Whose story is being told? How perspectives shape our understanding

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

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Interest in respiratory therapy training surges as province seeks to fill demand

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Preview
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Interest in respiratory therapy training surges as province seeks to fill demand

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026

Nearly half of the first-year respiratory therapy training seats at the University of Manitoba went unfilled this year even though there’s huge demand amid a staffing shortage.

However, application numbers have jumped since Manitoba’s largest post-secondary institution launched an awareness campaign about openings in the profession.

“I hope this year we are going to fill that gap,” said Dr. Jithin Sreedharan, who heads the university’s respiratory therapy department.

Respiratory therapists, who assist people suffering from breathing difficulties, often work in acute and critical-care hospital units.

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Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026
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Sewing studio offers classes for crafty folks

Eva Wasney 4 minute read Preview
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Sewing studio offers classes for crafty folks

Eva Wasney 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026

Make it Sew is made to feel like a living room. Handmade quilts and crafts are displayed throughout the cosy Sherbrook Street sewing studio. A vintage couch sits next to a tall credenza filled with kitschy teapots and refreshments for “mandatory cookie breaks.”

The homey vibes are an intentional nod to the business’s early days, when owner Brittany Karbonik was teaching students how to sew in her Transcona abode.

“I wanted it to feel inviting, like a home,” she says.

Karbonik opened Make it Sew (156 Sherbrook St.) last fall as haven for fibre art enthusiasts of all skill levels and ages. The shop offers private and group classes in sewing, crocheting, knitting and weaving, as well as equipment rentals and special crafting events. The space also has a retail section stocked with items made by local craftspeople.

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Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026
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What to do with inconvenient wildlife

Scott Forbes 5 minute read Preview
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What to do with inconvenient wildlife

Scott Forbes 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026

Their flocks darkened the skies, over a mile wide and hundreds of miles long. It would take hours or even days for them to pass over a fixed spot. They were a common Manitoba resident, nesting as far north as York Factory. In the 1860s, one hunter trapped 80 dozen in a net near St. Andrews.

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Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026
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The pitfalls of increased use of AI in policing

Christopher J. Schneider 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026

As a part of its body-worn camera program, the RCMP recently completed a pilot project using artificial intelligence to draft reports. The AI-generated reports are created from audio captured from officers’ body cameras. A report can be drafted in mere seconds. The pilot, which ran for about six months and concluded in January, occurred across eight detachments in British Columbia generating nearly 800 reports.

Harnessing AI to write police reports is replete with some serious and unresolved concerns and must be immediately discontinued.

It isn’t even entirely clear why police need to use AI in the first place.

The primary justification for the expanding use of AI to generate police reports across law enforcement is to free police from the administrative burden of having to write reports in the first place. The idea is that officers could do more relevant police work, presumably patrol work.

After facing the death of its dominant newspaper, Pittsburgh’s media has a surprising turnaround

David Bauder, The Associated Press 8 minute read Preview

After facing the death of its dominant newspaper, Pittsburgh’s media has a surprising turnaround

David Bauder, The Associated Press 8 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

PITTSBURGH (AP) — In the space of a couple of weeks this spring, Pittsburgh media has lived through a near-death experience and a resurrection.

Owners of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette last week announced the newspaper's sale to a nonprofit foundation that said it was committed to keeping it open. A news outlet that predates the U.S. Constitution was due to close on May 3, which would have made the Steel City the nation's largest community without a city-based paper.

Weeks earlier, the alternative Pittsburgh City Paper, whose staff learned on New Year's Day that it was closing after 34 years, roared back to life under new ownership.

They were rare positive developments for a local news industry that has seen its share of the opposite over the past two decades — newsrooms shuttered or thinned out, journalists thrown out of work, consumers drifting away. No one is pretending that a true turnaround will be easy in Pittsburgh. One thing that may help is that the city faced a news abyss and was forced to prepare for it.

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Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026
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Most fashion mannequins are about a size 2. The Met Gala exhibit is making room for diverse bodies

Jocelyn Noveck, The Associated Press 7 minute read Preview
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Most fashion mannequins are about a size 2. The Met Gala exhibit is making room for diverse bodies

Jocelyn Noveck, The Associated Press 7 minute read Tuesday, May. 12, 2026

NEW YORK (AP) — On a sultry summer day in Brooklyn last year, artist and couture designer Michaela Stark found herself in a studio surrounded by 175 cameras, for a photo shoot unlike any she’d done before.

Clad only in her signature corsetry that binds the flesh, Stark stood in the midst of a circle as the cameras captured all angles of her body, simultaneously — part of an intricate process known as photogrammetry. The goal: to scan her body and build a mannequin — three, actually — for display in one of the world’s top museums, the Metropolitan Museum of Art. And at the Met Gala, no less.

“It was definitely a bit nerve-wracking,” recalls Stark of the “intimate and vulnerable” experience. But, she quips, “something about being naked on a 40-degree (Celsius) day in a corset that isn’t hiding anything kind of takes the awkwardness away from the situation, actually.”

The mannequins, and others based on real-life models like Stark, will be featured in “Costume Art,” the upcoming spring exhibit at the museum’s Costume Institute that's launched by the starry May 4 gala. It’s part of an effort to add an element of body positivity to a show that examines the dressed body in art over the centuries, says curator Andrew Bolton.

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Tuesday, May. 12, 2026
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North End vocational school opens ‘cultural learning lab’ creative design studio

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview
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North End vocational school opens ‘cultural learning lab’ creative design studio

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

A North End warehouse has been converted into a multi-purpose design studio where students can sew ribbon skirts, print 3D models and launch businesses.

The Winnipeg School Division celebrated the grand opening of its Waabishkaa-Makwa Lab last week.

The first-of-its-kind “cultural learning lab” embeds Indigenous teachings into project-based learning activities.

For more than a decade, the 4,500-square-foot space inside R.B. Russell Vocational School had been collecting dust and housing broken equipment.

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Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

Rural communities team up to court doctors

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Preview

Rural communities team up to court doctors

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

A close call that would have seen the Russell emergency department temporarily close has leaders in the area joining forces to entice more doctors to practise in the town.

“At this point in time, it’s becoming a crisis,” said Louise Perreault, who manages both the Lions Manor and Park Manor, home to approximately 40 seniors.

The ER at the Russell Health Centre was set to close for a weekend earlier this month, but the shutdown was avoided at the last minute when a doctor was found.

Currently, only two doctors work in the community, one at the medical centre and another at a local clinic, but the low numbers are creating concern for many in the area, located roughly 350 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg.

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Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

In praise of the deliberately slower lane

Erna Buffie 5 minute read Preview

In praise of the deliberately slower lane

Erna Buffie 5 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

Before I begin this story, I should first confess that I once suffered from a serious affliction — that nasty urban disease known as road rage.

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Monday, Apr. 20, 2026
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Small towns and temporary foreign workers

Kelly Higginson 4 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

On any given day in a small town, restaurants should be busy. Orders coming in. People being served. The steady rhythm of a place that’s part of the community.

Instead, more and more locations are running below capacity; not because customers aren’t there, but because there aren’t enough staff.

This is the reality in many rural and tourism communities across Canada.

Recently, Ottawa took a small but important step to begin to address it.