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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.

Eight-year-old Betsy Schruder poses for a portrait in her Halloween costume as Zoey from Netflix's
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‘KPop Demon Hunters’ to take over the streets this Halloween

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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‘KPop Demon Hunters’ to take over the streets this Halloween

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

TORONTO - Earlier this year, eight-year-old Betsy Schruder had a tough decision to make: Glinda, Benson Boone, or Zoey from "KPop Demon Hunters"?

Ultimately, her choice was clear: she'd join the legions of kids dressing up as characters from Netflix's runaway hit this Halloween, donning black space buns, a turquoise tank top and purple pants to embody the bubbly popstar-by-day, demon slayer-by-night.

"I like how she sometimes turns into cartoons and when she cries out popcorn," Betsy says by way of explanation.

Though Betsy has seen "KPop Demon Hunters" fewer times than some of her peers -- a paltry twice -- she knows all the songs by heart and regularly watches clips online.

Read
Friday, Oct. 31, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Demand for warm clothes will spike when it snows, says Hillary Gair, senior manager of engagement initiatives at United Way Winnipeg.

Need for winter clothes outstripping supply

Jesse Brogan 2 minute read Preview

Need for winter clothes outstripping supply

Jesse Brogan 2 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025

Despite Winnipeg’s mild fall, the bitter cold is coming — and already the demand for winter clothing donations is outstripping supply, United Way Winnipeg says.

Read
Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025
FILE - A kid carves a pumpkin on the front porch of her home Oct 20, 2023, in Auburn, Maine. (Andree Kehn/Sun Journal via AP, File)

Halloween pumpkin waste is a methane problem, but chefs and farmers have solutions

Kiki Sideris, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview

Halloween pumpkin waste is a methane problem, but chefs and farmers have solutions

Kiki Sideris, The Associated Press 5 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025

Don’t let your Halloween pumpkin haunt the landfill this November.

More than 1 billion pounds (454 million kilograms) of pumpkins rot in U.S. landfills each year after Halloween, according to the Department of Energy.

Yours doesn’t have to go to waste. Experts told us your pumpkins can be eaten, composted or even fed to animals. Here’s how.

Cooking with pumpkin waste

Read
Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025
SUPPLIED
                                The Diwali celebration’s cultural show featured a variety of folk and contemporary dances.
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Annual Diwali celebration puts spotlight on Hindu culture, customs and community

Romona Goomansingh 5 minute read Preview
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Annual Diwali celebration puts spotlight on Hindu culture, customs and community

Romona Goomansingh 5 minute read Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025

‘Even a single lamp dispels the deepest darkness’

— Mahatma Gandhi

The Hindu Society of Manitoba welcomed more than 5,000 attendees to its Diwali Mela on Oct. 11. The annual bazaar-type event streamed bright lights throughout the RBC Convention Centre in the spirit of celebrating Hindu culture, customs, community connections and camaraderie and cheer.

At this moment in time, as many of us and as many corners of the world face challenges and conflicts, the Diwali vibe offers a reminder to hold firmly onto the message that darkness is defeated by lamps of light and love.

Read
Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025
FILE - Rosa Parks speaks at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 15, 1969. (AP Photo/Joe Holloway, Jr., File)

Rosa Parks and Helen Keller statues unveiled at the Alabama Capitol

Kim Chandler, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

Rosa Parks and Helen Keller statues unveiled at the Alabama Capitol

Kim Chandler, The Associated Press 4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Statues of Rosa Parks and Helen Keller, pivotal figures who fought for justice and inspired change across the world, were unveiled Friday on the grounds of the Alabama Capitol.

The monuments honoring the Alabama natives whose advocacy helped dismantle racial segregation and promoted the rights of people with disabilities are the first statues of women to be installed on the lawn of the Alabama Capitol, broadening the history reflected on the grounds that also include tributes to the Confederacy, which was formed at the site in 1861.

Gov. Kay Ivey, currently the nation's longest serving female governor, said Parks and Keller “rose to shape history through quiet strength and unwavering conviction.”

“Courage changes the course of history, and today, these statutes stand as symbols of that courage — testaments to what one person, especially one determined one, can do to make the world a better place,” Ivey said.

Read
Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                The altar at the Manitoba Buddhist Temple in Winnipeg. Winnipeggers interested in learning about the Buddhist idea of karma are invited to a free public workshop at the temple from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday.
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Local Buddhist Temple teaches true meaning of karma; promotes positive living

John Longhurst 3 minute read Preview
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Local Buddhist Temple teaches true meaning of karma; promotes positive living

John Longhurst 3 minute read Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

A popular misconception about the Buddhist idea of karma is that it’s about punishment — a kind of cosmic “what goes around comes around.”

While Buddhists believe actions have consequences, karma is a much deeper idea than that, said Kyle Rathgaber, a board member of the Manitoba Buddhist Temple.

“Karma is not about retribution,” he said. “It’s not about being punished for something you did wrong.”

While there are elements of negative consequences in the idea of karma — if you are angry at others all the time, you may feel stress and anxiety in your own life — for Rathgaber, 34, it’s more about how people can peacefully and helpfully engage the world around them.

Read
Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Being human — by choice

Carina Blumgrund 4 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025

I have found myself thinking about what draws me to a children’s television host who spent decades talking about how we live together in neighbourhoods.

Fred Rogers had this gentle way of speaking to children about the everyday challenges of being human: how to handle anger, disappointment, fear, and joy. But the more I consider his approach, the more I realize he wasn’t really teaching children how to behave, how to feel about themselves, how to understand the world around them. He was making something much more fundamental feel possible and worthwhile: he was making human decency aspirational.

Mr. Rogers knew that how we treat each other matters, not because it’s polite or proper, but because it’s how we create the kind of world we actually want to live in. His genius wasn’t in the specific lessons he taught, but in how he made kindness, patience, honesty, and gentleness feel like the most essential ways to be human.

I keep wondering if that’s what we’re missing sometimes. Not more rules about how to behave, but a sense that kindness and integrity are worth striving for.

FACEBOOK
                                A post on the Winnipeg Police Service Facebook page says two horses were spotted trotting riderless along Wilkes Avenue at about 8:30 Tuesday morning. Officers, some neighbours and the animals’ owners were eventually able to rein in the escapees and lead them back home.

Hot-to-trot equine escapees take leisurely morning tour in Charleswood

Free Press staff 2 minute read Preview

Hot-to-trot equine escapees take leisurely morning tour in Charleswood

Free Press staff 2 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025

A couple of “trot-away” — there were no reports of any galloping — steeds are back with their owners after a brief, riderless adventure in Charleswood Tuesday morning.

Read
Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025

St. Andrews pumpkin patch set to shutter

Free Press staff 1 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025

Schwabe Pumpkins, a popular pumpkin patch in the Rural Municipality of St. Andrews, has announced its closure.

The family-run farm business is more than 20 years old. Ownership took to social media Sunday to spread the news; they declined an interview request Monday.

“With heavy hearts we have decided this will be our last year,” an online post reads.

The business made headlines in September, after volunteers assisted in a quick crop harvest. Frost had come early, threatening the farm’s operations.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Seven Oaks Pool will be closed for a year beginning Monday.

Seven Oaks pool closing at least a year for repairs, renovations; parents worry about dried-up swim-lesson opportunities

Scott Billeck 3 minute read Preview

Seven Oaks pool closing at least a year for repairs, renovations; parents worry about dried-up swim-lesson opportunities

Scott Billeck 3 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025

Parents in northwest Winnipeg say they’re worried about losing access to swimming lessons after the city announced it will close Seven Oaks Pool for more than a year in order to complete extensive repairs.

Read
Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025
Marta Guerrero photo
                                Lise Gaboury-Diallo a mis 4 ans pour donner vie à la figure marquante de la culture franco-manitobaine.
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Hommage vivant à une pionnière du théâtre franco-manitobain

Virginie Frère 6 minute read Preview
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Hommage vivant à une pionnière du théâtre franco-manitobain

Virginie Frère 6 minute read Friday, Oct. 17, 2025

Du 22 octobre au 1er novembre 2025, le Théâtre Cercle Molière donnera vie à la figure emblématique de la francophonie manitobaine, Pauline Boutal.

Pour le centenaire du TCM, l’ancienne direction a choisi d’inaugurer sa saison avec la programmation d’une pièce “100 % Manitoba,” comme le dit Marie-Ève Fontaine, nouvelle directrice artistique et co-directrice générale de l’établissement.

Il s’agit de Pauline Boutal, entre les toiles et les planches, œuvre de théâtre écrite par l’une des plus importantes figures de la littérature franco-canadienne de l’Ouest actuelle, Lise Gaboury-Diallo, et mise en scène par Simon Miron, également franco-manitobain.

Le spectacle retrace en deux actes les faits saillants de la vie de Pauline Le Goff Boutal (1894-1992), illustratrice, artiste-peintre, costumière, comédienne, metteuse en scène et première directrice artistique du TCM, qu’elle a dirigé pendant 27 ans.

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Friday, Oct. 17, 2025
JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
                                Teresa Byrne, a Métis way of life teacher, speaks to some parents and students during a Wolseley School renaming community meeting Tuesday.

Truth, home, nature: Renaming process for Wolseley School 'requires care’

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview

Truth, home, nature: Renaming process for Wolseley School 'requires care’

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

Wolseley School will be renamed after the towering trees that surround it, a perennial grass found in nearby Omand’s Creek or a Michif phrase.

Read
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025
FILE - Shoppers walk from the Walmart store, Aug. 14, 2025, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

OpenAI partners with Walmart to let users buy products in ChatGPT, furthering chatbot shopping push

Wyatte Grantham-philips, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

OpenAI partners with Walmart to let users buy products in ChatGPT, furthering chatbot shopping push

Wyatte Grantham-philips, The Associated Press 3 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

NEW YORK (AP) — OpenAI is partnering with Walmart to let shoppers make purchases directly within ChatGPT, furthering the artificial intelligence company's push to turn its chatbot into a virtual merchant as it seeks to boost revenue.

In an Tuesday announcement, Walmart said the new offering will give customers the option to “simply chat and buy." That means the retailer’s products would be available through instant checkout in ChatGPT — allowing users to buy anything from meal ingredients or household items, to other goods they might be discussing with the chatbot.

“For many years now, eCommerce shopping experiences have consisted of a search bar and a long list of item responses," Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said in a prepared statement. “That is about to change.”

Sam Altman, cofounder and CEO of OpenAI, added that the partnership would "make everyday purchases a little simpler.”

Read
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025
Sergio Marchi speaks in the House of Commons in Ottawa on Wednesday, March 17, 1999. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tom Hanson)
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Former Liberal cabinet minister says young people are hesitant to enter politics

Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
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Former Liberal cabinet minister says young people are hesitant to enter politics

Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

OTTAWA - Sergio Marchi says when he asks students in his university course on politics how many of them are interested in a career in public life, he's surprised if two or three of them raise a hand.

Marchi, who served as minister for international trade from 1997 to 1999 and later as ambassador to the World Trade Organization and the United Nations, told The Canadian Press he fears that more and more young people are giving politics a pass.

"You can't have the current young generation be exempted from public life," he said.

"Nothing wrong with old white men, but we can't have our politicians be just white old men. We need the energy and the idealism of the youngsters."

Read
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025
Morgane Michotte photo
                                Susanna Crossman’s novel carries a tone of nostalgia and reflection that’s similar to that of her 2024 memoir, Home Is Where We Start.
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The Orange Notebooks navigate love, longing and a quest for a lost child

Reviewed by Laurence Broadhurst 5 minute read Preview
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The Orange Notebooks navigate love, longing and a quest for a lost child

Reviewed by Laurence Broadhurst 5 minute read Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025

He turned. He looked back, precisely when he seemed to have the cosmic solution in his hands — and that was his terrible undoing. That was Orpheus’s mistake.

Susanna Crossman reimagines turning and looking back here, in a kind of experiment in genre. The Orange Notebooks is an adventure story, to be sure, but it is also part aching memoir, part lyrical poetry, part polychromatic kaleidoscope, part surreptitious “found footage” but, most thoroughly, part primordial myth.

Crossman seems to dwell, as her writing does, between worlds. She grew up in the U.K. in a “utopian commune” about 50 years ago but now resides in France, writing (both essays and fiction), lecturing and practising arts therapy. Her 2024 memoir, Home Is Where We Start, set a lingering tone of journeys, nostalgia and psychological reflection.

The Orange Notebooks reprises that tone, beginning with the pretense that we are being handed a set of journal reflections written by our protagonist, “Anna,” who herself lives in liminal spaces. She too was raised in England but grew to adulthood as a server on an English Channel ferry, married a dashing Frenchman with an exotic name, Antton (the two Ts a vestige of his Basque heritage) and eventually settled with Antton in a lovely rural French home, both as teachers.

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Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025
Local leader Antonia Olpo (centre), along with aquaculture expert Álvaro Céspedes and fish farmer Marisabel Avendaño, helps pull in a catch from Avendaño’s pond. (Melissa Martin / Free Press)

Winnipeg-based organization injects federal funds into innovative, women-powered business in Bolivia

Melissa Martin 13 minute read Preview

Winnipeg-based organization injects federal funds into innovative, women-powered business in Bolivia

Melissa Martin 13 minute read Friday, Oct. 10, 2025

With practised grace, Antonia Olpo slides down the bank of the long, shallow pond and plunges fully clothed into the muddy water. On the grass above, other women and their male helpers unfurl the net, stretching it across the pond from edge to edge, and let it sink below the surface.

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Friday, Oct. 10, 2025
FILE - A Nobel Prize medal is displayed before a ceremony at the Swedish Ambassador's Residence in London, Monday, Dec. 6, 2021. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, File)
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Three scientists at US universities win Nobel Prize in physics for advancing quantum technology

Kostya Manenkov, Seth Borenstein And Mike Corder, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview
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Three scientists at US universities win Nobel Prize in physics for advancing quantum technology

Kostya Manenkov, Seth Borenstein And Mike Corder, The Associated Press 6 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Three scientists won the Nobel Prize in physics Tuesday for research on the strange behavior of subatomic particles called quantum tunneling that enabled the ultra-sensitive measurements achieved by MRI machines and laid the groundwork for better cellphones and faster computers.

The work by John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis, who work at American universities, took the seeming contradictions of the subatomic world — where light can be both a wave and a particle and parts of atoms can tunnel through seemingly impenetrable barriers — and applied them in the more traditional physics of digital devices. The results of their findings are just starting to appear in advanced technology and could pave the way for the development of supercharged computing.

The prizewinning research in the mid-1980s took the subatomic “weirdness of quantum mechanics” and found how those tiny interactions can have real-world applications, said Jonathan Bagger, CEO of the American Physical Society. The experiments were a crucial building block in the fast-developing world of quantum mechanics.

Speaking from his cellphone, Clarke, who spearheaded the research team, said: “One of the underlying reasons that cellphones work is because of all this work."

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Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025
JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
Jeff Lieberman, Jewish Federation of Winnipeg president and CEO, is photographed Monday, October 6, 2025 at the Asper Jewish community campus for a story on the alleged increase in anti-semitic graffiti in Winnipeg as the second anniversary of the Oct 7, 2023 Hamas attack approaches. 

Reporter: ?
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On second anniversary of Oct. 7 attacks and start of Gaza war, officers say rushing to cover painful vandalism reduces odds of arrests

Kevin Rollason 8 minute read Preview
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On second anniversary of Oct. 7 attacks and start of Gaza war, officers say rushing to cover painful vandalism reduces odds of arrests

Kevin Rollason 8 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025

A swastika on a monument to French Canadian author Gabrielle Roy across the Red River from the Canadian Museum for Human Rights.

The words “F—k Jews” on the wall of a toilet stall at a north Winnipeg middle school.

A spray-painted swastika on a garage door along with the initials M.K.Y., an international neo-Nazi violent extremist group. The initials come from the Russian words for “Maniac Murder Cult.”

But as fast as they appeared, they were being covered up just as quickly — until recently.

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Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025
Coffee beans are held by an employee at Club Coffee's plant in Toronto on Thursday, Nov. 2, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
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Roasters and cafés grapple with rising coffee bean prices

Ritika Dubey, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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Roasters and cafés grapple with rising coffee bean prices

Ritika Dubey, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Monday, Oct. 6, 2025

Your daily cup of java is getting a little more expensive as roasters and cafés grapple with rising coffee bean prices.

Climate change has been the biggest contributor to the ongoing surge in bean prices, as coffee crops are very sensitive to temperature changes, said Michael von Massow, food economist at the University of Guelph.

"We've seen some increases in disease and some decreases in yield that have lowered supply, and basic economics 101 — when supply goes down, prices go up," he said in an interview on Monday.

Coffee prices have remained high amid concerns of dry weather in Brazil, a major coffee-producing country.

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Monday, Oct. 6, 2025
Russell Wangersky/Free Press
                                The Peace Tower in Ottawa.

A petition you should consider signing

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

A petition you should consider signing

Editorial 4 minute read Monday, Oct. 6, 2025

Let’s just keep track of e-6679 and ask ourselves whether it’s not about time for plenty of us to sign it.

What is e-6679? Well, it’s an electronic petition to the House of Commons, suggesting that federal politicians and candidates who knowingly mislead the public should face penalties, including, potentially, being disqualified from sitting in the House of Commons.

Here’s the prayer — the details — of the petition.

“Whereas: Members of Parliament (MPs) have been accused of making important public statements that are false and without evidence; Misinformation is a growing threat to the proper functioning of, as well as faith in, our democratic process; A mechanism is needed to verify MPs’ public statements to maintain trust in our governing body; Artificial Intelligence is amplifying misinformation; Current events in the United States demonstrate the dangers of not addressing this problem; and The Institute for Constitutional and Democratic Research (ICDR) of Wales, UK, proposed a white paper entitled ‘A Model for Political Honesty,’ created because ‘the Welsh Government will bring forward legislation before 2026 for the disqualification of Members and candidates found guilty of deliberate deception through an independent judicial process and will invite the committee to make proposals to that effect.’

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Monday, Oct. 6, 2025
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