Oh no, I got all these donations and now they’re gone’… it’s 164 pairs that could have gone to quite a few people.”

Munro, who volunteers with the St. Laurent branch of the Manitoba Métis Federation, had collected the socks from community members for Main Street Project’s Socktober campaign.

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Friday, Nov. 7, 2025
FILE - Astrid Rubens demonstrates the elasticity of homemade slime in her kitchen in St. Paul, Minn., June 21, 2017. (AP Photos/Jeff Baenen, File)
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Slime, Battleship and Trivial Pursuit join the Toy Hall of Fame

Carolyn Thompson, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview
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Slime, Battleship and Trivial Pursuit join the Toy Hall of Fame

Carolyn Thompson, The Associated Press 3 minute read Monday, Nov. 10, 2025

Slime, that gooey, sticky and often-homemade plaything, was enshrined into the National Toy Hall of Fame on Thursday along with perennial bestselling games Battleship and Trivial Pursuit.

Each year, the Hall of Fame recognizes toys that have inspired creative play across generations, culling its finalists from among thousands of nominees sent in online. Voting by the public and a panel of experts decides which playthings will be inducted.

Milton Bradley's Battleship, a strategy game that challenges players to strike an opponent's warships, and Trivial Pursuit, which tests players' knowledge in categories like geography and sports, have each sold more than 100 million copies over several decades, according to the Hall of Fame.

Battleship started as a pencil-and-paper game in the 1930s, but it was Milton Bradley's 1967 plastic edition with fold-up stations and model ships that became a hit with the public. Its popularity crested when Universal Pictures and Hasbro, which now owns Milton Bradley, released the 2012 movie, “Battleship,” loosely based on the game. Battleship was also among the first board games to be computerized in 1979, according to the Hall of Fame, and now there are numerous, electronic versions.

Read
Monday, Nov. 10, 2025
FILE - A cat named Poke sits on a couch at a home on Dec. 5, 2023, in Waipahu, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)

Pets contribute to greenhouse gases like us. Here’s how to reduce their carbon pawprint

Caleigh Wells, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

Pets contribute to greenhouse gases like us. Here’s how to reduce their carbon pawprint

Caleigh Wells, The Associated Press 6 minute read Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025

The whole “pets are family members” idea isn't just a sweet sentiment. Data shows that pet owners are increasingly buying food that resembles their own diets.

The trend toward refrigerated, “fresh” or even “human-grade” pet food can come with a price beyond the pet food budget.

One of the most climate intensive decisions we make is whether to own a pet. It’s for the same reason that humans have a big impact: They eat every day. And most of them eat meat. The environmental impact of meat includes the land the animal lived on, the food it ate, the waste it generated and other factors.

“What else do pets do? We have to feed them. I think that that’s why it’s number one,” said Allison Reser, director of sustainability and innovation at the Pet Sustainability Coalition.

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Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025
RETSD
                                River East Transcona School Division Trustee Rod Giesbrecht can return on Dec. 10.

Trustee suspended for third time in three years

Maggie Macintosh 3 minute read Preview

Trustee suspended for third time in three years

Maggie Macintosh 3 minute read Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025

TRANSCONA’S school board has given a veteran member his third strike in as many years, but he’s not out of a job.

Rod Giesbrecht, a longtime trustee in the River East Transcona School Division, has been suspended for three months for breaching the board’s code of conduct.

Giesbrecht was disciplined twice during the 2023-24 school year for admitting he spoke out of turn about confidential board matters.

His colleagues voted to suspend him without pay — the most severe consequence available — on Sept. 9.

Read
Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Fiona Zhao, owner of Unique Bunny, will open a new store in Montreal next month.

Unique Bunny jumps to 10 stores, with eye on future expansion

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Preview

Unique Bunny jumps to 10 stores, with eye on future expansion

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Monday, Nov. 3, 2025

Ekam Verma’s shopping trip might be sparked by an email: we’ve restocked. Her destination? Unique Bunny. Verma scanned the aisles of Unique Bunny’s McPhillips Street location on Monday — her go-to Japanese eyeliner was across the store; South Korean cleansing foams and pore repair serums stood nearby.

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Monday, Nov. 3, 2025
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Grade 2 student, Hank Friesen-LeDrew, 8, writes on a small whiteboard during his daily reading comprehension period in Makayla Specaluk’s Winnipeg Beach School grade 2 class Thursday morning. Gimli-based Evergreen School Division is radically changing the way its teachers instruct students how to read. The return-to-basics program is taking place amid a controversial debate about reading instruction (structured literacy versus balanced literacy) across Manitoba and Canada at large. Reporter: Maggie Macintosh 250123 - Thursday, January 23, 2025.
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Probe flags troubles in literacy education

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview
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Probe flags troubles in literacy education

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Monday, Nov. 3, 2025

Human rights investigators have found that parents of struggling readers across Manitoba are being forced to take on “a full-time job” of advocacy so their children can become literate in local public schools.

The Manitoba Human Rights Commission released the long-awaited findings of its probe into literacy 101 education on Thursday — the penultimate day of Dyslexia Awareness Month 2025.

The 70-page document reveals that many schools are not using evidence-based methods to teach reading and lengthy wait times for clinical assessments are affecting overall literacy rates.

The results are unsurprising for Laura Jones, a mother who volunteered at the launch event organized in partnership with Dyslexia Canada.

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Monday, Nov. 3, 2025
Province hires teens to ensure merchants check IDs

Province hires teens to ensure merchants check IDs

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Preview

Province hires teens to ensure merchants check IDs

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Monday, Nov. 3, 2025

Minors are being paid to try buying lottery tickets, cannabis and liquor from Manitoba retailers.

The Liquor Gaming and Cannabis Authority of Manitoba that regulates those sales launched the “minors as agents” program two years ago, with undercover 16- to 18-year-olds trying to buy lottery tickets from licensed retailers.

The minors work alongside LGCA inspectors to test how licensees check identification.

The youths try to buy regulated products, allowing inspectors to monitor licensees’ compliance with prohibitions on underage sales. The purpose is to ensure sellers check for identification that proves a buyer’s age.

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Monday, Nov. 3, 2025
SUPPLIED
                                The mayor of the Municipality of Souris-Glenwood called the vandalism “disappointing.”

‘We have to call it out’: Souris responds to anti-LGBTTQ+ vandalism

Chris Kitching 4 minute read Preview

‘We have to call it out’: Souris responds to anti-LGBTTQ+ vandalism

Chris Kitching 4 minute read Monday, Nov. 3, 2025

A Pride crosswalk in a southwestern Manitoba community was vandalized over the weekend, leaving its creators upset but unbowed in their efforts to foster inclusive and safe spaces for LGBTTQ+ people.

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Monday, Nov. 3, 2025
Supplied

Patty Wiens
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It’s never too brisk to bike — once you get in gear with winter

Patty Wiens 8 minute read Preview
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It’s never too brisk to bike — once you get in gear with winter

Patty Wiens 8 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025

Excerpt from That’ll Never Work Here: Challenging the Myths Around Biking in a Winter City, by Patty Wiens (Great Plains Press). A book launch will be held Nov. 8 at McNally Booksellers. It is the second book in The City Project, which examines ways to create a happier, healthier more sustainable Winnipeg.

 

When someone asks me, “How did you become a cycling advocate?” I usually say, “I rode my bike in winter one day and now I’m here.” Bicycle stories usually have a gap in the middle. There’s a well-known joke that says that the beginning of your life is all about bikes, then there’s a bunch of BS with cars in the middle, then you get older and get back to bikes.

That’s true for me.

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Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025
Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Joseph Pilapil’s meticulously formed letters, from bold block capitals to curly twirls and swirls, appear in front of restaurants, on shop windows and sandwich panels.
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Travelling sign painter finds his groove on the move

AV Kitching 4 minute read Preview
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Travelling sign painter finds his groove on the move

AV Kitching 4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025

For someone whose writing appears all over the city, Joseph Pilapil’s penmanship isn’t the best.

You’ve probably seen his meticulously formed letters above store entrances, on shop windows and decorating sandwich boards all across the city.

But when it comes to writing on paper, well, the less said the better.

“My handwriting is terrible. When I am writing out my day-to-day stuff, it’s absolutely really bad,” he says, with a laugh.

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Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025
Alicia Régnier photo
                                En 2025, l’artiste franco-manitobaine Anna Binta Diallo a multiplié les expositions à travers le pays.
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La créativité franco-manitobaine rayonne: Anna Binta Diallo expose à travers le pays

Virginie Frere 4 minute read Preview
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La créativité franco-manitobaine rayonne: Anna Binta Diallo expose à travers le pays

Virginie Frere 4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025

En 2025, l’artiste visuelle franco-manitobaine Anna Binta Diallo connaît une année charnière. De Vancouver à Toronto, en passant par Edmonton et Winnipeg, ses expositions se succèdent, confirmant la place qu’elle occupe désormais parmi les figures majeures de la scène artistique canadienne contemporaine.

Née à Dakar, Sénégal, en 1983 et élevée à Saint-Boniface, Anna Binta Diallo tisse depuis toujours des liens entre les continents et les mémoires. Ses œuvres explorent les intersections entre identité, nostalgie et nature, dans un langage visuel qui conjugue collage, vidéo, graphisme et sculpture.

“Le collage est depuis longtemps au cœur de ma démarche,” confie-t-elle. “J’aime réagencer des images anciennes, des sons, des fragments d’archives pour construire de nouveaux récits.”

L’artiste collecte cartes, livres et photos qu’elle transforme en compositions hybrides, à la croisée du passé et du futur.

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Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025
Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Lisa Forbes, manager of social enterprise and fund development at SEED (left) and workshop facilitator Michael Huntinghawk offer courses on financial literacy.

Investment regulator funds program to help Indigenous youth manage settlement money

Joel Schlesinger 4 minute read Preview

Investment regulator funds program to help Indigenous youth manage settlement money

Joel Schlesinger 4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025

Sudden wealth isn’t a topic that would typically be part of a basic financial literacy course. It seems like even more of an odd fit for a new program for low-income Manitobans.

“We’ve been picking up on what people we worked with in the community have been asking about,” says Lisa Forbes, manager of social enterprise and fund development at SEED Winnipeg Inc.

Called “Sudden Wealth and Investing Basics,” the pilot is a response to what SEED has been hearing from Indigenous youth who may soon be recipients of legal settlements, she says.

These notably include a $530-million settlement to compensate children in care from 2005 to 2019 in Manitoba who had grant money unfairly clawed back and a $23-billion federal settlement over discriminatory child welfare practices and chronic underfunding.

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Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025
Supplied
                                Jeremy Matuszewski has picked up numerous awards for the new concave, including the farmer’s choice award and innovation award at the Ag in Motion event in Saskatchewan.
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Invention of combine part reaps recognition in Time

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Preview
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Invention of combine part reaps recognition in Time

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025

A dozen years ago, Jeremy Matuszewski had only visited farms a few times in his life. Now, Time magazine has recognized him for a product he created to help farmers.

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Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                ‘What we like to do is pair personalities,’ says Animal Services Agency’s Jennifer Medlicott (left) with colleague Camille Williams and Business Buddies’ Brandt.
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No dog? No problem: Local program offers offices pup for a day

AV Kitching 4 minute read Preview
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No dog? No problem: Local program offers offices pup for a day

AV Kitching 4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025

Brandt and Paisley are raring to start their new jobs. But instead of hellos and handshakes, they’ll most likely be giving their co-workers tail wags and face licks. Not that anyone in the office will mind.

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Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025
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